Paris Peace Treaties, 1947
The Paris Peace Conference (29 July to 15 October 1946) resulted in the Paris Peace Treaties signed on 10 February 1947. The victorious wartime Allied powers (principally the United States, Soviet Union, United Kingdom, and France) negotiated the details of treaties with Italy, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Finland (see the List of countries involved in World War II).
The treaties allowed Italy, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Finland to reassume their responsibilities as sovereign states in international affairs and to qualify for membership in the United Nations.
The settlement elaborated in the peace treaties included payment of war reparations, commitment to minority rights and territorial adjustments including the end of the Italian Colonial Empire in Africa and changes to the Italian–Yugoslav, Hungarian–Slovak, Romanian–Hungarian, Soviet–Romanian, Bulgarian–Romanian, French–Italian and Soviet–Finnish frontiers.
The political clauses stipulated that the signatory should "take all measures necessary to secure to all persons under (its) jurisdiction, without distinction as to race, sex, language or religion, the enjoyment of human rights and of the fundamental freedoms, including freedom of expression, of press and publication, of religious worship, of political opinion and of public meeting."
No penalties were to be visited on nationals because of wartime partisanship for the Allies. Each government undertook measures to prevent the resurgence of fascist organizations or any others "whether political, military or semi-military, whose purpose it is to deprive the people of their democratic rights".
Particularly in Finland, the reparations and the dictated border adjustment were perceived as a major injustice and a betrayal by the Western Powers, after the sympathy Finland had received from the West during the Soviet-initiated Winter War of 1939–1940. However, this sympathy had been eroded by Finland's cooperation with Nazi Germany during the Continuation War. During this time Finland not only recaptured territory lost in 1940, but continued its offensive deeper into the Soviet Union, occupying a broad strip of Soviet territory. This prompted the United Kingdom to declare war on Finland in November 1941, further weakening political support in the West for the country. The Soviet Union's accessions of Finnish territory were based on the Moscow Armistice signed in Moscow on 19 September 1944 and resulted in an extension of the accessions in the Moscow Peace Treaty (1940) that ended the Winter War.
[edit] War reparations
The war reparation problem proved to be one of the most difficult arising from post-war conditions. The Soviet Union, the country most heavily ravaged by the war, felt entitled to the maximum amounts possible, with the exception of Bulgaria, which was perceived as being the most sympathetic of the former enemy states. In the cases of Romania and Hungary, the reparation terms as set forth in their armistices were relatively high and were not revised.
War reparations at 1938 prices:
- US$360,000,000 from Italy:
- $125,000,000 to Yugoslavia;
- $105,000,000 to Greece;
- $100,000,000 to the Soviet Union;
- $25,000,000 to Ethiopia;
- $5,000,000 to Albania.
- $300,000,000 from Finland to the Soviet Union;
- $300,000,000 from Hungary:
- $200,000,000 to the Soviet Union;
- $100,000,000 to Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia.
- $300,000,000 from Romania to the Soviet Union;
- $70,000,000 from Bulgaria:
- $45,000,000 to Greece;
- $25,000,000 to Yugoslavia.
The collapse of the Soviet Union has not led to any formal revision of the Paris Peace Treaties.
[edit] See also
- Allied Control Commissions
- Potsdam Agreement (1945)
- Moscow Conference of Foreign Ministers (1945)
- Treaty of peace with Italy (1947)
- Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany
- War reparations
- Soviet occupation of Romania
- World War II reparations towards Yugoslavia
[edit] External links
- United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States, 1946. Paris Peace Conference Proceedings
- United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States, 1946. Paris Peace Conference Documents
- Australian treaty series 1948 (full text of the treaties).
- "Paris-WWII Peace Conference-1946: Settling Romania's Western Frontiers", at the Honorary Consulate of Romania in Boston, has pictures of the Romanian delegation
- Aftermath of World War II
- 1947 in Finland
- 1947 in Bulgaria
- 1947 in Romania
- 1947 in Italy
- 1947 in the Soviet Union
- Bulgaria–Soviet Union relations
- Finland–Soviet Union relations
- Hungary–Soviet Union relations
- Italy–Soviet Union relations
- Italy–United States relations
- Italy–Yugoslavia relations
- Romania–Soviet Union relations
- Peace treaties of Bulgaria
- Peace treaties of Finland
- Peace treaties of France
- Peace treaties of Hungary
- Peace treaties of Italy
- Peace treaties of Romania
- Peace treaties of the Soviet Union
- Peace treaties of the United Kingdom
- Peace treaties of the United States
- Treaties concluded in 1947
- Treaties entered into force in 1947
- Treaties of the French Fourth Republic
- Treaties of the Italian Republic
- Treaties of the Kingdom of Romania
- Treaties of the People's Republic of Bulgaria
- Treaties of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
- World War II treaties