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2: 46 American
B-29 bombers based near Calcutta, India attacked a railroad bridge near
Bangkok,
Thailand and other targets in the area.[1] : The Japanese increasingly use
kamikaze tactics against the US naval forces nearby.
3: The Allies take the offensive east of the Bulge but they fail to close the pincers (which might have surrounded large numbers of Germans) with Patton's tanks.
5: The German offensive Nordwind crosses the border into
Alsace. : Japanese retreat across the
Irrawaddy River in
Burma with General
Slim's troops in pursuit.
6: American B-29s bomb Tokyo again.
7: Germans, as part of the plan to retake
Strasbourg, break out of the "
Colmar Pocket", a bridgehead on the
Rhine, and head east.
8: The battle of Strasbourg is underway, with Americans in defence of their recent acquisition.
9: Americans land on
Luzon.[1][2] There are more kamikaze attacks on the American navy.
11: The first convoy moves on the
Ledo Road (or "Stilwell" road) in northern Burma, linking India and China.
13: 1st Byelorussian Front launched its winter offensive towards Pillkallen, East Prussia, meeting heavy resistance from the German
3rd Panzer Army.[1]
14: British forces clear the Roer Triangle during
Operation Blackcock; it is an area noted for its industrial dams.
15: The British commander in Athens, General
Ronald Scobie, accepts a request for a ceasefire from the
Greek People's Liberation Army. This marks the end of the
Dekemvriana, resulting in clear defeat for the Greek Left.
17:
Warsaw is entered by Red Army troops.[1][2] A government favourable to the Communists is installed. : It is announced officially that the
Battle of the Bulge is at an end.
19: Hitler orders that any retreats of divisions or larger units must be approved by him.
20: The Red Army advances into East Prussia. Germans renew the retreat. :
Franklin D. Roosevelt is sworn in for a fourth term as U.S. President; Harry Truman is sworn in as Vice President.
23: German jurist and anti-Nazi activist
Helmuth James von Moltke was hanged for treason in Berlin.
24: The
Battle of Poznań began for the German-occupied stronghold city of
Poznań in Poland.
28: The Red Army completes the occupation of
Lithuania.
30: The
Malta Conference (1945) began with
Winston Churchill meeting with the
Combined Chiefs of Staff on the Island of Malta in the Mediterranean to plan the end of WWII in both Theaters, and to discuss the ramifications of the Soviets now controlling most of Eastern Europe. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt would join the Conference for one day on 2 February 1945; both would fly to Yalta on 3 February for the
Yalta Conference with Stalin.
31: The Red Army crosses the
Oder River into Germany and are now less than 50 miles from Berlin. : A second invasion on Luzon by Americans lands on the west coast. : The whole
Burma Road is now opened as the
Ledo Road linkage with India is complete.
4: The
Yalta Conference of
Roosevelt,
Churchill and
Stalin begins;[1][2] the main subject of their discussions is postwar spheres of influence. : Belgium is now cleared of all German forces.
16: American paratroopers and Philippine Commonwealth troops land on
Corregidor Island, in Manila Bay. Once the scene of the last American resistance in early 1942, it is now the scene of Japanese resistance. : American naval vessels bombard Tokyo and Yokohama.
22:
Operation Clarion, a massive bombing of German rail and other transport infrastructure by approximately 9,000 U.S. and British aircraft takes place, carrying over into 23 February.
23: U.S. Marines
raise the American flag on
Mount Suribachi on Iwo Jima. :
Turkey declares war on Germany and Japan. : In the Philippines, U.S. Army forces staged the
Raid on Los Baños freeing 2147 Allied military and civilian prisoners from the Japanese.
24: Egypt declares war on the Axis. Moments after making this Declaration before Parliament, Prime Minister
Ahmad Maher Pasha is assassinated.
25: Taking off on the 24th, a US B-29 incendiary raid on Tokyo, Japan takes place.
26:
Syria declares war on Germany and Japan. : After ten days of fighting, American and Filipino troops recapture Corregidor.
28: A Philippine government is established. : U.S. and Filipino forces
invadePalawan, an island of the Philippines.
March 1945
March 1945
1st
15th
1:
Saudi Arabia declares war on Germany and Japan.
3:
Manila is fully liberated.[1][2] :
Battle of Meiktila, Burma comes to an end with General
Slim's troops overwhelming the Japanese; the road to Rangoon is now cleared. : The Allies attempted to destroy V-2s and launching equipment near The Hague by a
large-scale bombardment, but due to navigational errors the Bezuidenhout quarter was destroyed, killing 511 Dutch civilians.
4: Finland declares war on Germany, backdated to September 15, 1944.
6: Germans launch
an offensive against Soviet forces in Hungary.
7: The
Battle of Remagen: When German troops fail to dynamite the
Ludendorff Bridge over the Rhine, the U.S. First Army captures the bridge and begins crossing the river. The Army also takes
Cologne, Germany.[1][3] : Germans begin to evacuate Danzig.
8: Private Karl Hulten, an Army Airborne Regiment deserter, was hanged in an English prison for a flurry of crimes ending in what came to be called the
Cleft chin murder.
9: The US
firebombs Tokyo (the attack was code-named Operation Meetinghouse),[4] with heavy civilian casualties. : Amid rumours of a possible American invasion, Japanese overthrow the Vichy French
Jean Decoux Government which had been operating independently as the colonial government of
Vietnam: they proclaim an "independent"
Empire of Vietnam, with
EmperorBảo Đại as nominal ruler. Premier
Trần Trọng Kim forms the first Vietnamese government.
10: Japanese
Fu-Go balloon bombs damage the Manhattan Project's
Hanford Site in Washington State slightly, but cause no lasting effects.[5]
11: Nagoya, Japan is firebombed by hundreds of B-29s.
15: V-2 rockets continue to hit England and Belgium.
16: The German offensive in Hungary ends with another Soviet victory. : Iwo Jima is finally secured after a month's fighting, in the war's only Marine battle where the number of American casualties is larger than the Japanese's. Sporadic fighting will continue as isolated Japanese fighters emerge from caves and tunnels.
19: U.S. Carrier Task Force 58 conducts heavy bombing of important naval bases in Japan, Kobe and Kure. Fifty miles off Japan, the carrier
USS Franklin (CV-13) is hit by two bombs, killing hundreds and disabling the ship for the remainder of the war. :
Deutsch Schutzen massacre occurs, in which 60 Jews are killed.
23: By this time it is clear that Germany is under attack from all sides.
24:
Operation Varsity, an Anglo-American-Canadian airborne assault under Montgomery deployed over the Rhine at Wesel.
27: The Western Allies slow their advance and allow the Red Army to take Berlin. :
Argentina declares war on Germany, the last Western hemisphere country to do so; its policies for sheltering escaping Nazis are also coming under scrutiny. Argentina had not declared war before due to British wishes that Argentine shipping be neutral (and therefore Argentine foodstuffs would reach Britain unharmed), this, however, went against the plan of the USA, who applied much political pressure on Argentina.
29: The
Red Army enters Austria. Other Allies take Frankfurt; the Germans are in a general retreat all over the centre of the country.
31: General Eisenhower broadcasts a demand for the Germans to surrender.
April 1945
April 1945
1st
15th
1: U.S. troops start Operation Iceberg, which is the
Battle of Okinawa. It would have been a leaping off base for a
mainland invasion. : Americans retake
Legaspi,
Albay in the Philippines.
2: Soviets launch the
Vienna Offensive against German forces in and around the Austrian capital city. : German armies are surrounded in the
Ruhr Pocket.
4:
Bratislava, the capital of the
Slovak Republic, is overrun by advancing Soviet forces. The remaining members of President
Jozef Tiso's pro-German government flee to Austria. : The
Ohrdruf death camp is liberated by the Allies.
10:
Buchenwald concentration camp is liberated by American forces.
11: Japanese
kamikaze attacks on American naval ships continue at Okinawa; the carrier
Enterprise and the battleship
Missouri are hit. :
Spain breaks off diplomatic relations with Japan.
13: The
Vienna Offensive ends with a Soviet victory. :
Gardelegen Massacre takes place. Over 1000 slave laborers were closed in a barn which then was set on fire. It was one of the last massacres on civil population perpetrated by
Germans. Just a few hours later, American troops captured
Gardelegen
17: The Italian town
Montese is liberated by Brazilian Forces.
18:
Ernie Pyle, famed war correspondent for the GIs, is killed by machine gun fire on
Ie Shima, a small island near Okinawa.
19: Switzerland closes its borders with Germany (and the former Austria). : Allies continue their sweep toward the
Po Valley. : The Soviet advance towards the city of Berlin continues and soon reaches the suburbs.
20: Hitler celebrates his 56th birthday in the bunker in Berlin; reports are that he is in an unhealthy state, nervous, and depressed.
22: Hitler is informed late in the day that, with the approval of
Gotthard Heinrici, Steiner's attack was never launched. Instead, Steiner's forces were authorised to retreat. In response, Hitler launches a furious tirade against the perceived treachery and incompetence of his military commanders in front of
Wilhelm Keitel,
Hans Krebs,
Alfred Jodl,
Wilhelm Burgdorf and
Martin Bormann. Hitler's tirade culminates in an oath to stay in Berlin to head up the defence of the city. Hitler orders General
Walther Wenck to attack towards Berlin with the
Twelfth Army, link up with the
Ninth Army of General
Theodor Busse, and relieve the city. Wenck
launched an attack, but it will come to nothing.
23:
Hermann Göring sends a radiogram to Hitler's bunker, asking to be declared Hitler's successor. He proclaims that if he gets no response by 10 PM, he will assume Hitler is incapacitated and assume leadership of the Reich. Furious, Hitler strips him of all his offices and expels him from the Nazi Party. :
Albert Speer makes one last visit to Hitler, informing him that he (Speer) ignored the
Nero Decree for
scorched earth.
24: Himmler, ignoring the orders of Hitler, makes a secret surrender offer to the Allies, (led by
Count Folke Bernadotte, head of the
Red Cross), provided that the Red Army is not involved. The offer is rejected; when Hitler hears of the betrayal on the 28th, he orders Himmler shot. : Forces of the 1st Belorussian Front and the 1st Ukrainian Front link up in the initial encirclement of Berlin. : Allies encircle the last German armies near
Bologna, and the Italian war in effect comes to an end.
25:
Elbe Day: First contact between Soviet and American troops at the river
Elbe, near
Torgau in Germany.
26: Hitler summons Field Marshal
Robert Ritter von Greim from Munich to Berlin to take over command of the Luftwaffe from Göring. While flying into Berlin, von Greim is seriously wounded by Soviet anti-aircraft fire.
27: The encirclement of German forces in Berlin is completed by the
1st Belorussian Front and the
1st Ukrainian Front. : The last German formations withdraw to Norway from Finland; the
Finnish flag is raised at the three-country cairn in celebration. : Head of State for the Italian Social Republic, Benito Mussolini, heavily disguised, is captured in northern Italy while trying to escape to Switzerland.
28: Mussolini and his mistress
Clara Petacci, are shot, and hanged by the feet upside down in Milan. Other members of his
puppet government are also executed by
Italian partisans and their bodies put on display.
The 148th German Division surrender to Brazilian Expeditionary Division.
30: Hitler and his wife commit suicide with a combination of poison and a gunshot. Before he dies, he dictates his
last will and testament. In it
Joseph Goebbels is appointed Reich Chancellor and Grand Admiral
Karl Dönitz is appointed Reich President.
May 1945
May 1945
1st
15th
1: German General
Hans Krebs negotiates the surrender of the city of Berlin with Soviet General
Vasily Chuikov. Chuikov, as commander of the
Soviet 8th Guards Army, commands the Soviet forces in central Berlin. Krebs is not authorized by Reich Chancellor Goebbels to agree to an unconditional surrender, so his negotiations with Chuikov end with no agreement. : Goebbels and his wife murder
their children and commit suicide. :
Yugoslavian Partisan leader
Josip Broz Tito and his troops capture
Trieste, Italy. : The war in Italy is over but some German troops are still not accounted for. : Australian troops
land on Tarakan island off the coast of
Borneo
2: Soviet forces capture the
Reichstag building and
install the Soviet flag. : The
Battle of Berlin ends when German General
Helmuth Weidling, commander of the Berlin Defence Area, (and no longer bound by Goebbels's commands), unconditionally surrenders the city of Berlin to Soviet General Vasily Chuikov. : General Vietinghoff surrenders his troops in Northern Italy.[6] : Krebs,
Martin Bormann and
Wilhelm Burgdorf commit suicide.
3:
Rangoon is liberated. : The German cruiser
Admiral Hipper is scuttled, having been hit heavily by the RAF in April.
4: Karl Dönitz orders all U-boats to cease operations. : German troops in Denmark, Northern Germany and The Netherlands surrender to
Montgomery. :
Neuengamme concentration camp is liberated.
5: Formal negotiations for Germany's surrender begin at
Reims, France. :
Czech resistance fighters begin the
Prague uprising and the Soviets begin the
Prague Offensive. : German troops in the Netherlands officially surrender; Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands accepts the surrender. :
Mauthausen concentration camp is liberated. : Kamikazes have major successes off Okinawa. : Japanese
fire balloons claim their first and only lives—a Sunday school group in
Bly, Oregon.
6: German soldiers open fire on a crowd celebrating the liberation of the Netherlands in
Dam Square. At the brink of peace, 120 people were badly injured and 22 pronounced dead.[7] : This date marks the last fighting for American troops in Europe.[citation needed]
7: Germany surrenders unconditionally to the Allies at the
Western Allied Headquarters in
Rheims, France at 2:41 a.m. In accordance with orders from Reich President
Karl Dönitz, General
Alfred Jodl signs for Germany. : Hermann Göring, for a while in the hands of the SS, surrenders to the Americans. Elements of Task Force Smythe, U.S. 80th ID in Austria, fire last American shots of the war in Europe when 80th Recon Platoon is strafed by two German planes and returns fire, causing one plane to leave trailing smoke.[8]
8:
Victory in Europe Day: The ceasefire takes effect at one minute past midnight. : In accordance with Dönitz's orders, Colonel-General
Carl Hilpert unconditionally surrenders his troops in the
Courland Pocket. : Germany surrenders again unconditionally to the Soviet Union army but this time in a ceremony hosted by the Soviet Union. In accordance with orders from Dönitz, General
Wilhelm Keitel signs for Germany. : The remaining members of President
Jozef Tiso's pro-German
Slovak Republic capitulates to the American General
Walton Walker's
XX Corps in
Kremsmünster, Austria. : The
Prague uprising ends with negotiated surrender with
Czech resistance which allowed the Germans in Prague to leave the city. : In order to disarm the Japanese in
Vietnam, the Allies divide the country in half at the
16th parallel. Chinese Nationalists will move in and disarm the Japanese
north of the parallel while the British will move in and do the same in the
south. During the conference, representatives from France request the return of all French pre-war colonies in
Indochina. Their request is granted.
9: The
Soviet Union officially pronounces May 9 as
Victory Day. : The Red Army enters Prague. : The German garrison in the
Channel Islands agree to unconditional surrender. : German troops on
Bornholm surrender to Soviet troops.
11: The Soviets capture Prague, the last European capital to be liberated. Eisenhower stops Patton from participating in the liberation. : German
Army Group Centre in
Czechoslovakia surrenders. : War in
New Guinea continues, with Australians attacking
Wewak.
14:
Nagoya, Japan, is heavily bombed. : Fighting in the southern Philippines continues.
21: SS Commander
Heinrich Himmler, attempting to pass with a forged identity as a common soldier, is arrested at a checkpoint manned by liberated Soviet POWs acting under command of British forces. He would be remanded to British custody on 23 May and there correctly identified.
23: British forces capture and arrest the members of what was left of the
Flensburg government. This was the German government formed by Reich President Karl Dönitz after the suicides of both
Adolf Hitler and Joseph Goebbels. : Heavy bombing of
Yokohama, an important port and naval base. :
Heinrich Himmler, head of the notorious SS, dies of suicide via cyanide pill.
29: Fighting breaks out in Syria and Lebanon, as nationalists demand freedom from French control.
June 1945
June 1945
1st
15th
2: Air Group 87 aircraft from
USS Ticonderoga strike airfields on
Kyushu, Japan, in an attempt to stop special attack aircraft from taking off.[1]
5: The Allies agree to divide Germany into four areas of control (American, British, French and Soviet). : The U.S. fleet under
William Halsey, Jr., suffers widespread damage from a huge Pacific
typhoon.
11:
Schiermonnikoog, a Dutch island, is the last part of Europe freed by Allied troops.
13: The Australians capture
Brunei. : Japanese Admiral
Ota Minoru, along with thousands of his surrounded Naval brigade, commits ritual suicide for failing to defend Okinawa, Japan.[1]
28: The Japanese battleships
Haruna and
Ise are sunk by aircraft from US
Task Force 38 while in shallow anchorage at Kure Naval Base.
30: The
USS Indianapolis is sunk shortly after midnight by a Japanese submarine after having delivered atomic bomb material to
Tinian. Because of poor communications, the ship's whereabouts are unknown for some time and many of its men drown or are attacked by sharks in the next four days.
31: U.S. conducts air attacks on the cities of
Kobe and
Nagoya in Japan.
August 1945
August 1945
1st
15th
1: Ukrainian insurgents attack the police station in
Baligrod,
Poland. Polish soldiers defend the station, driving off the attackers, who torch several houses as they retreat
8: The Soviet Union declares war on Japan; the
Soviet invasion of Manchuria begins about an hour later which includes landings on the
Kuril Islands. The Japanese have been
evacuating in anticipation of this.
10: The Japanese government announced that a message had been sent to the Allies accepting the terms of the Potsdam Declaration provided that it "does not comprise any demand that prejudices the prerogatives of the Emperor as sovereign ruler."
14: Japanese military personnel and right-wingers
attempt to overthrow their government and prevent the inevitable surrender. : The last day of United States Force combat actions. All units are frozen in place.
15:
Emperor Hirohito issues a radio broadcast announcing the
Surrender of Japan; though the surrender seems to be "unconditional", the Emperor's status is still open for discussion. :
Victory over Japan Day celebrations take place worldwide.
16: Emperor Hirohito issues an
Imperial Rescript ordering Japanese forces to cease fire.
17:
Indonesia declares independence from Japan. :
General Order No. 1 for the surrender of Japan is approved by President Truman.
19: At a spontaneous non-communist meeting in
Hanoi,
Ho Chi Minh and the
Viet Minh assume a leading role in the movement to wrest power from the French. With the Japanese still in control of Indochina in the interim,
Bảo Đại goes along because he thinks that the Viet Minh are still working with the American OSS and could guarantee independence for Vietnam. Later, Ho Chi Minh's guerrillas occupy Hanoi and proclaim a provisional government. : Hostilities between Chinese Nationalists and Chinese Communists break into the open.
20: Nazi collaborator
Vidkun Quisling went on trial in Oslo, Norway.
22: Japanese armies surrender to the Red Army in Manchuria.
27: Japanese armies in Burma surrender at Rangoon ceremonies.
9: The Japanese troops in China formally surrender.[10]
12: Japanese rule of Korea ends after Governor General
Nobuyuki Abe stands down.
13: British forces under Major-General
Douglas Gracey's 20th Indian Division, some 26,000 men in all, arrive in
Saigon to disarm and accept the surrender of the Japanese Occupation Forces in Vietnam south of the
16th parallel. 180,000 Chinese Nationalist soldiers, mainly poor peasants, arrive in
Hanoi to disarm and accept surrender north of the line. After looting Vietnamese villages during their entire march down from China, they then proceed to loot Hanoi.
16: The Japanese garrison in Hong Kong officially signs the instrument of surrender.
22: The British rearm 1,400 French soldiers from Japanese internment camps around Saigon. In Saigon, on the night of 24 September, a mob composed of Viet-Minh militants and sympathizers attacks French colonial administration and kills around 150 European civilians. An estimated 20,000 French civilians live in Saigon.
29: US General
Robert Milchrist Cannon accepts the surrender of arms from Japanese Navy and Army soldiers on the islands of Miyako and Ishigaki at
Sakishima Gunto.
October 1945
1: In
Southern Vietnam, a purely bilateral British/French agreement recognizes French administration of the southern zone. In
northern Vietnam, Chinese troops go on a "rampage".
Hồ's Việt Minh are hopelessly ill-equipped to deal with it.
The non fraternization directive for U.S. troops against German civilians was rescinded. Previously even speaking to a German could lead to court martial, except for "small children", these had been exempt in June 1945.
15: Former Prime Minister
Pierre Laval is executed by the French Provisional Government.
21 US Supreme Court Justice
Robert H. Jackson opens for the prosecution with a speech lasting several hours, leaving a deep impression on both the court and the public.
26 The Hossbach Memorandum (of a conference in which Hitler explained his war plans) is presented.
29 The film "Nazi concentration camps" is screened.
30 Witness Erwin von Lahousen testifies that Keitel and von Ribbentrop gave orders for the murder of Poles, Jews, and Russian prisoners of war.
Elsewhere
29: The prohibition against marriage between GIs and Austrian women was rescinded on November 29. Later it would be rescinded for German women too. Black soldiers serving in the army were not allowed to marry white women, (in the case that they remained in the army) so they were restricted until 1948 when the prohibition against interracial marriages was removed.
December 1945
Nuremberg
11 The film The Nazi Plan is screened, showing long-term planning and preparations for war by the Nazis.
Elsewhere
28: The US Coast Guard was transferred under the US Treasury Department.[1]
The US prohibition against food shipments to Germany is rescinded.[11] "
CARE Package shipments to individuals remained prohibited until 5 June 1946".[12]
Aftermath
January 1946
Nuremberg
3 Witness
Otto Ohlendorf, former head of Einsatzgruppe D, detachedly admits to the murder of around 90,000 Jews.
Witness
Dieter Wisliceny describes the organisation of RSHA Department IV-B-4, in charge of the Final Solution.
7 Witness and former SS-Obergruppenführer
Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski admits to the organized mass murder of Jews and other groups in the Soviet Union.
28 Witness
Marie-Claude Vaillant-Couturier, member of the French Resistance and concentration camp survivor, testifies on the Holocaust, becoming the first Holocaust survivor to do so.
February 1946
Nuremberg
11–12 Witness and former Field Marshal
Friedrich Paulus, who had been secretly brought to Nuremberg, testifies on the question of waging a war of aggression.
14 The Soviet prosecutors try to blame the
Katyn massacre on the Germans.
19 The film Cruelties of the German-Fascist Intruders, detailing the atrocities which took place in the extermination camps, is screened.
27 Witness
Abraham Sutzkever testifies on the murder of almost 80,000 Jews in Vilnius by the Germans occupying the city on the afternoon of 1 October.
March 1946
Nuremberg
8 The first witness for the defense testifies – former General
Karl Bodenschatz.
15 Witness
Rudolf Höss, former commandant of Auschwitz, confirms that Kaltenbrunner had never been there, but admits to having carried out mass murder.
Tokyo
29 The
International Military Tribunal for the Far East (IMTFE), also known as the Tokyo Trials or the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal, is convened to try the leaders of the Empire of Japan for "Class A" crimes, which were reserved for those who participated in a joint conspiracy to start and wage war.
May 1946
Nuremberg
21 : Witness
Ernst von Weizsäcker explains the German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact of 1939, including its secret protocol detailing the division of Eastern Europe between Germany and the Soviet Union.
Elsewhere
9:
Victor Emmanuel III abdicates the Italian throne, one of the last Axis leaders left in power.
June 1946
Nuremberg
20 :
Albert Speer takes the stand. He is the only defendant to take personal responsibility for his actions.
1–2 The court hears six witnesses testifying on the Katyn massacre; the Soviets fail to pin the blame for the event on Germany.
2 Admiral
Chester W. Nimitz provides written testimony regarding attacks on merchant vessels without warning, admitting that Germany was not alone in these attacks, as the US did the same.
4 Final statements for the defense.
26 Final statements for the prosecution.
30 Start of the trial of the "criminal organizations".
Elsewhere
4:
Kielce pogrom, the last atrocity of the Holocaust.
29: Start of the
1946 Paris Peace Conference to end the state of war between the UN and the Axis nations besides Germany.
August 1946
Nuremberg
31 statements by the defendants.
September–October 1946
Nuremberg
1: The court adjourns.
30: September–1 October The sentencing occurs, taking two days, with the individual sentences read out on October 1
15: Two hours before his scheduled execution,
Hermann Göring committed suicide.[13]
16 All other war criminals sentenced to death are hanged.
Elsewhere
15 October: End of the Paris peace conference.
December 31, 1946
U.S.
President Truman declares: "Although a state of war still exists, it is at this time possible to declare, and I find it to be in the public interest to declare, that hostilities have terminated. Now, therefore, I, Harry S. Truman, President of the United States of America, do hereby proclaim the cessation of hostilities of World War II, effective twelve o'clock noon, December 31, 1946."
February 10, 1947
The United Nations signs the
Paris peace accords with Italy, Bulgaria, Finland, Hungary, and Romania, technically ending World War II for them.
December 23, 1948
Japanese "Class A" war criminals, including two former Prime Ministers, are put to death.
October 19, 1951
End of state of war with Germany was granted by the U.S. Congress, after a request by President Truman on 9 July. In the
Petersberg Agreement of November 22, 1949, it was noted that the West German government wanted an end to the state of war, but the request could not be granted. The U.S. state of war with Germany was being maintained for legal reasons, and though it was softened somewhat it was not suspended since "the U.S. wants to retain a legal basis for keeping a U.S. force in Western Germany".
[1]
End of occupation of
West Germany.
West Berlin remained as a special territory. The Eastern quarter of Germany remained annexed by the Allies, but Germany would not legally accept this as a fact until in 1970 when West Germany signed treaties with the Soviet Union (
Treaty of Moscow) and Poland (
Treaty of Warsaw) recognizing the
Oder-Neisse line between Germany and Poland.
1955
Last major repatriation of German
Prisoners of War and German civilians who were used as
forced labor by the Allies after the war, in accordance with the agreement made at the
Yalta conference. Most Prisoners of War held by the U.S., France, and the U.K. had been released by 1949.
October 19, 1956
Japan and the USSR agree to sidestep territorial disputes over the
Kuril Islands and issue a
joint declaration, restoring diplomatic relations and ending de facto hostilities.
Rudolf Heß, the last prisoner held by the UN under the Nuremberg protocols, is found hanged in his room.
Spandau Prison, where he was held alone for many years and one of the few remaining Four Power institutions in Germany, is demolished the same year.
January 7, 1989
Emperor Shōwa, known in life as
Hirohito, dies; and is the last Axis leader to die. He is succeeded by
Akihito.
September 12, 1990
The United States, the USSR, the United Kingdom, and France, together with the governments of East and West Germany, sign the
Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany, the final treaty ending the war, paving the way for German reunification. The Four Powers renounce all rights they formerly held in Germany, including those regarding the city of Berlin.
March 15, 1991
The
Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany goes into effect. The nominal military occupation of Germany by the Four Powers—the last vestige of the World War II Allies—ends, and German sovereignty is restored.
Unexploded ordnance, such as mines and bombs, still turn up from time to time, and have, on rare occasions, caused death and injury. As of the 75th anniversary of the end of the war in 2020, tens of thousands of veterans of the conflict are still alive.
^Keating, J.K.; Harvey, D.W.
"Site Security"(PDF). History of the Plutonium Production Facilities at the Hanford Site Historic District, 1943–1990. Archived from
the original(PDF) on November 10, 2006. Retrieved April 27, 2007.
^ Swanston, Alexander; Swanston, Malcolm. The Historical atlas of World War 2. p. 323.