TRIPARTITE PACT

  • GERMAN 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 next month Ger­man troops entered the coun­try osten­sibly to train and rebuild…

  • ANTONESCU TAKES REINS OF ROMANIAN GOVERNMENT

    Bucharest, Romania · September 5, 1940 In the wake of Romania’s swift territorial concessions of Bes­sara­bia and Northern Buko­vina to the Soviet Union, the north­western part of Transyl­vania to Hun­gary, and the south­ern part of Dobruja to Bul­garia (see map below), 47‑year‑old King Carol II ab­di­cated in favor of his 19‑year‑old son, Michael (Mihai), but not…

  • GREEK ARMY CAPITULATES TO NAZI INVADERS

    German 12th Army HQ, Larissa, Greece · April 21, 1941 On this date in 1941 representa­tives of the Greek govern­ment, leader­less after Prime Minis­ter Alexan­dros Koryzis com­mitted sui­cide three days earlier, signed a docu­ment of capi­tu­la­tion at the head­quarters of the Ger­man 12th Army at Larissa. Four­teen Greek divi­sions laid down their arms. The news…

  • ALLIES PLEDGE MUTUAL ASSISTANCE

    London, England · April 13, 1939 Following the Nazi occupation of Czecho­slo­va­kia’s Ger­man-speaking Sude­ten­land in Octo­ber 1938 and the in­va­sion and in­cor­po­ra­tion of the rest of Czecho­slo­va­kia into the Reich in mid-March 1939, Great Brit­ain, France, Poland, Greece, and Roma­nia entered into mutu­al assist­ance pacts in case of a mili­tary in­va­sion by “a Euro­pean power,”…

  • YUGOSLAVIA JOINS AXIS PACT

    Vienna, Austria · March 25, 1941 On this date in 1941 in Vienna, the govern­ment of Yugo­slav regent Prince Paul signed a protocol of ad­herence to the Berlin-Rome-Tokyo Tri­par­tite Pact, there­by setting the stage for a com­plex guer­rilla war against Ger­mans, Ital­ians, and their Yugo­slav allies, and within the Yugo­slav resis­tance forces them­selves. Not two…