French Freedom PapersMain MenuLettersSummaries of the translated letters of the French Freedom Papers collectionRelevant FiguresProvides context about the people sending, receiving, and mentioned in these lettersRelevant Events & PlacesProvides context about the historical events and places being discussed in the lettersReferencesSources used to give context to the historical events and figures found in the letters.External ResourcesLinks to external sites about Charles de Gaulle, World War II, Free French, and this collectionTranslation MethodsKSU French 7208b42ed21d3c5345086d6fd65589ad65f6b323f0c
Soviet-Japanese Neutrality Pact
12016-10-10T11:15:34-07:00Robert Olleraf78ffd7a21d64304daa96a2509eae7bf402d00698631plain2016-10-10T11:15:34-07:00Robert Olleraf78ffd7a21d64304daa96a2509eae7bf402d006The Soviet-Japanese Neutrality Pact, also referred to as the Japanese-Soviet Non-aggression Pact, signed April 13th, 1941 prevented the Soviet Union from participating on the Eastern front during World War II. Coupled with the German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact of 1939, Allied leaders remained unsure about the status of the Soviet Union's leanings and allegiances as war broke on a global stage. Although the Soviet Union denounced its agreement just two months after signing as a response to its invasion by German forces, correspondences between Allied leaders, namely Charles de Gaulle, show that a state of looming unrest created substantial problems in planning Allied operations (Letter 27, 1944).
People involved: Général de Gaulle (France), Joseph Stalin (USSR), Emperor Hirohito (Japan)
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12016-10-09T19:17:09-07:00Leah Devers42408f2f7751c1c649b624bacebb2a415aa0bbd9Historical EventsMary Hellmer4An alphabetical list of the historical events pertinent to our Letters (Leah Devers)plain2016-10-11T22:55:51-07:00Mary Hellmer9543bbbc864f26c17be9a9d2ad5b4c1fb3a2b378