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MINISTER CHURCHILL'S ANNOUNCEMENT IN PARLIAMENT OF GERMANY'S UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER
May
8, 1945 Parliamentary
Debates. Mr.
Speaker, I have just had the duty of making an official statement to the nation
and the British Empire and Commonwealth, and I thought it might perhaps be convenient
to the House if I repeated it. Yesterday
morning, at 2.41, at General Eisenhower's headquarters, General Jodl, the representative
of the German High Command and of Grand Admiral Doenitz, the designated head of
the German State, signed the act of unconditional surrender of all German land,
sea and air forces in Europe to the Allied Expeditionary Force, and, simultaneously,
to the Soviet High Command. General Bedell Smith, who is the Chief of the Staff
to the Allied Expeditionary Force-and not, as I stated in a slip just now, Chief
of the Staff to the United States Army-and General François Sevez, signed the
document on behalf of the Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force,
and General Susloparoff signed on behalf of the Russian High Command. Today
this agreement will be ratified and confirmed at Berlin, where Air Chief Marshal
Tedder, Deputy Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force, and General
de Lattre de Tassigny, representing the French Republic, will sign on behalf of
General Eisenhower, and General Zhukov will sign on behalf of the Soviet High
Command. The German representatives will be Field Marshal Keitel, Chief of the-High
Command, and the Commanders-in-Chief of the German Army, Navy, and Air forces.
Hostilities
will end officially at one minute after midnight to-night, Tuesday, 8th May, but
in the interests of saving lives the "Cease Fire" began yesterday to be sounded
all along the fronts, and I should not forget to mention that our dear Channel
Islands, the only part of His Majesty's Dominions that has been in the hands of
the German foe, are also to be freed to-day. The Germans are still in places resisting
Russian troops, but should they continue to do so after midnight, they will, of
course, deprive themselves of the protection of the laws of war and will be attacked
from all quarters by the Allied troops. It is not surprising that on such long
fronts and in the existing disorder of the enemy that the orders of the German
High Command should not in every case have been obeyed. This does not, in our
opinion, constitute any reason for withholding from the nation the facts communicated
to us by General Eisenhower of the unconditional surrender already signed at Rheims,
nor should it prevent us from celebrating to-day, and to-morrow-Wednesday-as Victory-in-Europe
Days, and I think that to-morrow it may be specially desirable for us to emphasise
the debt we owe to our Soviet Ally, whose main celebrations will be taking place
to-morrow. The
German war, Mr. Speaker, is therefore at an end. After years of intense preparation
Germany hurled herself on Poland at the beginning of September, 1939, and in pursuance
of our guarantee to Poland, and in common action with the French Republic, Great
Britain and the British Empire and Commonwealth of Nations declared war against
this foul aggression. After gallant France had been struck down we from this Island
and from our united Empire maintained the struggle single-handed for a whole year
until we were joined by the military might of Soviet Russia and later by the overwhelming
power and resources of the United States of America. Finally almost the whole
world was combined against the evildoers, who are now prostrate before us. Sir,
our gratitude to our splendid Allies goes forth from all our hearts. We may allow
ourselves a brief period of rejoicing, but let us not forget for a moment the
toils and efforts that lie ahead. Japan, with all her treachery and greed, remains
unsubdued. The injuries she has inflicted upon Great Britain, the United States
and other countries and her detestable cruelties call forth justice and retribution.
We must now devote all our strength and resources to the completion of our tasks
both at home and abroad. Advance Britannia! Long Live the Cause of Freedom! God
Save the King! Sir,
that is the message which I have been instructed to deliver to the British
Nation and Commonwealth. I have only two or three sentences to add. They will
convey to the House my deep gratitude to this House of Commons which has proved
itself the strongest foundation for waging war that has ever been seen in the
whole of our long history. We have all of us made our mistakes, but the strength
of the Parliamentary institution has been shown to enable it at the same moment
to preserve all the title deeds of democracy while waging war in the most stern
and protracted form. I wish to give my hearty thanks to men of all Parties, to
everyone in every part of the House where they sit, for the way in which the liveliness
of Parliamentary institutions has been maintained under the fire of the enemy
and for the way in which we have been able to persevere-and we could have persevered
much longer if the need had been-till all the objectives which we set before us
of the procuring of the unlimited and unconditional surrender of the enemy had
been achieved. I recollect well at the end of the last war, more than a quarter
of a century ago, that the House, when it heard the long list of the surrender
terms, the armistice terms, which had been imposed upon the Germans did not feel
inclined for debate or business but desired to offer thanks to Almighty God, to
the Great Power which seems to shape and design the fortunes of nations and the
destiny of man, and I therefore beg, Sir, with your permission to move: "That
this House do now attend at the Church of St. Margaret, Westminster, to give humble
and reverent thanks to Almighty God for our deliverance from the threat of German
domination."
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