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Walter Hallstein

Walter Hallstein (17 November 1901 – 29 March 1982) was a German academic, diplomat and statesman who was the first president of the Commission of the European Economic Community and one of the founding fathers of the European Union.

Walter Hallstein
Hallstein in 1957
President of the European Commission
In office
7 January 1958 – 30 June 1967
First Vice-PresidentSicco Mansholt
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byJean Rey
State Secretary at the Federal Foreign Office
In office
2 April 1951 – 7 January 1958
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byHilger van Scherpenberg
Member of the Bundestag
In office
28 September 1969 – 19 November 1972
ConstituencyNeuwied
Personal details
Born
Walther [sic] Peter Hallstein[a]

(1901-11-17)17 November 1901
Mainz, German Empire
Died29 March 1982(1982-03-29) (aged 80)
Stuttgart, West Germany
Resting placeWaldfriedhof Cemetery,
Stuttgart, Germany
Political partyChristian Democratic Union
Alma materFriedrich Wilhelm University
Military service
Allegiance Nazi Germany
Branch/service Wehrmacht
Years of service1942–1945
RankOberleutnant
Battles/warsWorld War II

Hallstein began his academic career in the 1920s Weimar Republic and became Germany's youngest law professor in 1930, at the age of 29. During World War II he served as a First Lieutenant in the German Army in France. Captured by American troops in 1944, he spent the rest of the war in a prisoner-of-war camp in the United States, where he organised a "camp university" for his fellow soldiers. After the war he returned to Germany and continued his academic career; he became rector of the University of Frankfurt in 1946 and spent a year as a visiting professor at Georgetown University from 1948. In 1950 he was recruited to a diplomatic career, becoming the leading civil servant at the German Foreign Office, where he gave his name to the Hallstein Doctrine, West Germany's policy of isolating East Germany diplomatically.

A keen advocate of a federal Europe, Hallstein played a key role in West German foreign policy and then in European integration. He was one of the architects of the European Coal and Steel Community and the first President of the Commission of the European Economic Community, which would later become the European Union. He held the office from 1958 to 1967 and was the only German to be selected as president of the European Commission or its predecessors until the selection of Ursula von der Leyen in 2019.[1] Hallstein famously described his role as "a kind of European prime minister" and dismissed national sovereignty as a "doctrine of yesteryear."[2][3]

Hallstein left office following a clash with the President of France, Charles de Gaulle; he turned to German politics as a member of the Bundestag, also serving as President of the European Movement from 1968 to 1974. He is the author of books and numerous articles and speeches on European integration and on the European Communities.

Early life and pre-war academic career edit

Walter Hallstein was born on 17 November 1901 in Mainz, Germany.[a] After primary school in Darmstadt he attended a classical school[b] in Mainz from 1913 until his matriculation (Abitur) in 1920.[7]

From 1920 Hallstein studied law in Bonn, later moving to Munich and then to Berlin.[8] He specialized in international private law and wrote his doctoral dissertation on commercial aspects of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles.[c] He obtained his doctorate from the Friedrich Wilhelm University in Berlin in 1925[6]  – at the age of 23. From 1923 to 1926 he was a legal clerk at the Kammergericht,[6] and in 1927, having passed his qualifying examination, he was employed for a very brief spell as a judge.[9] He then worked as an academic[d] at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Foreign Private and International Private Law in Berlin, where he specialized in comparative commercial and company law,[6] working under Professor Martin Wolff, a leading scholar of private law.[10] He would remain there until 1930.[6] In 1929 he obtained his Habilitation[e] from the University of Berlin, based on a thesis on company law.[6][f] In 1930, at the age of 29, he was appointed professor of private law and company law at the University of Rostock,[11][12] making him Germany's youngest professor of law.[6] He was made Deputy Dean (Prodekan) of the Faculty of Law in 1935[13] and then Dean in 1936.[14] He remained in Rostock until 1941.[15][14][11] From 1941 to 1944 Hallstein lectured at Frankfurt University, where he was Director of the Institute for Comparative Law and Economic Law.[16]

In 1935, Hallstein attempted to start a military career alongside his academic duties.[17] In 1936, he managed to integrate a voluntary military service in an artillery unit.[17] In the years between 1936 and 1939, he attended several military courses[18] and was made a reserve officer.[17]

Hallstein was a member of several nominally Nazi professional organizations,[g][19] but he was not a member of the Nazi Party or of the SA.[1] He is reputed to have rejected Nazi ideology[20][10] and to have kept his distance from the Nazis.[6] There was opposition from Nazi officials to his proposed appointment, in 1941, as professor of law at the University of Frankfurt, but the academics pushed through his candidacy, and he soon advanced to become dean of the faculty.[21]

Soldier and prisoner of war (1942–1945) edit

 
Hallstein was taken prisoner by American troops in Cherbourg in 1944

In 1942 Hallstein was called up; he served in an artillery regiment[10] of the Wehrmacht in Northern France with the rank of first lieutenant (Oberleutnant).[12][h] In early 1944, Hallstein's name was submitted by the University of Frankfurt as a potential Nationalsozialistischer Führungsoffizier to the National Socialist Lecturers League.[22][18] On 26 June 1944, during the Battle of Cherbourg, he was captured by the Americans[12] and sent to Camp Como, a prisoner-of-war camp in Mississippi.[23]

As a German prisoner of war (POW) in the United States, Hallstein started a "camp university",[11] where he held law courses for the prisoners.[23] As part of the Sunflower Project, a project to re-educate German POWs, he attended an "administrative school" at Fort Getty, where teaching included the principles of the Constitution of the United States.[23] Hallstein remained a prisoner of war from June 1944 to mid-1945.[23]

Post-war academic career (1945–1950) edit

In November 1945 Hallstein returned to Germany,[24] where he campaigned for Frankfurt University to be re-opened. Turning down an offer from Ludwig Erhard to be deputy minister at the Bavarian Ministry of Economics,[10] he became a professor at Frankfurt University on 1 February 1946, and in April he was elected its rector, a position he retained until 1948. He was president of the South German Rectors' Conference, which he founded.[25] From 1948 to 1949, he spent a year as visiting professor at Georgetown University in Washington D.C.[11][23]

Hallstein was co-founder of the German national UNESCO committee and was its president from 1949 to 1950.[24][26]

Diplomatic career (1950–1957) edit

Foreign affairs at the Chancellery (1950–1951) edit

 
The Palais Schaumburg (1950), seat of the Federal Chancellery in 1950, where Hallstein worked before the German Foreign Office was formed

Against the background of the Second World War, a conflict that had caused massive destruction and left the continent split in two by the Iron Curtain, there were calls for increased co-operation in Europe. The French foreign minister, Robert Schuman, put forward a plan, originating from Jean Monnet, for a European Coal and Steel Community that would unify control of German and French coal and steel production, and talks were started with this aim.[27] Germany had still not regained its sovereignty following defeat in World War II, and was represented internationally by the Allied High Commission.[28] There was no German foreign office and, for a time, foreign affairs were dealt with by the Chancellery.[29]

Konrad Adenauer, the German Chancellor, called Hallstein to Bonn, at the suggestion of Wilhelm Röpke,[30] and in June 1950 he appointed him to head the German delegation at the Schuman Plan negotiations in Paris,[11] which were to lead to the formation of the European Coal and Steel Community.[24] Jean Monnet, the leader of the French delegation, and Hallstein drew up the Schuman Plan, which was the basis for the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC), established by the Treaty of Paris in 1951.[31] The ECSC was to develop into the European Economic Community, and later the European Union. In August 1950, to general surprise, Hallstein was made head of the Office of Foreign Affairs (Dienststelle für auswärtige Angelegenheiten) at the Federal Chancellery (Kanzleramt).[32] At this time, little was known about Hallstein, except that he had not been a member of the Nazi Party and that he was on good terms with US officials.[33]

State Secretary at the Foreign Office (1951–1958) edit

 
1955 German Foreign Office building
 
West Germany joins NATO: Walter Hallstein (left) with Konrad Adenauer (centre) and Ambassador Herbert Blankenhorn (right) at the NATO Conference in Paris in 1954
 
Second reading of the Paris Treaties in the Bundestag on 25 February 1955

Following a change in the Occupation Statute, the German Foreign Office was re-created in March 1951,[i] but the post of Foreign Minister was filled by Adenauer himself.[34] On 2 April 1951, Hallstein was made the leading civil servant at the newly created Foreign Office.[35] Foreign policy continued to be managed by Adenauer himself with his group of intimates, including Hallstein, Blankenhorn and others. In many respects Hallstein was the West German Foreign Minister in all but name,[36] but there was a growing awareness that a separate officeholder was needed. Adenauer is said to have considered Hallstein for the position, even though he was not a member of a political party.[37]

Hallstein also played an important part in promoting West Germany's goals of regaining sovereignty and creating a European Defence Community (EDC), of which West Germany would be a member.[10] Negotiations at first resulted in two international agreements:

  • On 26 May 1952, the Treaty of Bonn was signed by the United States, United Kingdom, France, and West Germany; on ratification, it would largely restore sovereignty to the Federal Republic of Germany (de facto West Germany, but not including West Berlin, which retained a special status).
  • On 27 May 1952, the Treaty of Paris was signed by the United States, France, Italy, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg, and West Germany; on ratification, it would have established the European Defence Community (EDC).[38][39]

However, the Treaty of Paris failed to obtain the necessary approval of the French Parliament. Instead, a solution involving the Western European Union (WEU) was agreed, and West Germany was to become a member of NATO.[40] The efforts to resolve the issues culminated, in 1954, in a series of conferences in London and Paris. The German side was represented by Adenauer, the German chancellor, together with the top civil servants at the German Foreign Office: Hallstein, his colleague Blankenhorn, and his deputy, Grewe.[40] Hallstein helped negotiate various treaties at the London Nine-Power Conference from 23 September to 3 October 1954; they were finalized at the Paris conference from 20 to 23 October 1954. The conferences in Paris included a meeting of the parties to the Nine-Power Conference in London (20 October), a meeting of the seven WEU members (20 October), a meeting of the Four Powers to end the occupation of Germany (21–22 October), and a meeting of all fourteen NATO members to approve Germany's membership.[40]

After the ratification of the Paris Accords on 5 May 1955, the General Treaty (Deutschlandvertrag), which largely restored (West) German[j] sovereignty, took full effect; the Federal Republic of Germany became a member of NATO.

Once the major foreign policy objectives were in hand, Hallstein set about restoring Germany's diplomatic service[24] and re-organizing the Foreign Office, based on the findings of the Maltzan Report, a report commissioned by Hallstein on 26 June 1952 and produced a month later by Vollrath Freiherr von Maltzan, a former diplomat, at that time on loan from the Ministry of Economics.[41]

There was criticism of a lack of information and consultation and an atmosphere of secrecy, possible resulting from Adenauer's distrust of the old hands at the Foreign Office, the Wilhelmstraße veterans, as well as the desire to fill top jobs with outsiders not tainted by having served as diplomats under the Nazis.[42] There were suggestions of a disconnect between the leadership (consisting of Adenauer and a small group of close advisers, including Hallstein and Blankenhorn) on the one hand and the division leaders at the Foreign Office and the diplomatic missions on the other. In particular, Hallstein was also criticised in the press after the European Defence Community was rejected by the French National Assembly, as had been predicted by the German diplomatic mission in Paris.[43]

 
After Heinrich von Brentano was appointed Foreign Minister, Walter Hallstein retained his very influential status at the Foreign Office.

On 6 June 1955, Adenauer, who had until then been Foreign Minister as well as Chancellor, appointed Heinrich von Brentano foreign minister and there was a reshuffling of responsibilities, but Hallstein retained the trust of Adenauer and continued to attend cabinet meetings.[44] Herbert Blankenhorn, who until then been the head of the Political Department of the Foreign Office, became the German Permanent Representative to NATO in Paris; Wilhelm Grewe took over the Political Department under Hallstein and was made Hallstein's deputy.[44]

Hallstein was involved in discussions with the French concerning the return of the coal-rich Saar to Germany. In October 1955 there was a referendum held to decide whether the Saar would remain separate from Germany or be re-integrated into Germany, following which it was agreed with France that there would be political integration into the Federal Republic of Germany by 1 January 1957 and economic integration by 1 January 1960.[44] In September 1956, Hallstein announced that France had agreed to hand over control of the Saar to Germany; on 27 October 1956, the Saar Treaty was signed.[45]

Hallstein Doctrine edit

In 1955, Germany had in large measure regained its sovereignty and become integrated into western defence-organizations, the WEU and NATO; European integration had progressed, with the establishment of the ECSC; the Saar question was to be resolved by the referendum in October 1955. In all of these matters, Hallstein had played a major role.[45] Some of the main issues of German foreign policy were now German re-unification and the relations of West Germany (the Federal Republic of Germany) with its eastern neighbours, including East Germany (the German Democratic Republic). Being more involved in Western European integration, Hallstein delegated much of this work to his deputy, Wilhelm Grewe.[46] But in this area particularly, German foreign policy became associated with the name Hallstein. In 1955, Hallstein and Grewe accompanied Adenauer as members of a delegation to Moscow, where the establishment of diplomatic relations between Bonn and Moscow was agreed.[47] It was on the flight back from Moscow that the policy that was later to become known as the Hallstein Doctrine was fleshed out,[48] though the Foreign Office had already devised and practised elements of the policy.[49] The idea behind the Hallstein Doctrine came from Hallstein's deputy, Wilhelm Grewe.[50] The doctrine would become one of the major elements of West German foreign policy from September 1955 – until official recognition of the German Democratic Republic in October 1969.[51]

Based on the Basic Law, its de facto constitution, the Federal Republic of Germany – then commonly known in the English-speaking world as West Germany – claimed an exclusive mandate to represent the whole of Germany, including the Communist East Germany, which was aligned with the Soviet Union. One of the early objectives of West German foreign policy was the diplomatic isolation of East Germany. In 1958, journalists named this policy the Hallstein–Grewe Doctrine, which later became shortened to the Hallstein Doctrine.[52] Grewe himself writes that he did devise the broad outlines of the policy, but mainly as one of a number of options, the decisions being made by the foreign minister, Brentano, and the chancellor, Adenauer; in any case, the name Hallstein doctrine may have been something of a misnomer.[53]

No official text of the so-called "doctrine" was made public, but it was explained publicly in a radio interview[51] by its main architect, Wilhelm Grewe. Adenauer also explained the outlines of the policy in a statement to the German parliament on 22 September 1955.[54] It meant that the Federal German government would regard it as an "unfriendly act" if third countries were to recognize or maintain diplomatic relations with the "German Democratic Republic" (East Germany). The exception was the Soviet Union, as one of the Four Powers responsible for Germany.[53] The threatened response to such an unfriendly act was often understood to mean breaking off diplomatic relations; this was not stated as an automatic response under the policy, but remained the ultima ratio.[51]

European integration and the Rome treaties edit

 
Economics minister Ludwig Erhard had opposing views on the path of European integration.

Members of the German government had different positions on European integration. Hallstein and his team at the Foreign Office advocated a federal solution with a form of "constitutional integration" broadly based on the European Coal and Steel Community, with the scope gradually increasing to include additional sectors, and with true parliamentary representation of the European populace.[55] Hallstein contended that institutional integration was in the interests of a successful German export industry.[56] Ludwig Erhard and the Ministry of Economics argued for a looser "functional integration" and advocated intergovernmental economic co-operation. Erhard opposed supranational structures and characterized the Foreign Office proponents of a federal Europe as out of touch with economic realities.[57] In the dispute, Adenauer finally supported Hallstein,[58] settling the acrimonious, and public, conflict between Hallstein and Erhard.[10]

In 1955 the foreign ministers of the European Coal and Steel Community met at the Messina Conference, among other things to nominate a member of the High Authority of the European Coal and Steel Community and to appoint its new president and vice-presidents for the period ending 10 February 1957. The conference, which was held from 1 to 3 June 1955 in the Italian city of Messina, Sicily, would lead to the signing of the Treaty of Rome in 1957. Shortly before the conference, Adenauer had given up his double post as Foreign Minister and, since Brentano had not yet been sworn in, Hallstein led the German delegation.[k] The agenda included discussion of an action programme to relaunch European integration following the collapse, in August 1954, of the plans to create a European Political Community and a European Defence Community, when France failed to ratify the treaty.[59]

On 6 September 1955, shortly before Adenauer's trip to Moscow, Hallstein, standing in for Brentano, attended the Noordwijk Conference of foreign ministers convened to evaluate progress made by the Spaak Committee.[60] On 9 November 1955, Hallstein reported the results to the West German Cabinet, where the Ministry of Economics and the Ministry of Agriculture opposed the plans for a common market rather than a free trade area. The Ministry of Economics feared that a customs union meant protectionism; the Ministry of Agriculture was concerned that the interests of German farmers would be betrayed; Franz Josef Strauss opposed the perceived discrimination against German industry regarding access to uranium.[60] Finally, the chancellor, Adenauer, again settled the dispute between the ministries by a decision in favour of Hallstein and the Foreign Office.[61] When the Spaak Report (the Brussels Report on the General Common Market) was finally presented in April 1956, it recommended a customs union. In the Cabinet meeting of 9 May 1956 there was renewed opposition to the position of the Foreign Office from other ministers, but Adenauer lent his support to Hallstein, and the Cabinet authorized intergovernmental negotiations, to be held at the conference of foreign ministers in Venice at the end of May, the German delegation again to be led by Hallstein.[61]

In July 1956, Britain had made proposals for the Organisation for European Economic Co-operation (OEEC) to examine the possibility of a free trade area for industrial goods.[62] The French, mainly interested in Euratom, attempted to separate the debate on the two topics and proposed a compromise treaty under which only the general principles of a common market would be agreed, leaving details to be decided later,[63] but Germany made negotiations on Euratom dependent on negotiations on a common market.[61] At the Venice Conference, the French foreign minister, Christian Pineau agreed to intergovernmental negotiations, with three provisos: the economic community was to be established in stages; customs tariffs should be reduced by only 30%; and national governments should not be overly constrained with regard to economic policy. Hallstein warned against accepting the French terms, which in his view meant that the French would push for a quick decision in favour of Euratom and delay the negotiations on the common market.[64] Hallstein was supported by the foreign ministers of the Netherlands and Luxembourg, against France, in demanding a fixed deadline and timetable for the establishment of a common market.[64] The French National Assembly approved the commencement of intergovernmental negotiations in July 1956, after the prime minister, Guy Mollet, gave an assurance that Euratom would not impose restrictions on the French nuclear weapons programme.[62]

Another cause of disagreement was the inclusion of French overseas territories in any common market. Erhard strongly opposed this, partly because of the perceived danger of France involving the other member states in its colonial responsibilities. The Foreign Office shared these concerns to some extent but Hallstein and Carstens were willing to accept the French position, believing it would help gain support from the French National Assembly; Hallstein also accepted the argument of his French counterpart, Faure, that it would benefit Germany.[65] Hallstein helped to strike a deal by which the imports and exports of overseas territories would be treated like products of the mother country and private investment and company branches of other member states would be permitted, thus opening up the overseas territories for German exports. Hallstein helped deal with these problems at two conferences of foreign ministers, one from 26 to 27 January 1957 and another on 4 February.[66]

 
Konrad Adenauer, Walter Hallstein and Antonio Segni, signing the European Customs Union and Euratom in 1957 in Rome

On 25 March 1957, the six countries Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Luxemburg, and Netherlands signed the Treaties of Rome. Adenauer and Hallstein signed for Germany.[67] The foreign minister, Brentano had largely left the negotiations to Hallstein, so the signing of the treaty represented a major success for Hallstein.[66] It was also Hallstein who explained the treaties to the German parliament on 21 March 1957, before they were signed on 25 March 1957.[66]

Choosing the President of the Commission edit

There had been previous suggestions of Hallstein becoming president of the European Court,[68] but now he was put forward as the German candidate for the president of the commission, though the Belgian Minister of Economics, Rey and the Netherlands Agriculture Minister, Mansholt were regarded as the strongest contenders for the position.[69] The conference of foreign ministers on 20 December 1957 could not reach a decision, so when the Treaties of Rome took effect on 1 January 1958, the position had not been filled. At the conference of foreign ministers on 6 and 7 January 1958, however, Hallstein was finally chosen as the first president of the EEC Commission.[69] Hallstein's selection for this position at the head of a major European organization, a decade after the end of World War II, was a major achievement for Germany.[69]

President of the Commission of the European Economic Community (1958–1967) edit

Laying the foundations of the EEC edit

Barely a decade after the end of World War II, the German Walter Hallstein was unanimously elected the first president of the Commission of the European Economic Community (now the European Commission) in Brussels.[70] He was elected on 7 January 1958,[71] and he was to remain in the position until 1967.[11]

Hallstein's commission, which held its first meeting on 16 January 1958,[72] comprised nine members (two each from France, Italy and Germany, one each from Luxembourg, Belgium and the Netherlands).[73] The tasks it faced included the implementation of a customs union and the Four Freedoms, as well as common policies on competition, trade, transport and agriculture.[74]

Hallstein famously described his role as "a kind of European prime minister" and regarded national sovereignty as a "doctrine of yesteryear."[3] Though Hallstein's personal vision of a federal Europe was clear, the EEC treaty left many questions open. Opinions were divided, for instance, on whether a common market could succeed without a common economic policy, on enlargement of the European Union – in particular whether Britain should join – and whether the final goal should be a political union in the sense of a "United States of Europe".[75]

Differing interests and traditions in the member states and differences of opinion among the politicians meant that consensus was difficult. The disagreements that had preceded the creation of the EEC continued after it was established, and these were reflected within the commission. For instance, the protectionist Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), the responsibility of Sicco Mansholt, the Commissioner for Agriculture, was at odds with the liberal foreign trade policy of the Commissioner for External relations, Jean Rey.[76]

 
In 1961, the British government under Prime Minister Harold Macmillan applied to join the EEC.

Britain had at first been against the formation of the EEC, preferring a looser free trade area, and later proposed a larger free trade area that would include the EEC and other European countries. The German government, German industry, and – especially – the Economics Minister, Ludwig Erhard, wanted Britain to be part of an integrated Europe. Hallstein opposed the idea of a wider free trade area at this time, advocating first achieving a greater degree of integration among a smaller number of countries.[77] Discussions on the possibility of a wider trade area, avoiding the tariff wall between the EEC and the EFTA countries, continued, but in the middle of preparations for the negotiations the French government, on instructions from de Gaulle, withdrew. This unilateral action by the French in November 1958 displeased the other EEC members and effectively ended the negotiations. German politicians like Erhard felt that Hallstein and his commission had not done enough to promote the wider free trade area.[75]

 
Edward Heath led Britain's application to join the EEC. He shared Hallstein's private nature and interest in music.

The six countries of the EEC had decided on a customs union: they agreed to remove tariffs between one another within a period of twelve years, and to erect a common tariff barrier between themselves and other countries. Seven of the excluded European countries (United Kingdom, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Switzerland, Austria, and Portugal) responded with an alternative free trade area, EFTA, which also removed tariff barriers between each other, but did not insist on a tariff barrier with other countries. The EFTA convention was signed in January 1960 and was to come into force in May 1960.[78] On 3 March 1960, Hallstein announced a plan for accelerating the implementation of the common market, which commentators regarded as sabotaging hopes of a joint free trade area that included the EEC and EFTA. This invoked the displeasure, not only of the EFTA countries, but also of the Economics Ministry under Erhard.[79] Commentators talked of Hallstein's "religious zeal".[79]

In 1961 Harold Macmillan, the British Prime Minister, finally gave up the idea of the larger free trade area, and the United Kingdom applied to join the EEC. Edward Heath, as Lord Privy Seal in the Macmillan government, led the negotiations in Britain's first attempt to join the EEC. Hallstein, as president of the EEC Commission, was cautious, considering the British application premature.[80] Of British politicians, only Heath was able to establish a rapport with Hallstein.[81] The Financial Times (of 2 August 1961) wrote that Hallstein was one of the least enthusiastic about British membership of the EEC.[82] In British government circles he was at first seen as siding with the French and de Gaulle, against Britain and the other five members of the EEC, who were more welcoming to Britain, and as favouring the French protectionist position.[83] Elements of the British Press, notably the Daily Express, were critical of Hallstein – or what he represented.[84]

It was in 1961 that de Gaulle proposed the Fouchet Plan, a plan for an intergovernmental "union of states", as an alternative to the European Communities. There was little support from the other European countries, and negotiations were abandoned on 17 April 1962.[85]

While Hallstein had a decidedly federal vision for Europe, and regarded the commission as a quasi-federal organ,[86] de Gaulle's vision was of a confederation.[87] From the beginning, Hallstein did not believe that de Gaulle's approach of cooperation between sovereign nation states would be able to realize his vision of a powerful Europe that could play its proper part on the world stage.[86]

 
Hallstein with Israel's Prime Minister Golda Meir in 1964

De Gaulle also envisaged a pooling of sovereignty in certain areas, such as external defence, harmonization of industrial production and foreign trade, currency, exploitation of resources in overseas territories, and cultural and scientific development,[88] but at the same time he was developing the French nuclear deterrent capability, the Force de Frappe, which he envisaged as part of a European defence capability independent of the United States.[87] This independence from the United States was one of de Gaulle's main objectives; he was against the increased integration of Europe under the umbrella of transatlantic integration as provided for in the Rome treaties.[85]

The Hallstein Commission drew up plans and a timetable for an economic and currency union, and Hallstein presented these to the Council of Ministers and the European Parliament in October 1962.[89]

A second attempt by de Gaulle to establish a closer political union in Europe that would be independent of the United States was the Franco-German bilateral treaty on political cooperation. This treaty between France and Germany, which was signed on 22 January 1963, was criticized by other countries as being incompatible with the EEC and NATO treaties. Hallstein and other members of the commission also criticized the treaty, and this angered de Gaulle.[75] When the treaty was ratified by West Germany,[j] the German Bundestag unilaterally added a preamble that re-affirmed the commitment to close transatlantic ties, the enlargement of the existing European Communities and attempts to secure Britain's accession. Since Britain had firmly expressed its unwillingness to support an autonomous European defence independent of America, de Gaulle regarded the treaty as a failure.[85]

Further attempts by de Gaulle at military cooperation with Germany to the exclusion of America were rebuffed by Erhard (now Federal Chancellor) and his foreign minister Gerhard Schröder.[85] Britain's application for membership of the EEC was vetoed by de Gaulle in 1963, which also further antagonized the other participants.[85]

Confrontation with de Gaulle edit

 
As President of the Commission of the EEC, Hallstein had a major confrontation with french president Charles de Gaulle that resulted in Hallstein's leaving the position.

De Gaulle took a confrontational course on the Common Agricultural Policy, and on 21 October 1964, the French Minister of Information, Alain Peyrefitte announced that France would leave the EEC if the European Agricultural market were not implemented in the agreed form by 15 December 1964.[90] On 1 December 1964, Erhard, now head of government in Germany, announced that Germany would accede to French demands for a common wheat price, and on 15 December the Council of Ministers laid down common grain prices from 1 July 1967 and instructed the commission to submit proposals for financing the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) by 1 July 1965.[90]

Differences between France and the Commission – and especially between de Gaulle and Hallstein – were exacerbated when France held the rotating six-month Presidency of the council, from January to June 1965.[91]

The Council of Ministers instructed the commission to submit plans by 1 April 1965 on how to finance the Common Agricultural Policy as from July 1965, including its financing from direct levies rather than national contributions; this would entail a transfer of revenues to the Community. [90] The ministers representing other countries, in particular the Netherlands, indicated that their national parliaments would not approve transfer of revenues to the Community unless the rights of the European Parliament were strengthened.[90] On 20 January 1965, the European Parliament passed a resolution appealing to the governments to take this step toward strengthening a democratic and federal Europe.[90] Hallstein supported this.[92] Hallstein had received indications that other countries shared his point of view and decided to risk the confrontation with de Gaulle, interpreting the instructions from the Council broadly, with the support of Dutch Commissioner for Agriculture, Sicco Mansholt.[92] The majority of the commission backed Hallstein.[92]

On 24 March 1965, Hallstein presented the commission's proposals for financing the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) to the European Parliament. It was proposed that customs duties collected at EEC borders would go to the community budget and that the Common Agricultural Market would be implemented as scheduled on 1 July 1967 – but the customs union for industrial products would also be implemented at the same time, two and a half years earlier than provided for in the Rome Treaty.[93] The proposals would have allowed the Community to develop its own financial resources independently of the member states and given more budgetary powers to the European Parliament.[91] From 1 January 1966, voting in the Council was to be by simple majority, removing the implicit veto power of individual countries. The French government stated it could not agree to this.[94]

Since the legislation would increase not only the commission's powers, but also the Parliament's, Hallstein had the support of the Parliament, which had long been campaigning for more powers. Before the proposals were presented to the Council, they became public, and Hallstein then presented them to the European Parliament on 24 March, a week before presenting them to the council. When Hallstein put forward his proposals, the council was already concerned.[94] France rejected the idea of the increased powers for the European Parliament and of the Community having its own independent revenues, insisting that what had been agreed by the Council regarding the financing of the common agricultural policy be implemented by 30 June 1965.[95] He accused Hallstein of acting as if he were a head of state. [91] France was particularly concerned about protecting the CAP because – under a majority system – it could be challenged by the other members.[91]

After discussions between France and Germany, a compromise was at first reached, postponing implementation of the agricultural levies until 1970, [96] but at the Council meeting of 28 June the Netherlands foreign minister, Joseph Luns, and his Italian counterpart, Amintore Fanfani, insisted that all of the commission's proposals should be discussed as a package.[96] German diplomats supported this position, and the German Bundestag passed a resolution stating that the commission's proposals did not go far enough; Germany did not want to agree to the plans for agricultural financing without being assured that France would not hinder a general reduction in tariffs in the Kennedy Round.[97]

The Committee of Permanent Representatives of the foreign ministers produced a report recommending a compromise by making both the agricultural levies and the customs duties available to be used for Community purposes but not centralizing the process; however, Hallstein refused to broker this deal, and suggested employing the common practice of "stopping the clock" until the issue could be resolved.[97]

Under pressure from Couve de Murville, who was the rotating President of the Council at the time, Hallstein agreed, on 30 June 1965, to work out a compromise. The same day, however, after consulting with de Gaulle, Couve de Murville announced that no agreement had been reached by the agreed deadline and that the negotiations had failed. France's presidency of the council, which rotated every six months, terminated on 30 June 1965.[97]

Empty Chair Crisis edit

A few days later, on de Gaulle's instructions, France ceased participation in all meetings of the Council of Ministers and the Council of Permanent Representatives that dealt with any new decisions. Participation in many working groups ceased, and the French Permanent Representative to the EU, Jean-Marc Boegner was recalled, together with 18 high-ranking civil servants and diplomats.[98][99]

In an attempt to resolve the situation, Hallstein, together with Marjolin, the (French) vice-president of the commission, drew up a new plan, continuing the provisional arrangement for agricultural finances until 1 January 1970. This proposal was presented to the council on 22 June 1965.[100]

De Gaulle, however, remained confrontational toward Hallstein and the Brussels "technocrats". In September 1965, he publicly declared his opposition to majority voting and the political role of the commission.[100] Since a treaty change required unanimity, there was stalemate,[101] and there was no provision in the treaties to cover such a boycott of the normal running of the Community.[100] At least in Hallstein's eyes, it was a breach of treaty obligations, and he was unprepared for such a scenario.[102]

On 20 October 1965 Couve de Murville, in the National Assembly, pushed for a revision of the treaties; this was opposed by the other five member states. At the Council meeting of 25 to 26 October they passed a resolution stating that a solution "must be found within the provisions of the existing treaties".[103][100] As a compromise, however, they offered the possibility of an extraordinary meeting of the council to discuss "the general situation of the Community" – without the Commission being invited.[104]

Following the French presidential elections on 5 and 19 December 1965, de Gaulle accepted this offer. In the negotiations on 17/18 January 1966, the French foreign minister, Couve de Murville, dropped the more extreme of France's demands.[105]

In January 1966, the six foreign ministers agreed to suggest to the Commission that the Permanent Representatives of the ministers should be consulted before making any major proposals and not to publish such proposals before they had been dealt with by the Council of Ministers. The other five took note of – but did not formally accept – the opinion of the French delegation that for matters of very important national interest, the discussion should continue until a unanimous agreement was reached.[105]

This became known as the Luxembourg Compromise.[105] It was not specified what could be invoked as a national interest and how to resolve disputes, so majority decisions were avoided and – until it was abolished by the Single European Act – it became a de facto veto, requiring unanimity for Council decisions.[106] Some concessions were also made to French sensibilities; for instance, diplomats no longer presented their credentials to Hallstein alone but jointly to the presidents of the Commission and the council.[107]

When the "Empty Chair Crisis" was finally resolved, it had lasted from 30 June 1965 to 29 January 1966.[102]

When the French foreign minister Couve de Murville returned to the negotiating table after Hallstein's official term of office in January 1966, he insisted on Hallstein's departure and the nomination of someone else to be the head of the new commission, which would in future be the commission shared by all three communities when the EEC, the ECSC, and Euratom were merged.[108]

Since there was no agreement on a replacement for Hallstein when his term ended on 8 January 1966, he remained in office as a caretaker (based on Article 159 of the EEC Treaty). This also meant that the planned merger of the three communities, which was to have taken place on 1 January 1966, was postponed.[109][107]

In view of the confrontation with de Gaulle, there was a proposal that Hallstein should be nominated for a further term but that he should serve for only six months. The German Chancellor, Georg Kiesinger agreed to this compromise, but Hallstein considered this was a breach of the Treaty[110] and on 5 May 1967 he asked not to be re-nominated at all.[105]

In this way, the national governments had refused to accept the commission becoming a European executive, blocking Hallstein's vision of a United States of Europe.[111]

Issues behind confrontation with de Gaulle edit

De Gaulle recognized Hallstein's service to European integration, but attributed it to German patriotism, serving the interests of Germany, enabling Germany to re-attain a respect and status in Europe that it had lost because of Hitler. De Gaulle resented the status that Hallstein, for him a mere technocrat, was accorded by foreign states. [112][113] Hallstein, for his part, was watchful that, as representative of the commission, he was accorded the status normally accorded to a head of state.[114][113] De Gaulle complained of the Commission usurping a political role reserved for governments and of Hallstein usurping a role reserved for heads of government or heads of state; he attacked Hallstein personally saying that Hallstein was trying to turn the EEC into a superstate, with Brussels as its capital; he talked of defending French democracy against an unaccountable and stateless technocracy, "a technocratic Areopagus, stateless and unaccountable" [De Gaulle at a press conference at the Elysée Palace on 9 September 1965.[l]]

In his memoirs, De Gaulle wrote of Hallstein

He was ardently wedded to the thesis of the super-State, and bent all his skilful efforts towards giving the Community the character and appearance of one. He had made Brussels, where he resided, into a sort of capital. There he sat, surrounded with all the trappings of sovereignty, directing his colleagues, allocating jobs among them, controlling several thousand officials who were appointed, promoted and remunerated at his discretion, receiving the credentials of foreign ambassadors, laying claim to high honors on the occasion of his official visits, concerned above all to further the amalgamation of the Six, believing that the pressure of events would bring about what he envisaged.

— De Gaulle, Memoirs of Hope[113]

According to Der Spiegel, De Gaulle's complaints included[116]

  • Hallstein's being frequently received by US presidents, although the commission had no foreign relations mandate;
  • Hallstein's claim to be a sort of European prime minister;
  • the rank of ambassador held by the representatives of the 65 states accredited with the European Commission;
  • foreign ambassadors' presentation of their credentials to Hallstein (ambassadors normally present their credentials, signed by the countries head of state to the head of state of the host country);
  • the participation of Commission staff in the Kennedy Round negotiations in Geneva, in negotiations with EFTA, and in negotiations with non-European states, in particular South American states.

On the political role of the commission, Hallstein stated in an interview with Der Spiegel

In principle, we have no political competences ... because there is nothing of that nature in the Rome Treaty. But we have political responsibility because we are a political – not an economic – enterprise. The Common Market has the goal of unifying Europe politically.[m]

— Walter Hallstein, [Der Spiegel][117]

The issue that triggered the Empty Chair Crisis was the financing of the common agricultural policy, which was of critical interest to France: from 1962 to 1964, France had received 46 million US dollars from the agricultural fund, eighty-five per cent of all revenue.[117]

The clash between Hallstein and de Gaulle demonstrated a clash between two opposing visions of Europe.[118] The differences included:

On most of these issues, de Gaulle regarded Hallstein as an opponent. Hallstein's response to de Gaulle's attacks was also somewhat confrontational, comparing de Gaulle's actions with those of Hitler.[n]

Later life (1967–1982) edit

 
Hallstein in 1969, accepting the Robert Schuman Prize.
 
Grave of Walter Hallstein at the Waldfriedhof cemetery in Stuttgart

Hallstein left the Commission at the end of 1967, aged 68.[110]

On 20 January 1968, Hallstein was elected president of the European Movement, a private organization founded in 1948 as the umbrella organization of various organizations in favour of European integration, [120] where he continued to promote his vision of a "United States of Europe".[121] Hallstein retained this office until 1974, when he did not stand for re-election, being followed by Jean Rey, who had also succeeded him as President of the commission.[122][70]

In the run-up to the federal elections in 1969, Helmut Kohl, then minister-president and head of the CDU in the state of Rhineland Palatinate offered Hallstein the opportunity of standing as a direct candidate in the Neuwied constituency in the Westerwald area and heading up the CDU party list in the state of Rhineland Palatinate. At the time, the CDU under Kurt Georg Kiesinger was the governing party. At the CDU "Euroforum 68" congress in Saarbrücken in January 1968, Hallstein was celebrated as the future foreign minister, should the CDU win the 1969 federal election.[123] He proposed to confront de Gaulle and counter his attempts to "devalue" and "weaken" the European Community.[123] However, the party lost the election, leaving Hallstein as a member of the Bundestag, but with no government office.[124]

As reported by Der Spiegel, Hallstein was later approached by Kohl as a possible candidate to replace Heinrich Lübke as Federal President, but this did not come to fruition. [125] From 1969 to 1972, he was a member of the German Federal Parliament for the Christian Democratic Union,[70] where he was on the Foreign Affairs Committee and was one of the party's spokesmen for European affairs, along with Erik Blumenfeld and Carl-Ludwig Wagner. In the party, he supported the Junge Union, the CDU youth organization. Hallstein had little personal contact with his constituency, the work being done mainly by his assistant Christian Franck. At the next elections in 1972, he was not re-nominated.[124] In his speeches in the Bundestag, he continued to express his vision of European union. He also spoke out in favour of direct election of the European Parliament in Germany. At that time, the members of the European Parliament were delegated by the Bundestag, and direct election was not introduced until 1979.[126]

Having left the Bundestag in 1972 and the presidency of the European Movement in 1974, Hallstein retired from active political life but continued to write and give talks. He moved from his country house in the Westerwald to Stuttgart, and continued his work as an author.[70]

Hallstein fell ill in early 1980[127] and died in Stuttgart on 29 March 1982, at the age of 80.[11] He was buried, following a state funeral,[128] on 2 April 1982[129] at the Waldfriedhof Cemetery in Stuttgart.[70]

Hallstein remained a bachelor all his life.[129]

Vision of Europe edit

Central to Hallstein's ideas on Europe was his vision of a federal Europe. He called European integration a "revolutionary endeavour"[130] that would take a long time.[131] According to Hallstein's analysis of the situation, European integration was favoured by the external threat from the Soviet bloc and the internal threat of conflict between the states of central and western Europe and the political and economic fragility of some European democracies.[131] Hallstein and his staff at the Foreign Office aimed for a constitutional framework in the federalist sense – a supranational concept that was opposed by the school centred around Ludwig Erhard and the Ministry of Economics, who advocated intergovernmental, economic cooperation, founded on free trade.[132]

Hallstein spoke early in favour of the proposed European Defence Community, which never came to fruition, and of West German's integration in the West, which he saw as necessary for the solution of other problems, including German reunification.[133]

In a speech in 1953, in London, Hallstein talked of three "dimensions" of European integration:[134]

  • Intensity expressed the degree to which member states give up individual sovereignty to create a supranational community.
  • Extensity expressed the size of the community, that is the number of member states.
  • Time expressed the order and speed of steps toward complete integration.

He spoke of a trade-off between the different dimensions, for instance: the larger the number of members, the less integration would be possible in a given time. His model included the coexistence of different European organizations of differing sizes and with differing degrees of integration.[134] Such considerations were particularly relevant to the United Kingdom, which had been more in favour of intergovernmental organizations such as the Council of Europe and had shown less interest in supranational organizations like the European Coal and Steel Community and the proposed European Defence Community.[134]

Though Hallstein first pursued the goal of economic integration, he stated that this was not an end in itself but was a means of achieving a political union that "pool[ed] all the appropriate functions of the member-states.[135][136] For Hallstein the Schuman Plan was a way for Europe to become an equal partner of the United States – and as a way for Germany to "rejoin the organized community of free peoples".[133] He envisaged a planned, gradual evolution involving a number of projects, coming together to produce a coherent whole. At first he talked of the "dynamic aspect of the constituent plans" (dynamischer Aspekt der Teilpläne), but later of what he – or rather his unenviable translator – called "material logic" (German: Sachlogik, an "anonymous force [that] only works through human will ... [an] inner logic, which is stronger than the capricious dictates of politics"[135]). This meant setting up a situation in such a way that the desired goal would be achieved because people faced with future problems and choices would naturally choose the desired path – not automatically, but because the inherent logic of the situation would favour the desired choice.[137] For instance, installing common tariffs would naturally lead to the need for a common trade policy; prescribing free movement for people, services, and capital would tend to lead to a common infrastructure, including a common tax policy, a common budgetary policy, and a common currency.[138]

The Schuman Plan was the first step, applied to the field of economics; the next step was to be defence; these would then necessarily lead to integration in the related fields of industrial relations and social policy, energy policy and foreign policy.[134]

Hallstein strove for a Europe based on the rule of law ("law in place of force").[139][140] His concept of European union was that of a "community" based on democracy and the rule of law — not a federation (because it was not yet a state), nor a confederation ("because it was endowed with the power of exercising authority directly over every citizen in each of its member states").[139]

A lawyer and an expert in international law, Hallstein saw a strong legal foundation as essential.[141][142] His model of a federal Europe borrowed from the federal structures of Germany, the United States and Switzerland.[142] Hallstein later wrote that the experience of Nazi Germany led him to distrust not only the idea of absolute and inalienable national sovereignty, but also the British idea of a European balance of power.[143] Partly as a result of the Americans' re-education programme, Hallstein developed an interest in the United States Constitution and American history between independence in 1776 and the ratification of the Constitution in 1788, when the United States was a confederation of states. The problems that the United States experienced were, in his view, due partly to the states defending their sovereignty. He rejected the concept of the unitary nation-state favoured by the French, in favour of a federal solution, and concluded that Europe should follow the American path towards a federal solution.[144] However, he wished to retain Europe's diversity and opposed the idea of Europe becoming a "melting pot".[145]

Reception and legacy edit

People who knew Hallstein described him as someone with keen intellect, an excellent command of language, and high reliability.[146][147][148] But he was also perceived by those who knew him as cold, unapproachable, and excessively intellectual, respected rather than liked.[149] British Prime Minister Edward Heath allegedly said of him "He is just a brain."[5][150] He was also characterized as having a keen sense of duty:[70] Franz Josef Strauss called him one of the last Prussians.[151]

 
Accepting the Robert Schuman Prize in Bonn, February 1969

During his lifetime, Walter Hallstein received honorary doctorates from nine European universities, including Padua, Sussex, Liège, Nancy, Leuven, Oviedo, and Tübingen, and nine American universities, including Georgetown, Harvard, and Johns Hopkins University.[129][152]

He was also awarded numerous other honours and prizes from European governments.[o]

In 1997, the Walter Hallstein Institute for European Constitutional Law at the Humboldt University in Berlin was named in his honour.

Works edit

The documented total number of publications by Hallstein exceeds 365.[156]

Hallstein's major popular work was Der unvollendete Bundesstaat [The Unfinished Federation], which was first published in 1969:[122]

  • Hallstein, Walter (1969). Der unvollendete Bundesstaat. Europäische Erfahrungen und Erkenntnisse. Düsseldorf, Vienna: Econ. ISBN 978-3-430-13897-0.

This book can be seen as Hallstein's political testament.[157] The second German edition was titled simply Die Europäische Gemeinschaft [The European Community]:

  • Hallstein, Walter (1973). Die europäische Gemeinschaft. Düsseldorf, Vienna: Econ. ISBN 978-3-430-13898-7.

A later version was published in English with the title Europe in the Making:[158]

  • Hallstein, Walter (1972). Europe in the Making. Translated by Charles Roetter. George Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-0-04-330215-6.

He also wrote a number of academic books and numerous articles, and he gave innumerable speeches. Some of his speeches were published as a book:

  • Hallstein, Walter (1979). Europäische Reden. Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt. ISBN 978-3-421-01894-6.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b According to his birth certificate he was named Walther [sic] Peter Hallstein.[4] He was the second of two sons of Anna Hallstein (née Geibel) and Jakob (or Jacob) Hallstein, a senior civil-servant for the railway authority with the rank of Regierungsbaurat.[4][5]
  2. ^ The Rabanus-Maurus-Gymnasium.[6]
  3. ^ The topic of Hallstein's doctoral dissertation was life insurance policies in the Treaty of Versailles ("Der Lebensversicherungvertrag im Versailler Vertrag").[6]
  4. ^ As a wissenschaftlicher Referent.
  5. ^ Habilitation, a post-doctoral qualification, entitles a person to teach independently and to supervise doctoral dissertations
  6. ^ The thesis was entitled Die Aktienrechte der Gegenwart [Contemporary Company Law in Different Jurisdictions] and was published in 1931.
  7. ^ These included the National Socialist Teachers League (Nationalsozialistischer Lehrerbund), the National Socialist Association of Legal Professionals (NS-Rechtswahrerbund ), the National Socialist People's Welfare organization (Nationalsozialistische Volkswohlfahrt), the National Socialist German Lecturers League (Nationalsozialistischer Deutscher Dozentenbund), and the National Socialist Air-Raid Protection Association (Nationalsozialistischer Luftschutzbund). The backdrop to this was the Nazi seizure of control of civil servants' associations and many other professional and civic organizations in what they called Gleichschaltung (synchronization or alignment); so being a member of a professional association entailed membership in a nominally Nazi association.
  8. ^ He served as an assistant adjutant (Ordonnanzoffizier)
  9. ^ The date was 15 March 1951.
  10. ^ a b The two entities officially using the names Federal Republic of Germany and German Democratic Republic were, at this time, generally known in the English-speaking world as West Germany and East Germany, respectively. However, for much of the time, the Federal Republic of Germany claimed to represent the whole of Germany, and this was generally acknowledged by its allies and reflected in the language of international treaties. This should be borne in mind when any of these terms is used, since any term may be taken imply a point of view but it is not possible to avoid all problematic terms. For details, see Hallstein Doctrine.
  11. ^ The delegations of the other countries were headed by Johan Willem Beyen (Netherlands), Gaetano Martino (Italy), Joseph Bech (Luxembourg), Antoine Pinay (France), and Paul-Henri Spaak (Belgium). Joseph Bech chaired the meeting.[56]
  12. ^ He said (in French) "Or on sait, Dieu sait si on le sait! qu'il y a une conception différente au sujet d'une fédération européenne dans laquelle, suivant les rêves de ceux qui l'ont conçue, les pays perdraient leur personnalité nationale, et où, faute d'un fédérateur, tel qu´a l'Ouest tentèrent de l'être – chacun d'ailleurs à sa façon – César, et ses successeurs, Charlemagne, Orthon, Charles Quint, Napoléon, Hitler, et tel qu´a l'Est s'y essaya Staline, ils seraient régis par quelque aréopage technocratique, apatride, et irresponsable." (as quoted by Edward and Lane [115])
  13. ^ German: Im Prinzip haben wir keine (politischen) Kompetenzen ... weil davon nichts im Römischen Vertrag steht. Dennoch tragen wir eine politische Verantwortung, weil wir selbst ein politisches Unternehmen sind und kein wirtschaftliches. Der Gemeinsame Markt hat das Ziel, Europa politisch zu einigen.
  14. ^ Hallstein called de Gaulle's attempts to dismantle the progress achieved on the path to a supranational Europe "the greatest act of destruction in the history of Europe, even of the free world, since Hitler" (German: der größte Zerstörungsakt in der Geschichte Europas, ja der freien Welt, seit den Tagen Hitlers).[119]
  15. ^ Honours awarded to Halstein included the following:

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  • —— (2011). "110. Geburtstag von Walter Hallstein" [The 110th anniversary of Walter Hallstein's birth] (in German).
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Further reading edit

  • Loth, Wilfried; Wallace, William; Wessels, Wolfgang (1998). Walter Hallstein: The Forgotten European?. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-21293-3.
  • Müller, Kay; Walter, Franz (2004). "Der Mann für Verträge: Walter Hallstein" [The Man for Treaties: Walter Hallstein]. Graue Eminenzen der Macht: Küchenkabinette in der deutschen Kanzlerdemokratie von Adenauer bis Schröder [Éminences grises: Kitchen Cabinets in Germany's Chancellor Democracy from Adenauer to Schröder] (in German). Wiesbaden: Springer. pp. 31–34. ISBN 9783531143484.
  • Grewe, W.G. (1960). Deutsche Außenpolitik der Nachkriegszeit (in German). Stuttgart: DVA.
  • Küsters, Hanns Jürgen (1990). "Der Streit um Kompetenzen und Konzeptionen deutscher Europapolitik" [The Dispute over Competencies and Conceptions of German European Policy]. In Herbst, Ludolf; Bührer, Werner; Sowade, Hanno (eds.). Vom Marshallplan zur EWG.: Die Eingliederung der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in die westliche Welt [From the Marshall Plan to the EEC: The Integration of the Federal Republic of German into the Western World]. Quellen u. Darstellungen zur Zeitgeschichte [Sources and Presentations on Contemporary History] (in German). Vol. 30. Bonn: Oldenbourg Verlag. pp. 335–372. ISBN 978-3-486-55601-8.

External links edit

  • The History of the European Union: The founding fathers of the EU
  • Biography of Walter Hallstein at a semi-official French web site (in French)
  • Biography of Walter Hallstein at the Konrad-Adenauer Foundation(in German)
  • Brief portrait of Walter Hallstein at the official web site for Charlemagne Prize awards
  • Walter Hallstein Institute(in German)
  • Charlemagne Prize Foundation; includes a list of recipients
  • Walter Hallstein (speaker). Founding fathers of the European Union: Walter Hallstein (in German). European Commission. I-072675. Retrieved 18 February 2013.
  • Address given by Walter Hallstein: the revival of European integration (Bonn, 14 May 1956)
Political offices
New office German European Commissioner
1958–1967
Served alongside: Hans von der Groeben
Succeeded by
Succeeded by
President of the European Commission
1958–1967
Succeeded by

walter, hallstein, november, 1901, march, 1982, german, academic, diplomat, statesman, first, president, commission, european, economic, community, founding, fathers, european, union, excellencyhallstein, 1957president, european, commissionin, office, january,. Walter Hallstein 17 November 1901 29 March 1982 was a German academic diplomat and statesman who was the first president of the Commission of the European Economic Community and one of the founding fathers of the European Union His ExcellencyWalter HallsteinHallstein in 1957President of the European CommissionIn office 7 January 1958 30 June 1967First Vice PresidentSicco MansholtPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byJean ReyState Secretary at the Federal Foreign OfficeIn office 2 April 1951 7 January 1958Preceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byHilger van ScherpenbergMember of the BundestagIn office 28 September 1969 19 November 1972ConstituencyNeuwiedPersonal detailsBornWalther sic Peter Hallstein a 1901 11 17 17 November 1901Mainz German EmpireDied29 March 1982 1982 03 29 aged 80 Stuttgart West GermanyResting placeWaldfriedhof Cemetery Stuttgart GermanyPolitical partyChristian Democratic UnionAlma materFriedrich Wilhelm UniversityMilitary serviceAllegiance Nazi GermanyBranch serviceWehrmachtYears of service1942 1945RankOberleutnantBattles warsWorld War II German occupation of France Normandy Campaign Battle of Cherbourg Hallstein began his academic career in the 1920s Weimar Republic and became Germany s youngest law professor in 1930 at the age of 29 During World War II he served as a First Lieutenant in the German Army in France Captured by American troops in 1944 he spent the rest of the war in a prisoner of war camp in the United States where he organised a camp university for his fellow soldiers After the war he returned to Germany and continued his academic career he became rector of the University of Frankfurt in 1946 and spent a year as a visiting professor at Georgetown University from 1948 In 1950 he was recruited to a diplomatic career becoming the leading civil servant at the German Foreign Office where he gave his name to the Hallstein Doctrine West Germany s policy of isolating East Germany diplomatically A keen advocate of a federal Europe Hallstein played a key role in West German foreign policy and then in European integration He was one of the architects of the European Coal and Steel Community and the first President of the Commission of the European Economic Community which would later become the European Union He held the office from 1958 to 1967 and was the only German to be selected as president of the European Commission or its predecessors until the selection of Ursula von der Leyen in 2019 1 Hallstein famously described his role as a kind of European prime minister and dismissed national sovereignty as a doctrine of yesteryear 2 3 Hallstein left office following a clash with the President of France Charles de Gaulle he turned to German politics as a member of the Bundestag also serving as President of the European Movement from 1968 to 1974 He is the author of books and numerous articles and speeches on European integration and on the European Communities Contents 1 Early life and pre war academic career 2 Soldier and prisoner of war 1942 1945 3 Post war academic career 1945 1950 4 Diplomatic career 1950 1957 4 1 Foreign affairs at the Chancellery 1950 1951 4 2 State Secretary at the Foreign Office 1951 1958 4 2 1 Hallstein Doctrine 4 2 2 European integration and the Rome treaties 4 2 3 Choosing the President of the Commission 5 President of the Commission of the European Economic Community 1958 1967 5 1 Laying the foundations of the EEC 5 2 Confrontation with de Gaulle 5 2 1 Empty Chair Crisis 5 2 2 Issues behind confrontation with de Gaulle 6 Later life 1967 1982 7 Vision of Europe 8 Reception and legacy 9 Works 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life and pre war academic career editWalter Hallstein was born on 17 November 1901 in Mainz Germany a After primary school in Darmstadt he attended a classical school b in Mainz from 1913 until his matriculation Abitur in 1920 7 From 1920 Hallstein studied law in Bonn later moving to Munich and then to Berlin 8 He specialized in international private law and wrote his doctoral dissertation on commercial aspects of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles c He obtained his doctorate from the Friedrich Wilhelm University in Berlin in 1925 6 at the age of 23 From 1923 to 1926 he was a legal clerk at the Kammergericht 6 and in 1927 having passed his qualifying examination he was employed for a very brief spell as a judge 9 He then worked as an academic d at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Foreign Private and International Private Law in Berlin where he specialized in comparative commercial and company law 6 working under Professor Martin Wolff a leading scholar of private law 10 He would remain there until 1930 6 In 1929 he obtained his Habilitation e from the University of Berlin based on a thesis on company law 6 f In 1930 at the age of 29 he was appointed professor of private law and company law at the University of Rostock 11 12 making him Germany s youngest professor of law 6 He was made Deputy Dean Prodekan of the Faculty of Law in 1935 13 and then Dean in 1936 14 He remained in Rostock until 1941 15 14 11 From 1941 to 1944 Hallstein lectured at Frankfurt University where he was Director of the Institute for Comparative Law and Economic Law 16 In 1935 Hallstein attempted to start a military career alongside his academic duties 17 In 1936 he managed to integrate a voluntary military service in an artillery unit 17 In the years between 1936 and 1939 he attended several military courses 18 and was made a reserve officer 17 Hallstein was a member of several nominally Nazi professional organizations g 19 but he was not a member of the Nazi Party or of the SA 1 He is reputed to have rejected Nazi ideology 20 10 and to have kept his distance from the Nazis 6 There was opposition from Nazi officials to his proposed appointment in 1941 as professor of law at the University of Frankfurt but the academics pushed through his candidacy and he soon advanced to become dean of the faculty 21 Soldier and prisoner of war 1942 1945 edit nbsp Hallstein was taken prisoner by American troops in Cherbourg in 1944 In 1942 Hallstein was called up he served in an artillery regiment 10 of the Wehrmacht in Northern France with the rank of first lieutenant Oberleutnant 12 h In early 1944 Hallstein s name was submitted by the University of Frankfurt as a potential Nationalsozialistischer Fuhrungsoffizier to the National Socialist Lecturers League 22 18 On 26 June 1944 during the Battle of Cherbourg he was captured by the Americans 12 and sent to Camp Como a prisoner of war camp in Mississippi 23 As a German prisoner of war POW in the United States Hallstein started a camp university 11 where he held law courses for the prisoners 23 As part of the Sunflower Project a project to re educate German POWs he attended an administrative school at Fort Getty where teaching included the principles of the Constitution of the United States 23 Hallstein remained a prisoner of war from June 1944 to mid 1945 23 Post war academic career 1945 1950 editIn November 1945 Hallstein returned to Germany 24 where he campaigned for Frankfurt University to be re opened Turning down an offer from Ludwig Erhard to be deputy minister at the Bavarian Ministry of Economics 10 he became a professor at Frankfurt University on 1 February 1946 and in April he was elected its rector a position he retained until 1948 He was president of the South German Rectors Conference which he founded 25 From 1948 to 1949 he spent a year as visiting professor at Georgetown University in Washington D C 11 23 Hallstein was co founder of the German national UNESCO committee and was its president from 1949 to 1950 24 26 Diplomatic career 1950 1957 editForeign affairs at the Chancellery 1950 1951 edit nbsp The Palais Schaumburg 1950 seat of the Federal Chancellery in 1950 where Hallstein worked before the German Foreign Office was formed Against the background of the Second World War a conflict that had caused massive destruction and left the continent split in two by the Iron Curtain there were calls for increased co operation in Europe The French foreign minister Robert Schuman put forward a plan originating from Jean Monnet for a European Coal and Steel Community that would unify control of German and French coal and steel production and talks were started with this aim 27 Germany had still not regained its sovereignty following defeat in World War II and was represented internationally by the Allied High Commission 28 There was no German foreign office and for a time foreign affairs were dealt with by the Chancellery 29 Konrad Adenauer the German Chancellor called Hallstein to Bonn at the suggestion of Wilhelm Ropke 30 and in June 1950 he appointed him to head the German delegation at the Schuman Plan negotiations in Paris 11 which were to lead to the formation of the European Coal and Steel Community 24 Jean Monnet the leader of the French delegation and Hallstein drew up the Schuman Plan which was the basis for the European Coal and Steel Community ECSC established by the Treaty of Paris in 1951 31 The ECSC was to develop into the European Economic Community and later the European Union In August 1950 to general surprise Hallstein was made head of the Office of Foreign Affairs Dienststelle fur auswartige Angelegenheiten at the Federal Chancellery Kanzleramt 32 At this time little was known about Hallstein except that he had not been a member of the Nazi Party and that he was on good terms with US officials 33 State Secretary at the Foreign Office 1951 1958 edit nbsp 1955 German Foreign Office building nbsp West Germany joins NATO Walter Hallstein left with Konrad Adenauer centre and Ambassador Herbert Blankenhorn right at the NATO Conference in Paris in 1954 nbsp Second reading of the Paris Treaties in the Bundestag on 25 February 1955 Following a change in the Occupation Statute the German Foreign Office was re created in March 1951 i but the post of Foreign Minister was filled by Adenauer himself 34 On 2 April 1951 Hallstein was made the leading civil servant at the newly created Foreign Office 35 Foreign policy continued to be managed by Adenauer himself with his group of intimates including Hallstein Blankenhorn and others In many respects Hallstein was the West German Foreign Minister in all but name 36 but there was a growing awareness that a separate officeholder was needed Adenauer is said to have considered Hallstein for the position even though he was not a member of a political party 37 Hallstein also played an important part in promoting West Germany s goals of regaining sovereignty and creating a European Defence Community EDC of which West Germany would be a member 10 Negotiations at first resulted in two international agreements On 26 May 1952 the Treaty of Bonn was signed by the United States United Kingdom France and West Germany on ratification it would largely restore sovereignty to the Federal Republic of Germany de facto West Germany but not including West Berlin which retained a special status On 27 May 1952 the Treaty of Paris was signed by the United States France Italy Belgium Netherlands Luxembourg and West Germany on ratification it would have established the European Defence Community EDC 38 39 However the Treaty of Paris failed to obtain the necessary approval of the French Parliament Instead a solution involving the Western European Union WEU was agreed and West Germany was to become a member of NATO 40 The efforts to resolve the issues culminated in 1954 in a series of conferences in London and Paris The German side was represented by Adenauer the German chancellor together with the top civil servants at the German Foreign Office Hallstein his colleague Blankenhorn and his deputy Grewe 40 Hallstein helped negotiate various treaties at the London Nine Power Conference from 23 September to 3 October 1954 they were finalized at the Paris conference from 20 to 23 October 1954 The conferences in Paris included a meeting of the parties to the Nine Power Conference in London 20 October a meeting of the seven WEU members 20 October a meeting of the Four Powers to end the occupation of Germany 21 22 October and a meeting of all fourteen NATO members to approve Germany s membership 40 After the ratification of the Paris Accords on 5 May 1955 the General Treaty Deutschlandvertrag which largely restored West German j sovereignty took full effect the Federal Republic of Germany became a member of NATO Once the major foreign policy objectives were in hand Hallstein set about restoring Germany s diplomatic service 24 and re organizing the Foreign Office based on the findings of the Maltzan Report a report commissioned by Hallstein on 26 June 1952 and produced a month later by Vollrath Freiherr von Maltzan a former diplomat at that time on loan from the Ministry of Economics 41 There was criticism of a lack of information and consultation and an atmosphere of secrecy possible resulting from Adenauer s distrust of the old hands at the Foreign Office the Wilhelmstrasse veterans as well as the desire to fill top jobs with outsiders not tainted by having served as diplomats under the Nazis 42 There were suggestions of a disconnect between the leadership consisting of Adenauer and a small group of close advisers including Hallstein and Blankenhorn on the one hand and the division leaders at the Foreign Office and the diplomatic missions on the other In particular Hallstein was also criticised in the press after the European Defence Community was rejected by the French National Assembly as had been predicted by the German diplomatic mission in Paris 43 nbsp After Heinrich von Brentano was appointed Foreign Minister Walter Hallstein retained his very influential status at the Foreign Office On 6 June 1955 Adenauer who had until then been Foreign Minister as well as Chancellor appointed Heinrich von Brentano foreign minister and there was a reshuffling of responsibilities but Hallstein retained the trust of Adenauer and continued to attend cabinet meetings 44 Herbert Blankenhorn who until then been the head of the Political Department of the Foreign Office became the German Permanent Representative to NATO in Paris Wilhelm Grewe took over the Political Department under Hallstein and was made Hallstein s deputy 44 Hallstein was involved in discussions with the French concerning the return of the coal rich Saar to Germany In October 1955 there was a referendum held to decide whether the Saar would remain separate from Germany or be re integrated into Germany following which it was agreed with France that there would be political integration into the Federal Republic of Germany by 1 January 1957 and economic integration by 1 January 1960 44 In September 1956 Hallstein announced that France had agreed to hand over control of the Saar to Germany on 27 October 1956 the Saar Treaty was signed 45 Hallstein Doctrine edit Further information Hallstein Doctrine In 1955 Germany had in large measure regained its sovereignty and become integrated into western defence organizations the WEU and NATO European integration had progressed with the establishment of the ECSC the Saar question was to be resolved by the referendum in October 1955 In all of these matters Hallstein had played a major role 45 Some of the main issues of German foreign policy were now German re unification and the relations of West Germany the Federal Republic of Germany with its eastern neighbours including East Germany the German Democratic Republic Being more involved in Western European integration Hallstein delegated much of this work to his deputy Wilhelm Grewe 46 But in this area particularly German foreign policy became associated with the name Hallstein In 1955 Hallstein and Grewe accompanied Adenauer as members of a delegation to Moscow where the establishment of diplomatic relations between Bonn and Moscow was agreed 47 It was on the flight back from Moscow that the policy that was later to become known as the Hallstein Doctrine was fleshed out 48 though the Foreign Office had already devised and practised elements of the policy 49 The idea behind the Hallstein Doctrine came from Hallstein s deputy Wilhelm Grewe 50 The doctrine would become one of the major elements of West German foreign policy from September 1955 until official recognition of the German Democratic Republic in October 1969 51 Based on the Basic Law its de facto constitution the Federal Republic of Germany then commonly known in the English speaking world as West Germany claimed an exclusive mandate to represent the whole of Germany including the Communist East Germany which was aligned with the Soviet Union One of the early objectives of West German foreign policy was the diplomatic isolation of East Germany In 1958 journalists named this policy the Hallstein Grewe Doctrine which later became shortened to the Hallstein Doctrine 52 Grewe himself writes that he did devise the broad outlines of the policy but mainly as one of a number of options the decisions being made by the foreign minister Brentano and the chancellor Adenauer in any case the name Hallstein doctrine may have been something of a misnomer 53 No official text of the so called doctrine was made public but it was explained publicly in a radio interview 51 by its main architect Wilhelm Grewe Adenauer also explained the outlines of the policy in a statement to the German parliament on 22 September 1955 54 It meant that the Federal German government would regard it as an unfriendly act if third countries were to recognize or maintain diplomatic relations with the German Democratic Republic East Germany The exception was the Soviet Union as one of the Four Powers responsible for Germany 53 The threatened response to such an unfriendly act was often understood to mean breaking off diplomatic relations this was not stated as an automatic response under the policy but remained the ultima ratio 51 European integration and the Rome treaties edit nbsp Economics minister Ludwig Erhard had opposing views on the path of European integration Members of the German government had different positions on European integration Hallstein and his team at the Foreign Office advocated a federal solution with a form of constitutional integration broadly based on the European Coal and Steel Community with the scope gradually increasing to include additional sectors and with true parliamentary representation of the European populace 55 Hallstein contended that institutional integration was in the interests of a successful German export industry 56 Ludwig Erhard and the Ministry of Economics argued for a looser functional integration and advocated intergovernmental economic co operation Erhard opposed supranational structures and characterized the Foreign Office proponents of a federal Europe as out of touch with economic realities 57 In the dispute Adenauer finally supported Hallstein 58 settling the acrimonious and public conflict between Hallstein and Erhard 10 In 1955 the foreign ministers of the European Coal and Steel Community met at the Messina Conference among other things to nominate a member of the High Authority of the European Coal and Steel Community and to appoint its new president and vice presidents for the period ending 10 February 1957 The conference which was held from 1 to 3 June 1955 in the Italian city of Messina Sicily would lead to the signing of the Treaty of Rome in 1957 Shortly before the conference Adenauer had given up his double post as Foreign Minister and since Brentano had not yet been sworn in Hallstein led the German delegation k The agenda included discussion of an action programme to relaunch European integration following the collapse in August 1954 of the plans to create a European Political Community and a European Defence Community when France failed to ratify the treaty 59 On 6 September 1955 shortly before Adenauer s trip to Moscow Hallstein standing in for Brentano attended the Noordwijk Conference of foreign ministers convened to evaluate progress made by the Spaak Committee 60 On 9 November 1955 Hallstein reported the results to the West German Cabinet where the Ministry of Economics and the Ministry of Agriculture opposed the plans for a common market rather than a free trade area The Ministry of Economics feared that a customs union meant protectionism the Ministry of Agriculture was concerned that the interests of German farmers would be betrayed Franz Josef Strauss opposed the perceived discrimination against German industry regarding access to uranium 60 Finally the chancellor Adenauer again settled the dispute between the ministries by a decision in favour of Hallstein and the Foreign Office 61 When the Spaak Report the Brussels Report on the General Common Market was finally presented in April 1956 it recommended a customs union In the Cabinet meeting of 9 May 1956 there was renewed opposition to the position of the Foreign Office from other ministers but Adenauer lent his support to Hallstein and the Cabinet authorized intergovernmental negotiations to be held at the conference of foreign ministers in Venice at the end of May the German delegation again to be led by Hallstein 61 In July 1956 Britain had made proposals for the Organisation for European Economic Co operation OEEC to examine the possibility of a free trade area for industrial goods 62 The French mainly interested in Euratom attempted to separate the debate on the two topics and proposed a compromise treaty under which only the general principles of a common market would be agreed leaving details to be decided later 63 but Germany made negotiations on Euratom dependent on negotiations on a common market 61 At the Venice Conference the French foreign minister Christian Pineau agreed to intergovernmental negotiations with three provisos the economic community was to be established in stages customs tariffs should be reduced by only 30 and national governments should not be overly constrained with regard to economic policy Hallstein warned against accepting the French terms which in his view meant that the French would push for a quick decision in favour of Euratom and delay the negotiations on the common market 64 Hallstein was supported by the foreign ministers of the Netherlands and Luxembourg against France in demanding a fixed deadline and timetable for the establishment of a common market 64 The French National Assembly approved the commencement of intergovernmental negotiations in July 1956 after the prime minister Guy Mollet gave an assurance that Euratom would not impose restrictions on the French nuclear weapons programme 62 Another cause of disagreement was the inclusion of French overseas territories in any common market Erhard strongly opposed this partly because of the perceived danger of France involving the other member states in its colonial responsibilities The Foreign Office shared these concerns to some extent but Hallstein and Carstens were willing to accept the French position believing it would help gain support from the French National Assembly Hallstein also accepted the argument of his French counterpart Faure that it would benefit Germany 65 Hallstein helped to strike a deal by which the imports and exports of overseas territories would be treated like products of the mother country and private investment and company branches of other member states would be permitted thus opening up the overseas territories for German exports Hallstein helped deal with these problems at two conferences of foreign ministers one from 26 to 27 January 1957 and another on 4 February 66 nbsp Konrad Adenauer Walter Hallstein and Antonio Segni signing the European Customs Union and Euratom in 1957 in Rome On 25 March 1957 the six countries Belgium France Germany Italy Luxemburg and Netherlands signed the Treaties of Rome Adenauer and Hallstein signed for Germany 67 The foreign minister Brentano had largely left the negotiations to Hallstein so the signing of the treaty represented a major success for Hallstein 66 It was also Hallstein who explained the treaties to the German parliament on 21 March 1957 before they were signed on 25 March 1957 66 Choosing the President of the Commission edit There had been previous suggestions of Hallstein becoming president of the European Court 68 but now he was put forward as the German candidate for the president of the commission though the Belgian Minister of Economics Rey and the Netherlands Agriculture Minister Mansholt were regarded as the strongest contenders for the position 69 The conference of foreign ministers on 20 December 1957 could not reach a decision so when the Treaties of Rome took effect on 1 January 1958 the position had not been filled At the conference of foreign ministers on 6 and 7 January 1958 however Hallstein was finally chosen as the first president of the EEC Commission 69 Hallstein s selection for this position at the head of a major European organization a decade after the end of World War II was a major achievement for Germany 69 President of the Commission of the European Economic Community 1958 1967 editFurther information Hallstein Commission Laying the foundations of the EEC edit Barely a decade after the end of World War II the German Walter Hallstein was unanimously elected the first president of the Commission of the European Economic Community now the European Commission in Brussels 70 He was elected on 7 January 1958 71 and he was to remain in the position until 1967 11 Hallstein s commission which held its first meeting on 16 January 1958 72 comprised nine members two each from France Italy and Germany one each from Luxembourg Belgium and the Netherlands 73 The tasks it faced included the implementation of a customs union and the Four Freedoms as well as common policies on competition trade transport and agriculture 74 Hallstein famously described his role as a kind of European prime minister and regarded national sovereignty as a doctrine of yesteryear 3 Though Hallstein s personal vision of a federal Europe was clear the EEC treaty left many questions open Opinions were divided for instance on whether a common market could succeed without a common economic policy on enlargement of the European Union in particular whether Britain should join and whether the final goal should be a political union in the sense of a United States of Europe 75 Differing interests and traditions in the member states and differences of opinion among the politicians meant that consensus was difficult The disagreements that had preceded the creation of the EEC continued after it was established and these were reflected within the commission For instance the protectionist Common Agricultural Policy CAP the responsibility of Sicco Mansholt the Commissioner for Agriculture was at odds with the liberal foreign trade policy of the Commissioner for External relations Jean Rey 76 nbsp In 1961 the British government under Prime Minister Harold Macmillan applied to join the EEC Britain had at first been against the formation of the EEC preferring a looser free trade area and later proposed a larger free trade area that would include the EEC and other European countries The German government German industry and especially the Economics Minister Ludwig Erhard wanted Britain to be part of an integrated Europe Hallstein opposed the idea of a wider free trade area at this time advocating first achieving a greater degree of integration among a smaller number of countries 77 Discussions on the possibility of a wider trade area avoiding the tariff wall between the EEC and the EFTA countries continued but in the middle of preparations for the negotiations the French government on instructions from de Gaulle withdrew This unilateral action by the French in November 1958 displeased the other EEC members and effectively ended the negotiations German politicians like Erhard felt that Hallstein and his commission had not done enough to promote the wider free trade area 75 nbsp Edward Heath led Britain s application to join the EEC He shared Hallstein s private nature and interest in music The six countries of the EEC had decided on a customs union they agreed to remove tariffs between one another within a period of twelve years and to erect a common tariff barrier between themselves and other countries Seven of the excluded European countries United Kingdom Sweden Denmark Norway Switzerland Austria and Portugal responded with an alternative free trade area EFTA which also removed tariff barriers between each other but did not insist on a tariff barrier with other countries The EFTA convention was signed in January 1960 and was to come into force in May 1960 78 On 3 March 1960 Hallstein announced a plan for accelerating the implementation of the common market which commentators regarded as sabotaging hopes of a joint free trade area that included the EEC and EFTA This invoked the displeasure not only of the EFTA countries but also of the Economics Ministry under Erhard 79 Commentators talked of Hallstein s religious zeal 79 In 1961 Harold Macmillan the British Prime Minister finally gave up the idea of the larger free trade area and the United Kingdom applied to join the EEC Edward Heath as Lord Privy Seal in the Macmillan government led the negotiations in Britain s first attempt to join the EEC Hallstein as president of the EEC Commission was cautious considering the British application premature 80 Of British politicians only Heath was able to establish a rapport with Hallstein 81 The Financial Times of 2 August 1961 wrote that Hallstein was one of the least enthusiastic about British membership of the EEC 82 In British government circles he was at first seen as siding with the French and de Gaulle against Britain and the other five members of the EEC who were more welcoming to Britain and as favouring the French protectionist position 83 Elements of the British Press notably the Daily Express were critical of Hallstein or what he represented 84 Further information Fouchet Plan It was in 1961 that de Gaulle proposed the Fouchet Plan a plan for an intergovernmental union of states as an alternative to the European Communities There was little support from the other European countries and negotiations were abandoned on 17 April 1962 85 While Hallstein had a decidedly federal vision for Europe and regarded the commission as a quasi federal organ 86 de Gaulle s vision was of a confederation 87 From the beginning Hallstein did not believe that de Gaulle s approach of cooperation between sovereign nation states would be able to realize his vision of a powerful Europe that could play its proper part on the world stage 86 nbsp Hallstein with Israel s Prime Minister Golda Meir in 1964 De Gaulle also envisaged a pooling of sovereignty in certain areas such as external defence harmonization of industrial production and foreign trade currency exploitation of resources in overseas territories and cultural and scientific development 88 but at the same time he was developing the French nuclear deterrent capability the Force de Frappe which he envisaged as part of a European defence capability independent of the United States 87 This independence from the United States was one of de Gaulle s main objectives he was against the increased integration of Europe under the umbrella of transatlantic integration as provided for in the Rome treaties 85 The Hallstein Commission drew up plans and a timetable for an economic and currency union and Hallstein presented these to the Council of Ministers and the European Parliament in October 1962 89 A second attempt by de Gaulle to establish a closer political union in Europe that would be independent of the United States was the Franco German bilateral treaty on political cooperation This treaty between France and Germany which was signed on 22 January 1963 was criticized by other countries as being incompatible with the EEC and NATO treaties Hallstein and other members of the commission also criticized the treaty and this angered de Gaulle 75 When the treaty was ratified by West Germany j the German Bundestag unilaterally added a preamble that re affirmed the commitment to close transatlantic ties the enlargement of the existing European Communities and attempts to secure Britain s accession Since Britain had firmly expressed its unwillingness to support an autonomous European defence independent of America de Gaulle regarded the treaty as a failure 85 Further attempts by de Gaulle at military cooperation with Germany to the exclusion of America were rebuffed by Erhard now Federal Chancellor and his foreign minister Gerhard Schroder 85 Britain s application for membership of the EEC was vetoed by de Gaulle in 1963 which also further antagonized the other participants 85 Confrontation with de Gaulle edit nbsp As President of the Commission of the EEC Hallstein had a major confrontation with french president Charles de Gaulle that resulted in Hallstein s leaving the position De Gaulle took a confrontational course on the Common Agricultural Policy and on 21 October 1964 the French Minister of Information Alain Peyrefitte announced that France would leave the EEC if the European Agricultural market were not implemented in the agreed form by 15 December 1964 90 On 1 December 1964 Erhard now head of government in Germany announced that Germany would accede to French demands for a common wheat price and on 15 December the Council of Ministers laid down common grain prices from 1 July 1967 and instructed the commission to submit proposals for financing the Common Agricultural Policy CAP by 1 July 1965 90 Differences between France and the Commission and especially between de Gaulle and Hallstein were exacerbated when France held the rotating six month Presidency of the council from January to June 1965 91 The Council of Ministers instructed the commission to submit plans by 1 April 1965 on how to finance the Common Agricultural Policy as from July 1965 including its financing from direct levies rather than national contributions this would entail a transfer of revenues to the Community 90 The ministers representing other countries in particular the Netherlands indicated that their national parliaments would not approve transfer of revenues to the Community unless the rights of the European Parliament were strengthened 90 On 20 January 1965 the European Parliament passed a resolution appealing to the governments to take this step toward strengthening a democratic and federal Europe 90 Hallstein supported this 92 Hallstein had received indications that other countries shared his point of view and decided to risk the confrontation with de Gaulle interpreting the instructions from the Council broadly with the support of Dutch Commissioner for Agriculture Sicco Mansholt 92 The majority of the commission backed Hallstein 92 On 24 March 1965 Hallstein presented the commission s proposals for financing the Common Agricultural Policy CAP to the European Parliament It was proposed that customs duties collected at EEC borders would go to the community budget and that the Common Agricultural Market would be implemented as scheduled on 1 July 1967 but the customs union for industrial products would also be implemented at the same time two and a half years earlier than provided for in the Rome Treaty 93 The proposals would have allowed the Community to develop its own financial resources independently of the member states and given more budgetary powers to the European Parliament 91 From 1 January 1966 voting in the Council was to be by simple majority removing the implicit veto power of individual countries The French government stated it could not agree to this 94 Since the legislation would increase not only the commission s powers but also the Parliament s Hallstein had the support of the Parliament which had long been campaigning for more powers Before the proposals were presented to the Council they became public and Hallstein then presented them to the European Parliament on 24 March a week before presenting them to the council When Hallstein put forward his proposals the council was already concerned 94 France rejected the idea of the increased powers for the European Parliament and of the Community having its own independent revenues insisting that what had been agreed by the Council regarding the financing of the common agricultural policy be implemented by 30 June 1965 95 He accused Hallstein of acting as if he were a head of state 91 France was particularly concerned about protecting the CAP because under a majority system it could be challenged by the other members 91 After discussions between France and Germany a compromise was at first reached postponing implementation of the agricultural levies until 1970 96 but at the Council meeting of 28 June the Netherlands foreign minister Joseph Luns and his Italian counterpart Amintore Fanfani insisted that all of the commission s proposals should be discussed as a package 96 German diplomats supported this position and the German Bundestag passed a resolution stating that the commission s proposals did not go far enough Germany did not want to agree to the plans for agricultural financing without being assured that France would not hinder a general reduction in tariffs in the Kennedy Round 97 The Committee of Permanent Representatives of the foreign ministers produced a report recommending a compromise by making both the agricultural levies and the customs duties available to be used for Community purposes but not centralizing the process however Hallstein refused to broker this deal and suggested employing the common practice of stopping the clock until the issue could be resolved 97 Under pressure from Couve de Murville who was the rotating President of the Council at the time Hallstein agreed on 30 June 1965 to work out a compromise The same day however after consulting with de Gaulle Couve de Murville announced that no agreement had been reached by the agreed deadline and that the negotiations had failed France s presidency of the council which rotated every six months terminated on 30 June 1965 97 Empty Chair Crisis edit A few days later on de Gaulle s instructions France ceased participation in all meetings of the Council of Ministers and the Council of Permanent Representatives that dealt with any new decisions Participation in many working groups ceased and the French Permanent Representative to the EU Jean Marc Boegner was recalled together with 18 high ranking civil servants and diplomats 98 99 In an attempt to resolve the situation Hallstein together with Marjolin the French vice president of the commission drew up a new plan continuing the provisional arrangement for agricultural finances until 1 January 1970 This proposal was presented to the council on 22 June 1965 100 De Gaulle however remained confrontational toward Hallstein and the Brussels technocrats In September 1965 he publicly declared his opposition to majority voting and the political role of the commission 100 Since a treaty change required unanimity there was stalemate 101 and there was no provision in the treaties to cover such a boycott of the normal running of the Community 100 At least in Hallstein s eyes it was a breach of treaty obligations and he was unprepared for such a scenario 102 On 20 October 1965 Couve de Murville in the National Assembly pushed for a revision of the treaties this was opposed by the other five member states At the Council meeting of 25 to 26 October they passed a resolution stating that a solution must be found within the provisions of the existing treaties 103 100 As a compromise however they offered the possibility of an extraordinary meeting of the council to discuss the general situation of the Community without the Commission being invited 104 Following the French presidential elections on 5 and 19 December 1965 de Gaulle accepted this offer In the negotiations on 17 18 January 1966 the French foreign minister Couve de Murville dropped the more extreme of France s demands 105 In January 1966 the six foreign ministers agreed to suggest to the Commission that the Permanent Representatives of the ministers should be consulted before making any major proposals and not to publish such proposals before they had been dealt with by the Council of Ministers The other five took note of but did not formally accept the opinion of the French delegation that for matters of very important national interest the discussion should continue until a unanimous agreement was reached 105 This became known as the Luxembourg Compromise 105 It was not specified what could be invoked as a national interest and how to resolve disputes so majority decisions were avoided and until it was abolished by the Single European Act it became a de facto veto requiring unanimity for Council decisions 106 Some concessions were also made to French sensibilities for instance diplomats no longer presented their credentials to Hallstein alone but jointly to the presidents of the Commission and the council 107 When the Empty Chair Crisis was finally resolved it had lasted from 30 June 1965 to 29 January 1966 102 When the French foreign minister Couve de Murville returned to the negotiating table after Hallstein s official term of office in January 1966 he insisted on Hallstein s departure and the nomination of someone else to be the head of the new commission which would in future be the commission shared by all three communities when the EEC the ECSC and Euratom were merged 108 Since there was no agreement on a replacement for Hallstein when his term ended on 8 January 1966 he remained in office as a caretaker based on Article 159 of the EEC Treaty This also meant that the planned merger of the three communities which was to have taken place on 1 January 1966 was postponed 109 107 In view of the confrontation with de Gaulle there was a proposal that Hallstein should be nominated for a further term but that he should serve for only six months The German Chancellor Georg Kiesinger agreed to this compromise but Hallstein considered this was a breach of the Treaty 110 and on 5 May 1967 he asked not to be re nominated at all 105 In this way the national governments had refused to accept the commission becoming a European executive blocking Hallstein s vision of a United States of Europe 111 Issues behind confrontation with de Gaulle edit De Gaulle recognized Hallstein s service to European integration but attributed it to German patriotism serving the interests of Germany enabling Germany to re attain a respect and status in Europe that it had lost because of Hitler De Gaulle resented the status that Hallstein for him a mere technocrat was accorded by foreign states 112 113 Hallstein for his part was watchful that as representative of the commission he was accorded the status normally accorded to a head of state 114 113 De Gaulle complained of the Commission usurping a political role reserved for governments and of Hallstein usurping a role reserved for heads of government or heads of state he attacked Hallstein personally saying that Hallstein was trying to turn the EEC into a superstate with Brussels as its capital he talked of defending French democracy against an unaccountable and stateless technocracy a technocratic Areopagus stateless and unaccountable De Gaulle at a press conference at the Elysee Palace on 9 September 1965 l In his memoirs De Gaulle wrote of HallsteinHe was ardently wedded to the thesis of the super State and bent all his skilful efforts towards giving the Community the character and appearance of one He had made Brussels where he resided into a sort of capital There he sat surrounded with all the trappings of sovereignty directing his colleagues allocating jobs among them controlling several thousand officials who were appointed promoted and remunerated at his discretion receiving the credentials of foreign ambassadors laying claim to high honors on the occasion of his official visits concerned above all to further the amalgamation of the Six believing that the pressure of events would bring about what he envisaged De Gaulle Memoirs of Hope 113 According to Der Spiegel De Gaulle s complaints included 116 Hallstein s being frequently received by US presidents although the commission had no foreign relations mandate Hallstein s claim to be a sort of European prime minister the rank of ambassador held by the representatives of the 65 states accredited with the European Commission foreign ambassadors presentation of their credentials to Hallstein ambassadors normally present their credentials signed by the countries head of state to the head of state of the host country the participation of Commission staff in the Kennedy Round negotiations in Geneva in negotiations with EFTA and in negotiations with non European states in particular South American states On the political role of the commission Hallstein stated in an interview with Der Spiegel In principle we have no political competences because there is nothing of that nature in the Rome Treaty But we have political responsibility because we are a political not an economic enterprise The Common Market has the goal of unifying Europe politically m Walter Hallstein Der Spiegel 117 The issue that triggered the Empty Chair Crisis was the financing of the common agricultural policy which was of critical interest to France from 1962 to 1964 France had received 46 million US dollars from the agricultural fund eighty five per cent of all revenue 117 The clash between Hallstein and de Gaulle demonstrated a clash between two opposing visions of Europe 118 The differences included the debate on inclusion of the United Kingdom the financing of the Common Agricultural Policy the rights of the European Parliament especially with respect to the budget majority voting in the Council of Ministers On most of these issues de Gaulle regarded Hallstein as an opponent Hallstein s response to de Gaulle s attacks was also somewhat confrontational comparing de Gaulle s actions with those of Hitler n Later life 1967 1982 edit nbsp Hallstein in 1969 accepting the Robert Schuman Prize nbsp Grave of Walter Hallstein at the Waldfriedhof cemetery in Stuttgart Hallstein left the Commission at the end of 1967 aged 68 110 On 20 January 1968 Hallstein was elected president of the European Movement a private organization founded in 1948 as the umbrella organization of various organizations in favour of European integration 120 where he continued to promote his vision of a United States of Europe 121 Hallstein retained this office until 1974 when he did not stand for re election being followed by Jean Rey who had also succeeded him as President of the commission 122 70 In the run up to the federal elections in 1969 Helmut Kohl then minister president and head of the CDU in the state of Rhineland Palatinate offered Hallstein the opportunity of standing as a direct candidate in the Neuwied constituency in the Westerwald area and heading up the CDU party list in the state of Rhineland Palatinate At the time the CDU under Kurt Georg Kiesinger was the governing party At the CDU Euroforum 68 congress in Saarbrucken in January 1968 Hallstein was celebrated as the future foreign minister should the CDU win the 1969 federal election 123 He proposed to confront de Gaulle and counter his attempts to devalue and weaken the European Community 123 However the party lost the election leaving Hallstein as a member of the Bundestag but with no government office 124 As reported by Der Spiegel Hallstein was later approached by Kohl as a possible candidate to replace Heinrich Lubke as Federal President but this did not come to fruition 125 From 1969 to 1972 he was a member of the German Federal Parliament for the Christian Democratic Union 70 where he was on the Foreign Affairs Committee and was one of the party s spokesmen for European affairs along with Erik Blumenfeld and Carl Ludwig Wagner In the party he supported the Junge Union the CDU youth organization Hallstein had little personal contact with his constituency the work being done mainly by his assistant Christian Franck At the next elections in 1972 he was not re nominated 124 In his speeches in the Bundestag he continued to express his vision of European union He also spoke out in favour of direct election of the European Parliament in Germany At that time the members of the European Parliament were delegated by the Bundestag and direct election was not introduced until 1979 126 Having left the Bundestag in 1972 and the presidency of the European Movement in 1974 Hallstein retired from active political life but continued to write and give talks He moved from his country house in the Westerwald to Stuttgart and continued his work as an author 70 Hallstein fell ill in early 1980 127 and died in Stuttgart on 29 March 1982 at the age of 80 11 He was buried following a state funeral 128 on 2 April 1982 129 at the Waldfriedhof Cemetery in Stuttgart 70 Hallstein remained a bachelor all his life 129 Vision of Europe editCentral to Hallstein s ideas on Europe was his vision of a federal Europe He called European integration a revolutionary endeavour 130 that would take a long time 131 According to Hallstein s analysis of the situation European integration was favoured by the external threat from the Soviet bloc and the internal threat of conflict between the states of central and western Europe and the political and economic fragility of some European democracies 131 Hallstein and his staff at the Foreign Office aimed for a constitutional framework in the federalist sense a supranational concept that was opposed by the school centred around Ludwig Erhard and the Ministry of Economics who advocated intergovernmental economic cooperation founded on free trade 132 Hallstein spoke early in favour of the proposed European Defence Community which never came to fruition and of West German s integration in the West which he saw as necessary for the solution of other problems including German reunification 133 In a speech in 1953 in London Hallstein talked of three dimensions of European integration 134 Intensity expressed the degree to which member states give up individual sovereignty to create a supranational community Extensity expressed the size of the community that is the number of member states Time expressed the order and speed of steps toward complete integration He spoke of a trade off between the different dimensions for instance the larger the number of members the less integration would be possible in a given time His model included the coexistence of different European organizations of differing sizes and with differing degrees of integration 134 Such considerations were particularly relevant to the United Kingdom which had been more in favour of intergovernmental organizations such as the Council of Europe and had shown less interest in supranational organizations like the European Coal and Steel Community and the proposed European Defence Community 134 Though Hallstein first pursued the goal of economic integration he stated that this was not an end in itself but was a means of achieving a political union that pool ed all the appropriate functions of the member states 135 136 For Hallstein the Schuman Plan was a way for Europe to become an equal partner of the United States and as a way for Germany to rejoin the organized community of free peoples 133 He envisaged a planned gradual evolution involving a number of projects coming together to produce a coherent whole At first he talked of the dynamic aspect of the constituent plans dynamischer Aspekt der Teilplane but later of what he or rather his unenviable translator called material logic German Sachlogik an anonymous force that only works through human will an inner logic which is stronger than the capricious dictates of politics 135 This meant setting up a situation in such a way that the desired goal would be achieved because people faced with future problems and choices would naturally choose the desired path not automatically but because the inherent logic of the situation would favour the desired choice 137 For instance installing common tariffs would naturally lead to the need for a common trade policy prescribing free movement for people services and capital would tend to lead to a common infrastructure including a common tax policy a common budgetary policy and a common currency 138 The Schuman Plan was the first step applied to the field of economics the next step was to be defence these would then necessarily lead to integration in the related fields of industrial relations and social policy energy policy and foreign policy 134 Hallstein strove for a Europe based on the rule of law law in place of force 139 140 His concept of European union was that of a community based on democracy and the rule of law not a federation because it was not yet a state nor a confederation because it was endowed with the power of exercising authority directly over every citizen in each of its member states 139 A lawyer and an expert in international law Hallstein saw a strong legal foundation as essential 141 142 His model of a federal Europe borrowed from the federal structures of Germany the United States and Switzerland 142 Hallstein later wrote that the experience of Nazi Germany led him to distrust not only the idea of absolute and inalienable national sovereignty but also the British idea of a European balance of power 143 Partly as a result of the Americans re education programme Hallstein developed an interest in the United States Constitution and American history between independence in 1776 and the ratification of the Constitution in 1788 when the United States was a confederation of states The problems that the United States experienced were in his view due partly to the states defending their sovereignty He rejected the concept of the unitary nation state favoured by the French in favour of a federal solution and concluded that Europe should follow the American path towards a federal solution 144 However he wished to retain Europe s diversity and opposed the idea of Europe becoming a melting pot 145 Reception and legacy editPeople who knew Hallstein described him as someone with keen intellect an excellent command of language and high reliability 146 147 148 But he was also perceived by those who knew him as cold unapproachable and excessively intellectual respected rather than liked 149 British Prime Minister Edward Heath allegedly said of him He is just a brain 5 150 He was also characterized as having a keen sense of duty 70 Franz Josef Strauss called him one of the last Prussians 151 nbsp Accepting the Robert Schuman Prize in Bonn February 1969 During his lifetime Walter Hallstein received honorary doctorates from nine European universities including Padua Sussex Liege Nancy Leuven Oviedo and Tubingen and nine American universities including Georgetown Harvard and Johns Hopkins University 129 152 He was also awarded numerous other honours and prizes from European governments o In 1997 the Walter Hallstein Institute for European Constitutional Law at the Humboldt University in Berlin was named in his honour Works editThe documented total number of publications by Hallstein exceeds 365 156 Hallstein s major popular work was Der unvollendete Bundesstaat The Unfinished Federation which was first published in 1969 122 Hallstein Walter 1969 Der unvollendete Bundesstaat Europaische Erfahrungen und Erkenntnisse Dusseldorf Vienna Econ ISBN 978 3 430 13897 0 This book can be seen as Hallstein s political testament 157 The second German edition was titled simply Die Europaische Gemeinschaft The European Community Hallstein Walter 1973 Die europaische Gemeinschaft Dusseldorf Vienna Econ ISBN 978 3 430 13898 7 A later version was published in English with the title Europe in the Making 158 Hallstein Walter 1972 Europe in the Making Translated by Charles Roetter George Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 0 04 330215 6 He also wrote a number of academic books and numerous articles and he gave innumerable speeches Some of his speeches were published as a book Hallstein Walter 1979 Europaische Reden Stuttgart Deutsche Verlags Anstalt ISBN 978 3 421 01894 6 Notes edit a b According to his birth certificate he was named Walther sic Peter Hallstein 4 He was the second of two sons of Anna Hallstein nee Geibel and Jakob or Jacob Hallstein a senior civil servant for the railway authority with the rank of Regierungsbaurat 4 5 The Rabanus Maurus Gymnasium 6 The topic of Hallstein s doctoral dissertation was life insurance policies in the Treaty of Versailles Der Lebensversicherungvertrag im Versailler Vertrag 6 As a wissenschaftlicher Referent Habilitation a post doctoral qualification entitles a person to teach independently and to supervise doctoral dissertations The thesis was entitled Die Aktienrechte der Gegenwart Contemporary Company Law in Different Jurisdictions and was published in 1931 These included the National Socialist Teachers League Nationalsozialistischer Lehrerbund the National Socialist Association of Legal Professionals NS Rechtswahrerbund the National Socialist People s Welfare organization Nationalsozialistische Volkswohlfahrt the National Socialist German Lecturers League Nationalsozialistischer Deutscher Dozentenbund and the National Socialist Air Raid Protection Association Nationalsozialistischer Luftschutzbund The backdrop to this was the Nazi seizure of control of civil servants associations and many other professional and civic organizations in what they called Gleichschaltung synchronization or alignment so being a member of a professional association entailed membership in a nominally Nazi association He served as an assistant adjutant Ordonnanzoffizier The date was 15 March 1951 a b The two entities officially using the names Federal Republic of Germany and German Democratic Republic were at this time generally known in the English speaking world as West Germany and East Germany respectively However for much of the time the Federal Republic of Germany claimed to represent the whole of Germany and this was generally acknowledged by its allies and reflected in the language of international treaties This should be borne in mind when any of these terms is used since any term may be taken imply a point of view but it is not possible to avoid all problematic terms For details see Hallstein Doctrine The delegations of the other countries were headed by Johan Willem Beyen Netherlands Gaetano Martino Italy Joseph Bech Luxembourg Antoine Pinay France and Paul Henri Spaak Belgium Joseph Bech chaired the meeting 56 He said in French Or on sait Dieu sait si on le sait qu il y a une conception differente au sujet d une federation europeenne dans laquelle suivant les reves de ceux qui l ont concue les pays perdraient leur personnalite nationale et ou faute d un federateur tel qu a l Ouest tenterent de l etre chacun d ailleurs a sa facon Cesar et ses successeurs Charlemagne Orthon Charles Quint Napoleon Hitler et tel qu a l Est s y essaya Staline ils seraient regis par quelque areopage technocratique apatride et irresponsable as quoted by Edward and Lane 115 German Im Prinzip haben wir keine politischen Kompetenzen weil davon nichts im Romischen Vertrag steht Dennoch tragen wir eine politische Verantwortung weil wir selbst ein politisches Unternehmen sind und kein wirtschaftliches Der Gemeinsame Markt hat das Ziel Europa politisch zu einigen Hallstein called de Gaulle s attempts to dismantle the progress achieved on the path to a supranational Europe the greatest act of destruction in the history of Europe even of the free world since Hitler German der grosste Zerstorungsakt in der Geschichte Europas ja der freien Welt seit den Tagen Hitlers 119 Honours awarded to Halstein included the following 1953 Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic 152 1953 54 Grand Cross Grand Merit Cross with Star and Sash of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany 152 1955 Grand Decoration of Honour in Gold with Sash for Services to the Republic of Austria 153 1955 Icelandic Grand Cross of the Order of the Falcon 154 1961 Charlemagne prize Karlspreis from the City of Aachen for efforts in the cause of European federation 11 1964 Honorary member of the American Society of International Law 155 1968 Order of Merit of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem 123 1968 Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold 123 1968 Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Netherlands Lion 123 1969 Robert Schuman Prize 15 1969 Grand Cross of the Pontifical Equestrian Order of St Sylvester Pope and Martyr GCSS 152 1969 Grand Cross of the Brazilian Order of the Southern Cross 152 1969 Grand Cross of the Greek Order of George I 152 1969 Grand Cross of the Argentinian order of merit 152 1971 Honorary citizen of Brussels the first German since the War to receive such an honour 129 References edit a b Kusters 2011 Urwin 1995 p 103 a b Soetendorp 2014 p 20 a b Piela 2012 p 27 a b Freiberger 2010 p 208 a b c d e f g h i Kilian M 2005 p 371 Piela 2012 p 28 Freiberger 2010 p 210 Piela 2012 p 29 a b c d e f Elvert 2011 a b c d e f g h German Historical Museum a b c Freiberger 2010 p 211 Buddrus amp Fritzlar 2007 p 173 a b Raehlmann 2012 p 78 a b Rostock University Bitsch 2007 p 79 a b c Schonwald 2017 p 30 a b Buddrus amp Fritzlar 2007 p 174 Kitchen 2011 p 239 Gerstenmaier 1981 p 66 Freiberger 2010 p 214 Heiber 1991 p 360 a b c d e Freiberger 2010 p 225 a b c d Kilian M 2005 p 372 Piela 2012 p 32 Piela 2012 p 34 Dettke 1981 pp 242 243 Maulucci 2012 pp 47 54 Maulucci 2012 p 62 Freiberger 2010 p 216 Piela 2010 pp 2 3 Maulucci 2012 p 112 Conze 2010 p 458 Maulucci 2012 pp 205 206 Knoll 2004 p 91 Maulucci 2012 pp 185 208 Maulucci 2012 p 203 Eden 1952 McCauley 2008 p xv a b c Grewe 1979 pp 195 217 Maulucci 2012 pp 124 125 Maulucci 2012 pp 182 190 Maulucci 2012 pp 200 202 a b c Lahn 1998 p 25 a b Kusters 1998 pp 72 73 Grewe 1998 pp 39 40 Kilian W 2001 p 13 Kilian M 2005 pp 372 373 Kilian W 2001 pp 19 21 Kilian M 2005 p 372f a b c Wendt 1995 Gray 2003 p 84 a b Grewe 1998 pp 40 42 Adenauer 1955 Kusters 1998 pp 63 65 a b Kusters 1998 p 65 Kusters 1998 pp 68 69 Maulucci 2012 p 142 Griffiths 1994 pp 20 40 a b Kusters 1998 p 69 a b c Kusters 1998 p 70 a b Kusters 1998 p 71 Kusters 1998 p 72 a b Kusters 1998 pp 70 72 Kusters 1998 pp 73 74 a b c Kusters 1998 p 74 Piela 2010 p 3 Maulucci 2012 p 195 a b c Kusters 1998 p 75 a b c d e f Piela 2010 p 7 German Foreign Office Hallstein 1958 Dumoulin 2007 p 51 Groeben 1998 pp 101 102 a b c Groeben 1998 pp 97 101 Groeben 1998 p 103 Groeben 1998 p 100 Sloan 2005 p 300 a b Spiegel 1960 Narjes 1998 p 127 Wallace 1998 p 182 Wallace 1998 p 193 Wallace 1998 pp 193 195 Wallace 1998 p 194 a b c d e Loth 1998 p 139 a b Groeben 1998 pp 96 97 a b Loth 1998 pp 137 138 Loth 1998 p 137 Groeben 1998 p 98 a b c d e Loth 1998 p 140 a b c d CVCE 2011 a b c Loth 1998 p 141 Loth 1998 p 142 a b Ludlow 2006 Loth 1998 pp 142 143 a b Loth 1998 p 143 a b c Loth 1998 p 144 Gotz 1998 p 157 Loth 1998 pp 144 145 a b c d Loth 1998 p 145 Groeben 1998 p 99 a b Gotz 1998 p 151 van Middelaar 2013 Loth 1998 pp 145 146 a b c d Loth 1998 p 146 CVCE 2012 a b Spiegel 1967a Spiegel 1966b Geary 2013 p 65 a b Jansen 1998 p 165 Loth 1998 p 147 Loth 1998 p 148 a b c De Gaulle 1971 p 184 Gotz 1998 p 154 Edward amp Lane 2013 p 9 Spiegel 1966a a b Spiegel 1965b Gotz 1998 pp 151 152 Spiegel 1965c Piela 2012 p 42 Jansen 1998 p 166 a b Jansen 1998 p 167 a b c d e Spiegel 1968a a b Jansen 1998 pp 171 173 Spiegel 1968b Jansen 1998 p 175 Kilian M 2005 pp 376 377 Jansen 1998 p 179 a b c d Kilian M 2005 p 374 Hallstein 1951 p 2 a b Kusters 1998 p 62 Kusters 1998 pp 63 64 a b Barenbrinker 1998 pp 83 85 a b c d Barenbrinker 1998 pp 85 86 a b Hallstein 1972 p 22 Barenbrinker 1998 p 85 Piela 2010 p 12 Piela 2010 pp 11 12 a b Hallstein 1972 pp 30 55 Piela 2010 pp 12 13 Hallstein 1972 p 30 a b Barenbrinker 1998 pp 87 88 Freiberger 2010 p 215 Freiberger 2010 p 227 Hallstein 1972 pp 15 16 Kusters 1998 pp 60 61 Maulucci 2012 p 186 Lahn 1998 pp 19 23 Kusters 1998 p 60 Loch 1968 p 20 Kilian M 2005 pp 379 380 a b c d e f g Buddrus amp Fritzlar 2007 Austrian Parliament IcelandicPresidency ASIL 1964 p 311 Piela 2012 p 43 Jansen 1998 p 168 Jansen 1998 p 167 169 Bibliography editAdenauer Konrad 22 September 1955 Government statement made by Federal Chancellor Konrad Adenauer to the German Parliament Bundestag on 22 September 1955 PDF in German Konrad Adenauer Stiftung Archived from the original PDF on 23 May 2013 Retrieved 13 September 2011 American Society of International Law 1964 Proceedings of the American Society of International Law at its Fifty Eighth Annual Meeting 58 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Austrian Chancellor Reply to a parliamentary question PDF in German p 19 Retrieved 29 August 2012 Barenbrinker Frank 1998 Hallstein s Conception of Europe Before Assuming Office in the Commission In Loth Wilfried Wallace William Wessels Wolfgang eds Walter Hallstein The Forgotten European Forewords by Jacques Delors Sir Edward Heath and Helmut Kohl translated from the German by Bryan Ruppert York St Martin s Press pp 82 91 ISBN 978 0 312 21293 3 Bitsch Marie Therese 2007 The European Commission 1958 72 history and memories Office for Official Publications of the European Communities Buddrus Michael Fritzlar Sigrid 2007 Die Professoren der Universitat Rostock Im Dritten Reich Ein Biographisches Lexikon The Professors of the University of Rostock in the Third Reich A Biographical Lexicon Texte Und Materialien Zur Zeitgeschichte Text and Materials on Contemporary History in German Vol 16 Walter de Gruyter pp 173 176 doi 10 1515 9783110957303 ISBN 978 3 11 095730 3 Conze Eckart Frei Norbert Hayes Peter Zimmermann Moshe 2010 Das Amt und die Vergangenheit Deutsche Diplomaten im Dritten Reich und in der Bundesrepublik The Foreign Office and the Past German Diplomats in the Third Reich and in the Federal Republic of Germany in German Munich Blessing ISBN 978 3 89667 430 2 CVCE The Empty Chair Policy Centre Virtuel de la Connaissance sur l Europe Virtual Centre for Knowledge about Europe Retrieved 1 March 2013 The Luxembourg Compromise Centre Virtuel de la Connaissance sur l Europe Virtual Centre for Knowledge about Europe Retrieved 1 March 2013 De Gaulle Charles 1971 First published in France in 1970 under the title Memoires d Espoir Memoirs of Hope Translated by Terence Kilmartin Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 00346 5 Dettke Thomas 1981 Pionier der Europaischen Integration Robert Schuman Pionier of European Integration Robert Schuman In Jansen Dieter Mahncke Dieter eds Personlichkeiten der Europaischen Integration vierzehn biographische Essays Personalities of European Integration Fourteen Biographical Essays in German Bonn Europa Union ISBN 978 3 7713 0146 0 Dumoulin Michel 2007 The European Commission 1958 72 history and memories Luxembourg Office for Official Publications of the European Communities ISBN 978 92 79 05494 5 Eden Anthony Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs 10 June 1952 Germany Contractual Agreements and EDC Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Commons col 32 41 Edward David A O Lane Robert 2013 Edward and Lane on European Union Law Elgar ISBN 978 0 8579 3105 4 Elvert Jurgen 2011 Walter Hallstein Biography of a European 1901 1982 Centre Virtuel de la Connaissance sur l Europe Retrieved 27 March 2013 Freiberger Thomas 2010 Der friedliche Revolutionar Walter Hallsteins Epochenbewusstsein The Peaceful Revolutionary Walter Hallstein s Sense of Epoch In Depkat Volker Graglia Piero S eds Entscheidung fur Europa Erfahrung Zeitgeist und politische Herausforderungen am Beginn der europaischen Integration Decision for Europe Experience Zeitgeist and Political Challenges at the Beginning of European Integration in German de Gruyter pp 205 242 ISBN 978 3 11 023389 6 Geary Michael J 2013 Enlarging the European Union The Commission Seeking Influence 1961 1973 Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 24523 6 German Foreign Office Romische Vertrage Treaties of Rome in German German Foreign Office Retrieved 22 March 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link German Historical Museum Walter Hallstein in German German Historical Museum Retrieved 11 November 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Gerstenmaier Eugen 1981 Streit und Friede hat seine Zeit Ein Lebenbericht Conflict and Peace Each Have Their Time A Life in German Propylaen ISBN 978 3 549 07621 7 Gotz Hans Herbert 1998 The Crisis of 1965 66 In Loth Wilfried Wallace William Wessels Wolfgang eds Walter Hallstein The Forgotten European Forewords by Jacques Delors Sir Edward Heath and Helmut Kohl translated from the German by Bryan Ruppert New York St Martin s Press pp 151 162 ISBN 978 0 312 21293 3 Gray William Glenn 2003 Germany s Cold War The Global Campaign to Isolate East Germany University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 6248 3 Grewe Wilhelm 1979 Ruckblenden 1976 1951 Retrospections in German Frankfurt Main Propylaen ISBN 978 3 549 07387 2 1998 Hallstein s Conception of German German Policy and Relations In Loth Wilfried Wallace William Wessels Wolfgang eds Walter Hallstein The Forgotten European Forewords by Jacques Delors Sir Edward Heath and Helmut Kohl translated from the German by Bryan Ruppert New York St Martin s Press pp 39 59 ISBN 978 0 312 21293 3 Griffiths Richard T 1994 Europe s First Constitution The European Political Community 1952 1954 In Martin Stephen ed The Construction of Europe Essays in Honour of Emile Noel with the cooperation of Emile Noel Kluwer Acad Publ pp 19 40 ISBN 978 0 7923 2969 5 Groeben Hans von der 1998 Walter Hallstein as President of the Commission In Loth Wilfried Wallace William Wessels Wolfgang eds Walter Hallstein The Forgotten European Forewords by Jacques Delors Sir Edward Heath and Helmut Kohl translated from the German by Bryan Ruppert New York St Martin s Press pp 95 108 ISBN 978 0 312 21293 3 Hallstein Walter 28 April 1951 Address given by Walter Hallstein on the Schuman Plan in German Speech Translated into English by the Centre Virtuel de la Connaissance sur l Europe CVCE Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt West Germany Retrieved 14 January 2012 16 January 1958 Walter Hallstein s inaugural address to the constituent meeting of the Commission of the European Economic Community on 16 January 1958 PDF Speech Translated into English by the Centre Virtuel de la Connaissance sur l Europe CVCE Brussels 1972 Europe in the Making Translated by Charles Roetter George Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 0 04 330215 6 Heiber Helmut 1991 Universitat unterm Hakenkreuz Teil 1 Der Professor im Dritten Reich Bilder aus der akademischen Provinz University under the Swastika Part 1 Professor under the Third Reich Pictures of the academic province in German K G Saur p 360 ISBN 3 598 22629 2 Icelandic Presidency Falkaorduhafar Hallstein Walter Cross holders Hallstein Walter Archived from the original on 5 June 2013 Jansen Thomas 1998 Walter Hallstein After the Presidency In Loth Wilfried Wallace William Wessels Wolfgang eds Walter Hallstein The Forgotten European Forewords by Jacques Delors Sir Edward Heath and Helmut Kohl translated from the German by Bryan Ruppert New York St Martin s Press pp 165 180 ISBN 978 0 312 21293 3 Kilian Michael 2005 Walter Hallstein Jurist und Europaer Walter Hallstein Jurist and European Jahrbuch des offentlichen Rechts der Gegenwart New series in German 53 Tubingen Mohr Siebeck 369 389 ISSN 0075 2517 Kilian Werner 2001 Die Hallstein Doktrin Der diplomatische Krieg zwischen der BRD und der DDR 1955 1973 Aus den Akten der beiden deutschen Aussenministerien The Hallstein Doctrine The Diplomatic War between the Federal Republic of Germany and the German Democratic Republic 1955 1973 From the files of the two German foreign ministries Zeitgeschichtliche Forschungen in German Vol 7 Berlin Duncker amp Humblot ISBN 978 3 428 10371 3 ISSN 1438 2326 Kitchen Martin 8 April 2011 A History of Modern Germany 1800 to the Present Quellen u Darstellungen zur Zeitgeschichte Sources and Presentations on Contemporary History 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 470 65581 8 Knoll Thomas 2004 Das Bonner Bundeskanzleramt Organisation und Funktionen 1949 1999 The Federal Chancellery in Bonn Organisation and Functions1949 1999 in German Wiesbaden VS Verlag fur Sozialwissenschaften ISBN 978 3 531 14179 4 Kusters Hanns Jurgen 1998 Walter Hallstein and the Negotiations on the Treaties of Rome 1955 57 In Loth Wilfried Wallace William Wessels Wolfgang eds Walter Hallstein The Forgotten European Forewords by Jacques Delors Sir Edward Heath and Helmut Kohl translated from the German by Bryan Ruppert New York St Martin s Press pp 60 81 ISBN 978 0 312 21293 3 2011 110 Geburtstag von Walter Hallstein The 110th anniversary of Walter Hallstein s birth in German Lahn Lothar 1998 Walter Hallstein as State Secretary In Loth Wilfried Wallace William Wessels Wolfgang eds Walter Hallstein The Forgotten European Forewords by Jacques Delors Sir Edward Heath and Helmut Kohl translated from the German by Bryan Ruppert New York St Martin s Press pp 17 32 ISBN 978 0 312 21293 3 Loch Theo 1968 Einleitung und biographische Skizze Introduction and a Biographical Sketch Europa 1980 in German Bonn Eicholz Loth Wilfried 1998 Hallstein und de Gaulle the Disastrous Confrontation In Loth Wilfried Wallace William Wessels Wolfgang eds Walter Hallstein The Forgotten European Forewords by Jacques Delors Sir Edward Heath and Helmut Kohl translated from the German by Bryan Ruppert New York St Martin s Press pp 135 150 ISBN 978 0 312 21293 3 Ludlow N 2006 De Commissioning the Empty Chair Crisis the Community Institutions and the Crisis of 1965 6 PDF London School of Economics Archived from the original PDF on 25 October 2007 Retrieved 24 September 2007 Maulucci Thomas W Jr 2012 Adenauer s Foreign Office West German Diplomacy in the Shadow of the Third Reich Northern Illinois University Press ISBN 978 1 60909 077 7 McCauley Martin 2008 1998 Russia America and the Cold War 1949 1991 Seminar Studies in History Berlin Pearson Education ISBN 978 1 4058 7430 4 Narjes Karl Heinz 1998 Walter Hallstein and the Early Phase of the EEC In Loth Wilfried Wallace William Wessels Wolfgang eds Walter Hallstein The Forgotten European Forewords by Jacques Delors Sir Edward Heath and Helmut Kohl translated from the German by Bryan Ruppert New York St Martin s Press pp 109 130 ISBN 978 0 312 21293 3 Piela Ingrid 2010 Walter Hallstein 1901 1982 Leben und Wirken eines Europaers der ersten Stunde Walter Hallstein 1901 1982 Life and Work of a European of the First Hour PDF IEV Online IEV Online Hagener Online Beitrage zu den Europaischen Verfassungswissenschaften in German 1 2010 Institut fur Europaische Verfassungswissenschaften FernUniversitat in Hagen ISSN 1868 6680 2012 Walter Hallstein Jurist und gestaltender Europapolitiker der ersten Stunde Politische und institutionelle Visionen des ersten Prasidenten der EWG Kommission 1958 1967 Walter Hallstein Lawyer and Formative European Politician of the First Hour Political and Institutional Visions of the First President of the EEC Commission 1958 1967 Veroffentlichungen des Dimitris Tsatsos Instituts fur Europ Verfassungswissenschaften in German Vol 11 Berliner Wissenschaftsverlag ISBN 978 3 8305 3139 5 Raehlmann Irene 2012 Arbeitswissenschaft im Nationalsozialismus Eine wissenschaftssoziologische Analyse Labour Studies under National Socialism A Sociological Analysis Springer ISBN 978 332280765 6 Rostock University Hallstein Walter Catalogus Professorum Rostochiensium in German Retrieved 26 March 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Soetendorp Ben 2014 Foreign Policy in the European Union History theory amp practice Routledge ISBN 9781317881216 Schonwald Matthias 2017 Walter Hallstein Ein Wegbereiter Europas Walter Hallstein a pioneer of Europe Kohlhammer Verlag ISBN 978 3 17 033164 8 Schonwald Matthias Walter Hallstein Aspekte seiner politischen Biographie In Christoph E Palmer Ed Die politischen Krafte in unserem Werk drangen weiter Gedenkveranstaltung fur Walter Hallstein am 17 November 2001 in Stuttgart Staatsministerium Baden Wurttemberg Stuttgart 2002 p 13 30 Schonwald Matthias Walter Hallstein et les institutions des Communautes Europeennes In Marie Therese Bitsch Ed Le couple France Allemagne et les institutions europeennes Une posterite pour le plan Schuman Bruylant Bruxelles 2001 p 151 168 Schonwald Matthias Walter Hallstein and the Empty chair Crisis 1965 66 In Wilfried Loth Ed Crises and compromises Nomos Baden Baden 2001 ISBN 3 7890 6980 9 p 157 172 Schonwald Matthias The same should I say antenna Gemeinsamkeiten und Unterschiede im europapolitischen Denken von Jean Monnet und Walter Hallstein 1958 1963 In Andreas Wilkens Ed Interessen verbinden Jean Monnet und die europaische Integration der Bundesrepublik Deutschland Bouvier Bonn 1999 p 269 298 Sloan S R 2005 NATO the European Union and the Atlantic community the transatlantic bargain reconsidered Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 3573 2 Spiegel Online 6 April 1960 EWG Beschleunigung Hallsteins Eiserner Vorhang EEC Acceleration Hallstein s Iron Curtain Spiegel Online in German Retrieved 3 February 2013 14 July 1965 EWG Krieg und Frieden EEC War and Peace Spiegel Online in German Retrieved 3 February 2013 4 August 1965 Hallstein Vermintes Gelande Gemeinsamer Markt Hallstein Common Market Minefield Spiegel Online in German Retrieved 3 February 2013 17 January 1966 EWG KRISE EEC Crisis Spiegel Online in German Retrieved 3 February 2013 13 June 1966 Hallstein So oder so EWG Hallstein Whatever EEC Spiegel Online in German Retrieved 3 February 2013 24 April 1967 EWG Hallstein Verdiente Leute EEC Hallstein People of Merit Spiegel Online in German Retrieved 3 February 2013 29 January 1968 Hallstein Marsch auf Bonn Hallstein Marching on Bonn Spiegel Online in German Retrieved 3 February 2013 24 June 1968 Bonn Lubke Nachfolge Rechte Eigenschaften Bonn Lubke s successor The Right Qualities Spiegel Online in German Retrieved 3 February 2013 Urwin Derek 1995 The Community of Europe A History of European Integration Since 1945 Longman ISBN 9780582231993 van Middelaar Luuk 2013 The Passage to Europe How a Continent Became a Union Translated by Liz Waters Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 30018112 8 Wallace William 1998 Walter Hallstein the British Perspective In Loth Wilfried Wallace William Wessels Wolfgang eds Walter Hallstein The Forgotten European Forewords by Jacques Delors Sir Edward Heath and Helmut Kohl translated from the German by Bryan Ruppert New York St Martin s Press pp 181 199 ISBN 978 0 312 21293 3 Wendt Hans 1995 Interview des Ministerialdirektors Professor Dr Wilhelm G Grewe mit dem Chefredakteur des Nordwestdeutschen Rundfunk Hans Wendt Hallstein Doktrin 11 Dezember 1955 Interview with Professor Wilhelm Grewe Head of the Political Department of the Foreign Office of the Federal Republic of Germany on 11 December 1955 Summary 100 0 Schlusseldokumente zur deutschen Geschichte im 20 Jahrhundert 100 0 key documents on German history of the 20th century in German Bavarian State Library Retrieved 13 September 2011 Further reading editLoth Wilfried Wallace William Wessels Wolfgang 1998 Walter Hallstein The Forgotten European New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 21293 3 Muller Kay Walter Franz 2004 Der Mann fur Vertrage Walter Hallstein The Man for Treaties Walter Hallstein Graue Eminenzen der Macht Kuchenkabinette in der deutschen Kanzlerdemokratie von Adenauer bis Schroder Eminences grises Kitchen Cabinets in Germany s Chancellor Democracy from Adenauer to Schroder in German Wiesbaden Springer pp 31 34 ISBN 9783531143484 Grewe W G 1960 Deutsche Aussenpolitik der Nachkriegszeit in German Stuttgart DVA Kusters Hanns Jurgen 1990 Der Streit um Kompetenzen und Konzeptionen deutscher Europapolitik The Dispute over Competencies and Conceptions of German European Policy In Herbst Ludolf Buhrer Werner Sowade Hanno eds Vom Marshallplan zur EWG Die Eingliederung der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in die westliche Welt From the Marshall Plan to the EEC The Integration of the Federal Republic of German into the Western World Quellen u Darstellungen zur Zeitgeschichte Sources and Presentations on Contemporary History in German Vol 30 Bonn Oldenbourg Verlag pp 335 372 ISBN 978 3 486 55601 8 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Walter Hallstein The History of the European Union The founding fathers of the EU Biography of Walter Hallstein at a semi official French web site in French Biography of Walter Hallstein at the Konrad Adenauer Foundation in German Brief portrait of Walter Hallstein at the official web site for Charlemagne Prize awards Walter Hallstein Institute in German Charlemagne Prize Foundation includes a list of recipients Walter Hallstein speaker Founding fathers of the European Union Walter Hallstein in German European Commission I 072675 Retrieved 18 February 2013 Address given by Walter Hallstein the revival of European integration Bonn 14 May 1956 Political offices New office German European Commissioner1958 1967 Served alongside Hans von der Groeben Succeeded byFritz Hellwig Succeeded byHans von der Groeben President of the European Commission1958 1967 Succeeded byJean Rey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walter Hallstein amp oldid 1220019040, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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