Today is the 90th anniversary of Britain’s, France’s, & the Fascists’ Four-Power Pact
Today is the 90th anniversary of Britain’s, France’s, & the Fascists’ Four-Power Pact
The Four‐Power Pact, also known as the Quadripartite Agreement, was an international treaty between Britain, France, Fascist Italy, and the Third Reich that was initialled on 7 June 1933 and signed on 15 July 1933 in the Palazzo Venezia, Rome. This was a form of coordination between four dictatorships of the bourgeoisie against the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
There is a short version, a long version, and the longest version to describe the context behind this pact. The short version, quoting Gaetano Salvemini’s Prelude to World War II, pages 138–9:
It had almost certainly been worked out in London, but the English Ministers allowed [Benito] Mussolini to put it forward. The core of that Pact is to be found in Survey of International Affairs, 1933, p. 209:
“The essence of the plan seems to have been that the four Powers, acting à quatre, could and should do certain things agreeable to Germany and not disagreeable to Italy which France, at any rate, could not be expected to do gladly, and which she probably would never do, or allow to be done at all, if, instead of being placed in a minority of one in an executive committee of four, she continued to play her previous rôle under the existing international régime, in which French policy could count upon holding its own on the Council and Assembly of the League by enlisting the support of a phalanx of smaller Powers.”
[The Soviet Union] was left out in the cold. An agreement among certain Great or self‐styled Great Powers, from which another Great Power is excluded, always arouses the suspicion that it may be directed against the Power which is left out.
In short, the Four‐Power Pact was a Three‐Power Pact between England, Germany, and Italy, who were inviting the fourth partner, France, to break with all her old friends in the east, and to walk into a trap where her three associates would throttle her. The turn of [the Soviet Union] and the smaller European Powers would come later.
Paul‐Boncour, then Prime Minister of France, writes that the Four‐Power Pact was brought to him in Paris “one fine March morning” by [Ramsay] MacDonald and [John] Simon, just back from Rome. Had the French ambassadors in London, Rome, or Berlin, then, never heard of it? Paul‐Boncour adds that [Ramsay] MacDonald seemed “very impressed by Fascism and much taken with Mussolini”.
Page 508:
From the summer of 1936 on, it was clear that [the Soviet Union], if attacked by [the Third Reich], could not count on any help from England, and that Mussolini had gone over to Hitler’s camp. The Four‐Power Pact which the French Government had scotched in 1933 had become a reality. The English Conservatives, who had disannexed the Far East and East Africa from the League of Nations, had now cut off Eastern Europe as well.
(Emphasis added in all cases. Click here for more photographs.)