Yalta Conference Quotes

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Returning to Washington,FDR declared that Yalta Conference had put and end to the kind of balance-of-power divisions that had long marred global politics. His assessment echoed Woodrow Wilson's idealistic and equally inaccurate claims at the end of World War I. In London, Churchill told his cabinet that "poor Chamberlain believed he could trust Hitler. He was wrong. But I don't think I'm wrong about Stalin." Soviet-British friendship, Churchill maintained, "would continue as long as Stalin was in charge.
Madeleine K. Albright (Prague Winter: A Personal Story of Remembrance and War, 1937-1948)
Katherine read constantly. She loved biographies of male dictators and enjoyed a long Stalin phase when she became obsessed, not by the Gulags or by the Yalta Conference, but by his wife’s suicide, his taste for sweet Georgian wines, the way he made his ministers bark ‘The Blue Danube’ after dinner, like dogs. She quoted his daughter Svetlana, who said, ‘He was a Sagittarius, you know, on the cusp with Capricorn.
Anne Enright (Actress)
At the Yalta Conference in early 1945, Franklin Roosevelt had made it clear that he had little interest in further close collaboration or partnership with the United States' Western Allies, whose empires and global influence were fast disintegrating. Serenely confident of his own country's power, he envisioned the Soviet Union and its main ally in dealing with postwar international problems.
Lynne Olson (Last Hope Island: Britain, Occupied Europe, and the Brotherhood That Helped Turn the Tide of War)
poster of the Yalta Conference—Yalta!—in his bedroom, the words “NEVER FORGET” emblazoned beneath Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin in Polish, Latvian, Czech, Albanian, and all those other ex-commie tongues.
Rob Reid (After On: A Novel of Silicon Valley)
President Franklin D. Roosevelt met with King Abdel-Aziz ibn Saud, the founder of the modern Saudi dynasty, while returning from the Allied summit conference in Yalta. Although the details of this meeting have never been made public, it is widely believed that Abdel-Aziz offered Roosevelt unlimited access to Saudi oil in return for a U.S. pledge to protect the royal family against internal and external attack. And whatever the exact nature of this agreement, the United States has served as Saudi Arabia’s principal defender ever since.
Michael T. Klare (Resource Wars: The New Landscape of Global Conflict)