WWII Decisions Online · Ribbentrop in Moscow — the Accord of 28 September
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27 - 28 September 1939
Kremlin, Moscow
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Ribbentrop in Moscow — the Accord of 28 September

Joachim von Ribbentrop, German Foreign Minister

The German-Soviet Pact of 23 August 1939 had provided in its secret protocol for a partition of Poland: German sphere west of the Narew-Vistula-San rivers, Soviet sphere to the east. But the rapid evolution of the conflict alters the calculations. By 17 September the Red Army has advanced to the agreed line; German troops have even slightly overshot it around Brzesc-Lublin. A rectification is needed.

More important: Hitler wishes to annex further Polish territory (the Lublin mining region) to Germany, while Stalin wants Lithuania brought into his sphere — a neutral country not mentioned in the August protocol. On 25 September, Stalin proposes to Berlin an exchange: Lithuania into the Soviet sphere in return for Polish territories (Lublin, Suwalki) for Germany.

On 27 September, , 46, German Foreign Minister since February 1938, arrives in Moscow aboard a special Junkers Ju 290 with a delegation of 30. He is received at the Kremlin at 10 p.m. on 27 September by Stalin himself, by Molotov, and by ambassador . The negotiations run all night. Stalin hosts a banquet at which they toast "the new German-Soviet friendship sealed in blood."

Moscow, 28 September 1939, you are Ribbentrop: what public legal framing for the deal with Stalin?

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