Читать книгу European Integration - Mark Gilbert - Страница 9

1950s

Оглавление

May 9, 1950: Schuman Plan announced.

October 24, 1950: Announcement of Pleven Plan.

November 4, 1950: Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms signed in Rome by thirteen European countries. Greece and Sweden sign on November 28.

April 18, 1951: ECSC treaty signed in Paris by Belgium, France, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, and West Germany.

May 27, 1952: EDC treaty signed in Paris by the same countries.

March 10, 1953: EPC proposals presented to the government of the Six by the ECSC Assembly.

August 30, 1954: French Parliament rejects the EDC treaty.

October 23, 1954: WEU treaty signed in Paris.

June 1–2, 1955: Messina conference of the Six delegates to an intergovernmental committee headed by Paul-Henri Spaak the task of drawing up plans for an economic community and a community to govern atomic energy.

October 13, 1955: Jean Monnet forms his Action Committee for a United Europe.

May 29, 1956: Spaak committee presents its report to foreign ministers of the Six in Venice.

October 30–November 6, 1956: Suez Crisis.

March 25, 1957: Treaties of Rome instituting Euratom and the EEC signed by the Six.

January 7, 1958: Walter Hallstein (Germany) becomes the first president of the EEC Commission, which begins operations.

November 14, 1958: French government blocks the British idea of a free trade area encompassing all OEEC countries.

European Integration

Подняться наверх