But when the German foreign minister broadcast the surrender news to the German people, later that day, one of the correspondents at Eisenhower's headquarters defied the Supreme Commander and broke the story. Ed Kennedy, Western Front chief of Associated Press, placed an unauthorized phone call to his London office: "This is Ed Kennedy. Germany has surrendered unconditionally. That's official. Make the dateline Rheims, France, and get it out." At 9:36 a.m. in New York the news tickers chattered out: FLASH. GERMANY SURRENDERS UNCONDITIONALLY TO THE WESTERN ALLIES AND RUSSIA.
Meanwhile at SHAEF, General Eisenhower and his staff tried to squelch the story to placate the Russians, the White House, 10 Downing Street, and 15 indignant reporters. No one was madder than Ike. Within two hours Eisenhower's staff released the following message: "Supreme Headquarters authorize correspondents at 16:45 Paris time (10:45 Eastern Daylight Time) today to state that SHAEF has made nowhere any official statement for publication to that hour concerning the complete surrender of all German armed forces in Europe and that no story to this effect is authorized."
It didn't work. The public knew about the German broadcast and saw through the evasive SHAEF statement. Celebrations began in Times Square and all across the United States and the Allied world. President Truman made the official announcement the next day from the Oval Office, declaring May 8, V-E Day.
As for Kennedy, his colleagues in Europe claimed he had
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