Founded 28 August 1991 | ||
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The "Weimar Triangle" is, loosely, a grouping of Poland, Germany, and France. The group is intended to promote co-operation between the three countries in crisis zones. It exists mostly in the form of summit meetings between the leaders of these three countries, the most recent of which occurred on 7 February 2011. Previous meetings took place in Poznań, Poland (1998), Nancy, France (1999), Hambach, Germany (2001) and Nancy, France (2005). The Weimar Triangle also involves lower-level connections, such as the annual meeting between Foreign Ministers.
Contents
- France weimar triangle annual summit
- History
- Summits of foreign ministers
- Summits of heads of state
- Summits of Defence Ministers
- Summits of Ministers of European Affairs
- Joint meetings of the Committees on European Affairs
- References
The most recent leaders' summit was hosted by President Bronisław Komorowski of Poland and attended by President Nicolas Sarkozy (France) and Chancellor Angela Merkel (Germany). Issues of renewing regular Weimar Triangle meetings, the Egyptian situation and improving relations with Russia were discussed (Among other topics). Both Germany and France urged Poland to join the pact for competitiveness.
France weimar triangle annual summit
History
The Weimar Triangle was established in the German city of Weimar in 1991, aimed at assisting Poland's emergence from Communist rule. Attending the meeting were the Foreign Ministers of each state: Roland Dumas of France, Hans-Dietrich Genscher of Germany, and Krzysztof Skubiszewski of Poland. Genscher chose Weimar for the inaugural meeting because it was situated in former East Germany.
At the 1992 meeting of the Weimar Triangle in France, Poland won agreement from Germany and France that it should have special association status at the Western European Union, the European arm of NATO.
On 5 July 2011, Poland, France, and Germany signed an agreement in Brussels to put together a unit of 1,700 soldiers, called the Weimar Battlegroup, that will be ready to deploy in crisis zones starting in 2013. The EU business newsletter reports that Poland will command the group, providing the core combat troops and a mechanised battalion, Germany will provide logistical support, and France will contribute medical support. The operational command centre will be based in Mont Valerien, located in a Paris suburb.
Shortly after the referendum on the status of Crimea held on March 16, 2014, the chairpersons of the Weimar Triangle parliaments’s committees on foreign affairs – Elisabeth Guigou of France, Norbert Röttgen of Germany and Grzegorz Schetyna of Poland – visited Kyiv to express their countries’ firm support of the territorial integrity and the European integration of Ukraine. This was the first time that parliamentarians of the Weimar Triangle had ever made a joint trip to a third country.
In April 2016, Poland’s foreign minister Witold Waszczykowski told daily newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza that the Weimar Triangle had lost its relevance for his country.
On 28 August 2016, representatives of the three countries vowed to "reinvigorate" the Weimar Triangle. German foreign minister Frank-Walther Steinmeier said the group would meet before the end of 2016, and French foreign minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said France would host a summit in November 2016. The stated reasoning for this reinvigoration were the decision of the United Kingdom to leave the European Union, as well as the ongoing European migrant crisis.
Summits of foreign ministers
- 28–29 August 1991 in Weimar, Germany
- 23–24 April 1992 in Bergerac, France
- 11–12 November 1993 in Warsaw, Poland
- 14–15 September 1994 in Bamberg, Germany
- 26 October 1995 in Paris, France
- 19 December 1996 in Warsaw, Poland
- 19 November 1997 in Frankfurt/Oder, Germany
- 6 January 1999 in Paris, France
- 30 August 1999 in Weimar, Germany
- 7 June 2000 in Kraków, Poland
- 16 January 2002 in Paris, France
- 15 May 2004 in Berlin, Germany
- 27 June 2005 in Nancy, France
- 2005 in Warsaw, Poland
- June 2008 in Paris, France
- June 2009 in Weimar, Germany
- 26–27 April 2010 in Bonn, Germany
- 20 May 2011 in Bydgoszcz, Poland
- 29 February 2012 in Berlin, Germany
- 23 June 2012 in Warsaw, Poland
- 31 March-1 April 2014 in Berlin and Weimar, Germany
- 3 April 2015 in Wrocław, Poland
- 28–29 August 2016 in Weimar and Berlin, Germany
Summits of heads of state
- 21 September 1993 in Gdańsk, Poland
- 21 February 1998 in Poznań, Poland
- 7 May 1999 in Nancy, France
- 27 February 2001 in Hambach, Germany.
- 9 May 2003 in Wrocław, Poland. Held a few days before the referendum on the entry of Poland in the European Union.
- 19 May 2005 in Nancy, France
- 5 December 2006 in Mettlach, Germany
- 7 February 2011 in Warsaw, Poland
Summit on 3 July 2006 in Weimar, Germany was postponed due to alleged indisposition of the Polish president Lech Kaczyński.
Summits of Defence Ministers
- 25 July 2006 in Wieliczka, Poland
- 18 December 2007 in Berlin, Germany
In March 2015, Germany’s Minister of Defence Ursula von der Leyen hosted her counterparts Jean-Yves Le Drian of France and Tomasz Siemoniak of Poland to revive a meeting format intended to promote co-operation between the three countries in crisis zones; it was the first meeting between the Weimar Triangle defence ministers since 2007.
Summits of Ministers of European Affairs
- 30 September 2015 in Paris, France
Joint meetings of the Committees on European Affairs
- 14 November 2014 in Berlin, Germany
- 2013 in Gdańsk, Poland
- 2012 in Paris, France