Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

COMMONS VOTES ROME PACT; CHAMBERLAIN EXTOLS DUCE AS HITLER STARTS FOR ITALY (Real Time + 70 Years)
Microfiche-New York Times archives | 5/3/38 | Ferdinand Kuhn Jr.

Posted on 05/03/2008 6:15:27 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson

click here to read article


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021 next last

1 posted on 05/03/2008 6:15:27 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Homer_J_Simpson
TIMES MAN FINDS CHINA HOLDING FOE

Goes to Taierhchwang Front and Sees Preparations for Counter-Offensive

The following dispatch is from a correspondent of THE NEW YORK TIMES who has visited the vital battle front in South Shantung,, where the Japanese and Chinese have been locked for weeks in a major struggle. His revelations bear out reports that the second Japanese offensive has been checked:

By F. TILLMAN DURDIN
Wireless to THE NEW YORK TIMES.
TAIERHCHWANG, Shantung Province, China, May 2. – Sporadic warfare, marked by desultory artillery duels and occasional infantry attacks of small forces that result in bitter struggles for control of strategic villages, characterizes the Sino-Japanese hostilities along the front northwest, north and east of this city, the writer found during visits to outposts of this sector last Thursday and Friday.

The Japanese are attacking along a jagged line running roughly northward, eastward and southward along the Tientsin-Pukow Railway and the branch Taierhchwang Railway, the line then bulging around Yihsien and bending south-eastward six miles above Taierhchwang toward Pihsien, twelve miles north of the Lung-Hai Railway, the objective of the spearhead of the Japanese drive in South Shantung.

The Chinese are holding their positions firmly all along this line, and Chinese commanders believe lessening of the Japanese assaults, which up to a few days ago had been continuous, indicate the Japanese forces in this area have spent their offensive strength and are now trying to hold their positions.

Chinese Offensive Ready

The heavily reinforced Chinese armies have, therefore, prepared to launch a counter-offensive coinciding with a Chinese counter-attack all along the South Shantung fronts.

The lull in the Japanese attacks has permitted the Chinese to entrench themselves firmly and defenses are being built around hundreds of small stone-walled villages, typical of the Shantung countryside. Trenches, barricades and dugouts honeycomb the environs of these towns. The Japanese infantry attacks upon these defenses, unaided by tanks or intensive artillery bombardments, are making no headway.

Hsiaochi is the most advanced Chinese outpost north of Taierhchwang. Visiting that village during a lull late in the afternoon the writer found the Chinese troops enjoying a rest after having repulsed Japanese force from Howan, 150 yards away. The Japanese attack had been preceded by an artillery bombardment, during which the north corner of the village was set afire.

The infantry then attacked, but was driven back by sweeping Chinese machine-gun fire. To the right of Hsiaochi and about a mile away a bloody fight was going on for control of Tsaochwang, where four days previously the Japanese had succeeded in taking over half the town. Since then Chinese and Japanese have been battling at close quarters, each in an effort to dislodge the other.

The casualties have reached hundreds on both sides, and two days ago Major Gen. Hu Hsien-mei was killed leading a charge against the Japanese.

At Hsiaochi and a number of other front-line villages visited the Chinese morale seemed excellent. The troops were confident, well fed and neatly uniformed. Although they admitted the inferiority of their weapons, they always declared their spirit and their numerical superiority would offset this. Often the men were in groups singing China’s few war songs.

Chinese Discipline Impressive

The lines north and east of Taierhchwang are held by divisions of General Yu Hsueh-chung’s Fifty-first Army, and the discipline and invariable courtesy of the men were particularly impressive. To the left, between the Taierhchwang Railway and the Tientsin-Pukow line, General Sun Lein-chung’s Twentieth Army, part of which recaptured Taierhchwang, is holding out against only occasional Japanese attacks, a visit to one outpost, Peishan, revealed.

Territory for miles behind the front lines is without civilian inhabitants, except for an occasional aged man or woman who was too old to flee and survived the Japanese conquest of those areas. The intensity of previous fighting during the Japanese advance and the subsequent Chinese counter-advance was shown by the fact that virtually every village was reduced to blackened ruins and roads were lined with corpses. Fields of Spring wheat are untended.

The Chinese troops suffer from lack of water, and they say that this condition is due to the fact that most of the wells were poisoned by retreating Japanese troops. Blazing villages light up the countryside at night as a result of Japanese bombardment with incendiary shells designed to light fires so that Chinese attacks, which are usually carried out at night, can be spotted.

Thus this little city of Taierhchwang, once taken by the Japanese and then recaptured by the Chinese, is the center of a continued struggle and remains a strategic stumbling block in the way of the Japanese drive toward Suchow, strategic center on the Tientsin-Pukow and Lung-Hai railways.

Resistance Is Stanch

On a visit to the headquarters of General Sun Lien-chung, who is the commander of this section of the South Shantung front, and his colleague, General Yu Chung, leader of the Fifty-second Army, holding a line bending east and south of here, the writer had found Chinese troops stanchly resisting repeated Japanese attacks that often resulted in bitter hand-to-hand fighting. The casualties on both sides were obviously heavy.

Chinese commanders then believed the Japanese were attempting a sweeping flank attack eastward of here, pointed toward Pisien. If this met with success the Japanese could then push westward in an attempt to envelop Taierhchwang and advance across the Grand Canal toward Suchow. Simultaneously large Japanese forces that broke through at Lini, about thirty-four miles eastward of Taierhchwang, and joined Japanese troops from Yihsien were attacking Pihsien from the north. Thus, despite the critical position of the Taierhchwang front a few days ago, the Chinese troops were cheerful and confident.

In Taierhchwang itself a brigade of General Yu’s men were busily going about strengthening fortifications throughout the ruined city. Six civilians are the only inhabitants besides the garrison, and among the civilians is Taierhchwang’s “town crier,” who faithfully tramps his rounds beating out the hours on a bamboo gong.

The writer reached Taierhchwang, which is fifty miles from Suchow, after a half-day bus ride over tortuous rutted roads running through smiling fields in which peasants were quietly carrying on their traditional labors, apparently confident that the Japanese military machine would be halted short of overrunning their fruitful acres.

The bus left Suchow just as fifteen Japanese planes finished bombing the north and east railroad stations. In the area of the east station the explosives fell wide of the mark and demolished scores of near-by residences, killing or injuring more than a score of civilians. Some of the bombs damaged a wall of the American mission compound near the station.

Chinese Attack Tancheng
SHANGHAI, May 2 (AP). – Three Chinese columns were reported today to be encircling Tancheng, strategic walled town twenty miles north of the Lung-Hai Railway, while 10,000 fresh Chinese troops were being rushed to that sector.

In a desperate effort to halt the reinforcements, Japanese warplanes subjected them to almost continuous bombardment. The Chinese attack on Tancheng, however, had already developed into a battle of major proportions, threatening communication lines of the Japanese advance guard near the Lung-Hai.

The question of whether the Japanese were approaching their second major military disaster in Shantung was being discussed openly by foreign military experts, who expected decisive action within a week.

Japanese Silence Is Tomblike
Wireless to THE NEW YORK TIMES.
PEIPING, May 2. – The Japanese military authorities here continue to maintain a tomblike silence in regard to the situation in Southern Shantung, where Chinese and Japanese Armies are believed to be either engaged in or preparing for the greatest struggle in the present Far Eastern hostilities.

The Japanese spokesman, however, continues to declare that Japanese forces are “pursuing, attacking and preparing.” Humor was injected into those repetitions when a suggestion was made that such pursuing must place the contending armies back to back.

Although the Chinese forces were consolidated along the Lung-Hai Railway, a change in tactics was apparent in other sectors of North China, where mobile bands are now taking the place of massed Chinese troops. Although the Japanese refuse to admit the existence of these guerrilla fighters, sufficient evidence is prevalent in the Peiping area to make it clear that small bands of Chinese raiders are causing considerable embarrassment to the Japanese lines of communications and outposts.

Both the Peiping-Hankow and Tientsin-Pukow Railways have been attacked and bridges and trackage destroyed, necessitating suspension of traffic, while territories removed from the lines of communications continue to provide sufficient men whose raiding tactics point toward organized warfare of this type, rather than sporadic bandit raids.

2 DIE IN MEXICAN CLASH

Six Are Hurt in Political War in Town of Cuernavaca

Wireless to THE NEW YORK TIMES.
MEXICO CITY, May 2. – Two persons were killed and six hurt during the political clashes yesterday in the resort town of Cuernavaca. The fight took place when the Governor-elect, Elpidio Perdomo, tried to take possession of the State Capitol and his opponents in the recent election tried to stop him.

Three different political parties claim they won the election.

The dead are Jesus Maria Martinez, a lawyer, and Leonardo Gonzaga, a farm worker. Leopoldo Heredia, former Federal Deputy and campaign manager for Senor Perdomo, was injured.

2 posted on 05/03/2008 6:19:06 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson (For events that occurred in 1938, real time is 1938, not 2008.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Homer_J_Simpson
SEND-OFF IS NOISY

100,000 in Berlin See Chancellor Entrain for Visit to Mussolini

SERIOUS OBJECT STRESSED

Reich-Italian Policies to Get Emphasis, the Press Says – London Accord Criticized

Wireless to THE NEW YORK TIMES.
BERLIN, May 2. – Chancellor Adolf Hitler’s departure for Rome this afternoon was made the occasion for a noisy send-off, and in its exuberance it ran yesterday’s May Day festivities a close second.

Long before the Chancellor and his official party entrained the streets leading to Anhalter Station were lined with formations from various party units, behind which 100,000 men, women and children stood on tiptoe for glimpses of the parade of automobiles conveying government and party dignitaries. The Chancellor’s car arrived last, and a half hour was required for the numerous ceremonies. There were more flashlights and more music as Hitler waved farewell from the window of his car.

Although Hitler’s visit to Rome was decided on four months ago, special significance now attaches to it in view of recent European developments, according to the press. The size and rank of the delegation accompanying the Chancellor were cited in support of a semi-official warning to the outside world that the visit stands for something more than a conventional meeting of two statesmen.

To Emphasize Present Policies

The visit will give unequivocal and renewed emphasis, the semi-official comment says, to those national policies of Germany and Italy that are being carried out openly before the whole world. It would be a grave error, the warning adds, if the outside world should profess to see in this unity of purpose a casual or chance development instead of something founded on genuine conviction.

Hitler’s political and diplomatic advisers, led by Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop, travel in the Fuehrer’s train, while the second of his specials is occupied by army, navy and air force leaders, party chiefs and invited guests.

One of the last documents compiled for the Chancellor’s perusal before he left was a transcript of the Anglo-French talks concluded in London last week. If any cognizance is to be taken of them in the course of the Rome conversations, such reference, it was hinted, will be in the nature of a vigorous and unmistakable reaffirmation of the Rome-Berlin axis. The emphasis, it was added, would be of a sort that British and French statesmen could not fail to understand.

Criticism of Accord

The Anglo-French accord continues to receive skeptical appraisal in the German press, and while Prime minister Neville Chamberlain is credited with having retained politically a superior strategic position in relation to France, his acceptance of military commitments is criticized as representing “antiquated diplomatic methods of a sort that do not harmonize with his more recent public professions.”

The British memorandum on the Sudetan German issue has not yet reached the German Foreign Office, it was declared today. If it arrives during Hitler’s absence, the Foreign Office will “receive” it. If a more formal approach should be attempted after Herr von Ribbentrop’s return, Germany’s reply, as far as could be ascertained today, will bluntly notify the British that the nature of the subject of the demarche definitely precluded discussions with “third” parties and that the Sudeten issue as such is not, in the German view, a topic for political barter.

Goering Is Left in Charge

BERLIN, May 2 (AP). – Field Marshal Hermann Goering, Chancellor Hitler’s right-hand man, had charge of the German Government tonight as his chief speeded toward Italy for a State visit.

Informed circles saw in the inclusion of Dr. Friedrich Wilhelm Gaus, legal expert of the Foreign Office, in Hitler’s entourage an indication that at least the basic lines of a pact might be drafted in Rome.

Hitler Will Get a Ride Behind Horses in Rome

By The Associated Press. ROME, May 2. – Chancellor Adolf Hitler, exponent of the airplane and automobile, will return to the horse and buggy era when he arrives tomorrow on his state visit.

As head of the German State, Hitler will be the guest of King Victor Emmanuel who has not succumbed to streamlining.

The King will take his guest to the Quirinal palace in a royal coach, drawn by four horses with silver harness and mounted by red-coated, white-wigged postilions.

3 posted on 05/03/2008 6:21:30 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson (For events that occurred in 1938, real time is 1938, not 2008.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: fredhead; GOP_Party_Animal; r9etb; PzLdr; dfwgator; Paisan; From many - one.; rockinqsranch; ...
Reply #2 is about the Chinese and Japanese still slugging it out around Taierhchwang. This article is the reason for the MilHist keyword.

Reply #3 relates to the main story.

4 posted on 05/03/2008 6:26:33 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson (For events that occurred in 1938, real time is 1938, not 2008.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Homer_J_Simpson

Shouldn’t the posted date be “real time MINUS 70 years”?


5 posted on 05/03/2008 7:52:26 AM PDT by canuck_conservative
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: canuck_conservative

See my tagline.


6 posted on 05/03/2008 7:59:05 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson (For events that occurred in 1938, real time is 1938, not 2008.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: canuck_conservative

This was a very interesting read. Though Neville Chamberlain is condemmed today as an appeaser, Hitler and Mussilini were much more popular at the time than it is realized today. The Munich Pact was extremely popular at the time. Chamberlain was greeted by cheering crowds after the agreement. US ambassidor to Britain Joseph P. Kennedy said that American influence was responsible for the Munich Pact. FDR sent Chamberlain a letter congratulating him for the Munich Pact and praising his efforts. Chamberlain had asked the US to stand with him against Hitler over Czechoslovalia but Kennedy and Roosevelt refused and encouraged him not to honor Britain’s Treaty to defend the Czechs. When Hitler threatened to invaded Poland, Chamberlain again asked the US to stand with Britain in facing down Hitler. This time, even ambassidor Kennedy asked FDR to intervene on behalf of the US. FDR refused. Chamberlain then honored Britain’s treaty with Poland and declared war on Germeny.


7 posted on 05/03/2008 8:13:19 AM PDT by detective
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: detective

Ron Paul got a handful of primary votes this year as a stand-in for old Neville Chamberlain and his all purpose cowardice masked as foreign policy.


8 posted on 05/03/2008 8:18:33 AM PDT by BlackElk (Dean of Discipline of the Tomas de Torquemada Gentlemen's Club)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: Homer_J_Simpson

Oh my.

Chamberlin certainly was the Jimmy Carter of his day!


9 posted on 05/03/2008 8:28:37 AM PDT by BenLurkin
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Homer_J_Simpson
...The clouds of mistrust and suspicion have been cleared away. The peoples now regard one another with a determination to promote mutual friendship instead of hostility. I believe that between Italy and ourselves this agreement marks the beginning of a new era.”

History repeating itself again in real time...

JMO.

10 posted on 05/03/2008 11:33:49 AM PDT by EGPWS (Trust in God, question everyone else)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: BenLurkin
Chamberlin certainly was the Jimmy Carter of his day!

Thank God for Winston Churchill!

A man with the right stuff!

11 posted on 05/03/2008 11:36:05 AM PDT by EGPWS (Trust in God, question everyone else)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: canuck_conservative
Shouldn’t the posted date be “real time MINUS 70 years”?

Yes it should. This error is repeated over and over in this thread series.

12 posted on 05/03/2008 11:38:15 AM PDT by Petronski (When there's no more room in hell, the dead will walk the earth, voting for Hillary.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: Homer_J_Simpson

Thank you very much for taking the time and consideration to remind us all of what is still the darkest chapter in all of human history, bringing this most timely, timeless of issues to the fore as we face a nemesis every bit as ruthless and diabolical as were the Nazis.


13 posted on 05/03/2008 1:59:29 PM PDT by freerepublic_or_die (Islam:Truly the opium of the morons with apologies to Karl Marx)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: detective
"Chamberlain had asked the US to stand with him against Hitler over Czechoslovakia but Kennedy and Roosevelt refused and encouraged him not to honor Britain’s Treaty to defend the Czechs.

"When Hitler threatened to invaded Poland, Chamberlain again asked the US to stand with Britain in facing down Hitler. This time, even ambassador Kennedy asked FDR to intervene on behalf of the US. FDR refused."

There's no record I know of showing Chamberlain requesting Roosevelt's help in "facing down Hitler."

Such a request would have been pointless anyway, considering America's well known determination to remain isolationist and not involved in European squabbles.

Indeed, there's no record of Chamberlain EVER seriously wavering from his appeasement policy. That's one reason he was finally replaced by Churchill.

And Ambassador Kennedy, if anything, was even more defeatist, and a bigger appeaser -- when push came to serious shoving (in that, the old man resembled Teddy more than John. Old Joe hated FDR, among other things, for getting the US into Europe's war).

You just can't seriously portray Kennedy as a "war hawk."

14 posted on 05/03/2008 3:29:52 PM PDT by BroJoeK (A little historical perspective....)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: BroJoeK

“Indeed, there’s no record of Chamberlain EVER seriously wavering from his appeasement policy.”

Chamberlain declared war on Germany after Germany invaded Poland. Calling his country to war can not be called achievement. Ambassidor Kennedy said America was responsible for the Munich Agreement. Kennedy strongly encouraged appeasement of Hitler during his role as US ambassidor to England.


15 posted on 05/03/2008 6:58:20 PM PDT by detective
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: BroJoeK

Correction. Calling his country to war could not be called appeasement.


16 posted on 05/03/2008 7:23:41 PM PDT by detective
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: Homer_J_Simpson

What strikes me most is to confirm what some historians had pointed out about the Spanish civil war. After the confrontation in Spain a democracy could have not arised because, among other things, lack of democrats.

It is clear that many people in that era, including both governments in Britain in America believed that democracy, after a experience of barely 100 years, was over in Continental Europe, and that Fascism constitued the “modern” way of government at that time.

IMHO this helps to explain the rapid collapse of France before the German armies. There was no faith in Democracy then.

Germanophiles in Britain, therefore, simply advocated for what was trendy those times.

Unfortunately, those ideas are not so uncommon today in modern Continental Europe.


17 posted on 05/04/2008 4:24:26 AM PDT by J Aguilar (Veritas vos liberabit)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: detective
"Correction. Calling his country to war could not be called appeasement."

Almost without exception, historians are relentless in criticizing Chamberlain for the weakness of his policies toward Hitler.

For example, even Britain's declaration of war, in 1939, is said to have been forced on Chamberlain by his still-timid opposition, and resulted in NO serious aid to Poland, or attacks on Germany.

Do you remember how "blitz krieg" in 1939 against Poland became "sitz krieg," the "phony war," in France? For eight months Britain and France did nothing, sat patiently waiting for Hitler to make his next move.

Of course, the same failure of leadership could be said of Roosevelt. In 1938 he was still hoping to talk Hitler into behaving himself, and so isolate the US from Europe's disputes.

The only real difference is that in May of 1938, Roosevelt's America was a self-avowed isolationist country, while Chamberlain was, in effect, the Leader of the Free World.

We expect more of our leaders.

18 posted on 05/04/2008 5:28:23 AM PDT by BroJoeK (A little historical perspective....)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 16 | View Replies]

To: J Aguilar
"Unfortunately, those ideas are not so uncommon today in modern Continental Europe."

Good post, good points, well said!

19 posted on 05/04/2008 5:32:17 AM PDT by BroJoeK (A little historical perspective....)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

To: BroJoeK

“We expect more of our leaders.”

I agree. But I think historians tend to portray Chamberlain as the epitome of appeasement when at the time his policies reflected the popular opinion of the British people and the American policy enacted through ambassador Kennedy encouraged the same world view. Britain was not prepared for war in 1939 and could not have successfully attacked Germeny. They did try to secure Norway against a German attack but Britain was so unprepared for war it turned into a total disaster.
Churchill was extremely unpopular at the time as are many statesmen with integrity, foresight and courage. Churchill was not elected Prime Minister in 1940 he was appointed just as the allies were losing in France. Churchill himself said, “They never would have let me be Prime Minister if they thought there was any meat left on the bone.”


20 posted on 05/04/2008 9:47:29 AM PDT by detective
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 18 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson