With Germany and Poland on the brink of a border crisis, the French could no longer sit idly by.
On August 3, 1945, the French Foreign Minister personally traveled to Berlin to propose a peace conference to the German government.
At the same time, the French Envoy to Italy also contacted the Italian Government, advocating that the parties involved in this incident should sit down at the conference table for peaceful negotiations, rather than resorting to the use of force, which no one wanted to see, to obtain the final outcome through bloodshed.
Since the agreed time to attack had not yet arrived, Germany and Italy also planned to see what choice the French would make, so they agreed to the French request for peace talks.
As for Poland, facing the demands from France and Austria, the Poles could not possibly ignore them.