14 January 1943 A.D. Roosevelt, Churchill and de
Gaulle Hold Casablanca Conference
Editors. “Roosevelt and Churchill begin Casablanca
Conference.” History.com. N.d. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/roosevelt-and-churchill-begin-casablanca-conference. Accessed 13 Jan 2015.
Roosevelt and Churchill begin Casablanca Conference
On this day, Prime Minister Winston Churchill
and President Franklin D. Roosevelt meet in Casablanca, Morocco, along with the
Combined Chiefs of Staff, to discuss strategy and study the next phase of the
war. This meeting marked the first time an American president left American
soil during wartime. Participants also included leaders of the French
government-in-exile, Gen. Charles de Gaulle and Gen. Henri Giraud, who were
assured of a postwar united France.
The success of the North
Africa invasion, which resulted in the defeat of Vichy French forces, compelled
President Roosevelt to meet with Prime Minister Churchill (Joseph
Stalin, president and dictator of
the USSR, declined an invitation to attend) to confer on how best to push
forward an end to the war. Top priority was given to destroying German U-boat
patrols in the Atlantic and launching combined bombing missions. Most
important, in a controversial declaration, they announced that the Allies would
accept only unconditional surrender from the Axis powers, a decision that
caused consternation on all sides as too extreme and allowing too little room
for political maneuvering. The meeting was kept secret--even by newspapers that
knew about it--until the participants left Morocco on January 27.
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