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1901 2012
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The Nobel Peace Prize 1961
Dag Hammarskjöld
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Gunnar Jahn*, Chairman of the Nobel Committee
The Nobel
Committee of the Norwegian Parliament has awarded the Peace
Prize for 1961 posthumously to Dag Hammarskjöld.
Dag Hammarskjöld was born in 1905, and prior to his
appointment as Secretary-General to the Secretariat of the
United Nations
in 1953, he had been associated with the administration of his
native Sweden ever since the completion of his education.
He had studied widely, and his knowledge ranged far beyond his
chosen field. His special subject, however, was regarded as
economics, in which he took his doctor's degree in 1934, with a
thesis entitled "Konjunkturspridningen."1 He had by then already obtained
degrees in philology and in law. In 1936 he entered the Swedish
Ministry of Finance, and from 1941 to 1948, he was chairman of
the Board of the Swedish Riksbank. In 1945 he became government
adviser on trade policy and financial policy and in 1947 joined
the Swedish Foreign Office. In 1951 he was appointed a
consultative cabinet minister. But as he himself pointed out, he
was committed to no particular party, and his cabinet appointment
was a professional rather than a political one. In addition to
leading various Swedish financial delegations in negotiations
with other countries - primarily in connection with trade
agreements - he also represented Sweden in UNISCAN2 negotiations and was for a time
vice-chairman of OEEC.3
A brief recapitulation of this kind tells us little about Dag
Hammarskjöld the man; nor does his well-merited reputation
as a person of outstanding intellectual ability shed much light
on his personality. So many men receive this tribute. Those of us
who knew him before he became the Secretary General were also
impressed by this young man's wide knowledge and
indefatigability, as well as by his quiet and unassuming approach
to his administrative duties in the service of his country.
In 1953 he assumed his post as Secretary-General in the United
Nations Secretariat. He had already come into contact with the
United Nations as a member and vice-chairman of the Swedish
delegation to the General Assembly in 1951 and as chairman of the
delegation in 1952. As Secretary-General he succeeded Mr. Trygve
Lie,4 who had not only built up
the United Nations administration and participated in planning
its new building, but had also given the post of
secretary-general a more important and independent position
within the United Nations than had probably been originally
envisaged. In other words, he took over an office which had
already been given form and an administrative apparatus which had
acquired a certain amount of tradition.
There is no doubt that in accepting this high office Dag
Hammarskjöld fully realized that the years ahead would not
prove easy. He was all too familiar with the difficulties Trygve
Lie had encountered to have any illusions on that score. Fully
aware of the magnitude and complexity of his task, he devoted
himself to it completely, exerting all his determination and
strength in carrying it out. In a private letter written in 1953
he says: "To know that the goal is so significant that everything
else must be set aside gives a great sense of liberation and
makes one indifferent to anything that may happen to
oneself."
It has often been said that from the very first he wished to play
the role of adviser rather than that of politician, or we might
say that he preferred to be the one carrying out what others had
decided rather than the one who made the decision.
As far as I can judge, this appraisal is not correct. From the
beginning, back in 1953, when he outlined the role and activities
of the Secretariat and the secretary-general, he laid down that,
while it is clearly the duty of the Secretariat and of the
Secretary-General to obtain complete and objective information on
the aims and problems of the various member nations, the
secretary-general must personally form an opinion; he must base
it on the rules of the UN
Charter and must never for a moment betray those rules, even
if this means being at variance with members of the UN.
From the very first he placed great importance on the solution of
disputes through the medium of private discussion between
representatives of the individual countries, pursuing what has
come to be known as the "method of quiet diplomacy." There is, of
course, nothing new in this, as informal meetings of this kind
have always been and will always be an important part of the work
necessary to achieve agreement between conflicting views.
Outwardly it may have looked as if he became more and more active
as time went on, but this, I believe, can be ascribed more to the
course of events than to any change in his views. In every
situation with which he was faced he had one goal in mind: to
serve the ideas sponsored by the United Nations. He called
himself an international civil servant, with the emphasis on the
word "international."5 As such he
had only one master, and that was the United Nations.
There can be little doubt that Dag Hammarskjöld achieved a
great deal through the informal meetings he took part in, and
that in these he demonstrated strong personal initiative; yet his
personal contribution was best known to the general public in
cases where attempts to reach agreement between members in the
United Nations had failed, or where the instructions he had
received were not sufficiently clear, and he was compelled
personally to point the way, as we shall see. It is impossible to
mention in detail the many areas in which he intervened and on
which he left his mark during the time he was
Secretary-General.
The first and most important disputes which fell to his lot to
settle arose in the Middle East. The first of these was the
conflict between Israel and the Arab States in 1955. As the
representative of the UN, he succeeded in easing the tension by
negotiating an agreement between each of the parties involved and
the UN, setting up demarcation lines and establishing UN
observation posts. Personally he did not believe that the
relaxation of tension would prove permanent, and he was right in
his surmise.
In the following year, in September of 1956, the conflict that
arose between Great Britain, France, and Egypt, after Egypt had
nationalized the Suez Canal, was submitted to the Security
Council. In October, 1956, Dag Hammarskjöld tried to find a
solution to this dispute through private negotiations conducted
by himself, and it looked as if these would lead to a
satisfactory result. But at the end of October, 1956, Israel
attacked Egypt, and on October 30 the Security Council was called
together to deal with the situation that had arisen. This
meeting, however, proved abortive when France and Great Britain
exercised their veto right to obstruct a resolution calling on
Israel to withdraw her troops. On the next day, October 31,
France and Great Britain launched their attack on Egypt. At the
meeting of the Security Council on October 31, Hammarskjöld
was the first person to speak. In a forthright speech he hinted
that he would resign unless all member states honored their
pledge to abide by all clauses of the Charter.
On October 31 the General Assembly was then convoked, and on
November 1 passed a resolution calling on the parties concerned
to terminate hostilities immediately and requesting the
Secretary-General to keep a close watch on the course of events
and to report on the way in which the resolution was being
implemented. In reality the Secretary-General was thus vested
with far-reaching powers. On November 3 Hammarskjöld was
already able to announce that France and Great Britain were
willing to suspend hostilities, provided that Israel and Egypt
were prepared to accept the establishment of a UN force to ensure
and supervise the suspension of hostilities and subsequently to
prevent the violation of the Egyptian-Israeli border. The result
was that the war was brought to an end, a demarcation line was
fixed, and a UN force was established to guard it.
He also made a major contribution to the solution of a crisis
between Lebanon, Jordan, and the Arab States in 1958. In this,
both the United States and Great Britain were involved.
During these crises, all his qualities were given full scope,
particularly his ability to negotiate and to act swiftly and
firmly; and to Dag Hammarskjöld must go the principal credit
for the fact that all these crises were resolved in the spirit of
the United Nations. A state of peace was established in this
area.6 This was a triumph for the
ideal of peace of which the UN is an expression, and in addition
undoubtedly greatly strengthened the position of the
Secretary-General.
The concept of peace contained in the UN Charter was always to
remain Dag Hammarskjöld's guiding principle in tackling such
problems as that presented by the liberation of the Congo on June
30, 1960.
There is no time to deal here with all the problems confronting
the United Nations in connection with the termination of colonial
rule. I must restrict myself to the role which the United Nations
was to play in the Congo. When the Congo achieved its
independence on June 30, 1960, it was constituted as a unified
state. Kasavubu7 was elected
president and Lumumba8 was made
prime minister. Lumumba had always supported the idea of a
unified Congo.
The new government was faced with a difficult situation: the
administration, which had been in Belgian hands, had broken down;
the army had mutinied; a large proportion of the white population
had fled; Belgian troops had intervened - in part to protect the
white inhabitants; and on July 1, the province of Katanga
declared itself an independent state.
All these factors - the collapse of the administration, the
mutiny of the armed forces, and finally Katanga's secession from
the rest of the Congo form the background for the request made to
the UN by Kasavubu and Lumumba on July 1 for civil assistance and
on July 12 for military aid. In a cable dispatched on July 13,
Lumumba emphasized that UN military assistance was needed to
protect the Congo against an attack by Belgian troops.
Hammarskjöld was in a position to grant the Congo's request
for civil aid without referring the case to the Security Council;
military aid, however, could be given only by decision of the
Security Council, which he summoned on July 13.
This meeting is highly important, for it marks a turning point in
the history of the UN. It was the first time that the UN used
armed force to intervene actively in the solution of a problem
involving the termination of colonial rule. In the resolution
unanimously adopted by the Security Council, Belgium was ordered
to withdraw her troops from Congo territory, and the
Secretary-General was authorized in consultation with the Congo
government to provide whatever military aid proved necessary
until such time as the country's own forces were, in the opinion
of the Congo government, in a position to carry out their
functions.
The military aid made available to the Congo consisted of
contingents from African nations and from neutral Sweden and
Ireland. No troops from the Eastern bloc or from the old colonial
powers were included. The UN force was to function as a
noncombatant peace force; there was to be no intervention in
disputes involving matters of internal policy, and arms were to
be used only in self-defense.
This form of military aid did not meet the expectations of the
Congo government, which had clearly envisaged the expulsion of
Belgian troops by UN forces; whereas the UN's action was taken on
the assumption that Belgium would comply with the order of the
Security Council and withdraw her troops from the Congo.
This Belgium failed to do, despite the fact that a note of July
14 addressed to the Congo government announced that Belgian
troops would be withdrawn to two bases in Katanga as soon as UN
forces had succeeded in establishing law and order.
Thus, during these first few days, UN intervention had not
brought about the result Lumumba had anticipated. The Belgian
troops remained in their bases in Katanga, and fresh Belgian
troops were dispatched to the Congo.
As a consequence, during the period from July 14 to July 20,
1960, Lumumba made some highly unexpected moves. First of all, as
early as July 14 he sent a cable to Khrushchev,9 announcing the possibility of asking
for Russian aid if the Western powers continued their aggression
against the Congo. On July 15 he had already received an
encouraging reply from Khrushchev.
With that, the Congo crisis became a factor in the East-West
conflict, rendering the position of Hammarskjöld and the UN
in the Congo immensely difficult.
As the days and months went by, their position became no easier.
All conceivable obstacles to the success of the UN's Congo
venture seemed to pile up: disagreement among the Congolese
themselves on the question of unified state or confederation, the
support Katanga received from Belgium, Soviet aid to Lumumba, the
dissolution of the central government, the military rule under
Mobutu, the murder of Lumumba, increasingly violent Russian
attacks on Hammarskjöld and UN action. A complete account of
all that occurred cannot be given here; but an examination of the
available documents covering this period will establish that it
was the United Nations alone that worked to realize the
establishment of the Republic of the Congo as an independent
nation, and that the man who above all others deserves the credit
for this is Dag Hammarskjöld.
Time and again, in the Security Council and in the meetings of
the General Assembly, he fought in defense of his policy and
carried the day. He insisted throughout that all aid to the Congo
civil as well as military - must be made available through the
medium of the UN. No vested interests representing any of the
power blocs must be allowed to exert their influence. Is it then
surprising that he was the object of attack, at times from the
West but most often and most violently from the Soviet Union,
whose charges took the form of an assault on the very idea of the
United Nations Organization as a separate power? In the calm and
dignified answer which Dag Hammarskjöld made to the Soviet
leaders, he said that he would remain at his post as long as this
was necessary to defend and strengthen the authority of the
United Nations. And he added: It is not Soviet Russia or any of
the great powers that need the vigilance and protection of the
UN; it is all the others.10
But he was not destined to live long enough to pursue his policy
to its conclusion.
We all know that he perished on his way to a meeting which he
hoped would bring an end to the fighting in the Congo between
Katanga troops and UN forces, which had just broken out during
the attempt to implement the UN resolution of February 21, 1961.
This resolution called on UN military forces to take immediate
steps to prevent a civil war in the Congo, and to use force only
as a last resort. The UN was furthermore enjoined to ensure that
all Belgian and other foreign military, political, and other
advisers not under UN command should be withdrawn
immediately.
Hammarskjöld left for the Congo on September 12, at the
invitation of the Congolese government, to discuss the range and
details of the UN's program of aid to the Congo. When Dag
Hammarskjöld left New York, he knew that the situation in
Katanga was difficult, but it was not until he received Dr.
Linner's report on September 14 that he learned that Katanga
forces and UN troops were fighting one another.11
Attempts to conclude a truce during the first few days of his
visit proved unsuccessful; so Dag Hammarskjöld decided to
establish personal contact with the President of Katanga,
Tshombe;12 his purpose, as he
explained in a message to Tshombe, was to find the means of
settling the immediate conflict in a peaceful manner and thus
open the way to a solution of the Katanga problem within the
framework of the Congolese state.
The meeting never took place. Dag Hammarskjöld's plane
crashed on September 18 on its way to Tshombe. He and all the
others aboard perished.
Then - and not till then - criticism of Hammarskjöld and UN
policy in the Congo was silenced, but during the period from
September 13 to 18, operations in the province of Katanga were
severely criticized, this time in Western quarters, with the
strongest assault coming from certain English Conservative
newspapers.
Dag Hammarskjöld was exposed to criticism and violent,
unrestrained attacks, but he never departed from the path he had
chosen from the very first: the path that was to result in the
UN's developing into an effective and constructive international
organization, capable of giving life to the principles and aims
expressed in the UN Charter, administered by a strong Secretariat
served by men who both felt and acted internationally. The goal
he always strove to attain was to make the UN Charter the one by
which all countries regulated themselves.
Today this goal may seem remote; as we know, it is remote. Dag
Hammarskjöld fully realized this, and in a speech in Chicago
in 1960 he said:
"Working at the edge of the development of human society is to
work on the brink of the unknown. Much of what is done will one
day prove to have been of little avail. That is no excuse for the
failure to act in accordance with our best understanding, in
recognition of its limits but with faith in the ultimate result
of the creative evolution in which it is our privilege to
cooperate."13
His driving force was his belief that goodwill among men and
nations would one day create conditions in which peace would
prevail in the world.
The Nobel Committee of the Norwegian Parliament has today awarded
him the Peace Prize for 1961 posthumously in gratitude for all he
did, for what he achieved, for what he fought for: to create
peace and goodwill among nations and men.
Let us stand in tribute to the memory of Dag
Hammarskjöld.
* Mr. Jahn delivered
this speech on December 10, 1961, in the auditorium of the
University of Oslo, following his presentation of the Peace Prize
for 1960 to Mr. Lutuli. At its conclusion he presented the Peace
Prize for 1961 to Swedish Ambassador Rolf Edberg as
representative of the Hammarskjöld family, five of whose
members were present. The English translation of Mr. Jahn's
speech is, with certain editorial changes made after collation
with the Norwegian text, that published in Les Prix Nobel en
1961, which also contains the Norwegian text.
1. Translated in Richard L.
Miller, Dag Hammarskjöld and Crisis Diplomacy (p.
15), as "Expansion of Market Trends".
2. UNISCAN (United
Kingdom-Scandinavia) was a free trade project of the countries
concerned, promoted in the early 1950s
3. OEEC (Organization for European
Economic Cooperation), established in 1948.
4. Trygve Lie (1896-1968),
Norwegian lawyer and statesman; chief representative of the
Norwegian delegation at the organizing conference of the UN
(1945); chairman of the commission that drafted the Charter;
first UN Secretary-General (1946-1953).
5. See, for example,
Hammarskjöld's lecture, "International Civil Servant in Law
and in Fact" delivered at Oxford University, May 30, 1961, in
Foote, Servant of Peace, pp. 329-349.
6. For details of this and other
conflicts mentioned, see Miller, Dag Hammarskjöld and
Crisis Diplomacy.
7. Joseph Kasavubu (1917?-1969),
African political leader who favored a Congolese federation
rather than a strong central government.
8. Patrice Emergy Lumumba
(1925-1961), African political leader who supported strong
central government, was out of office two months later and
eventually imprisoned in Katanga; killed there in 1961 by parties
still unknown, he was considered a martyr by his followers.
9. Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev
(1894-1971), Russian premier (1958-1964).
10. Joseph Desire Mobutu (1930-
), commander of the Congolese army and "front man of the military
regime (September, 1960-February, 1961) set up after the crisis
precipitated by Lumumba; became president of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo in 1965.
11. After landing in
Leopoldville and being ceremoniously welcomed by Congolese
dignitaries, the laureate went to the home of Sture Linner, head
of the UN mission in the Congo, who gave him his first news of
the fighting that had begun during his flight to Africa.
12. Moise (Kependa) Tshombe
(1919-1969), African political leader whose Opposition to strong
central government resulted in Katanga's secession from the
Democratic Republic of the Congo; signed a cease-fire between
Katanga and UN troops a few days after the plane crash,
dedicating it to Hammarskjöld. Under UN pressure, Katanga
was reintegrated with the Republic in 1963, and Tshombe became
premier of the Republic (1964-1965).
13. These sentences conclude
"The Development of a Constitutional Framework for International
Cooperation", a speech delivered at the dedication ceremonies of
the new buildings of the University of Chicago Law School, May 1,
1960.
From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1951-1970, Editor Frederick W. Haberman, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1972
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1961
MLA style: "The Nobel Peace Prize 1961 - Presentation Speech". Nobelprize.org. 24 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1961/press.html
