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France’s deep fears about a future German threat sprang in large part from the elimination of Russia as a factor in the European balance. Indeed, the Russian question was at least as important as the German one and absorbed as much time and worry at the peace conference. After Brest-Litovsk, Anglo-French policy turned sharply anti-Bolshevik, and Clemenceau and Foch worked to build a cordon sanitaire in eastern Europe against German and Bolshevik expansion alike. The Lenin regime also repudiated the tsarist debts to Britain and France (the latter being more delicate since most of it dated from before the war ...(100 of 138320 words)