Michael Neiberg is the author of the new book Potsdam: The End of World War II and the Remaking of Europe. His many other books include Dance of the Furies and The Blood of Free Men. He is a professor of history at the U.S. Army War College, and he lives in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.
Q: You write, “Everyone at Potsdam saw the Versailles Treaty
as a horrible warning from history of the failures of making peace.” What
were some of the lessons from Versailles that were especially prominent at
Potsdam?
A: For the American delegates, the most important lesson was
to avoid the cycle of reparations payments that had ensued from Versailles.
As the American representatives at Potsdam in 1945 read it,
the British and French had imposed crippling reparations on Germany which the
United States, in the form of the Dawes Plan, essentially ended up paying
without getting anything in return.
The fear of repeating this huge mistake led the new American
Secretary of State James Byrnes to propose that each side take its reparations
out of its own occupation sector of Germany. Avoiding the reparations mess,
more than any fear of the Soviet Union, led to the division of Germany.
The British tended to see both the international financial
arrangements of 1919 and the form of the League of Nations as mistakes.
The former, most famously critiqued by John Maynard Keynes
(who was at both Paris and Potsdam), destabilized Europe and led to the great
depression. The latter set up no end of imperial problems for the British. The
United Nations, they hoped, would not give equal weight to all peoples as the
League of Nations had.
The Soviets, who were not invited to Versailles, wanted to
avoid the inclusion of the two dozen state and non-state actors who were
involved in 1919.
The Russians wanted to send the message that three great
powers had won the war in Europe and those same three powers would establish
the terms of peace. The rights of small nations would not count as they had a
generation earlier.
Q: What impact did Roosevelt’s death and Churchill’s political
defeat have on the Potsdam Conference?
A: A lot less than one might think. The arrival of two new
leaders, Harry Truman and Clement Attlee (along with the new advisory teams
they brought with them), did not change the basic history, geopolitics, or
economics of Europe in 1945.
Some observers even thought the transition to the newcomers
might help. Both Churchill and Roosevelt had aged and tired considerably in the
months before Potsdam. Roosevelt’s death in April shocked contemporaries
nevertheless; they were unable to imagine a world without him. Churchill struck
most of his advisors as badly in need of rest and clearly off his game.
The key lesson, I think, is to recognize how much more
important large structural factors were than the personalities of the men (and
in this case they were all men) at Potsdam.
Q: You write, “Although some insiders, such as Clement
Attlee and George Kennan, predicted a future of increased East-West conflict,
more people came out of Potsdam optimistic than pessimistic.” What were the
reasons for their optimism?
A: They had gone to Potsdam to settle questions related to
Germany, not each other. While all of the conferees knew that disagreements
between all three would remain, they thought they had laid the necessary foundation
for solving the basic problem of 1945: the future of the state that had caused
two world wars, Germany.
They also thought that they had worked well enough together
to find compromises on key issues. They thought that they had set up a modus
vivendi going forward. And, while the new American leaders would soon bemoan
what they called their naiveté about the Soviets, they thought they had gotten
the measure of their counterparts.
Remember, Harry Truman was brand new to international
diplomacy and had never even met a Russian before. Now he thought he could
leave Potsdam having stared the Russians in the eye and developed a solid
understanding of them.
The conferees had also gotten final agreement on the issue
Truman thought most important, namely Soviet promises to enter the war against
Japan.
Even if the atomic bomb worked, there remained the
possibility that the hundreds of thousands of Japanese soldiers in mainland
Asia would not surrender. If the Soviets entered the war, however, Japan was
more likely to see that it could not hope to hold onto Asia as a bargaining
chip.
The atomic bomb, which had just been successfully tested in
New Mexico, hovered over this optimism. Truman told Stalin about the atomic
bomb while at Potsdam, but Stalin already knew about it from his spies.
While Truman thought he was sharing a secret with an ally,
Stalin read Truman as blackmailing and threatening the Soviet Union with
America’s newfound military power.
The Hiroshima bombing occurred while Truman and the American
delegation were literally at sea en route home from Potsdam. The bombings of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, more than anything that happened at the conference
itself, began the process of mutual mistrust that soon produced the Cold War.
Q: What is the Potsdam Conference’s legacy 70 years later?
A: It is too shortsighted, it seems to me, to call Potsdam
the start of the Cold War. Rather, it ended the 30-year period of total war
from 1914-1945. It was the last chapter of the story that began in Sarajevo.
And Potsdam did solve the problem of Germany, reparations,
international multilateralism (in the form of the United Nations), and a host
of other issues that the men of 1919 would easily have understood.
The price of peace was the subjugation of Eastern Europe to
the brutalities of Stalinism. If the western powers (here meaning Britain and
France) were willing to go to war in 1939 over the future of Poland, no one was
willing to do so in 1945.
Despite Poland’s contribution to the victory in World War II
and despite the obvious puppet status of the pro-Soviet Polish leaders, the
Americans and the British essentially gave Poland away at Potsdam.
Although they were not happy about it (Truman went so far as
to tell the American people “In all candor I did not like this provision of the
Berlin agreement”), the western powers gave Poland away. They did not think
they had any choice short of risking another war. They knew how much more
Poland meant to the Soviets than to their own people.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I am working with Oxford University Press on a book about
American responses to the war in Europe from 1914 until American entry in April
1917.
I am analyzing how the American people, diverse as they
were, responded to events like the German atrocities in Belgium, the sinking of
the Lusitania, the massacres in Armenia, and the Zimmermann telegram. I am
trying as much as possible to bring in the voices of Americans away from the
center of power and to stay at the grassroots level.
Despite huge differences in how Americans responded to the
war in 1914, by 1917 they had reached a remarkable degree of consensus that
Wilson’s policy of neutrality had done the country more harm than good.
Although few Americans were eager to fight in the war, they
knew that they had run out of options. Rather than being some kind of
visionary, Woodrow Wilson was trailing far behind the American people in this
regard.
What was true for so-called native-born Americans was also
true for recent immigrants and their children. Irish-Americans,
Jewish-Americans, and Italian-Americans all had reasons to want to remain
neutral or to support the Central Powers in 1914, but by 1917 – for reasons
having to do with dynamics internal to their communities – they had shifted
position. The same is largely true even of many German-Americans.
The picture is terribly complicated and so far historians
have not really wrestled with it. I want to do so.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I was surprised by what the Big Three did not discuss at
Potsdam. They all knew about the Nazi death camps, but avoided discussing them.
They had a lot on their plates already, of course, and they remembered the men
of 1919 taking on far too many topics.
Still, the failure to at least discuss the implications of
the discovery of these horrors struck me as odd and as a significant missed
opportunity.
All three great powers had a reason to avoid talking about
it: the American State Department had no set policy on Palestine yet, and it
seems obvious to me that anti-Semitism in both the War and State departments
played a key role.
The Soviets did not want to single out any particular class
of Soviet citizen for special treatment because they saw the entire Soviet
people as victims of attempted genocide. And the British wanted to keep
Palestine a solely British problem. Not discussing the plight of the Jews
therefore served everyone’s narrow interests.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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