No sooner had the French rejected the EDC than the British government moved into high gear. Though a strong current of Schadenfreude ran through the Foreign Office as they beheld France's woes, the temptation to "let the French stew in their own juices" while the Anglo-Americans rearmed Germany was not, in Frank Roberts's view, "practical politics." 70 Mendès France would have to be taken at his word that he was willing to consider a new scheme for German rearmament. While Washington fumed and plotted against the French premier, London called for a meeting of the six EDC powers with the United States, Britain, and Canada. French and British officials resumed their discussions about an "Atlantic" solution to the German problem, namely, German entry into NATO under certain restrictions. Though the precise nature of these restrictions remained to be determined, it was clear that French and British views were converging on a more flexible, balanced, and simpler scheme for German integration with the European powers, one in which Britain could play its natural role as a counterbalance to German preponderance. As the British ambassador to France, Gladwyn Jebb, wrote to London, ''the one thing that could pull a vast majority of the French people together on a solution is one that made them feel that Britain is not merely at their side, but is together with France inside some organization which is smaller than, and especially tighter than, NATO." 71 With the EDC gone, this prospect seemed far more palatable to the British.
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On the weekend of September 5, according to Eden's recollection, the British prime minister, soaking in his Sunday bath, fixed on the novel solution. The Brussels Treaty of 1948 between France, Britain, and the Benelux countries, which Bevin had triumphantly called Western Union, had initially been designed to promote tighter European unity, demonstrate to the Americans that the Europeans were pulling together, and also provide the French some security from Germany. But the pact had been made meaningless by the formation of NATO the following year. Now, Eden believed, if the Italians and Germans could be added to the Brussels Treaty, and some executive powers be granted to it, it might provide the "little NATO" that the French and British were looking for. Here, in nascent form, lay what later analysts would term the "European pillar" of western defense. Best of all, the United Kingdom, already a full Western Union member, could play its full role, as Eden put it, "sharing from within instead of buttressing from without." 72 Despite Eden's claim to paternity, however, it is clear that the Brussels pact solution had also occurred to the French, as Mendès France explained in a telegram to
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