Conference of Ambassadors
The Conference of Ambassadors was a diplomatic body convened in Paris in January 1920 by the principal Allied Powers—Britain, France, Italy, and Japan—to supervise the execution of World War I peace treaties and arbitrate unresolved minor territorial and boundary questions stemming from the Paris Peace Conference of 1919.[1]Composed of the ambassadors of the United Kingdom, Italy, and Japan accredited to France, alongside the French foreign minister acting in lieu of an ambassador, the conference filled a practical gap left by the Allies' Supreme War Council, focusing on pragmatic adjustments rather than broad treaty-making. Its sessions addressed implementation hurdles in Eastern Europe and the Balkans, where ethnic complexities and local conflicts defied the initial settlements of Versailles, Saint-Germain, Trianon, and Neuilly.[2] The conference's key function was to draw definitive frontiers for nascent states, notably delimiting Albania's northern border with the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes in late 1921 amid Yugoslav incursions, thereby stabilizing the region against irredentist pressures.[3] In 1923, it validated Poland's de facto control over Vilna (Vilnius) and adjacent eastern territories, endorsing the Curzon Line adjustments and rejecting Lithuanian claims despite prior League of Nations inquiries, prioritizing ethnographic realities and strategic stability over strict plebiscites.[4] These rulings underscored the conference's realist approach, often favoring stronger powers' effective occupation while invoking treaty mandates, though it avoided direct enforcement, relying instead on Allied moral suasion.[5] Operating until the mid-1930s, it gradually ceded authority to the League of Nations Council as international arbitration mechanisms evolved, yet its decisions shaped interwar Europe's map amid rising revisionism.[6]