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Oder–Neisse line

The Oder–Neisse line (German: Oder-Neiße-Grenze, Polish: granica na Odrze i Nysie Łużyckiej) is an unofficial term for modern border between Germany and Poland. The line generally follows the Oder and Lusatian Neisse rivers, meeting the Baltic Sea in the north. A small portion of Polish territory does fall west of the line, including the cities of Szczecin and Świnoujście (German: Stettin and Swinemünde).[1]

The Oder–Neisse line
The Oder and Neisse rivers
The Oder–Neisse line at Usedom (2008)

All prewar German territories east of the line and within the 1937 German boundaries — comprising nearly one quarter (23.8 percent) of the Weimar Republic were ceded under the changes decided at the Potsdam Conference, with the majority ceded to Poland. The remainder, consisting of northern East Prussia including the German city of Königsberg (renamed Kaliningrad), was allocated to the Soviet Union, as the Kaliningrad Oblast of the Russian SFSR (today Russia). Much of the German population in these territories — estimated at around 12 million in autumn 1944 — had fled in the wake of the Soviet Red Army's advance.

The Oder–Neisse line marked the border between East Germany and Poland from 1950 to 1990. The two Communist governments agreed to the border in 1950, while West Germany, after a period of refusal, adhered to the border, with reservations, in 1970.[2]

After the revolutions of 1989, newly reunified Germany and Poland accepted the line as their border in the 1990 German–Polish Border Treaty.

History

The lower River Oder in Silesia was Piast Poland's western border from the 10th until the 13th century.[3] From around the time of World War I, some proposed restoring this line, in the belief that it would provide protection against Germany. One of the first proposals was made in the Russian Empire. Later, when the Nazis gained power, the German territory to the east of the line was militarised by Germany with a view to a future war, and the Polish population faced Germanisation.[4] The policies of Nazi Germany also encouraged nationalism among the German minority in Poland.

While the process of Germanisation of lands east of the Limes Sorabicus line already took place between 12th and 14th century, there were many areas where German population hardly settled at all, making the process of Germanisation extend well into the 19th and 20th centuries.[5] For example, on the Rugia Island, the local Slavic culture and language persisted into the 19th century; this was also the case for many areas between the Oder-Neisse and interwar Polish border. About half of what was Farther Pomerania remained plurality Kashubian or Polish until 18th and 19th century, with surviving majority Slavic pockets extending as far west as Dievenow.[5] In 1905, Arnošt Muka observed that "there remained in that land an old Slav national grouping with types and means of settlement, customs and habits unchanged through to this day in the character and outlook of the inhabitants”.[5] The situation was similar in the Western part of Silesia, where Polish and Silesian languages remained dominant by the end of 18th century in areas such as Ohlau, Groß Wartenberg and Namslau.[5]

Before World War II, Poland's western border with Germany had been fixed under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles of 1919. It partially followed the historic border between the Holy Roman Empire and Greater Poland, but with certain adjustments that were intended to reasonably reflect the ethnic compositions of small areas near the traditional provincial borders. The fate of Upper Silesia was to be decided in a plebiscite, which produced 59.8 % votes in favour of Germany. The plebiscite took place among severe ethnic tensions, as German authorities and Freikorps clashed and persecuted the local Polish population, and the Poles organised massive strikes and protests.[6] The plebiscite allowed both permanent inhabitants of the area but also people born in the region to vote, regardless of their current location or time spent living in Silesia.[7] Voters who participated in the plebiscite despite not living in Upper Silesia were called "migrants", and made up 192,408 (16 %) of the total electorate of 1,186,234. As these "migrants" voted overwhelmingly for Germany, the local Polish population considered the plebiscite to be fraudulent, resulting in three Silesian Uprisings.[7] Eventually, the region was divided roughly equally, with some majority Polish regions remaining in Germany, and some German provinces being ceded to Poland.

At the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, the Polish delegation led by Roman Dmowski requested the inclusion of the city of Danzig in the Polish state, arguing that the city was "rightfully part of Poland" because it was Polish until 1793, and that Poland would not be economically viable without it.[8] During the First Partition of Poland in 1772, the inhabitants of Danzig fought fiercely for it to remain a part of Poland,[9] but as a result of the Germanisation process in the 19th century,[10] 90% of the people in Danzig were German by 1919, which made the Entente leaders at the Paris Peace Conference compromise by creating the Free City of Danzig, a city-state in which Poland had certain special rights.[11] The city of Danzig was 90% German and 10% Polish, yet the surrounding countryside around Danzig was overwhelmingly Polish, and the ethnically Polish rural areas included in the Free City of Danzig objected, arguing that they wanted to be part of Poland.[8]

The Oder-Neisse line as a concept of future Polish border appeared among Polish nationalist circles in late 19th century; Jan Ludwik Popławski is considered to be one of the first advocates for the return of "Piast Poland", although his writings mainly focused on Upper Silesia, Opolian Silesia and the southern part of East Prussia, as these regions remained majority Polish.[12] In 1918, Bolesław Jakimiak advocated for a Polish border along the rivers of Oder and Lusatian Neisse, possibly inspired by the proposals of Russian nationalists. He described the German expansion towards the formerly Slavic lands and considered it a "matter of historical justice" to have East Prussia, the entirety of Pomerania, East Brandenburg and both Lower and Upper Silesia become "integral parts" of the future Polish state.[12] At the Paris Peace Conference, Polish commission supervised by Jules Cambon and headed by Roman Dmowski proposed a Polish border that would encompass the entirety of Upper Silesia and most of Opolian Silesia, including cities of Ratibor, Neustadt, Falkenberg, Brieg, Oels and Militsch in Poland. The entirety of Greater Poland was also to be ceded to the Polish state, along with Danzig, Warmia and Masuria. While the postulate of the Polish delegation gained acceptance of the rest of the conference, it was met with vehement protest from David Lloyd George, whose opposition led to border changes in favour of Germany.[12]

Considerations during the war

Background

Between the wars, the concept of "Western thought" (myśl zachodnia) became popular among some Polish nationalists. The "Polish motherland territories" were defined by scholars, like Zygmunt Wojciechowski, as the areas included in Piast Poland in the 10th century.[13][14][15][16] Some Polish historians called for the "return" of territories up to the river Elbe.[16] The proponents of these ideas, in prewar Poland often described as a "group of fantasists", were organized in the National Party, which was also opposed to the government of Poland, the Sanacja.[17] The proposal to establish the border along the Oder and Neisse was not seriously considered for a long time.[4] After World War II the Polish Communists, lacking their own expertise regarding the Western border[clarification needed], adopted the National Democratic concept of western thought.[18][clarification needed]

After Nazi Germany invaded and occupied Poland, some Polish politicians started to see a need to alter the border with Germany.[4] A secure border[4] was seen as essential, especially in the light of Nazi atrocities. During the war, Nazi Germany committed genocide against Poland's population, especially Jews, whom they classified as Untermenschen ("sub-humans"). Alteration to the western border was seen as a punishment for the Germans for their atrocities and a compensation for Poland.[4][Note 1] The participation in the genocide by German minorities and their paramilitary organizations, such as the Selbstschutz ("self defense"), and support for Nazism among German society also connected the issue of border changes with the idea of population transfers intended to avoid such events in the future.[20]

Initially the Polish government in exile envisioned territorial changes after the war which would incorporate East Prussia, Danzig (Gdańsk) and the Oppeln (Opole) Silesian region into post-war Poland, along with a straightening of the Pomeranian border and minor acquisition in the Lauenburg (Lębork) area.[4] The border changes were to provide Poland with a safe border and to prevent the Germans from using Eastern Pomerania and East Prussia as strategic assets against Poland.[Note 2] Only with the changing situation during the war were these territorial proposals modified.[4] In October 1941 the exile newspaper Dziennik Polski postulated a postwar Polish western border that would include East Prussia, Silesia up to the Lausitzer Neisse and at least both banks of the Oder's mouth.[21] While these territorial claims were regarded as "megalomaniac" by the Soviet ambassador in London, in October 1941 Stalin announced the "return of East Prussia to Slavdom" after the war. On 16 December 1941 Stalin remarked in a meeting with the British Foreign Minister Anthony Eden, though inconsistent in detail, that Poland should receive all German territory up to the river Oder.[21] In May 1942 General Władysław Sikorski, Prime Minister of the Polish government in exile, sent two memoranda to the US government, sketching a postwar Polish western border along the Oder and Neisse (inconsistent about the Eastern Glatzer Neisse and the Western Lausitzer Neisse). However, the proposal was dropped by the government-in-exile in late 1942.[22]

In post-war Poland the government described the Oder–Neisse line as the result of tough negotiations between Polish Communists and Stalin.[23] However, according to the modern Institute of National Remembrance, Polish aspirations had no impact on the final outcome; rather the idea of a westward shift of the Polish border was adopted synthetically by Stalin, who was the final arbiter in the matter. Stalin's political goals as well as his desire to foment enmity between Poles and Germans influenced his idea of a swap of western for eastern territory, thus ensuring control over both countries.[4] As with before the war, some fringe groups advocated restoring the old border between Poland and Germany.[4][13][14][15][16][17]

Tehran Conference

At the Tehran Conference in late 1943, the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin raised the subject of Poland's western frontier and its extension to the River Oder. While the Americans were not interested in discussing any border changes at that time,[24] Roosevelt agreed that in general the Polish border should be extended West to the Oder, while Polish eastern borders should be shifted westwards; he also admitted that it was due to elections at home he could not express his position publicly.[25] British Foreign Minister Anthony Eden wrote in his diary that "A difficulty is that the Americans are terrified of the subject which [Roosevelt advisor] Harry [Hopkins] called 'political dynamite' for their elections. But, as I told him, if we cannot get a solution, Polish-Soviet relations six months from now, with Soviet armies in Poland, will be infinitely worse and elections nearer."[26]Winston Churchill compared the westward shift of Poland to soldiers taking two steps "left close" and declared in his memoirs: "If Poland trod on some German toes that could not be helped, but there must be a strong Poland."[27]

The British government formed a clear position on the issue and at the first meeting of the European Advisory Commission on 14 January 1944, recommended "that East Prussia and Danzig, and possibly other areas, will ultimately be given to Poland" as well as agreeing on a Polish "frontier on the Oder".[25][28]

Yalta Conference

In February 1945, American and British officials met in Yalta and agreed on the basics on Poland's future borders. In the east, the British agreed to the Curzon line but recognised that the US might push for Lwów to be included in post-war Poland. In the west, Poland should receive part of East Prussia, Danzig, the eastern tip of Pomerania and Upper Silesia. President Franklin D. Roosevelt said that it would "make it easier for me at home" if Stalin were generous to Poland with respect to Poland's eastern frontiers.[29] Winston Churchill said a Soviet concession on that point would be admired as "a gesture of magnanimity" and declared that, with respect to Poland's post-war government, the British would "never be content with a solution which did not leave Poland a free and independent state."[30] With respect to Poland's western frontiers, Stalin noted that the Polish Prime Minister in exile, Stanisław Mikołajczyk, had been pleased when Stalin had told him Poland would be granted Stettin/Szczecin and the German territories east of the Western Neisse.[31] Yalta was the first time that the Soviets openly declared support for a German-Polish frontier on the Western as opposed to the Eastern Neisse.[32] Churchill objected to the Western Neisse frontier, saying that "it would be a pity to stuff the Polish goose so full of German food that it got indigestion."[33] He added that many Britons would be shocked if such large numbers of Germans were driven out of these areas, to which Stalin responded that "many Germans" had "already fled before the Red Army."[34] Poland's western frontier was ultimately left to be decided at the Potsdam Conference.

Polish and Soviet demands

 
Dominant ethnicities in and around Poland, 1931, according to Polish historian Henryk Zieliński.

Originally, Germany was to retain Stettin, while the Poles were to annex East Prussia with Königsberg (now Kaliningrad). The Polish government had in fact demanded this since the start of World War II in 1939, because of East Prussia's strategic position that allegedly undermined the defense of Poland.[citation needed] Other territorial changes proposed by the Polish government were the transfer of the Silesian region of Oppeln and the Pomeranian regions of Danzig, Bütow and Lauenburg, and the straightening of the border somewhat in Western Pomerania.[citation needed]

However, Stalin decided that he wanted Königsberg as a year-round warm water port for the Soviet Navy, and he argued that the Poles should receive Stettin instead.[citation needed] The prewar Polish government-in-exile had little to say in these decisions, but insisted on retaining the city of Lwów (Lvov, Lemberg, now L'viv) in Galicia. Stalin refused to concede, and instead proposed that all of Lower Silesia including Breslau (Polish: Wrocław) be given to Poland. Many Poles from Lwów would later be moved to populate the city.[citation needed]

 
Westward shift of Poland after World War II. Blue line: Curzon Line of 8 December 1919. Pink areas: prewar German territory transferred to Poland after the war. Grey area: prewar Polish territory transferred to the Soviet Union after the war.

The eventual border was not the most far-reaching territorial change that was proposed. There were suggestions to include areas further west so that Poland could include the small minority population of ethnic Slavic Sorbs who lived near Cottbus and Bautzen.[citation needed]

The precise location of the western border was left open. The western Allies accepted in general that the Oder would be the future western border of Poland. Still in doubt was whether the border should follow the eastern or western Neisse, and whether Stettin, now Szczecin, which lay west of the Oder, should remain German or be placed in Poland (with an expulsion of the German population). Stettin was the traditional seaport of Berlin.[35] It had a dominant German population and a small Polish minority that numbered 2,000 in the interwar period.[36][37] The western Allies sought to place the border on the eastern Neisse at Breslau, but Stalin refused to budge. Suggestions of a border on the Bóbr (Bober) were also rejected by the Soviets.[citation needed]

Nikita Khrushchev in his memoirs said: "I had only one desire – that Poland's borders were moved as far west as possible."[38]

Not satisfied with the Oder-Neisse line, the Polish communists initially wanted to own the entire island of Usedom and push the border west to the Randow river; however they were refused by Stalin.

Potsdam Conference

 

At Potsdam, Stalin argued for the Oder–Neisse line on the grounds that the Polish Government demanded this frontier and that there were no longer any Germans left east of this line.[39] Later the Russians admitted that at least "a million Germans" (still far lower than the true number) still remained in the area at that time. Several Polish Communist leaders appeared at the conference to advance arguments for an Oder–Western Neisse frontier. The port of Stettin was demanded for Eastern European exports. If Stettin was Polish, then "in view of the fact that the supply of water is found between the Oder and the Lausitzer Neisse, if the Oder's tributaries were controlled by someone else the river could be blocked."[40] Soviet forces had initially expelled Polish administrators who tried to seize control of Stettin in May and June, and the city was governed by a German communist-appointed mayor, under the surveillance of the Soviet occupiers, until 5 July 1945.[41]

Concessions

 
Marking the new Polish-German Border in 1945
 
Polish authorities issued an order to the population of Bad Salzbrunn (Szczawno-Zdrój) to force them to immediately leave Poland on 14 July 1945, issued at 6 a.m. to be executed until 10 am

James Byrnes – who had been appointed as U.S. Secretary of State earlier that month – later advised the Soviets that the U.S. was prepared to concede the area east of the Oder and the Eastern Neisse to Polish administration, and for it not to consider it part of the Soviet occupation zone, in return for a moderation of Soviet demands for reparations from the Western occupation zones.[42] An Eastern Neisse boundary would have left Germany with roughly half of Silesia – including the majority of Wrocław (Breslau), the former provincial capital and the largest city in the region. The Soviets insisted that the Poles would not accept this. The Polish representatives (and Stalin) were in fact willing to concede a line following the Oder-Bober-Queiss (Odra-Bóbr-Kwisa) rivers through Żagań (Sagan) and Lubań (Lauban), but even this small concession ultimately proved unnecessary, since on the next day Byrnes told the Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov that the Americans would reluctantly concede to the Western Neisse.[43]

Byrnes' concession undermined the British position, and although the British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin raised objections,[44] the British eventually agreed to the American concession. In response to American and British statements that the Poles were claiming far too much German territory, Stanisław Mikołajczyk argued that "the western lands were needed as a reservoir to absorb the Polish population east of the Curzon Line, Poles who returned from the West, and Polish people who lived in the overcrowded central districts of Poland."[45] The U.S. and the U.K. were also negative towards the idea of giving Poland an occupation zone in Germany. However, on 29 July, President Truman handed Molotov a proposal for a temporary solution whereby the U.S. accepted Polish administration of land as far as the Oder and eastern Neisse until a final peace conference determined the boundary. In return for this large concession, the U.S. demanded that "each of the occupation powers take its share of reparations from its own [Occupation] Zone and provide for admission of Italy into the United Nations." The Soviets stated that they were not pleased "because it denied Polish administration of the area between the two Neisse rivers."[46]

On 29 July Stalin asked Bolesław Bierut, the head of the Soviet-controlled Polish government, to accept in consideration of the large American concessions. The Polish delegation decided to accept a boundary of the administration zone at "somewhere between the western Neisse and the Kwisa". Later that day the Poles changed their mind: "Bierut, accompanied by Rola-Zymierski, returned to Stalin and argued against any compromise with the Americans. Stalin told his Polish protégés that he would defend their position at the conference."[46]

Finally on 1 August 1945, the Potsdam Agreement of the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union, in anticipation of the final peace treaty, placed the German territories east of the Oder–Neisse line formally under Polish administrative control. It was also decided that all Germans remaining in the new and old Polish territory should be expelled.[citation needed]

'Recovered territories'

 
Edward Henry Lewinski Corwin's map of Polish-German borders in the 12th century (published in 1917, US)

Those territories were known in Poland as the Regained or Recovered Territories, a term based on the claim that they were in the past the possession of the Piast dynasty of Polish kings, Polish fiefs or included in the parts lost to Prussia during the Partitions of Poland. The term was widely exploited by Propaganda in the People's Republic of Poland.[47] The creation of a picture of the new territories as an "integral part of historical Poland" in the post-war era had the aim of forging Polish settlers and repatriates arriving there into a coherent community loyal to the new Communist regime.[48] The term was in use immediately following the end of World War II when it was part of the Communist indoctrination of the Polish settlers in those territories.[48] The final agreements in effect compensated Poland with 112,000 km2 (43,000 sq mi) of former German territory in exchange for 187,000 km2 (72,000 sq mi) of land lying east of the Curzon Line – Polish areas occupied by the Soviet Union. Poles and Polish Jews from the Soviet Union were the subject of a process called "repatriation" (settlement within the territory of post-war Poland). Not all of them were repatriated: some were imprisoned or deported to work camps in Siberia or Kazakhstan.[citation needed]

One reason for this version of the new border was that it was the shortest possible border between Poland and Germany. It is only 472 km (293 miles) long, from one of the northernmost points of the Czech Republic to one of the southernmost points of the Baltic Sea at the Oder estuary.[citation needed]

World War II aftermath

 
Oder Lagoon area with border on western bank of the Oder, city of Szczecin to the south.

Winston Churchill was not present at the end of the Conference, since the results of the British elections had made it clear that he had been defeated. Churchill later claimed that he would never have agreed to the Oder–Western Neisse line, and in his famous Iron Curtain speech declared that

The Russian-dominated Polish Government has been encouraged to make enormous and wrongful inroads upon Germany, and mass expulsions of millions of Germans on a scale grievous and undreamed-of are now taking place.[49]

 
US Department of State Demographics map from 10 January 1945 Germany – Poland Proposed Territorial Changes, based in part on German prewar population census. Was used for border discussions at the Potsdam conference later in 1945.

Not only were the German territorial changes of the Nazis reversed, but the border was moved westward, deep into territory which had been in 1937 part of Germany with an almost exclusively German population.[50] The new line placed almost all of Silesia, more than half of Pomerania, the eastern portion of Brandenburg, a small area of Saxony, the former Free City of Danzig and the southern two-thirds of East Prussia (Masuria and Warmia) within Poland (see Former eastern territories of Germany). The northeastern third of East Prussia was directly annexed by the Soviet Union.

These territorial changes were followed by large-scale population transfers, involving 14 million people all together from the whole of Eastern Europe, including many people already shifted during the war. Nearly all remaining Germans from the territory annexed by Poland were expelled, while Polish persons who had been displaced into Germany, usually as slave laborers, returned to settle in the area. In addition to this, the Polish population originating from the eastern half of the former Second Polish Republic, now annexed by the Soviet Union, was mostly expelled and transferred to the newly acquired territories.

Most Poles supported the new border, mostly out of fear of renewed German aggression and German irredentism.[51] The border was also presented as a just consequence for the Nazi German state's initiation of World War II and the subsequent genocide against Poles and the attempt to destroy Polish statehood, as well as for the territorial losses of eastern Poland to the Soviet Union, mainly western Ukraine and Belarus. It has been asserted that resentment towards the expelled German population on the part of the Poles was based on the fact that the majority of that population was loyal to the Nazis during the invasion and occupation, and the active role some of them played in the persecution and mass murder of Poles and Jews.[citation needed] These circumstances allegedly have impeded sensitivity among Poles with respect to the expulsion committed during the aftermath of World War II.[citation needed]

The new order was in Stalin's interests, because it enabled the Soviet Communists to present themselves as the primary maintainer of Poland's new western border.[citation needed] It also provided the Soviet Union with territorial gains from part of East Prussia and the eastern part of the Second Republic of Poland.

United States Secretary of State James F. Byrnes outlined the official position of the U.S. government regarding the Oder–Neisse line in his Stuttgart Speech of 6 September 1946:

At Potsdam specific areas which were part of Germany were provisionally assigned to the Soviet Union and to Poland, subject to the final decisions of the Peace Conference. [...] With regard to Silesia and other eastern German areas, the assignment of this territory to Poland by Russia for administrative purposes had taken place before the Potsdam meeting. The heads of government agreed that, pending the final determination of Poland's western frontier, Silesia and other eastern German areas should be under the administration of the Polish state and for such purposes should not be considered as a part of the Soviet zone of occupation in Germany. However, as the Protocol of the Potsdam Conference makes clear, the heads of government did not agree to support at the peace settlement the cession of this particular area. The Soviets and the Poles suffered greatly at the hands of Hitler's invading armies. As a result of the agreement at Yalta, Poland ceded to the Soviet Union territory east of the Curzon Line. Because of this, Poland asked for revision of her northern and western frontiers. The United States will support revision of these frontiers in Poland's favor. However, the extent of the area to be ceded to Poland must be determined when the final settlement is agreed upon.[52]

The speech was met with shock in Poland and Deputy Prime Minister Mikołajczyk immediately issued a response declaring that retention of Polish territories based on the Oder–Neisse line was matter of life and death.[53]

Byrnes, who accepted Western Neisse as provisional Polish border,[54][55][56] in fact did not state that such a change would take place (as was read by Germans who hoped for support to regain the lost territories).[56] The purpose of the speech and associated US diplomatic activities was as propaganda aimed at Germany by Western Powers, who could blame the Polish-German border and German expulsions on Moscow alone.[56]

In the late 1950s, by the time of Dwight D. Eisenhower's Presidency, the United States had largely accepted the Oder–Neisse line as final and did not support German demands regarding the border, while officially declaring a need for a final settlement in a peace treaty.[57][58] In the mid-1960s the U.S. government accepted the Oder–Neisse line as binding and agreed that there would be no changes to it in the future.[59] German revisionism regarding the border began to cost West Germany sympathies among its western allies.[57] In 1959, France officially issued a statement supporting the Oder–Neisse line, which created controversy in West Germany.[60]

The Oder–Neisse line was, however, never formally recognized by the United States until the revolutionary changes of 1989 and 1990.[Note 3]

German recognition of the border

East Germany

 
1951 East German stamp commemorative of the Treaty of Zgorzelec establishing the Oder–Neisse line as a "border of peace", featuring the presidents Wilhelm Pieck (GDR) and Bolesław Bierut (Poland)

The East German Socialist Unity Party (SED), founded 1946, originally rejected the Oder–Neisse line.[62] Under Soviet occupation and heavy pressure by Moscow, the official phrase Friedensgrenze (border of peace) was promulgated in March–April 1947 at the Moscow Foreign Ministers Conference. The German Democratic Republic and Poland's Communist government signed the Treaty of Zgorzelec in 1950 recognizing the Oder–Neisse line, officially designated by the Communists as the "Border of Peace and Friendship".[63][64][65]

In 1952 Stalin made recognition of the Oder–Neisse line as a permanent boundary one of the conditions for the Soviet Union to agree to a reunification of Germany (see Stalin Note). The offer was rejected by the West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer.[citation needed]

West Germany

 
  Territory lost after World War I
  Territory lost after World War II
  Present-day Germany

The West German definition of the "de jure" borders of Germany was based on the determinations of the Potsdam Agreement, which placed the German territories (as of 31 December 1937) east of the Oder–Neisse line "under the administration of the Polish State" while "the final delimitation of the western frontier of Poland should await the peace settlement". The recognition of the Oder-Neisse Line as permanent was thus only reserved to a final peace settlement with reunited Germany.[Note 4][Note 5][Note 6][Note 7] In West Germany, where the majority of the displaced refugees found refuge, recognition of the Oder-Neisse Line as permanent was long regarded as unacceptable. Right from the beginning of his Chancellorship in 1949, Adenauer refused to accept the Oder–Neisse line as Germany's eastern frontier, and made it quite clear that if Germany ever reunified, the Federal Republic would lay claim to all of the land that had belonged to Germany as at 1 January 1937.[69] Adenauer's rejection of the border adjustments resulting from the Potsdam agreement was viewed critically by some in Poland.[70] Soon after the agreement was signed, both the US and Soviet Union accepted the border as the de facto border of Poland. United States Secretary James Byrnes accepted the Western Neisse as the provisional Polish border.[54] While in his Stuttgart Speech he played around with an idea of modification of borders (in Poland's favor), giving fuel to speculation by German nationalists and revisionists, the State department confessed that the speech was simply intended to "smoke out Molotov's attitude on the eve of elections in Germany".[56] The Adenauer government went to the Constitutional Court to receive a ruling that declared that legally speaking the frontiers of the Federal Republic were those of Germany as at 1 January 1937, that the Potsdam Declaration of 1945 which announced that the Oder–Neisse line was Germany's "provisional" eastern border was invalid, and that as such the Federal Republic considered all of the land east of the Oder–Neisse line to be "illegally" occupied by Poland and the Soviet Union.[71][need quotation to verify] The American historian Gerhard Weinberg pointed out that in claiming the frontiers of 1937, West Germany was in fact claiming the frontiers established by the Treaty of Versailles, which the entire interwar German leadership had claimed to be totally unacceptable from 1919 to 1939, and which perhaps indicated that Versailles was nowhere near as harsh as claimed, especially when compared with the far greater territorial losses imposed by the Oder–Neisse line.[72] Not all in Adenauer's government supported this; politicians like minister Seebohm criticized limiting German territorial demands to the borders of 1937, alluding to pre-Versailles borders,[73] as did the organisation of German expelled BdV.[74] In 1962 a virulent anti-Polish organization called AKON was founded in West Germany which published maps with the borders of 1914.[74]

 
CDU's election poster (1947): "Never Oder-Neisse line – vote CDU"

To Hans Peter Schwarz, Adenauer's refusal to accept the Oder–Neisse line was in large part motivated by domestic politics, especially his desire to win the votes of the domestic lobby of those Germans who had been expelled from areas east of the Oder–Neisse line.[69] 16% of the electorate in 1950 were people who fled or were expelled after the war, forming a powerful political force .[75] As a result, the CDU, the CSU, the FDP and the SPD all issued statements opposing the Oder–Neisse line and supporting Heimatrecht ("right to one's homeland", i.e. that the expellees be allowed to return to their former homes).[76] Adenauer greatly feared the power of the expellee lobby, and told his cabinet in 1950 that he was afraid of "unbearable economic and political unrest" if the government did not champion all of the demands of the expellee lobby.[76] In addition, Adenauer's rejection of the Oder–Neisse line was intended to be a deal-breaker if negotiations ever began to reunite Germany on terms that Adenauer considered unfavorable such as the neutralization of Germany as Adenauer knew well that the Soviets would never consider revising the Oder–Neisse line.[69] Finally Adenauer's biographer, the German historian Hans Peter Schwarz has argued that Adenauer may have genuinely believed that Germany had the right to retake the land lost east of the Oder and Neisse rivers, despite all of the image problems this created for him in the United States and western Europe.[69] By contrast, the Finnish historian Pertti Ahonen—citing numerous private statements made by Adenauer that Germany's eastern provinces were lost forever and expressing contempt for the expellee leaders as delusional in believing that they were actually going to return one day to their former homes—has argued that Adenauer had no interest in really challenging the Oder–Neisse line.[77] Ahonen wrote that Adenauer "saw his life's work in anchoring the Federal Republic irrevocably to the anti-Communist West and no burning interest in East European problems—or even German reunification."[77] Adenauer's stance on the Oder–Neisse line was to create major image problems for him in the Western countries in the 1950s, where many regarded his revanchist views on where Germany's eastern borders ought to be with considerable distaste, and only the fact that East Germany was between the Federal Republic and Poland prevented this from becoming a major issue in relations with the West.[69]

 
SPD's election poster (1949): "Silesians – We German Socialdemocrats will fight with all means of peaceful politics and in constant appeal on the sanity of the world for every single square kilometer east of Oder and Neisse"

On 1 May 1956, the West German Foreign Minister Heinrich von Brentano admitted during a press conference in London that the Federal Republic's stance on the Oder–Neisse line was "somewhat problematic", and suggested that the Federal Republic should recognize the Oder–Neisse line in exchange for the Soviet Union allowing German reunification.[78] Brentano's remark caused such an uproar with the expellee leaders arguing that he should resign, that Adenauer was forced to disallow his foreign minister, and Brentano only kept his job by claiming that he was misquoted by the British press.[78] In private, Brentano was willing to accept the Oder–Neisse line as the price of reunification, and was not misquoted in London as he claimed afterwards.[78] Away from the public limelight in a conversation with the Canadian ambassador Charles Ritchie in June 1956, Brentano called the leaders of the expellee groups "unteachable nationalists" who had learned nothing from World War II, and who did not have the right to control the Federal Republic's policy towards Eastern Europe by vetoing policy changes they disliked.[78] Brentano's press conference was meant by Adenauer to be a trial balloon to see if the Federal Republic could have a more flexible policy towards Eastern Europe.[78] The furious protests set off by Brentano's press conference convinced Adenauer that he did not have the domestic support for such a policy, and that the current policy of opposing the Oder–Neisse line would have to continue.[79] This caused considerable disappointment with Adenauer's Western allies, who had been applying strong pressure behind the scenes and would continue to apply such pressure for the rest of the 1950s for Bonn to recognize the Oder–Neisse line.[80] This pressure become especially acute after the "Polish October" crisis of 1956 brought to power Władysław Gomułka as Poland's new leader.[80] Gomułka was a Communist, but also a Polish nationalist, and it was believed possible in Washington that a split could be encouraged between Moscow and Warsaw if only Bonn would recognize the Oder–Neisse line.[80] Because the Federal Republic's refusal to recognize the Oder–Neisse line together with the presence of such Nazi-tainted individuals like Theodor Oberländer in Adenauer's cabinet, Gomułka was obsessed with the fear that one day the Germans would invade Poland again, which would mean a return to the horrors of the German occupation.[81]

Gomułka feared the Germans more than he disliked the Russians, and thus he argued in both public and in private that it was necessary to keep Soviet troops in Poland to guard against any future German revanchism.[81] Gomułka felt sincerely threatened by the revanchist statements put out by the Adenauer government, and believed the alliance with the Soviet Union was the only thing stopping the threat of a new German invasion.[82] Gomułka told the 8th Plenum on 19 October 1956 that: "Poland needs friendship with the Soviet Union more than the Soviet Union needs friendship with Poland...Without the Soviet Union we cannot maintain our borders with the West".[83] During his meetings with Nikita Khrushchev during the Polish October crisis, Gomułka stressed that though he wanted Poland to take a more independent line within the Soviet bloc, he would never break with Moscow because of his fears of future German aggression based on their statements rejecting the Oder–Neisse line.[83] Because Gomułka's obsession with the Oder–Neisse line and his reputation as a Polish nationalist who spoke of a "Polish road to socialism" independent of Moscow, it was believed possible by the Americans at the time that Gomułka might follow Tito's example in 1948 if only Adenauer could be persuaded to accept the Oder–Neisse line. One scholar wrote in 1962 that most Poles deeply disliked Communism, but were willing to accept Gomułka's regime as the lesser evil because they believed Gomułka's warnings that if without the Red Army, the Germans would invade again.[84] Such was the extent of Polish fears about German revanchism that as late as February 1990 the Polish Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki stated in a speech that Red Army might have to stay in Poland until Germany had promised to firmly recognize the Oder–Neisse line as the final frontier between Germany and Poland.[85]

In 1963 the German Social Democratic opposition leader Willy Brandt said that "abnegation is betrayal", but it was Brandt who eventually changed West Germany's attitude with his policy of Ostpolitik. In 1970 West Germany signed treaties with the Soviet Union (Treaty of Moscow) and Poland (Treaty of Warsaw) recognizing Poland's Western border at the Oder–Neisse line as current reality, and not to be changed by force. This had the effect of making family visits by the displaced eastern Germans to their lost homelands now more or less possible. Such visits were still very difficult, however, and permanent resettlement in the homeland, now Poland, remained impossible.[citation needed]

In 1989, another treaty was signed between Poland and East Germany, the sea border was defined, and a dispute from 1985 was settled.[citation needed]

In March 1990, the West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl caused a storm, when he suggested that a reunified Germany would not accept the Oder–Neisse line, and implied that the Federal Republic might wish to restore the frontier of 1937, by force if necessary.[86] Kohl further added that in a statement of 1 March 1990 that he would only recognize the Oder–Neisse line if Poland promised to pay compensation to the Germans expelled after 1945 and if Poland promised not to seek reparations for the sufferings of Polish slave labourers in Germany and reparations for the damage done by German forces to Poland during World War II.[87] After Kohl's note caused a massive international backlash that threatened to derail the process for German reunification, Kohl hastily changed track, and said that a reunified Germany would accept the Oder–Neisse line after all, and that he would not seek to link recognizing the Oder–Neisse line to talks about compensation. In November 1990, after German reunification, the Federal Republic of Germany and the Republic of Poland signed a treaty confirming the border between them, as requested by the Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany. Earlier, Germany had amended its constitution and abolished Article 23 of West Germany's Basic Law (on which reunification was based), which could have been used to claim the former German eastern territories.[citation needed]

The German-Polish Border Treaty, signed 14 November 1990, finalizing the Oder–Neisse line as the Polish-German border[88] came into force on 16 January 1992, together with a second one, a Treaty of Good Neighbourship, signed in June 1991, in which the two countries, among other things, recognized basic political and cultural rights for both the German and the Polish minorities living on either side of the border. After 1990, approximately 150,000 Germans still resided in the areas transferred to Poland, mainly in the Opole Voivodeship, with a smaller presence in regions such as Lower Silesia and Warmia-Masuria. There are 1.5 million Poles or ethnic Poles living in Germany, including both recent immigrants and the descendants of Poles that settled in Germany many generations ago.[citation needed]

Other developments

Division of cities

 
The Lusatian Neisse dividing German Görlitz (right) from Polish Zgorzelec (left); formerly both constituted the city of Görlitz.

The border divided several cities into two parts – Görlitz/Zgorzelec, Guben/Gubin, Frankfurt/Słubice and Bad Muskau/Łęknica.[89]

Partially open border 1971–1980

Millions visited the neighbouring country (either Poland or East Germany) during the years 1971–1980.[90][91] The East German economy was threatened by overconsumption of Polish tourists, who came to East Germany to buy cheaper products that the socialist economy could not provide in abundance on either side of the border; and the Poles also became politically dangerous for the GDR government by the time of the 1980 Solidarity strikes.[92]

See also

World War II-related events

Notes

  1. ^ "Przesunięcie granicy zachodniej na korzyść Polski było uważane także za jedną z form ukarania Niemców za popełnione zbrodnie i zadośćuczynienia Polsce."[19]
  2. ^ "Nowa Granica miała osłabić korzystny dotąd układ strategiczny wykorzystywany przeciwko Polsce (Prusy Wschodnie, Pomorze Zachodnie)."[19]
  3. ^ "Although the Polish and German governments signed a treaty in 1970..., the United States withheld the formal recognition of the Oder-Neisse until the revolutionary changes of 1989 and 1990, ..."[61]
  4. ^ Article VIII. B of the Potsdam Agreement: "In conformity with the agreement on Poland reached at the Crimea Conference the three heads of government have sought the opinion of the Polish Provisional Government of National Unity in regard to the accession of territory in the north 'end west which Poland should receive. The President of the National Council of Poland and members of the Polish Provisional Government of National Unity have been received at the Conference and have fully presented their views. The three heads of government reaffirm their opinion that the final delimitation of the western frontier of Poland should await the peace settlement. The three heads of government agree that, pending the final determination of Poland's western frontier, the former German territories cast of a line running from the Baltic Sea immediately west of Swinamunde, and thence along the Oder River to the confluence of the western Neisse River and along the Western Neisse to the Czechoslovak frontier, including that portion of East Prussia not placed under the administration of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics in accordance with the understanding reached at this conference and including the area of the former free city of Danzig, shall be under the administration of the Polish State and for such purposes should not be considered as part of the Soviet zone of occupation in Germany."
  5. ^ "In den Verhandlungen mit der polnischen Regierung mußte die Frage der Anerkennung der Oder-Neiße-Linie ausgeklammert warden, denn nach der Entscheidung des Bundesverfassungsgerichts von 1975 bestanden das Deutsche Reich in seinen Grenzen von 1937 und die Viermächteverantwortung für ganz Deutschland solange fort, bis ein förmlicher Friedensvertrag geschlossen worden sei."[66]
  6. ^ "Politiker und politische Gruppen verwiesen auf die Abmachungen der Potsdamer Konferenz von 1945, denen zufolge die endgültige Regelung der Oder-Neiße-Frage einem endgültigen Friedensvertrag für ganz Deutschland vorbehalten werden sollte."[67]
  7. ^ "Die Gebiete östlich von Oder und Neiße sind ebenso wie das übrige Reichsgebiet in den Grenzen vom 31. Dezember 1937 von den Siegermächten bei Kriegsende nicht annektiert worden. Im Vorspruch der "Erklärung" vom 5. Juni 1945, welche die Regierungen des Vereinigten Königreichs, der Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika und der Union der Sozialistischen Sowjetrepubliken sowie die provisorische Regierung der Französischen Republik "in Anbetracht der Niederlage Deutschlands und der Übernahme der obersten Regierungsgewalt hinsichtlich Deutschlands" abgegeben haben, heißt es: "Die Übernahme ... der besagten Regierungsgewalt und Befugnisse bewirkt nicht die Annektierung Deutschlands" (Amtsblatt des Kontrollrats in Deutschland, Ergänzungsblatt Nr. 1, S. 7). Auf der Potsdamer Konferenz (Juli/August 1945) kamen Großbritannien, die Sowjetunion und die Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika überein, die deutschen Gebiete östlich von Oder und Neiße einer Sonderregelung zu unterwerfen, die von der im übrigen Reichsgebiet eingerichteten Besatzungsherrschaft deutlich abwich. Nach den Abschnitten VI und IX des als "Mitteilung über die Dreimächtekonferenz von Berlin" bezeichneten Protokolls vom 2. August 1945 (oft Potsdamer Abkommen genannt) wurden die deutschen Ostgebiete "vorbehaltlich der endgültigen Bestimmung der territorialen Fragen bei der Friedensregelung" teilweise unter sowjetische und teilweise unter polnische "Verwaltung" gestellt ... (AmtsblattBVerfGE 40, 141 (157), BVerfGE 40, 141 (158) des Kontrollrats in Deutschland, Ergänzungsblatt Nr. 1 S. 17 f.). Die sich aus dem Vorbehalt der Friedensregelung ergebende Vorläufigkeit dieser Gebietszuweisung wurde nach dem Abschluß der Potsdamer Konferenz von der Sowjetunion und Polen zunächst respektiert. Der sowjetisch-polnische Vertrag vom 16. August 1945, der den Verlauf der sowjetisch-polnischen Grenzlinie in Ostpreußen beschreibt, wiederholt in seinem Art. 3 ausdrücklich den Friedensvertragsvorbehalt unter Bezugnahme auf die Potsdamer Konferenz (United Nations Treaty Series 10 II, Nr. 61, S. 196). 66 Die drei Westmächte haben einer endgültigen Zuweisung der deutschen Ostgebiete an die Sowjetunion und Polen nicht zugestimmt. Nach der Ziffer VI des Protokolls über die Beschlüsse der Potsdamer Konferenz haben Großbritannien und die Vereinigten Staaten lediglich in Aussicht gestellt, den "grundsätzlich" akzeptierten "Vorschlag der Sowjetregierung hinsichtlich der endgültigen Übergabe der Stadt Königsberg und des anliegenden Gebiets an die Sowjetunion" vorbehaltlich einer noch vorzunehmenden Festlegung des "genauen Grenzverlaufs" bei der "bevorstehenden Friedensregelung" zu "unterstützen".[68]

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External links

  • An East German pamphlet for propagandists entitled "Why is the Oder-Neiße Line a Peace Border?"
  • Treaty between the Federal Republic of Germany and the Republic of Poland on the confirmation of the frontier between them, 14 November 1990(PDF) ( in Polish and German)
  • The Oder Neisse Line Problem (German) (PDF)
  • Closing The Ring Winston Churchill; Excerpt on the Teheran conference, from his memoirs.
  • Speaking Frankly James F. Byrnes; Excerpt on the Yalta conference, from his memoirs.
  • Triumph and Tragedy Winston Churchill; Excerpt on the Yalta conference, from his memoirs.
  • Churchill's statement to the House of Commons 27, February 1945, Describing the outcome of Yalta
  • The German-Polish Border Region. A Case of Regional Integration? ARENA Working Papers WP 97/19 Jorunn Sem Fure Department of History, University of Bergen

Coordinates: 53°55′34.70″N 14°13′26.50″E / 53.9263056°N 14.2240278°E / 53.9263056; 14.2240278

oder, neisse, line, german, oder, neiße, grenze, polish, granica, odrze, nysie, Łużyckiej, unofficial, term, modern, border, between, germany, poland, line, generally, follows, oder, lusatian, neisse, rivers, meeting, baltic, north, small, portion, polish, ter. The Oder Neisse line German Oder Neisse Grenze Polish granica na Odrze i Nysie Luzyckiej is an unofficial term for modern border between Germany and Poland The line generally follows the Oder and Lusatian Neisse rivers meeting the Baltic Sea in the north A small portion of Polish territory does fall west of the line including the cities of Szczecin and Swinoujscie German Stettin and Swinemunde 1 The Oder Neisse line The Oder and Neisse rivers The Oder Neisse line at Usedom 2008 All prewar German territories east of the line and within the 1937 German boundaries comprising nearly one quarter 23 8 percent of the Weimar Republic were ceded under the changes decided at the Potsdam Conference with the majority ceded to Poland The remainder consisting of northern East Prussia including the German city of Konigsberg renamed Kaliningrad was allocated to the Soviet Union as the Kaliningrad Oblast of the Russian SFSR today Russia Much of the German population in these territories estimated at around 12 million in autumn 1944 had fled in the wake of the Soviet Red Army s advance The Oder Neisse line marked the border between East Germany and Poland from 1950 to 1990 The two Communist governments agreed to the border in 1950 while West Germany after a period of refusal adhered to the border with reservations in 1970 2 After the revolutions of 1989 newly reunified Germany and Poland accepted the line as their border in the 1990 German Polish Border Treaty Contents 1 History 2 Considerations during the war 2 1 Background 2 2 Tehran Conference 2 3 Yalta Conference 2 4 Polish and Soviet demands 3 Potsdam Conference 3 1 Concessions 3 2 Recovered territories 4 World War II aftermath 5 German recognition of the border 5 1 East Germany 5 2 West Germany 6 Other developments 6 1 Division of cities 6 2 Partially open border 1971 1980 7 See also 7 1 World War II related events 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory EditThe lower River Oder in Silesia was Piast Poland s western border from the 10th until the 13th century 3 From around the time of World War I some proposed restoring this line in the belief that it would provide protection against Germany One of the first proposals was made in the Russian Empire Later when the Nazis gained power the German territory to the east of the line was militarised by Germany with a view to a future war and the Polish population faced Germanisation 4 The policies of Nazi Germany also encouraged nationalism among the German minority in Poland While the process of Germanisation of lands east of the Limes Sorabicus line already took place between 12th and 14th century there were many areas where German population hardly settled at all making the process of Germanisation extend well into the 19th and 20th centuries 5 For example on the Rugia Island the local Slavic culture and language persisted into the 19th century this was also the case for many areas between the Oder Neisse and interwar Polish border About half of what was Farther Pomerania remained plurality Kashubian or Polish until 18th and 19th century with surviving majority Slavic pockets extending as far west as Dievenow 5 In 1905 Arnost Muka observed that there remained in that land an old Slav national grouping with types and means of settlement customs and habits unchanged through to this day in the character and outlook of the inhabitants 5 The situation was similar in the Western part of Silesia where Polish and Silesian languages remained dominant by the end of 18th century in areas such as Ohlau Gross Wartenberg and Namslau 5 Before World War II Poland s western border with Germany had been fixed under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles of 1919 It partially followed the historic border between the Holy Roman Empire and Greater Poland but with certain adjustments that were intended to reasonably reflect the ethnic compositions of small areas near the traditional provincial borders The fate of Upper Silesia was to be decided in a plebiscite which produced 59 8 votes in favour of Germany The plebiscite took place among severe ethnic tensions as German authorities and Freikorps clashed and persecuted the local Polish population and the Poles organised massive strikes and protests 6 The plebiscite allowed both permanent inhabitants of the area but also people born in the region to vote regardless of their current location or time spent living in Silesia 7 Voters who participated in the plebiscite despite not living in Upper Silesia were called migrants and made up 192 408 16 of the total electorate of 1 186 234 As these migrants voted overwhelmingly for Germany the local Polish population considered the plebiscite to be fraudulent resulting in three Silesian Uprisings 7 Eventually the region was divided roughly equally with some majority Polish regions remaining in Germany and some German provinces being ceded to Poland At the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 the Polish delegation led by Roman Dmowski requested the inclusion of the city of Danzig in the Polish state arguing that the city was rightfully part of Poland because it was Polish until 1793 and that Poland would not be economically viable without it 8 During the First Partition of Poland in 1772 the inhabitants of Danzig fought fiercely for it to remain a part of Poland 9 but as a result of the Germanisation process in the 19th century 10 90 of the people in Danzig were German by 1919 which made the Entente leaders at the Paris Peace Conference compromise by creating the Free City of Danzig a city state in which Poland had certain special rights 11 The city of Danzig was 90 German and 10 Polish yet the surrounding countryside around Danzig was overwhelmingly Polish and the ethnically Polish rural areas included in the Free City of Danzig objected arguing that they wanted to be part of Poland 8 The Oder Neisse line as a concept of future Polish border appeared among Polish nationalist circles in late 19th century Jan Ludwik Poplawski is considered to be one of the first advocates for the return of Piast Poland although his writings mainly focused on Upper Silesia Opolian Silesia and the southern part of East Prussia as these regions remained majority Polish 12 In 1918 Boleslaw Jakimiak advocated for a Polish border along the rivers of Oder and Lusatian Neisse possibly inspired by the proposals of Russian nationalists He described the German expansion towards the formerly Slavic lands and considered it a matter of historical justice to have East Prussia the entirety of Pomerania East Brandenburg and both Lower and Upper Silesia become integral parts of the future Polish state 12 At the Paris Peace Conference Polish commission supervised by Jules Cambon and headed by Roman Dmowski proposed a Polish border that would encompass the entirety of Upper Silesia and most of Opolian Silesia including cities of Ratibor Neustadt Falkenberg Brieg Oels and Militsch in Poland The entirety of Greater Poland was also to be ceded to the Polish state along with Danzig Warmia and Masuria While the postulate of the Polish delegation gained acceptance of the rest of the conference it was met with vehement protest from David Lloyd George whose opposition led to border changes in favour of Germany 12 Considerations during the war EditBackground Edit Between the wars the concept of Western thought mysl zachodnia became popular among some Polish nationalists The Polish motherland territories were defined by scholars like Zygmunt Wojciechowski as the areas included in Piast Poland in the 10th century 13 14 15 16 Some Polish historians called for the return of territories up to the river Elbe 16 The proponents of these ideas in prewar Poland often described as a group of fantasists were organized in the National Party which was also opposed to the government of Poland the Sanacja 17 The proposal to establish the border along the Oder and Neisse was not seriously considered for a long time 4 After World War II the Polish Communists lacking their own expertise regarding the Western border clarification needed adopted the National Democratic concept of western thought 18 clarification needed After Nazi Germany invaded and occupied Poland some Polish politicians started to see a need to alter the border with Germany 4 A secure border 4 was seen as essential especially in the light of Nazi atrocities During the war Nazi Germany committed genocide against Poland s population especially Jews whom they classified as Untermenschen sub humans Alteration to the western border was seen as a punishment for the Germans for their atrocities and a compensation for Poland 4 Note 1 The participation in the genocide by German minorities and their paramilitary organizations such as the Selbstschutz self defense and support for Nazism among German society also connected the issue of border changes with the idea of population transfers intended to avoid such events in the future 20 Initially the Polish government in exile envisioned territorial changes after the war which would incorporate East Prussia Danzig Gdansk and the Oppeln Opole Silesian region into post war Poland along with a straightening of the Pomeranian border and minor acquisition in the Lauenburg Lebork area 4 The border changes were to provide Poland with a safe border and to prevent the Germans from using Eastern Pomerania and East Prussia as strategic assets against Poland Note 2 Only with the changing situation during the war were these territorial proposals modified 4 In October 1941 the exile newspaper Dziennik Polski postulated a postwar Polish western border that would include East Prussia Silesia up to the Lausitzer Neisse and at least both banks of the Oder s mouth 21 While these territorial claims were regarded as megalomaniac by the Soviet ambassador in London in October 1941 Stalin announced the return of East Prussia to Slavdom after the war On 16 December 1941 Stalin remarked in a meeting with the British Foreign Minister Anthony Eden though inconsistent in detail that Poland should receive all German territory up to the river Oder 21 In May 1942 General Wladyslaw Sikorski Prime Minister of the Polish government in exile sent two memoranda to the US government sketching a postwar Polish western border along the Oder and Neisse inconsistent about the Eastern Glatzer Neisse and the Western Lausitzer Neisse However the proposal was dropped by the government in exile in late 1942 22 In post war Poland the government described the Oder Neisse line as the result of tough negotiations between Polish Communists and Stalin 23 However according to the modern Institute of National Remembrance Polish aspirations had no impact on the final outcome rather the idea of a westward shift of the Polish border was adopted synthetically by Stalin who was the final arbiter in the matter Stalin s political goals as well as his desire to foment enmity between Poles and Germans influenced his idea of a swap of western for eastern territory thus ensuring control over both countries 4 As with before the war some fringe groups advocated restoring the old border between Poland and Germany 4 13 14 15 16 17 Tehran Conference Edit At the Tehran Conference in late 1943 the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin raised the subject of Poland s western frontier and its extension to the River Oder While the Americans were not interested in discussing any border changes at that time 24 Roosevelt agreed that in general the Polish border should be extended West to the Oder while Polish eastern borders should be shifted westwards he also admitted that it was due to elections at home he could not express his position publicly 25 British Foreign Minister Anthony Eden wrote in his diary that A difficulty is that the Americans are terrified of the subject which Roosevelt advisor Harry Hopkins called political dynamite for their elections But as I told him if we cannot get a solution Polish Soviet relations six months from now with Soviet armies in Poland will be infinitely worse and elections nearer 26 Winston Churchill compared the westward shift of Poland to soldiers taking two steps left close and declared in his memoirs If Poland trod on some German toes that could not be helped but there must be a strong Poland 27 The British government formed a clear position on the issue and at the first meeting of the European Advisory Commission on 14 January 1944 recommended that East Prussia and Danzig and possibly other areas will ultimately be given to Poland as well as agreeing on a Polish frontier on the Oder 25 28 Yalta Conference Edit In February 1945 American and British officials met in Yalta and agreed on the basics on Poland s future borders In the east the British agreed to the Curzon line but recognised that the US might push for Lwow to be included in post war Poland In the west Poland should receive part of East Prussia Danzig the eastern tip of Pomerania and Upper Silesia President Franklin D Roosevelt said that it would make it easier for me at home if Stalin were generous to Poland with respect to Poland s eastern frontiers 29 Winston Churchill said a Soviet concession on that point would be admired as a gesture of magnanimity and declared that with respect to Poland s post war government the British would never be content with a solution which did not leave Poland a free and independent state 30 With respect to Poland s western frontiers Stalin noted that the Polish Prime Minister in exile Stanislaw Mikolajczyk had been pleased when Stalin had told him Poland would be granted Stettin Szczecin and the German territories east of the Western Neisse 31 Yalta was the first time that the Soviets openly declared support for a German Polish frontier on the Western as opposed to the Eastern Neisse 32 Churchill objected to the Western Neisse frontier saying that it would be a pity to stuff the Polish goose so full of German food that it got indigestion 33 He added that many Britons would be shocked if such large numbers of Germans were driven out of these areas to which Stalin responded that many Germans had already fled before the Red Army 34 Poland s western frontier was ultimately left to be decided at the Potsdam Conference Polish and Soviet demands Edit Dominant ethnicities in and around Poland 1931 according to Polish historian Henryk Zielinski Originally Germany was to retain Stettin while the Poles were to annex East Prussia with Konigsberg now Kaliningrad The Polish government had in fact demanded this since the start of World War II in 1939 because of East Prussia s strategic position that allegedly undermined the defense of Poland citation needed Other territorial changes proposed by the Polish government were the transfer of the Silesian region of Oppeln and the Pomeranian regions of Danzig Butow and Lauenburg and the straightening of the border somewhat in Western Pomerania citation needed However Stalin decided that he wanted Konigsberg as a year round warm water port for the Soviet Navy and he argued that the Poles should receive Stettin instead citation needed The prewar Polish government in exile had little to say in these decisions but insisted on retaining the city of Lwow Lvov Lemberg now L viv in Galicia Stalin refused to concede and instead proposed that all of Lower Silesia including Breslau Polish Wroclaw be given to Poland Many Poles from Lwow would later be moved to populate the city citation needed Westward shift of Poland after World War II Blue line Curzon Line of 8 December 1919 Pink areas prewar German territory transferred to Poland after the war Grey area prewar Polish territory transferred to the Soviet Union after the war The eventual border was not the most far reaching territorial change that was proposed There were suggestions to include areas further west so that Poland could include the small minority population of ethnic Slavic Sorbs who lived near Cottbus and Bautzen citation needed The precise location of the western border was left open The western Allies accepted in general that the Oder would be the future western border of Poland Still in doubt was whether the border should follow the eastern or western Neisse and whether Stettin now Szczecin which lay west of the Oder should remain German or be placed in Poland with an expulsion of the German population Stettin was the traditional seaport of Berlin 35 It had a dominant German population and a small Polish minority that numbered 2 000 in the interwar period 36 37 The western Allies sought to place the border on the eastern Neisse at Breslau but Stalin refused to budge Suggestions of a border on the Bobr Bober were also rejected by the Soviets citation needed Nikita Khrushchev in his memoirs said I had only one desire that Poland s borders were moved as far west as possible 38 Not satisfied with the Oder Neisse line the Polish communists initially wanted to own the entire island of Usedom and push the border west to the Randow river however they were refused by Stalin Potsdam Conference EditMain article Potsdam Conference Allied Occupation Zones in Germany from 1945 until 1949 At Potsdam Stalin argued for the Oder Neisse line on the grounds that the Polish Government demanded this frontier and that there were no longer any Germans left east of this line 39 Later the Russians admitted that at least a million Germans still far lower than the true number still remained in the area at that time Several Polish Communist leaders appeared at the conference to advance arguments for an Oder Western Neisse frontier The port of Stettin was demanded for Eastern European exports If Stettin was Polish then in view of the fact that the supply of water is found between the Oder and the Lausitzer Neisse if the Oder s tributaries were controlled by someone else the river could be blocked 40 Soviet forces had initially expelled Polish administrators who tried to seize control of Stettin in May and June and the city was governed by a German communist appointed mayor under the surveillance of the Soviet occupiers until 5 July 1945 41 Concessions Edit Marking the new Polish German Border in 1945 Polish authorities issued an order to the population of Bad Salzbrunn Szczawno Zdroj to force them to immediately leave Poland on 14 July 1945 issued at 6 a m to be executed until 10 am James Byrnes who had been appointed as U S Secretary of State earlier that month later advised the Soviets that the U S was prepared to concede the area east of the Oder and the Eastern Neisse to Polish administration and for it not to consider it part of the Soviet occupation zone in return for a moderation of Soviet demands for reparations from the Western occupation zones 42 An Eastern Neisse boundary would have left Germany with roughly half of Silesia including the majority of Wroclaw Breslau the former provincial capital and the largest city in the region The Soviets insisted that the Poles would not accept this The Polish representatives and Stalin were in fact willing to concede a line following the Oder Bober Queiss Odra Bobr Kwisa rivers through Zagan Sagan and Luban Lauban but even this small concession ultimately proved unnecessary since on the next day Byrnes told the Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov that the Americans would reluctantly concede to the Western Neisse 43 Byrnes concession undermined the British position and although the British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin raised objections 44 the British eventually agreed to the American concession In response to American and British statements that the Poles were claiming far too much German territory Stanislaw Mikolajczyk argued that the western lands were needed as a reservoir to absorb the Polish population east of the Curzon Line Poles who returned from the West and Polish people who lived in the overcrowded central districts of Poland 45 The U S and the U K were also negative towards the idea of giving Poland an occupation zone in Germany However on 29 July President Truman handed Molotov a proposal for a temporary solution whereby the U S accepted Polish administration of land as far as the Oder and eastern Neisse until a final peace conference determined the boundary In return for this large concession the U S demanded that each of the occupation powers take its share of reparations from its own Occupation Zone and provide for admission of Italy into the United Nations The Soviets stated that they were not pleased because it denied Polish administration of the area between the two Neisse rivers 46 On 29 July Stalin asked Boleslaw Bierut the head of the Soviet controlled Polish government to accept in consideration of the large American concessions The Polish delegation decided to accept a boundary of the administration zone at somewhere between the western Neisse and the Kwisa Later that day the Poles changed their mind Bierut accompanied by Rola Zymierski returned to Stalin and argued against any compromise with the Americans Stalin told his Polish proteges that he would defend their position at the conference 46 Finally on 1 August 1945 the Potsdam Agreement of the United States the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union in anticipation of the final peace treaty placed the German territories east of the Oder Neisse line formally under Polish administrative control It was also decided that all Germans remaining in the new and old Polish territory should be expelled citation needed Recovered territories Edit Edward Henry Lewinski Corwin s map of Polish German borders in the 12th century published in 1917 US Those territories were known in Poland as the Regained or Recovered Territories a term based on the claim that they were in the past the possession of the Piast dynasty of Polish kings Polish fiefs or included in the parts lost to Prussia during the Partitions of Poland The term was widely exploited by Propaganda in the People s Republic of Poland 47 The creation of a picture of the new territories as an integral part of historical Poland in the post war era had the aim of forging Polish settlers and repatriates arriving there into a coherent community loyal to the new Communist regime 48 The term was in use immediately following the end of World War II when it was part of the Communist indoctrination of the Polish settlers in those territories 48 The final agreements in effect compensated Poland with 112 000 km2 43 000 sq mi of former German territory in exchange for 187 000 km2 72 000 sq mi of land lying east of the Curzon Line Polish areas occupied by the Soviet Union Poles and Polish Jews from the Soviet Union were the subject of a process called repatriation settlement within the territory of post war Poland Not all of them were repatriated some were imprisoned or deported to work camps in Siberia or Kazakhstan citation needed One reason for this version of the new border was that it was the shortest possible border between Poland and Germany It is only 472 km 293 miles long from one of the northernmost points of the Czech Republic to one of the southernmost points of the Baltic Sea at the Oder estuary citation needed World War II aftermath EditFurther information Expulsion of Germans after World War II Former eastern territories of Germany Recovered Territories and Kaliningrad Oblast Oder Lagoon area with border on western bank of the Oder city of Szczecin to the south Winston Churchill was not present at the end of the Conference since the results of the British elections had made it clear that he had been defeated Churchill later claimed that he would never have agreed to the Oder Western Neisse line and in his famous Iron Curtain speech declared that The Russian dominated Polish Government has been encouraged to make enormous and wrongful inroads upon Germany and mass expulsions of millions of Germans on a scale grievous and undreamed of are now taking place 49 US Department of State Demographics map from 10 January 1945 Germany Poland Proposed Territorial Changes based in part on German prewar population census Was used for border discussions at the Potsdam conference later in 1945 Not only were the German territorial changes of the Nazis reversed but the border was moved westward deep into territory which had been in 1937 part of Germany with an almost exclusively German population 50 The new line placed almost all of Silesia more than half of Pomerania the eastern portion of Brandenburg a small area of Saxony the former Free City of Danzig and the southern two thirds of East Prussia Masuria and Warmia within Poland see Former eastern territories of Germany The northeastern third of East Prussia was directly annexed by the Soviet Union These territorial changes were followed by large scale population transfers involving 14 million people all together from the whole of Eastern Europe including many people already shifted during the war Nearly all remaining Germans from the territory annexed by Poland were expelled while Polish persons who had been displaced into Germany usually as slave laborers returned to settle in the area In addition to this the Polish population originating from the eastern half of the former Second Polish Republic now annexed by the Soviet Union was mostly expelled and transferred to the newly acquired territories Most Poles supported the new border mostly out of fear of renewed German aggression and German irredentism 51 The border was also presented as a just consequence for the Nazi German state s initiation of World War II and the subsequent genocide against Poles and the attempt to destroy Polish statehood as well as for the territorial losses of eastern Poland to the Soviet Union mainly western Ukraine and Belarus It has been asserted that resentment towards the expelled German population on the part of the Poles was based on the fact that the majority of that population was loyal to the Nazis during the invasion and occupation and the active role some of them played in the persecution and mass murder of Poles and Jews citation needed These circumstances allegedly have impeded sensitivity among Poles with respect to the expulsion committed during the aftermath of World War II citation needed The new order was in Stalin s interests because it enabled the Soviet Communists to present themselves as the primary maintainer of Poland s new western border citation needed It also provided the Soviet Union with territorial gains from part of East Prussia and the eastern part of the Second Republic of Poland United States Secretary of State James F Byrnes outlined the official position of the U S government regarding the Oder Neisse line in his Stuttgart Speech of 6 September 1946 At Potsdam specific areas which were part of Germany were provisionally assigned to the Soviet Union and to Poland subject to the final decisions of the Peace Conference With regard to Silesia and other eastern German areas the assignment of this territory to Poland by Russia for administrative purposes had taken place before the Potsdam meeting The heads of government agreed that pending the final determination of Poland s western frontier Silesia and other eastern German areas should be under the administration of the Polish state and for such purposes should not be considered as a part of the Soviet zone of occupation in Germany However as the Protocol of the Potsdam Conference makes clear the heads of government did not agree to support at the peace settlement the cession of this particular area The Soviets and the Poles suffered greatly at the hands of Hitler s invading armies As a result of the agreement at Yalta Poland ceded to the Soviet Union territory east of the Curzon Line Because of this Poland asked for revision of her northern and western frontiers The United States will support revision of these frontiers in Poland s favor However the extent of the area to be ceded to Poland must be determined when the final settlement is agreed upon 52 The speech was met with shock in Poland and Deputy Prime Minister Mikolajczyk immediately issued a response declaring that retention of Polish territories based on the Oder Neisse line was matter of life and death 53 Byrnes who accepted Western Neisse as provisional Polish border 54 55 56 in fact did not state that such a change would take place as was read by Germans who hoped for support to regain the lost territories 56 The purpose of the speech and associated US diplomatic activities was as propaganda aimed at Germany by Western Powers who could blame the Polish German border and German expulsions on Moscow alone 56 In the late 1950s by the time of Dwight D Eisenhower s Presidency the United States had largely accepted the Oder Neisse line as final and did not support German demands regarding the border while officially declaring a need for a final settlement in a peace treaty 57 58 In the mid 1960s the U S government accepted the Oder Neisse line as binding and agreed that there would be no changes to it in the future 59 German revisionism regarding the border began to cost West Germany sympathies among its western allies 57 In 1959 France officially issued a statement supporting the Oder Neisse line which created controversy in West Germany 60 The Oder Neisse line was however never formally recognized by the United States until the revolutionary changes of 1989 and 1990 Note 3 German recognition of the border EditEast Germany Edit 1951 East German stamp commemorative of the Treaty of Zgorzelec establishing the Oder Neisse line as a border of peace featuring the presidents Wilhelm Pieck GDR and Boleslaw Bierut Poland The East German Socialist Unity Party SED founded 1946 originally rejected the Oder Neisse line 62 Under Soviet occupation and heavy pressure by Moscow the official phrase Friedensgrenze border of peace was promulgated in March April 1947 at the Moscow Foreign Ministers Conference The German Democratic Republic and Poland s Communist government signed the Treaty of Zgorzelec in 1950 recognizing the Oder Neisse line officially designated by the Communists as the Border of Peace and Friendship 63 64 65 In 1952 Stalin made recognition of the Oder Neisse line as a permanent boundary one of the conditions for the Soviet Union to agree to a reunification of Germany see Stalin Note The offer was rejected by the West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer citation needed West Germany Edit Territory lost after World War I Territory lost after World War II Present day Germany The West German definition of the de jure borders of Germany was based on the determinations of the Potsdam Agreement which placed the German territories as of 31 December 1937 east of the Oder Neisse line under the administration of the Polish State while the final delimitation of the western frontier of Poland should await the peace settlement The recognition of the Oder Neisse Line as permanent was thus only reserved to a final peace settlement with reunited Germany Note 4 Note 5 Note 6 Note 7 In West Germany where the majority of the displaced refugees found refuge recognition of the Oder Neisse Line as permanent was long regarded as unacceptable Right from the beginning of his Chancellorship in 1949 Adenauer refused to accept the Oder Neisse line as Germany s eastern frontier and made it quite clear that if Germany ever reunified the Federal Republic would lay claim to all of the land that had belonged to Germany as at 1 January 1937 69 Adenauer s rejection of the border adjustments resulting from the Potsdam agreement was viewed critically by some in Poland 70 Soon after the agreement was signed both the US and Soviet Union accepted the border as the de facto border of Poland United States Secretary James Byrnes accepted the Western Neisse as the provisional Polish border 54 While in his Stuttgart Speech he played around with an idea of modification of borders in Poland s favor giving fuel to speculation by German nationalists and revisionists the State department confessed that the speech was simply intended to smoke out Molotov s attitude on the eve of elections in Germany 56 The Adenauer government went to the Constitutional Court to receive a ruling that declared that legally speaking the frontiers of the Federal Republic were those of Germany as at 1 January 1937 that the Potsdam Declaration of 1945 which announced that the Oder Neisse line was Germany s provisional eastern border was invalid and that as such the Federal Republic considered all of the land east of the Oder Neisse line to be illegally occupied by Poland and the Soviet Union 71 need quotation to verify The American historian Gerhard Weinberg pointed out that in claiming the frontiers of 1937 West Germany was in fact claiming the frontiers established by the Treaty of Versailles which the entire interwar German leadership had claimed to be totally unacceptable from 1919 to 1939 and which perhaps indicated that Versailles was nowhere near as harsh as claimed especially when compared with the far greater territorial losses imposed by the Oder Neisse line 72 Not all in Adenauer s government supported this politicians like minister Seebohm criticized limiting German territorial demands to the borders of 1937 alluding to pre Versailles borders 73 as did the organisation of German expelled BdV 74 In 1962 a virulent anti Polish organization called AKON was founded in West Germany which published maps with the borders of 1914 74 CDU s election poster 1947 Never Oder Neisse line vote CDU To Hans Peter Schwarz Adenauer s refusal to accept the Oder Neisse line was in large part motivated by domestic politics especially his desire to win the votes of the domestic lobby of those Germans who had been expelled from areas east of the Oder Neisse line 69 16 of the electorate in 1950 were people who fled or were expelled after the war forming a powerful political force 75 As a result the CDU the CSU the FDP and the SPD all issued statements opposing the Oder Neisse line and supporting Heimatrecht right to one s homeland i e that the expellees be allowed to return to their former homes 76 Adenauer greatly feared the power of the expellee lobby and told his cabinet in 1950 that he was afraid of unbearable economic and political unrest if the government did not champion all of the demands of the expellee lobby 76 In addition Adenauer s rejection of the Oder Neisse line was intended to be a deal breaker if negotiations ever began to reunite Germany on terms that Adenauer considered unfavorable such as the neutralization of Germany as Adenauer knew well that the Soviets would never consider revising the Oder Neisse line 69 Finally Adenauer s biographer the German historian Hans Peter Schwarz has argued that Adenauer may have genuinely believed that Germany had the right to retake the land lost east of the Oder and Neisse rivers despite all of the image problems this created for him in the United States and western Europe 69 By contrast the Finnish historian Pertti Ahonen citing numerous private statements made by Adenauer that Germany s eastern provinces were lost forever and expressing contempt for the expellee leaders as delusional in believing that they were actually going to return one day to their former homes has argued that Adenauer had no interest in really challenging the Oder Neisse line 77 Ahonen wrote that Adenauer saw his life s work in anchoring the Federal Republic irrevocably to the anti Communist West and no burning interest in East European problems or even German reunification 77 Adenauer s stance on the Oder Neisse line was to create major image problems for him in the Western countries in the 1950s where many regarded his revanchist views on where Germany s eastern borders ought to be with considerable distaste and only the fact that East Germany was between the Federal Republic and Poland prevented this from becoming a major issue in relations with the West 69 SPD s election poster 1949 Silesians We German Socialdemocrats will fight with all means of peaceful politics and in constant appeal on the sanity of the world for every single square kilometer east of Oder and Neisse On 1 May 1956 the West German Foreign Minister Heinrich von Brentano admitted during a press conference in London that the Federal Republic s stance on the Oder Neisse line was somewhat problematic and suggested that the Federal Republic should recognize the Oder Neisse line in exchange for the Soviet Union allowing German reunification 78 Brentano s remark caused such an uproar with the expellee leaders arguing that he should resign that Adenauer was forced to disallow his foreign minister and Brentano only kept his job by claiming that he was misquoted by the British press 78 In private Brentano was willing to accept the Oder Neisse line as the price of reunification and was not misquoted in London as he claimed afterwards 78 Away from the public limelight in a conversation with the Canadian ambassador Charles Ritchie in June 1956 Brentano called the leaders of the expellee groups unteachable nationalists who had learned nothing from World War II and who did not have the right to control the Federal Republic s policy towards Eastern Europe by vetoing policy changes they disliked 78 Brentano s press conference was meant by Adenauer to be a trial balloon to see if the Federal Republic could have a more flexible policy towards Eastern Europe 78 The furious protests set off by Brentano s press conference convinced Adenauer that he did not have the domestic support for such a policy and that the current policy of opposing the Oder Neisse line would have to continue 79 This caused considerable disappointment with Adenauer s Western allies who had been applying strong pressure behind the scenes and would continue to apply such pressure for the rest of the 1950s for Bonn to recognize the Oder Neisse line 80 This pressure become especially acute after the Polish October crisis of 1956 brought to power Wladyslaw Gomulka as Poland s new leader 80 Gomulka was a Communist but also a Polish nationalist and it was believed possible in Washington that a split could be encouraged between Moscow and Warsaw if only Bonn would recognize the Oder Neisse line 80 Because the Federal Republic s refusal to recognize the Oder Neisse line together with the presence of such Nazi tainted individuals like Theodor Oberlander in Adenauer s cabinet Gomulka was obsessed with the fear that one day the Germans would invade Poland again which would mean a return to the horrors of the German occupation 81 Gomulka feared the Germans more than he disliked the Russians and thus he argued in both public and in private that it was necessary to keep Soviet troops in Poland to guard against any future German revanchism 81 Gomulka felt sincerely threatened by the revanchist statements put out by the Adenauer government and believed the alliance with the Soviet Union was the only thing stopping the threat of a new German invasion 82 Gomulka told the 8th Plenum on 19 October 1956 that Poland needs friendship with the Soviet Union more than the Soviet Union needs friendship with Poland Without the Soviet Union we cannot maintain our borders with the West 83 During his meetings with Nikita Khrushchev during the Polish October crisis Gomulka stressed that though he wanted Poland to take a more independent line within the Soviet bloc he would never break with Moscow because of his fears of future German aggression based on their statements rejecting the Oder Neisse line 83 Because Gomulka s obsession with the Oder Neisse line and his reputation as a Polish nationalist who spoke of a Polish road to socialism independent of Moscow it was believed possible by the Americans at the time that Gomulka might follow Tito s example in 1948 if only Adenauer could be persuaded to accept the Oder Neisse line One scholar wrote in 1962 that most Poles deeply disliked Communism but were willing to accept Gomulka s regime as the lesser evil because they believed Gomulka s warnings that if without the Red Army the Germans would invade again 84 Such was the extent of Polish fears about German revanchism that as late as February 1990 the Polish Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki stated in a speech that Red Army might have to stay in Poland until Germany had promised to firmly recognize the Oder Neisse line as the final frontier between Germany and Poland 85 In 1963 the German Social Democratic opposition leader Willy Brandt said that abnegation is betrayal but it was Brandt who eventually changed West Germany s attitude with his policy of Ostpolitik In 1970 West Germany signed treaties with the Soviet Union Treaty of Moscow and Poland Treaty of Warsaw recognizing Poland s Western border at the Oder Neisse line as current reality and not to be changed by force This had the effect of making family visits by the displaced eastern Germans to their lost homelands now more or less possible Such visits were still very difficult however and permanent resettlement in the homeland now Poland remained impossible citation needed In 1989 another treaty was signed between Poland and East Germany the sea border was defined and a dispute from 1985 was settled citation needed In March 1990 the West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl caused a storm when he suggested that a reunified Germany would not accept the Oder Neisse line and implied that the Federal Republic might wish to restore the frontier of 1937 by force if necessary 86 Kohl further added that in a statement of 1 March 1990 that he would only recognize the Oder Neisse line if Poland promised to pay compensation to the Germans expelled after 1945 and if Poland promised not to seek reparations for the sufferings of Polish slave labourers in Germany and reparations for the damage done by German forces to Poland during World War II 87 After Kohl s note caused a massive international backlash that threatened to derail the process for German reunification Kohl hastily changed track and said that a reunified Germany would accept the Oder Neisse line after all and that he would not seek to link recognizing the Oder Neisse line to talks about compensation In November 1990 after German reunification the Federal Republic of Germany and the Republic of Poland signed a treaty confirming the border between them as requested by the Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany Earlier Germany had amended its constitution and abolished Article 23 of West Germany s Basic Law on which reunification was based which could have been used to claim the former German eastern territories citation needed The German Polish Border Treaty signed 14 November 1990 finalizing the Oder Neisse line as the Polish German border 88 came into force on 16 January 1992 together with a second one a Treaty of Good Neighbourship signed in June 1991 in which the two countries among other things recognized basic political and cultural rights for both the German and the Polish minorities living on either side of the border After 1990 approximately 150 000 Germans still resided in the areas transferred to Poland mainly in the Opole Voivodeship with a smaller presence in regions such as Lower Silesia and Warmia Masuria There are 1 5 million Poles or ethnic Poles living in Germany including both recent immigrants and the descendants of Poles that settled in Germany many generations ago citation needed Other developments EditDivision of cities Edit The Lusatian Neisse dividing German Gorlitz right from Polish Zgorzelec left formerly both constituted the city of Gorlitz The border divided several cities into two parts Gorlitz Zgorzelec Guben Gubin Frankfurt Slubice and Bad Muskau Leknica 89 Partially open border 1971 1980 Edit Millions visited the neighbouring country either Poland or East Germany during the years 1971 1980 90 91 The East German economy was threatened by overconsumption of Polish tourists who came to East Germany to buy cheaper products that the socialist economy could not provide in abundance on either side of the border and the Poles also became politically dangerous for the GDR government by the time of the 1980 Solidarity strikes 92 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Germany Poland border Curzon Line Federation of Expellees Allied Occupation Zones in GermanyWorld War II related events Edit Vistula Oder Offensive from 12 January until 2 February 1945 Malta Conference from 30 January to 3 February 1945 Yalta Conference from 4 to 11 February 1945 Battle of Konigsberg from 6 April until 9 April 1945 Battle of the Oder Neisse from 16 April until 19 April 1945 Potsdam Conference from 17 July to 2 August 1945Notes Edit Przesuniecie granicy zachodniej na korzysc Polski bylo uwazane takze za jedna z form ukarania Niemcow za popelnione zbrodnie i zadoscuczynienia Polsce 19 Nowa Granica miala oslabic korzystny dotad uklad strategiczny wykorzystywany przeciwko Polsce Prusy Wschodnie Pomorze Zachodnie 19 Although the Polish and German governments signed a treaty in 1970 the United States withheld the formal recognition of the Oder Neisse until the revolutionary changes of 1989 and 1990 61 Article VIII B of the Potsdam Agreement In conformity with the agreement on Poland reached at the Crimea Conference the three heads of government have sought the opinion of the Polish Provisional Government of National Unity in regard to the accession of territory in the north end west which Poland should receive The President of the National Council of Poland and members of the Polish Provisional Government of National Unity have been received at the Conference and have fully presented their views The three heads of government reaffirm their opinion that the final delimitation of the western frontier of Poland should await the peace settlement The three heads of government agree that pending the final determination of Poland s western frontier the former German territories cast of a line running from the Baltic Sea immediately west of Swinamunde and thence along the Oder River to the confluence of the western Neisse River and along the Western Neisse to the Czechoslovak frontier including that portion of East Prussia not placed under the administration of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics in accordance with the understanding reached at this conference and including the area of the former free city of Danzig shall be under the administration of the Polish State and for such purposes should not be considered as part of the Soviet zone of occupation in Germany In den Verhandlungen mit der polnischen Regierung musste die Frage der Anerkennung der Oder Neisse Linie ausgeklammert warden denn nach der Entscheidung des Bundesverfassungsgerichts von 1975 bestanden das Deutsche Reich in seinen Grenzen von 1937 und die Viermachteverantwortung fur ganz Deutschland solange fort bis ein formlicher Friedensvertrag geschlossen worden sei 66 Politiker und politische Gruppen verwiesen auf die Abmachungen der Potsdamer Konferenz von 1945 denen zufolge die endgultige Regelung der Oder Neisse Frage einem endgultigen Friedensvertrag fur ganz Deutschland vorbehalten werden sollte 67 Die Gebiete ostlich von Oder und Neisse sind ebenso wie das ubrige Reichsgebiet in den Grenzen vom 31 Dezember 1937 von den Siegermachten bei Kriegsende nicht annektiert worden Im Vorspruch der Erklarung vom 5 Juni 1945 welche die Regierungen des Vereinigten Konigreichs der Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika und der Union der Sozialistischen Sowjetrepubliken sowie die provisorische Regierung der Franzosischen Republik in Anbetracht der Niederlage Deutschlands und der Ubernahme der obersten Regierungsgewalt hinsichtlich Deutschlands abgegeben haben heisst es Die Ubernahme der besagten Regierungsgewalt und Befugnisse bewirkt nicht die Annektierung Deutschlands Amtsblatt des Kontrollrats in Deutschland Erganzungsblatt Nr 1 S 7 Auf der Potsdamer Konferenz Juli August 1945 kamen Grossbritannien die Sowjetunion und die Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika uberein die deutschen Gebiete ostlich von Oder und Neisse einer Sonderregelung zu unterwerfen die von der im ubrigen Reichsgebiet eingerichteten Besatzungsherrschaft deutlich abwich Nach den Abschnitten VI und IX des als Mitteilung uber die Dreimachtekonferenz von Berlin bezeichneten Protokolls vom 2 August 1945 oft Potsdamer Abkommen genannt wurden die deutschen Ostgebiete vorbehaltlich der endgultigen Bestimmung der territorialen Fragen bei der Friedensregelung teilweise unter sowjetische und teilweise unter polnische Verwaltung gestellt AmtsblattBVerfGE 40 141 157 BVerfGE 40 141 158 des Kontrollrats in Deutschland Erganzungsblatt Nr 1 S 17 f Die sich aus dem Vorbehalt der Friedensregelung ergebende Vorlaufigkeit dieser Gebietszuweisung wurde nach dem Abschluss der Potsdamer Konferenz von der Sowjetunion und Polen zunachst respektiert Der sowjetisch polnische Vertrag vom 16 August 1945 der den Verlauf der sowjetisch polnischen Grenzlinie in Ostpreussen beschreibt wiederholt in seinem Art 3 ausdrucklich den Friedensvertragsvorbehalt unter Bezugnahme auf die Potsdamer Konferenz United Nations Treaty Series 10 II Nr 61 S 196 66 Die drei Westmachte haben einer endgultigen Zuweisung der deutschen Ostgebiete an die Sowjetunion und Polen nicht zugestimmt Nach der Ziffer VI des Protokolls uber die Beschlusse der Potsdamer Konferenz haben Grossbritannien und die Vereinigten Staaten lediglich in Aussicht gestellt den grundsatzlich akzeptierten Vorschlag der Sowjetregierung hinsichtlich der endgultigen Ubergabe der Stadt Konigsberg und des anliegenden Gebiets an die Sowjetunion vorbehaltlich einer noch vorzunehmenden Festlegung des genauen Grenzverlaufs bei der bevorstehenden Friedensregelung zu unterstutzen 68 References Edit Eberhardt Piotr 2015 The Oder Neisse Line as Poland s western border As postulated and made a reality Geographia Polonica 88 1 77 105 doi 10 7163 GPol 0007 Jessup John E 1998 An encyclopedic dictionary of conflict and conflict resolution 1945 1996 Westport Conn Greenwood Press p 543 ISBN 978 0313281129 Historical dictionary of Poland 966 1945 Jan Jerzy Lerski page 398 Greenwood Publishing Group 1996 a b c d e f g h i Biuletyn Instytutu Pamieci Narodowej nr 9 10 2005 Polski Dziki Zachod ze Stanislawem Jankowiakiem Czeslawem Osekowskim i Wlodzimierzem Suleja rozmawia Barbara Polak pages 4 28 a b c d Kowalski Mariusz 2020 The Early Medieval Slav German border Limes Sorabicus in the light of research into Y chromosome polymorphism in contemporary and historical German populations Geographia Polonica 93 4 569 596 doi 10 7163 GPol 0190 S2CID 234996265 Peter Lesniewski 2001 The 1919 insurrection in upper Silesia Civil Wars 4 1 22 48 DOI 10 1080 13698240108402462 a b Machray Robert 1945 The Problem of Upper Silesia PDF Michigan G Allen amp Unwin Limited pp 79 80 a b Macmillan Margaret Paris 1919 New York Random House page 211 Gdansk i Ziemia Gdanska Franciszek Mamuszka Wiedza Powszechna 1966 page 83 Ksiazka polska w Gdansku w okresie zaboru pruskiego 1793 1919 page 61 Maria Babnis Ossolineum 1989 Macmillan Margaret Paris 1919 New York Random House page 218 a b c Eberhardt Piotr 2015 The Oder Neisse line as Poland s western border As postulated and made a reality Geographia Polonica 88 1 77 105 doi 10 7163 GPol 0007 a b Piskorski 2003 p 102 a b Hackmann 1996 p 224 a b Faraldo 2008 p 17 a b c Fahlbusch amp Haar 2005 pp 263 265 a b Mysl zachodnia Ruchu Narodowego w czasie II wojny swiatowej dr Tomasz Kenar Dodatek Specjalny IPN Nowe Panstwo 1 2010 Thum 2011 p 194 a b Wolff Poweska 1993 p 49 Polacy wysiedleni wypedzeni i wyrugowani przez III Rzesze Maria Wardzynska Warsaw 2004 a b Laufer 2009 pp 179 180 Laufer 2009 p 181 Laufer 2009 p 194 US State Department Foreign Relations of the US The Conference at Cairo and Tehran 1943 Archived 2 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Tripartite Dinner Meeting 28 November 1943 pp 509 14 a b Allen 2003 p 13 Anthony Eden The Reckoning London 1965 p 427 Churchill Winston 1986 Closing the ring Mariner books ISBN 9780395410592 Foreign Relations of the United States 1944 vol I p 141 US Dept of State Foreign Relations of the US The Conferences at Malta and Yalta 1945 Third Plenary Meeting 6 February 1945 Matthews Minutes p 77 US Dept of State Foreign Relations of the US The Conferences at Malta and Yalta 1945 Third Plenary Meeting 6 February 1945 Bohlen Minutes p 669 Llewellyn Woodward British Foreign Policy in the Second World War London 1962 p 299 Allen 2003 p 17 Winston Churchill and the Soviet Union during the Second World War The Churchill Centre Archived 4 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine Kimball Warren F The Cold War Warmed Over The American Historical Review 1974 American Historical Association Lebensraum Time Magazine 13 August 1945 Tadeusz Bialecki Historia Szczecina Zaklad Narodowy im Ossolinskich 1992 Wroclaw Pages 9 20 55 92 95 258 260 300 306 Polonia szczecinska 1890 1939 Anna Poniatowska Boguslaw Drewniak Poznan 1961 Sergeĭ Khrushchev George Shriver Stephen Shenfield Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev Penn State Press 2007 p 637 ISBN 0 271 02935 8 Harry Truman Year of Decisions New York 1955 p 296 US Dept of State Foreign Relations of the US The Conference of Berlin Potsdam 1945 vol II pp 1522 1524 Heitmann Clemens Die Stettin Frage Die KPD die Sowjetunion und die deutsch polnische Grenze 1945 Zeitschrift fur Ostmitteleuropa Forschung 2002 vol 51 no1 pp 25 63 Archived from the original on 14 September 2012 Retrieved 20 September 2009 US Dept of State Foreign Relations of the US The Conference of Berlin Potsdam 1945 vol II p 1150 US Dept of State Foreign Relations of the US The Conference of Berlin Potsdam 1945 vol II p 480 US Dept of State Foreign Relations of the US The Conference of Berlin Potsdam 1945 vol II p 519 Lukas 1982 p 16 a b Lukas 1982 p 17 An explanation note in The Neighbors Respond The Controversy Over the Jedwabne Massacre in Poland ed by Polonsky and Michlic p 466 a b Martin Aberg Mikael Sandberg Social Capital and Democratisation Roots of Trust in Post Communist Poland and Ukraine Ashgate Publishing Ltd 2003 ISBN 0 7546 1936 2 Google Print p 79 Churchill s Iron Curtain On expulsion of ethnic Germans historyguide org The History of Poland by Mieczyslaw B Biskupski Greenwood Publishing Group 2000 p 124 Allen 2003 p 4 Stuttgart Speech Allen 2003 p 52 a b No exit America and the German problem 1943 1954 page 94 James McAllister Cornell University Press 2002 Peter H Merkl German Unification 2004 Penn State Press p 338 a b c d Pertti Ahonen After the expulsion West Germany and Eastern Europe 1945 1990 2003 Oxford University Press pp 26 27 a b Ingrao amp Szabo 2008 p 406 Allen 2003 p 215 Ingrao amp Szabo 2008 p 407 Allen 2003 p 221 Allen 2003 p 1 Timmermann Heiner Ihmel Tuchel Beate 1997 Potsdam 1945 in German Duncker amp Humblodt p 307 ISBN 3 428 08876 X Slaski kwartalnik historyczny Sobotka Volume 60 Wroclawskie Towarzystwo Milosnikow Historii page 249 Zaklad im Ossolinskich 2005 Polityka Issues 44 52 page 84 Wydawnictwo Prasowe Polityka 2005 Why is the Oder Neisse Line a Peace Border 1950 Stoklosa Katarzyna 2011 Polen und die deutsche Ostpolitik 1945 1990 in German Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht p 494 ISBN 978 3 525 30000 8 Lepp Claudia 2005 Tabu der Einheit Die Ost West Gemeinschaft der evangelischen Christen und die deutsche Teilung 1945 1969 in German Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht p 436 ISBN 3 525 55743 4 Entscheidungen des Bundesverfassungsgerichts Band 40 in German 1975 pp 157 158 a b c d e Schwarz Hans Peter Konrad Adenauer From the German Empire to the Federal Republic 1876 1952 Oxford Berghahn Books 1995 page 638 Rocznik Polsko Niemiecki Volume 5 Zaklad Studiow nad Niemcami ISP PAN 1996 Duffy Christopher Red Storm on the Reich Routledge London 1991 page 302 Weinberg Gerhard Germany Hitler and World War II Essays in Modern German and World History Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1996 page 11 Guilt Suffering and Memory Germany Remembers Its Dead of World War II By Gilad Margalit page 204 a b Britain Germany and the Cold War The Search for a European Detente 1949 1967 By R Gerald Hughes page 77 Ahonen 1998 pp 41 42 a b Ahonen 1998 p 42 a b Ahonen 1998 p 48 a b c d e Ahonen 1998 p 44 Ahonen 1998 pp 44 45 a b c Ahonen 1998 p 46 a b Granville 2003 pp 284 285 Granville 2002 pp 540 541 a b Granville 2002 p 541 Bromke Adam Nationalism and Communism in Poland pages 635 643 from Foreign Affairs Volume 40 Issue No 4 July 1962 pages 638 640 Clemens Clay 6 March 1990 Kohl Performs A Balancing Act on German Polish Boundary Line Daily Press Retrieved 22 February 2014 Merkl Peter H German Unification in the European Context University Park Penn State Press 2010 page 132 Best Ulrich Transgression as a Rule German Polish Cross border Cooperation Border Discourse and EU enlargement Munster LIT Verlag 2007 page 100 Treaty between the Federal Republic of Germany and the Republic of Poland on the confirmation of the frontier between them 14 November 1990 PDF Kimmo Katajala Maria Lahteenmaki 2012 Imagined Negotiated Remembered Constructing European Borders and Borderlands LIT Verlag Munster p 204 ISBN 978 3 643 90257 3 Paul Ganster 1 January 1997 Borders and Border Regions in Europe and North America SCERP and IRSC publications p 178 ISBN 978 0 925613 23 3 Sven Tagil 1 January 1999 Regions in Central Europe The Legacy of History C Hurst amp Co Publishers p 244 ISBN 978 1 85065 552 7 Paulina Bren Mary Neuburger 8 August 2012 Communism Unwrapped Consumption in Cold War Eastern Europe Oxford University Press USA pp 377 385 ISBN 978 0 19 982766 4 Bibliography Edit Ahonen Pertti 1998 Domestic constraints on West German Ostpolitik the role of the expellee organizations in the Adenauer era Central European History 31 1 31 63 doi 10 1017 S0008938900016034 JSTOR 4546774 Allen Debra J 2003 The Oder Neisse line the United States Poland and Germany in the Cold War Westport Praeger ISBN 978 0 313 32359 1 Anderson Sheldon The Oder Neisse Border and Polish East German relations 1945 1949 Polish Review 42 2 1997 185 199 online Fahlbusch Michael Haar Ingo 2005 German scholars and ethnic cleansing 1919 1945 Berghahn Books ISBN 1 57181 435 3 Faraldo Jose M 2008 Europe nationalism communism Essays on Poland Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften ISBN 9783631567623 Granville Johanna 2002 From the archives of Warsaw and Budapest a comparison of the events of 1956 East European Politics and Societies 16 2 521 563 doi 10 1177 088832540201600208 S2CID 143214778 Granville Johanna 2003 Reactions to the events of 1956 new findings from the Budapest and Warsaw archives Journal of Contemporary History 38 2 261 290 doi 10 1177 0022009403038002133 JSTOR 3180658 S2CID 154087857 Hackmann Jorg 1996 Ostpreussen und Westpreussen in deutscher und polnischer Sicht in German Deutsches Historisches Institut Warschau Niemiecki Instytut Historyczny w Warszawie ISBN 3 447 03766 0 Ingrao Charles W Szabo Franz A J 2008 The Germans and the East Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 443 9 Laufer Jochen 2009 Pax Sovietica Stalin die Westmachte und die deutsche Frage 1941 1945 Pax Sovietica Stalin Western powers and the German question 1941 1945 in German Bohlau ISBN 978 3 412 20416 7 Lukas Richard C 1982 Bitter Legacy Polish American Relations in the Wake of World War II University Press of Kentucky ISBN 9780813114606 Piskorski Jan M 2003 Traditionen Visionen 44 Deutscher Historikertag in Halle an der Saale 2002 in German Oldenbourg ISBN 3 486 56769 1 Thum Gregor 2011 Uprooted How Breslau became Wroclaw during the century of expulsions Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 14024 7 Wolff Poweska Anna 1993 Polacy wobec Niemcow Instytut Zachodni ISBN 9788385003670 External links EditAn East German pamphlet for propagandists entitled Why is the Oder Neisse Line a Peace Border Treaty between the Federal Republic of Germany and the Republic of Poland on the confirmation of the frontier between them 14 November 1990 PDF Treaty confirming the border between Germany and Poland Warsaw 14 November 1990 in Polish and German The Oder Neisse Line Problem German PDF Closing The Ring Winston Churchill Excerpt on the Teheran conference from his memoirs Speaking Frankly James F Byrnes Excerpt on the Yalta conference from his memoirs Triumph and Tragedy Winston Churchill Excerpt on the Yalta conference from his memoirs Churchill s statement to the House of Commons 27 February 1945 Describing the outcome of Yalta The German Polish Border Region A Case of Regional Integration ARENA Working Papers WP 97 19 Jorunn Sem Fure Department of History University of BergenCoordinates 53 55 34 70 N 14 13 26 50 E 53 9263056 N 14 2240278 E 53 9263056 14 2240278 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oder Neisse line amp oldid 1153135128, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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