Everything about Locarno Pact totally explained
The
Locarno Treaties were seven agreements negotiated at
Locarno,
Switzerland on
5 October –
16 October 1925 and formally signed in
London on
December 1, in which the
World War I Western European
Allied powers and the new states of
central and
Eastern Europe sought to secure the post-war territorial settlement, in return normalizing relations with defeated
Germany (which was, by this time, the
Weimar Republic). Locarno divided borders in Europe into two categories: western, which were guaranteed by Locarno treaties, and eastern borders (of Germany), which were open for revision..
Background
The Locarno discussion arose from exchanges of notes between
Britain,
France and Germany over the summer of
1925 following German foreign minister
Gustav Stresemann's
February 9 proposal for a reciprocal of his country's western frontiers as established under the unfavourable
1919 Treaty of Versailles, as a means of facilitating Germany's diplomatic rehabilitation among the western powers.
Parties and agreement
The principal treaty concluded at Locarno was the "Rhineland Pact" between
Germany,
France,
Belgium,
Britain, and
Italy. The first three signatories undertook not to attack each other, with the latter two acting as guarantors. In the event of aggression by any of the first three states against another, all other parties were to assist the country under attack.
Germany also signed arbitration conventions with France and Belgium and meaningless arbitration treaties with
Poland and
Czechoslovakia, undertaking to refer disputes to an arbitration tribunal or to the
Permanent Court of International Justice.
France signed further treaties with Poland and Czechoslovakia, pledging mutual assistance in the event of conflict with Germany. These essentially reaffirmed existing treaties of alliance concluded by France with Poland on
19 February 1921 and with Czechoslovakia on
25 January 1924.
Effect
The Locarno Treaties were regarded as the keystone of the improved western European diplomatic climate of
1924-
1930, introducing a hope for international peace, typically called the "spirit of Locarno". This spirit was seen in Germany's admission to the
League of Nations, the international organization established under the Versailles treaty to promote world peace and co-operation, and in the subsequent withdrawal (completed in June
1930) of Allied troops from Germany's western
Rhineland.
In contrast, in Poland, the public humiliation received by Polish diplomats was one of contributing factors to the fall of the Grabski cabinet. Locarno contributed to the worsening of atmosphere between Poland and France (despite the
French-Polish alliance), and introduced distrust between Poland and Western countries . Locarno divided borders in Europe in two categories: those guaranteed by Locarno, and others, which were free for revision. In words of
Józef Beck: "Germany was officially asked to attack the east, in return for peace in the west". The failure at Locarno may be also one of contributing factor in decision of
Józef Piłsudski to
overthrow parliamentary democracy in Poland . With regards to Locarno, Piłsudski would say "every honest Pole spits when he hear this word [Locarno]".
(External Link
) Later, when a French ambassador assured him France would always back Poland and stand up to Germany, Piłsudski, foreseeing the
appeasement, would say: "No, no, believe me, you'll back down, really, you will."
(External Link
)
One notable exception from the Locarno arrangements was, however, the
Soviet Union, which saw western
détente as potentially deepening its own political isolation in Europe, in particular by detaching Germany from her own understanding with
Moscow under the April
1922 Treaty of Rapallo. Political tensions also continued throughout the period in eastern Europe. Therefore this treaty made Germany pay $50 million dollars to the Soviet Union.
The Locarno spirit didn't survive the revival of German nationalism from
1930. Proposals in
1934 for an "eastern Locarno" pact securing Germany's eastern frontiers foundered on German opposition and on Poland's insistence that her eastern borders should be covered by any western guarantee of her borders.
Germany formally repudiated her Locarno undertakings in sending troops into the demilitarized
Rhineland on
7 March 1936.
In both
1925 and
1926 the
Nobel Peace Prize was given to the lead negotiators of the treaty, going to Sir
Austen Chamberlain in 1925 and jointly to
Aristide Briand and
Gustav Stresemann in 1926.
Further Information
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