The powers met again in Paris on October 20–23, in an intergovernmental conference followed by a NATO Council meeting, to put the decisions reached in London into formal declarations and protocols to existing treaties. "Protocol No. I Modifying and Completing the Brussels Treaty" formally added West Germany and Italy to the Brussels Treaty, creating the
Western European Union (WEU), which, while not as broad or powerful as the previously proposed EDC, nevertheless was sufficient for the
Deutschlandvertrag to come into force and therefore to end the occupation of West Germany and admit it as an ally in the
Cold War. Altogether there were as many as twelve international agreements signed in Paris. The
Bonn–Paris conventions ended the occupation of West Germany and West Germany obtained "the full authority of a sovereign state" on 5 May 1955 (although "full sovereignty" was not obtained until the
Two Plus Four Agreement in 1990). The treaty allowed Allied troops to remain in the country. An agreement expanded the
Brussels Treaty of 1948 to include West Germany and Italy, creating the
Western European Union. This agreement allowed West Germany to start a limited rearmament program though it banned development of certain weapons, such as large warships. It was signed by the Brussels Treaty countries (Belgium, France, Great Britain, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands) and by West Germany and Italy. Another accord accepted West Germany into the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
Saar status The negotiations on
Saar status, only between France and West Germany, were held on the night before the conference, on 19 October. The territory had been essentially annexed by France after the war as a "protectorate" in an economic, customs and monetary union with France and with a government subordinate to a High Commissioner appointed by the French government. West Germany was keen to prevent further integration of the Saar with France and reincorporate the region into West Germany. France and West Germany negotiated an agreement under which the Saar would become a "European territory" and remain economically tied to France, but required a referendum of Saar residents on the new proposal. The
1955 Saar Statute referendum took place on October 23, 1955 and residents rejected the Paris Agreement proposal by 2-1. This was taken as a sign that residents preferred reunion with Germany. On 27 October 1956 the
Saar Treaty officially made Saarland a state of the Federal Republic of Germany. ==See also==