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Warsaw Collective Security Pact
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 May 2009
Extract
According to the press, a one-day meeting of the Political Consultative Committee of the Warsaw Pact in Moscow on February 4, 1960, was attended by premiers and foreign ministers of the eight pact members (Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, the Soviet Union, and Romania) and by observers from Communist China, Mongolia, North Vietnam, and North Korea. In a 4,000-word declaration issued after the meeting, the pact members expressed the hope that forthcoming East-West summit talks would be “a turning point in the relations” between the two groups of countries and proposed that the summit agenda include such topics as general and controlled disarmament, a German peace treaty, creation of a free city of West Berlin, a ban on nuclear weapons tests, and amelioration of relations between East and West. The committee also repeated the communist proposal for a non-aggression pact between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the Warsaw Pact countries and called on NATO members to respond to the Soviet Union's armed forces cut of 1, 200, 000 men by reducing their forces as well. It criticized NATO for maintaining “inflated armies” and for arming West Germany with atomic weapons, adding that the West German government was being given a free hand in the production of these weapons.
- Type
- International Organizations: Summary of Activities: III. Political and Regional Organizations
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The IO Foundation 1960
References
1 The Times(London), 02 5, 1960Google Scholar. For a summary of previous activities of members of the War-saw Pact, see International Organization, Summer 1959 (Vol. 13, No. 3), p. 485CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
2 For the text of the declaration, see The New York Times, February 5, 1960.
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