Franco-Italian Agreement of 1935

Map showing the Aozou strip, the main territorial agreement in the Mussolini-Laval accord

The Franco-Italian Agreement (called often Mussolini-Laval accord) of 7 January 1935 was signed in Rome by the French Foreign Minister Pierre Laval and Italian Prime Minister Benito Mussolini.

History

After the victory in WWI it was agreed that Italy was not going to receive territories from the defeated German colonial empire (that was divided between France and Great Britain) but later some bordering areas from the British and French empires. This fact was felt by the Italians as a very small "compensation" for their sacrifices in the bloody war and was one of the reasons of the rise to power in Italy of Mussolini's fascism. However the British gave soon from their Kenya in 1925 the OltreGiuba to Italian Somalia, but the French delayed some years until the mid 1930s: they accepted -under Laval leadership- only in 1935 to give only a small territory in eastern Africa and a desert area in the French Sahara.

Indeed Pierre Laval succeeded Louis Barthou as Foreign Minister after his assassination in Marseilles at the side of the Alexander I King of Yugoslavia on October 9, 1934. He borrowed from his predecessor the idea of a system of collective security intended to contain the threat of Hitler in Europe. On January 4, 1935, Pierre Laval went to Rome, capital of Fascist Italy, to meet Mussolini. It was the beginning of a diplomatic offensive intended to enclose Adolf Hitler's Germany in a network of alliances.

He proposed a treaty to Benito Mussolini that defined disputed parts of French Somaliland (now Djibouti) as part of Eritrea, redefined the official status of Italians in French-held Tunisia, and essentially gave the Italians a free hand in dealing with the Abyssinia Crisis with Ethiopia.

Italy was also to receive the Aouzou strip which was to be moved from French-ruled Chad to Italian-ruled Libya (this issue would have some implications in World War II and in post-colonial Libya-Chad relations).

In exchange for all these concessions, France hoped (in vain, as it turned out) for Italian support against German aggression.

Map showing the new Italian Eritrea-French Somaliland border as per the Laval-Mussolini Accord of January 1935. The coast of French Somalia was reduced south until the Bab-el-Mandeb strait

The Mussolini-Laval accord was signed as a "law" by the French National Parliament on March 26, 1935 [1] but was never accepted by the Italian Parliament (because judged "minimal", not including anything from French Tunisia, Corsica and Nizza).[2]

Main agreements

The Mussolini-Laval accord had the following main agreements:

Note

  1. 7 janvier 1935 - Accord franco-italien (Laval-Mussolini) (extrait in french)
  2. XXIX Legislatura del Regno d'Italia (in Italian)

Bibliography

See also

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