Posted on 07/22/2009 6:19:50 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson
On the same day Weizsaecker rather exuberantly wired Ambassador von der Schulenburg in Moscow some interesting new instructions. As to the trade negotiations, he informed the ambassador, we will act here in a markedly forthcoming manner, since a conclusion, and this at the earliest possible moment, is desired here for general reasons. As far as the purely political aspect of our conversations with the Russians is concerned, he added, we regard the period of waiting stipulated for you in our telegram [of June 30] as having expired. You are therefore empowered to pick up the threads again there, without in any way pressing the matter.
William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
From the lead editorial:
If the plight of the refugees were not so desperate, if some alternative plan had been offered when the British White Paper on Palestine was issued, [See realtime post for 5/18/39 Homer] large-scale illegal immigration and the consequent suspension of legal immigration into the Holy Land might have been avoided.
Nazi-Soviet pact update at Reply #2.
On July 24 Count Teleki, Premier of Hungary, addressed identical letters to Hitler and Mussolini informing them that in the event of a general conflict Hungary will make her policy conform to the policy of the Axis. Having gone so far, he then pulled back. On the same day he wrote the two dictators a second letter stating that in order to prevent any possible misinterpretation of my letter of July 24, I . . . repeat that Hungary could not, on moral grounds, be in a position to take armed action against Poland.
For some weeks the Duce had been worrying and fretting about the danger of the Fuehrer dragging Italy into war. Attolico, his ambassador in Berlin, had been sending increasingly alarming reports about Hitlers determination to attack Poland. Since early June Mussolini had been pressing for another meeting with Hitler and in July it was fixed for August 4 at the Brenner. On July 24 he presented to Hitler through Attolico certain basic principles for their discussion. If the Fuehrer considered war inevitable, then Italy would stand by her side. But the Duce reminded him that a war with Poland could not be localized; it would become a European conflict. Mussolini did not think that this was the time for the Axis to start such a war. He proposed instead a constructive peaceful policy over several years, with Germany settling her differences with Poland and Italy hers with France by diplomatic negotiations. He went further. He suggested another international conference of the Big Powers.
William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
But at the same time, he refuses to address the idea of actually doing something about Hitler, other than accepting the refugees that Hitler's actions have created.
"Doing something" meant war, or at least preparing seriously to do so. And the idea of going to war with Hitler was no doubt horrifying to the editor. What he didn't consider, apparently, was the consequences of not going to war with Hitler -- a problem that the free world had been refusing to address for years, by this point.
As usual in these outstanding posts of yours, we see the similarities to what's going on around us today.
As always, thanks for posting.
A few days ago I finished the book “Soldat: Reflections of a German Soldier, 1936-1949” by Siegfried Knappe. After his release from Soviet prison Knappe became a US citizen. If you haven’t read this book, I highly recommend it. It’s an incredibly riveting read from the perspective of a German staff order who realized far too late of Hitler’s road to the destruction of Germany.
It sounds like a good read. It would be interesting to read an account of a junior officer of serving in the Wehrmacht in the pre-war years. The closest I have come to that is a novel about a rifleman on the Eastern front I read years ago called, I thought, “The Forgotten Soldier.” I just went to Amazon to confirm that and there is a book there with that title on the same subject but it is described as an autobiography. Since the central character in the one I read is KIA at the end it can’t be the same forgotten soldier. Maybe I have the title wrong.
07/25/1939 - Poland gives Britain and France a German Enigma machine each, whose codes they have broken.
http://www.worldwar-2.net/prelude-to-war/prelude-to-war-index.htm
The following site gives some background on this event.
http://www.century-of-flight.net/Aviation%20history/WW2/Enigma.htm
Just trying to make your links clickable:
http://www.worldwar-2.net/prelude-to-war/prelude-to-war-index.htm
The following site gives some background on this event.
http://www.century-of-flight.net/Aviation%20history/WW2/Enigma.htm
1939 was really the cusp of “doing” something about the Nazis. They had been elected in 1933. They had demanded and gotten Austria and the Sudatenland. They had violated the Versailles Treaty, but as the Economic Consequences of the Peace evidences the west was split over that treaty.
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