181. Memorandum From Secretary of State Rusk to President Johnson1
SUBJECT
- Bilateral Negotiations with France on Reentry Rights and Facilities
Ambassador Lucet, in his June 6 talk with Mr. Ball,2 said France is ready to discuss and to conclude an agreement with the United States on the wartime use of facilities in France.
Discussing reentry rights—under what circumstances, with what rights, and into what facilities we can reenter—will enable us to determine whether and to what degree France will agree to reentry provisions that are dependable in crisis and operationally adequate. Such a determination is essential in military planning in order to assess the risk of relying on France. Perhaps more important, it will give the United States and its thirteen allies a gauge to measure the degree, if any, to which the French Government is willing to cooperate in an emergency. Properly handled, it should clarify thinking and unify action.
[Page 423]The normal way to conduct such a negotiation would be to ask the French Government to grant the United States, in case of emergency under Article V of the North Atlantic Treaty, the rights covered in our bilateral agreements in the manner provided therein. This would provide the French with an opportunity, if they desire it, to narrow the rights offered, which this Government can then appraise.
If you concur, I therefore propose to commence conversations with the French on reentry rights and facilities as soon as our representative is prepared; we have consulted with our allies and have coordinated the timing with other negotiations between the fourteen and France and the FRG and France.
Ambassador Bohlen should be our representative to conduct the talks; I plan to call him in to discuss the problems in detail, both with the State and Defense Departments, to instruct him generally in accordance with the attached Memorandum of Guidance, which can of course be modified in light of subsequent developments, and to reinforce him with the necessary experts.
Secretary McNamara has approved both this Memorandum and the enclosed Memorandum for Ambassador Bohlen.
- Source: Department of State, Bohlen Files: Lot 74 D 379, US-Fr Bilateral Discussions. Secret; Nodis.↩
- No further record of this conversation has been found.↩
- Ball signed for Rusk above Rusk’s typed signature.↩
- Secret; Nodis. The source text bears no drafting information.↩
- Document 142.↩
- The history of the Dillon-Bidault Agreement makes clear that the “use” of facilities in France relates only to use for launching air attacks with nuclear weapons. The agreement asked for and given was described as “a U.K.-type of assurance” (i.e., President-Prime Minister exchanges on use of U.K. facilities at which U.S. nuclear weapons are maintained; the U.K. is entitled to be consulted before the U.S. uses such weapons). [Footnote in the source text. The Dillon-Bidault agreement, signed on April 8, 1954, at Paris, confirmed assurances given by the French Government that the use of French bases and installations would, in time of emergency, be a matter for joint decision by the United States and France.]↩
- (1) Chateauroux Depot Agreement of February 27, 1951; (2) Paris Air Bases Agreement of October 4, 1952; (3) United States Military Headquarters Agreement of June 17, 1953; (4) Pipeline Agreement of June 30, 1953; and (5) System of Communications Agreement of December 8, 1958. [Footnote in the source text.]↩