The formula for the “unconditional surrender” adopted in Casablanca on the 24th of January 1943 was meant to acquaint the governments of the states at war with the United Nations with the treatment and the terms of their countries would have to take, no matter when or why they might withdraw. As far as Romania was concerned, the terms of surrender included, among others, demobilisation and disarmament, handing over war materials, amends etc, all of which were to be imposed on by the three great powers and had been thought mainly to secure safety and to carrying on the warfare against Germany. These objectives were considered to have deep political implications.surrender, unconditional surrender, Romanian delegation
On August 23, 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union signed the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact in Moscow, accor...
Abstract: The Romanian territorial losses from summer 1940 represented the worst period ...
The article covers the course of negotiations between the plenipotentiaries of Romania and the lea...
The formula for the “unconditional surrender” adopted in Casablanca on the 24th of Janua...
Ion Antonescu's defenders regard King Michael I's act as a tragic mistake or a "grave political erro...
The years 1943-1944 were the turning point in the carrying of the Second World War, the United Natio...
Romania’s participation in World War II was brought about by political reasons and strategic needs t...
Romania's contribution to the cause of the United Nations would be significant, leading to shortness...
From the interwar period until the end of the Second World War, Romania was in a kind of geopolitica...
Romania's special economic situation during the Second World War did not deter it from allying...
In March 1919, in the midst of a terrible internal and international crisis, Hungary became a Soviet...
The political and military significance of unconditional surrender in Europe, 1943-45, has been pres...
A German officer meets with Romanian officers under a white flag of truce to negotiate the Roman...
Romania and the Annexations of Transylvania and Bessarabia in the First Post-War Period At the end...
The process of establishing communism in Romania was not a singular phenomenon, on the contrary, it...
On August 23, 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union signed the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact in Moscow, accor...
Abstract: The Romanian territorial losses from summer 1940 represented the worst period ...
The article covers the course of negotiations between the plenipotentiaries of Romania and the lea...
The formula for the “unconditional surrender” adopted in Casablanca on the 24th of Janua...
Ion Antonescu's defenders regard King Michael I's act as a tragic mistake or a "grave political erro...
The years 1943-1944 were the turning point in the carrying of the Second World War, the United Natio...
Romania’s participation in World War II was brought about by political reasons and strategic needs t...
Romania's contribution to the cause of the United Nations would be significant, leading to shortness...
From the interwar period until the end of the Second World War, Romania was in a kind of geopolitica...
Romania's special economic situation during the Second World War did not deter it from allying...
In March 1919, in the midst of a terrible internal and international crisis, Hungary became a Soviet...
The political and military significance of unconditional surrender in Europe, 1943-45, has been pres...
A German officer meets with Romanian officers under a white flag of truce to negotiate the Roman...
Romania and the Annexations of Transylvania and Bessarabia in the First Post-War Period At the end...
The process of establishing communism in Romania was not a singular phenomenon, on the contrary, it...
On August 23, 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union signed the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact in Moscow, accor...
Abstract: The Romanian territorial losses from summer 1940 represented the worst period ...
The article covers the course of negotiations between the plenipotentiaries of Romania and the lea...