Word: schr
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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However, Foreign Minister Gerhard Schröder declared flatly that the new government would not risk straining its ties with the U.S., and later flew to Washington to reaffirm Germany's cautious support for "policies of motion" to ease East-West tensions, to which De Gaulle and Adenauer are both opposed...
...since, there is increasingly widespread apprehension that France's adamantly self-centered policies may have dealt the deathblow to the European Community that was envisaged by its founders. In Brussels last week, at an angry meeting of Common Market foreign ministers, West Germany's Foreign Minister Gerhard Schröder declared flatly that his government is tired of making economic concessions to suit the French, while Germany's dominant interests are imperiled by De Gaulle's foreign policy. West Germany, which relies heavily on foreign trade, is deeply concerned by the Common Market's isolation...
With new national elections due in 1965, it is none too early for the Christian Democrats to start building up a new candidate, whether he turns out to be Vice Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, the fast-rising Foreign Minister Gerhard Schröder, or one of the party's dark horses. As for a Socialist candidate for the chancellorship, Willy Brandt, who was beaten once by Adenauer, was sure to be it again. And Willy was willing. "My work might be more needed elsewhere," he said...
...Market-and that is exactly what frightens other European nations. Belgium's Foreign Minister Paul-Henri Spaak said that only because Britain "stood alone in 1940 is it possible for us to speak today of a Europe that can integrate itself." West Germany's Foreign Minister Gerhard Schröder reasserted his conviction that Britain should be admitted to the Common Market. But Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, fearful of offending his old friend De Gaulle on the eve of a visit to Paris this week, suggested that there was no cause for alarm...
Seeking Support. In preparation for the Brussels meeting, Ted Heath went to Chequers, Macmillan's ministerial estate, spent hours urging his views on West Germany's visiting Foreign Minister Gerhard Schröder, a considerable sympathizer. Then Heath crossed to the Continent to line up additional support for Britain's position. He talked with Belgium's Deputy Foreign Minister Henri Fayat, who wants Britain in the Common Market, and with France's Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville, who faithfully echoed De Gaulle's reluctance to lower the bars for Britain. Macmillan himself will...