October 02, 2005
World: Grandsons Of Stalin, Churchill, And Roosevelt Meet To Discuss Yalta
Josef Stalin
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The grandsons of Josef Stalin, Winston Churchill, and Franklin Roosevelt met for the first time Saturday night, gathering at Maastricht in The Netherlands to discuss the 1945 Yalta conference that had been attended by their famous relatives. While some have blamed the Yalta conference for triggering the Cold War, the grandsons of the allied leaders defended the talks.
Prague, 2 October 2005 (RFE/RL) -- The gathering at Maastricht on Saturday was the first meeting between the grandsons of the three World War II allied leaders. Indeed, it was the first time members of the three families had been together since their grandfathers attended the 1945 Yalta conference.
At that time, with the German Army in retreat and Adolf Hitler's vision of a Nazi-controlled continent in tatters, Stalin, Roosevelt, and Churchill met at the Black Sea resort to decide how to occupy Germany and reorganize Europe into spheres of influence.
On Saturday, the grandsons countered the view that the U.S. and British leaders had underestimated Stalin's cunning and had abandoned Central and Eastern Europe to five decades of Soviet oppression -- starting the Cold War.
Winston S. Churchill III says that view is not consistent with the historic facts.
"People imagine that Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin arrived at Yalta with a blank sheet of paper to decide the fate of Europe. Nothing could be further from the truth. The fate of Europe have been decided several months before with the Red Army, probably a couple of hundred of Soviet divisions, sweeping westwards, rolling up the German Wehrmacht and taking over all the countries of Eastern and Central Europe. That was what decided the fate of Europe," Churchill said.
Even U.S President George W. Bush has condemned the Yalta conference -- saying in speeches that great nations had decided the destiny of smaller nations in a way that resulted in years of oppression.