Z działalności ambasadora Waltera Bedell Smitha w okresie pierwszego kryzysu berlińskiego (1948-1949)
Streszczenie
The article presents the activity US Ambassador to Soviet Union W. B. Smith during
the First Berlin Crisis, which was one of the reasons why the Cold War began.
On June 24, 1948 Soviet forces implemented a blockade of Berlin halting all railroad
tralTic, the major means of transporting food and fuel into the city. The blockade was
a response to the Western currency reform announced on June 22, the decisions taken at the
London conference earlier in the month that established the foundation for West Germany,
and the Soviet desire to drive the three Western powers out of Berlin. At the end of June
the United States announced that an expanded airlift would begin to carry food and supplies
into Berlin.
Ihe negotiations held by Allies in Berlin did not lead to the solution to the dangerous
situation. They were moved to Moscow, when the ambassadors of the US, France and the
representative of United Kingdom were to talk to USRR leaders. The representatives of the
West were to make Stalin abolish the blockade getting a give-and-take in return.
During the first meeting the ambassadors with Joseph Stalin and Foreign Minister
Molotov (August 3), Smith told that the three Western powers were in Berlin by right, and
they intended to remain there. He said the Western Big Three were eager to resolve differences
with the Soviet Union, but no negotiations could take place while the blockade remained in
effect. The next meeting with Molotov Ambassador Smith consistently emphasized two points.
Firstly that the Western powers were in Berlin by right and not at the sufferance of the
Soviet Union, and secondly that the decision taken at the London conference would not be
suspended or delayed.
Ambassador Smith, along with the British and French ambassadors, met Joseph Stalin
again to discuss Berlin issues (August 23). A tentative agreement between the two sides was
reached regarding the currency issue, but the arrangements for its implementation were to be
worked out by the military governors in Berlin. In September the four military governors in
Berlin announced they could not rcach an agreement based on the Moscow directive.
In the end or September France, the United Kingdom, and the United States sent identical
letters to the secretary general of the United Nations informing him that the Berlin situation
constituted a threat to world peace as defined in Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter.
Ihe Western powers requested that the Berlin issue be taken up by the Security Council as
quickly as possible.
The negotiation in Moscow in which Walter Bedell Smith participated ended unsuccessfully
and the blockade of Berlin was not suspended by Russians until 1949.
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