Lend Lease
LEND LEASE
Lend-lease was a system of U.S. assistance to the Allies in World War II. It was based on a bill of March, 11, 1941, that gave the president of the United States the right to sell, transfer into property, lease, and rent various kinds of weapons or materials to those countries whose defense the president deemed vital to the defense of the United States itself. According to the system, the materials destroyed, lost, or consumed during the war should not be subject to payment after the war. The materials that were not used during the war and that were suitable for civilian consumption should be paid in full or in part, while weapons and war materials could be demanded back. After the United States entered the war, the concept of lend lease, originally a system of unidirectional U.S. aid, was transformed into a system of mutual aid, which involved pooling the resources of the countries in the anti-Hitler coalition (known as the concept of "pool"). Initially authorized for the purpose of aiding Great Britain, in April 1941 the Lend-Lease Act was extended to Greece, Yugoslavia, and China, and, after September 1941, to the Soviet Union. By September, 20, 1945, the date of cancellation of the Lend-Lease Act, American aid had been received by nearly forty countries.
During World War II, the U.S. spent a total of $49.1 billion on the Lend-Lease Act. This included $13.8 billion in aid to Great Britain and $9.5 billion to the USSR. Repayment in kind—called "reverse lend-lease"—was estimated at $7.8 billion, of which $2.2 million was the contribution of the USSR in the form of a discount for transport services.
The Soviet Union received aid on lend-lease principles not only from the United States, but also from the states of the British Commonwealth, primarily Great Britain and Canada. Economic relations between them were adjusted by mutual aid agreements and legalized by special Allies' protocols, renewable annually. The First Protocol was signed in Moscow on October, 1, 1941; the second in Washington (October 6, 1942); the third in London (September 1, 1943); and the fourth in Ottawa (April, 17, 1945). The Fourth Protocol was added by a special agreement between the USSR and the United States called the "Program of October 17, 1944" (or "Milepost"), intended for supplies for use by the Soviet Union in the war against Japan.
On the basis of those documents, the Soviet Union received 18,763 aircraft, 11,567 tanks and self-propelled guns, 7,340 armored vehicles and armored troop-carriers, more than 435,000 trucks and jeeps, 9,641 guns, 2,626 radar, 43,298 radio stations, 548 fighting ships and boats, and 62 cargo ships. The remaining 75 percent of cargoes imported into the USSR consisted of industrial equipment, raw material, and foodstuffs. A significant portion (up to seven percent) of supplies was lost during transportation.
Most of the cargoes sent to the USSR were delivered by three main routes: via Iran, the Far East, and the northern ports Arkhangelsk and Murmansk. The last route was the shortest but also the most dangerous.
After the war the United State cancelled all lend-lease debts except that of the USSR. In 1972 the USSR and the United States signed an agreement that the USSR would pay $722 million of its debt by July 1, 2001.
See also: foreign debt; world war ii; united states, relations with, northern convoys
bibliography
Beaumont, Joan. (1980). Comrades in Arms: British Aid to Russia, 1941–1945. London: Davis-Poynter.
Hall, H. Duncan; Scott, J. D., and Wrigley, C. C. (1956). Studies of Overseas Supply. London: H. M. Stationery Off.
Herring, George C. (1973). Aid to Russia, 1941–1946: Strategy, Diplomacy, the Origins of the Cold War. New York: Columbia University Press.
Jones, Robert Huhn. (1969). The Roads to Russia: United States Lend-Lease to the Soviet Union. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
Van Tuyll, Hubert P. (1989). Feeding the Bear: American Aid to the Soviet Union, 1941–1945. New York: Greenwood Press.
Mikhail Suprun
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Frog Riddles.
Magazine article from: Boy's Quest; 2/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; (1.) Which frog is from Africa and is the forked end of a hammer? (2.) Which frog is elaborately decorated and plays a trumpet-like instrument? (3.) Which frog is a Philistine giant? (4.) Which frog is destructive, harmful, and...
|
|
Frogs.(SCIENCE)
Magazine article from: Weekly Reader, Edition 1 (including Science Spin); 4/1/2008; 700+ words
; ...ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] How Do Frogs Eat? [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] A frog has a sticky tongue...drew a long tongue for my frog. Why do frogs need long tongues...Where might you see a frog? Background Information Frogs can live in water or on...
|
|
Calling frogs indicator of changes 'Canary in the coal mine'
Newspaper article from: Courier News (Elgin, IL); 4/28/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...confirmed to have cricket frogs," Boehmer said. Some frog species are more abundant...for the bullfrog and green frog, most frogs don't like detention ponds...that would bring back the frogs. Fish, a frog's natural predator, might...
|
|
Frogs bring smiles
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 1/28/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...summer; old-fashioned frog-jumping contests. And -- far from poison -- frogs' legs on the menu at French...And hear 12 different frogs and toads (speaking frog and toad) at www.naturesound.com/frogs/frogs.html. Send questions...
|
|
Frog power!(how frogs protect themselves from predators)
Magazine article from: Ranger Rick; 10/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; It's a frog-eat-frog world out there. Most frogs aren't strong enough to fight off an attacker...a big surprise. Really! See the two Amazon leaf frogs above? The lower frog is all tucked in and doesn't look like much of anything...
|
|
Frogs; Everything you need to know to look like you know about...(etc.)
Newspaper article from: The Record (Kitchener, Ontario); 5/17/2008; 700+ words
; ...actors as Kermit the Frog? Scientific mumbo-jumbo: Frogs and toads are amphibians...regularly shed their skin. Frogs then eat the skin. Frog song: A male frog vocalizes...complete.Voila, we have frog. It's uncertain how long frogs live in the wild, though...
|
|
Frog Sounds Recording
Transcript from: NPR Morning Edition; 8/27/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...stimulus for tree frogs to start calling. The squirrel tree frog clinging to a limb...have to imagine that frogs don't say to each other: gee, that frog has beautiful eyes...and other one a pig frog. They certainly sound...there. SOUNDBITE OF FROGS MIMICKING CRICKETS...
|
|
Frogs and toads.
Magazine article from: Science Weekly; 10/24/2003; 700+ words
; ...called camouflage. Frogs and toads help farmers...destroying insects. One frog can eat as many as...warts from touching a frog or toad. Frogs do not drink. They...blowing out your sticky frog tongue! DID YOU KNOW?? Some types of frogs can lay up to 1000...
|
|
Frogs and toads are your friends; get out and meet some of them
Newspaper article from: Concord Monitor; 6/5/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...a great time to go frog and toad watching...breed and lay eggs. Frogs and toads always return...in the same place. Frog ears (which look...of other kinds of frogs - otherwise it could...or early July wood frog tadpoles will have...teeny- tiny wood frogs less than an inch...
|
|
Frogs and toads are good low-maintenance pets.
Newspaper article from: Orange County Register (Santa Ana, CA); 10/17/2006; 700+ words
; ...amphibians are for you. FROG VS. TOAD: Although...differences between frogs and toads, said...branches as much as frogs. If you have a 4-inch frog, you don't need...between $40-$60. Frogs and toads mainly...Depending on the frog, you can feed them...
|
|
frog
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
frog common name for an...the order Anura. Frogs are found all over...dozen families of frogs; the term "true frog" is often applied...many of the commonest frogs of North America...and the leopard frog, R. pipiens. Species...
|
|
Frogs
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science
...commonly referred to as frogs. Frogs and their ancestors are...terrestrial vertebrates. A frog-like fossil animal more...locomotion. Among aquatic frogs, the hind limbs also provide...propulsion for swimming. The frog skeleton has been evolutionarily...
|
|
The Frogs
Book article from: Contemporary Musicians
The Frogs Folk rock band For the Record … The folk rock band the Frogs have been performing and recording their masterful...brothers Jimmy and Dennis Flemion at the helm, the Frogs began performing their own brand of folk rock music...
|
|
tree frog
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
tree frog name for any of the...or shrub-inhabiting frogs of the family Hylidae...In one group of tree frogs the eggs are carried...North American cricket frog ( Acris crepitans ), are not arboreal. Tree frogs are classified in the...
|
|
Frog’s-bit Family
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science
Frog ’ s-bit Family The frog ’ s-bit or tape-grass family (Hydrocharitaceae...in fresh and marine waters. There are about 100 species in the frog ’ s-bit family, distributed among 15 genera. Hydrocharitaceae...
|