On March 28 Henlein met with Hitler for three hours. His summary of the Fuehrer's views: "We must always demand so much that we can never be satisfied."
Konrad Henlein was, according to William L. Shirer, "a mild-mannered gymnastics teacher" who became head of the Sudeten German Party in 1933, the year Hitler came to power in Germany. By 1935 the party was subsidized by and under the control of Berlin.
The persuasion included a blunt warning that the time for compromises has passed and that any delay in Pragues decision until after the May and June municipal elections as suggested in the British press proceeds from false conceptions. It included also passionate appeals to the Czechoslovak Government to enrich Europes peace with a contribution of inestimable value, which can only enhance Czechoslovak prestige and make millions of people happy and satisfied.
The National Socialist Angriff ironically recommends that the Prague Government take the Karlsbad cure.
Official quarters insisted today that the German Government had not taken diplomatic steps in the Sudeten German question, which so far as the German Foreign Office is concerned is still a Czechoslovak domestic problem. But the official propaganda led by the Diplomatische Korrespondenz, mouthpiece of the Foreign Office, leaves no doubt that Germany regards the Sudeten German problem as an international one in which, according to Chancellor Hitlers proclamation of Feb. 20, Germany has a special and vital interest that makes diplomatic intervention possible at any time.
In general, the German propaganda passes over entirely Herr Henleins proclamation of allegiance to the Nazi ideology and insists, in the words of the Diplomatische Korrespondenz, that all the Sudeten Germans want is equal rights, security and their own national life within the present State. Where, as in the Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, the Nazi ideology is mentioned, it is argued that while this ideology naturally cannot halt at the States borders, it supposedly does halt at the racial borders, which factor is advanced as a guarantee for other nations against any German lust for conquest or imperialistic aims.
But the thesis of oppressed nationality rights is rather too simple to stand the test of deeper analysis of the European situation even in the German press. The Allgemeine Zeitung, which yesterday expanded on Great Germanys new political chances and economic opportunities in Southeastern Europe, today summarizes the issues thus:
We have freely acknowledged Britains overseas position, but we have also demanded for ourselves respect for our Continental position.
And Czechoslovakia is one of the last obstacles to complete assertion of this Continental position.
The Diplomatische Korrespondenz draws a parallel between conditions in Czechoslovakia and the nationality struggle in the former Turkish, Czarist and Habsburg empires, which the Great European powers were unable to solve and which consequently led first to the Balkan Wars and then to the World War.
The strange manner in which Wilsons Fourteen Points were fulfilled, the Diplomatische Korrespondenz continues, made it impossible to lift the curse of the nationality struggle from the nations of Europe. The Czechs, especially, who were foremost in the old Habsburg monarchy to undermine the States authority and cohesion, have completely failed in the twenty years at their disposal to administer their new State in conformity with the interests and to the satisfaction of the nationalities entrusted to them.
Not only the Germans and the Magyars, but also the Slovaks, the Ruthenians and the Poles can testify to this. The Czechs regard the new State as their very own domain, which gives them superior rights over the natives even in the territories they do not inhabit.
The democratic liberties of which Czech statesmen boast abroad are in the last analysis only the privilege of the Czechs, who in the game of parliamentary majority rule are able within the unitary State to enforce desired measures against the other nationalities with the necessary sanction.
Nobody in the world who has been pained by the unpleasant conditions in the nationality States in the past will be able to set aside the program adopted by the Sudeten Germans at the Karlsbad congress. Least of all the Czechs, who, in their dissatisfaction with the mild regime of the old Habsburg monarchy, went so far as to explode the century-old group of States.
But the armament alliance between the United States, Britain and France, coupled with the Anglo-French conversations with Rome, is also causing some uneasiness here, and the usually aggressive Angriff bitterly remarks:
The helplessness into which Occidental Europe has manoeuvred itself through the faulty post-war policy is most vividly illustrated by the fact that its future destiny is being determined by two non-European nations and States which are not interested in the maintenance of Europes old political, economic and spiritual position in the world, namely, by the United States, the new power center of the other half of the globe, and the Soviet Republic, whose program is the destruction of European culture and its mission. From both come to Europe . . . weapons of destruction designed to strike at the heart of Europe Germany unless the latter is ready to relinquish the function of this organ voluntarily.
From time to time, as now, diplomacy makes an effort to recognize this insanity and to conjure the spirit of community. But under the roar of American and Bolshevist planes this spirit can scarcely flourish.
VIENNA, April 25 (AP). The conservative newspaper Riechspost in an apparently inspired front-page editorial said today that Czechoslovakia as now constituted would not last another year.
The hour of reckoning has come, it said. The degree of suffering of Germans in Czechoslovakia has reached its apogee. The Fuehrer [Adolf Hitler] declared before the Reichstag Feb. 20 that he did not desire to tolerate longer the suppression of 10,000,000 Germans outside Germanys borders.
Since the freeing of Austria it seems panic has seized Prague officials. The true reason for this is their own bad conscience. . . .
The national unified State of Czechoslovakia has been barely able to survive for twenty years with force. As a national unified State Czechoslovakia will not live to experience its twenty-first year.
SHANGHAI, April 25. The Japanese-dominated reformed government of China at Nanking announced today it would not recognize the transfer of the China Merchants Steam Navigation Companys properties, valued at $25,000,000, to the American concern of William P. Hunt & Co.
This promised to raise issues growing out of the Chinese-Japanese war that might require negotiations between Washington and Tokyo.
The United States Court for China recently handed down a decision that the Hunt company had a right to take over the ships, warehouses and wharves at numerous Chinese ports belonging to the China Merchants company, in which the Chinese Government was a large shareholder.
Early in the war the Japanese had announced they would not recognize thenceforth the transfer of any vessels from Chinese to foreign registry. This was to prevent the sailing of Chinese vessels under foreign flags during the war period.
STOCKHOLM, Sweden, April 25. Count von Kageneck, another secretary of Franz von Papen, who had been reported executed, announced tonight that he was very much alive.
Also denying reports that he had fled Germany, Count von Kageneck said he had merely gone on leave April 6 to spend a holiday in Sweden as the guest of Count and Countess Douglas at their estate, St. Jaerntorp, in East Gotland.
I have never heard such nonsense as these reports, he said. I am still Colonel von Papens secretary, and in fact I shall return to Berlin Tuesday to resume my duties.
Baron von Ketteler, confidential aide and secretary of Colonel von Papen, former Ambassador to Austria, also disappeared and in Vienna he was reported dead.
BERLIN, April 25. Joseph Buerckel, a non-Austrian, the National Socialist party Commissioner in Austria, received dictatorial powers under a decree issued here today. He will be responsible for his rule in Austria solely to Chancellor Adolf Hitler.
Dr. Arthur Seyss-Inquart, the Governor, under same decree sinks to a subordinate position. He is to administer the laws that Her Buerckel issues and carry out any other measures that he decides on.
The powers under the decree are granted for one year. All government organs in Austria are instructed that as far as they are concerned Herr Buerckels directions will have the force of law during the period indicated, after which Dr. Seyss-Inquart will be made a Minister of the Reich Government.
Herr Buerckel is noted for his success in combating recalcitrant Catholics. He effectively crushed Catholic schools in the Saar-Palatinate, a province that he governed.
He is equally known for his uncompromising energy in other fields, and he is one of the most vigorous representatives in Germany of the idea of wholly totalitarian government.
The official title of Herr Buerckel will be Reich Commissioner. Hitler has written to Dr. Seyss-Inquart a public letter explaining the unlimited powers given to Herr Buerckel and pointing out that the Commissioner will work in cooperation with the German Minister of the Interior in matters affecting the subordination of Austrian institutions to Reich institutions.
A complicated decree was also issued providing for the gradual disappearance of Austrian currency, which is being replaced by the Reichsmark. Schilling notes will be called in by banks up to May 15, but thereafter they will still be accepted in exchange for Reichsmarks until the end of the year.
The Austrian National Banks note-issuing privileges have been discontinued and the bank will be liquidated. The government announced that means have been found to reimburse stockholders; they will receive twenty-year German Treasury certificates bearing 4 ½ per cent interest, which is considered equivalent to the annual dividends received in recent years.
TIRANA, Albania, April 25. As a prelude to Wednesdays wedding of King Zog and Countess Geraldine Apponyi a series of festivities took place in this capital today. In the early morning a salvo of twenty-one guns announced the opening of the three-day celebration.
The festivities included a large parade of Albanians in picturesque costumes through the citys main streets and a reception this evening at the royal palace. In view of the meager accommodations afforded by Tirana the Albanian court invited only a few foreign guests to the reception.
Count Galeazzo Ciano, Italys Foreign Minister, and the Duke of Bergamo, representing the Italian royal family, are expected here tomorrow.
Tribesmen from the mountains are arriving in thousands and encamping around the city.
Police believe the intruder gained access to the Baronesss second-story bedroom by climbing up a water drain onto a balcony and entering an open window.
The loot, taken from a night table, included a twenty-two-carat diamond ring and a collar of 180 matched pearls.
The Baronesss husband, Baron Andre de Neuflize, won the United States Distinguished Service Medal during the World War. The two are prominent in Paris society.
LONDON, April 25. The Royal Academy, which, despite its reputation as the most august body in British art, has been involved in many disputes in past years, today lost one of its most famous members when Augustus John resigned in protest against the academys rejection of Wyndham Lewiss portrait for it s annual exhibition, opening on Monday.
Despite the reputation of the academy, whose annual exhibition opens the London season, not all British artists covet election, which is most difficult to obtain. Indeed, many of the younger and more progressive British artists insist the academy is dead and refuse even to send paintings to its hanging committee on the ground that only entirely conventional pictures stand a chance.
However, Mr. Lewis submitted his portrait of T. S. Eliot, which he said he had done in academy style, only to have it rejected.
Following that rejection Mr. John submitted his resignation, saying he had not been in complete sympathy with the academy for some time and that a picture by a person of Mr. Lewiss eminence should have been unquestionably exhibited.
The Academy had no comment today, but Mr. Lewis followed up his attacks yesterday, when his picture was rejected, saying that Mr. John must have been a fish out of water in the Academy ranks, as he was the only great living artist who was a member.
Mr. Johns was the third resignation in recent years. Richard Sickert, a full Academician, resigned in 1935 in protest against the Academys refusal to take a stand against the removal of Jacob Epsteins statues from the Rhodesian Government Building on the Strand. The same year Stanley Spencer, an associate, resigned when the Academy rejected some of his pictures for exhibition.
Reply #4 is about reaction to the Henlein speech in the German press. (Henlein good, Czech government bad.)
Reply #5 is mostly unrelated miscellaneous short articles. It includes some good stuff on a cat burglar and King Zog!
The creation in 1919 Paris of doomed/disfuntional states such as this, where the MAJORITY of citizens were at best dis-effected or openly hostile minorities, might have seemed like a good idea at the time? Czechoslovakia ,Yugoslavia were eventually held together only by terror, ethnic cleansing and the Red Army. Where are the now?
Proposed map of the United States of Greater Austria, by Popovici, 1906
Franz Ferdinand had planned to radically redraw the map of Austria-Hungary creating a number of ethnically and linguistically dominated semi-autonomous "states" who would all be part of a larger confederation renamed the United States of Greater Austria. Under this plan language and cultural identification was encouraged, and the disproportionate balance of power would theoretically be righted somewhat. The idea was set to encounter heavy opposition from the Hungarian part of the Dual Monarchy, since a direct result of the reform would have been a significant territorial loss of Hungary.
* Deutsch-Österreich (German-Austria, present-day Austria and Italy (Alto Adige/Südtirol))
* Deutsch-Böhmen (German-Bohemia, northwestern part of present-day Czech Republic)
* Deutsch-Mähren (German-Moravia, northeastern part of present-day Czech Republic)
* Böhmen (Bohemia, southern and central part of present-day Czech Republic)
* Slowakenland (Slovakia)
* West-Galizien (West Galicia, part of present-day Poland)
* Ost-Galizien (East Galicia, part of present-day Ukraine)
* Ungarn (Hungary, present-day southern Slovakia and northern Vojvodina)
* Seklerland (Szeklerland, part of present-day Romania)
* Siebenbürgen (Transylvania, part of present-day Romania and Ukraine)
* Trento (Trentino, part of present-day Italy)
* Triest (Trieste and Gorizia, parts of present-day Italy, western Istria, part of present-day Croatia and Slovenia)
* Krain (Carniola, present-day Slovenia and southern Carinthia)
* Kroatien (Croatia, Srem in present-day Serbia and Boka Kotorska in present-day Montenegro)
* Woiwodina (Vojvodina, part of present-day Serbia)
The title is wrong. This was seventy years ago, not seventy years from now.