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Unconditional surrender
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==Examples== ===Banu Qurayza during Muhammad's era=== {{Main|Banu Qurayza}} After the [[Battle of the Trench]], in which the Muslims tactically overcame their opponents while suffering very few casualties, efforts to defeat the Muslims failed, and [[Islam]] became influential in the region. As a consequence, the Muslim army besieged the neighbourhood of the [[Siege of the Banu Qurayza|Banu Qurayza tribe]], leading to their unconditional surrender.<ref name="Watt, pp. 167β174" >Watt, ''Muhammad: Prophet and Statesman'', pp. 167β174.</ref > All the men, apart from a few who converted to [[Islam]], were executed, while the women and children were [[Ma malakat aymanukum|enslaved]].<ref name="Peterson" >Peterson, ''Muhammad: the prophet of God'', pp. 125β127.</ref ><ref name="Ramadan140" >Ramadan, ''In the Footsteps of the Prophet'', pp. 140f.</ref ><ref >Hodgson, ''The Venture of Islam'', vol. 1, p. 191.</ref ><ref name="Brown, p. 81" >Brown, ''A New Introduction to Islam'', p. 81.</ref ><ref name="Lings229" >Lings, ''Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources'', pp. 229β233.</ref > The historicity of the incident has been questioned.<ref > For details and references see [[ Banu Qurayza #Doubts about the historicity of the event |discussion]] in [[ Banu Qurayza |main article]]. </ref> ===Napoleon Bonaparte=== When [[Napoleon Bonaparte]] escaped from his enforced exile on the island of [[Elba]], one of the steps that the delegates of the European powers at the [[Congress of Vienna]] took was to issue a statement on 13 March 1815 [[s:Declaration at the Congress of Vienna|declaring Napoleon Bonaparte]] to be an outlaw. The text includes the following paragraphs: {{quotation| By thus breaking [[Treaty of Fontainebleau (1814)|the convention]] which had established him in the island of Elba, Bonaparte destroys the only legal title on which his existence depended, and by appearing again in France, with projects of confusion and disorder, he has deprived himself of the protection of the law, and has manifested to the universe that there can be neither peace nor truce with him. The powers consequently declare, that Napoleon Bonaparte has placed himself without the pale of civil and social relations; and that, as an enemy and disturber of the tranquillity of the world, he has rendered himself liable to public vengeance.|Plenipotentiaries of the high powers who signed the [[Treaty of Paris (1814)]].<ref>{{cite book|first=Edward |last=Baines |year=1818 |title=History of the Wars of the French Revolution, from the breaking out of the wars in 1792, to, the restoration of general peace in 1815 (of II)|volume=II |publisher=Longman, Rees, Orme and Brown |page=[https://books.google.com/books?id=GMxLAAAAMAAJ&pg=RA3-PA433 433]}}</ref> }} Consequently, as Napoleon was considered an [[outlaw]] when he surrendered to [[Frederick Lewis Maitland (Rear Admiral)|Captain Maitland]] of {{HMS|Bellerophon|1786|6}} at the end of the [[Hundred Days]], he was not protected by military law or international law as a head of state and so the British were under no legal obligation to either accept his surrender or to spare his life.<ref>{{cite book|last=MacDonald |first=John |year=1823 |chapter=Character of Bonaparte |editor-last=Urban |editor-first=Sylvanus |title=The Gentleman's magazine (part 1) |volume=93 |series=16th of the New Series |publisher=F. Jefferies |page=[https://books.google.com/books?id=IAEVHuU8IxIC&pg=PA596 569]}}</ref> However, they did so to prevent him from being a [[martyr]] and exiled him to the remote [[South Atlantic]] island of [[Saint Helena]].{{citation needed|date=May 2023}} ===American Civil War=== The most famous early use of the phrase in the [[American Civil War]] occurred during the 1862 [[Battle of Fort Donelson]]. [[Brigadier general (United States)|Brigadier General]] [[Ulysses S. Grant]] of the [[Union Army]] received a request for terms from [[Confederate Army|Confederate]] Brigadier General [[Simon Bolivar Buckner Sr.]], the fort's commanding officer. Grant's reply was that "no terms except an unconditional and immediate surrender can be accepted. I propose to move immediately upon your works." When news of Grant's victory, one of the Union's first in the war, was received in [[Washington, DC]], newspapers remarked (and [[President of the United States|President]] [[Abraham Lincoln]] endorsed) that Grant's first two initials, "U.S.," stood for "Unconditional Surrender," which would later become his nickname. However, subsequent surrenders to Grant were not unconditional. When [[Robert E. Lee]] surrendered his [[Army of Northern Virginia]] at [[Appomattox Court House National Historical Park|Appomattox Court House]] in 1865, Grant agreed to allow the men under Lee's command to go home under parole and to keep sidearms and private horses. Generous terms were also offered to [[John C. Pemberton]] at [[Battle of Vicksburg|Vicksburg]] and, by Grant's subordinate, [[William Tecumseh Sherman]], to [[Joseph E. Johnston]] in [[North Carolina]].<ref>Silkenat, David. ''Raising the White Flag: How Surrender Defined the American Civil War''. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2019. {{ISBN|978-1-4696-4972-6}}.</ref> Grant was not the first officer in the Civil War to use the phrase. The first instance came some days earlier, when Confederate Brigadier General [[Lloyd Tilghman]] asked for terms of surrender during the [[Battle of Fort Henry]]. Flag Officer [[Andrew H. Foote]] replied, "no sir, your surrender will be unconditional." Even at Fort Donelson, earlier in the day, a Confederate messenger approached Brigadier General [[Charles Ferguson Smith]], Grant's subordinate, for terms of surrender, and Smith stated, "I'll have no terms with Rebels with guns in their hands, my terms are unconditional and immediate surrender." The messenger was passed along to Grant, but there is no evidence that either Foote or Smith influenced Grant's choice of words. In 1863, [[Ambrose Burnside]] forced an unconditional [[Battle of the Cumberland Gap (1863)|surrender of the Cumberland Gap]] and 2,300 Confederate soldiers,<ref>[http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/moa/pageviewer?frames=1&coll=moa&view=50&root=%2Fmoa%2Fwaro%2Fwaro0052%2F&tif=00509.TIF&cite=http%3A%2F%2Fcdl.library.cornell.edu%2Fcgi-bin%2Fmoa%2Fmoa-cgi%3Fnotisid%3DANU4519-0052 Burnside's Official Report]</ref> and in 1864, Union General [[Gordon Granger]] forced an unconditional surrender of [[Fort Morgan (Alabama)|Fort Morgan]]. ===World War II=== {{see also|German Instrument of Surrender|Japanese Instrument of Surrender}} [[File:Surrender of Japan - USS Missouri.jpg|right|thumb| The Japanese delegation, headed by [[Mamoru Shigemitsu]], prepares to sign the instrument of surrender aboard the [[USS Missouri (BB-63)|USS ''Missouri'']] in [[Tokyo Bay]], 2 September 1945.]] [[File:Field Marshall Keitel signs German surrender terms in Berlin 8 May 1945 - Restoration.jpg|right|thumb|[[Wilhelm Keitel|Field-Marshal Wilhelm Keitel]] signing the definitive act of unconditional surrender for the German military in Berlin, 8 May 1945]] The use of the term was revived during [[World War II]] at the [[Casablanca conference]] in January 1943 when American President [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]] stated it to the press as the objective of the war against the Axis Powers of [[Nazi Germany|Germany]], [[Kingdom of Italy|Italy]], and [[Empire of Japan|Japan]]. When Roosevelt made the announcement at Casablanca, he referred to General Grant's use of the term during the American Civil War. The term was also used in the [[Potsdam Declaration]] issued to Japan on July 26, 1945. Near the end of the declaration, it said, "We call upon the government of Japan to proclaim now the unconditional surrender of all Japanese armed forces" and warned that the alternative was "prompt and utter destruction." It has been claimed that it prolonged the war in Europe by its usefulness to [[Themes in Nazi propaganda#War|German domestic propaganda]], which used it to encourage further resistance against the Allied armies, and by its suppressive effect on the [[German resistance to Nazism|German resistance]] movement since even after a coup against [[Adolf Hitler]]: {{quotation| "those Germans β and particularly those German generals β who might have been ready to throw Hitler over, and were able to do so, were discouraged from making the attempt by their inability to extract from the Allies any sort of assurance that such action would improve the treatment meted out to their country."<ref name="balfour1970">Michael Balfour, "[https://www.jstor.org/pss/2614534 Another Look at 'Unconditional Surrender'"], ''International Affairs'' (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944β), Vol. 46, No. 4 (Oct., 1970), pp. 719β736</ref>}} It has also been argued that without the demand for unconditional surrender, [[Central Europe]] might not have fallen behind the [[Iron Curtain]].<ref name="balfour1970"/> "It was a policy that the [[Soviet Union]] accepted with alacrity, probably because a completely destroyed Germany would facilitate Russia's postwar expansion program."<ref>Deane, John R. 1947. The Strange Alliance, The Story of our Efforts at Wartime Co-operation with Russia. The Viking Press.</ref> It has also been claimed to have prolonged the war with Japan or to be a cause of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (see [[debate over the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki]]). One reason for the policy was that the Allies wished to avoid a repetition of the [[stab-in-the-back myth]], which had arisen in Germany after [[World War I]] and attributed Germany's loss to betrayal by Jews, Bolsheviks, and Socialists, as well as the fact that the war ended before the [[Allies of World War I|Allies]] had reached Germany. The myth was used by the Nazis in their propaganda. An unconditional surrender was felt to ensure that the Germans knew that they had lost the war themselves.<ref>{{cite book |last=Wheeler-Bennett |first=John W. |title=The Nemesis of Power: The German Army in Politics, 1918β1945 |year=1954 |location=London |publisher=Macmillan |page=559}}</ref> ===Bangladesh War of Independence=== [[File:1971 Instrument of Surrender.jpg|thumb|right|Signing of [[Pakistani Instrument of Surrender]] by Lt.Gen. [[A. A. K. Niazi]] in the presence of Indian military officers]] {{Unreferenced section|date=December 2021}} On 16 December 1971, Lt. Gen [[A. A. K. Niazi]], [[Commanding Officer|CO]] of Pakistan Armed Forces located in [[East Pakistan]] (now [[Bangladesh]]) signed the [[Instrument of Surrender (1971)|Instrument of Surrender]] handing over the command of his forces stationed in East Pakistan to the Indian Army under [[Jagjit Singh Aurora|General Jagjit Singh Aurora]]. This led to the surrender of 93,000 personnel including families of the Pakistan's East Command and cessation of hostilities between the Pakistani Armed Forces and the Indian Armed Forces along with the guerrilla forces, the [[Mukti Bahini]]. The signing of this unconditional surrender document gave [[ Geneva convention |Geneva Convention]] guarantees for the safety of the surrendered soldiers and completed the [[Bangladesh War of Independence|independence of Bangladesh]].{{Citation needed|date=December 2021}} ===Afghanistan War=== On [[Fall of Kabul (2021)|15 August 2021]], the government of the [[Islamic Republic of Afghanistan]] and the [[Afghan National Security Forces]] unconditionally surrendered to the [[Taliban]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Fall of Afghanistan: Taliban seek unconditional surrender at palace |url=https://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/fall-of-afghanistan-taliban-seek-unconditional-surrender-at-palace/2FT2AHXOGNJV4EB3INLKCN3NCU/ |website=[[The New Zealand Herald]] |language=en-NZ |date=15 August 2021}}</ref><ref name="14 September 2021">{{cite web |last1=Gabriel Hernandez |first1=Michael |title=Blinken on Afghanistan withdrawal: 'We inherited a deadline,' not plan |url=https://www.aa.com.tr/en/americas/blinken-on-afghanistan-withdrawal-we-inherited-a-deadline-not-plan/2363913 |website=www.aa.com.tr}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Whitlock |first1=Craig |title=Afghan security forces' wholesale collapse was years in the making |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/afghan-security-forces-capabilities/2021/08/15/052a45e2-fdc7-11eb-a664-4f6de3e17ff0_story.html |newspaper=Washington Post |date=16 August 2021 |quote=Those fears, rarely expressed in public, were ultimately borne out by the sudden collapse this month of the Afghan security forces, whose wholesale and unconditional surrender to the Taliban will go down as perhaps the worst debacle in the history}}</ref> The unconditional surrender brought an end to the [[War in Afghanistan (2001β2021)|conflict]] and allowed the Taliban to take over Afghanistan and establish their government in the country.<ref>{{cite web |title=Taliban Seizes Power, Says 'War is Over'; President Ghani Flees Afghanistan |url=https://www.thequint.com/news/world/taliban-takeover-of-afghanistan-live-updates |website=TheQuint |language=en |date=14 August 2021}}</ref>
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