Oder-Neisse line

Oder-Neisse line

The Oder-Neisse line ( _pl. Granica na Odrze i Nysie Łużyckiej, _de. Oder-Neiße-Grenze) was drawn in the aftermath of World War II as the eastern border of Germany and the western border of Poland. The line is formed primarily by the rivers Oder and Lusatian Neisse, and meets the Baltic Sea west of the seaport cities of Szczecin ( _de. Stettin) and Świnoujście ( _de. Swinemünde). All pre-war German territory east of the line was ethnically cleansed of Germans after the war and awarded to Poland and the Soviet Union. The line marked the border between the German Democratic Republic and Poland between 1950 and 1990. Since 1990, it has marked the border between reunited Germany and Poland.

Pre-war German-Polish border

Before World War II, Poland's western border with Germany had been fixed under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles of 1919. It partially ran along the historic borders of Great Poland, but with certain adjustments that were intended to reasonably reflect the ethnic compositions of small areas beyond the traditional provincial borders. However, eastern Pomerania, Upper Silesia and Masuria had been divided, leaving small areas populated by a rural Slavic population (often Germanized) on the German side and significant German, primarily urban populations on the Polish side. Moreover, the border left Germany divided into two portions by the Polish Corridor and the independent Free City of Danzig which was populated by a predominantly German urban population, but split from Germany to provide Poland increased access to the Baltic Sea.

Allied considerations during the war

Tehran Conference 1943

It was Josef Stalin who had first insisted that Poland's western frontier be extended to the Oder River at the Tehran Conference in late 1943. The Americans, however, were not interested in discussing any border changes at that time. [ [http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/FRUS.FRUS1943CairoTehran US State Department, Foreign Relations of the US: The Conference at Cairo and Tehran 1943] , "Tripartite Dinner Meeting, 28 November 1943" pp. 509-14] British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden wrote in his diary that "A difficulty is that the Americans are terrified of the subject which [Roosevelt advisor] Harry [Hopkins] called 'political dynamite' for their elections. But, as I told him, if we cannot get a solution, Polish-Russian relations six months from now, with Russian armies in Poland, will be infinitely worse and elections nearer." [Anthony Eden, The Reckoning (London, 1965) p. 427.]

Yalta Conference

At the Yalta Conference, in Ukraine, Poland was again discussed. President Franklin D. Roosevelt said that it would "make it easier for me at home" if Stalin was generous to Poland with respect to Poland's eastern frontiers. [US Dept. of State, Foreign Relations of the US, The Conferences at Malta and Yalta, 1945, Third Plenary Meeting 6 February 1945, Matthews Minutes, p. 77] Winston Churchill said a Soviet concession on that point would be admired as "a gesture of magnanimity" and declared that, with respect to Poland's post-war government, the British would "never be content with a solution which did not leave Poland a free and independent state." [Ibid., Bohlen Minutes, p. 669.] With respect to Poland's western frontiers, Stalin noted that the Polish Prime Minister in exile, Stanisław Mikołajczyk, had been pleased when Stalin had already told him Poland would be granted Stettin (Szczecin) and the German territories east of the Western Neisse River. [Llewellyn Woodward, British Foreign Policy in the Second World War, (London, 1962) p. 299] Churchill objected to the Western Neisse frontier saying that "it would be a pity to stuff the Polish goose so full of German food that it got indigestion." [ [http://www.winstonchurchill.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=531 Winston Churchill and the Soviet Union during the Second World War - The Churchill Centre ] ] He added that many British would be shocked if such large numbers of Germans (more than 11 million) were driven out of these areas, to which Stalin responded that "many Germans" had "already fled before the Red Army." [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0002-8762(197410)79%3A4%3C1119%3ATCWWO%3E2.0.CO%3B2-1] Poland's western frontier was ultimately left to be decided at the Potsdam Conference.

Polish and Soviet demands

Originally, Germany was to retain Stettin, while the Poles were to annex East Prussia with Königsberg (now Kaliningrad). The Polish government had in fact demanded this since the start of World War II in 1939, due to East Prussia's strategic position that undermined the defense of Poland.Fact|date=July 2008 Other territorial changes proposed by the Polish government were the occupation of the Silesian region of Oppeln (Opole), Danzig (Gdańsk), straightening the border in Western Pomerania, and areas near Bütow (Bytów) and Lauenburg (Lębork).

Eventually, however, Stalin decided that he wanted Königsberg to be added to Soviet territory as a year-round warm water port for the Soviet Navy, and he argued that the Poles should receive Stettin instead. The pre-war Polish government-in-exile had little to say in these decisions, but insisted on retaining the historic Polish city of Lwów (now L'viv) in Galicia, eastern Poland. Stalin refused to give it up and instead offered Lower Silesia with Breslau (Wrocław). Many people from Lwów (L'viv) would later be moved to populate Gdańsk (Danzig).

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

The precise location of the western border was still left open. The western Allies accepted in general the Oder River as the future western border of Poland. The open question was whether the border should follow the eastern or western Neisse Rivers, and whether Stettin (Szczecin), the traditional seaport of Berlin [ [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,792263,00.html Lebensraum] , Time Magazine 13 August 1945] , a city with an exclusively German population should remain German or be included in Poland and the population be ethnically cleansed. The western Allies sought to place the border on the eastern Neisse, but Stalin refused to budge. Suggestions of the Bóbr (Bober) river were also brushed aside by the Soviets.clarifyme

Potsdam Conference

At the Potsdam Conference, in response to the U.S. and U.K. statements that the Poles were claiming far too much German territory, Stanisław Mikołajczyk argued that "the western lands were needed as a reservoir to absorb the Polish population east of the Curzon line, Poles who returned from the West, and Polish people who lived in the overcrowded central districts of Poland." [Richard C. Lukas Bitter Legacy: Polish-American Relations in the Wake of World War II. p 16] The U.S. and the U.K. were also negative on the idea of giving Poland an occupation zone in Germany. However on July 29, President Truman handed Molotov a proposal for a temporary solution whereby the US accepted Polish administration of land to the Oder River-eastern Neisse River until a final peace conference determined the boundary. In return for this large concession, the U.S. demanded that "each of the occupation powers to take its share of reparations from its own [Occupation] Zone and provided for admission of Italy into the United Nations." The Soviets stated that they were not pleased "because it denied Polish administration of the area between the two Neisse rivers."Richard C. Lukas Bitter Legacy: Polish-American Relations in the Wake of World War II. p.17]

However, on the 29th Stalin asked Bierut to accept, considering the large American concesions. The Polish delegation decided to accept a boundary of the administration zone at "somewhere between the western Neisse and the Queiss (Kwisa)." Later that day the Poles changed their mind; "Bierut, accompanied by Rola-Zymierski, returned to Stalin and argued against any compromise with the Americans. Stalin told his Polish proteges that he would defend their position at the conference."

At the Potsdam Conference the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union placed the German territories east of the Oder-Neisse line formally under Polish administrative control.

Polish propagandaAn explanation note in [http://books.google.com.au/books?id=a_49GjK8ovMC&pg=PA466&source=gbs_search_r&cad=0_2&sig=jMhtaVsIbLmsC_LA07eB0mYV158 "The Neighbors Respond: The Controversy Over the Jedwabne Massacre in Poland"] , ed. by Polonsky and Michlic, p.466] came to refer to those territories as the Regained or Recovered Territories, a term alluding to them having been in possession of the early medieval Piast dynasty of Polish kings or some of the parts lost to Germany during the many Partitions of Poland. The creation of a picture of the new territories as an "integral part of historical Poland" in the post-war had the aim of forging Polish settlers and repatriates arriving there into a coherent community loyal to the new Communist Regime.Martin Åberg, Mikael Sandberg, "Social Capital and Democratisation: Roots of Trust in Post-Communist Poland and Ukraine", Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2003, ISBN 0754619362, [http://books.google.com/books?id=uy1nPLTUhscC&pg=PA80&ei=p85NR8uhKaCKpgLnsYnuBg&sig=EPpKsFWcnMe5B0eKOjCeYyHyzrU#PPA79,M1 Google Print, p.79] ] The term was in use immediately following the end of World War II when it was part of the Communist indoctrination of the Polish settlers in those territories. It was anticipated that a final peace treaty would follow shortly, and that would either confirm this border or determine whatever alterations might be agreed upon. It was also decided that all Germans remaining in the new and old Polish territory should be expeled, for various reasons, including prevention of another war with their presence as a cause. The final agreements in effect compensated Poland for 187,000 square kilometers of land located east of the Curzon line - Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union (in which ethnic Poles supposedly comprised a mere 36.5% of the population) with 112,000 km² of former German territories.

One reason for this version of the new border was the fact that it was the shortest possible border between Poland and Germany. It is only 472 kilometers in length, since it stretches from the northernmost point of the Czech Republic to one of the southernmost points of the Baltic Sea in the Oder River estuary. The rights of the inhabitants of the formerly German territories, some of the people themselves originally of Slavic origin, were disregarded by the victorious powers and the Communist Regime installed by Soviets in Poland, who sometimes also expelled Masurians, Slovincians, some Kashubians, and Slavic Upper Silesians as "Germans".

At Potsdam, Stalin argued for the Oder-Neisse line on the grounds that the Polish Government demanded this frontier and that there were no longer any Germans left east of this line, a claim that prompted Admiral William D. Leahy, American President Truman's Chief of Staff, to whisper "The Bolshies have killed them all", into President Truman's ear. [Harry Truman, Year of Decisions, (New York, 1955) p. 296] Later the Russians admitted that at least "a million Germans" (a number far too low) still remained in the area at that time. Several Polish leaders appeared at the conference to advance arguments for an Oder-Western Neisse frontier. Szczecin was demanded for Eastern European exports. If Szczecin were Polish, then "in view of the fact that the supply of water is found between the Oder and the Lausitzer Neisse, if the Oder's tributaries were controlled by someone else the river could be blocked." [US Dept of State, Foreign Relations of the US, The Conference of Berlin (Potsdam) 1945, vol. II pp. 1522-1524.]

President Harry S. Truman and British Prime Minister Clement Attlee said that they could not tolerate Polish administration of part of one of the occupation zones (effectively making Poland a fifth occupying power after the U.S., Britain, France, and the Soviet Union) and the expulsion of millions of German people from it into other areas. [Ibid., pp. 381ff] Stalin responded that the Poles "were taking revenge for the injuries which the Germans had caused them in the course of centuries." [Ibid., p. 384]

James Byrnes – who had become the American Secretary of State earlier that month – later advised the Soviets that the U.S. was prepared to concede the area east of the Oder River and the Eastern Neisse (Nysa Kłodzka) River to Polish administration, and for it not consider it part of the Soviet occupation zone, in return for a moderation of Soviet demands for reparations from the Western occupation zones. [Ibid., p. 1150] A Nysa Kłodzka boundary would have left Germany with roughly half of Silesia. The Soviets insisted that the Poles would not accept this. The Polish representatives (and Stalin) were in fact willing to concede a line following the Oder-Bober-Queiss (Odra-Bóbr-Kwisa) rivers through Zagan (Sagan) and Luban, but even this small concession ultimately proved unnecessary, since on the next day, Byrnes told the Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov that the Americans would reluctantly concede to the Western Neisse. [(Ibid., p. 480)] Byrnes's concession undermined the British position, and although the British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin raised objections, [Ibid., p. 519] the British eventually agreed with the American concession.

Winston Churchill was not present at the end of the Conference, since the results of the British elections had made it clear that he had been defeated. Churchill later claimed that he would never have agreed to the Oder-Western Neisse line, and in his famous Iron Curtain speech declared that "The Russian-dominated Polish Government has been encouraged to make enormous and wrongful inroads upon Germany, and mass expulsions of millions of Germans on a scale grievous and undreamed-of are now taking place." [ [http://www.historyguide.org/europe/churchill.html "Churchill's Iron Curtain", On expulsion of ethnic Germans - historyguide.org] ]

World War II aftermath

At the end of World War II in 1945, under the territorial changes demanded by the Soviet Union, the border was moved westward deep into territory formerly part of Germany and populated by a German population, to a line which placed almost all of Silesia, more than half of Pomerania, the eastern portion of Brandenburg and a small area of Saxony within Poland ("See: Former eastern territories of Germany"). Polish territory gains also included the former Free City of Danzig with its almost completely German population expelled and the southern two-thirds of East Prussia, Masuria and Warmia with a historically German population. The northeastern third of East Prussia was directly annexed by the Soviet Union with the Memelland becoming annexed by the Lithuanian SSR and the bulk of the territory forming the new Kaliningrad Oblast of the Russian SFSR.

The territorial changes were followed by large-scale population transfers and ethnic cleansing carried out by the Polish government and military, which resulted in the expulsion of nearly all the Germans (Admiral Leahy: "The Bolshies have killed them all") from the territory annexed by Poland and the Soviets and the return to Poland of the Polish displaced persons then inside Allied occupied Germany. In addition to this, the Polish population from the eastern half of the former Second Polish Republic, now annexed by the Soviet Union, was mostly expelled and transferred to the newly acquired Oder-Neisse territories.

It brought about one of the biggest ethnic cleansings in human history by deporting (and denying return to their homes after cessation of battles) of 14 million people. The ethnic cleansing of German citizens from their homelands in East Prussia, Silesia, Pommerania, eastern Brandenburg and other regions was carried out with utmost brutality, violation of human rights through gang-rape, child-abuse, theft, torture, terror, and mass murder. de Zayas, Alfred-Maurice: A Terrible Revenge: The Ethnic Cleansing of the Eastern European Germans 1944-1950, New York: St. Martin's Press, 1994 ] Out of 14 million ethnic Germans who were deported, only 12 million arrived in the four Occupation Zones of Germany. About two million got murdered or remained missing in the wake of the ethnic cleansing. Few Poles have opposed the territorial gains from Germany and the expulsion of the indigenous German inhabitants. These developments have been excused as a just consequence for the Nazi German state's starting the war and conducting genocide, as well as for the territorial losses of eastern Poland to the Soviet Union (and hence to the Ukraine). With respect to the expelled ethnic German minority in Poland, resentments have been based on their majoritarian loyalty to the German Reich during the invasion and occupation, and the active role played by some individuals in persecution and mass murder of Poles and Jews. Those circumstances have impeded sensitivity among Poles with respect to the injustices committed during the aftermath of WW II.

The new order was in Stalin's interests, because then the Soviet Union could present itself as the primary maintainer of the western Polish border, which was presumably opposed by Germany.

Recognition of the border by Germany

The (founded 1946) SED of the Communist German Democratic Republic (DDR) rejected the Oder-Neisse line. Under Soviet occupation and heavy pressure by Moscow, the official phrase "Friedensgrenze" (border of peace) was promulgated in March/April 1947 at the Moscow Foreign Ministers Conference. On 11 January 1949, the German, now Polish "New Territories" were annexed by the Communist Polish government. The GDR under Soviet occupation, and the Communist Polish government, signed the Treaty of Zgorzelec in 1950, recognizing the Oder-Neisse line, officially designated by the Communists as the "Border of Peace and Friendship". [ [http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/oder.htm Why is the Oder-Neiße Line a Peace Border? (1950) ] ]

Decades later, in 1989, another treaty was signed between Poland and East Germany, the sea border was set, and a dispute from 1985 came to an end.

In 1952, recognition of the Oder-Neisse line as a permanent boundary was one of Stalin's conditions for the Soviet Union to agree to a reunifying Germany. The offer was rejected by the West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. Even in 1950, France declared the eastern borders of 1937 as applying and relevant to Germany, but the United Kingdom and the United States condemned the 1950 Treaty of Zgorzelec between the GDR and Poland that established the Oder-Neisse Line between the two states.

In West Germany, where the majority of the 12 million displaced refugees from the countries of Eastern bloc had settled, the recognition of the Oder-Neisse Line as permanent was long regarded as unacceptable. In fact, West Germany, as part of the Hallstein Doctrine, neither recognized the government of Communist Poland, nor the German Democratic Republic (East Germany: the DDR).

In 1963 the German opposition leader Willy Brandt said that "abnegation is betrayal". But it was Brandt who eventually changed West Germany's attitude with his policy of "Ostpolitik". In 1970 West Germany signed treaties with the Soviet Union (Treaty of Moscow) and Poland (Treaty of Warsaw) recognizing as current reality not to be changed by force the Oder-Neisse line between Germany and Poland. This had the effect of making family visits by the displaced eastern Germans to their lost homelands now more or less possible. Visits however were still very difficult and permanent re-settling in Poland remained impossible.

In November 1990, after German reunification, the Federal Republic of Germany and the Republic of Poland signed a treaty confirming the border between them, as requested by the Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany. Earlier, Germany had amended its constitution and abolished Article 23 of West Germany's Basic Law, the one used for reunification, which could have been used to claim the former German eastern territories.

The 1990 German-Polish Border Treaty finalizing the Oder-Neisse line as the Polish-German border [ [http://www.un.org/Depts/los/LEGISLATIONANDTREATIES/PDFFILES/TREATIES/DEU-POL1990CF.PDF Treaty between the Federal Republic of Germany and the Republic of Poland on the confirmation of the frontier between them, 14 November 1990] (PDF) ] came into force on January 16, 1992, together with a second one, a Treaty of Good Neighbourship, signed in June 1991, in which the two countries, among other things, recognized basic political and cultural rights for both the German and the Polish minorities living on either side of the border. After 1990, approximately 150,000 of the remaining Germans registered as Germans still reside in the by Poland annexed area, mainly in the Opole (Oppeln) Voivodship, with a smaller presence in regions such as Lower Silesia, and Warmia-Masuria, and one and a half million Poles or ethnic Poles live in Germany, recent immigrants, in addition to families that have lived in Germany for centuries.

ee also

*Curzon Line
*Expulsion of Germans after World War II
*Federation of Expellees
*Union of Poles in Germany

World War II-related events

*Vistula-Oder Offensive, from January 12 until February 2, 1945
*Malta Conference, from January 30 to February 3, 1945
*Yalta Conference, from February 4 to February 11, 1945
*Battle of Königsberg, from April 6 until April 9, 1945
*Battle of the Oder-Neisse, from April 16 until April 19, 1945
*Potsdam Conference, from July 17 to August 2, 1945

Further reading

* [http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/oder.htm An East German pamphlet for propagandists entitled "Why is the Oder-Neiße Line a Peace Border?"]
* [http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cold.war/episodes/02/spotlight/ CNN Cold War - The Oder-Neisse Line: Ethnic cleansing, 1940s style]
* [http://www.un.org/Depts/los/LEGISLATIONANDTREATIES/PDFFILES/TREATIES/DEU-POL1990CF.PDF Treaty between the Federal Republic of Germany and the Republic of Poland on the confirmation of the frontier between them, 14 November 1990] (PDF) ( [http://www.zbiordokumentow.pl/1991/4/4.html Treaty confirming the border between Germany and Poland (Warsaw, November 14, 1990)] in Polish and German)
* [http://library.fes.de/pdf-files/netzquelle/a87-01858.pdf The Oder Neisse Line Problem] (German) (PDF)
* [http://www.ena.lu?lang=2&doc=3359 Closing The Ring] Winston Churchill; Excerpt on the Teheran conference, from his memoirs.
* [http://www.ena.lu?lang=2&doc=4023 Speaking Frankly] James F. Byrnes; Excerpt on the Yalta conference, from his memoirs.
* [http://www.ena.lu?lang=2&doc=3991 Triumph and Tragedy] Winston Churchill; Excerpt on the Yalta conference, from his memoirs.
* [http://www.ena.lu?lang=2&doc=5922 Churchill's statement to the House of Commons] 27, February, 1945, Describing the outcome of Yalta
* [http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/SOD.CHAP7.ADDENDA.HTM Statistics Of Poland's Democide] Democide Addenda By R.J. Rummel
* [http://www.arena.uio.no/publications/wp97_19.htm The German-Polish Border Region. A Case of Regional Integration?] ARENA Working Papers WP 97/19 Jorunn Sem Fure Department of History, University of Bergen
* [http://src-h.slav.hokudai.ac.jp/publictn/acta/16/alfred/alfred-1.html Minority Rights Abuse in Communist Poland and Inherited Issues]
* [http://www.time.com/time/archive/printout/0,23657,774743,00.html "Dismember or Dismantle"] , Time Magazine February 21, 1944

Footnotes


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