settlement on the German issue were delayed interminably, the Truman administration's case before Congress for sending American troops to Europe would be dealt a severe blow, and NATO would suffer the consequences. To allow the talks in the NAC to break down would play right into Soviet hands. 27
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Ultimately, therefore, the Soviet proposal had the effect of forcing the Allies to compromise on the German question, for each power realized that before a four-power meeting convened, the position of the Allies would have to be firmly in place to avoid the inevitable Soviet efforts to secure an agreement on a neutral and unified Germany. Toward the end of November, the American deputy to the NAC, Charles Spofford, offered a compromise plan to the French: German "combat teams" of 5,000 to 6,000 men much smaller than the infantry divisions the United States had earlier proposed would be raised and placed into the integrated force under a supreme commander before the political institutions that the French desired had been erected. However, no German general staff would be formed, the German troops would carry no heavy weapons, and the units would be directly controlled by the supreme commander's staff. Moreover, the French effort to build a European army could go forward in future negotiations, and the United States would support this initiative. 28 Pleven, considering whether or not to accept the compromise, sought out Georges Bidault's views. The former prime minister and foreign minister, not then in the cabinet, told him "to take the bull by the horns" and accept the plan. "What we don't want is the Wehrmacht," he said, "but what we do want is to be defended." 29 In the first week of December, the French, so keen to have American troops in Europe and pleased that the German contribution had been limited to small units, agreed to the plan.
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Ironically, just as the Allies came to terms on the contribution of the Germans to European defense, Chancellor Adenauer stated publicly that he could not agree to the Spofford plan because it did not assure political equality for Germany or guarantee a reevaluation of the Occupation Statute. Adenauer attempted to frame the discussion of rearmament around the question of political evolution and thus make it appear that the Allies were demanding one in exchange for another. To avoid the appearance of begging the Germans to accept the Allied plan, the three occupation powers agreed to begin negotiations with the Germans on the subject so that a public rebuff could be avoided. This could only mean more delay in raising the German troops, an outcome quite satisfactory from the French point of view. As Roland de Margerie noted
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