Early in the war, King Boris pursued a strict policy of neutrality, not engaging in any alliance with one of the powers. In 1940, Rumania gave in to Germany's and Russia's pressure and ceded territory; in this context, Rumania ceded the SOUTHERN DOBRUDJA to Bulgaria in the TREATY OF CRAIOVA on September 7th 1940.
In April 1941 it was no longer possible for Bulgaria to stay neutral. Bulgaria entered an alliance with Germany and joined in the occupation of Yugoslavia and Greece - Bulgarian troops occupied much of Serb-held MACEDONIA and Greek WESTERN THRACE. King Boris maintained that the Bulgarians were prepared to fight alongside the Germans, but not against the Russians (Bulgaria owed it's independence to the Russians, and sentiment was very pro-Russian). Bulgarian troops were not to be deployed outside the Balkans peninsula.
As the war progressed, Bulgarian troops had to take over occupation duties in previously German-occupied regions of Yugoslavia and Greece, to free German units for the eastern front.
When German officials in 1943 pressed for the deportation of Bulgaria's Jews, the Jewish population of the occupied territories was deported and dealt with; when it came to the Jewish population of Bulgaria proper, public opinion was against it; the Bulgarian church and their King rejected the German demand; Bulgaria's Jewish community, which was interned, was not handed over to the Germans; it survived the war. King Boris died in 1943, succeeded by his son SIMEON, a minor. A REGENCY COUNCIL was formed.
In 1944 Bulgaria's situation became critical as the Red Army closed in. Bulgaria cautiously moved away from it's German Alliance toward neutrality - the country was technically not at war with the Soviet Union. On August 17th Prime Minister BAGRYANOV declared neutrality. Bulgarian forces disarmed the German forces in the country; the USSR was not prepareed to respect Bulgaria's neutrality. On September 8th, Bulgaria declared war on Germany, now as a Soviet ally, with a new government - Bagryanov had resigned. Bulgaria had managed to transfer from a German to a Soviet alliance without a German occupation. Bulgarian forces accompanied Soviet forces on their further campaign, until Germany surrendered.
In fact, Bulgaria's post-war fate had been decided at Yalta, when Churchill suggested to partition eastern Europe into Soviet, American and British spheres of interested.
Formally an Allied Control Commission Bulgaria was established; in fact, the British and Americans left that to the Soviets, spending little attention on Bulgaria.
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