France: 1
1. For correspondence regarding the invasion of France by Germany and collapse of French resistance, see vol. i , section under Extension of the European War entitled “Invasion of France by Germany and collapse of French resistance.”
Contents
- Maintenance of relations by the United States with the French
Government at Vichy (Documents 462–496)
- Continuation by the United States of Embassy functions in France after
French capitulation to Germany (Documents 497–522)
- Concern of the United States over the disposition of the French Fleet
after the Germans invaded France (Documents 523–564)
- Concern of the United States over the fate of the French possessions
in the Western Hemisphere after the invasion of France by Germany (Documents 565–577)
- Concern of the United States over the disposition of French war
vessels and airplanes in Martinique after the capitulation of France to
Germany (Documents 578–603)
- Consideration of problem of giving food relief to France without
aiding Germany (Documents 604–621)
- Protection of American property interests in France after capitulation
to Germany (Documents 622–628)
- Persecution of Jews by German occupation and Vichy Governments;
representations by the United States on behalf of American Jews (Documents 629–634)
- Interest of the United States in political and economic conditions in
French North Africa (Documents 635–722)
- Assumption of control over French Equatorial Africa by the Free
French; non-committal attitude of the United States (Documents 723–742)
- Efforts by the United States to secure release by France of certain
strategic materials held in Indochina (Documents 743–775)
- Reservations by the United States of its treaty rights with respect to export-import restrictions in French mandated territory