Katana VentraIP

Four Power Agreement on Berlin

The Four Power Agreement on Berlin, also known as the Berlin Agreement or the Quadripartite Agreement on Berlin, was agreed on 3 September 1971 by the four wartime Allied powers, represented by their ambassadors. The four foreign ministers, Sir Alec Douglas-Home of the United Kingdom, Andrei Gromyko of the Soviet Union, Maurice Schumann of France, and William P. Rogers of the United States signed the agreement and put it into force at a ceremony in Berlin on 3 June 1972.[1] The agreement was not a treaty and required no formal ratification.

Berlin Declaration

Four Power (disambiguation)

Treaty of Moscow (1970)

Treaty of Warsaw (1970)

Basic Treaty, 1972

Transit Agreement (1972)

Potsdam Conference

Potsdam Agreement

Council of Foreign Ministers

Allied Control Council

Allied Kommandatura

Treaty on the Final Settlement With Respect to Germany

Steinstücken

E-text of the Agreement in German

Text des Viermächte-Abkommens

U.S Embassy Germany

Ostpolitik: The Quadripartite Agreement of September 3, 1971

Note 4 gives details of the impact of this Agreement on the assession of East and West Germany to this Convention and other international treaties which effected the international status of West Berlin.

Convention on the Privileges and Immunities of the United Nations

Photo series on the 1970 treaty sessions.

Site of the Four Power Talks on the Status of Berlin.