71. Memorandum From the President’s Assistant for National Security Affairs (Kissinger) to President Nixon1
SUBJECT
- Consequences of the Recognition of East Germany
There has been an increasing trend in West German policy moving toward recognition of the GDR. It was not too long ago that Bonn insisted on using terms such as “the Soviet occupied Zone” and the “so-called GDR” when referring to East Germany. Brandt has accelerated the rate of change dramatically. He now accepts the existence of two German states based on equal rights. He does assert, however, that these are states “within one German nation,” and that their relationship must be of a special character, not as between two foreign states. Brandt has not recognized that the GDR exists as a foreign state in international law—and he says he will not.
The East Germans have maintained a drumbeat of demands that Bonn extend recognition under international law and accept diplomatic relations between the two Germanies. In his letter to you of March 22,2 Brandt noted that at his Erfurt meeting with GDR Premier Stoph, the East German side “persevered resolutely” in its interpretation of the recognition question. The Soviets, of course, lead the other Eastern European nations in pushing the FRG toward recognition of the GDR. Brandt’s negotiator in the FRG–USSR talks in Moscow reported to the Allied Ambassadors on March 24 that a main pressure from Gromyko was for the FRG to accept a definition of its relationship with East Germany not distinguishable from recognition.3 Brandt also feels pressure from within his SPD/FDP coalition to show some early success in his dealings with the East. This pressure will undoubtedly increase as the May 21 date for his second meeting with Stoph approaches—and as [Page 191] he nears the June election in Germany’s largest industrial state of North-Rhine Westphalia. He may feel compelled to move even closer toward recognition of the GDR.
The impact of this trend on Four Power rights and responsibilities for Berlin and Germany has a new relevance. The FRG has an interest in maintaining at least the symbol of Four Powers rights, since they provide a framework for him to develop the “special” relationship between the FRG and GDR—and it helps diffuse the pressures which would otherwise be directed at Bonn. The Soviets, though insisting on two separate sovereign Germanies, are nevertheless interested in holding on to Four Power rights (not responsibilities) for leverage. The Three Western Allies have their own varying degrees of interest in maintaining all-German rights. In this light, I thought you might be interested in a study prepared by the State Department on the legal consequences of GDR recognition (Tab B).4 Since the study is lengthy, I have attached a summary at Tab A which you may wish to read since the topic is of increasing importance.
- Source: National Archives, Nixon Presidential Materials, NSC Files, Box 683, Country Files, Europe, Germany, Vol. IV. Secret. Sent for information. A notation on the memorandum indicates the President saw it on April 2. Sonnenfeldt originally raised the subject of recognition of the GDR on February 20 in a memorandum to Kissinger, forwarding the study on legal consequences prepared by the Department of State (see footnote 4 below). On March 16 Kissinger issued the following handwritten instruction: “Send memo to Pres with cover re trends of German policy making this important topic.” (Ibid.) According to another copy, Downey drafted the memorandum on March 25. (Library of Congress, Manuscript Division, Kissinger Papers, CL 289, Memoranda to the President, 1969–74, Mar.–Apr. 1970)↩
- See Document 70.↩
- See Documents 67 and 68.↩
- Tab B is a memorandum from Eliot to Kissinger, February 2, enclosing a memorandum prepared by the Office of the Legal Adviser; attached but not printed. Another copy is in the National Archives, RG 59, Central Files 1970–73, POL GER E–GER W.↩
- Reference is to the Convention on Relations Between the Three Powers and the Federal Republic of Germany, signed in Bonn on May 26, 1952, and amended by the Protocol on Termination of the Occupation Regime in Germany, signed in Paris on October 23, 1954. See Documents on Germany, 1944–1985, pp. 379–383, 424–438.↩
- For text of the Treaty Establishing the European Economic Community, signed in Rome on March 25, 1957, see American Foreign Policy: Current Documents, 1957, pp. 426–518.↩