Stalin Note

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The four occupation zones in post-war Germany
The four occupation zones in post-war Germany

The 1952 Stalin Note, a.k.a. the March Note, was a Soviet diplomatic note dated March 10, 1952 and delivered to representatives of Britain, France, and the United States (the other Great Powers with occupation zones in Germany), which included an offer of Superpower disengagement from Germany if the West would agree that a new, unified Germany would also be neutral and disarmed. This led to "The Battle of the Notes" between the Western Powers and the Soviet Union at a time when the West was developing the new North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO, initiated in 1949) and was negotiating the 1952 Bonn Agreement with the embryonic West Germany (Federal Republic of Germany, or FRG) as part of Western Cold War strategy. The West's rejection, including the U.S. rejection, of the 1952 Soviet offer to unify Germany created a controversial political and academic debate and established a post-WWII "stab-in-the-back" theory to parallel the post-WWI "stab-in-the-back" theory of German political history and international relations.

Contents

May 8, 1945 - Victory in Europe Day

1946 - Mutual deliveries of supplies between Eastern and Western sectors stop

1948-1949 - Berlin Blockade

April 4, 1949 - North Atlantic Treaty

1949 - Western Trizone becomes FRG

October 7, 1949 - GDR forms

June 25, 1950 - North Korea invades South Korea

1950 - Pleven and Spofford plans for European armed forces

February 25, 1952 - Lisbon Agreement

March 10, 1952 - Stalin Note begins Battle of the Notes

April 1, 1952 - Stalin orders GDR "to create a people's army--quietly."

May 26, 1952 - Bonn Agreement

June 1, 1952 - Soviets seal FRG-GDR border

September 23, 1952 - Battle of the Notes ends

May 5, 1955 - FRG "full" sovereignty

May 15, 1955 - Austrian State Treaty

October 27, 1955 - Saarland plebiscite

January 1, 1957 - Saarland incorporated into FRG

December 21, 1972 - FRG and GDR sign Basic Treaty

October 3, 1990 - German reunification

The Stalin Note advanced terms similar to those later adopted for Austria (see Austrian State Treaty). It called for the creation of a neutral Germany with an eastern border on the Oder-Neisse line and all allied troops removed within the year. The West German government under Chancellor Konrad Adenauer favoured closer integration with Western Europe and asked that the reunification be negotiated with the provision that there be internationally monitored elections throughout Germany. This condition was rejected by the Soviets. Stalin's proposal was subsequently rejected by Adenauer as a propaganda ploy, although some speculate that Adenauer feared what amounted to the Finlandization of Germany under the Soviet reunification plan. The proposal came while the European Defence Community was being discussed, which would have resulted in a rearmed West Germany tightly integrated in the Western bloc.

  • Germany was to be reestablished as a united state within the boundaries established by the provisions of the Potsdam Conference.
  • A single united German government was to play a role in the negotiations of the peace treaty.
  • All occupation forces were to be withdrawn within one year following the date on which treaty came into effect.
  • Political parties and organizations were to have "free" activity.
  • Germany was to become officially neutral and not enter into any kind of coalition or military alliance.
  • Germany was to have its own national armed forces and would be allowed to manufacture munitions for these forces.
  • Germany would have access to world markets.
  • Former members of the German armed forces and of the Nazi Party, except for convicted war criminals, could join in establishing a peaceful and democratic Germany.

The West's rejection, including the U.S. rejection, of the 1952 Soviet offer to unify Germany created a controversial political and academic debate and established a post-WWII "stab-in-the-back" theory to parallel the post-WWI "stab-in-the-back" theory of German political history and international relations.

Whether Stalin's offer was genuine or simply a tactical manoeuvre to disrupt the ongoing military integration of the West was the subject of a heated debate at the time. No Soviet or East German document released to date offers substantial evidence that Stalin was prepared to abandon the GDR and reunify Germany, although earlier documents indicate Stalin did have an interest in German reunification. Although most historians deny that Stalin was serious about reunification, this question was never definitively answered.

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