(Redirected from Treaty of Brussels 1948)''This article is on the 1948 treaty, which served as a basis for the Western Union. Some see it as the basis of NATO, set up by the North Atlantic Treaty a year later. For the treaty in 1516, refer to
War of the League of Cambrai''
A Western Union
Signed on
March 17,
1948 between
Belgium,
France,
Luxembourg, the
Netherlands and the
United Kingdom, as an expansion to the previous year's defence pledge, the
Dunkirk Treaty, signed between Britain and France. The Treaty was aimed primarily at defending against possible German rearmament.
In that it was an effort towards European post-war security cooperation, the Brussels Pact was a precursor to
NATO and similar to it in the sense that it promised European mutual defence. However, it greatly differed from NATO in that it envisaged a purely European mutual defence pact primarily against Germany, whereas NATO took shape the next year, on the recognition that Europe was unavoidably divided into two opposing blocks (western and
communist), that the
USSR was a much greater threat than the possibility of a resurgent Germany, and that western European mutual defence would have to be atlantacist (i.e. including
North America).
In September 1948, the parties to the Treaty of Brussels decided to create a military agency under the name of the Western Union Defence Organization.
[1] Field Marshal Montgomery (UK) was appointed permanent Chairman of the Land, Naval and Air Commanders-in-Committee, with headquarters in Fontainebleau, France. Commanders-in-Chief were nominated: General de Lattre de Tassigny (France) for the Army, Air Chief Marshal Sir James Robb (UK) for the Air, and Vice-Admiral Jaujard (France) for the Navy.
The Pact featured cultural and social clauses, concepts for the setting up of a 'Consultative Council'. The basis for this was that a cooperation between Western nations would help stop the spread of Communism. The Treaty of Brussels was amended by the Protocol signed at
Paris on
23 October 1954, which added
West Germany and
Italy to the Western Union. On this occasion it was renamed the
Western European Union.
The Treaty was signed by the following
plenipotentiaries:
★
Prince Charles of Belgium, as reigning
Prince Regent of Belgium
★
French President Vincent Auriol
★
Charlotte, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg
★ Queen
Wilhelmina of the Netherlands
★ King
George VI of the United Kingdom
★
Paul-Henri Spaak,
Prime Minister of Belgium
★
Georges Bidault,
French Minister of Foreign Affairs
★
Joseph Bech, Luxembourgish
Minister of Foreign Affairs
★
Gaston Eyskens, Belgian Minister of Finance
★
Carel Godfried Willem Hendrik baron van Boetzelaer van Oosterhout,
Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs
★
Ernest Bevin,
Secretary of State for Foreign and Imperial Affairs of the United Kingdom
★
Jean de Hautecloque, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the French Republic in Brussels
★
Robert Als, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Luxembourg in Brussels
★
Baron Binnert Philip van Harinxma thoe Slooten, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Netherlands in Brussels
★
George William Rendel, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of His Britannic Majesty in Brussels
NATO
When the division of Europe into two opposing camps became unavoidable, the threat of the
USSR and
Eastern Bloc became much more important than the threat of German rearmament.
Western Europe therefore sought a new mutual defence pact involving the
United States, a powerful military force for such an alliance. The United States, recognising the growing threat of the USSR, was responsive to this idea.
There was therefore rapid progress on this idea, and secret meetings had already begun by the end of March, where
American,
Canadian and British officials negotiated over the concept. Eventually, it would lead to the formation of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organisation by the North Atlantic Treaty signed in
Washington DC in
1949.
External links and references
1. Lord Ismay, NATO: The First Five Years
★
European Navigator The Treaty of Brussels
★
History until the creation of the WEU