the coal-and-steel negotiations." 18 The following day, three highly placed Quai officials, all associates of Monnet Roland de Margerie, Schuman's private secretary Bernard Clappier, and Quai adviser Jacques Bourbon-Busset privately approached Charles Bohlen of the American Embassy and presented him with a scheme for a European army, to be placed under the aegis of NATO, in which Germany would participate. The plan would depend, however, on prior German agreement to the Schuman Plan. The Frenchmen implied that Schuman, Pleven, and René Mayer were in favor of the scheme. Acheson, informed of the idea, was not impressed. The proposal, he said, "postpones any solution for many months." Acheson had fixed his hopes on the October 28 meeting of NATO defense ministers to produce a "workable" plan for German participation in European defense. The French knew, then, that a scheme for a future European army, after the coal and steel pool had been formed, would be poorly received in Washington. 19
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Yet the idea had already been picked up within French policy circles and thoroughly applauded. Armand Bérard made a cogent argument in favor of prompt French action on a European integrated army. The Germans, Bérard believed, would welcome the constitution of a Franco-German force because such an organization would be less provocative to the Russians than a German national army backed and armed by the United States. In their common wish to avoid open hostilities between East and West, the French and Germans could work together to find a European response to their own security problems. But above all, Bérard argued, France must avoid the temptation to remain totally hostile to any discussion of German rearmament. Some form of German military was inevitable; the challenge was to make sure that French views were given careful consideration in the construction of such a force. 20 François Seydoux concurred. France, he wrote in a policy paper, faced two choices: it could either remain inflexible and watch "German rearmament go forward in the framework of German-American relations," or it could accept the inevitability of German rearmament and, indeed, take the initiative on the issue. As Seydoux put it, it was time to "make [France] the champion of a European Army, itself integrated into a unified Atlantic force, placed under French command [sic] and containing German contingents." Seydoux calculated that by accepting the European army concept, France could augment its bargaining power, insist on the size, equipment, and role of these German forces, demand prohibitions against a German general staff, and oblige the Germans to accept the Schuman Plan before the European army came into being.
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