The accord was the biggest piece of international news in the evening papers in London on the night of 22 August. It was also praised in the press in France and the Little Entente. It was met with anger by Germany. The actual agreement was complicated and incomplete. Although the question of the Hungarian minority in Romania had been resolved earlier that month, the same question with regards to Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia was still open. On three points of dispute, the Hungarians and the Yugoslavs came to an understanding in separate accords that were appended to the general accord and initialed but not signed. A final agreement between Hungary and Czechoslovakia on the minority question remained uninitialed because the latter could not satisfy the former's stronger demands. Czechoslovak Foreign Minister
Kamil Krofta informed the Yugoslavs before the conference that although it was "a case of discrimination [against us]... we wish to contribute to an agreement". The result was that Hungary could come to a general agreement with all three of its neighbours but hold up implementation with respect to the only one that bordered Germany as well: Czechoslovakia. Only Italy saw the agreement for what it was. The Italian foreign minister,
Galeazzo Ciano, remarked that it "marked a new phase in the crumbling of the Little Entente. Czechoslovakia is isolated. The
French system of friendships is completely upset". The Bled conference itself was held without Italy or Austria being consulted and so was in violation of the
Rome Protocols, which had been agreed to by the three powers in 1934, and of their supplementary agreements made during conferences at Rome (20–23 March 1936) and Vienna (11–12 November 1936). (At the latter, Hungary had received recognition that the Little Entente states had an interest in its re-armament.) On 23 August, the Hungarian prime minister,
Béla Imrédy, and foreign minister,
Kálmán Kánya, met their German counterparts,
Adolf Hitler and
Joachim von Ribbentrop, at the naval review in
Kiel. The Germans, especially Ribbentrop, were incensed at the recently published agreement since they were contemplating war against Czechoslovakia. On 25 August in
Berlin, Ribbentrop further pressured Kánya about Hungary's reaction to a German invasion of Czechoslovakia. Kánya suggested that the Bled agreement might be invalidated by making demands on the Entente and that Hungary's armed forces would be prepared to partake in a Czechoslovak conflict as early as 1 October. Hitler told Kánya directly that Hungary, if it wanted to benefit from the
partition of Czechoslovakia, must work towards making that happen: "He who wants to sit at the table must at least help in the kitchen". The Hungarian military would certainly not have been ready to participate in any conflict by October 1, as both governments must have known. ==Hungary's excessive demands==