General Treaty
This article does not cite any sources. (August 2020) |
Signed | May 26, 1952 |
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Parties |
The General Treaty (German: Generalvertrag, also Deutschlandvertrag “Germany Treaty”) is a treaty which was signed by the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG or West Germany), and the Western Allies (France, United Kingdom, United States) on 26 May 1952 but which took effect, with some slight changes, only in 1955. It formally ended Germany's status as an occupied territory and recognised its rights of a sovereign state, with certain restrictions that remained in place until German reunification in 1990.
Attaining sovereignty had become necessary in light of the rearmament efforts of the FRG. For this reason, it was agreed that the Treaty would only come to force when West Germany also joined the European Defense Community (EDC). Because the EDC Treaty was not approved by France's Parliament on 30 August 1954, the General Treaty could not come into effect. After this failure, the EDC Treaty had to be reworked and the nations at the London Nine-Power Conference decided to allow West Germany to join NATO and to create the Western European Union (not to be confused with the Western Union or the European Union). With this development, West Germany, under the leadership of Konrad Adenauer, in front of the backdrop of the Cold War became a fully trusted partner of the western allies and with the second draft of the General Treaty, West Germany largely regained its sovereignty. The Allies, however, retained some controls over Germany until 1991 (see further Two Plus Four Agreement).
After the ratification of the Paris Treaties on 5 May 1955 the General Treaty took full effect.
See also[]
External links[]
- German Text of the treaty (in German)
- 1952 in Germany
- Legal history of Germany
- Treaties of the United States
- Treaties of the United Kingdom
- 1952 in France
- 1955 in France
- Treaties concluded in 1952
- Treaties entered into force in 1955
- Treaties of the French Fourth Republic
- Treaties of West Germany
- United Kingdom in World War II
- German history stubs