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Treaty establishing the European Defence Community

The Treaty establishing the European Defence Community, also known as the Treaty of Paris,[1] is an unratified treaty signed on 27 May 1952 by the six 'inner' countries of European integration: the Benelux countries, France, Italy, and West Germany. The treaty would have created a European Defence Community (EDC), with a unified defence force acting as an autonomous European pillar within the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). The ratification process was completed in the Benelux countries and West Germany, but stranded after the treaty was rejected in the French National Assembly. Instead, the London and Paris Conferences provided for West Germany's accession to NATO and the Western European Union (WEU), the latter of which was a transformed version of the pre-existing Western Union. The historian Odd Arne Westad calls the plan "far too complex to work in practice".[2]

Type

Military pact

24 October 1950

27 May 1952

Never

Ratification by all member states

50 years after entry into effect

6
  •  Belgium
  •  France
  •  West Germany
  •  Italy
  •  Luxembourg
  •  Netherlands

The treaty was initiated by the Pleven plan, proposed in 1950 by then French Prime Minister René Pleven in response to the American call for the rearmament of West Germany. The formation of a pan-European defence architecture, as an alternative to West Germany's proposed accession to NATO, was meant to harness the German military potential in case of conflict with the Soviet bloc. Just as the Schuman Plan was designed to end the risk of Germany having the economic power on its own to make war again, the Pleven Plan and EDC were meant to prevent the military possibility of Germany's making war again.

France: 14 divisions, 750 planes

West Germany: 12 divisions*

Italy: 12 divisions, 450 planes

Benelux: 5 divisions, 600 planes

History of the European Union

Western Union

Western European Union

European Political Community (1952)

(1993–present)

Common Foreign and Security Policy

(ESDI)

European Security and Defence Identity

(1999–present)

European Security and Defence Policy

Treaty of Brussels

European Defence Agency

Fursdon, Edward. The European Defence Community: A History (1980), the standard history

online

Judt, Tony (2005). . Penguin Press. ISBN 978-1-59420-065-6.

Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945

Ruane, Kevin. The Rise and Fall of the European Defence Community: Anglo-American Relations and the Crisis of European Defense, 1950–55 Palgrave, 2000. 252 pp.

Guillen, Pierre. "France and the Defence of Western Europe: From the Brussels Pact (March 1948) to the Pleven Plan (October 1950)." in The Western Security Community: Common Problems and Conflicting Interests during the Foundation Phase of the North Atlantic Alliance, ed. Norbert Wigershaus and Roland G. Foerster (Oxford UP, 1993), pp 125–48.

Van der Harst, J. (2003). The Atlantic Priority: Defence Policy of the Netherlands at the Time of the European Defence Community. Florence: European Press Academic Publishing.  8883980220.

ISBN

Weigall, David (1991). "British perceptions of the European Defence Community". In Stirk, Peter Michael Robert; Willis, David (eds.). Shaping Postwar Europe: European Unity and Disunity, 1945-1957. London: Pinter. pp. 90–99.  0-86187-161-8.

ISBN

Varsori, Antonio (1991). "Italy and the European Defence Community: 1950-54". In Stirk, Peter Michael Robert; Willis, David (eds.). Shaping Postwar Europe: European Unity and Disunity, 1945-1957. London: Pinter. pp. 100–111.  0-86187-161-8.

ISBN

EDC Treaty (unofficial translation) see pg 2

EDC information on European Navigation

EUROPEAN ARMY: De Gaulle's Alternative

[3]

Archival material concerning the EDC can be consulted at the in Florence.

Historical Archives of the European Union