Talk:American Committee on United Europe

the name
As far as I can tell in all official sources the name is "American Committee on Europe", so I'm changing the name back to that, presumably the newspaper article got it wrong.--Stor stark7 Speak 23:14, 12 September 2008 (UTC)

Telegraph conspiracy theories
I've removed a reference to the suggestion that monetary union was pursued by Stealth. It had nothing to do with the subject of the American Committee on United Europe, and the Ambrose Evans-Pritchard misrepresents the wording of the memo in question. The Commission's policy on Monetary Union is made public in 1962, and the commissioner Robert Marjolin announced in March 1965 a policy of coordinating monetary policy to prepare for monetary union. The memo in question is an account of a conversation about what the EEC would have achieved by 1975. In that conversation Marjolin refers to resistance to taking the step to monetary union by the member states which means they are happy to wait until it is 'inescapable'. There is no discussion of stealth.

Critical informations missing
The older version of this article was less white washed and contained more information.--213.142.96.145 (talk) 10:16, 13 September 2022 (UTC)