Conference files, lot 60 D 627, CF 398

No. 673
Memorandum of Conversation, by the Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs (Merchant)1

confidential
  • Subject: Saar

Participants:

  • Premier Mendès-France
  • Ambassador Bonnet
  • The Secretary
  • Livingston T. Merchant

The Secretary told M. Mendès-France that since the talk at the White House2 we had given this matter further consideration and that he felt the Premier was entitled to know that our preliminary thinking was to the effect that it would not be possible to give a fresh committal to support the Saar settlement in the Peace Treaty except under the unlikely circumstance that the Germans as well as the French ask for such a committal. He mentioned the fact that provision had been made in TeitgenAdenauer agreement3 last spring for the French to approach us and the British on this subject. Mendès-France pointed out that this had been merely a reservation by the French Delegation of its right to request such a guarantee.

Mendès-France spoke of the delicacy of this matter and the importance of a satisfactory response by us to the ratification by France.

[Page 1487]

The Secretary replied that the scales were so delicately balanced in the matter of the Saar as between France and Germany that we were not disposed to take any action which might be disturbing.

Mendès-France argued that there should be no difficulty for us if we made our committal subject to our support conforming to the wishes of the Saar population as expressed at the time of the peace conference. He also expressed the hope that we might be able to do something after ratification if not before.

The Secretary said that we had not of course fully explored the matter yet but he didn’t want the Premier to be in any doubt as to our thinking. He added that apart from legal and constitutional questions, the controlling consideration in his mind would be the avoidance of any risk of an action on our part being responsible for failure of ratification of the complex of Paris agreements by all the countries.

  1. Presumably this conversation took place in Dulles’ office at 2:40 p.m., preceding the Third Plenary Meeting. For a record of other subjects discussed at this time, see Document 671.
  2. For a record of this opening meeting at the White House on Nov. 18, see Document 669.
  3. Reference is to the agreement signed by Teitgen, head of the French Delegation to the Council of Europe, and Chancellor Adenauer in May 1954, according to which the French and German Governments undertook to settle the Saar question on the basis of the report of Apr. 30, 1954, approved by the General Affairs Committee of the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe. For documentation on this agreement, see vol. vii, Part 2, pp. 1403 ff.