Trump and Putin could decide the fate of others, Yalta could echo at the summit

The world’s superpowers met at the Black Sea port of Yalta to divide Europe after the Nazi German defeat in 1945. They drawn lines on the map, which tear different countries, effectively lead Eastern Europe into Soviet capture and destroy Poland. And none of those countries were represented. As President Trump prepares to meet President Putin on Friday in Alaska, there is more talk between Ukrainian and European people about each other – and concern. They are not determined to appear, and Trump has said that he plans to interact on “Bhoomi Swap” with Putin in the Ukrainian region. Regarding the division of Berlin, “The Wall Jumper,” Peter Schnider said, “Yalta is a symbol of everything that we are afraid.” In Yalta, the world was divided and “countries were handed over to Stalin,” he said.Yalta, in the Russian-Anexed Crimea itself, is a symbol of how the superpowers can determine the fate of other countries. “This is a moment of an lynchpin when the European world is divided into two and the fate of Europeans in the east has been closed without any possible,” said Ivan Vejvoda, a surb political scientist at the Institute for Human Sciences, said, a research institute in Vienna. “Today’s world is different, but decisions are being made by the third countries, for which this is an existence issue,” said Vejvoda.Putin’s declared objectives do not end with Ukraine. As a revisionist, he wants a new “security architecture” in Europe that recognizes the old Soviet region.The Yalta meeting of the UK, the Soviet Union and the United States, took place in February 1945 after France and Belgium and Germany’s defeat was unavoidable. A conference was followed in Germany after the summit, which re -confirmed the division of Europe in western and Soviet regions.Both Franklin de Roosevelt and Winston Churchill were ill. Many believed that both people were taken from the promises of Joseph Stalin that they would allow free elections in Red Army occupied countries. “Yalta has gone down in history as many things, but it became a dirty word in Eastern Europe,” Since the main theme of the conference was its new boundaries, said Seri Ploki, a professor of Ukrainian history in Harvard.Charles de Gaul, who led free French forces during World War II, was also not invited to Yalta, said Ploki. “Here we see clear similarities between de Gaul and Europe and Poland and Ukraine,” he said. Of course, there are clear differences, Ploki said. Stalin was troubled, but a colleague, who was playing an important role in defeating the Nazis. Roosevelt and Churchill were doing what they could “by the Red Army to improve the situation for already occupied areas.He said, “They were not giving to the Allies, as Stalin wanted, he said.Today, Ploki said, Putin wants Ukraine to hand over Russia occupied areas. Because in 1938, there is another controversial moment in history in Munich, when Neville Chambberlane agreed to eliminate Czechoslovakia with Adolf Hitler, which was not represented in the talks, attempts to maintain peace.Putin’s demand for the Ukrainian region is similar to Hitler’s demand from Czechoslovakia in 1938, said Timothy snider, historians of the Cold War. “If Ukraine is forced to accept the rest of Donbas, it would accept the defensive lines, which had to be checked,” he said. “Hitler’s purpose was to destroy Czechoslovakia,” the snider said, “and Putin aims to destroy Ukraine.”