890E.01/151: Telegram

The Consul at Beirut (Gwynn) to the Secretary of State

306. My 302, August 23, 9 p.m. Under cover of a note dated today General de Gaulle has sent a memorandum containing his remarks on the Department’s 136 of August 21, 4 p.m.51 which in translation reads as follows:

  • “1. General de Gaulle and the French National Committee can only practice war collaboration with the British in the States of the Levant under French mandate if the rights and the position of France there are effectively recognized and respected in practice by their Allies.
  • 2. This irrefutable position in law is furthermore justified by essential reasons of a moral and political order: Firstly, the Fighting French can not consent at any point in the world to an alteration of France’s rights, lacking which the reason for being of their action would be destroyed as regards the French nation and as regards the other states. Secondly, every interference of the British in the French policy in the Levant takes on immediately in the eyes of the local populations and in world opinion the appearance of a rivalry of interests which denatures and compromises the general situation of the Allies in the whole of the Orient and in the world. Thirdly, the participation of France in the war on the side of the Allies and as concerns the future maintenance of France on the side of the democracies in the peace imply that France be treated wholly as an ally by the Allies. Any other formula of collaboration is unacceptable; it would justify the criticisms and insinuations spread abroad by Vichy, by the German propaganda and by that of Germany’s accomplices.
  • 3. But it is a fact in spite of these principles and notwithstanding signed promises the British continually exercise an interference in the political activities of France.
  • 4. They attempt to justify this interference by British military security which however is not distinct from French military security but blended with it. Franco-British military collaboration in the Levant is founded furthermore on bases clearly denned by the Lyttelton–de Gaulle agreements, agreements strictly respected on the French side.
  • 5. The British furthermore attempt also to justify their interventions by invoking promises, guarantees, speeches or programs which emanate only from themselves and bind only themselves.
  • 6. Fighting France is not in the position of a political minority and is capable of understanding alone the extent of its engagements. She makes claim to fulfill them without receiving foreign directives.
  • 7. General de Gaulle, and General Catroux, in the name of the National Committee, have proclaimed the independence of Syria and the Lebanon. They have established governments which, after having accepted the terms of these proclamations, exercise effectively the prerogatives of independence under the sole reserves which the state of war imposes.
  • 8. Such is the fact.
  • 9. There remains to put in place the constitutional mechanics which will regulate the internal policy of the States of the Levant. This putting into place should imply naturally elections in the first place. They will take place as soon as the circumstances of the war permit it, which is presently not the case.
  • 10. In the meanwhile France can not admit that British agents scattered in great number in the Levant should practice, under different pretexts and in different capacities, in the upper ranks or in subordinate posts, interventions which ruin the very possibility of a collaboration.
  • 11. In these conditions General and the French National Committee judge the time come, at the present phase of the war, to clarify this situation.
  • 12. They firmly hope that this settlement may be obtained. In the contrary case there would remain for them but to note with regret the impossibility of a sincere and efficacious collaboration with the British in the Levant and to draw the necessary inferences (en tirer les conséquences).
  • 13. Beirut August 24, 1942.”

Repeated to Cairo.

Gwynn
  1. See footnote 49, p. 619.