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The Conference on Security and Cooperation
in Europe
Keen to gain international recognition of its sphere of interest and
believing that such recognition would solidify its grip on its East European
satellite states, the Soviet Union, beginning in the early 1970s, sponsored
an initiative calling for the convening of a Conference on Security and
Cooperation in Europe (CSCE). For the West, such meetings meant the possibility
of tying the Soviet Union and its satellites to an international security
system, thereby lessening tensions, furthering economic cooperation, and
obtaining humanitarian improvements for the people of Eastern Europe.
The first of the series of conferences opened in July 1973 in Helsinki
and was attended by the foreign ministers of the thirty-five member states.
At the conference's final meeting in 1975, the heads of state of all member
countries were in attendance for the signing of the Final Act, or the
Helsinki Accords.
As subsequent CSCE conferences showed, Soviet officials had totally
underestimated the effect of the provisions for the exchange of information,
which allowed for the unscrambled reception of Western media broadcasts
within the geographic area of the Warsaw Pact countries. East Germans
benefited especially from access to West German radio and television programs,
which furnished previously unobtainable news about world events. Television
viewers in the East also became aware of an obviously far superior standard
of living in the West and developed a new awareness of the deficiencies
of the communist regime, an awareness that fifteen years later led to
the events that brought down that regime.
- The Honecker Era, 1971-1989
- The
Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe
- The New East
German Constitution and the Question of Identity
- Relations Between
the Two Germanys
- The Peace Movement
and Internal Resistance
- The Last Days of East Germany
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