On 9 May 1945 the signing of the German Instrument of Surrender took place, although it was backdated to 8 May. This officially ended the Second World War for Germany; but surrenders of individual units continued afterwards.

On 16 May 1945 3,202 Germans surrendered on Alderney, the last of the Channel Islands to be liberated.

On 17 August 1945 the crew of U-977 (between 28 and 44 sailors) surrendered in Mar de Plata, Argentina. This was the last of several late surrenders by individual U-boats.

On 6 September 1945 there was an unusual surrender. A year earlier the Germans had launched "Unternehmen Haudegen" (Operation Broadsword) to establish meteorological stations on the Nazi-occupied Norwegian Svalbard archipelago. The remote northern station went live on 9 September 1944. On 8 May 1945, the staff received a message from their commanders in Tromsø that Germany had surrendered and the war was over. After that, radio contact was lost. It was not until August 1945 that the isolated soldiers were able to resume contact and ask for support. On 6 September they were picked up from Bear Island by a Norwegian seal-hunting vessel and surrendered to its captain. This group of eleven men thus became the last German troops to surrender after the Second World War.

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