Young French women celebrate VE-Day decked out in the flags of the U.S., France, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union. |
Note: Adapted from a post on May 7, 2010.
On May 7, 1945 representatives of the German High Command signed articles of unconditional surrender to
the Allies at a French school house in Rheims used
as the Supreme Headquarters Allied
Expeditionary Forces (SHAEF).
It had been apparent for weeks
that the German position was hopeless.
Pressed on all sides, the Soviets
were about to take Berlin when Adolf Hitler committed suicide in his
bunker leaving Grand Admiral Karl Donitz as his successor as President
of the Riech. Dönitz realized his
only duty was ending the war as quickly as possible on the best possible terms
for Germany. He immediately began back
channel negotiations.
Meanwhile German armies began surrendering
regionally. German forces in Italy lay
down arms on May 1. Berlin surrendered
on May 2 and two separate armies north of Berlin capitulated.
On May 4 Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery accepted
the unconditional surrender of all German forces in Holland, Northern Germany,
Denmark and all naval forces in the area.
General Admiral Hans-Georg von Friedberg, acting on orders from Dönitz initially offered surrender to Western
allies only leaving the option for this troops to turn around to face the
Russians. Montgomery coldly refused
leaving the Germans no other choice by surrender.
The same day troops in Bavaria, the state
whose mountains were once considered as a fall back position for a drawn out
campaign of guerilla resistance, surrendered.
From the Channel Islands—held by Germany even after the Normandy
Invasion—to Prague one after another German forces capitulated.
Dönitz was informed that any surrender had to be
conducted by a representative of the German High Command. This was because the Allies did not want a
repeat of the Armistice of the First World War which was signed
by the government, not the military leading to the charge that the Army had
been “stabbed in the back,” a key propaganda point when Germany re-armed.
On May 6 Dönitz dispatched Colonel General
Alfred Jodl, Chief of the German General Staff to Reims with orders to
offer surrender to Western forces only—exactly the same terms turned down my
Montgomery two days earlier. Allied
Supreme Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower harshly excoriated Jodl and bluntly
demanded unconditional surrender to all allies or face continued prosecution of
the war. Informed of the terms, Dönitz
wired his consent.
At 2:41 local time Jodl signed the Instrument
of Surrender. Eisenhower pointedly
and as an intended snub did not personally accept or sign for the Allies
assigning his Chief of Staff, the brusque General Walter Bedell Smith, to be principal signer for the
Allies. Also signing was General Ivan Susloparov, Soviet liaison to SHAEF. Suspoparaov signed before he could get full
authorization for his government so it was understood that a second surrender
would be signed with the Soviets on the Eastern front. French
Major General François Sevez signed as the official witness.
The surrender of all hostile forces was set for May 8, 11:01 pm Central European Time. Shortly after midnight on May 8 the
second surrender signing was conducted at the seat of the Soviet Military Administration in Berlin. Marshal
Georgy Zhukov, of the Soviet High
Command was the principal Allied signatory and was joined by British Air Chief Marshal Arthur William Tedder,
as Deputy Supreme Commander SHAEF. American
Lt. General Carl Spaz, Commander of United States Strategic Air
Forces in Europe; and General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny of the
First French Army were witnesses. Signing for the Germans were Admiral Hans-Georg von Friedeburg, Commander-in-Chief of the Navy; Colonel-General Hans-Jürgen Stumpff of the Luftwaffe; and Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel, Chief of Staff of the German Armed Forces also signing on behalf of the Army. The signing was completed fifteen minutes
after midnight.
By the terms signed in Rheims, fighting had already ceased just over an
hour earlier.
News of the end of the war in Europe broke on May 8, with spontaneous
celebrations erupting across Europe and North America. Street celebrations in Britain and France
were especially jubilant.
President Harry Truman announced the end of the war in a somber
broadcast announcing that “the Flags of Freedom fly all over Europe today,”
while reminding listeners that the war against Japan continued. The knowledge
that a long bloody war against Japan might still stretch ahead with American
troops taking most of the casualties in a final assault against the home
islands somewhat restrained celebrations in this country.
This knowledge also haunted many allied troops in Europe, who knew that
they might be shipped to the Pacific. Indeed some Air Force and Naval units
were almost immediately re-directed and some of the crack U.S. Airborn, Infanrty, and Armored divisions
which had been in the thick of fighting for months were slated for
re-assignment, as were many individual G.I.s
whose units would be dissolved.
Not all fighting ended on May 8. Field
Marshal Ferdinand Schörner of the Army Group Centre fought on in Austria
and Czechoslovakia, but the
Soviets turned all of their considerable might against him and by May 15 ceased
all offensive operations with mop up in Czechoslovakia completed.
The last battle in the war took
place on May 15 in Slovenia and the
last shots were fired on the Dutch island
of Texel where Ukrainian prisoners of war had rebelled against the German
occupiers on April 5 and kept up a guerilla campaign against them. The German garrison had simply been forgotten
in the shuffle and was afraid if they surrendered to the Ukrainians they would
be executed en masse.
A final bit of business was
dissolving the German Government under Dönitz.
The Allies had concentrated so hard on getting the armed forces to lay
down their arms, that they had neglected to demand that civil authority be
transferred to them. Worse, they had
neglected to outline how a military occupation would work. On May 28 a rather junior British officer was
dispatched to the town of Flensburg to read to Dönitz Eisenhower’s edict dissolving the government and arresting all of
its members.
In the meantime, local commanders took charge
where they were. On June 9 the Allies
officially signed a Declaration Regarding the Defeat of Germany and the
Assumption of Supreme Authority by Allied Powers taking over all civil
authority at all levels in occupied Germany.
Details of the shape of the occupation—and of the
post war world—were agreed to at the Potsdam Conference by
Truman, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill (replaced after this
agreement was reached at the Conference by Clement Attlee
after Churchill’s stunning electoral loss) and Soviet leader Josef Stalin. The agreement divided
Germany, and its capital of Berlin in zones of Allied control.
On December 13, 1946 President
Truman finally declared that hostilities between the United States and Germany
had ceased.
Yet the war was not technically
over. Even after the establishment of
the German Federal Republic (West Germany) as a U.S. ally and the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) in 1949, the U.S. felt it
needed the fiction of an official state of war to maintain authority for
stationing troops in Germany.
Congress adopted a resolution declaring a formal end to hostilities
in 1951. Official occupation continued
until 1955 when the West German government was given full sovereignty.
In September 1990, more than 45
years after the surrender the Four Powers—the U.S., Britain, France, and the
U.S.S.R—finally signed a Treaty on the
Final Settlement with Respect to Germany with both German Federal Republic
and the German Democratic Republic which allowed the two German states to
unite, which they did on October 3, 1990.
The war was finally, officially over.
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