Everything about The Oder-neisse Line totally explained
The
Oder-Neisse line () marked the border between
German Democratic Republic and
Poland between 1950 and 1990. Since 1990, it has marked the border between reunited
Germany and
Poland.
The line is formed primarily by the rivers
Oder and
Lusatian Neisse, but it deviates west of the Oder to include the seaport cities of
Szczecin and
Świnoujście within Poland.
History of the line
First World War
During the
First World War the Oder-Neisse line was proposed as one option by Russian foreign minister
Sergey Sazonov as border between Germany and an autonomous Poland in union with
Russian Empire.
Second World War
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 large areas populated by rural
Slavic population (often Germanized) on the German side and significant German 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.
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
Brandenburg and a small area of
Saxony within Poland (
See: Former eastern territories of Germany). Polish territory includes also the former
Free City of Danzig with its almost completely German population and the southern two-thirds of
East Prussia,
Masuria and
Warmia with ahistorically German population. The northeastern third of East Prussia was directly annexed by the
Soviet Union with the
Klaipėda/Memel region becoming part of the
Lithuanian SSR and the bulk of the territory forming the
Kaliningrad Oblast of the
Russian SFSR.
The territorial changes were followed by large-scale population transfers and ethnic cleansing, including the expulsion and massacre 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 Oder-Neisse territories.
Among the Poles, there were not many who opposed Poland's territorial gains from Germany on a humanitarian basis, since they were excused as justice for starting the war, genocide conducted by the German state and territorial losses of Poland as well as the support that some of the German minority had given to the German Reich during its invasion and occupation of Poland, and the active role some individuals played in persecution and mass murder of Poles .
It was also in Stalin's interests to see the Poles had a western border unacceptable to the more numerous Germans, since Stalin could then maintain in Polish society the conviction that only the USSR would defend the border. Poles wanted to be sure the frontier was stable.
Allied decision to move the borders of Poland westward
A decision to move Poland's boundary westward was agreed on by the
United States,
Britain and the
Soviet Union at the
Yalta Conference, shortly before the end of the war. The precise location of the border was left open. The western Allies accepted in general the principle of 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
Szczecin (Stettin), the traditional seaport of Berlin, a city with exclusively German population should remain German or be included in Poland, or be included in the ethnic cleansing. 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.
Germany originally was to retain Stettin, while the Poles were to annex
East Prussia with Königsberg (now Kaliningrad), as the Polish government had in fact demanded at the start of World War II in 1939, due to East Prussia's strategic position that undermined defence of Poland. Other territorial changes proposed by Polish government were the occupation of Silesian region of
Opole/Oppeln,
Gdańsk(Danzig), straightening the border in
Western Pomerania and areas near
Bytów/Bütow and
Lębork/Lauenburg.
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 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. Stalin refused to give it up and instead offered
Lower Silesia with
Breslau (now Wrocław). (Many people from Lwów would later be moved to populate Wrocław and Gdańsk (Danzig).
The eventual border wasn't 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 Slavic
Sorbs who lived near
Cottbus and
Bautzen.
At the
Potsdam Conference the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union placed the German territories east of the Oder-Neisse line as formally under Polish administrative control. The Poles came to refer to those territories as the
Regained Territories, due to fact that these areas had once been in possession by the
Piast dynasty of Polish kings or were lost in
Partitions of Poland. It was anticipated that a final
peace treaty would follow shortly and 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 expelled, for various reasons, including prevention of another war with their presence as a cause. The final agreements in effect compensated Poland for 187,000 km² located east of the
Curzon line occupied by the Soviets with 112,000 km² of former German territories.
One reason for this version of the border was the fact that it was the shortest possible border between Poland and Germany. It is only 472 km 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 authorities installed by Soviets in Poland, who sometimes also expelled
Masurians,
Slovincians, some
Kashubians and Slavic
Upper Silesians as "Germans".
It was Stalin who had first insisted that Poland's western frontier be extended to the Oder at the
Tehran Conference in late 1943. The Americans, however, were not interested in discussing any border changes at that time. British Foreign Secretary
Anthony Eden wrote in his diary that "A difficulty is that the Americans are terrified of the subject which [Rooseveltadvisor] Harry [Hopkins] called 'political dynamite' for their elections. But, as I told him, if we can't get a solution, Polish-Russian relations six months from now, with Russian armies in Poland, will be infinitely worse and elections nearer."
At the Yalta Conference, Poland was again discussed. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt said that it would "make it easier for me at home" if Stalin were generous to Poland with respect to Poland's eastern frontiers.
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 didn't leave Poland a free and independent state." 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 Szczecin and the German territories east of the Western Neisse River. 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." 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." Poland's western frontier was ultimately left to be decided at the Potsdam Conference.
At Potsdam, Stalin argued for the Oder-Neisse line on the grounds that the Polish Government demanded this frontier and that there were no longer any Germans left east of this line, a claim which prompted Admiral
William D. Leahy, US President
Truman's Chief of Staff, to whisper "The Bolshies have killed them all", into US President Truman's ear. . 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."
President
Harry S. Truman and Prime Minister
Clement Attlee said that they couldn't 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. Stalin responded that the Poles "were taking revenge for the injuries which the Germans had caused them in the course of centuries"
James Byrnes – who had become
US Secretary of State earlier that month – later advised the Soviets that the U.S. was prepared to concede the area east of the Oder and the Eastern Neisse (
Nysa Kłodzka) river to Polish administration and not consider it part of the Soviet occupation zone, in return for a moderation of Soviet demands for reparations from the Western occupation zones. A Nysa Kłodzka boundary would have left Germany with roughly half of Silesia. The Soviets insisted that the Poles wouldn't 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
Żagan and
Lubań, but even this small concession ultimately proved unnecessary since the next day Byrnes told Soviet Foreign Minister
Vyacheslav Molotov that the Americans would reluctantly concede the Western Neisse . Byrnes's concession undermined the British position, and although British Foreign Secretary
Ernest Bevin raised objections, the British eventually agreed with the American concession.
Winston Churchill wasn't present at the end of the Conference as the results of the
British election had made it clear he'd been defeated. Churchill later claimed that he'd 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."
Recognition of the border by Germany
The governments of the
German Democratic Republic and
Poland signed the
Treaty of Zgorzelec in 1950, recognizing the Oder-Neisse line, officially designated the "Border of Peace and Friendship". In another treaty signed in 1989 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 reunified Germany. The offer was rejected by West German Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer. In 1950 already, France declared the eastern borders of 1937 as applying and relevant to Germany, while Britain and the United States also condemned the
Treaty of Zgorzelec between the GDR and Poland.
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 socialist Poland nor the
German Democratic Republic.
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 the Oder-Neisse line as the border of 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 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 German and Polish minorities living on either side of the border. Approximately 150,000 ethnic Germans still reside in Poland, mainly in the
Opole (Oppeln) Voivodship, with smaller presence in regions such as
Lower Silesia and
Masuria, and one and a half million Poles live in Germany, both from recent migration as well as families living in Germany for centuries.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Oder-neisse Line'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://oder-neisse_line.totallyexplained.com">Oder-Neisse line Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |