Secret Diplomatic History
Secret Diplomatic HistoryCHAPTER ICHAPTER IICHAPTER IIICHAPTER IVCHAPTER VCHAPTER VICopyright
Secret Diplomatic History
Karl Marx
CHAPTER I
No. 1. Mr. Rondeau to Horace Walpole."Petersburg,17th August, 1736.[1]" ... I heartily wish ... that the Turks could be brought to
condescend to make the first step, for this Court seems resolved to
hearken to nothing till that is done, to mortify the Porte, that
has on all occasions spoken of the Russians with the greatest
contempt, which the Czarina and her present Ministers cannot bear.
Instead of being obliged to Sir Everard Fawkner and Mr. Thalman
(the former the British, the latter the Dutch Ambassador at
Constantinople), for informing them of the good dispositions of the
Turks, Count Oestermann will not be persuaded that the Porte is
sincere, and seemed very much surprised that they had written to
them (the Russian Cabinet) without order of the King and the
States-General, or without being desired by the Grand Vizier, and
that their letter had not been concerted with the Emperor's
Minister at Constantinople.... I have shown Count Biron and Count
Oestermann the two letters the Grand Vizier has written to the
King, and at the same time told these gentlemen that as there was
in them several hard reflections on this Court, I should not have
communicated them if they had not been so desirous to see them.
Count Biron said that was nothing, for they were used to be treated
in this manner by the Turks. I desired their Excellencies not to
let the Porte know that they had seen these letters, which would
sooner aggravate matters than contribute to make them
up...."No. 2. Sir George Macartney to the Earl of
Sandwich."St. Petersburg,1st (12th) March,
1765."Most Secret.[2]" ... Yesterday M. Panin[3]and the
Vice-Chancellor, together with M. Osten, the Danish Minister,
signed a treaty of alliance between this Court and that of
Copenhagen. By one of the articles, a war with Turkey is made
acasus fœderis; and whenever
that event happens, Denmark binds herself to pay Russia a subsidy
of 500,000 roubles per annum, by quarterly payments. Denmark also,
by a most secret article, promises to disengage herself from all
French connections, demanding only a limited time to endeavour to
obtain the arrears due to her by the Court of France. At all
events, she is immediately to enter into all the views of Russia in
Sweden, and to act entirely, though not openly, with her in that
kingdom. Either I am deceived or M.
Gross[4]has misunderstood his
instructions, when he told your lordship that Russia intended to
stop short, and leave all the burden of Sweden upon England.
However desirous this Court may be that we should pay a large
proportion of every pecuniary engagement, yet, I am assured, she
will always choose to take the lead at Stockholm. Her design, her
ardent wish, is to make a common cause with England and Denmark,
for the total annihilation of the French interest there. This
certainly cannot be done without a considerable expense; but
Russia, at present, does not seem unreasonable enough to expect
that WE SHOULD PAY THE WHOLE. It has been hinted to me that £1,500
per annum, on our part, would be sufficient to support our
interest, and absolutely prevent the French from ever getting at
Stockholm again."The Swedes, highly sensible of, and very much mortified at,
the dependent situation they have been in for many years, are
extremely jealous of every Power that intermeddles in their
affairs, and particularly so of their neighbours the Russians. This
is the reason assigned to me for this Court's desiring that we and
they should act upon SEPARATE bottoms, still preserving between our
respective Ministers a confidence without reserve. That our first
care should be, not to establish a faction under the name of a
Russian or of an English faction; but, as even the wisest men are
imposed upon by a mere name, to endeavour to have OUR friends
distinguished as the friends of liberty and independence. At
present we have a superiority, and the generality of the nation is
persuaded how very ruinous their French connections have been, and,
if continued, how very destructive they will be of their true
interests. M. Panin does by no means desire that the smallest
change should be made in the constitution of
Sweden.[5]He wishes that the royal
authority might be preserved without being augmented, and that the
privileges of the people should be continued without violation. He
was not, however, without his fears of the ambitious and intriguing
spirit of the Queen, but the great ministerial vigilance of Count
Oestermann has now entirely quieted his apprehensions on that
head."By this new alliance with Denmark, and by the success in
Sweden, which this Court has no doubt of, if properly seconded, M.
Panin will, in some measure, have brought to bear his grand scheme
of uniting the Powers of the
North.[6]Nothing, then, will be wanted to
render it entirely perfect, but the conclusion of a treaty alliance
with Great Britain. I am persuaded this Court desires it most
ardently. The Empress has expressed herself more than once, in
terms that marked it strongly. Her ambition is to form, by such an
union, a certain counterpoise to the family
compact,[7]and to disappoint, as much as
possible, all the views of the Courts of Vienna and Versailles,
against which she is irritated with uncommon resentment. I am not,
however, to conceal from your lordship that we can have no hope of
any such alliance, unless we agree, by some secret article, to pay
a subsidy in case of a Turkish war, for no money will be desired
from us, except upon an emergency of that nature. I flatter myself
I have persuaded this Court of the unreasonableness of expecting
any subsidy in time of peace, and that an alliance upon an equal
footing will be more safe and more honourable for both nations. I
can assure your lordship that a Turkish war's being acasus fœderis, inserted either in the
body of the treaty or in a secret article, will be asine quâ nonin every negotiation we
may have to open with this Court. The obstinacy of M. Panin upon
that point is owing to the accident I am going to mention. When the
treaty between the Emperor and the King of Prussia was in
agitation, the Count Bestoucheff, who is a mortal enemy to the
latter, proposed the Turkish clause, persuaded that the King of
Prussia would never submit to it, and flattering himself with the
hopes of blowing up that negotiation by his refusal. But this old
politician, it seemed, was mistaken in his conjecture, for his
Majesty immediately consented to the proposal on condition that
Russia should make no alliance with any other Power but on the same
terms.[8]This is the real fact, and to
confirm it, a few days since, Count Solme, the Prussian Minister,
came to visit me, and told me that if this Court had any intention
of concluding an alliance with ours without such a clause, he had
orders to oppose it in the strongest manner. Hints have been given
me that if Great Britain were less inflexible in that article,
Russia will be less inflexible in the article of export duties in
the Treaty of Commerce, which M. Gross told your lordship this
Court would never depart from. I was assured at the same time, by a
person in the highest degree of confidence with M. Panin, that if
we entered upon the Treaty of Alliance the Treaty of Commerce would
go on with itpassibus æquis;
that then the latter would be entirely taken out of the hands of
the College of Trade, where so many cavils and altercations had
been made, and would be settled only between the Minister and
myself, and that he was sure it would be concluded to our
satisfaction, provided the Turkish clause was admitted into the
Treaty of Alliance. I was told, also, that in case the Spaniards
attacked Portugal, we might have 15,000 Russians in our pay to send
upon that service. I must entreat your lordship on no account to
mention to M. Gross the secret article of the Danish Treaty....
That gentleman, I am afraid, is no well-wisher to
England."[9]No. 3.—Sir James Harris to Lord Grantham."Petersburg, 16 (27 August), 1782."(Private.)" ... On my arrival here I found the Court very different
from what it had been described to me. So far from any partiality
to England, its bearings were entirely French. The King of Prussia
(then in possession of the Empress' ear) was exerting his influence
against us. Count Panin assisted him powerfully; Lacy and Corberon,
the Bourbon Ministers, were artful and intriguing; Prince Potemkin
had been wrought upon by them; and the whole tribe which surrounded
the Empress—the Schuwaloffs, Stroganoffs, and Chernicheffs—were
what they still are,garçons perruquiers de
Paris. Events seconded their endeavours. The
assistance the French affected to afford Russia in settling its
disputes with the Porte, and the two Courts being immediately after
united as mediators at the Peace of Teschen, contributed not a
little to reconcile them to each other. I was, therefore, not
surprised that all my negotiations with Count Panin,from February, 1778, to July, 1779,
should be unsuccessful, as he meant to prevent, not to promote, an
alliance. It was in vain we made concessions to obtain it. He ever
started fresh difficulties; had ever fresh obstacles ready. A very
serious evil resulted, in the meanwhile, from my apparent
confidence in him. He availed himself of it to convey in his
reports to the Empress, not the language I employed, and the
sentiments I actually expressed, but the language and sentiments he
wished I should employ and express. He was equally careful to
conceal her opinions and feelings from me; and while he described
England to her as obstinate, and overbearing, and reserved, he
described the Empress to me as displeased, disgusted, and
indifferent to our concerns; and he was so convinced that, by this
double misrepresentation, he had shut up every avenue of success
that, at the time when I presented to him the Spanish declaration,
he ventured to say to me, ministerially, 'That
Great Britain had, by its own haughty conduct, brought down all its
misfortunes on itself; that they were now at their height; that we
must consent to any concession to obtain peace; and that we could
expect neither assistance from our friends nor forbearance from our
enemies.' I had temper enough not to give way to
my feelings on this occasion.... I applied, without loss of time,
to Prince Potemkin, and, by his means, the Empresscondescendedto see me alone at
Peterhoff. I was so fortunate in this interview, as not only to
efface all bad impressions she had against us, but by stating in
its true light, our situation, and the inseparable interests of
Great Britain and Russia, to raise in her mind a decided resolution
to assist us.This resolution she declared to me
in express words.When this transpired—and Count
Panin was the first who knew it—he became my implacable and
inveterate enemy. He not only thwarted by falsehoods and by a most
undue exertion of his influence my public negotiations, but
employed every means the lowest and most vindictive malice could
suggest to depreciate and injure me personally; and from the very
infamous accusations with which he charged me, had I been prone to
fear, I might have apprehended the most infamous attacks at his
hands. This relentless persecution still continues; it has outlived
his Ministry.Notwithstanding the positive
assurances I had received from the Empress herself, he found means, first to stagger, and afterwards to alter
her resolutions. He was, indeed, very officiously assisted by his
Prussian Majesty, who, at the time, was as much bent on oversetting
our interest as he now seems eager to restore it. I was not,
however, disheartened by this first disappointment, and, by
redoubling my efforts,I have twice more, during
the course of my mission, brought the Empress to the
verge(!)of standing forth our
professed friend, and, each time, myexpectations were grounded on assurances from her own
mouth. The first was whenour
enemies conjured up the armedneutrality;[10]the other when
Minorca was offered her. Although, on the first of these occasions,
I found the same opposition from the same quarter I had experienced
before, yet I am compelled to say that the principal cause of my
failure was attributable to the very awkward manner in which we
replied to the famous neutral declaration of February, 1780. As I
well knew from what quarter the blow would come, I was prepared to
parry it.My opinion was: 'If England feels itself
strong enough to do without Russia, let it reject at once these
new-fangled doctrines; but if its situation is such as to want
assistance, let it yield to the necessity of the hour, recognise
them as far as they relate toRussia
alone,and by a well-timed act of complaisance
insure itself a powerful friend.'[11]My opinion wasnotreceived; an ambiguous and trimming
answer was given;we seemed equally afraid to
accept or dismiss them. I was instructed secretly to oppose, but
avowedly to acquiesce in them, and some
unguarded expressions of one of its then confidential servants,
made use of in speaking to Mr. Simolin, in direct contradiction to
the temperate and cordial language that Minister had heard from
Lord Stormont,irritatedthe
Empress to the last degree, and completed thedislikeandbad
opinionshe entertained of that
Administration.[12]Our enemies took
advantage of thesecircumstances.... I suggested the idea of giving up Minorca to the
Empress,because, as it was evident to me we
should at the peace be compelled to make sacrifices, it seemed to
me wiser to make them to our friends than to our
enemies. The idea was adopted at home in its
whole extent,[13]and nothing could
be more perfectly calculated to the meridian of this Court than the
judicious instructions I received on this occasion from Lord
Stormont. Whythis project failed I am still at a
loss to learn.I never knew the Empress incline so
strongly to any one measure as she did to this, before I had my
full powers to treat, nor was I ever more astonished than when I
found her shrink from her purpose when they arrived.I imputed it at the same time, in my own mind, to therooted aversion she had for our Ministry, and hertotal want of confidence in
them; but I since am more strongly disposed to
believe that she consulted the Emperor (of Austria) on the subject,
and that he not only prevailed on her to decline the offer, but
betrayed the secret to France, and that it thus became public. I
cannot otherwise account for this rapidchange of
sentiment in the Empress, particularly asPrince Potemkin(whatever he might be
in other transactions) was certainly in thiscordial and sincerein his support, and
both from what I saw at the time, and from what has since come to
my knowledge,had its success at heart as much as
myself. You will observe, my lord, thatthe idea of bringing the Empress forward as a friendly
mediatrix went hand-in-hand with the proposed cession of
Minorca. As this idea has given rise to what has
since followed, and involved us in all the dilemmas of the present
mediation, it will be necessary for me to explain what my views
then were, and to exculpate myself from the blame of having placed
my Court in so embarrassing a situation,my wish
and intention was that she should be sole mediatrix without an
adjoint; if you have perused what passed between
her and me, in December, 1780, your lordship will readily perceive
how very potent reasons I had to imagine she would be a friendly
and even a partial one.[14]I knew,
indeed, she was unequal to the task; but I knew, too, how
greatlyher vanitywould be
flattered by this distinction, and was well aware that when once
engaged she would persist, and be inevitably involved in our
quarrel, particularly when it should appear (and appear it would)
that we hadgratifiedher with
Minorca. The annexing to the mediation the other (Austrian)
Imperial Court entirely overthrew this plan. It not only afforded
her a pretence for not keeping her word, but piqued and mortified
her; and it was under this impression that she made over the whole
business to the colleague we had given her, and ordered her
Minister at Vienna to subscribe implicitly to whatever the Court
proposed. Hence all the evils which have since arisen, and hence
those we at this moment experience. I myself could never be brought
to believe that the Court of Vienna, as long as Prince Kaunitz
directs its measures, can mean England any good or France any harm.
It was not with that view that I endeavoured to promote its
influence here, but becauseI found that of
Prussia in constant opposition to me; and
because I thought that if I could by any means smite this, I should
get rid of my greatest obstacle. I was mistaken, and, by a singular
fatality, the Courts of Vienna and Berlin seem never to have agreed
in anything but in the disposition to prejudice us here by
turns.[15]The proposal relative to
Minorca was the last attempt I made to induce the Empress to stand
forth. I had exhausted my strength and resources; the freedom with
which I had spoken in my last interview with her, though
respectful, haddispleased;
andfrom this period to the removal of the late
Administration, I have been reduced to act on
the defensive.... I have had more difficulty in preventing the
Empress from doing harm than I ever had in attempting to engage her
to do us good. It was to prevent evil, that I inclined strongly for
the acceptation ofher single mediation between us
and Holland, when her Imperial Majesty first offered it. Theextreme dissatisfactionshe expressedat our refusaljustified my opinion; and I TOOK UPON ME, when it was
proposed a second time,to urge the necessity of
its being agreed to(ALTHOUGH I KNEW IT TO BE IN
CONTRADICTION OF THE SENTIMENTS OF MY PRINCIPAL), since I firmly
believed, had we again declined it, the Empress would, in amoment of anger, have joined the Dutch
against us. As it is,all has gone on
well; ourjudiciousconduct has transferred to them theill-humourshe originally was in with
us, and she now is as partial to our cause as she was before
partial to theirs.Since the new Ministry in
England, my road has been made smoother; the
great and new path struck out byyour
predecessor,[16]and which you,
my lord, pursue, has operated a most
advantageous change in our favour upon the Continent. Nothing,
indeed, but events which come home to her, will, I believe, ever
induce her Imperial Majesty to take an active part; but there is
now astrong glow of friendshipin our favour; she approves our measures; shetrustsour Ministry, andshe gives way to that predilection she certainly has for
our nation. Our enemies know and feel this; it
keeps them in awe. This is a succinct but accurate sketch of what
has passed at this Court from the day of my arrival at Petersburg
to the present hour. Several inferences may be deduced from
it.[17]