On 26-28 June 1904 the AIA held its founding congress in Amsterdam, with a 12-member delegation from France. ''L'Ennemi du Peuple'' reported that there were 4,500 attendees at the last public meeting, but this is probably an exaggeration. The congress was dominated by anarchists, but also included syndicalists and communists. The question of whether refusal of military service should be AIA strategy was hotly debated. Libertad and Paraf-Javal considered the simple call for desertion as too timid, and refused to participate further. Although technically not linked to the
Confédération Générale du Travail, (CGT), the AIA moved its headquarters into the CGT building and had many of the same members. The AIA was the subject of intense police surveillance. The AIA held a national congress in
Saint-Étienne on 14-16 July 1905, attended by delegates from across France. It was agreed that the AIA was committed to a workers' revolution in the event of war, but that it was neutral on the subject of desertion. After publishing a poster aimed at conscripts, twenty eight members of the AIA were tried on 26–30 December 1905. Twenty six received harsh sentences, including
Gustave Hervé with four years in prison and Miguel Almereyda with three years. Eventually they were pardoned on 14 July 1906. The second AIA congress was held in Amsterdam on 30–31 August 1907. However, by 1907 the organization was in terminal decline in France, with only small groups remaining in the main cities. In September 1907
Le Libertaire called for formation of a new French antimilitarist federation. At a meeting in Paris in October 1907 the secretary-treasurer for greater Paris was expelled for extorting subscription fees, and for rumors that he was being paid by the police. The AIA tried to revive itself in March 1908 under the leadership of Georges Durupt and Gaston Delpech, but was unable to obtain an adequate base of support. Since 1921 organization cooperated with the
War Resisters' International. Organization remained active in the
Netherlands and ceased to exist in 1939. ==Publications==