Title: The Finnish Exploitation of D
1The Finnish Exploitation of Détente From the US
Perspective in the Early 1970sThe Case of the
CSCE
- Minna Starck
- April 4, 2005
- University of Helsinki
- Email minna.starck_at_helsinki.fi
2The topics that this lecture will cover are
- Détente in the early 1970s
- American-Soviet relations during détente
- European détente
- Finland and the United States
- Kekkonens visit to the White House in July 1970
- Historical background to the CSCE
- American attitude towards the CSCE
- Outcomes from the CSCE
3History of Détente
- A possible end to a post-war adjustment to the
division of Europe. - The beginning of a new phase in the Cold War
characterized by ongoing dialogue e. g. SALT and
CSCE. - It accelerated the process of exchanges between
East and West.
4The Rise of Détente
- SALT I
- Nixon-Brezhnev Summits
- Opening to China
- German Question
- Four-Power agreement
5What was this man thinking?
Czechoslovak crisis?
Finnish active neutrality policy?
East-West détente?
CSCE ?
6Finnish Neutrality
- After the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia,
the Soviet Union ceased to refer to Finland as a
neutral country in its official texts. - It insisted on giving the 1948 Finnish-Soviet
treaty priority. - What followed was a long drawn-out battle of
words. - Finally a compromise was reached and both the
1948 treaty and Finlands policy of neutrality
were mentioned in a single paragraph.
7President Kekkonens trip to Washington in July
1970
We respect you in the field of foreign policy, a
policy of independence, and a policy of
neutrality
8Finland and the United States
- Much as from the 1940s onwards, in 1970 the U.S.
policy formulation towards Finland consisted of
three main elements - 1. To maintain an independent and democratic
Finland with the truly neutral foreign policy - 2. the strengthening of Finlands ties with the
West - 3. Reduction of Finnish vulnerability to Soviet
political and economic pressures
9Americas foreign policy
Richard Nixon came to power in January 1969
era of negotiations
Henry Kissinger was his closest advisor
Nixon and his successor Gerald Ford
10The American Conception of Détente
- Nixon in 1968 The United States must move away
from confrontations in this nuclear age into a
new era the era of negotiation
11AmericanSoviet Relations During Détente
- A turning point
- American domestic problems Watergate etc..
- Soviet view of American recognition of parity
SALT etc
12Superpower relations continued
- Carrots and sticks?
- Unexpected outcomes?
- Misconceptions of strengths and weaknesses?
13European Détente
- Differences between European and superpower
détente - European détente dynamic process
- Independent European initiatives
- Peoples interest human rights agenda in the
CSCE
14Historical Background of the CSCE
- Original proposals for a pan-European security
conference - Development of Warsaw Pact and NATO
- 1960s renewed interest in a multilateral
security conference - Inclusion of the North Americans
- Kekkonens invitation
15Facts about CSCE
- Ostpolitik
- Acceptance of the status quo
- Getting something back
- Low level of expectations
16Kissinger worked closely with Dobrynin from
Helsinki meeting Nov. 17, 1969 to Moscow summit
May 22-29, 1972
17American attitude towards the CSCE
- United States considers CSCE as a peripheral
affair - Focus of US diplomatic efforts elsewhere
- Mechanics of US diplomacy and CSCE
- A pragmatic approach
-
18Soviet interests in the CSCE
- To gain general acceptance of the territorial and
political status quo in central and eastern
Europe - Enlarging on the bilateral West German agreements
with the Soviet Union, Poland and East Europe - To support reduction of interstate barriers to
increased economic relations and to further the
general process of East-West detente
19CSCE was a part of a broader diplomatic strategy
- CSCE- a diplomatic strategy to be used in dealing
with the USSR - -and a political necessity when viewed from the
perspective of transatlantic relations - But still the real decisions were made in
bilateral context with the leaders of the Soviet
Union - A key point in this regard was the May 1972
Moscow summit where Nixon and Brezhnev agreed on
a linkage between CSCE and the Multilateral
Balanced Forces Reduction talks (MBFR)
20Outcome of the CSCE
- Lack of interest but concessions made
- Soviet triumph????
- Implications of the Final Act
21Friends forever!...
22Soviet reaction to the Final Act
- Great deal, major triumph
- Highlight of European détente
- The existence of the two German states had
finally been recognized by the whole world - The Soviet leaders clearly believed the
correlation of forces in the world had shifted
decisively in their favour
23The Reaction to the Final Act in the United States
- Different from that in the SU and Western Europe
- Unknown to most Americans
- The growing disenchantment with détente and
politicking in the upcoming presidential election
in 1976 led to criticism of the CSCE and of
President Fords journey to Helsinki to sign it
24European reaction
- CSCE Final Act was positive.
- Perception of a real relaxation of tensions
- Cynical commentators as well as those carried
away by euphoria
25Effects for Finland
- Urho Kekkonens project
- Significance for Finnish neutrality and foreign
policy - Kekkonens moment in the sun
26Outcomes from the CSCE
- A shift in American attitudes the significance
of human rights in criticism of the Soviet union - Post-Helsinki popular action - Czechoslovakia,
Poland and the Soviet Union itself. - Legitimacy for dissidents
- The Helsinki review conferences
27Irony of the Soviet-American detente
- The Nixon-Kissinger détente doctrine promoted the
eventual collapse of the USSR? - Soviet over-stretch in the belief that the U.S.
was weaker?
28Conclusion
- The Soviets desperately wanted the CSCE, they
got it and it laid the foundations for the end of
their empire. We resisted it for years, went
grudgingly, Ford paid a terrible price for going
perhaps re-election itself only to discover
years later that CSCE had yielded benefits beyond
our wildest imagination. Go figure. - Robert Gates The Former Director of the CIA. In
his book From the Shadows The Ultimate insiders
Story of Five Presidents and How They Helped Win
the Cold War, 1996.
29Some faces that mattered
30 Henry Kissinger, Leonid Brezhnev, Gerald Ford,
and Andrei Gromyko during the Helsinki summit,
July 1975
31Further reading
- Henry Kissinger Diplomacy 1994.
- Raymond L.Garthoff Détente and Confrontation,
American-Soviet Relations from Nixon to Reagan
1985. - Reviewing the Cold War. Approaches,
Interpretations, Theory. Ed. Odd Arne Westad
2000. - Johan Lewis Gaddis We Know Now. Rethinking Cold
War History 1997.