Yalta Conference and the Post-War [Deep Dive] - February 4th, 2026

On February 4, 1945, the leaders of the Allied powers convened at the Yalta Conference to decide the future of Europe as World War II neared its end. This pivotal meeting between Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Joseph Stalin set the stage for the Cold War, particularly regarding the sovereignty of Poland and the division of Germany. This episode of Deep Dive also explores the lives of three vastly different yet influential figures born on this day: civil rights icon Rosa Parks, aviation pioneer Charles Lindbergh, and theatrical rock legend Alice Cooper. Furthermore, we look back at the digital revolution sparked in a Harvard dormitory on February 4, 2004, when Mark Zuckerberg launched Facebook, a platform that would eventually redefine global communication with over three billion users.

[00:00] Claire Donovan: Hi there, I'm Claire Donovan.
[00:02] Daniel Brooks: And I'm Daniel Brooks.
[00:04] Daniel Brooks: Today on Deep Dive, we're looking back at a date that really changed the map of the world and the way we connect with one another.
[00:12] Claire Donovan: It's a heavy day in the history of international relations, Daniel.
[00:17] Claire Donovan: On February 4th, 1945,
[00:20] Claire Donovan: The Yalta Conference began.
[00:23] Claire Donovan: This was where the big three, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Joseph Stalin met in Crimea at the Lovatia Palace to decide what a post-World War II Europe would actually look like.
[00:37] Daniel Brooks: The stakes were incredibly high, Claire.
[00:40] Daniel Brooks: While the Allies were winning the war, you know, the unity between the Western powers and the Soviet Union was already showing some serious cracks.
[00:49] Daniel Brooks: At Yalta, they were hashing out the occupation zones of Germany and the future of Poland.
[00:54] Daniel Brooks: It was essentially the opening act of the Cold War, despite the outward appearance of cooperation between the leaders.
[01:02] Claire Donovan: Exactly.
[01:03] Claire Donovan: Stalin wanted a sphere of influence in Eastern Europe for security, while Roosevelt and Churchill were pushing for democratic elections.
[01:12] Claire Donovan: That tension over Poland's sovereignty specifically really foreshadowed the decades of standoff that followed the fall of Berlin.
[01:21] Claire Donovan: It's a reminder of how quickly alliances can shift when a common enemy starts to fade.
[01:28] Daniel Brooks: Right.
[01:29] Daniel Brooks: Moving from the global stage to individual legacies, today is also the birthday of one of the most significant figures in the American Civil Rights Movement.
[01:40] Daniel Brooks: Rosa Parks was born on this day in 1913.
[01:44] Claire Donovan: Her legacy is so often simplified to just one moment on a bus in Montgomery back in 1955,
[01:51] Claire Donovan: but she was a lifelong activist, Daniel.
[01:54] Claire Donovan: She worked as a secretary for the local NAACP and was deeply involved in labor and workplace protections long before the boycott ever began.
[02:04] Claire Donovan: Her refusal to give up her seat wasn't a random act of exhaustion.
[02:07] Claire Donovan: It was a calculated, courageous stand against a segregated system.
[02:12] Daniel Brooks: That's remarkable to compare her quiet, firm resolve with another birthday today.
[02:18] Daniel Brooks: Charles Lindbergh, born in 1902.
[02:21] Daniel Brooks: He was a massive global celebrity for his 1927 solo flight across the Atlantic in the spirit of St. Louis.
[02:28] Daniel Brooks: From an urban planning perspective, his flight helped prove the feasibility of commercial aviation,
[02:35] Daniel Brooks: which would eventually transform how we build our cities and transit hubs.
[02:39] Claire Donovan: True, though Lindbergh is such a complicated figure, Daniel.
[02:42] Claire Donovan: While his contributions to aviation are undeniable, he later faced immense criticism for his isolationist views
[02:49] Claire Donovan: and his opposition to U.S. involvement in World War II.
[02:53] Claire Donovan: He really illustrates how the heroes of one era can become the controversies of the next,
[02:59] Claire Donovan: depending on the lens of history.
[03:00] Daniel Brooks: That shift in public perception is something we see a lot in modern history,
[03:05] Daniel Brooks: especially with the rise of the digital age.
[03:08] Daniel Brooks: Speaking of which, our fact of the day takes us to February 4, 2004,
[03:13] Daniel Brooks: the day Mark Zuckerberg launched Facebook from his dorm at Harvard.
[03:16] Claire Donovan: It's hard to believe it has been over 20 years since then.
[03:20] Claire Donovan: What started as the Facebook, a simple directory for college students, has ballooned into a platform with over 3 billion users.
[03:31] Claire Donovan: It fundamentally changed how we communicate, how we consume news, and even how political campaigns are run across the globe.
[03:41] Daniel Brooks: And before we wrap up, we have to mention a very different kind of cultural pioneer born today in 1948.
[03:48] Daniel Brooks: Alice Cooper. He basically invented the theatrical shock rock genre.
[03:54] Daniel Brooks: While Lindbergh was conquering the skies and Parks was changing the law,
[03:58] Daniel Brooks: Cooper was redefining what a rock performance could be with his macabre stage shows
[04:03] Daniel Brooks: and hits like Schools Out.
[04:06] Claire Donovan: He really did set the stage for generations of performers who wanted to push the boundaries of pop culture.
[04:14] Claire Donovan: It is a fascinating mix of events for one day, from the high-stakes diplomacy of Yalta to the birth of social media and the evolution of rock and roll.
[04:25] Claire Donovan: I'm Claire Donovan.
[04:26] Daniel Brooks: And I'm Daniel Brooks.
[04:28] Daniel Brooks: Thank you for joining us.
[04:30] Daniel Brooks: You can find more historical dives at deepdive.neuralnewscast.com.
[04:36] Daniel Brooks: Deep dive is AI-assisted, human-reviewed.
[04:39] Daniel Brooks: Explore history every day on Neural Newscast.

Yalta Conference and the Post-War [Deep Dive] - February 4th, 2026
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