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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
We are living at a time when events move more rapidly than in the past. It is therefore very difficult, even in an article for a review, to sum up the situation, and still more difficult to see even a short distance into the future. This is true for any country, even for those, like the United States and the Soviet Union, which have greater autonomy and greater power in the bipolar world in which we live. But it is probably in the case of France that the task is most difficult of all, for in this country the general problems are complicated by a particular kind of crisis growing out of internal conditions. As I write these lines, it is impossible for me to have the slightest idea as to what French foreign policy will be when the article is published.
* See my article “Franco-German Relations since 1945,” in the Review of Politics, 10, 1952, pp. 501–19.Google Scholar
1 Monteil, M. was excluded from the party in 09, 1954.Google Scholar
2 Le Monde, 09 2, 1954.Google Scholar