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Monnet Plan

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This article deals with the 1946–50 plan of the immediate post-war period. For the Monnet plan of 1950, see European Coal and Steel Community.
UK map of the French proposals, created April 1946. The Ruhr Area is to be extended to the Dutch border by incorporating parts of the Rhineland, and the whole new territory shall then be detached from Germany.

The Monnet Plan was proposed by French civil servant Jean Monnet after the end of World War II. It was a reconstruction plan for France that proposed giving France control over the German coal and steel areas of the Ruhr area and Saar and using these resources to bring France to 150% of pre-war industrial production. The plan was adopted by Charles de Gaulle in early 1946. The plan would permanently limit German economic capacity, and greatly increase French power.

Background

The early French plans were concerned with keeping Germany weak and strengthening the French economy at the expense of that of Germany. French foreign policy aimed to dismantle German heavy industry, place the coal rich Ruhr area and Rhineland under French control or at a minimum internationalize them, and also to join the coal-rich Saarland with the iron-rich province of Lorraine (which had been handed over from Germany to France again in 1944).[1] When American diplomats reminded the French of what a devastating effect this would have on the German economy, France's response was to suggest the Germans would just have to "make [the] necessary adjustments" to deal with the inevitable foreign exchange deficit.[1]

Five Year plans

The "Monnet Plan" (1946–1950) was in effect the first five-year plan for modernization and equipment, a plan for national economic reconstruction which drew heavily on earlier French plans to make France the largest steel producer in Europe. Monnet's aim was to modernize the French economy so as to make it internationally competitive, especially versus German exports. To carry out his plans he created the Planning Commissariat (Commissariat général du Plan) and entrenched it in the French bureaucracy. Germany was seen as a necessary tool for carrying out the plans. The planned steel production increases to 15 million tonnes of steel a year could only be achieved by replacing former German steel exports and increasing the imports of German coal and coke, making control of this German resource vital.[2]

French proposals for the area spanned by the German coalfields east of the Rhine had since late 1945, therefore, been to turn it into an International State with its own currency and customs and supervised by an International Authority which would include the US and France. Part of the reason for these proposals was in 1946 explained to the US by a French Foreign Office official: "With the aim of military security we prefer to increase French steel production and output to the detriment of the Ruhr."[2] The French plans for industrial expansion required an additional 1,000,000 workers for 4 years, and France therefore planned on keeping for as long as possible the German prisoners employed in mining, agriculture, and rebuilding.[3]

The UK and the US were generally reluctant to acquiesce to the French demands, since they feared it would lead to increased Soviet influence.[2]

Monnet's memoirs show no hard evidence of an interest in European unity before April 1948, when he realized it was a central US objective.[4] He then wrote to Schumann that to ward off the current dangers there was only one solution; it would "only be possible through the creation of a federation of the west".[4]

French foreign minister Robert Schuman stated in a speech that the Schuman plan in reality was the continuation of the Monnet plan, and that it was solely for the sake of supporting French steel exports that they had taken on that task.[5] According to Professor Dr. Hans Ritschl this speech was never intended to reach German ears.[5]

The Saar Area

100 Saar franken coin

In 1947 France detached the coal-rich Saar area from Germany and turned it into the Saar Protectorate under French economic control. The area returned to German administration on January 1, 1957, but France retained the right to mine from its coal mines until 1981.

As a protectorate, the Saar area was economically integrated with France and nominally politically independent but security and foreign policy was dictated from France. In addition, France maintained a High Commissioner in the Saar with wide-ranging powers.

The mining and steel industries were the main industries in the region. In 1946 France had claimed ownership of the mines, and also introduced a customs-border between the Saar and the rest of Germany. In 1947 the "Regie des Mines de la Sarre" took operative control of the Saar mining industry. During 1946 the output from the mines represented a third of the French coal-production and in 1949 a quarter of the French production. Without the coal from the Saar the French steel production would have been substantially lower.[6]

Parties advocating a return of the Saar to Germany were banned, with the consequence that West Germany did not recognize the democratic legality of the Saar government. Konrad Adenauer stated "The term "protectorate" is too kind. One could rather speak of a 'colony' – but this I will not do." –"Der Name‚ Protektorat' wäre vielleicht noch zu gut. Man könnte eher von einer ‚Kolonie' sprechen – doch das werde ich nicht tun."[7]

In view of continued conflict between Germany and France over the future of the Saarland, efforts were made by the other Western European nations to find a solution to the potentially dangerous problem. Placed under increasing international pressure, France finally agreed to a compromise. The Saar territory was to be Europeanised under the context of the Western European Union. France and Germany agreed in the Paris Agreements that until a peace treaty was signed with Germany, the Saar area would be governed under a "statute" that was to be supervised by a European Commissioner who in turn would be responsible to the Council of Ministers of the Western European Union. The Saarland would however have to remain in economic union with France.[8][9]

Despite the endorsement of the statute by West Germany, in the 1955 referendum amongst the Saarlanders that was needed for it to come into effect the statute was rejected by 67.7% of the population. Despite French pre-referendum assertions that a "no" to the statute would simply result in the Saarland remaining in its previous status as a French-controlled territory, the claim of the campaign group for a "no" to the statute that it would lead to unification with West Germany turned out to be correct. The Saarland was politically reintegrated with West Germany on 1 January 1957, but economic reintegration took many additional years. In return for agreeing to return the Saar, France demanded and gained the following concessions:

  • France was permitted to extract coal from the Warndt coal deposit until 1981.
  • Germany had to agree to the channelisation of the Moselle. This reduced French freight costs in the Lorraine steel industry.
  • Germany had to agree to the teaching of French as the first foreign language in schools in the Saarland. Although no longer binding, the agreement is still in the main followed.[9][10]

As one minor consequence of French efforts to Frenchify the territory, it was alone in the western occupied territories not to accept any refugees from the expulsions of Germans in the Eastern provinces and German settlements elsewhere in Eastern Europe. France did not wish to increase the German-speaking population in the territory.

The Ruhr Area

Map showing details of the French proposal for the detachment of the Ruhr area from Germany.

In September 1946, the US government stated in the Stuttgart speech Restatement of Policy on Germany that it would accept the French demands on the Saarland, but that: "the United States will not support any encroachment on territory which is indisputably German or any division of Germany which is not genuinely desired by the people concerned. So far as the United States is aware the people of the Ruhr Area and the Rhineland desire to remain united with the rest of Germany. And the United States is not going to oppose their desire."

The U.S. was at this point in time becoming more concerned by the risk of West Germany slipping into the communist camp, and a detachment of the Ruhr from Germany was seen as dangerous from that standpoint.

France had since the end of the war, based on the Monnet plan, repeatedly requested that the Ruhr be detached from Germany. Steel production in the Ruhr had resumed despite prohibitions and restrictions on production, and despite dismantling of manufacturing plants. With the preparations for the founding of West Germany, France renewed demands that the German coal and steel production in the Ruhr should be controlled.

In 1949, the International Authority for the Ruhr was imposed on the (West) Germans as a pre-condition for permitting them to establish the Federal Republic of Germany.[11] By controlling the production and distribution of coal and steel (i.e., how much coal and steel the Germans themselves would get), the International Authority for the Ruhr (IAR) in effect controlled the entire West German economy, much to the dismay of the Germans. Ludwig Erhard called the statute a "tragic error", which would have the consequence that "the living standards of the German people would no longer depend on German efforts, diligence and social policies, but would rather be in the hands of the competitors to German industry".[12]

Industrial dismantling in the Ruhr continued also in 1949, with German workers protesting and trying to barricade factories slated for dismantling. The Germans were permitted to send their delegations to the Ruhr authority after signing the Petersberg agreement. The list of industries to be dismantled in the Ruhr was reduced as a consequence of the agreement, but dismantling continued until mid-1950. On November 24, two days after the Petersberg agreement, there was a heated debate in the German parliament as a consequence. Konrad Adenauer argued in defense of the agreement that had he done otherwise then within 8 weeks the industrial dismantling would have reached an unendurable level.[13] The opposition leader Kurt Schumacher responded by labeling Adenauer "Chancellor of the Allies".

In 1951, West Germany agreed to join the European Coal and Steel Community, in order to lift the industrial restrictions imposed by the International Authority for the Ruhr (IAR),[14] thus also ensuring French security by perpetuating French access to Ruhr coal.[15] The activities and rights of the International Authority for the Ruhr were taken over by the European Coal and Steel Community.[16]

See also

References and notes

  1. ^ a b Hrycaj, Andrew (2000). Challenging the United States: French Foreign Policy 1944 - 1948 (PDF) (Thesis). Concordia University. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  2. ^ a b c Alan S. Milward, "The Reconstruction of Western Europe, 1945–51" pp. 97–98
  3. ^ [1] SM Nr. 95/97 Issued by the London Representative of the German Social Democratic Party
  4. ^ a b Alan S. Milward, George Brennan, Federico Romero "The European Rescue of the Nation-state: Second Edition" p.335
  5. ^ a b DER SCHUMANPLAN: DIE NEUE RUHRBEHÖRDE Professor Dr. Hans Ritschl Der Spiegel 1951
  6. ^ Stiftung Demokratie Saarland Dialog 15, S.12
  7. ^ H.-P. Schwarz, Die Ära Adenauer 1949–1957, p.93
  8. ^ Yes or No, Time Magazine Monday, Oct. 17, 1955
  9. ^ a b Bverfg No. 7 E 4, 157 1 BvF 1/55 "Saar Statute" Institute of Global Law, University College London (Google Caché)
  10. ^ The issue of the Saar European NAvigator
  11. ^ Amos Yoder, "The Ruhr Authority and the German Problem", "The Review of Politics", Vol. 17, No. 3 (July 1955), pp. 345–58
  12. ^ Der Spiegel 2/1949
  13. ^ Der Spiegel 49/1949
  14. ^ "No more guns from the Ruhr!". Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2008-07-06.
  15. ^ France Restored: Cold War Diplomacy and the Quest for Leadership in Europe, 1944–1954 Archived 2005-04-27 at the Wayback Machine H-Net Reviews June 2001
  16. ^ Information bulletin Frankfurt, Germany: Office of the US High Commissioner for Germany Office of Public Affairs, Public Relations Division, US Army, January 1952 "Plans for terminating international authority for the Ruhr", pp. 61–62 (main URL)