| Bédarida and Rioux, Pierre Mendès France et le mendésisme, and Girault, Pierre Mendés France et le role de la France dans le monde . For a trenchant analysis, see Rioux, The Fourth Republic, 22440.
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| 56. Pierre Saffroy to Quai, June 23, 1954, MAE, Europe 194955, Généralités, vol. 74 * . The French representative in the Hague, Jean-Paul Garnier, received similar messages from the Dutch government (Garnier to Quai, June 29, 1954, same dossier). Minutes of Spaak-Mendès France conversation in Pierre Mendès France, Oeuvres, 3: 9295. Spaak kept U.S. envoy David Bruce closely informed (Bruce to State, June 18 and 21, 1954, FRUS, 195254, 5: 97578).
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| 57. Memorandum of Conversation, Dulles and Eden, June 27, 1954, FRUS, 195254, 5: 985; Memorandum of Conversation, Eisenhower and Churchill, June 27, 1954, ibid., 98587; U.S.-U.K. Secret Minute, June 28, 1954, ibid., 98889. For the views of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, see Memorandum by JCS Chairman Arthur Radford, June 25, 1954, ibid., 99495. Bonnet to Quai, July 23, 1954, DDF 1954, 1619. The British debate on whether German entry into NATO was in fact a good idea may be followed in FO 371 109576, esp. F. Hoyer-Millar (in Bonn) to Foreign Office, June 22, 1954, and Frank Roberts to HoyerMillar, June 23, 1954. Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick, the former high commissioner in Germany who had never been sympathetic to France, thought Britain should give Mendès France until the end of July and then "act promptly and decisively to unfreeze the political situation in Germany and to bring the Treaties [of Paris and Bonn] into force" (Foreign Office to Hoyer-Millar, June 25, 1954). For papers concerning Churchill's visit to Washington, see FO 371 109577.
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| 58. Mendès France to major posts, July 6, 1954, MAE, Europe 194954, Généralités, vol. 74 * ; Memorandum of Conversation, Dulles and Mendès France, July 13, 1954, FRUS, 195254, 5: 101823. Mendès France also felt obliged to counter the claim put forward by Adenauer that all that was required to get the EDC through the parliament was firm leadership; see his letter to André François-Poncet, July 11, 1954, Oeuvres, 3: 11415.
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| 59. Mendès France to major posts, August 8, 1954, DDF 1954, 1012.
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| 60. Churchill to Dulles, August 14, 1954, FRUS, 195254, 5: 103739.
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| 61. Guérin de Beaumont to Mendès France, August 6, 1954, DDF 1954, 9699; Bruce and Dillon to State, August 5, 1954, FRUS, 195254, 5: 102326, and August 13, 1954, ibid., 103336. The resignation from the cabinet of Koenig and another prominent Gaullist, Jacques Chaban-Delmas, on hearing of Mendès France's plans to pursue the existing treaty, did not bode well for this strategy.
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| 62. The roll text is reprinted in L'année politique, 1954, 63235; explanatory note from the Quai, August 13, 1954, DDF 1954, 14750. Mendès France tried to explain his position to Dulles in a letter dated August 17, 1954, in Mendès France, Oeuvres, 3: 23335.
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| 63. Acting Secretary Smith to Dillon, August 16, 1954, FRUS, 195254, 5: 104244. For the response of Benelux, see Sprouse to State, August 16, 1954, ibid., 104142; Garnier to Quai, August 14 and 16, 1954; and Rivière to Quai, August 14 and 16, 1954, MAE, Europe 194955, Généralités, vol. 76 * . The Germans made their opposition clear as well: Haussaire to Quai, August 13,
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