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The Registration and Publication of Treaties
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 May 2017
Extract
In late 1917, when the Soviet Government of Russia published various documents from the archives of the Russian Foreign Office, an insistent demand was created throughout the world for the abolition of secret diplomacy. A volume of secret treaties was published in England in 1917 and in the United States in early 1918, and the consequent reaction of public opinion greatly influenced the current statements of the aims of the belligerents. In his address of January 8, 1918, President Wilson put the subject of secret diplomacy at the forefront in the “program of the world's peace” embodied in the Fourteen Points: “Open covenants of peace, openly arrived at, after which there shall be no private international understandings of any kind but diplomacy shall proceed always openly and in the public view.” It has since developed that these words may have been written without a knowledge of the contents of the secret treaties made by Allied Powers during the war; but they were largely responsible for the crystallization of the revulsion which followed the publication of the secret treaties into a determination that the end of the war should signalize the beginning of a new era in the conduct of international relations.
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References
1 In 1916, the Organisation Centrale pour une Paix Durable had put into its minimum program a provision that “Les trail$$$s secrets seronts nuls de plein droit.” Google Scholar Rapports, II, p. IV. On December 28, 1917, leaders of the Labor movement in England presented to the British Prime Minister a memorandum demanding “the suppression of secret diplomacy, and the placing of foreign policy just as much as home policy under the control of popularly elected legislatures.” Google Scholar See, A League of Nations (published by World Peace Foundation), vol. I, p. 119 (No. 3).Google Scholar The American League of Free Nations Association included in its statement of principles the demand that “in the future there must be an end to secret diplomacy.” Google Scholar
2 The secret treaties were published in the Isvestiya and the Pravda, the official organs of the Soviets, in November, 1917.Google ScholarPubMed Translations were published by the Manchester Guardian on December 12, 1917, January 18, and 19, February 1, 8, and 22, and March 12, 1918, and by the New York Evening Post on January 25, and 26, and March 2, 1918.Google Scholar They were also published in part by New Europe on December 20, 1917, supplement, and January 17 1918, and by Current History in March, 1918.Google Scholar See Laloy, Les Documents Secrets (4th ed., 1920).Google Scholar See also Pribram, The Secret Treaties of Austria-Hungary (English ed. by A. C. Coolidge, 1920);Google Scholar Cocks, The Secret Treaties and Understandings (1918).Google Scholar
3 See Baker, Woodrow Wilson and World Settlement, vol. I, pp. 38–46.Google Scholar
4 President Wilson later explained this statement, in a letter of June 12, 1918, addressed to Secretary Lansing, as follows: “When I pronounced for open diplomacy, I meant, not that there should be no private discussions of delicate matters, but that no secret agreements should be entered into, and that all international relations, when fixed, should be open, above board, and explicit.” Google Scholar Baker, Woodrow Wilson and World Settlement, I, p. 46.Google Scholar
5 See Baker, Woodrow Wilson and World Settlement, I, pp. 33–37.Google Scholar
6 On April 1, 1924, Mr. Ponsonby, , Under-Secretary to the Foreign Office, announced in the House of Commons that “it was the intention of the Government to lay on the table of the House every treaty, when signed, for a period of twenty-one days, after which the treaty would be ratified . . . By this means secret treaties and secret clauses of treaties would be rendered impossible.” Google Scholar London Times, April 2, 1924, p. 7.Google Scholar “In 1886 a resolution Was all but carried in the House of Commons, desiring all treaties to be laid before Parliament for its approval before being finally concluded.” Bryce, American Commonwealth (1924 rev. ed.), I, 109 note.Google Scholar The matter seems to have been debated also on March 11, 1925.Google Scholar It has been pointed out that secrecy is now far more difficult with respect to British Empire treaties on account of Dominion participation. 146 Law Times, 113. Cf., a brochure entitled “The Treaty-Making Power in Various Countries,” published by the U. S. Department of State in 1919;Google Scholar Denys, P. Myers, in American Political Science Review, vol. xi, pp. 46 ff.Google Scholar
7 See Hunter Miller, David, Secret Statutes of the United States (1918).Google Scholar
8 In practice, the texts of American treaties are usually withheld from publication at the time of signing, and it is the Senate that releases them. The Senate manual provides: “All confidential communications made by the President of the United States to the Senate shall be by the Senators and the officers of the Senate kept secret; and all treaties which may be laid before the Senate, and all remarks, votes, and proceedings thereon shall also be kept secret, until the Senate shall, by their resolution, take off the injunction of secrecy, or unless the same shall be considered in open Executive sessions.” Manual of U. S. Senate, Rule 36, par. 3. For an instance of the violation of the injunction of secrecy, see Hayden, The Senate and Treaties (1920), p. 90.Google Scholar See also Bryce, American Commonwealth (1924 rev. ed.), I, 105 note.Google Scholar By recent practice, texts are published in the Congressional Record when the Senate acts favorably.
9 The scope of executive agreements not submitted to the Senate of the United States is very large. See Moore, John Bassett, “Treaties and Executive Agreements,” 20 Political Science Quarterly, 385 (1905).Google Scholar
10 Baker, Woodrow Wilson and World Settlement, III, p. 129.Google Scholar The Italian delegation at the Peace Conference submitted a draft of a constitution for a league to the League of Nations Commission, listing as one of the fundamental principles, “Secret international treaties are prohibited.” Kluyver, Documents on the League of Nations, p. 90.Google ScholarPubMed The German delegation, in its proposals for the establishment of a League of Nations, suggested the following: “The members of the League of Nations shall bind themselves to hand over all international treaties, concluded by them, to the Chancery for publication in the organ of the League of Nations.” See the German Proposals, p. 9.Google Scholar
The suggestions of various neutral Powers were to the same effect. For the Swiss proposal, see Mmage du Conseil F$$$d$$$ral a l’AssembUe F$$$d$$$rah, du 4 ao$$$ 1919, p. 249.Google Scholar The Danish, Norwegian and Swedish Governments proposed an international council to be charged with the registration and publication of treaties in an international bulletin. Norway, Utenrikt-departementet, Norges tilslutning til folkenes forbund, Annex 1, p. 18.Google Scholar
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15 Article 43 of the 1907 Convention, Article 22 of the 1899 Convention.Google Scholar
16 1 League of Nations Treaty Series, 9–13.Google Scholar Cf. a report of a lecture on “Secret Treaties” by MacDonnell, Sir John, in March, 1919.Google Scholar 146 Law Times, 324.Google Scholar
17 It might be argued that because of Article 21 of the Covenant, Article 18 does not apply to “international engagements such as treaties of arbitration or regional understandings like the Monroe Doctrine for securing the maintenance of peace.” But in spite of the language of Article 21, that effect is hardly to be given to it. Cf. Hyde, International Law, II, p. 7, note.Google Scholar
18 It would seem possible, however, that the date of a state’s becoming a member of the League might be taken, wherever this date is later than January 10 1920.
19 Though many of the instruments since registered refer to treaties antedating January 10, 1920, all of them seem to have come into effect in some way subsequently to that date.
20 Moore, John Bassett, “Treaties and Executive Agreements,” 20 Pol. Sci. Quarterly 385, 388.Google Scholar See also Crandall, Treaties, Their Making and Enforcement (2d ed., 1916), p. 7.Google ScholarPubMed On the general classification of international treaties, see Andr$$$a Rapisardi-Mirabelli, “La Classification des Traites Intemationaux,” 4 Revue de Droit International et de Legislation Compared (3 ser.), 653.Google Scholar
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31 11 Treaty Series, p. 465.Google ScholarPubMed
32 8 Treaty Series, p. 372.Google ScholarPubMed
33 11 Treaty Series, p. 387.Google ScholarPubMed
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36 Ibid., p. 108.
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39 13 Treaty Series, p. 333.Google ScholarPubMed
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42 In practice, many engagements have been registered prior to any ratification, but in most cases they are such as do not require ratification. See, however, 26 Treaty Series, p. 21.Google ScholarPubMed
43 This seems to envisage a written text, but an oral treaty seems a possibility. Oppen-heim, International Law (3d ed.), I, 664 note.Google Scholar
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47 Ibid., p. 252.
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52 Speaking in the Council on February 21, 1921, Mr. Balfour (Great Britain) referred to this understanding and stated that it “included a secret and purely technical chapter which could not in the interests of international peace be registered or published.”
53 This is based on Mr. Balfour’s statement in the Council on February 21, 1921, that “the origin of the difficulty which rendered this investigation necessary lay in the defensive treaty recently concluded between France and Belgium.”
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55 Ibid., p. 94.
56 Ibid., p. 160.
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63 The report seems to have been omitted from the Assembly records, but it was published as Doc. C. 256. 1921. V. (A. C. 31.)Google Scholar
64 But see the report presented to the Institute of International Law in August, 1923. 4 Revue de Droit International et de Legislation Compared (3 ser.), 671.Google Scholar
65 Mr. Charles Cheney Hyde has expressed the opinion that Article 18 “did not purport to render invalid a treaty which was not registered with the Secretariat, but rather to cause it to be voidable should a party to the agreement appropriately and in season so elect. Thus an engagement not so registered might be fairly deemed to resemble a contract between private individuals, which although not invalid, is rendered unenforcible through the failure of the parties to heed the requirements of a statute of frauds.” Hyde, International Law, II, p. 7.Google Scholar But considering the purpose of a statute of frauds, perhaps a failure to record a conveyance as required by a statute would be a closer analogy, for the requirement of record is designed to protect third persons.
As to states not parties to the Covenant of the League of Nations, the question may arise whether such states are in any way bound to take notice of the effect of Article 18 in limiting the capacity of members of the League to enter into treaties. If a treaty between the United States and France were not registered, what would an international tribunal say as to its validity? Are non-members bound to take notice of Article 18 in any way? Cf. Mr.Crocker’s, H. G. suggestion in this JOURNAL, vol. 18, p. 43.Google Scholar
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72 Ibid., pp. 841–845.
73 Ibid., p. 852.
74 Provisional Verbatim Record of Second Assembly, 32d Plenary Meeting, pp. 10, 12.Google Scholar
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I
L’article 18, interprété conformement à son esprit, n’interdit pas d’apporter à la régie de l’enregistrement certaines dérogations telles que celles qui ont été provisoirement approuvées par la deuxieme assemblée de la Société des Nations et qui tendent à dispenser de la présentation a l’enregistrement les conventions étrangéres par leur objet aux relations politiques internationales ou qui n’ont pour but que de régler, sans rien modifier, les conditions techniques d’exécution d’un acte déjà enregistré
II
Le défaut d’enregistrement n’affecte pas l’existence d’un traité devenu définitif entre parties par l’accomplissement des formalités diplomatiques requises pour sa perception; il tient simplement en suspens, tant entre les parties, membres toutes deux de la Société des Nations ou liées par les traités de paix, que vis-à-vis de la Société des Nations, la force executoire des engagements conventionnels.
L’enregistrement opére avec effet rétroactif: il rend exigibles toutes les obligations nées du traité depuis le jour où il est devenu définitif ou depuis la date fixée par les Parties pour sa mise en vigueur. (4 Revue de Droit International (3 ser.), p. 671.)Google Scholar
82 A. 8. 1924, p. 4.Google Scholar
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91 Annuaire de I’lnstitut, VII, 285.Google Scholar
92 Annuaire de I’Institut, VIII, 232.Google Scholar
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97 Annuaire de I’Institut, XI, p. 322.Google Scholar
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109 Six indexes have been published: for Volumes 1–3, Volumes 4–7, Volumes 8–11, Volumes 12–15; Volumes 16–19, Volumes 20–23.
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