The Hallstein Doctrine, named after Walter Hallstein, was a key doctrine in the foreign policy of the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) between 1955 and 1969. It was supported by the Christian Democratic Party.
According to the doctrine, the Federal Republic of Germany had the exclusive right to represent the entire German nation, and with the exception of the Soviet Union, West Germany would not establish or maintain diplomatic relations with any state that recognized East Germany. The doctrine was first applied to Yugoslavia in 1957.
East Germany attempted to undermine this doctrine by forming diplomatic relationships with the newly decolonized nations of the Third World.
The doctrine was never popular, even with West Germany's western allies, as it effectively tried to impose retroactive conditions on the unconditional surrender of 1945. It weakened with the re-establishing of diplomatic relations to Romania (1967) and Yugoslavia (1969) and was finally abandoned with the adoption of Ostpolitik by Chancellor Willy Brandt, which resulted in mutual recognition between East and West Germany as two states (though not as two nations).
Foreign policy doctrines | West Germany
Doctrina Hallstein | Hallstein-Doktrin | Doctrine Hallstein | Dottrina Hallstein | ハルシュタイン原則 | Hallsteindoktrinen | Hallsteinin oppi | Hallstein-doktrinen | 哈尔斯坦主义
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