Seventy-Five Years Ago: The Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact
German Foreign Minister Joachim Von Ribbentrop (left), Soviet leader Josef Stalin, and Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov (right) meet at the Kremlin on August 23, 1939, to sign the nonaggression pact.
Molotov signs the treaty. For the Soviet Union, the pact bought time to rebuild its military before what appeared to be an inevitable conflict.
Von Ribbentrop shakes hands with Stalin after signing the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation, and Demarcation, the continuation of the nonaggression pact.
The final page, in German, of the Additional Secret Protocol, which divided Central and Eastern Europe into "spheres of influence."
The same document in Russian
A map published by "Izvestiya" on September 18, 1939, one day after the Soviet invasion of Poland, shows the demarcation line determined by the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact.
German and Soviet troops meet at the demarcation line, or the so-called "Border of Peace," in September 1939.
Soviet Commissar Vladimir Borovitsky meets with German officers to discuss the partition of Poland between the two armies at the captured town of Brest-Litovsk (present-day Brest, Belarus).
German and Soviet soldiers meet in Brest on September 22, 1939.
Soviet and German troops in the captured town of Brest, where they staged a joint victory parade on September 22, 1939
Soviet Commissar Borovitsky and one of his soldiers stand beside an armored car in Brest.
German Lieutenant Colonel Gustav-Adolf Riebel shakes hands with Brigadier Semyon Krivoshein during the joint Nazi-Soviet victory parade in Brest.
A British perspective on the nonaggression pact in a cartoon by David Low, published in the "Evening Standard" on September 20, 1939
Part of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact published in the Soviet newspaper "Pravda" on September 28, 1939
Stalin and von Ribbentrop on the cover of "Newsweek" on October 9, 1939
Molotov (left) in Berlin on November 14, 1940. The nonaggression pact remained in effect until Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941.