People can talk all they want about secret agreements but the fact remains 
that there were Bolshevik troops all over eastern Europe.  Nothing short of 
another war could have saved those people.  The fact that at Yalta FDR was able 
to get a promise of free elections out of Stalin was the best the Western 
allies could have done.  And then Stalin ignored his promise (or when, as in 
Czechoslovakia , he threw the results literally out the window).

 

Anthony



From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ChurchillChat] Churchill and Stalin's Secret Agreement
Date: Mon, 22 Jul 2013 12:44:53 -0400









Daniel,
 
Yes, true story.  Google ‘churchill stalin percentages deal’ and you will find 
links to the story and to images of the document itself.  Text is WSC’s 
writing, tick marks are Stalin’s.
 
Dave
 




From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Daniel Ibarra
Sent: Monday, July 22, 2013 12:24 PM
To: Churchill Chat
Subject: [ChurchillChat] Churchill and Stalin’s Secret Agreement
 

Members of the list, is this a true story? Thank you. Daniel
 
Churchill and Stalin’s Secret Agreement



The so called ‘Percentages Agreement’ was an outcome of a secret meeting 
between the leaders of Britain and Russia that effectively sealed the fate of 
millions living in Eastern Europe.

The meeting occurred in October 1944 as the realisation that the war was all 
but won dawned on the allied forces. Both Churchill and Stalin realised that it 
was imperative to secure a future whereby Germany would be unable to attack its 
neighbours and thus, potentially avoid a future world war.

However the fear of invasion petrified Stalin. After two German invasions since 
1914, Stalin knew that a military weak Germany and an array of ‘buffer’ states 
– that have also been referred to as Soviet ‘satellite’ states due to their 
sub-ordinance to Moscow, and the Eastern bloc- were necessary for his country. 
He also knew that due to the amount of fighting the Soviets had engaged in, he 
was entitled to serious reparations and influence in the outcome of Europe.

During the meeting, Churchill slipped a piece of paper to Stalin with a list of 
European countries on it, followed by the percentage of influence he believed 
Britain and Russia were entitled to. The percentages proposed indicated 
Britain’s loss of power in world affairs, with the Soviet Union given far 
larger stake in the affairs of the Eastern European nations – barring Greece, a 
traditional British sphere of influence.

What Churchill perhaps did not realise at the time was that conceding Eastern 
Europe to Stalin would create a vast communist empire, that’s expansionist 
tendencies would be a pivotal issue of the Cold War that would dominate 
European affairs for the best part of the next half-century.

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