- Spaak Committee
The Spaak Committee was an Intergovernmental Committee set up by the Foreign Ministers of the six Member States of the
European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) as a result of theMessina Conference of1955 . The Spaak Committee started its work on9 July 1955 and ended on20 April 1956 , when the Heads of Delegation of the six Member States of the ECSC approved the Spaak report. The committee worked on two main topics, one was the creation of a general common market and the other one was the establishment of a European Community for the peaceful use of atomic energy.The steering committee was composed of
Paul-Henri Spaak , the six heads of delegation from the ECSC member states and a representative,Russell Bretherton , of theUnited Kingdom . The different committees examined thecommon market ,investment s andsocial issues ,conventional energy ,nuclear energy andpublic transport andpublic works . In addition several highly specialised subcommittees would then be set up, depending on the topics raised, which might relate to eithercustoms ornuclear matters.The common market was the core issue of the committee, although the question of
agriculture also arose. In additiontransportation and conventional energy were also to be dealt with. By November 1955 the focus of the committee was on the establishment of the common market by abolition oftrade barriers ,customs arrangements with third countries,social andfinancial harmonisation and the establishment of commoninstitution s.On
6 September 1955 at theNoordwijk Conference , Spaak presented an interim report. In October1955 the United Kingdom decided to leave the Spaak Committee as the UK opposed a customs union and did not want to submit its atomic research program to Euratom. On25 September 1955 the Treaty of Association between the ECSC and the United Kingdom was already enough for the UK. Russell Bretherton left the committee on7 November 1955 [Michael Maclay, "Historical Notes: Mr Bretherton's retreat from Europe", The Independent, (London), Aug 30, 1999] [Susan Stokes, "Letters: How UK missed out", The Independent, (London), Sep 1, 1999]The Ministers for Foreign Affairs of the ECSC convened in
Brussels on 11 and12 February 1956 to take the final decisions. TheSpaak Report [ [http://aei.pitt.edu/995/ Spaak report] ] was then published in April1956 . The Spaak report was presented to the foreign ministers of the six Member States of the ECSC on21 April 1956 and at the Venice conference one month later.The Spaak report was approved at the
Venice Conference on 29 and30 May 1956 and was used as the basis for discussion in the work of theIntergovernmental Conference on the Common Market and Euratom from July1956 which met at theCastle of the Valley of the Duchess inBrussels . This would lead to theTreaties of Rome being signed in1957 which established theEuropean Economic Community (EEC) and theEuropean Atomic Energy Community (Euratom) among the members of the ECSC.ee also
*
History of the European Union
* BeNeLux memorandum
*Spaak method References
ource
* [http://www.ena.lu/europe/formation-community/spaak-committee.htm The Spaak Committee] (EU)
* [http://www.ena.lu/europe/european-revival-rome-treaties/work-spaak-committee.htm The work of the Spaak Committee] (EU)
* [http://www.ena.lu/europe/relance-europeenne-traites-rome/deniau-position-royaume-uni-bruxelles-1997.htm Interview de Jean-François Deniau: la position du Royaume-Uni] (Brussels, 26 March 1997)
* W. Maas, "The Genesis of European Rights", JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies 43 (5), 1009–1025.
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