COMMON FRONTIER
CZECHS AND RUSSIANS
Rec. 11 a.m. LONDON, Jan. 5. Russia and Czechoslovakia will have a common frontier after the war. Dr. E. Benes gave this first concrete indication of Russia's post-war plans to an informal gathering of Czechs in Cairo, who believe it means that Russia intends to regain and keep Bessarabia and northern Bukovina, which Russia occupied after Rumania's frontiers were withdrawn in 1940.
Dr. Benes said that Marshal Stalin had agreed that all Germans should be expelled from the Sudetenland.
He added: "Now I have seen with my own eyes the tremendous results which the Soviet forces are achieving. I am sure the war will end in 1944."
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXXVII, Issue 4, 6 January 1944, Page 5
Word Count
112COMMON FRONTIER Evening Post, Volume CXXXVII, Issue 4, 6 January 1944, Page 5
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