Skip to content

Results:

1 - 10 of 11

Documents

September 23, 1944

Paraphrase of Navy Cable

Harriman adds to a former cable that Stalin thinks the proposed British landing in Greece is a good plan.

September 23, 1944

Harriman's Telegram to the President

Harriman updates Roosevelt on Stalin's recent illness and a possible future meeting in the Mediterranean in November.

June 26, 1944

Paraphrase of Army Cable

Harriman telling the President that he presented the Stalingrad and Leningrad scrolls to Stalin.

June 10, 1944

Paraphrase of Telegram From Harriman to the President

Harriman relays Stalin's thoughts on the Chinese government and military to the President.

June 10, 1944

Stalin and Harriman Discuss Future Meeting with President

Harriman conveys to Stalin the possibility of a summer meeting with the President in Alaska, if necessary.

June 10, 1944

Stalin’s conversation with Averill Harriman

Stalin and Harriman discuss the success of D-day, and future Soviet offensives.

February 23, 1945

Hugh Dalton Diary Entry Concerning Meeting of Churchill with Junior Ministers

Hugh Dalton discusses Churchill's impressions of the Yalta Conference.

December 10, 1945

Malik, 'On the Question of a United Government in Korea'

This document discusses the creation of an independent Korea. Roosevelt, Churchill, and Chiang Kai-shek first presented the idea at the Cairo Conference in 1943. The United States supports the creation of a single Korean state while the USSR opposes it. The document discusses the importance of the answer to the unification question for the Soviet Union's political and economic future as well as its interest in the Far East.

November 26, 1943

The Cairo Declaration

Roosevelt, Churchhill, and Chiang Kai-shek declare that they are "fighting this war to restraint and punish the aggression of Japan."

February 11, 1945

Yalta Conference Agreement, Declaration of a Liberated Europe

The text of the agreements reached at the Yalta (Crimea) Conference between President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill and Generalissimo Stalin.

Pagination