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OCR Page 1 of 2OFFICE OF
THE SECRETÁRY OF STATE
DECLASSIFIED
WASHINGTON
Dept. E.O. Guidelines, March 6, 1982
12065, Sec. 3-402
January 17, 1952
State By DEB NLT, Date 4-9-81
SECRET SECURITY INFORMATION
SUMMARY OF TELEGRAMS
FRANCE
Our Ambassador in Paris reports that former Prime
Minister Pleven thinks there is a fifty-fifty chance that
Edgar Faure of the Radical party can succeed in forming a cabinet. As
former Budget Minister Faure is well qualified to tackle the immediate
problems which brought the downfall of the Pleven Government, namely,
the reorganization of the railways and the social security system. Pleven
does not wish and has not promised to take any portfolio in any Govern-
ment which may be formed. He believes he can better use his influence
toward achievement of a European army and political federation goals as
a Deputy in the National Assembly than if bound by coalition obligations
as a member of a Government. Pleven thinks that the European Army
plan will be approved by Parliament along general lines. However, he
points out that eventual ratification in detail will be more difficult than
obtaining general approval in anticipation of the Lisbon meeting. He still
considers a European political federation the most desirable of all
European political projects.
Pleven told our Ambassador that he feels the French
budget problem under present conditions is insoluble since commitments
in Indochina and NATO are beyond the economic and financial capabilities
of the country. In conversations with Bidault and Reynaud the last few days,
both indicated a government should be formed as quickly as possible and
the European army pushed to completion. They agreed, however, that
underlying budget and defense problem with commitments in Indochina and
NATO unsolved will mean that any government will be comparatively short-
lived. Bidault still favors a military program for France which every party
leader except himself thinks is beyond France's financial capabilities. When
pressed as to how it could be supported he has no constructive answer, ex-
cept to express hope that American aid will cover "the necessary gap".
EUROPEAN
The Belgian representative to the European Defense
DEFENSE FORCE
Community conference yesterday expressed to our
Embassy in London optimism at the prospects of reach-
ing an early and generally satisfactory agreement on the EDC. He saw no
reason why the conference could not finish the treaty ad referendum within
SECRET SECURITY INFORMA TION