Second Quebec Conference: Difference between revisions
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| image = Prime Minister's Reception at the Chateau Frontenac during the Octagon Conference.jpg |
| image = Prime Minister's Reception at the Chateau Frontenac during the Octagon Conference.jpg |
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| caption = The Prime Minister's Reception hosted at the [[Château Frontenac]] |
| caption = The Prime Minister's Reception hosted at the [[Château Frontenac]] |
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| country = {{flag|Canada|1921}} |
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Revision as of 00:54, 17 September 2018
Second Quebec Conference Octagon | |
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Host country | Canada |
Date | September 12–16, 1944 |
Cities | Quebec City, Canada |
Participants | United Kingdom United States |
The Second Quebec Conference (codenamed "OCTAGON") was a high-level military conference held during World War II by the British and American governments. The conference was held in Quebec City, September 12 – September 16, 1944, and was the second conference to be held in Quebec, after "QUADRANT" in August 1943. The chief representatives were Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Combined Chiefs of Staff. Canada's Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King was the host but did not attend the key meetings.
Agreements were reached on the following topics: Allied occupation zones in defeated Germany, the Morgenthau Plan to demilitarize Germany, continued U.S. Lend-Lease aid to Britain, and the role of the Royal Navy in the war against Japan. Based on the Hyde Park Aide-Mémoire, they made plans to drop the atomic bomb to Japan.
See also
Further reading
- Bernier, Serge. "Mapping Victory," Beaver (2008) 88#1 pp 69-72
- John L. Chase "The Development of the Morgenthau Plan Through the Quebec Conference" The Journal of Politics, Vol. 16, No. 2 (May, 1954), pp. 324-359
Primary sources
- United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States, Conference at Quebec, 1944