Bulgaria had long protested the restrictions placed on armaments at Neuilly, but unlike
Austria,
Germany and
Hungary, it had a good track record of abiding by them. In the 1930s, it began to evade them by buying military equipment from Germany since it was refused orders placed in the
United Kingdom. The Bulgarians argued, with the support of the
United States, that the
League of Nations, which was designed to protect weak and disarmed states, was not powerful enough to protect Bulgaria. In November 1937, when the pace of rearmament had picked up, a British memorandum advised a "blind eye" policy towards it and pressured the Entente and
France to do the same to prevent Bulgaria from falling under the influence of the Italo-German Axis. The British memo specified that Bulgaria was set to violate all the pertinent articles of the treaty: The relevant articles of the treaty are #78, which prohibits fortification of any further places in Bulgaria, #81, which prohibits the importation of arms, munitions, and war materials of all kinds, #82, prohibiting the manufacture and importation into Bulgaria of armoured cars, tanks and any similar machines suitable for use in war, #86, which prohibits the construction or acquisition of any submarine, even for commercial purposes and #89, which prohibits the inclusion in the armed forces of Bulgaria of any military or naval air forces. Turkey strongly opposed Bulgaria's accelerated rearmament in 1934, especially on account of the weakness of the Greek army. By the time of the Salonika Agreement, however, the Greek and Turkish armies had recovered from the
Greco-Turkish War (1919–1922), leaving it to be accepted as a
fait accompli. ==Notes==