opposed to the French position, and everything is happening as if, in order to make us give in, they will refuse even the most legitimate of our demands." Alphand believed, with some reason, that Clay wanted to block wheat and coal supplies to the French zone to make the French knuckle under. 46 The Americans, of course, claimed that it was not Clay, but the very absence of central administrations that had obstructed deliveries of wheat and coal to the French zone. Yet in using strong-arm tactics, the Americans ensured that Bidault would not back down on the question of central agencies, and that he continued to favor de Gaulle's policy of confrontation over cooperation. 47
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In addition to Byrnes, Bidault had to contend with his Socialist colleagues who, following de Gaulle's departure, pressed their attack on the foreign minister's policies. Just as Philip in the CEI had outlined a more flexible strategy toward Germany, so President Félix Gouin, still feeling his way as the new leader of the government, wanted Bidault to modify his positions. In late January, he appointed, without consulting Bidault, the Socialist Party's patriarch, Léon Blum, to lead the special delegation to the United States to seek financial help for France, a mission whose success could only help his party's prestige, and which Bidault could not openly oppose. In February, Gouin confronted Bidault and demanded modifications on German policy, seeking to strengthen Blum's negotiating position by allowing him the power to bargain with the Americans over Germany in exchange for credits. Bidault could not accept what the chief of protocol at the Quai privately called "the bartering of our future security with a momentary easing of our financial difficulties," and threatened to resign if pressed too hard on Germany. Gouin, propped up by a shaky three-legged coalition, could not afford an open break with the MRP. But Gouin did make a major speech on March 30 at the Socialist Party National Congress, calling for a shift in foreign policy, including an Anglo-French alliance, before a final settlement of the Ruhr issue had been reached. He also thought the "annexationist" policy toward Germany must be abandoned. Nothing so characterized the difficulties of building a coherent strategy for French foreign policy: while Bidault remained inflexible, Gouin, Auriol, Blum, and other Socialists of cabinet rank were in contact with the American ambassador, trying to cut a deal that would enhance the Socialist Party's prestige and undermine the foreign minister, a political rival. In the meantime, the Quai d'Orsay privately derided Blum's "begging visit" to America, the ostensible purpose of which was to secure the means to rebuild this penurious nation. 48
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