Pictured: Pierre Laval signing the Franco‐Italian Declaration in a Venetian palace.

Quoting Gaetano Salvemini’s Prelude to World War II, pages 172–7:

Mussolini must have been informed that Laval’s intentions concerning Ethiopia would be good.1 […] Correspondence sent from Addis Ababa to London reported that it was currently believed in French Somaliland that Rome and Paris had reached a secret understanding; Addis Ababa believed one of its many features to be for “Italy to obtain a protectorate over Ethiopia linking Eritrea and Somaliland”; anti‐Italian feeling was running high (DT. 2.135).

[…]

Had an agreement on Ethiopia been arrived at between Rome and Paris let us say, a final agreement?

To be true there were, during November and December 1934, negotiations with the aim of settling all Franco‐Italian differences. Mussolini asked Laval to limit to “Austria’s immediate neighbours”—that is to say, Italy, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia—the right to participate in that Franco‐Italian agreement which would guarantee the independence of Austria from Germany. Rumania would thus have been excluded from the agreement. This would have spelt the end of the Little Entente. Laval refused.

Mussolini backed out, but presented another demand: the pact guaranteeing the independence of Austria should be signed by the “Great Powers”; the smaller Powers, including those of the Little Entente, would be invited to join later. This was no more nor less than a revival of the defunct Four‐Power Pact with the aggravating circumstance that the smaller Powers were asked to acknowledge the discrimination between them and the major Powers. Laval refused.

Mussolini came forward with still another request: the concessions made to [Fascism] in the administration of the French Addis Ababa–Djibuti railway should be broadened. The London Times expressed its astonishment that “so beneficial a settlement” should be obstructed by a “minor difference” (3i.xii.34). But on January 3 there was a “sudden and little‐expected advance in the negotiations” (LI. 3.1.35). That night Laval left for Rome.

An official communiqué stated that complete agreement had been reached, and six documents were published on January 7.

The two Governments would henceforth “co‐operate in a spirit of mutual confidence in the preservation of general peace”; they would consult each other in case of necessity, and follow the procedure established by the Covenant of the League in the event of a dispute, or appeal to the Court of The Hague, or consent to arbitration. They agreed to “recommend” to all States “particularly interested” in the Austrian question a convention for non‐intervention in the internal affairs of Austria and all the neighbouring countries.

[…]

The substance of the agreement if there was a substance lay in the promise made by the Governments of Rome and Paris to act jointly in the Austrian question and to consult each other in the event of Austrian independence being threatened.

In addition, the Governments of Paris and Rome jointly affirmed the principle that no country had the right to increase its armaments by unilateral action, and they pledged themselves to act jointly if this principle were violated. This was a warning to [Berlin]. At the same time, however, they admitted the principle of equal rights for all countries to arm in their own defence. This formula gave Mussolini the loophole he would need to join hands with Hitler in case he wanted to do so.

An end was put to the quarrels arising from the Treaty of London, April 26, 1915, over colonial compensations. The French Government ceded to [Fascism]: (a) a stretch of desert extending from Ghadames to Tummo south‐west of Libya; (b) another still more barren area south of Libya in Tibesti; (c) an equally desolate zone between French Somaliland and Eritrea, along the Red Sea not far from the Strait of Babu’l‐Mandab, with an adjacent islet; and (d) 2,500 of the 34,500 shares of the Addis Ababa–Djibuti railway which belonged to the French Government and which the [Fascist] Government was to buy.

Mussolini, in an interview with the Daily Mail, found the following words to describe his territorial acquisitions in Central Africa:

I got 110,000 square miles (corr. kilometres) of Sahara Desert from the French. Do you know how many inhabitants there are in that desolate area? Sixty‐two. They had to be searched for like a needle in a haystack, and were eventually found tucked away in an isolated valley which happened to have enough water to be cultivable” (19.ix.35).

The Duce was exaggerating. It would appear that there were not sixty‐two but nearly 900 inhabitants in the area. As for the desert of Babu’l‐Mandab and its adjacent islet, “experts” saw great strategic value in these two sites, but nobody took heed of them during the wars of 1935–6 and 1940–41. The 2,500 shares of the Addis Ababa Djibuti railway gave the [Fascists] no effective authority.

In return, [Rome] not only put an end to the hullabaloo about Lake Tchad and French Somaliland, but consented to the abolition of the 1896 Franco‐Italian agreements about Tunisia.

The sons of Italian parents born in Tunisia between March 1945 and 1965 would be free to opt for either French or Italian citizenship; those born would be subject to French legislation after 1955; Italian citizens admitted to the practice of a liberal profession before 1945 would continue to enjoy this right, for the remainder of their lives; but after 1945 any person wishing to practise a liberal profession would have to be a French citizen.

Thus the privileges of the Italians, which heretofore might be subject to abrogation every three months (see above, p. 86), were stabilized for ten years, but the Tunisian question would be liquidated entirely in favour of France in 1945. Meanwhile something might turn up, as Mr. Micawber would say, and [Rome] could always reopen the question.

During the Pétain trial in 1945, Laval stated that high officials in [Rome], in commenting on the concession made by Mussolini in the Tunisian question, had said that “if there had been a Parliament, Mussolini would have been driven out”; when the Rome agreements were announced in Tunisia “the Italian teachers in certain schools had Mussolini’s picture taken down from classroom walls, and placed on the floor so the children should file by and spit on it”. He, Laval, had taken measures to keep the newspapers of Tunisia from publicizing these incidents.

During the same Pétain trial, Laval also asserted that he and Mussolini had agreed to “an outright military alliance”.

This agreement was of capital importance. With Italy an ally of France, a bridge was thrown between France and the countries of Central and Eastern Europe which were allied to us. The agreement presented us with the opportunity to benefit not only from the entire military effort of Italy, but also from the entire military effort of Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Rumania. This will give an idea of the value I attached to good relations between France and Italy. […] Mussolini, even if he did have leanings towards Hitler, was still an Italian who wanted very much to have a buffer between Italy and Germany, and therefore was determined not to allow Germany to seize Austria.”1

During his own trial, Laval again stated that he had planned, “once an agreement had been reached with Italy, to try to work out an agreement with Germany which would guarantee us against war”.

Italy was the corridor which would permit us to rejoin the 100 divisions of the Little Entente armies. Italy was the corridor through Middle Eastern Europe towards Moscow, that is to say, towards the Soviet Army. I put into effect the policy of encirclement.2

This was Laval’s point of view. It was not Mussolini’s. Preventing Germany from increasing her strength through the annexation of Austria was not an exclusive Italian gain. It was a French gain too. Between [Paris] and [Rome] there was a parity of interests in Austria. For the advantages accruing to France from her entente with Italy, [Rome] deserved much more than common resistance to Anschluss, and a number of African deserts.

The fact is that a secret agreement regarding Ethiopia was signed. It was communicated to [London] on January 29 (see below, p.185).1

(Emphasis added. Click here for more.)

Pages 177–8:

What were the contents of the Laval–Mussolini secret agreement?

Paul‐Boncour, to whom Laval showed the shorthand record of the talks held in Rome, says that there was only a question of economic penetration: “but we shall never know what passed between the two statesmen when in the course of the evening they were seen talking privately together in one corner”.2

In the spring of 1935, Badoglio confidentially told Gamelin that Laval had given Italy a free hand in Abyssinia: “in any case, that is what Mussolini had assured him”. Questioned by Gamelin on this point, Léger, who as Secretary‐General of the French Foreign Office had attended the Rome talks, answered that he did not know exactly what Mussolini and Laval had said to each other “in their private conversation”.3

Until such time as all the documents relating to this affair are made public, the historian must perforce proceed on the basis of hypotheses. But [one] will not risk straying far from the truth if [one] adopts the hypothesis that the written agreement of January 1935 between Laval and Mussolini relative to Ethiopia consisted of no more than what diplomats term in French “un protocol de désistement” over everything in Ethiopia except French rights in the Djibuti–Addis Ababa railway.

In addition, there must have been some verbal agreement, a “wink”, the precise significance of which the two cronies are probably still discussing in the other world. At any rate, Mussolini was assured that Laval would keep his hands off [Rome’s] “sphere of influence”.4

The Assistant Chief of Police at that time states that the plainclothes‐men who were among the guests at the reception given by the French embassy in the Farnese Palace, saw Mussolini emerge late at night, “visibly radiant with joy”, from the room in which he and Laval had had a conversation: the agreement on Ethiopia had been concluded.

He aptly remarks that the agreement represented for Mussolini “a kind of endorsement for the Fascist Régime from an old democracy, the cradle of a revolution that had renewed the world”. It was as if “a title of nobility had been conferred on Fascism”.1

While the Rome negotiations were coming to fruition, the King of Italy received the Ethiopian Charge d’Affaires on January 5, and “told him that Italy had no aggressive intentions against his country” (official communiqué of January 6).

Pictured: Pierre Laval and Benito Mussolini reviewing a document, presumably the Franco‐Italian Declaration.


Click here for other events that happened today (January 7).

1932: Governor Zhang Jinghui of Harbin, Heilongjiang Province, declared with support from the Imperialists the secession of Heilongjiang from China to join the collaborationist régime of Manchukuo. Meanwhile, German Chancellor Heinrich Brüning met with Adolf Schicklgruber regarding the upcoming re‐election and President Paul von Hindenburg’s elderhood. Brüning attempted to convince Schicklgruber that they should convince the Reichstag to cancel the election and keep Hindenburg in power, but Schicklgruber secretly considered to challenge Hindenburg in the election.
1935: The League of Nations approved the results of the Saar plebiscite, which allowed Saar to be incorporated into the Third Reich’s borders. Coincidentally, the Empire of Japan’s prototype Ki‐9 trainer aircraft took its first flight.
1937: Erwin Rommel was briefly without a position in the Wehrmacht.
1938: The Empire of Japan lost an A5M2b fighter over Nanchang to the Chinese.
1939: As the Fascists commissioned Scharnhorst into service, Imperial bombers attacked Chongqing, China during the day. Berlin also named SS‐Hauptsturmführer Alexander Piorkowski the Dachau Concentration Camp’s commandant in southern Germany, replacing Hans Loritz.
1940: Vessels of Fascist First Minesweeper Flotilla sank British submarine HMS Seahorse southeast of Helgoland, massacring all thirty‐six of the crew. Fascist minesweepers also counterattacked British submarine HMS Undine, forcing it to dive. In Taranto, the Fascists launched Capitano Tarantini at the Cantieri navali Tosi di Taranto shipyard.
1941: An Axis convoy off of Libya’s coast suffered an Allied assault, and Axis torpedo boats Clio and Castore counterattacked the offending submarine. Axis torpedo boats Kondor and Wolf laid a minefield off Dover, England, but Wolf sank in an Allied minefield north of Dunkirk, France on the way home. Axis submarine Giacomo Nani unsuccessfully assaulted Allied convoy HX.99 south of Iceland. The Allies counterattacked, sinking Nani but leaving all fifty‐eight Italian sailors and officers alive to be rescued and taken prisoner.
1943: A three‐day Axis operation in the Lvov ghetto in Ukraine ended with about ten thousand deaths and the Jewish Council’s disbanding.
1944: The Axis launched U‐1234 at Deutsche Werft Hamburg, but the Axis’s chemical plant at Ludwigshafen suffered an Allied bombing raid.
1945: The Axis’s rail facilities at Euskirchen suffered an Allied bombing raid, and Zero fighters led by Shiochi Sugita killed Allied ace Major Thomas McGuire in low‐level combat while the Reich’s Navy began the first of a series of evacuation convoys between the Gulf of Danzig and the trapped Wehrmacht in Latvia.
1989: Hirohito, Axis Emperor, dropped dead.
2006: Heinrich Harrer, SS sergeant, bit the dust.