I've been studying European history lately, since I managed to miss that class in high school thanks to having to move around so much, and a what-if question popped into my mind that I was wondering if anyone else had considered.
At the Yalta Conference between the US, UK, and USSR, Winston Churchill broke his word to the invaded states of Eastern Europe and gave them over to Stalin, choosing to honor an agreement between Stalin and Hitler, rather than the prior commitments he had given to Poland and the other nations of Eastern Europe.
Those nations, of course, ended up subject to Soviet oppression. Germany wound up partitioned and the city of Berlin in particular as well.
What if Churchill and Roosevelt had stood up to Stalin? What would the possible consequences of that have been, had they decided to honor their promises to their allies, rather than a pact between Hitler and Stalin that you'd think would've been nullified by Soviet-German fighting?
More about Yalta:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yalta_Conference
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_betrayal
At the Yalta Conference between the US, UK, and USSR, Winston Churchill broke his word to the invaded states of Eastern Europe and gave them over to Stalin, choosing to honor an agreement between Stalin and Hitler, rather than the prior commitments he had given to Poland and the other nations of Eastern Europe.
Those nations, of course, ended up subject to Soviet oppression. Germany wound up partitioned and the city of Berlin in particular as well.
What if Churchill and Roosevelt had stood up to Stalin? What would the possible consequences of that have been, had they decided to honor their promises to their allies, rather than a pact between Hitler and Stalin that you'd think would've been nullified by Soviet-German fighting?
More about Yalta:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yalta_Conference
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_betrayal