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15 September 1939
Brussels, Belgium
Europe🇧🇪 BESupply ChainPoliticsAllies

Selling to Both Sides

Belgian government, Minister of Foreign Affairs Paul-Henri Spaak

September 1939. Belgium reaffirms its neutrality as soon as war breaks out. But its powerful export industry (coal, steel) traditionally sells to both camps, which are now enemies. London, which is organizing the blockade of Germany, is pressing to reduce Belgian deliveries to Berlin. Berlin warns that any increase in Belgian trade with the Allies would be deemed hostile.

The government must set a rule. Yet the Hague Convention (Article 9) requires a neutral to treat the belligerents equally: a restriction imposed on one must be imposed on the other. But whether to apply this principle strictly or loosely, and the degree of protection given to the domestic supply, remain to be decided.

Each option has a cost: angering an armed neighbor, sacrificing industrial revenue, or finding oneself accused of bias by one of the camps.

In Belgium's neutral government, September 1939: what export policy to hold between the belligerents?

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