The Paris Peace Conference, 1919, negotiated the treaties ending World War I. The Paris Peace Conference was an international conference, organized by the victors of the World War I for negotiating the peace treaties between the Allied and Associated Powers and their former enemies. ... Missing image Ypres, 1917, in the vicinity of the Battle of Passchendaele. ...
The Paris Peace Conference, 1946, negotiated the Paris Peace Treaties, 1947, with Germany's [[World War II allies and co-belligerents in Europe. This page is about the partial formal conclusion of World War II. For other Paris peace treaties see article Treaty of Paris. ...
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The ParisPeaceConference of 1919 was an international conference, organized by the victors of the World War I for negotiating the peace treaties between the Allied and Associated Powers and their former enemies.
The Parispeace treaties, together with the accords of the Washington Naval Conference of 1921-1922, laid the foundations for the so-called Versailles-Washington system of international relations.
Germany and its former allies were allowed to attend the conference only after the details of all the peace treaties had been elaborated and agreed upon.
At the Council of Foreign Ministers and at the ParisPeaceConference your representatives were a united and harmonious delegation acting under the guidance and instructions of the President of the United States.
The ParisConference recommended by a two-thirds vote that the treaties should ensure freedom of commerce on the Danube on terms of equality to all states.
Under these circumstances the ParisConference provided as adequate an opportunity for the smaller states and the ex-enemy states to express their views on the proposed treaties as it was practical to provide.