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Reflections on the Moscow Conference

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2009

Edward S. Mason
Affiliation:
Dr. Edward S. Mason, Dean of the Graduate School of Public Administration at Harvard University, was recently appointed to the President's National Inventory Committee, created to study United States resources available for economic assistance to foreign countries. While tie attended the Moscow meeting of the Council of Foreign Ministers as an adviser to Secretary of State George C. Marshall, the views here expressed are strictly his own and not necessarly those of the United States Government.
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Extract

It is a mistake to underestimate the extent and the significance of the failure at Moscow. With respect to Germany the conference ended with the participants further apart than they had been at Potsdam. Nor can a modicum of comfort be salvaged by asserting that Moscow achieved a clearer understanding of the aims and ambitions of the four powers now occupying Germany. While the discussion contributed something in detail to a clarification of points of agreement and disagreement, on major issues the initial positions of the participants were known before the conference assembled. And at Moscow no power receded from its initial position on any major issue. The pertinent question is, why did the Moscow conference fail?

There are two possible answers to this question, in both of which some truth is, probably, to be found. The first runs in terms of what has come to be standard negotiating technique at meetings of the Conference of Foreign Ministers. Following the practice favored by Soviet negotiators, no country is willing to make a concession until convinced by protracted and exhausting debate that the positions of others are firm. If one accepts this interpretation a certain measure of optimism is possible even after Moscow. One can refer to the experience of the satellite treaties in the negotiation of which the powers came to final agreement only after some fifteen months of what seemed at times hopeless disagreement. If it took four meetings of the Council of Foreign Ministers to obtain agreement on the much less difficult questions involved in the satellite treaties, it can be argued that to write off the possibility of agreement on Germany after only one meeting is, at least, premature.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 1947

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References

1 Cf. a recent article in this journal by Philip E. Mosely, “Peace-Making, 1946,” International Organization, I, p. 22. 475

2 Department of State, Bulletin, May 11, 1947, p. 924.

3 “Great Britain Finished,” The Economist May 10, 1947.

4 For text of this speech see Department of State, Bulletin, XV, p. 496.

5 The recent failure in Paris of the Three Power Conference adds strong support to this interpretation.

6 This proposal was, however, subject to a number of qualifications designed, among other objectives, to postpone the meeting of a reparations obligation until Germany was, in fact, self-supporting. Cf. Statement by the U. S. Delegation, April 3, 1947: “Any plan for providing such compensation must not increase the cost of occupation, retard the payment of allied advances to Germany, retard the establishment of a self-supporting Germany, nor could it be permitted to prevent the equitable distribution of coal and other raw material in short supply among the countries dependent upon these resources. It could not become operative until economic and political unity as well as the other related objectives have been attained.”