RIBBENTROP-MOLOTOV PACT

  • GERMANY TO SEND TROOPS TO AID ROMANIA

    Berlin, Germany • September 20, 1940 On this date in 1940 the chief of the German high command, Field Marshal Wil­helm Kei­tel, announced that Wehr­macht troops were being dis­patched to Roma­nia “in case a war with Soviet Russia is forced upon us.” The announce­ment was Berlin’s warning shot across Moscow’s bow that the Soviets were…

  • NAZIS, SOVIETS DIVIDE POLISH SPOILS

    Brest-Litovsk, Occupied Eastern Poland • September 19, 1939 Adolf Hitler’s armies stormed over Poland’s border on Septem­ber 1, 1939, in what became known as the world’s first blitz­krieg—“light­ning war.” Soviet dic­ta­tor Joseph Stalin has­tened to claim his share of the spoils under the terms of a sec­ret pro­to­col in the Molotov-Ribbentrop Non­aggression Treaty signed in Mos­cow less…

  • GERMANS, SOVIETS AGREE TO HISTORIC NONAGGRESSION PACT

    Moscow, Soviet Union • August 23, 1939 At least since April 1939 Adolf Hitler was deter­mined to end the exis­tence of Poland, a country of just over 35 mil­lion people lying on Germany’s eastern border. But con­quering that nation was fraught with danger because Poland shared a border with the Soviet Union, Hitler’s long-time bogey­man. The…

  • SOVIETS OVERRUN PARTS OF ROMANIA

    Bucharest, Romania • June 27, 1940 On this date in 1940 Red Army troops invaded Roma­nia in the wake of Roma­nian King Carol II’s refusal to cede the east­ern terri­tories of Bes­sa­rabia and North­ern Buko­vina to the Soviet Union (see map). These terri­tories, once part of Czarist Russia and Austria-Hungary before 1918, had been assigned to…

  • FINNISH AID TO DISRUPT NAZI ORE IMPORTS

    London, England · December 19, 1939 In the afternoon of August 23, 1939, Adolf Hitler’s foreign secretary Joachim von Ribben­trop appeared in Moscow’s Krem­lin fortress to sign off on the Nazi-Soviet Non­ag­gres­sion Pact. The 10‑year pact, also known by the twin sur­names of the Soviet foreign minister Vyacheslav Molotov and the German foreign minister Ribben­trop, was…

  • NAZIS, SOVIETS DIVIDE POLAND

    Brest-Litovsk, Occupied Eastern Poland · September 19, 1939 Adolf Hitler’s armies stormed over Poland’s border on Septem­ber 1, 1939, in what became known as the world’s first blitz­krieg—“light­ning war.” Soviet dic­ta­tor Joseph Stalin has­tened to claim his share of the spoils under the terms of a sec­ret pro­to­col in the Molotov-Ribbentrop Non­aggression Treaty signed in…

  • HITLER HALTS POLAND INVASION

    Berlin, Germany · August 26, 1939 Serious discussions between the Nazi and Soviet regimes began secretly in late July 1939. On August 21 Ger­many announced that Foreign Minis­ter Joachim von Ribben­trop had been invited to Mos­cow. Two days later the world learned that Ribben­trop and his Soviet counter­part, Vyacheslav Molotov, had ini­tialed a non­aggres­sion pact (Molotov-Ribben­trop…

  • MOLOTOV-RIBBENTROP PACT ENDS FEUD

    Moscow, Soviet Union · August 19, 1939 On this date in 1939 Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov presented to Adolf Hitler’s Mos­cow ambas­sa­dor a draft of a non­aggres­sion pact between the two powers. The draft con­tained essen­tially every­thing the Ger­man serial aggressor could have wished for because it opened the gates for crushing neigh­boring Poland…

  • NAZIS, SOVIETS DIVIDE POLAND

    Brest-Litovsk, Occupied Eastern Poland · September 19, 1939 Adolf Hitler’s armies stormed over Poland’s border on Septem­ber 1, 1939, in what became known as the first blitz­krieg—“light­ning war.” Soviet dic­ta­tor Joseph Stalin has­tened to claim his share of the spoils under the terms of a sec­ret pro­to­col in the Molotov-Ribben­trop Pact signed in Mos­cow the month before,…

  • MOLOTOV-RIBBENTROP PACT ENDS FEUD

    Moscow, Soviet Union · August 19, 1939 On this date in 1939 Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov presented to Adolf Hitler’s Mos­cow ambas­sa­dor a draft of a non­aggres­sion pact between the two powers. The draft con­tained essen­tially every­thing the Ger­man serial aggressor could have wished for because it opened the gates for crushing neigh­boring Poland…