- Franco-Polish Military Alliance
The term Franco-Polish Military Alliance mainly refers to the
military alliance betweenPoland andFrance that was active between 1921 and 1940.Background
Already during the
France-Habsburg rivalry that started in the 16th century, France tried to find allies east ofAustria , namely Poland.Jan III Sobieski allegedly also had the intention to ally with France against Austria, but the threat by theOttoman Empire made him fight for the Christian cause in theBattle of Vienna . In 1795 Poland ceased to exist as a nation with its partition byRussia ,Prussia andAustria , but the EmperorNapoleon I of France recreated a Polish state in theGrand Duchy of Warsaw . With the rise of the unitedGerman Empire , both France and Poland found a new common enemy.Interwar
During the
interwar period it was one of the cornerstones of theFrench foreign policy . Near the end of that period, along with theFranco-British Alliance , it was the basis for creation of theAllies of World War II . During thePolish-Soviet War , France was one of the most active supporters of Poland, and sent theFrench Military Mission to Poland to aid the Polish army.The pact was discussed by Polish Chief of State
Józef Piłsudski andFrench President Alexandre Millerand in early February in Paris and signed there onFebruary 19 ,1921 byPolish Minister of Foreign Affairs CountEustachy Sapieha and his French counterpartAristide Briand , in the background of the negotiations that ended thePolish-Soviet War (Treaty of Riga ). The agreement assumed common foreign policies, promotion of bilateral economical contacts, consultation of new pacts concerning Central and Eastern Europe as well as help in case one of the signataries is attacked. As such it was adefensive alliance . The pact was amendedFebruary 21 ,1921 , with a secret military convention, which precised that the alliance is aimed at all possible threats from bothGermany and theSoviet Union .The alliance was further extended by the "Franco-Polish Warrant Agreement" signed
October 16 ,1925 inLocarno , as part of theLocarno Treaties . The new treaty subscribed all previously-signed Polish-French agreements to the system of mutual pacts of theLeague of Nations .This alliance was closely tied with the
Franco-Czech Alliance . The alliances of France with Poland andCzechoslovakia were aimed at deterring Germany from the use of force to achieve a revision of the postwar settlement or ensuring that German forces would be confronted with significant combined strength of its neighbours. Although Czechoslovakia had a significant economy and industry, and Poland a strong army, the French-Polish-Czechoslovakian triangle never reached its full potential. The Czechoslovakian foreign policy underEdvard Beneš shied however from signing a formal alliance with Poland that would force Czechoslovakia to take sides in the Polish-German territorial disputes. Czechoslovakia's influence was weakened by the doubts of its allies as to the trustworthiness of its army, Poland's influence was in turn undermined by the infighting between supporters and opponents ofJózef Piłsudski . French reluctance to invest in its allies (especially Polish) industry, strengthening trade relations (buying their agricultural products) and sharing military expertise further weakened the alliance.In the 1930's the Franco-Polish alliance remained mostly inactive and its only effect was the
French Military Mission to Poland , which continued to work with the Polish General Staff ever since thePolish-Bolshevik War of 1919-1920. However, with the Nazi threat becoming increasingly visible, in the later part of the decade both countries started to seek new pact, that would not only guarantee the independence of all contracting parties, but would also ensure military cooperation in case of a war with Germany.1939
Finally, a new alliance was signed in 1939. The so-called "
Kasprzycki-Gamelin Convention " signedMay 19 ,1939 inParis (named after thePolish Minister of War Affairs GeneralTadeusz Kasprzycki and the commander of theFrench Army Maurice Gamelin ) obliged both countries to provide military help to each other in case of a war with Nazi Germany. In May Gamelin promised a "bold relief offensive" within three weeks of German's attack. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0521522420&id=4iQQrESpA48C&pg=PA294&lpg=PA294&dq=September+1939+British+promise+to+Poland&sig=k3mZoIIY2irY0S4NAbZib6mMIn8] Later staff talks and consultation between both armies' commands were also included in the treaty. Finally, it was enhanced with a political convention, signed inParis onSeptember 4 ,1939 .Despite all the obligations of the treaties, the alliance was never fulfilled by France, which provided only token help to Poland during the Polish Defensive War of 1939, in the form of the
Saar Offensive . This is often considered an example ofWestern betrayal . However, the political part of it was a basis of recreation of thePolish Army in France in 1939.ee also
*
British-Polish Military Alliance
*Phony War
*Polish Army in France (1940)
*Western betrayal References
*
Andrzej Ajnenkiel , "Polsko-francuski sojusz wojskowy". Akademia Obrony Narodowej,Warsaw , 2000.
*Piotr Stefan Wandycz , "The twilight of French eastern alliances. 1926-1936. French-Czecho-Slovak-Polish relations from Locarno to the remilitarization of the Rheinland.", Princeton University Press, 1988 (republished in 2001). ISBN 1-59740-055-6
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