into two hostile blocs, a policy that their party had expressly opposed since the end of the war. 75 Bidault marshaled effective arguments in the cabinet in favor of the agreements reached in London. He thought it "the maximum for which we could have hoped." Premier Schuman supported Bidault on this, suggesting that the Ruhr agreement provided France the access to this region that its national and economic security demanded. The MRP ministers stood fast in the face of criticism from Auriol and Interior Minister Jules Moch, who considered the American agenda provocative and reckless. Bidault consistently maintained that France, by abstaining from participating in the deal being offered in London, would not inhibit the United States and Britain from moving ahead with reforms in the bizone, but would simply sacrifice any influence over the future of western Germany. 76
|
If Bidault was opposed by most of the cabinet, he appeared nevertheless to have strong support from within the Foreign Ministry. De Leusse's office put forth a paper on the clear benefits of the zonal agreement that the London negotiators had worked out, again placing the deal in terms of influence over Germany. The Joint Import-Export Agency, for example, would provide France with a capacity to monitor the whole of German commerce, which through the granting of import and export licenses allowed France to continue to manipulate German trade. De Leusse thought that "a purely zonal policy is, by contrast, sterile at the present time, and given the exigencies of the French zone, totally without any future." Similarly, the Office of Economic and Financial Affairs of the Quai, under Hervé Alphand's direction, believed that without some kind of Ruhr agreement, even a limited one, "the distribution of coke, coal, and steel will be left in the hands of Germany . . . and German industry will rapidly recover a margin of superiority with respect to its neighbors. In the place of an equitable division in the common interest will be substituted the caprice of German decisions." Above all, in Alphand's thinking, "the allied powers, without rights in the Ruhr, will be deprived of any effective means to observe German rearmament." Even General Koenig was able to lay aside his Gaullist proclivities and admit that the London accords constituted a reasonable compromise, "advancing 6065 percent of the French position.'' Koenig, moreover, did not think that the Russians would be willing to risk war over an agreement whose implications were chiefly economic rather than military, and he communicated these views to Auriol. 77 Key officials, then, supported the compromises Bidault and Massigli made in London.
|
|