Dunkirk Agreement
Have decided to enter into a contract. According to Marc Trachtenberg, the German threat was a pretext to defend against the USSR. [1] Without prejudice to treaty agreements between all Powers responsible under the Charter of the United Nations for acting vis-à-vis Germany in order to prevent violations by Germany of its obligations in the field of disarmament and demilitarization and, more generally, to ensure that Germany does not again become a threat to peace, the High Contracting Parties shall become High Contracting Parties in the event of a security threat. one of them resulting from the adoption of a policy of aggression by Germany or measures taken by Germany to facilitate such a policy, on reciprocity and, where appropriate, with the other Powers. the agreed measures that are best calculated to end this threat. and the President of the French Republic, desiring to reaffirm, in a treaty of alliance, the cordial friendship and close alliance of interests between the United Kingdom and France; This treaty preceded the 1948 Brussels Treaty (also known as the “Brussels Pact”), which established the Western Union between Belgium, France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom, which became the Western European Union in 1955 after the entry into force of the 1954 Brussels Treaty (also known as the “Modified Brussels Treaty (MBT)”) when Italy and West Germany were incorporated. Subjects: History — Contemporary history (after 1945) The Treaty of Dunkirk, officially called the Treaty of Alliance and Mutual Administrative Assistance, was signed by Great Britain and France in March 1947. As one of the first alliances of the Cold War period, it was a military alliance in the event of a resurgence of German aggression: in the event that one of the two High Contracting Parties was disadvantaged by the non-compliance with an obligation of Germany imposed on it by the capitulation document against an obligation of an economic nature, or would result from a subsequent settlement, the High Contracting Parties would consult each other and, where appropriate, with the other Powers responsible for taking measures against Germany in order to take agreed measures to deal with the situation. . .
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