Part I
Post-Cold War Pioneer
Chapter 1
A New International
Development Institution
Introduction
Mitterrand’s original proposal for a new institution, the EBRD, to support
the integration of central and eastern Europe into the European and glob-
al economy was endorsed in early December 1989 at the Strasbourg Europe-
an Council by all 12 EC countries. The speed with which leaders decided to
create a new international financial institution was unprecedented in Euro-
pean Council history and reflected the urgency of the situation. There was
no doubt in the minds of the key actors about the potentially grave conse-
quences for Europe of failing to support their eastern neighbours.
A variety of forces lay behind these events. The old certainties of the
Cold War had begun to falter with the arrival of Mikhail Gorbachev as
General Secretary of the Soviet Communist Party in the mid-1980s and his
adoption of a reformist stance through perestroika and glasnost in the So-
viet Union. This was followed by the visible abandonment of the Brezhnev
doctrine and a new-found willingness to allow Soviet satellite states more
independence, quickly built upon by populations eager to catch up with
the West, as well as a more open approach to detente and relations with
western leaders.
In western Europe too it was a moment of internal change. As envis-
aged under the Treaty of Rome, the EC was embarking on the next stage
of integration and had begun to set out concrete steps to achieve econom-
ic and monetary union. Political union was also on the table, under which
lay a schism with the United Kingdom which was to fester and undermine
European unity. Despite this, there was full agreement that the adoption
After the Berlin Wall: A History of the EBRD, Volume 1 by Andrew Kilpatrick