a future peace treaty might revisit the issue. 61 Despite the firm legal ground on which France stood, the Germans remained profoundly dissatisfied about the status of the Saar. "No Oder-Neisse line in the West!" was the cry of the SPD. 62 Chancellor Adenauer, to mute criticism that he was too submissive to western demands, used the Saar issue to attack French policy toward Germany. During a visit in January 1950 by Schuman to Bonn to try to calm troubled waters, Adenauer launched into a stem condemnation of French policy in the Saar, claiming that if the French did not show flexibility in the creation of a Saar statute, Germany would refuse to join the Council of Europe. Schuman, angered at the tone of both Adenauer and the German press, shot back through his emissaries that if Germany did not join the Council, the entire Petersberg accords would be placed in jeopardy, and this would surely work to Adenauer's disadvantage. Schuman claimed that his policy had the full support of the Allies, and that France would proceed with a statute that reflected French interests. 63
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Although Britain and the United States did not formally object to France's position on the Saar they recognized that France was legally in the right leaders in both countries bemoaned France's timing in opening a new round of negotiations on the Saar just at a time when Adenauer needed strong gestures of support to justify his policy of alignment with the West. 64 Instead, the publication of the Franco-Saar Conventions on March 3, 1950, cast a pall over Franco-German relations, with Adenauer claiming that French policy could place European unity in grave jeopardy. 65 Though France did not alter its policy to suit Adenauer, and in fact Germany joined the Council of Europe anyway in May, the entire affair revealed an undercurrent of hostility in the Paris-Bonn relationship.
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In a further effort to underscore Germany's junior status in Europe, the French sought the reorganization of the NATO alliance in such a way as to enhance French influence while limiting a future German role. All the allies were keen on strengthening the powers of the North Atlantic Council (NAC), the chief decision-making body of NATO, so that it could deal, in a way the OEEC or Council of Europe clearly could not, with the complex problem of rearmament, its economic impact on European recovery, and the future relation of Germany to NATO. The United States favored a stronger NAC, probably including West Germany, but wanted to avoid any weakening of European economic and political institutions. Britain, by contrast, was willing to see the Council emerge as the sole focus of real economic and political power in the
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