Question

Help answer this question below.

What was the Casablanca Conference?

  • Like
  • Report

Answers. Showing one answer.

  • by Balaji on April 14th, 2004

    Balaji

    Feb 12, 1943

    The Casablanca Conference was attended by Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, the respective leaders of the United States and Great Britain. Notable by his absence was the Soviet leader, Josef Stalin. His country and Germany were still locked in the epic battle for Stalingrad, and its fate was still in the balance, necessitating his presence at home. Although Roosevelt and Churchill spoke mostly of the Pacific war in this document, the emphasis on unconditional surrender was designed to stiffen Russian morale and to prevent a separate German-Soviet peace. This document has relevance to Italy as well.

    The decisions reached and the actual plans made at Casablanca were not confined to any one theater of war or to any one continent or ocean or sea. Before this year is out, it will be made known to the world-in actions rather than words-that the Casablanca Conference produced plenty of news; and it will be bad news for the Germans and Italians-and the Japanese

    Comments
    • Like
    • Report

    No comments. Post one | Permalink

Want to attach an image to your answer? Click here.

Did this answer your question? If not, then ask a new question or create a poll.

You're reading What was the Casablanca Conference?

Follow us on Facebook!

Related Ads