On 6 August 1914, an Anglo-French naval agreement was signed, giving France the leadership of naval operations in the Mediterranean.
Some right-wing militants were upset about the naval agreement that he signed.
Iran and Syria agreed to cooperate on naval training a year ago, and Tehran has no naval agreement with any other country in the region.
With the exception of historical research on naval agreements in the 1920s and 1930s, arms control at sea was neglected until the late 1970s.
In the following year, 1912, a naval agreement was reached with France as the result of a momentous mission-not to France but to Berlin.
The naval agreement "was not based upon an engagement to cooperate in war."
Both his order and Grey's promise to make good the naval agreement with France were contrary to majority Cabinet sentiment.
Instead a naval agreement with France saw Britain agree to safeguard the French north coast in return for France protecting the Mediterranean.
The idea of a naval agreement was felt to be a useful stepping stone to an air pact.
However, in June 1935, the United Kingdom made an independent naval agreement with Germany, easing prior restrictions.