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US - FRENCH RELATIONS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   112146


French connection: a new perspective on the end of the Red Line agreement, 1945-1948 / Toprani, Anand   Journal Article
Toprani, Anand Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract For almost twenty years, the so-called Red Line Agreement compelled the members of the multi-national Iraq Petroleum Company (IPC) to operate collectively within the Persian Gulf. In 1946, however, the two American members of the IPC announced that they were acquiring a 40% stake in the American-owned Arabian American Oil Company (ARAMCO), which held the most important oil concession in Saudi Arabia. The French member of the IPC (and by extension, the French Government, which was a major shareholder in the company) strongly protested, but eventually accepted a settlement that abrogated the Red Line Agreement and allowed for the expansion of ARAMCO. Although many studies have analyzed these events as an important episode in the history of the international oil industry, this article examines them within the context of U.S.-French relations and the early Cold War. It argues that the major American oil companies and the U.S. Government expended considerable effort in brokering an amicable settlement, and that the French received more favorable terms than previously assumed.
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2
ID:   131447


With friends like these: John Adams and the Comte de Vergennes on Franco-American relations / Bauer, Jean   Journal Article
Bauer, Jean Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract In the summer of 1780, John Adams and the Comte de Vergennes crossed epistolary swords over America's status in the Franco-American Alliance. Understanding their irreconcilable policies explains how a minor dispute about paper money erupted into a fight over the control of post-war American commerce, which became a battle over the proper deployment of the French Navy in the New World, which led to mutual accusations of betrayal and treason. France thought the United States was its client state, bound to assist France against its enemies, particularly Great Britain. At the same time, American politicians followed the logic of the Model Treaty and "free ships make free goods" to claim America as a neutral state, free to sell its staple agricultural products to whomever offered the best price, including Britain. This difference underlies all the major conflicts of Franco-American relations through the end of the Napoleonic Wars.
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