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Aristide Briand.
Aristide
Briand was
born at Nantes,
France, on 28th March, 1862. While a law student he developed socialist
ideas and after leaving university wrote for Le
Peuple, La Lanterne and
Petite République.
Briand,
became secretary-general of the French Socialist
Party in 1901 and the following year was elected to Chamber of Deputies.
In 1904 he joined with Jean Jaurés
to establish the left-wing newspaper, L'Humanité in 1904.
In
1906 Briand was expelled from the party for accepting office in the
coalition government headed by Georges Clemenceau.
As minister of public instruction and worship (1906-09) Briand helped
to complete the separation of Church and State in France.
In July 1909 Briand became prime minister and horrified his former socialist
colleagues when he broke up a railway stoppage by calling up some of
the strikers for military service. Briand further upset the left-wing
by supporting the extension of compulsory military service. He lost
power in November 1910 but returned to office briefly in 1913.
On the outbreak of the First World War Briand
became Justice Minister in the French government headed by Rene
Viviani. A powerful cabinet figure, Briand advocated French intervention
on the Balkan Front and promoted the merits
of the socialist general, Maurice
Sarrail.
In October 1915, the French president, Raymond
Poincare appointed Briand as prime minister. His attempts to establish
political control over the military high command ended in failure and
he was unable to persuade Joseph Joffre,
chief of general staff in the French Army,
to change his tactics on the Western Front.
However, after French losses at Verdun Briand
was able to remove Joffre from power.
Georges
Clemenceau, editor of
L'Homme Libre,
became highly critical of Briand's decision not to persecute pacifists
and his refusal to sack his interior minister, Louis
Malvy, who favoured a negotiated peace.
Briand backed the Nivelle Offensive and
when this failed, the resignation of Hubert
Lyautey in November 1917, brought the government down. Briand was
now replaced by his long-time rival, Georges
Clemenceau, as prime minister.
Briand returned to power in 1921 and as well as being prime minister
(1921-22, 1925-26 and 1929) he was also foreign minister between 1925
and 1932. While in this post he put forward the idea of a European
Federal Union. He gained support from Edouard
Herriot but the idea stimulated little interest and was not taken
up by other political leaders.
Briand
became a great supporter of international pacifism
through the League of Nations. He also championed
Franco-German reconciliation and in 1926 shared the Nobel Peace Prize
with Gustav Stresemann. Two years later
he and Frank. B. Kellogg
signed the Kellogg-Briand Pact (Pact of
Paris). The treaty outlawed war between France
and the United States. The US Senate ratified
it in 1929 and over the next few years forty-six nations signed a similar
agreement committing themselves to peace.
Aristide
Briand died in Paris on 7th March, 1932.

Astride Briand by
Viktor Deni
(1921)
Aristide
Briand: Nobel Prize
Aristide
Briand: Wikipedia
Aristide
Briand: Spartacus
Forum
Debates
War
Propaganda Bureau
Military
Commanders and the First World War
Battle
of the Somme
Aristide
Briand
(1)
Lord
Francis Bertie, the British Ambassador in Paris, wrote to the British
government about the situation in France on 21st February 1917.
Briand, though not popular in the Chamber, and though his conduct
of affairs is much criticized there, manages to keep himself in office,
partly by his Parliamentary skill and his persuasive eloquence, and
owing to the non-existence of a suitable successor, and no combination
of parties constituting a majority in the Chamber being able to agree
on the choice of substitute. Clemenceau, who not very long since was
thought of, has from his continual but unreasoning attacks in his newspaper
on M. Briand and the authorities generally, and his recent defeat in
the Senate, rendered himself impossible. Poincare made advances to him
for a reconciliation but was unsuccessful.
(2)
Aristide
Briand,
speech (7th September, 1929)
Among peoples who are geographically grouped
together like the peoples of Europe there must exist a sort of federal
link. It is this link which I wish to endeavour to establish. Evidently
the association will act mainly in the economic sphere. That is the
most pressing question. But I am sure also that from a political point
of view, and from a social point of view the federal link, without infringing
the sovereignty of any of the nations which might take part in such
as association, could be beneficial.
(3)
Aristide
Briand, Memorandum on the Organisation of a Regime of European Federal
Union (17th May, 1930)
No one doubts today that the lack of cohesion
in the grouping of the
material and
moral forces of Europe constitutes, practically, the most serious obstacle
to the development and efficiency of all political and Juridical institutions
on which it is the tendency to base the first attempts for a universal
organisation of peace. The very action of the League of Nations, the
responsibilities of which are the greater because it is universal might
be exposed in Europe to serious obstacles if such breaking-up of territory
were not offset, as soon as possible, by a bond of solidarity permitting
European nations to at last become conscious of European geographical
unity and to effect, within the framework of the League one of those
regional understandings which the covenant formally recommended.
This means that
the search for a formula of European cooperation in connection with
the League of Nations, far from weakening the authority of this latter
must and can only tend to strengthen it, for it is closely connected
with its aims.
The European organisation
contemplated could not oppose any ethnic group, on other continents
or in Europe itself, outside of the League of Nations, any more than
it could oppose the League of Nations.
The policy of European
union to which the search for a first bond of solidarity
between European Governments ought to tend, implies in fact a conception
absolutely contrary to that which may have determined formerly, in Europe,
the formation of customs unions tending to abolish internal customs
houses in order to erect on the boundaries of the community a more rigorous
barrier against States situated outside of those unions.