Attendees The key attendees at the Locarno meeting between 5 and 16 October 1925 were: Signatories of the main treaty (the "high contracting parties" referred to in the text of the treaty): • Germany: Chancellor
Hans Luther and Foreign Minister
Gustav Stresemann • France: Minister of Foreign Affairs
Aristide Briand • Great Britain: Foreign Secretary
Austen Chamberlain • Belgium: Minister of Foreign Affairs
Emile Vandervelde • Italy: Senator
Vittorio Scialoja, with periodic attendance by Prime Minister
Benito Mussolini Signatories of the four separate treaties (in addition to Germany and France): • Poland: Minister of Foreign Affairs
Aleksander Skrzyński • Czechoslovakia: Foreign Minister
Edvard Beneš Treaties and agreements The seven treaties and agreements were: • Treaty of mutual guarantee between Germany, Belgium, France, Great Britain and Italy (main treaty) • Arbitration agreements between: • Germany and France • Germany and Belgium • Arbitration treaties (rather than agreements because they were not addenda to the main treaty) between: • Germany and Poland • Germany and Czechoslovakia • Separate treaties between • France and Poland • France and Czechoslovakia
Main terms of the treaty of mutual guarantee • Germany, France, Great Britain, Belgium and Italy guaranteed to maintain the inviolability of the borders between Germany and Belgium and between Germany and France as established by the Treaty of Versailles. They also pledged to observe the demilitarized zone of the Rhineland as defined in Articles 42 and 43 of the Treaty of Versailles. • Germany and Belgium, and also Germany and France, mutually promised that they would in no case resort to war against each other. Three exceptions were allowed, including breach of the terms of the demilitarized Rhineland. • Germany, France and Belgium resolved to settle disputes peacefully with the involvement of the League of Nations Council. • Articles 4 and 5 spelled out the mutual guarantees of the provisions and the actions to be taken against a signatory who violated the treaty. The League of Nations was to play a central role in adjudicating violations. If it determined that a breach had occurred, the other signatories were to assist the country against which the violation had taken place.
Arbitration agreements and treaties Germany–France and Germany–Belgium of the Belgian delegation. Left to right:
Henri Rolin, Joseph de Ruelle,
Emile Vandervelde, Pierre van Zuylen and Ferdinand du Chastel The terms of the two arbitration agreements were identical and were intended to peacefully handle "all disputes of every kind between Germany and France / Belgium with regard to which the parties are in conflict as to their respective rights, and which it may not be possible to settle amicably by the normal methods of diplomacy." Each arbitration agreement set up a five-member Permanent Conciliation Commission with one member named by Germany, one by France or Belgium and three others by common agreement from three different countries. If the Permanent Conciliation Commission(s) were not able to reach an agreement, the matter was to be passed to either the
Permanent Court of International Justice or an arbitral tribunal as established by the
Hague Convention of 1907. If the two parties had not been able to reach an agreement within a month after the Permanent Conciliation Commission finished its work, either party could request that the question be brought before the Council of the League of Nations. The parties could choose to bypass the Permanent Conciliation Commissions and go directly to the Permanent Court of International Justice or an arbitral tribunal.
Germany–Poland and Germany–Czechoslovakia The arbitration treaties between Germany and Poland and Germany and Czechoslovakia were in their major points nearly identical to Germany's arbitration agreements with France and Belgium. The independent treaties with Poland and Czechoslovakia were, however, non-binding, and there was no guarantee of Germany's eastern borders that mirrored the statements in the main treaty that fixed its western borders where they had been set by the Treaty of Versailles. Stresemann did not want an "Eastern Locarno". His goal was to use economic means to push Poland into border negotiations. Poland especially was unhappy about the addendum to the Locarno Treaties titled "Collective Note to Germany Regarding Article 16 of the
Covenant of the League of Nations". Article 16 required member nations to participate in sanctions or military action against a country that attacked a member state of the League. The Collective Note stated that the League would take into consideration a country's military capability when invoking Article 16. Germany interpreted the note to mean that after it joined the League of Nations, it would be free to make its own decision on how to respond if the League invoked Article 16 against the Soviet Union (e.g. for attacking Poland). ==Effects and evaluations ==