quently, France possessed no representation on the committee that the government judged of supreme importance to French interests. Armand Bérard, French chargé in Washington, told his interlocutors at the State Department that Paris would read this exclusion as evidence "of a continued refusal to grant France her proper place as a major power in the shaping of the European settlement," for he knew that there were those in the cabinet who were urging France to "abandon any attempts to participate in Allied deliberations and carry out her own policies on a unilateral basis." Averell Harriman, the American ambassador in Moscow, where the Commission was based, came to the same conclusion, seeing French exclusion as likely to encourage ''unilateral action of [an] awkward nature by French authorities," making a unified reparations policy difficult indeed to enforce. 13
|
These were prescient remarks, for with the continued delay in reparations policy, and in light of severe coal shortages in France, French policymakers began to consider such moves in the regions of Germany that France occupied in the spring of 1945. At a gathering of the CEI on May 31, 1945, ministers expressed alarm at the worsening coal situation and anger at Eisenhower's command, Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF), for failing to distribute German coal to needy nations. Robert Lacoste, minister of industrial production, enumerated the consequences of the coal shortage for the recovery of French industry: a retardation of recovery in steel, textile, and mechanical industries; the lowering of national production; and increased domestic dissatisfaction with the government. The French ambassador to Britain, René Massigli, was working to secure French representation on the Reparations Commission, while Monnet was working vainly in Washington to have coal deliveries expedited. 14 "It appears in these circumstances," a memorandum from the Foreign Ministry argued, "in the absence of any decision on an interallied plan to organize restitutions and payments, that it is necessary to draw roll advantage from the occupation by our troops of certain German territories" and organize the transport to France of coal and industrial equipment. 15 The Ministry of Finance concurred: due to dilatory Allied execution of reparations policy, the First Army ought to begin "appropriations" of German goods, "without waiting for the result of diplomatic negotiations." 16 The CEI resolved to issue a forceful memorandum to the Allies asking for French inclusion in the distribution process of Ruhr coal. 17 When the final boundaries of the French zone of occupation were agreed upon, in June, General Pierre Koenig, newly installed as commander in chief there,
|
|