The Secret Polish Documents
By Mark Weber
Major
ceremonies were held in 1982 to mark the one hundredth anniversary of the birth
of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. With the exceptions of Washington and Lincoln, he
was glorified and eulogized as no other president in American history. Even
conservative President Ronald Reagan joined the chorus of applause. In early
1983, newspapers and television networks remembered the fiftieth anniversary of
Roosevelt’s inauguration with numerous laudatory tributes.
And
yet, with each passing year more and more new evidence comes to light which
contradicts the glowing image of Roosevelt portrayed by the mass media and
politicians.
Much
has already been written about Roosevelt’s campaign of deception and outright
lies in getting the United States to intervene in the Second World War prior to
the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941. Roosevelt’s aid to
Britain and the Soviet Union in violation of American neutrality and
international law, his acts of war against Germany in the Atlantic in an effort
to provoke a German declaration of war against the United States, his
authorization of a vast „dirty tricks“ campaign against U.S. citizens by
British intelligence agents in violation of the Constitution, and his
provocations and ultimatums against Japan which brought on the attack against
Pearl Harbor – all this is extensively documented and reasonably well known.[1]
Not
so well known is the story of Roosevelt’s enormous responsibility for the
outbreak of the Second World War itself. This essay focuses on Roosevelt’s
secret campaign to provoke war in Europe prior to the outbreak of hostilities
in September 1939. It deals particularly with his efforts to pressure Britain,
France and Poland into war against Germany in 1938 and 1939.
Franklin
Roosevelt not only criminally involved America in a war which had already
engulfed Europe. He bears a grave responsibility before history for the
outbreak of the most destructive war of all time.
This
paper relies heavily on a little-known collection of secret Polish documents
which fell into German hands when Warsaw was captured in September 1939. These
documents clearly establish Roosevelt’s crucial role in bringing on the Second
World War. They also reveal the forces behind the President which pushed for
war.
While
a few historians have quoted sentences and even paragraphs from these
documents, their importance has not been fully appreciated. There are three
reasons for this, I believe. First, for many years their authenticity was not
indisputably established. Second, a complete collection of the documents has
not been available in English. And third, the translation of those documents
which has been available in English until now is deficient and unacceptably
bad.
When
the Germans took Warsaw in late September 1939, they seized a mass of documents
from the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In a letter of 8 April 1983, Dr.
Karl Otto Braun of Munich informed me that the documents were captured by an SS
brigade led by Freiherr von Kuensberg, whom Braun knew personally. In a
surprise attack, the brigade captured the center of Warsaw ahead of the regular
German army. Von Kuensberg told Braun that his men took control of the Polish
Foreign Ministry just as Ministry officials were in the process of burning
incriminating documents. Dr. Braun was an official of the German Foreign Office
between 1938 and 1945.
The
German Foreign Office chose Hans Adolf von Moltke, formerly the Reich’s
Ambassador in Warsaw, to head a special Archive Commission to examine the
collection and sort out those documents which might be suitable for
publication. At the end of March 1940, 16 of these were published in book form
under the title Polnische
Dokumente zur Vorgeschichte des Krieges [„Polish Documents on the Pre-History
of the War“]. The Foreign Office edition was subtitled „German White Book No.
3.“ The book was immediately published in various foreign language editions in
Berlin and some other European capitals. An American edition was published in
New York by Howell, Soskin and Company as The
German White Paper. Historian C. Hartley Grattan contributed a
remarkably cautious and reserved foreword.[2]
The
translation of the documents for the U.S. White
Paper edition was inexcusably bad. Whole sentences and parts of
sentences were missing and portions were grossly mistranslated. H. Keith
Thompson explained to me why this was so during a conversation on 22 March 1983
and in a letter of 13 May 1983. A poor first draft English-language translation
had been prepared in Berlin and sent to America. It was given to George
Sylvester Viereck, a prominent pro-German American publicist and literary
advisor to the German Library of Information in New York City. Thompson knew
Viereck intimately and served as his chief aide and re-writer. Viereck had
hurriedly redrafted the translation from Berlin into more readable prose but
without any opportunity of comparing it to the original Polish text (which he
could not read in any case) or even the official German-language version. In
making stylistic changes for the sake of readability, the meaning of the
original documents was thereby inadvertently distorted.
The
matter was also discussed at a small dinner for Lawrence Dennis hosted by
Thompson at Viereck’s apartment in the Hotel Belleclaire in New York City in
1956. Viereck explained that he had been a highly paid literary consultant to
the German government, responsible for the propaganda effect of publications,
and could not be concerned with the translation groundwork normally done by
clerks. Even the most careful translation of complicated documents is apt to
distort the original meaning, and literary editing is certain to do so, Viereck
said. Thompson agreed with that view.
In
preparing the English-language text for this essay, I have carefully examined
the official German translation and various other translations, and compared
them with facsimiles of the original Polish documents.
Media Sensation
The
German government considered the captured Polish documents to be of tremendous
importance. On Friday, 29 March, the Reich Ministry of Propaganda
confidentially informed the daily press of the reason for releasing the
documents:
These
extraordinary documents, which may be published beginning with the first
edition on Saturday, will create a first-class political sensation, since they
in fact prove the degree of America’s responsibility for the outbreak of the
present war. America’s responsibility must not, of course, be stressed in
commentaries; the documents must be left to speak for themselves, and they
speak clearly enough.
The
Ministry of Propaganda specifically asks that sufficient space be reserved for
the publication of these documents, which is of supreme importance to the Reich
and the German people.
We
inform you in confidence that the purpose of publishing these documents is to
strengthen the American isolationists and to place Roosevelt in an untenable
position, especially in view of the fact that he is standing for re-election.
It is however not at all necessary for us to point Roosevelt’s responsibility;
his enemies in America will take care of that.[3]
The
German Foreign Office made the documents public on Friday, 29 March 1940. In
Berlin, journalists from around the world, including the United States, were
given facsimile copies of the original Polish documents and translations in
German. journalists were permitted to examine the original documents
themselves, along with an enormous pile of other documents from the Polish
Foreign Ministry.
The
release of the documents was an international media sensation. American
newspapers gave the story large front page headline coverage and published
lengthy excerpts from the documents. But the impact was much less than the
German government had hoped for.
Leading
U.S. government officials wasted no time in vehemently denouncing the documents
as not authentic. Secretary of State Cordell Hull stated: „I may say most
emphatically that neither I nor any of my associates in the Department of State
have ever heard of any such conversations as those alleged, nor do we give them
the slightest credence. The statements alleged have not represented in any way
at any time the thought or the policy of the American government.“ William
Bullitt, the U.S. Ambassador to Paris who was particulary incriminated by the
documents, announced: „I have never made to anyone the statements attributed to
me.“ And Count Jerzy Potocki, the Polish Ambassador in Washington whose
confidential reports to Warsaw were the most revealing, declared: „I deny the
allegations attributed to my reports. I never had any conversations with
Ambassador Bullitt on America’s participation in war.“[4]
These
categorical public denials by the highest officials had the effect of almost
completely undercutting the anticipated impact of the documents. It must be
remembered that this was several decades before the experiences of the Vietnam
war and Watergate had taught another generation of Americans to be highly
skeptical of such official denials. In 1940, the vast majority of the American
people trusted their political leaders to tell them the truth.
After
all, if the
documents made public to the world by the German government were in fact
authentic and genuine, it would mean that the great leader of the American democracy
was a man who lied to his own people and broke his own country’s laws, while
the German government told the truth. To accept that would be quite a lot to
expect of any nation, but especially of the trusting American public.
Comment
from Capitol Hill generally echoed the official government view. Senator Key
Pittman, the Democratic Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, called the
documents „unmitigated falsehood designed to create dissension in the United
States.“ Senator Claude Peper, Democrat of Florida, declared: „It’s German
propaganda and shouldn’t affect our policies in the least.“ Only a few were not
impressed with the official denials. Representative Hamilton Fish of New york,
the ranking Republican member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, called
for a Congressional investigation and declared in a radio address: „If these
charges were true, it would constitute a treasonable act. If President
Roosevelt has entered into secret understandings or commitments with foreign
governments to involve us in war, he should be impeached.“[5]
American
newspapers stressed the high-level denials in reporting the release of the
documents. The New York Times headline read: U.S. BRANDS AS FALSE NAZI
DOCUMENTS CHARGING WE FOSTERED WAR IN EUROPE AND PROMISED TO JOIN ALLIES IF
NEEDED. The Baltimore Sun headlined: NAZI DOCUMENTS LAYING WAR BLAME ON U.S.
ARE ASSAILED IN WASHINGTON.[6]
Although
the book of Polish documents was labeled „first series,“ no further volumes
ever appeared. From time to time the German government would make public
additional documents from the Polish archives. These were published in book
form in 1943 along with numerous other documents captured by the Germans from
the French Foreign Ministry and other European archives, under the title Roosevelts Weg in den Krieg:
Geheimdokumente zur Kriegspolitik des Praesidenten der Vereinigten Staaten
[„Roosevelt’s Way Into War: Secret Documents on the War Policy of the President
of the United States“].[7]
A
very important unanswered question is: Where are the original Polish documents
today? Unless they were destroyed in the conflagration of the war, they
presumably fell into either American or Soviet hands in 1945. In view of recent
U.S. government policy on secret archival material, it is very unlikely that
they would still be secret today if they had been acquired by the United
States. My guess is that if they were not destroyed, they are now either in
Moscow or at the East German Central State Archives in Potsdam.
It
is particularly important to keep in mind that these secret reports were
written by top level Polish ambassadors, that is, by men who though not at all
friendly to Germany nonetheless understood the realities of European Politics far better than those who made
policy in the United States.
For
example, the Polish ambassadors realized that behind all their rhetoric about
democracy and human rights, and expressions of love for the United States, the
Jews who agitated for war against Germany were actually doing nothing other
than ruthlessly furthering their own purely sectarian interests. Many centuries
of experience in living closely with the Jews had made the Poles far more aware
than most nationalities of the special character of this people.
The
Poles viewed the Munich Settlement of 1938 very differently than did Roosevelt
and his circle. The President bitterly attacked the Munich agreement, which
gave self-determination to the three and a half million Germans of
Czechoslovakia and settled a major European crisis, as a shameful and
humiliating capitulation to German blackmail. Although wary of German might,
the Polish government supported the Munich agreement, in part because a small
Polish territory which had been a part of Czechoslovakia against the wishes of
its inhabitants was united with Poland as a result of the Settlement.
The
Polish envoys held the makers of American foreign policy in something
approaching contempt. President Roosevelt was considered a master political
artist who knew how to mold American public opinion, but very little about the
true state of affairs in Europe. As Poland’s Ambassador to Washington
emphasized in his reports to Warsaw, Roosevelt pushed America into war in order
to distract attention from his failures as President in domestic policy.
It
is beyond the scope of this paper to go into the complexities of German-Polish
relations between 1933 and 1939 and the reasons for the German attack against
Poland at dawn on the first day of September 1939. However, it should be noted
that Poland had refused to even negotiate over self-determination for the
German city of Danzig and the ethnic German minority in the so-called Polish
Corridor. Hitler felt compelled to resort to arms when he did in response to a
growing Polish campaign of terror and dispossession against the one and a half
million ethnic Germans under Polish rule. In my view, if ever a military action
was justified, it was the German campaign against Poland in 1939.
Poland’s
headstrong refusal to negotiate was made possible because of a fateful blank
check guarantee of military backing from Britain – a pledge that ultimately
proved completely worthless to the hapless Poles. Considering the lightning
swiftness of the victorious German campaign, it is difficult to realize today
that the Polish government did not at all fear war with Germany. Poland’s
leaders foolishly believed that German might was only an illusion. They were
convinced that their troops would occupy Berlin itself within a few weeks and
add further German territories to an enlarged Polish state. It is also
important to keep in mind that the purely localized conflict between Germany
and Poland was only transformed into a Europe-wide conflagration by the British
and French declarations of war against Germany.
After
the war the Allied-appointed judges at the International Military Tribunal
staged at Nuremberg refused to admit the Polish documents as evidence for the
German defense. Had these pieces of evidence been admitted, the Nuremberg
undertaking might have been less a victors’ show trial and more a genuinely
impartial court of international justice.
Authenticity Beyond Doubt
There
is now absolutely no question that the documents from the Polish Foreign
Ministry in Warsaw made public by the German government are genuine and
authentic.
Charles
C. Tansill, professor of American diplomatic history at Georgetown University,
considered them genuine. „… I had a long conversation with M. Lipsky, the
Polish ambassador in Berlin in the prewar years, and he assured me that the
documents in the German
White Paper are authentic,“ he wrote.[8] Historian and sociologist Harry Elmer Barnes
confirmed this assessment: „Both Professor Tansill and myself have
independently established the thorough authenticity of these documents.“[9]
In America’s Second
Crusade, William H. Chamberlain reported: „I have been privately
informed by an extremely reliable source that Potocki, now residing in South
America, confirmed the accuracy of the documents, so far as he was concerned.“[10]
More
importantly, Edward Raczynski, the Polish Ambassador in London from 1934 to
1945, confirmed the authenticity of the documents in his diary, which was
published in 1963 under the title In Allied London. In his entry for 20 June
1940, he wrote:
The
Germans published in April a White Book containing documents from the archives
of our Ministry of Foreign Affairs, consisting of reports from Potocki in
Washington, Lukasiewicz in Paris and myself. I do not know where they found
them, since we were told that the archives had been destroyed. The documents
are certainly genuine, and the facsimiles show that for the most part the
Germans got hold of originals and not merely copies.
In
this ‘First Series’ of documents I found three reports from this Embassy, two by
myself and the third signed by me but written by Balinski. I read them with
some apprehension, but they contained nothing liable to compromise myself or
the Embassy or to impair relations with our British hosts.[11]
In
1970 their authenticity was reconfirmed with the publication of Diplomat in Paris 1936-1939.
This important work consists of the official papers and memoirs of Juliusz
Lukasiewicz, the former Polish Ambassador to Paris who authored several of the
secret diplomatic reports made public by the German government. The collection
was edited by Waclaw Jedrzejewicz, a former Polish diplomat and cabinet member,
and later Professor Emeritus of Wellesley and Ripon colleges. Professor
Jedrzejewicz considered the documents made public by the Germans absolutely
genuine. He quoted extensively from several of them.
Mr.
Tyler G. Kent has also vouched for the authenticity of the documents. He states
that while working at the U.S. embassy in London in 1939 and 1940, he saw
copies of U.S. diplomatic messages in the files which corresponded to the
Polish documents and which confirmed their accuracy.
Two Key Diplomats
Two
American diplomats who played especially crucial roles in the European crisis
of 1938-1939 are mentioned often in the Polish documents. The first of these
was William C. Bullitt. Although his official position was U.S. Ambassador to
France, he was in reality much more than that. He was Roosevelt’s „super envoy“
and personal deputy in Europe.
Like
Roosevelt, Bullitt „rose from the rich.“ He was born into an important
Philadelphia banking family, one of the city’s wealthiest. His mother’s
grandfather, Jonathan Horwitz, was a German Jew who had come to the United
States from Berlin.[12] In 1919 Bullitt was an assistant to President Wilson
at the Versailles peace conference. That same year, Wilson and British Prime
Minister Lloyd George sent him to Russia to meet with Lenin and determine if
the new Bolshevik government deserved recognition by the Allies. Bullitt met
with Lenin and other top Soviet leaders and upon his return urged recognition
of the new regime. But he had a falling-out with Wilson and left diplomatic
service. In 1923 he married Louise Bryant Reed, the widow of American Communist
leader John Reed. In Europe Bullitt collaborated with Sigmund Freud on a
psychoanalytical biography of Wilson. When Roosevelt became President in 1933,
he brought Bullitt back into diplomatic life.[13]
In
November 1933, Roosevelt sent Bullitt to Moscow as the first U.S. Ambassador to
the Soviet Union. His initial enthusiasm for the Soviet system gave way to a
deep distrust of Stalin and Communism. In 1936 the President transferred him to
Paris. He served there as Roosevelt’s key European diplomat until 1940 when
Churchill’s assumption of leadership in Britain and the defeat of France made
his special role superfluous.
In
the Spring of 1938, all U.S. envoys in Europe were subordinated to Bullitt by
an internal directive of the State Department.[14] As the European situation worsened in 1939, Roosevelt
often spoke with his man in Paris by telephone, sometimes daily, frequently
giving him precisely detailed and ultra-confidential instructions on how to conduct
America’s foreign policy. Not even Secretary of State Cordell Hull was privy to
many of the letters and communications between Bullitt and Roosevelt.
In
France, the New York Times
noted, Bullitt „was acclaimed there as ‘the Champagne Ambassador’ on account of
the lavishness of his parties, but he was far more than the envoy to Paris: He
was President Roosevelt’s intimate adviser on European affairs, with telephone
access to the President at any hour.“[15]
Bullitt
and Roosevelt were fond of each other and saw eye to eye on foreign policy
issues. Both were aristocrats and thorough internationalists who shared
definite views on how to remake the world and a conviction that they were
destined to bring about that grand reorganization.
„Between
these teammates,“ the Saturday Evening Post reported in March 1939,
there
is a close, hearty friendship and a strong temperamental affinity. The
President is known to rely upon Bullitt’s judgment so heavily that the
ambassador’s mailed and cabled reports from abroad are supplemented several
times a week by a chat by transatlantic telephone. In addition, Bullitt returns
to the United States several times each year to take part in White House
councils, to the displeasure of the State Department, which considers him a
prima donna.
In
the whole roster of the State Department the President could not have found an
adviser who would have been so responsive to his own champagne personality as
Bullitt. Both men, born patricians, have the same basic enthusiasm for
remolding society ...[16]
In
Europe, Bullitt spoke with the voice and the authority of President Roosevelt
himself.
The
second most important American diplomat in Europe was Joseph P. Kennedy,
Roosevelt’s Ambassador at the Court of St. James. Like Bullitt he was a wealthy
banker. But this Boston Catholic of Irish ancestry was otherwise a very
different sort of man. Roosevelt sent Kennedy, an important Democratic party
figure and father of a future President, to Britain for purely political
reasons. Roosevelt disliked and distrusted Kennedy, and this sentiment grew as
Kennedy opposed the President’s war policies more and more vehemently.
Moreover, Kennedy despised his counterpart in Paris. In a letter to his wife,
he wrote: „I talk to Bullitt occasionally. He is more rattlebrained than ever.
His judgment is pathetic and I am afraid of his influence on F.D.R. because
they think alike on many things.“[17]
The Documents
Here
now are extensive excerpts from the Polish documents themselves. They are given
in chronological order. They are remarkably lucid for diplomatic reports and
speak eloquently for themselves.
* * *
On
9 February 1938, the Polish Ambassador in Washington, Count Jerzy Potocki,
reported to the Foreign Minister in Warsaw on the Jewish role in making
American foreign policy:
The
pressure of the Jews on President Roosevelt and on the State Department is
becoming ever more powerful ...
...
The Jews are right now the leaders in creating a war psychosis which would plunge
the entire world into war and bring about general catastrophe. This mood is
becoming more and more apparent.
in
their definition of democratic states, the Jews have also created real chaos:
they have mixed together the idea of democracy and communism and have above all
raised the banner of burning hatred against Nazism.
This
hatred has become a frenzy. It is propagated everywhere and by every means: in
theaters, in the cinema, and in the press. The Germans are portrayed as a
nation living under the arrogance of Hitler which wants to conquer the whole
world and drown all of humanity in an ocean of blood.
In
conversations with Jewish press representatives I have repeatedly come up
against the inexorable and convinced view that war is inevitable. This
international Jewry exploits every means of propaganda to oppose any tendency
towards any kind of consolidation and understanding between nations. In this
way, the conviction is growing steadily but surely in public opinion here that
the Germans and their satellites, in the form of fascism, are enemies who must
be subdued by the ‘democratic world.’
On
21 November 1938, Ambassador Potocki sent a report to Warsaw which discussed in
some detail a conversation between himself and Bullitt, who happened to be back
in Washington:
The
day before yesterday I had a long conversation with Ambassador Bullitt, who is
here on vacation. He began by remarking that friendly relations existed between
himself and [Polish] Ambassador Lukasiewicz in Paris, whose company he greatly
enjoyed.
Since
Bullitt regularly informs President Roosevelt about the international situation
in Europe, and particularly about Russia, great attention is given to his
reports by President Roosevelt and the State Department. Bullitt speaks
energetically and interestingly. Nonetheless, his reaction to events in Europe
resembles the view of a journalist more than that of a politician ...
About
Germany and Chancellor Hitler he spoke with great vehemence and strong hatred.
He said that only force, and ultimately a war would put an end to the insane
future German expansionism.
To
my question asking how he visualized this coming war, he replied that above all
the United States, France and England must rearm tremendously in order to be in
a position to oppose German power.
Only
then, when the moment is ripe, declared Bullitt further, will one be ready for
the final decision. I asked him in what way a conflict could arise, since
Germany would probably not attack England and France first. I simply could not
see the connecting point in this whole combination.
Bullitt
replied that the democratic countries absolutely needed another two years until
they were fully armed. In the meantime, Germany would probably have advanced
with its expansion in an easterly direction. It would be the wish of the
democratic countries that armed conflict would break out there, in the East
between the German Reich and Russia. As the Soviet Union’s potential strength
is not yet known, it might happen that Germany would have moved too far away
from its base, and would be condemned to wage a long and weakening war. Only
then would the democratic countries attack Germany, Bullitt declared, and force
her to capitulate.
In
reply to my question whether the United States would take part in such a war,
he said, ‘Undoubtedly yes, but only after Great Britain and France had let
loose first!’ Feeling in the United States was no intense against Nazism and
Hitlerism, that a psychosis already prevails today among Americans similar to
that before America’s declaration of war against Germany in 1917.
Bullitt
did not give the impression of being very well informed about the situation in
Eastern Europe, and he conversed in a rather superficial way.
Ambassador
Potocki’s report from Washington of 9 January 1939 dealt in large part with
President Roosevelt’s annual address to Congress:
President
Roosevelt acts on the assumption that the dictatorial governments, above all
Germany and Japan, only understand a policy of force. Therefore he has decided
to react to any future blows by matching them. This has been demonstrated by
the most recent measures of the United States.
The
American public is subject to an ever more alarmifig propaganda which is under
Jewish influence and continuously conjures up the specter of the danger of war.
Because of this the Americans have strongly altered their views on foreign
policy problems, in comparison with last year.
Of
all the documents in this collection, the most revealing is probably the secret
report by Ambassador Potocki of 12 January 1939 which dealt with the domestic
situation in the United States. This report is given here in full:
The
feeling now prevailing in the United States is marked by a growing hatred of
Fascism and, above all, of Chancellor Hitler and everything connected with
Nazism. Propaganda is mostly in the hands of the Jews who control almost 100
percent radio, film, daily and periodical press. Although this propaganda is
extremely coarse and presents Germany as black as possible – above all
religious persecution and concentration camps are exploited – this propaganda
is nevertheless extremely effective since the public here is completely
ignorant and knows nothing of the situation in Europe.
Right
now most Americans regard Chancellor Hitler and Nazism as the greatest evil and
greatest danger threatening the world. The situation here provides an excellent
platform for public speakers of all kinds, for emigrants from Germany and
Czechoslovakia who don’t spare any words to incite the public here with every
kind of slander. They praise American liberty which they contrast with the
totalitarian states.
It
is interesting to note that in this extremely well-planned campaign which is
conducted above all against National Socialism, Soviet Russia is almost
completely excluded. If mentioned at all, it is only in a friendly manner and
things are presented in such a way as if Soviet Russia were working with the
bloc of democratic states. Thanks to the clever propaganda the sympathy of the
American public is completely on the side of Red Spain.
Besides
this propaganda, a war psychosis is being artificially created. The American
people are told that peace in Europe is hanging only by a thread and that war
is unavoidable. At the same time the American people are unequivocally told
that in case of a world war, America must also take an active part in order to
defend the slogans of freedom and democracy in the world.
President
Roosevelt was the first to express hatred against Fascism. In doing so he was
serving a double purpose: First, he wanted to divert the attention of the
American people from domestic political problems, especially the problem of the
struggle between capital and labor. Second, by creating a war psychosis and by spreading
rumors about danger threatening Europe, he wanted to get the American people to
accept an enormous armament program which exceeds the defense requirements of
the United States.
Regarding
the first point, it must be said that the internal situation on the labor
market is steadily growing worse. The unemployed today already number twelve
million. Federal and state expenditures are increasing daily. Only the huge
sums, running into billions, which the treasury expends for emergency labor
projects, are keeping a certain amount of peace in the country. Thus far there
have only been the usual strikes and local unrest. But how long this kind of
government aid can be kept up cannot be predicted. The excitement and
indignation of public opinion, and the serious conflict between private
enterprises and enormous trusts on the one hand, and with labor on the other,
have made many enemies for Roosevelt and are causing him many sleepless nights.
As
to point two, I can only say that President Roosevelt, as a clever political
player and an expert of the American mentality, speedily steered public
attention away from the domestic situation to fasten it on foreign policy. The
way to achieve this was simple. One needed, on the one hand, to conjure up a
war menace hanging over the world because of Chancellor Hitler, and, on the
other hand, to create a specter by babbling about an attack of the totalitarian
states against the United States. The Munich pact came to President Roosevelt
as a godsend. He portrayed it as a capitulation of France and England to
bellicose German militarism. As people say here: Hitler compelled Chamberlain
at pistol-point. Hence, France and England had no choice and had to conclude a
shameful peace.
The
prevalent hatred against everything which is in any way connected with German
Nazism is further kindled by the brutal policy against the Jews in Germany and
by the 6migr6 problem. In this action, various Jewish intellectuals
participated: for instance, Bernard Baruch; the Governor of New York State,
Lehman; the newly appointed judge of the Supreme Court, Felix Frankfurter;
Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau; and others who are personal friends of
President Roosevelt. They want the President to become the champion of human
rights, freedom of religion and speech, and the man who in the future will
punish trouble-makers. These groups of people who occupy the highest positions
in the American government and want to pose as representatives of ‘true
Americanism’ and ‘defenders of democracy’ are, in the last analysis, connected
by unbreakable ties with international Jewry.
For
this Jewish international, which above all is concerned with the interests of
its race, to portray the President of the United States as the ‘idealist’
champion on human rights was a very clever move. In this manner they have
created a dangerous hotbed for hatred and hostility in this hemisphere and
divided the world into two hostile camps. The entire issue is worked out in a
masterly manner. Roosevelt has been given the foundation for activating
American foreign policy, and simultaneously has been procuring enormous
military stocks for the coming war, for which the Jews are striving very
consciously. With regard to domestic policy, it is very convenient to divert
public attention from anti-Semitism, which is constantly growing in the United
States, by talking about the necessity of defending religion and individual
liberty against the onslaught of Fascism.
On
16 January 1939, Polish Ambassador Potocki reported to the Warsaw Foreign
Ministry on another lengthy conversation he had with Roosevelt’s personal
envoy, William Bullitt:
The
day before yesterday, I had a longer discussion with Ambassador Bullitt in the
Embassy where he called on me. Bullitt leaves on the 21st of this month for
Paris, from where he has been absent for almost three months. He is sailing
with a whole ‘trunk’ full of instructions, conversations, and directives from
President Roosevelt, the State Department and Senators who belong to the
Committee on Foreign Affairs.
In
talking with Bullitt I had the impression that he had received from President
Roosevelt a very precise definition of the attitude taken by the United States
towards the present European crisis. He will present this material at the Quai
d’Orsay [the French Foreign Ministry] and will make use of it in discussions
with European statesmen. The contents of these directives, as Bullitt explained
them to me in the course of a conversation lasting half an hour, were:
1.
The vitalizing of foreign policy under the leadership of President Roosevelt,
who severely and unambiguously condemns totalitarian countries.
2.
United States preparations for war on sea, land and air will be carried out at
an accelerated pace and will consume the colossal sum of 1.25 billion dollars.
3.
It is the decided opinion of the President that France and Britain must put an
end to any sort of compromise with the totalitarian countries. They must not
get into any discussions aiming at any kind of territorial changes.
4.
They have the moral assurance that the United States will abandon the policy of
isolation and be prepared to intervene actively on the side of Britain and
France in case of war. America is ready to place its whole wealth of money and
raw materials at their disposal.
The
Polish Ambassador to Paris, Juliusz (Jules) Lukasiewicz, sent a top secret
report to the Foreign Ministry in Warsaw at the beginning of February 1939
which outlined U.S. policy towards Europe as explained to him by William
Bullitt:
A
week ago, the Ambassador of the United States, William Bullitt returned to
Paris after a three months’ leave in America. Meanwhile, I have had two
conversations with him which enable me to inform you of his views regarding the
European situation and to give a survey of Washington’s policy.
The
international situation is regarded by official circles as extremely serious
and in constant danger of armed conflict. Those in authority are of the opinion
that if war should break out between Britain and France on the one hand, and
Germany and Italy on the other, and should Britain and France be defeated, the
Germans would endanger the real interests of the United States on the American
continent. For this reason, one can foresee right from the beginning the participation
of the United States in the war on the side of France and Britain, naturally
some time after the outbreak of the war. As Ambassador Bullitt expressed it: ‘Should
war break out we shall certainly not take part in it at the beginning, but we
shall finish it.’
On
7 March 1939, Ambassador Potocki sent a remarkably lucid and perceptive report
on Roosevelt’s foreign policy to his government in Warsaw. This document was
first made public when leading German newspapers published it in German
translation, along with a facsimile reproduction of the first page of the
Polish original, in their editions of 28 October 1940. The main National
Socialist party newspaper, the Voelkischer
Beobachter, published the Ambassador’s report with this
observation:
The
document itself needs no commentary. We do not know, and it does not concern
us, whether the internal American situation as reported by the Polish diplomat
is correct in every detail. That must be decided by the American people alone.
But in the interest of historical truth it is important for us to show that the
warmongering activities of American diplomacy, especially in Europe, are once
again revealed and proven by this document. It still remains a secret just who,
and for what motives, have driven American diplomacy to this course. In any
case, the results have been disastrous for both Europe and America. Europe was
plunged into war and America has brought upon itself the hostility of great
nations which normally have no differences with the American people and,
indeed, have not been in conflict but have lived for generations as friends and
want to remain so.
This
report was not one of the Polish documents which was released in March 1940 and
published as part of the „German White Book No. 3“ (or the German White Paper).
However, it was published in 1943 as part of the collection entitled „Roosevelt’s
Way Into War.“ As far as I can determine, this English translation is the first
that has ever appeared. Ambassador Potocki’s secret report of 7 March 1939 is
here given in full:
The
foreign policy of the United States right now concerns not only the government,
but the entire American public as well. The most important elements are the
public statements of President Roosevelt. In almost every public speech he refers
more or less explicitly to the necessity of activating foreign policy against
the chaos of views and ideologies in Europe. These statements are picked up by
the press and then cleverly filtered into the minds of average Americans in
such a way as to strengthen their already formed opinions. The same theme is
constantly repeated, namely, the danger of war in Europe and saving the
democracies from inundation by enemy fascism. In all of these public statements
there is normally only a single theme, that is, the danger from Nazism and Nazi
Germany to world peace.
As
a result of these speeches, the public is called upon to support rearmament and
the spending of enormous sums for the navy and the air force. The unmistakable
idea behind this is that in case of an armed conflict the United States cannot
stay out but must take an active part in the maneuvers. As a result of the
effective speeches of President Roosevelt, which are supported by the press,
the American public is today being conscientiously manipulated to hate
everything that smacks of totalitarianism and fascism. But it is interesting
that the USSR is not included in all this. The American public considers Russia
more in the camp of the democratic states. This was also the case during the
Spanish civil war when the so-called Loyalists were regarded as defenders of
the democratic idea.
The
State Department operates without attracting a great deal of attention,
although it is known that Secretary of State [Cordell] Hull and President
Roosevelt swear allegiance to the same ideas. However, Hull shows more reserve
than Roosevelt, and he loves to make a distinction between Nazism and
Chancellor Hitler on the one hand, and the German people on the other. He
considers this form of dictatorial government a temporary „necessary evil.“ In
contrast, the State Department is unbelievably interested in the USSR and its
internal situation and openly worries itself over its weaknesses and decline.
The main reason for United States interest in the Russians is the situation in
the Far East. The current government would be glad to see the Red Army emerge
as the victor in a conflict with Japan. That’s why the sympathies of the
government are clearly on the side of China, which recently received
considerable financial aid amounting to 25 million dollars.
Eager
attention is given to all information from the diplomatic posts as well as to
the special emissaries of the President who serve as Ambassadors of the United
States. The President frequently calls his representatives from abroad to
Washington for personal exchanges of views and to give them special information
and instructions. The arrival of the envoys and ambassadors is always shrouded
in secrecy and very little surfaces in the press about the results of their
visits. The State Department also takes care to avoid giving out any kind of
information about the course of these interviews. The practical way in which
the President makes foreign policy is most effective. He gives personal
instructions to his representatives abroad, most of whom are his personal
friends. In this way the United States is led down a dangerous path in world
politics with the explicit intention of abandoning the comfortable policy of
isolation. The President regards the foreign policy of his country as a means
of satisfying his own personal ambition. He listens carefully and happily to
his echo in the other capitals of the world. In domestic as well as in foreign
policy, the Congress of the United States is the only object that stands in the
way of the President and his government in carrying out his decisions quickly
and ambitiously. One hundred and fifty years ago, the Constitution of the
United States gave the highest prerogatives to the American parliament which
may criticize or reject the law of the White House.
The
foreign policy of President Roosevelt has recently been the subject of intense
discussion in the lower house and in the Senate, and this has caused
excitement. The so-called Isolationists, of whom there are many in both houses,
have come out strongly against the President. The representatives and senators
were especially upset over the remarks by the President, which were published
in the press, in which he said that the borders of the United States lie on the
Rhine. But President Roosevelt is a superb political player and understands
completely the power of the American parliament. He has his own people there,
and he knows how to withdraw from an uncomfortable situation at the right
moment.
Very
intelligently and cleverly he ties together the question of foreign policy with
the issues of American rearmament. He particularly stresses the necessity of
spending enormous sums in order to maintain a defensive peace. He says
specifically that the United States is not arming in order to intervene or to
go to the aid of England or France in case of war, but rather because of the
need to show strength and military preparedness in case of an armed conflict in
Europe. In his view this conflict is becoming ever more acute and is completely
unavoidable.
Since
the issue is presented this way, the houses of Congress have no cause to
object. To the contrary, the houses accepted an armament program of more than
one billion dollars. (The normal budget is 550 million, the emergency 552
million dollars.) However, under the cloak of a rearmament policy, President
Roosevelt continues to push forward his foreign policy, which unofficially
shows the world that in case of war the United States will come out on the side
of the democratic states with all military and financial power.
In
conclusion it can be said that the technical and moral preparation of the
American people for participation in a war – if one should break out in Europe
– is preceding rapidly. It appears that the United States will come to the aid
of France and Great Britain with all its resources right from the beginning.
However, I know the American public and the representatives and senators who
all have the final word, and I am of the opinion that the possibility that
America will enter war as in 1917 is not great. That’s because the majority of
states in the mid-West and West, where the rural element predominates, want to
avoid involvement in European disputes at all costs. They remember the
declaration of the Versailles Treaty and the well-known phrase that the war was
to save the world for democracy. Neither the Versailles Treaty nor that slogan
have reconciled the United States to that war. For millions there remains only
a bitter aftertaste because of unpaid billions which the European states still
owe America.
Juliusz
Lukasiewicz, Poland’s Ambassador to France, reported to Warsaw on 29 March 1939
about further conversations with U.S. envoy Bullitt in Paris. Lukasiewicz
discussed Roosevelt’s efforts to get both Poland and Britain to adopt a totally
uncompromising policy towards Germany, even in the face of strong sentiment for
peace. The report concludes with these words:
...
I consider it my duty to inform you of all the aforesaid because I believe that
collaboration with Ambassador Bullitt in such difficult and complicated times
may prove useful to us. In any case it is absolutely certain that he agrees
entirely with our point of view and is prepared for the most extensive friendly
collaboration possible.
In
order to strengthen the efforts of the American Ambassador in London [Joseph
Kennedy], I called the attention of Ambassador Bullitt to the fact that it is
not impossible that the British may treat the efforts of the United States with
well-concealed contempt. He answered that I am probably right, but that
nevertheless the United States has at its disposal the means to really bring
pressure on England. He would be giving serious consideration to mobilizing
these means.
The
Polish Ambassador in London, Count Edward Raczynski, reported to Warsaw on 29
March 1939 on the continuing European crisis and on a conversation he had with
Ambassador Joseph Kennedy, his American counterpart. Kennedy’s remarks to
Raczynski confirmed Bullitt’s reputation in diplomatic circles as an indiscreet
big mouth:
I
asked Mr. Kennedy point blank about the conference which he is supposed to have
had recently with [British Prime Minister] Mr. Chamberlain concerning Poland.
Kennedy was surprised and declared categorically that a conversation of such
special significance never took place. At the same time, and thereby
contradicting his own assertion to a certain extent, Kennedy expressed
displeasure and surprise that his colleagues in Paris and Warsaw [William
Bullitt and Anthony Biddle] ‘who are not, as himself, in a position to get a
clear picture of conditions in England’ should talk so openly about this
conversation.
Mr.
Kennedy – who made me understand that his views were based on a series of
conversations with the most important authorities here – declared that he was
convinced that should Poland decide in favor of armed resistance against
Germany, especially with regard to Danzig, it would draw England in its wake.
This
concludes the excerpts from the Polish reports.
* * * * *
The Path To War
While
the Polish documents alone are conclusive proof of Roosevelt’s treacherous
campaign to bring about world war, it is fortunate for posterity that a
substantial body of irrefutable complementary evidence exists which confirms
the conspiracy recorded in the dispatches to Warsaw.
The
secret policy was confirmed after the war with the release of a confidential
diplomatic report by the British Ambassador to Washington, Sir Ronald Lindsay.
During his three years of service in Washington, the veteran diplomat had
developed little regard for America’s leaders. He considered Roosevelt an
amiable and impressionable lightweight, and warned the British Foreign Office
that it should not tell William Bullitt anything beyond what it wouldn’t mind
reading later in an American newspaper.[18]
On
19 September 1938 – that is, a year before the outbreak of war in Europe –
Roosevelt called Lindsay to a very secret meeting at the White House. At the
beginning of their long conversation, according to Lindsay’s confidential
dispatch to London, Roosevelt „emphasized the necessity of absolute secrecy.
Nobody must know I had seen him and he himself would tell nobody of the
interview. I gathered not even the State Department.“ The two discussed some
secondary matters before Roosevelt got to the main point of the conference. „This
is the very secret part of his communication and it must not be known to anyone
that he has even breathed a suggestion.“ The President told the Ambassador that
if news of the conversation was ever made public, it could mean his
impeachment. And no wonder. What Roosevelt proposed was a cynically brazen but
harebrained scheme to violate the U.S. Constitution and dupe the American
people.
The
President said that if Britain and France „would find themselves forced to war“
against Germany, the United States would ultimately also join. But this would
require some clever maneuvering. Britain and France should impose a total
blockade against Germany without actually declaring war and force other states
(including neutrals) to abide by it. This would certainly provoke some kind of
German military response, but it would also free Britain and France from having
to actually declare war. For propaganda purposes, the „blockade must be based
on loftiest humanitarian grounds and on the desire to wage hostilities with
minimum of suffering and the least possible loss of life and property, and yet
bring the enemy to his knees.“ Roosevelt conceded that this would involve
aerial bombardment, but „bombing from the air was not the method of hostilities
which caused really great loss of life.“
The
important point was to „call it defensive measures or anything plausible but
avoid actual declaration of war.“ That way, Roosevelt believed he could talk
the American people into supporting war against Germany, including shipments of
weapons to Britain and France, by insisting that the United States was still technically
neutral in a non-declared conflict. „This method of conducting war by blockade
would in his [Roosevelt’s] opinion meet with approval of the United States if
its humanitarian purpose were strongly emphasized,“ Lindsay reported.[19]
The
American Ambassador to Italy, William Phillips, admitted in his postwar memoirs
that the Roosevelt administration was already committed to going to war on the
side of Britain and France in late 1938. „On this and many other occasions,“
Phillips wrote, „I would like to have told him [Count Ciano, the Italian
Foreign Minister] frankly that in the event of a European war, the United
States would undoubtedly be involved on the side of the Allies. But in view of
my official position, I could not properly make such a statement without
instructions from Washington, and these I never received.“[20]
Carl
J. Burckhardt, the League of Nations High Commissioner to Danzig, reported in
his postwar memoirs on a remarkable conversation held at the end of 1938 with
Anthony Drexel Biddle, the American Ambassador to Poland. Biddle was a rich
banker with close ties to the Morgan financial empire. A thoroughgoing
internationalist, he was an ideological colleague of President Roosevelt and a
good friend of William Bullitt. Burckhardt, a Swiss professor, served as High
Commissioner between 1937 and 1939.
Nine
months before the outbreak of armed conflict, on 2 December 1938, Biddle told
Burckhardt
with
remarkable satisfaction that the Poles were ready to wage war over Danzig. They
would counter the motorized strength of the German army with agile
maneuverability. ‘In April,’ he [Biddle] declared, ‘a new crisis would break
out. Not since the torpedoing of the Lusitania [in 1915] had such a religious
hatred against Germany reigned in America as today! Chamberlain and Daladier
[the moderate British and French leaders] would be blown away by public
opinion. This was a holy war!,[21]
The
fateful British pledge to Poland of 31 March 1939 to go to war against Germany
in case of a Polish-German conflict would not have been made without strong
pressure from the White House.
On
14 March 1939, Slovakia declared itself an independent republic, thereby
dissolving the state known as Czechoslovakia. That same day, Czechoslovak
President Emil Hacha signed a formal agreement with Hitler establishing a
German protectorate over Bohemia and Moravia, the Czech portion of the
federation. The British government initially accepted the new situation, but
then Roosevelt intervened.
In
their nationally syndicated column of 14 April 1939, the usually very well
informed Washington journalists Drew Pearson and Robert S. Allen reported that
on 16 March 1939 Roosevelt had „sent a virtual ultimatum to Chamberlain“
demanding that henceforth the British government strongly oppose Germany.
According to Pearson and Allen, who completely supported Roosevelt’s move, „the
President warned that Britain could expect no more support, moral or material
through the sale of airplanes, if the Munich policy continued.“[22]
Chamberlain gave in and the next day, 17 March, ended Britain’s policy of
cooperation with Germany in a speech at Birmingham bitterly denouncing Hitler.
Two weeks later the British government formally pledged itself to war in case
of German-Polish hostilities.
Bullitt’s
response to the creation of the German protectorate over Bohemia and Moravia
was to telephone Roosevelt and, in an „almost hysterical“ voice, urge him to
make a dramatic denunciation of Germany and immediately ask Congress to repeal
the Neutrality Act.[23]
In
a confidential telegram to Washington dated 9 April 1939, Bullitt reported from
Paris on another conversation with Ambassador Lukasiewicz. He had told the
Polish envoy that although U.S. law prohibited direct financial aid to Poland,
it might be possible to circumvent its provisions. The Roosevelt administration
might be able to supply war planes to Poland indirectly through Britain. „The
Polish Ambassador asked me if it might not be possible for Poland to obtain
financial help and aeroplanes from the United States. I replied that I believed
the Johnson Act would forbid any loans from the United States to Poland but
added that it might be possible for England to purchase planes for cash in the
United States and turn them over to Poland.“[24]
On
25 April 1939, four months before the outbreak of war, Bullitt called American
newspaper columnist Karl von Wiegand, chief European correspondent of the
International News Service, to the U.S. embassy in Paris and told him: „War in
Europe has been decided upon. Poland has the assurance of the support of
Britain and France, and will yield to no demands from Germany. America will be
in the war soon after Britain and France enter it.“[25]
In
a lengthy secret conversation at Hyde Park on 28 May 1939, Roosevelt assured
the former President of Czechoslovakia, Dr. Edvard Benes, that America would
actively intervene on the side of Britain and France in the anticipated
European war.[26]
In
June 1939, Roosevelt secretly proposed to the British that the United States
should establish „a patrol over the waters of the Western Atlantic with a view
to denying them to the German Navy in the event of war.“ The British Foreign
Office record of this offer noted that „although the proposal was vague and
woolly and open to certain objections, we assented informally as the patrol was
to be operated in our interests.“[27]
Many
years after the war, Georges Bonnet, the French Foreign Minister in 1939,
confirmed Bullitt’s role as Roosevelt’s deputy in pushing his country into war.
In a letter to Hamilton Fish dated 26 March 1971, Bonnet wrote: „One thing is
certain is that Bullitt in 1939 did everything he could to make France enter
the war.“[28]
An important confirmation of the crucial role of Roosevelt and the Jews in
pushing Britain into war comes from the diary of James V. Forrestal, the first
U.S. Secretary of Defense. In his entry for 27 December 1945, he wrote:
Played
golf today with [former Ambassador] Joe Kennedy. I asked him about his
conversations with Roosevelt and [British Prime Minister] Neville Chamberlain
from 1938 on. He said Chamberlain’s position in 1938 was that England had
nothing with which to fight and that she could not risk going to war with
Hitler. Kennedy’s view: That Hitler would have fought Russia without any later
conflict with England if it had not been for [William] Bullitt’s urging on
Roosevelt in the summer of 1939 that the Germans must be faced down about
Poland; neither the French nor the British would have made Poland a cause of
war if it had not been for the constant needling from Washington. Bullitt, he
said, kept telling Roosevelt that the Germans wouldn’t fight; Kennedy that they
would, and that they would overrun Europe. Chamberlain, he says, stated that
America and the world Jews had forced England into the war. In his telephone
conversations with Roosevelt in the summer of 1939, the President kept telling
him to put some iron up Chamberlain’s backside.[29]
When
Ambassador Potocki was back in Warsaw on leave from his post in Washington, he
spoke with Count Jan Szembek, the Polish Foreign Ministry Under-Secretary,
about the growing danger of war. In his diary entry of 6 July 1939, Szembek
recorded Potocki’s astonishment at the calm mood in Poland. In comparison with
the war psychosis that had gripped the West, Poland seemed like a rest home.
„In
the West,“ the Ambassador told Szembek, „there are all kinds of elements openly
pushing for war: the Jews, the super-capitalists, the arms dealers. Today they
are all ready for a great business, because they have found a place which can
be set on fire: Danzig; and a nation that is ready to fight: Poland. They want
to do business on our backs. They are indifferent to the destruction of our
country. Indeed, since everything will have to be rebuilt later on, they can
profit from that as well.“[30]
On
24 August 1939, just a week before the outbreak of hostilities, Chamberlain’s
closest advisor, Sir Horace Wilson, went to Ambassador Kennedy with an urgent
appeal from the British Prime Minister for President Roosevelt. Regretting that
Britain had unequivocally obligated itself in March to Poland in case of war,
Chamberlain now turned in despair to Roosevelt as a last hope for peace. He
wanted the American President to „put pressure on the Poles“ to change course
at this late hour and open negotiations with Germany. By telephone Kennedy told
the State Department that the British „felt that they could not, given their
obligations, do anything of this sort but that we could.“ Presented with this
extraordinary opportunity to possibly save the peace of Europe, Roosevelt
rejected Chamberlain’s desperate plea out of hand. At that, Kennedy reported,
the Prime Minister lost all hope. „The futility of it all,“ Chamberlain had
told Kennedy, „is the thing that is frightful. After all, we cannot save the
Poles. We can merely carry on a war of revenge that will mean the destruction
of all Europe.“[31]
Roosevelt
liked to present himself to the American people and the world as a man of peace.
To a considerable degree, that is still his image today. But Roosevelt
cynically rejected genuine opportunities to act for peace when they were
presented.
In
1938 he refused even to answer requests by French Foreign Minister Bonnet on 8
and 12 September to consider arbitrating the Czech-German dispute.[32]
And a year later, after the outbreak of war, a melancholy Ambassador Kennedy
beseeched Roosevelt to act boldly for peace. „It seems to me that this
situation may crystallize to a point where the President can be the savior of
the world,“ Kennedy cabled on 11 September from London. „The British government
as such certainly cannot accept any agreement with Hitler, but there may be a
point when the President himself may work out plans for world peace. Now this
opportunity may never arise, but as a fairly practical fellow all my life, I
believe that it is entirely conceivable that the President can get himself in a
spot where he can save the world … „
But
Roosevelt rejected out of hand this chance to save the peace of Europe. To a
close political crony, he called Kennedy’s plea „the silliest message to me
that I have ever received.“ He complained to Henry Morgenthau that his London
Ambassador was nothing but a pain in the neck: „Joe has been an appeaser and
will always be an appeaser ... If Germany and Italy made a good peace offer
tomorrow, Joe would start working on the King and his friend the Queen and from
there on down to get everybody to accept it.“[33]
Infuriated
at Kennedy’s stubborn efforts to restore peace in Europe or at least limit the
conflict that had broken out, Roosevelt instructed his Ambassador with a „personal“
and „strictly confidential“ telegram on 11 September 1939 that any American
peace effort was totally out of the question. The Roosevelt government, it
declared, „sees no opportunity nor occasion for any peace move to be initiated
by the President of the United States. The people [sic] of the United States
would not support any move for peace initiated by this Government that would
consolidate or make possible a survival of a regime of force and aggression.“[34]
Hamilton Fish Warns The Nation
In
the months before armed conflict broke out in Europe, perhaps the most vigorous
and prophetic American voice of warning against President Roosevelt’s campaign
to incite war was that of Hamilton Fish, a leading Republican congressman from
New York. In a series of hard-hitting radio speeches, Fish rallied considerable
public opinion against Roosevelt’s deceptive war policy. Here are only a few
excerpts from some of those addresses.[35]
On
6 January 1939, Fish told a nationwide radio audience:
The
inflammatory and provocative message of the President to Congress and the world
[given two days before] has unnecessarily alarmed the American people and
created, together with a barrage of propaganda emanating from high New Deal
officials, a war hysteria, dangerous to the peace of America and the world. The
only logical conclusion to such speeches is another war fought overseas by
American soldiers.
All
the totalitarian nations referred to by President Roosevelt ... haven’t the
faintest thought of making war on us or invading Latin America.
I
do not propose to mince words on such an issue, affecting the life, liberty and
happiness of our people. The time has come to call a halt to the warmongers of
the New Deal, backed by war profiteers, Communists, and hysterical
internationalists, who want us to quarantine the world with American blood and
money.
He
[Roosevelt] evidently desires to whip up a frenzy of hate and war psychosis as
a red herring to take the minds of our people off their own unsolved domestic
problems. He visualizes hobgoblins and creates in the public mind a fear of
foreign invasions that exists only in his own imagination.
On
5 March, Fish spoke to the country over the Columbia radio network:
The
people of France and Great Britain want peace but our warmongers are constantly
inciting them to disregard the Munich Pact and resort to the arbitrament of
arms. If only we would stop meddling in foreign lands the old nations of Europe
would compose their own quarrels by arbitration and the processes of peace, but
apparently we won’t let them.
Fish
addressed the listeners of the National Broadcasting Company network on 5 April
with these words:
The
youth of America are again being prepared for another blood bath in Europe in
order to make the world safe for democracy.
If
Hitler and the Nazi government regain Memel or Danzig, taken away from Germany
by the Versailles Treaty, and where the population is 90 percent German, why is
it necessary to issue threats and denunciations and incite our people to war? I
would not sacrifice the life of one American soldier for a half dozen Memels or
Danzigs. We repudiated the Versailles Treaty because it was based on greed and
hatred, and as long as its inequalities and injustices exist there are bound to
be wars of liberation.
The
sooner certain provisions of the Versailles Treaty are scrapped the better for
the peace of the world.
I
believe that if the areas that are distinctly German in population are restored
to Germany, except Alsace-Lorraine and the Tyrol, there will be no war in
western Europe. There may be a war between the Nazis and the Communists, but if
there is that is not our war or that of Great Britain or France or any of the
democracies.
New
Deal spokesmen have stirred up war hysteria into a veritable frenzy. The New
Deal propaganda machine is working overtime to prepare the minds of our people
for war, who are already suffering from a bad case of war jitters.
President
Roosevelt is the number one warmonger in America, and is largely responsible
for the fear that pervades the Nation which has given the stock market and the
American people a bad case of the jitters.
I
accuse the administration of instigating war propaganda and hysteria to cover
up the failure and collapse of the New Deal policies, with 12 million
unemployed and business confidence destroyed.
I
believe we have far more to fear from our enemies from within than we have from
without. All the Communists are united in urging us to go to war against
Germany and Japan for the benefit of Soviet Russia.
Great
Britain still expects every American to do her duty, by preserving the British
Empire and her colonies. The war profiteers, munitions makers and international
bankers are all set up for our participation in a new world war.
On
21 April, Fish again spoke to the country over nationwide radio:
It
is the duty of all those Americans who desire to keep out of foreign
entanglements and the rotten mess and war madness of Europe and Asia to openly
expose the war hysteria and propaganda that is impelling us to armed conflict.
What
we need in America is a stop war crusade, before we are forced into a foreign
war by internationalists and interventionists at Washington, who seem to be
more interested in solving world problems rather than our own.
In
his radio address of 26 May, Fish stated:
He
[Roosevelt] should remember that the Congress has the sole power to declare war
and formulate the foreign policies of the United States. The President has no
such constitutional power. He is merely the official organ to carry out the
policies determined by the Congress.
Without
knowing even who the combatants will be, we are informed almost daily by the
internationalists and interventionists in America that we must participate in
the next world war.
On
8 July 1939, Fish declared over the National Broadcasting Company radio
network:
If
we must go to war, let it be in defense of America, but not in defense of the
munitions makers, war profiteers, Communists, to cover up the failures of the
New Deal, or to provide an alibi for a third term.
It
is well for all nations to know that we do not propose to go to war over
Danzig, power politics, foreign colonies, or the imperialistic wars of Europe
or anywhere in the world.
Powers Behind The President
President
Roosevelt could have done little to incite war in Europe without help from
powerful allies. Behind him stood the self-serving international financial and
Jewish interests bent on the destruction of Germany. The principal organization
which drummed up public support for U.S. involvement in the European war prior
to the Pearl Harbor attack was the cleverly named „Committee to Defend America
by Aiding the Allies.“ President Roosevelt himself initiated its founding, and
top administration officials consulted frequently with Committee leaders.[36]
Although
headed for a time by an elderly small-town Kansas newspaper publisher, William
Allen White, the Committee was actually organized by powerful financial
interests which stood to profit tremendously from loans to embattled Britain
and from shrewd investments in giant war industries in the United States.
At
the end of 1940, West Virginia Senator Rush D. Holt issued a detailed
examination of the Committee which exposed the base interests behind the
idealistic-sounding slogans:
The
Committee has powerful connections with banks, insurance companies, financial
investing firms, and industrial concerns. These in turn exert influence on
college presidents and professors, as well as on newspapers, radio and other
means of communication. One of the powerful influences used by the group is the
‘400’ and social set. The story is a sordid picture of betrayal of public
interest.
The
powerful J.P. Morgan interest with its holdings in the British Empire helped
plan the organization and donated its first expense money.
Some
of the important figures active in the Committee were revealed by Holt: Frederic
R. Coudert, a paid war propagandist for the British government in the U.S.
during the First World War; Robert S. Allen of the Pearson and Allen syndicated
column; Henry R. Luce, the influential publisher of Time, Life,
and Fortune
magazines; Fiorella LaGuardia, the fiery half-Jewish Mayor of Now York City;
Herbert Lehman, the Jewish Governor of New York with important financial
holdings in war industries; and Frank Altschul, an officer in the Jewish
investment firm of Lazard Freres with extensive holdings in munitions and
military supply companies.
If
the Committee succeeded in getting the U.S. into war, Holt warned, „American
boys will spill their blood for profiteers, politicians and ‘paytriots.’ If war
comes, on the hands of the sponsors of the White Committee will be blood – the
blood of Americans killed in a needless war.“[37]
In
March 1941 a list of most of the Committee’s financial backers was made public.
It revealed the nature of the forces eager to bring America into the European
war. Powerful international banking interests were well represented. J.P.
Morgan, John W. Morgan, Thomas W. Lamont and others of the great Morgan banking
house were listed. Other important names from the New York financial world
included Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon, Felix M. and James F. Warburg, and J.
Malcolm Forbes. Chicago department store owner and publisher Marshall Field was
a contributor, as was William Averill Harriman, the railroad and investment
millionaire who later served as Roosevelt’s ambassador in Moscow.
Of
course, Jewish names made up a substantial portion of the long list. Hollywood
film czar Samuel Goldwyn of Goldwyn Studios was there, along with David
Dubinsky, the head of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union. The
William S. Paley Foundation, which had been set up by the head of the giant
Columbia Broadcasting System, contributed to the Committee. The name of Mrs.
Herbert H. Lehman, wife of the New York Governor, was also on the list.[38]
Without
an understanding of his intimate ties to organized Jewry, Roosevelt’s policies
make little sense. As Jewish historian Lucy Dawidowicz noted: „Roosevelt
himself brought into his immediate circle more Jews than any other President
before or after him. Felix Frankfurter, Bernard M. Baruch and Henry Morgenthau
were his close advisers. Benjamin V. Cohen, Samuel Rosenman and David K. Niles
were his friends and trusted aides.“[39] This is perhaps not so remarkable in light of
Roosevelt’s reportedly one-eighth Jewish ancestry.[40]
In
his diary entry of 1 May 1941, Charles A. Lindbergh, the American aviator hero
and peace leader, nailed the coalition that was pushing the United States into
war:
The
pressure for war is high and mounting. The people are opposed to it, but the
Administration seems to have ‘the bit in its teeth’ and [is] hell-bent on its
way to war. Most of the Jewish interests in the country are behind war, and
they control a huge part of our press and radio and most of our motion
pictures. There are also the ‘intellectuals,’ and the ‘Anglophiles,’ and the
British agents who are allowed free rein, the international financial
interests, and many others.[41]
Joseph
Kennedy shared Lindbergh’s apprehensions about Jewish power. Before the
outbreak of war he privately expressed concerns about „the Jews who dominate
our press“ and world Jewry in general, which he considered a threat to peace
and prosperity. Shortly after the beginning of hostilities, Kennedy lamented „the
growing Jewish influence in the press and in Washington demanding continuance
of the war… „[42]
Betrayal, Failure, Delusion
Roosevelt’s
efforts to get Poland, Britain and France into war against Germany succeeded
all too well. The result was untold death and misery and destruction. When the
fighting began, as Roosevelt had intended and planned, the Polish and French
leaders expected the American president to at least make good on his assurances
of backing in case of war. But Roosevelt had not reckoned on the depth of peace
sentiment of the vast majority of Americans. So, in addition to deceiving his
own people, Roosevelt also let down those in Europe to whom he had promised
support.
Seldom
in American history were the people as united in their views as they were in
late 1939 about staying out of war in Europe. When hostilities began in
September 1939, the Gallup poll showed 94 percent of the American people
against involvement in war. That figure rose to 96.5 percent in December before
it began to decline slowly to about 80 percent in the Fall of 1941. (Today,
there is hardly an issue that even 60 or 70 percent of the people agree upon.)[43]
Roosevelt
was, of course, quite aware of the intensity of popular feeling on this issue.
That is why he lied repeatedly to the American people about his love of peace
and his determination to keep the U.S. out of war, while simultaneously doing
everything in his power to plunge Europe and America into war.
In
a major 1940 re-election campaign speech, Roosevelt responded to the growing
fears of millions of Americans who suspected that their President had secretly
pledged United States support to Britain in its war against Germany. These
well-founded suspicions were based in part on the publication in March of the
captured Polish documents. The speech of 23 October 1940 was broadcast from
Philadelphia to the nation on network radio. In the most emphatic language
possible, Roosevelt categorically denied that he had
pledged
in some way the participation of the United States in some foreign war. I give
to you and to the people of this country this most solemn assurance: There is
no secret Treaty, no secret understanding in any shape or form, direct or
indirect, with any Government or any other nation in any part of the world, to
involve this nation in any war or for any other purpose.[44]
We
now know, of course, that this pious declaration was just another one of
Roosevelt’s many brazen, bald-faced lies to the American people.
Roosevelt’s
policies were more than just dishonest – they were criminal. The Constitution
of the United States grants authority only to the Congress to make war and
peace. And Congress had passed several major laws to specifically insure U.S.
neutrality in case of war in Europe. Roosevelt continually violated his oath as
President to uphold the Constitution. If his secret policies had been known,
the public demand for his impeachment would very probably have been
unstoppable.
The
Watergate episode has made many Americans deeply conscious of the fact that
their presidents can act criminally. That affair forced Richard Nixon to resign
his presidency, and he is still widely regarded as a criminal. No schools are
named after him and his name will never receive the respect that normally goes
to every American president. But Nixon’s crimes pale into insignificance when
compared to those of Franklin Roosevelt. What were Nixon’s lies compared to
those of Roosevelt? What is a burglary cover-up compared to an illegal and
secret campaign to bring about a major war?
Those
who defend Roosevelt’s record argue that he lied to the American people for
their own good – that he broke the law for lofty principles. His deceit is
considered permissible because the cause was noble, while similar deception by
presidents Johnson and Nixon, to name two, is not. This is, of course, a
hypocritical double standard. And the argument doesn’t speak very well for the
democratic system. It implies that the people are too dumb to understand their
own best interests. It further suggests that the best form of government is a
kind of benevolent liberal-democratic dictatorship.
Roosevelt’s
hatred for Hitler was deep, vehement, passionate – almost personal. This was
due in no small part to an abiding envy and jealousy rooted in the great
contrast between the two men, not only in their personal characters but also in
their records as national leaders.
Superficially,
the public fives of Roosevelt and Hitler were astonishingly similar. Both
assumed the leadership of their respective countries at the beginning of 1933.
They both faced the enormous challenge of mass unemployment during a
catastrophic worldwide economic depression. Each became a powerful leader in a
vast military alliance during the most destructive war in history. Both men
died while still in office within a few weeks of each other in April 1945, just
before the end of the Second World War in Europe. But the enormous contrasts in
the lives of these two men are even more remarkable.
Roosevelt
was born into one of the wealthiest families in America. His was a life utterly
free of material worry. He took part in the First World War from an office in
Washington as UnderSecretary of the Navy. Hitler, on the other hand, was born
into a modest provinicial family. As a young man he worked as an impoverished
manual laborer. He served in the First World War as a front line soldier in the
hell of the Western battleground. He was wounded many times and decorated for
bravery.
In
spite of his charming manner and soothing rhetoric, Roosevelt proved unable to
master the great challenges facing America. Even after four years of his
presidency, millions remained unemployed, undernourished and poorly housed in a
vast land richly endowed with all the resources for incomparable prosperity.
The New Deal was plagued with bitter strikes and bloody clashes between labor
and capital. Roosevelt did nothing to solve the country’s deep, festering
racial problems which erupted repeatedly in riots and armed conflict. The story
was very different in Germany. Hitler rallied his people behind a radical
program that transformed Germany within a few years from an economically ruined
land on the edge of civil war into Europe’s powerhouse. Germany underwent a
social, cultural and economic rebirth without parallel in history. The contrast
between the personalities of Roosevelt and Hitler was simultaneously a contrast
between two diametrically different social-political systems and ideologies.
And
yet, it would be incorrect to characterize Roosevelt as merely a cynical
politician and front man for powerful alien interests. Certainly he did not
regard himself as an evil man. He sincerely believed that he was doing the
right and noble thing in pressuring Britain and France into war against
Germany. Like Wilson before him, and others since, Roosevelt felt himself
uniquely qualified and called upon by destiny to reshape the world according to
his vision of an egalitarian, universalist democracy. He was convinced, as so
many American leaders have been, that the world could be saved from itself by
remodeling it after the United States.
Presidents
like Wilson and Roosevelt view the world not as a complex of different nations,
races and cultures which must mutually respect each others’ separate collective
identities in order to live together in peace, but rather according to a
selfrighteous missionary perspective that divides the globe into morally good
and evil countries. In that scheme of things, America is the providentially
permanent leader of the forces of righteousness. Luckily, this view just
happens to correspond to the economic and political interests of those who
wield power in the United States.
President Roosevelt’s War
In
April 1941, Senator Gerald Nye of North Dakota prophetically predicted that one
day the Second World War would be remembered as Roosevelt’s war. „If we are
ever involved in this war, it will be called by future historians by only one
title, ‘the President’s War,’ because every step of his since his Chicago
quarantine speech [of 5 October 1937] has been toward war.[45]
The
great American historian, Harry Elmer Barnes, believed that war could probably
have been prevented in 1939 if it had not been for Roosevelt’s meddling. „Indeed,
there is fairly conclusive evidence that, but for Mr. Roosevelt’s pressure on
Britain, France and Poland, and his commitments to them before September 1939,
especially to Britain, and the irresponsible antics of his agent provocateur,
William C. Bullitt, there would probably have been no world war in 1939, or,
perhaps, for many years thereafter.“[46] In Revisionism:
A Key to Peace, Barnes wrote:
President
Roosevelt had a major responsibility, both direct and indirect, for the
outbreak of war in Europe. He began to exert pressure on France to stand up to
Hitler as early as the German reoccupation of the Rhineland in March 1936,
months before he was making his strongly isolationist speeches in the campaign
of 1936. This pressure on France, and also England, continued right down to the
coming of the war in September 1939. It gained volume and momentum after the
quarantine speech of October 1937. As the crisis approached between Munich and
the outbreak of war, Roosevelt pressed the Poles to stand firm against any
demands by Germany, and urged the English and French to back up the Poles
unflinchingly.
There
is grave doubt that England would have gone to war in September 1939 had it not
been for Roosevelt’s encouragement and his assurances that, in the event of
war, the United States would enter on the side of Britain just as soon as he
could swing American public opinion around to support intervention.
Roosevelt
had abandoned all semblance of neutrality, even before war broke out in 1939,
and moved as speedily as was safe and feasible in the face of
anti-interventionist American public opinion to involve this country in the European
conflict.[47]
One
of the most perceptive verdicts on Franklin Roosevelt’s place in history came
from the pen of the great Swedish explorer and author, Sven Hedin. During the
war he wrote:
The
question of the way it came to a new world war is not only to be explained
because of the foundation laid by the peace treaties of 1919, or in the
suppression of Germany and her allies after the First World War, or in the
continuation of the ancient policies of Great Britain and France. The decisive
push came from the other side of the Atlantic Ocean.
Roosevelt
speaks of democracy and destroys it incessantly. He slanders as undemocratic
and un-American those who admonish him in the name of peace and the
preservation of the American way of life. He has made democracy into a
caricature rather than a model. He talks about freedom of speech and silences
those who don’t hold his opinion.
He
talks about freedom of religion and makes an alliance with Bolshevism.
He
talks about freedom from want, but cannot provide ten million of his own people
with work, bread or shelter. He talks about freedom from the fear of war while
working for war, not only for his own people but for the world, by inciting his
country against the Axis powers when it might have united with them, and he
thereby drove millions to their deaths.
This
war will go down in history as the war of President Roosevelt.[48]
Officially
orchestrated praise for Roosevelt as a great man of peace cannot conceal
forever his crucial role in pushing Europe into war in 1939.
* * *
It
is now more than forty years since the events described here took place. For
many they are an irrelevant part of a best-forgotten past. But the story of how
Franklin Roosevelt engineered war in Europe is very pertinent – particularly
for Americans today. The lessons of the past have never been more important
than in this nuclear age. For unless at least an aware minority understands how
and why wars are made, we will remain powerless to restrain the warmongers of
our own era.
[1] See, for example: Charles A. Beard, President Roosevelt and the Coming of the War
1941 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1948); William Henry
Chamberlin, America’s Second Crusade
(Chicago: Regnery, 1952, 1962); Benjamin Colby, ‘Twas a Famous Victory (New Rochelle, N.Y.: Arlington
House, 1979); Frederic R. Sanborn, Design
for War (New York: Devin-Adair, 1951); William Stevenson, A Man Called Intrepid (New York:
Ballantine Books, 1980); Charles C. Tansill, Back
Door to War (Chicago: Regnery, 1952); John Toland, Infamy: Pearl Harbor and Its Aftermath
(New York: Doubleday, 1982).
[2] Saul Friedlander, Prelude to Downfall: Hitler and the United
States 1939-1941 (New York: Knopf, 1967), pp. 73-77; U.S.,
Congress, House, Special
Committee on Investigation of Un-American Activities in the United States,
1940, Appendix, Part II, pp. 1054-1059.
[3] Friedlander, pp. 75-76.
[4]
New York Times, 30 March 1940, p.
1.
[5]
Ibid., p. 4,
and 31 March 1940, p. 1.
[7] A French-language edition was
published in 1944 under the title Comment
Roosevelt est Entre en Guerre.
[8] Tansill, „The United States and
the Road to War in Europe,“ in Harry Elmer Barnes (ed.), Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace
(Caldwell, Idaho: Caxton, 1953; reprint eds., New York: Greenwood, 1969 and
Torrance, Calif.: Institute for Historical Review [supplemented] , 1982), p.
184 (note 292). Tansill also quoted from several of the documents in his Back
Door to War, pp. 450-51.
[9] Harry Elmer Barnes, The Court Historians Versus Revisionism
(N.p.: privately printed, 1952), p. 10. This booklet is reprinted in Barnes, Selected Revisionist Pamphlets (New
York: Arno Press & The New York Times, 1972), and in Barnes, The Barnes Trilogy (Torrance,
Calif.: Institute for Historical Review, 1979).
[10] Chamberlin, p. 60.
[11] Edward Raczynski, In Allied London (London:
Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1963), p. 51.
[12] Orville H. Bullitt (ad.), For the President: Personal and Secret
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1972), p. x1v [biographical foreword] . See also Time, 26 October 1936, p. 24.
[14] Gisleher
Wirsing, Der masslose Kontinent:
Roosevelts Kampf um die Weltherrschaft (Jena: E. Diederichs, 1942),
p. 224.
[15]
Bullitt obituary in New York
Times, 16 February 1967, p. 44.
[16]
Jack Alexander, „He Rose From the Rich,“ Saturday Evening Post, 11 March
1939, p. 6. (Also see continuation in issue of 18 March 1939.) Bullitt’s public
views on the European scene and what should be America’s attitude toward it can
be found in his Report to the American People (Boston: Houghton Mifflin
[Cambridge: Riverside Press] , 1940), the text of a speech he delivered, with
the President’s blessing, under the auspices of the American Philosophical
Society in Independence Hall in Philadelphia shortly after the fall of France.
For sheer, hyperventilated stridency and emotionalist hysterics, this anti-German
polemic could hardly be topped, even given the similar propensities of many
other interventionists in government and the press in those days.
[17]
Michael R. Beschloss, Kennedy and Roosevelt (New York: Norton, 1980), pp.
203-04.
[18]
Robert Dallek, Franklin
D. Roosevelt and American Foreign Policy 1932-1945 (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1979), p. 31. See also pp. 164-65.
[19]
Dispatch No. 349 of 20 September 1938 by Sir. R.
Lindsay, Documents on British Foreign
Policy (ed. Ernest L. Woodward), Third series, Vol. VII (London,
1954), pp. 627-29. See also: Joseph P. Lash, Roosevelt and Churchill 1939-1941
(New York: Norton, 1976), pp. 25-27; Dallek, pp. 164-65; Arnold A. Offner,
America and the Origins of World War II (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1971), p.
61.
[20]
William Phillips, Ventures
in Diplomacy (North Beverly, Mass.: privately published, 1952), pp.
220-21.
[21] Carl
Burckhardt, Meine Danziger Mission
1937-1939 (Munich: Callwey, 1960), p. 225.
[22]
Drew Pearson and Robert S. Allen, „Washington Daily
Merry-Go-Round,“ Washington
Times-Herald, 14 April 1939, p. 16. A facsimile reprint of this
column appears in Conrad Grieb (ed.), American
Manifest Destiny and The Holocausts (New York: Examiner Books,
1979), pp. 132-33. See also: Wirsing, pp. 238-41.
[23]
Jay P. Moffat, The
Moffat Papers 1919-1943 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press,
1956), p. 232.
[24]
U.S., Department of State, Foreign Relations of the United States (Diplomatic
Papers), 1939, General, Vol. I (Washington: 1956), p. 122.
[25]
„Von Wiegand Says-,“ Chicago Herald-American, 8 October 1944, p. 2.
[26]
Edvard Benes, Memoirs
of Dr. Eduard Benes (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1954), pp.
79-80.
[27]
Lash, p. 64.
[28]
Hamilton Fish, FDR: The
Other Side of the Coin (Now York: Vantage, 1976; Torrance, Calif.:
Institute for Historical Review, 1980), p. 62.
[29]
James V. Forrestal (ads. Walter Millis and E.S.
Duffield), The Forrestal Diaries
(New York: Viking, 1951), pp. 121-22. I have been privately informed by a colleague
who has examined the original manuscript of the Forrestal diaries that many
very critical references to the Jews were deleted from the published version.
[30]
Jan Szembek, Journal
1933-1939 (Paris: Plan, 1952), pp. 475-76.
[31]
David E. Koskoff, Joseph
P. Kennedy: A Life and Times (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.:
Prentice-Hall, 1974), p. 207; Moffat, p. 253; A.J.P. Taylor, The Origins of the
Second World War (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1961; 2nd ed. Greenwich, Conn.:
Fawcett Premier [paperback] , 1965), p. 262; U.S., Department of State, Foreign
Relations of the United States, 1939, General, Vol. I (Washington: 1956), p.
355.
[32]
Dallek, p. 164.
[33]
Beschloss, pp. 190-91; Lash, p. 75; Koskoff, pp.
212-13.
[34]
Hull to Kennedy (No. 905), U.S., Department of State, Foreign Relations of the United States,
1939, General, Vol. I (Washington: 1956), p. 424.
[35]
The radio addresses of Hamilton Fish quoted here were
published in the Congressional Record Appendix (Washington) as follows: (6
January 1939) Vol. 84, Part 11, pp. 52-53; (5 March 1939) same, pp. 846-47; (5
April 1939) Vol. 84, Part 12, pp. 1342-43; (21 April 1939) same, pp. 1642-43;
(26 May 1939) Vol. 84, Part 13, pp. 2288-89; (8 July 1939) same, pp. 3127-28.
[36]
Wayne S. Cole, Charles
A. Lindbergh and the Battle Against American Intervention in World War II
(New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1974), pp. 128, 136-39.
[37]
Congressional Record Appendix
(Washington: 1941), (30 December 1940) Vol. 86, Part 18, pp. 7019-25. See also:
Appendix, Vol. 86, Part 17, pp. 5808-14.
[39]
Lucy Dawidowicz, „American Jews and the Holocaust,“ The New York Times Magazine, 18
April 1982, p. 102.
[40]
„FDR ‘1982, p. 3.
[41]
Charles A. Lindbergh, The Wartime Journals of Charles A. Lindbergh (New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1970), p. 481.
[42]
Koskoff, pp. 282, 212. The role of the American press
in fomenting hatred against Germany between 1933 and 1939 is a subject that
deserves much more detailed treatment. Charles Tansill provides some useful
information on this in Back
Door to War. The essay by Professor Hans A. Muenster, „Die
Kriegsschuld der Presse der USA“ in Kriegsschuld
und Presse, published in 1944 by the German Reichsdozentenfuehrung,
is worth consulting.
[43]
An excellent essay relating and contrasting American
public opinion measurements to Roosevelt’s foreign policy moves in 1939-41 is
Harry Elmer Barnes, Was
Roosevelt Pushed Into War By Popular Demand in 1941? (N.p.:
privately printed, 1951). It is reprinted in Barnes, Selected Revisionist Pamphlets.
[44]
Lash, p. 240.
[46]
Harry Elmer Barnes, The
Struggle Against the Historical Blackout, 2nd ed. (N.p.: privately
published, ca. 1948), p. 12. See also the 9th, final revised and enlarged
edition (N.p.: privately published, ca. 1954), p. 34; this booklet is reprinted
in Barnes, Selected Revisionist
Pamphlets.
[47]
Harry Elmer Barnes, „Revisionism: A Key to Peace,“ Rampart Journal of Individualist Thought
Vol. II, No. 1 (Spring 1966), pp. 29-30. This article was republished in
Barnes, Revisionism: A Key to Peace
and Other Essays (San Francisco: Cato Institute [Cato Paper No. 12]
, 1980).
[48]
Sven Hedin, Amerika
im Kampf der Kontinente (Leipzig: F.A. Brockhaus, 1943), p. 54.had
a Jewish great-grandmother’„ Jewish
Chronicle (London), 5 February
Bibliography
Listed
here are the published editions of the Polish documents, the most important
sources touching on the questions of their authenticity and content, and
essential recent sources on what President Roosevelt was really – as opposed to
publicly – doing and thinking during the prelude to war. Full citations for all
references in the article will be found in the notes.
·
Beschloss,
Michael R. Kennedy and Roosevelt.
New York: Norton, 1980.
·
Bullitt,
Orville H. (ed.). For the
President: Personal and Secret. [Correspondence between Franklin D.
Roosevelt and William C. Bullitt.] Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1972.
·
Germany.
Foreign Office Archive Commission. Roosevelts Weg in den Krieg: Geheimdokumente
zur Kriegspolitik des Praesidenten der Vereinigten Staaten. Berlin:
Deutscher Verlag, 1943.
·
Germany.
Foreign Office. The German White Paper.
[White Book No. 3.] New York: Howell, Soskin and Co., 1940.
·
Germany.
Foreign Office. Polnische Dokumente zur
Vorgeschichte des Kriegs. [White Book No. 3.] Berlin: F.
Eher, 1940.
·
Koskoff, David
E. Joseph P. Kennedy: A Life and
Times. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1974.
·
Lukasiewicz,
Juliusz (Waclaw Jedrzejewicz, ed.). Diplomat
in Paris 1936-1939. New York: Columbia University Press, 1970.
·
Wirsing,
Giselher. Der masslose Kontinent:
Roosevelts Kampf um die Weltherrschaft. Jena: E.
Diederichs, 1942.
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