Word: rearmaments
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Three Tests Ahead. To 1954?5 Man of the Year, to his boss, Dwight Eisenhower, and to the people of the U.S. whose destiny they hold, 1955 will bring three critical tests. The immediate problem is the French reaction to the Paris agreements. Somehow, the rearmament of Germany will begin in 1955, whatever stand France takes. The other two tests facing U.S. foreign policy in 1955 are more serious...
...voiced four, three, two years ago-oblivious to all the new concessions (British troops, Saar settlement) made just for them. In the end, the French Assembly proved again that it is an assemblage of negatives. Men who, by their dedication to EDC, had shown themselves ready to accept German rearmament, now joined the 100 Communists in voting it down...
...still worries Frenchmen, the abstainers can say, 'Don't blame us; we didn't vote for it.' If the Germans behave, the abstainers can contend, 'After all, we didn't stand in the way of the treaties.' " Socialists, pledged to vote for rearmament, began to panic...
...Long Night. At midnight Mendes asked a vote on the treaty provisions which authorized German rearmament and admission to the Western European Union. The M.R.P. demanded a recess. For three hours Mendes confidently sat on the front bench scanning newspapers while the M.R.P. conferred. de Menthon argued for an outright vote against, instead of abstention. Bidault agreed...
These votes will be examined abroad with severity." The M.R.P.'s strategy was clear. Let the Paris accords pass, so that Mendes would get the blame for German rearmament. Make the margin ungraciously thin, so that Mendes would get no glory from it. But Mendes' failure to pose a vote of confidence gave many a Deputy an opportunity to register his dislike of Mendes and the Germans...