French negotiators if they were to secure parliamentary approval of the EDC scheme in final form.
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As this debate raged, Schuman shuttled on" to London to join Acheson, Adenauer, and Eden in a hastily arranged conference to try to resolve outstanding issues between the French and Germans. Schuman, at that very moment under fire in the Assembly, laid out his demands. He wanted definite restrictions on German arms production, including atomic, biological, and chemical weapons, missiles, aircraft, naval vessels, gun barrels, and propellants. He demanded that the Germans abandon their campaign to gain entry into NATO, though he supported close relations between the EDC and NATO. He asked that the Germans give up their objections to French policy in the Saar, a point on which French public opinion was adamant. Finally, he requested a declaration from the United States and Britain guaranteeing their support for the EDC in the event of any threat to it, either from within or without: a means of ensuring that France would never be left alone in Europe, faceto-face with a hostile Germany. Aware of the grave state of Schuman's position in the French government, Acheson, Eden, and even Adenauer proved conciliatory, giving the Frenchman what he needed to stave off a rebellion against his policies within the government. 73
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In an atmosphere of cautious optimism, the four ministers flew to Lisbon, there to be joined by representatives of all the NATO members for the ninth convocation of the North Atlantic Council. The agenda at Lisbon was enormous, as the ministers hoped to agree on the report of the TCC, or "wise men," for financing the NATO rearmament plans. They also sought to determine the size of the German contribution to this effort and planned to adopt a resolution in favor of the European army, a scheme that NATO as a body had not yet endorsed. All of these questions were settled, though not without some acrimony. The French in particular felt that the size of the defense burden they were obliged to undertake, and in particular their growing expenses in Indochina, required $ 600 million in American aid, which they received. Adenauer, after some hesitation, agreed to the TCC's figure of $ 2.6 billion for a German contribution to the cost of NATO rearmament and the occupation. The Council also approved the TCC force goals, which over the next two years proved totally unrealizable: fifty NATO divisions by the end of 1952, including twelve German divisions within the EDC. Finally, NATO proudly endorsed the EDC concept, knowing that at London the United States and Britain had agreed that they would issue a declaration upon the signing of the EDC treaty stating their support for
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