Office of Strategic Services - Reports, April 13, 1942-April 28, 1942
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OCR Page 1 of 2PSF: Office of Strategic Services: Donovan Reports, April 13-28,1942
Folder #9
PSF Subject File
Box 165
PSF: OFFICE OF STRATEGIC SERVICES
1942
Donovan Report
No. 9
April 13 to 28
No. 400
April 13, 1942
6:00 P.M.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
FROM: William J. Donovan
I have heard from Richard Casey. My talk with
him was based on an arrangement made by us with the British
on April 4 and with the Yugoslavs. I attach a memorandum
of the general plan. All of this I have thoroughly dis-
cussed with the Office of the Chiefs of Staff. This is
done for the purpose of attempting to effect some kind of
a diversion in the event that the Germans move in through
Yugoslavia.
Mr. Casey spoke to me about additional funds in
the form of gold, but I told him that I would prefer to
do nothing about that until specific situations arise
which might justify your authorization. I am a little
inclined myself to the belief that while bribery should
not be ignored, patriotism is more effective. I will not
call upon you for gold unless it is essential.
GENERAL PLAN
I outlined to Mr. Casey our belief that our sub-
versive and intelligence organizations should, like
theirs, be separate; and that while as to subversive
activities we would work in combination with their
organization in the Middle East, in order to insure
the maximum results from both, we would on the other
hand develop and maintain our own intelligence organiza-
tion, with liaison through the directing officer in
Cairo. In this way, we will obtain double security,
and the collapse of any part of one intelligence system
will not affect the other.
As to the intelligence side, I pointed out to him
the necessity of our own wireless facilities in the
Middle East, and he agreed to pursue the matter on our
behalf in London.
Once preliminary arrangements are made we can, if
necessary, present the matter formally through regular
diplomatic channels.
As to subversive activities, including such activi-
ties as supplying General Mihailovitch's forces, I sug-
gested that we work in partnership, with the command
- 2 -
being in British hands since the Middle East is pre-
dominantly a British theatre of war. I proposed that
command of combined subversive activities in a given
area should follow the command of the combined military
operations in the area, unless there was some good
reason otherwise. The question of supplies for such
activities should also be handled in the same way that
questions of ordinary military supplies for the area con-
cerned are handled - in this case requests for supplies
going in the first instance to London, to be forwarded
to Washington if the material requested cannot be supplied
from London.
I also told Mr. Casey that I was opposed to working
out and signing a long and detailed agreement, specifying
precise sums of gold to be contributed by us, etc. I
suggested that we proceed on the general principles set
out above, the details to be worked out as they arise on
the basis of a common endeavor of men of good will, with
either of us being free to withdraw if it becomes apparent
that for any reason, separate activities might be more
effective.
Mr. Casey is taking these matters up in London at
beardeco 3010 to bring
potus a BLIffor
R BATTER
- 3 -
the first opportunity, and is to let me know the re-
sults. I have several trained men ready to send to
Cairo at once to carry through the arrangement.
No. 401
April 13, 1942
6:00 P.M.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
From:
William J. Donovan
We are making a study of the Scandinavian
situation. The purpose of this study is to examine the
situation in Norway, Sweden and Finland with respect to
possible Axis or Allied political and military action in
1942. The study will examine the political situation in
these countries, their position in the German war economy,
and the logistical problems involved in both Axis and Allied
penetration.
I. The Political Position of Scandinavia
A. Norway
1. The Underground Movement
2. The Strength of the Pro-German Group
3. Probable Reactions to Allied Military Action
B. Sweden
1. General Factors Affecting Swedish Outlook on War
(a) fear of Russia
(b) economic ties to Germany
(c) sympathy for Norway and Pro-Allied sentiment
2. Political Groups
(a) the major parties
(b) the labor unions
-2-
(c) the army
(d) key personalities
3. Recent Trends
(a) consequences of German Russian War
(b) consequences of persecutions in Norway
(c) consequences of American entry into war
C. Finland
1. Finland's Position in Russian War
(a) desire for quick victory
(b) desire for long run security
(c) isolation from Allies; dependence on Germany
2. Political Groups
(a) the major parties
(b) the army (Mannerheim)
(c) key personalities
3. Recent Trends
(a) the food shortage
(b) consequences of prolongation of war
D. Conclusions
Speculation on (a) possibilities of affecting Allied
position in Scandinavia through propaganda or diplomacy;
(b) probable reaction of the three areas to Allied
military action of various kinds: major attempt to
reconquer Scandinavia; expedition to Northern Norway;
expeditionary force to Murmansk.
-3-
II. The Economic Role of Scandinavia in the German War Economy
This section is virtually finished. It examines the
contribution of Scandinavia to the German supply of strategic
minerals, wood products, foodstuffs, merchant shipping, and
industrial production, and weighs the consequences to the
German war economy of denial of the whole area. It concludes
that the loss of the area would have serious long and short
run consequences on the German war effort.
III. The Logistics of Scandinavia
A. The Terrain. Basic factors affecting defense or attack:
road and railway net, principal harbors, lessons of
campaign of April 1940.
B. German Military Preparations.
1. Present German Order of Battle
2. German Air Defense: location and adequacy of air
fields.
3. Possibility of Germany concentrating large forces
in Scandinavia: transport facilities and routes;
probable margin of German strength available in West.
C. The Possible Role of the Swedish Armed Forces
1. Size of Establishment: army, navy, air force
2. Routes to Norway
3. Conditions, political and military, under which
Swedish Army would fight with or against Allies.
D. Logistical Considerations Affecting Possible Allied Action
-4-
E. Conclusions
Military conclusions examined in light of political
and economic conclusions: the type and scale of
Allied action capable of producing the maximum
.
military, economic, and political results.
Mirch
No. 402
April 13, 1942
6:00 P.M.
for
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
FROM: William J. Donovan
The attached is a brief report on our
weekly shortwave radio operations. The report
concerns volume rather than content.
March 31, 1942
WEEKLY NEW YORK STUDIO PRODUCTION
REBROADCAST:
French
)
7 - - 15 min. shows
German
)
1 - 15 min. show (extra platter for shipment)
Italian
)
8 for each language
English
)
32 - 15 min. shows - - 8 hours
WLWO - Live
English - - 49 - 15 min. shows
German - - 42 - 15 #
.
French - - - - 42 - 15 #
.
Italian - - - 42 - 15
#
.
255 - 63 hours and 45 minutes
SPECIAL FEATURES
German American Observer
3 - 15 min. shows
German Health Report
4 - 8
.
.
German Science Report
2 - 8
#
-
Classical Arabic
6 - 15
.
#
Egyptian Arabic
5 - 15
.
.
Turkish
6 - 15
"
.
Dutch
6 - 5
#
.
Czech
3 - 15 #
#
Finnish
1 - 15 #
#
36 - 7 hours and 18 min.
XSCY EXP XJXXXV
March 31, 1942
DAILY NEW YORK NEWS AND FEATURE PRODUCTION
NEWS -- including midnight newscast, sunrise news-
cast, Frisco newscast, Far East newscast,
Czech newscast, Finn newscast, Leopold-
ville
17,240 words
SCRIPTS -- Regulars - United America Fights, Fight
for Freedom Victory for Philippines
4,800
.
....
-- Specials - from 300 to 1,500 words,
translated in varying number of languages
dependent upon purpose, etc.
3,200 .
TOTAL
25,240
#
United America Fights goes into Danish, French, German,
Italian, Portuguese, Spanish,
Swedish, Turkish.
Fight for Freedom goes into varying number according to purpose.
Victory for Philippines goes into English only at this point.
A 1500-word Greek program is produced once each week.
A Turkish program is produced daily - - about 3000 words.
A similar program is produced in Egyptian and Syrian Arabic.
Also, a running news report is edited and prepared for Edd Johnson's
staff. This is also made available to the Regional Desks, etc.
Daily - 7 days a week - Propaganda analysis report - 6 a.m. and 12 noon.
850 words each report -- total 1700 words. At 3 p.m. there is a
special Latin American report which goes to all stations on what the
Axis is saying to Latin America. This is also sent to CIAA repre-
sentatives here and a copy to the Propaganda Section at 444 Madison
Avenue. (Medium wave report at 6 p.m.)
WASHINGTON - Cabled News Reports
Cabled News Reports are as follows: PHILIPPINE (twice-daily service to
Luzon;) CEBU: CHUNGKING (twice-daily about 2500 words); AUSTRALIAN
(nightly-about 500-800 words); BRITISH (nightly 600-900 words); London
also receives a drop copy of our daily editorial round-up prepared
primarily for Stockholm and Cairo; STOCKHOLM-CAIRO-daily service,
800-900 words; ICELAND-GREENLAND, daily - about 1,100 words; SWISS,
4 times a week; LEOPOLDVILLE-daily, handled in New York.
and X60Y N3M YJIAG
You will recall that in Jánuary you
authorized us to buy time from the various
companies in order that we might have con-
trol over what went out over the stations.
This has not yet gone through because
it has not been approved by the Budget. At
this very critical period it would be most
helpful if we could have that done under
our immediate direction and programming.
No. 403
April 13, 1942
6:00 P.M.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
From:
William J. Donovan
In our Foreign Propaganda Planning Group we are
having the following general outline up for discussion.
This is a world-wide war of liberation. We are
fighting to liberate the peoples of the world -
From the terror of the Gestapo
From the ruthless cruelty of the tyrant - of the
political tyrant, the economic tyrant, and the
military tyrant.
This is a peoples' war.
We are fighting for freedom against totalitarian
slavery.
We are fighting to make a commonwealth of free men.
We are fighting -
(1) For freedom within the world-wide
order of the Commonwealth.
(2) For freedom to organize society and
utilize the world's resources in the
interest of the Commonweal.
-2-
We are fighting for a society in which -
(1) The Governors are removable by the
peoples' will.
(2) No one man has absolute authority,
and the exercise of power is controlled
by constitutional safeguards.
(3) Government is responsible to the
general welfare rather than to the
interests of particular pressure groups.
(4) There is opportunity to work, to pro-
duce, and to trade within the interest
of the Commonweal.
(5) There is freedom to act on religious
faith.
(6) There is freedom to participate through
discussion in the process of formulating
national policy.
To this end, the Government of the United States is -
(1) Accumulating vast stock piles of food
and raw materials to be used as soon as
victory is won - food for the starving
peoples of occupied countries, and raw
materials to set the wheels of industry
freely moving again for civilian purposes.
-3-
(2) Preparing to revitalize the world's
economic system through world-wide col-
laboration with free peoples along the
lines of its recent lend-lease agreement
with Great Britain.
(3) Preparing to use its forces in the
post-war world to maintain the conditions
necessary for the realization of
these objectives.
In the light of the past twenty-five years, it is apparent
that peace cannot be made by inaction. The field when plowed
and left untended produces weeds. A world unorganized
produces tyranny and war.
The destiny of America is not the destiny of a race or of a
class or of a military imperialism. Our destiny is related
to the destiny of men as persons 1 to the dignity and
grandeur of personal life. Man was not made for the state
but the state for man. Our aim is to create an order within
the discipline of the Commonwealth. That is our mission.
And upon that mission we have embarked.
No. 404
April 14, 1942
8:30 A.M.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
From:
William J. Donovan
For your information, the following is a memorandum
handed to me by one of the British S0 men. We are working
on this basis.
"In general terms it was agreed that joint Anglo-
American SOE activities in any theatre of war are not the
direct concern of the Chiefs of Staff. They do, however, be-
come concerned over questions of supply."
"The correct procedure in a British theatre of war
is for all applications for materials to be submitted in the
ordinary way to London. If the Munitions Assignment Board
there cannot supply what is required they will forward a bid
to the United States Munitions Assignment Board through the
British Chiefs of Staff in Washington."
"If this is done SOE New York should be advised and
given the whole story so that the necessary explanations can
be given to the Chiefs of Staff Washington to enable them to
press the case."
"Arrangements should be made that the Chiefs of Staff
are asked by the Munitions Assignment Board in London to con-
sult British Security Coordination regarding the matter to
ensure that there is no chance of a slip up. Until this stage
-2-
is reached SO'S people should take no hand and should certainly
not put in a separate bid for the material. In an American
theatre of war the procedure is reversed and the application
for material is first made by the SO organization in the usual
way. If
"As to the position in Latin America, this could be no
concern of the British Chiefs of Staff since it is a purely
Western Hemisphere matter. The United States Chiefs of Staff
are fully aware of the importance of and the dangers in Latin
America. If
No. 405
April 14, 1942
8:30 A.M.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
From:
William J. Donovan
The following is for your information and is
taken from a letter which I have just received from
Commander John Ford who has been in Honolulu for the past
six or eight weeks making the Pearl Harbor film requested
by the Navy:
"These islands from a military view are merely
bases for striking forces, Army and Navy. This, to my view,
is their only advantage. The Army talks in terms of defense--
the Navy in terms of offense. They do not get together. As
this is the front line of Naval striking force, we need the
supreme command in Navy hands."
"The local Japanese situation is distorted. N. I.
and M.I.D. are poles apart. Their efforts are not coordinated.
F.B.I. acts independently. Example; M.I.D. turns over for
our use as liaison man with local Japs a supposedly loyal
American of Jap ancestry, fully vouched for by the Army.
Three days later, F.B.I. picks him up and throws him in jail.--
complete lack of coordination of information."
-2-
" We are doing the Japanese espionage stuff very
thoroughly. It's fascinating and quite exciting. Personally,
I do not trust any of the Japanese. I honestly believe the
majority of them are tainted. It's strange since the "Raid"
how very Oriental Honolulu appears--thousands upon thousands
of Jap faces. We have been photographing scores of Jap signs
to show the character of the town. Now you can hardly see one.
They have all taken down their. signs and have substituted
English lettering. Example; 'Banzai Cafe'--beers and liquors--
is now the 'Keep Em Flying Cafe'. The Army is being influenced
in its Japanese attitude by Walter Dillingham. Naturally,
the 'Big Five' would be embarrassed economically by any
curtailment of Oriental skilled help. Most of the key positions--
chief bookkeepers, time-keepers, expert accountants, skilled
mechanics, plantation foremen, are Japs."
"From the best sources, they estimate about six
hundred active agents still loose on the island. I figure
triple that number. Some amazing stories of spying leak out
daily, some cunning, some crude, but information is getting
out. Up to this date, April 3, the mountains have not been
carefully searched for sending sets. Pistols are fired at
midnight, fires start, etc. I wish they would open up and light
up the town and coax them back again. I'm sure this time they'd
never get back. And I am reluctantly forced to admit, despite
my former reasoning drawn from some knowledge of the Jap, that
copie
-3-
he will come back, if only for a token raid--perhaps an
incendiary attack on Honolulu proper. There have been too
many authenticated flights of single planes, presumably
launched from subs, over the city at night--these reconnaissance
flights are for some purpose. It has one good effect, it keeps
the Army boys on their toes. "
"As for our work, we're really working hard but the
result should and will be magnificent. Our story of the "Raid
on Pearl Harbor" must be the best documentary of all times.
It is, first, a great historic document. I am not sacrificing
truth for fiction. This thing we're doing is the real thing--
actually the stuff we've gotten so far is grand."
No. 406
April 13, 1942
6:00 P.M.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
FROM: William J. Donovan
The following is a report of British Home Intelligence
for week ending April 6, 1942.
"Slight rise in public spirits which was mentioned in
the last report appears to be maintained. So does the mood of
expectancy which still is ill-defined. There is 'an air of
suspense, of waiting for something to happen'. Lack of new
disasters and indications of British vigor and initiative con-
tribute. However, the public will need many more signs that
Britain is passing from an attitude of defense to themuch de-
sired aggressive spirit before it can be described again as
'on its toes'.
The general trend of public thought is toward attack
rather than defense. The St. Nazaire attack, the recent heavy
raids on France and Germany and the successful passage of the
Murmansk convoy have had the effect of a tonic but the public
still reacts to them as spectators rather than as participants.
According to one RIO: 'Private considerations and the lure
of personal gains still weigh more with many persons than does
the cause'. Lack of interest in the war and reluctance to talk
about it are mentioned by 7 RIO's. 'The public appears to be
- 2 -
concentrating on what they can do for themselves'. They are
preoccupied with domestic or home affairs such as civil defense
or 'digging for victory'. The general tone of most reports sug-
gested that there still exists a 'sense of frustration which,
though no longer at boiling point, exists as a background for
discontent'.
"On India, there is very great admiration for Cripps,
this being 'more of a compliment to his personality than optimism
concerning the result of his mission'. There are fears that
India will go the way of Burma. In some quarters the government
is criticized for 'putting the plan forward too late'. 'We
should have won India by an offer of Dominion Status immediately
following the Atlantic charter'.
"United States. About the USA there is little comment
but satisfaction is reported that 'they are doing something at
last'. Postal censorship confirms some belief in USA support
'as soon as they get into their stride'. Complaints come from
the same source on the behavior of U.S. troops now in England.
It is alleged that they 'all talk', and resentment is expressed
at their tone: 'It is about time we came over to win the war
for you'. It is felt that they are 'throwing their weight
áround'.
"Russia. Sympathy and admiration continue as before
for Russia, but anxiety is reported again by 5 RIO's at the
- 3 -
apparent slowing down of the progress and prospects of the Red
Army.
"News presentation and broadcasting. There exists 'an-
noyance' at expressions such as 'strategic withdrawal' and
'straightening of lives' in Burma. Listeners research report
No. 78 discloses that in the last few weeks the level of listen-
J
ing to news bulletins has decreased by 20 per cent.
"Post-war conditions. This week 3 Ministry of Information
speakers and 4 RIO's refer to interest of the public in post-war
conditions. People 'demand to be informed what sort of post-war
society our rulers contemplate as a result of victory'. Two of
the RIO's refer to the belief that 'production would be improved
if something could be done to convince workers that post-war
conditions would be better than those which they now enjoy'. 'A
definite statement by the government, - preferably the Prime
Minister -, on conditions in this country after the war would do
a great deal to improve the war effort'.
"Food. There is little complaining about it but growing
demand for 'equality in distribution' and strong feeling that
'luxury foods should not be at the disposal of only the wealthy'.
The abolition of white bread was taken with very little complaint.
"Black markets and anti-semitism. From Midland and London
areas and from police duty room reports references to an increase
in anti-semitism, said to be due principally to 'the frequent
Too #
/ animals to &
: 4 -
occurrences of Jewish names in news reports of black market
cases'. Other reasons cited for the increase or prevalence of
anti-semitism are 'the many current stories of Jewish evasion of
duties and regulations, and the 'apparent unwillingness to take
action, on the part of Jewish leaders'".
No. 407
April 14, 1942
MEMORAN DUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
12 Noon
FROM: William J. Donovan
I know your interest in geography and following
is a report prepared by us in response to an inquiry on be-
half of the Office of Naval Intelligence. This inquiry read
in part as follows:
"Specifically, what is desired is information
on the average ice conditions prevailing during
the winter in the Straits of Tartary, 1.0., aver-
age thickness of the ice, its capacity to sustain
a temporary railway line across it, etc."
In an attempt to appraise the practicability of
using ice-transport between the Island of Sakhalin and the
mainland of Siberia, as a link in a supply route from the
United States to Russia, the following subjects would ap-
pear to require consideration:
1. Port facilities on the eastern shore of Sak-
halin Island.
2. Land communications from such port or ports
to points on the western shore of Sakhalin Island (on the
Tartar Strait and the Gulf of Amur).
3. Communications from the western shore of these
waters to inland points in Siberia.
These three subjects are treated only very briefly,
or not at all, in the present memorandum. An attempt is
being made to collect further information under these
headings.
matting MON
OF
- 2 -
THE TARTAR STRAIT AND THE GULF OF AMUR.
Extending from the La Perouse Strait in the South
to the Sakhalin Gulf in the North, the Tartar Strait oom-
prises:
1.- Gulf of Tartary, south of the line C. Sush-
chev-Viakhtu Bay;
2. Tartar Strait proper, 1.0., the narrows ex-
tending northward from this line to the line C. Lazarev -
0. Pogobi; and
3. Gulf of Amur (Amurskii Liman), from Lat.
52°14' N. to Lat. 534° N.
Parts of the Tartar Strait proper are frequently
called by special names: Nevelskoi Strait (the southern
section), and Mamia Rinzo (from C. Muravev to C. Lazarev).
Only the Tartar Strait proper and the Gulf of
Amur are covered in the present memorandum, Almost en-
tirely occupied by banks of sand and mud, formed by silt
from the Amur River, these waters are closed to n avigation,
except through the following channels: 2/
Karta Soiusa S.S.R., III, 1926; scale - 1:6,000,000.
Also: Bolshoi Sovetskii Atlas Mira (The Large Soviet At-
las of the World), V. II, Moscow, 1939, plate 91-92. Data
respecting the configuration of this waterway, the width
at some of its points, the navigable channels, and the
winter routes over the ice, are taken from Lotsiia Severo-
Zapadnoi Chasti Vostochnogo Okeana (Sailing Directions for
the North-Western Section of the Pacific), II, St. Peters-
burg, 1904; also Dopolnenie k II chasti (The Supplement to
Part II), corrected to January I, 1912, St. Petersburg,
1912.
Ibid., D. 247.
fire
TASTE HATRAT
- 3 -
1. In the Tartar Strait proper, there is only
one narrow channel; six miles long (from 0. Muravev to O.
Lazarev), it has & depth of 17 feet at high water.
2. Entering the Gulf of Amur, this channel
branches off into two fairways:
a) The South channel, which passes along the
Siberian mainland and leads finally to the Amar estuary.
b) The Sakhalin channel, which leads through
the eastern part of the Gulf, along the shore of the Sakhalin
Island, and serves as a passage northward to the gulf by the
same name.
Opposite Khagemif Islands these two channels meet
for a short distance, affording thus a pasage from one chan-
nel into the other.
The South Channel varies in its width from one-
half of one cable's length to twomiles, and has two bars:
one with only 12 feet of water (between 00. Dahaore and
Pronge), and the other with 17 feet of water, opposite 0.
Nale, The Sakhalin Channel is wider and deeper. Its only
bar has about 21 feet of water.
3. The third channel in the Gulf of Amur is
called the North (or Nevelskoi) Channel. It leads from the
Amur estuary into the Sakhalin Gulf, along the Siberian
mainland. At the northern entrance to this channel (four
miles northward of the eastern end of Langr Island) there
1/ Lotsiia Severo-Zapadnoi Chasti Vostochnogo Okeana, II,
pp. 254-257.
- 4 -
1a a bar with a depth of 13 feet at low water. At high
water the channel 18 available to vessels drawing not over
17 feet. 1
ICE CONDITIONS IN THE TARTAR STRAIT AND THE GULF OF AMUR.
The Tartar Strait proper and the Gulf of Amur, as
well as the southern part of the Sakhalin Gulf, are frozen
over from about mid-November to about May, as far northward
as Lat. 53°39' N.
The congelation seldom is sudden and usually the
surface of the ice is rough. The average thickness of the
ice varies from 3-3} feet over the channels to 5 feet over
the banks. The ice breaks up first in the northern part of
the Gulf of Amur. In the narrows (south of 0. Lazarev) it
stays until the whole of the southern approach to the strait
(up to 0. Nevelskoi) is free of ice. Usually this takes
place toward the end of May.
Sailing Directions for Siberia and Chosen, H. 0. No. 112,
3d ed., Washington, 1932, P. 259.
Sailing Directions for Siberia and Chosen, P. 248. In
another place, these Directions state that northward of the
Line from due across to Castries Bay, "the Gulf and Strait
of Tartary are closed by ice during the winter months
the earliest ice observed during 15 years' observation was on
November 5, and the latest was May 22" (p. 227). The Russian
Sailing Directions, however, refers to these dates as those
of earliest congelation and latest breaking up of the ice in
the Gulf of Amur, respectively (Dopolnenie k II chasti, P. 58).
Lotsiia Severo-Zapadnoi Chasti Vostochnogo Okeana, pp.
260-261 and 463. Thickness of the ice, of up to 4 feet over
the channels, and of 7 feet over the shallows, have been
recorded in the northern section of the Gulf of Amur (Ibid.,
P. 463). The Amur River itself is frozen over from early
November to the beginning of May, the thickness of ice aver-
aging 5 ft, (Ibid., pp. 270 and 410, respectively).
25
margo
2
- 5 -
Winter travel and the traffic of goods across the
ice 1s by dog and horse drawn sleighs, the latter commencing
in about 3-5 days later than the former. The usual routes
across the ice used throughout the winter are the following:
1. From 0. Lazarev to 0. Pogobi and to Aleksand-
rovskii. The latter route passes across the Nevelskoi Strait
(southern part of the Tartar Strait proper) and is also the
mail route from Nikolaevsk (on the Amur) to Sakhalin.
2. From the Bolshoi Island of the Khagemif group
directly eastward across the Gulf of Amur.
3. From Cape Puir to Nanivo, and
4. From Langr Island to Petumbopo.
Although "to the north of the de Castries - due
line, the Tartar Strait is frozen over for an average of
four months," and "the southern part, of the Sakhalin Gulf
is frozen over for about the same period of time," no
mention has been found of winter travel to and from Sakhalin
across the ice in these areas.
1/ Lotsiia Severo-Zapadnoi Chasti Vostochnogo Okeana, pp. 21
and 158.
2/ Ibid., pp. 260-261. This route is always used by the
natives from the region of the Chome, Uarke and My rivers
on the Siberian mainland.
Ibid., P. 463.
4/ Dopolnenie k II chasti, D. 21, and Sailing Directions
for Siberia and Chosen, P. 248, respectively. The yearly
Soviet hydro-meteorological reports from 1926 to 1932 show
that during some winters the Tartary Strait at the Kloster-
Kamp Lighthouse did not freeze.
To sports FINO Too meed C*
700 To A2 2-g Todo Japoz
VOR try DOLSO
I PIANAT
- 6 -
BAIKAL BAY AND MOSKALVO.
The Baikal Bay is about 11 miles wide and about 13
miles deep. Across the entrance to the bay stretches the
Ush Island, which is of miles long and has an average width
of about 1 mile.
Two entrances lead into the bay. The shortest and
most direct of the two is the western entrance. It has,
however, a bar with only 12-14 feet of water. 1/ The eastern
entrance has a minimum depth of 22 feet. Its channel is
narrow and winding. At the widest and deepest section
(3.5 to 4 cables' length wide and 70 feet deep) it runs close
to the Sakhalin mainland and near the village Moskalvo, which
is situated across from the eastern part of Ush Island,
While no data are available on the actual thickness of the
ice in the bay, the following has been observed: the grease
ice appears towards the end of October; by mid-November the
bay is frozen, the traffic over the ice by dogs and horses
commencing a few days after the congelation. The ice stays
late: in 1931, the horse-drawn traffic ended on June 6th.
In 1932 the ice in the bay was broken on June 9th. This 18
due to the general shallowness of the bay.
1/ Sailing Directions for Siberia and Chosen, p. 205, gives
12 feet. The latest Soviet data show a minimum depth of 14
feet (Lotsiia Okhotskogo Moria, Sailing Directions for the
Sea of Okhotsk, Leningrad, 1938, P. 52.).
2/ Svedeniia o sostoianii ldov na moriakh SSSR (The State
of Ioe in the Seas of the U.S.S.R.), VII, winter 1930-31,
Leningrad, 1934, P. 48, and ibid., VIII, winter, 1931-32,
Leningrad, 1936, P. 51. Also: D. V. Sokolov, N. N.
Tikhonovich, Sakhalin, Moscow, 1925, P. 16.
good. aprop yeloss
4
SEAL THE
sellm
- 7 -
Moskalvo is the oil exporting port for the Okha
oilfields, with which it is connected by a 23-mile normal
gauge railroad and an oil pipe (a harbor boom 985 feet long
extending out into the Baikal Bay, toward Ush Island, affords
rapid transfer of oil to the ships). Two miles southward of
the town there 1s a 285-foot wharf built about 500 yards
from the beach and connected to it by & runway. 1/ This
position of the wharf corresponds to the location referred
to as "a good anchorage at six cable's length south of cape
Vnutrennii and one mile and two cable's length from Moskalvo." 2/
The port facilities include pilot services and radio beacon.
Cargo is landed entirely by ships' gear.
1/ Stephansson, Report on Sakhalin, pp. 10 and 14.
2/ Lotsiia Okhotskogo Moria, P. 53.
No. 408
April 14, 1942
12 Noon
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
FROM: William J. Donovan
I thought you would be interested to know about one
of the tangible results achieved in our radio work recently.
The FCC daily monitoring analysis dated April 6 re-
ports that on April 4 Radio-Berlin quoted Jean Luchaire, writ-
ing in LES NOUVEAUX TEMPS, as follows:
"If Mr. Laval's conversations thus far have had
no result, this is only because of United States
pressure which has been administered on the one hand
by noisy radio propaganda and on the other by clan-
destine but effective diplomatic maneuvers."
For the past two weeks we have conducted a most in-
tensive radio campaign aimed at France with two objects in mind:
1. To reveal to the French people the true facts of
the political intrigues by which the Germans hoped to get Laval
into the cabinet.
2, To make suggestions to the French people in order
to create a fear in the minds of the enemy that large, scale dis-
orders would break out in France if they persisted in pushing
Laval.
Our campaign started within 1/2 hour after the first
press despatch from Vichy announcing that Laval had conferred
with Darlan. The next day the State Department asked us to
conduct a strong campaign and we accordingly intensified and
multiplied the efforts we had already started.
No. 409
April 14, 1942
6:00 P.M.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
From:
William J. Donovan
From the most recent British Ministry of Economic
Warfare propaganda survey, the following appears to give
evidence of Axis production difficulties:
1.
(a) Funk's acknowledgement of using costs in
statements to shareholders Reichsbank meeting that
while production rose in 1941, incomes increased
even more.
(b) 50% decrease in Italian war production due:
1. Reduction in expenditure from 7,000,000,000
LIRE per month to 5,000,000,000.
2. Inefficient wage and price stops.
3. Most efficient labor moved to Germany.
2. More drastic black market regulations in France permitting
10 years imprisonment, 10,000,000 francs.
3. Greece's financial load is eased, occupation costs
removed due to the fact that Greece is milked dry.
4. Labor drive extended to Belgium,Holland principally
aimed at unemployed. In Belgium, wages deliberately
are kept low in comparison with wages paid to Belgian
workers in Germany. VERWILGHEN, Secretary General, Ministry
of Labor, resigned as a protest against German labor measures.
-2-
5. For the first time on the continent, fruit and
vegetables are to be rationed by Belgium.
No. 410
April 15, 1942
12 Noon
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
FROM: William J. Donovan
Here are two additional cables from our man in
Tangier which were received yesterday. All of the Eddy
cables were the subject of discussion at the Joint
Intelligence Committee meeting yesterday and are under
consideration by the Joint Chiefs of Staff:
"No. 28 - Re my number 24. We are also asked by
our French partners how soon we would be able to furnish
heavy material to Bathurst, Freetown or Liberia and kept
there by Americans secret from knowledge of agents of the
Axis and ready for French vessels to pick it up and trans-
port to Morocco or Tunis at H. hour. List in following
dispatch in which page references are to 'Science te La
Nie', December 1941.
"No. 29 - One thousand motorcycles with postillion
seat. Five hundred motorcycles with side cars and 2-wheel
drive, fifty 105MM howitzers with trucks and tractors, one
hundred fifty 105MM anti-aircraft page 335, three hundred
- 2 -
37 MM anti-aircraft page 335, ammunition for all of
these guns, four hundred fifty M-2A4 tanks page 338,
three hundred M-3QRT-6 tanks and one hundred fifty
scout cars page 337. One hundred fifty AUTOMITRAIL-
LEUSES (probably jeeps)."
No. 411
April 15, 1942
12 Noon
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
FROM: William J. Donovan
Further on the subject of the recent cables from
our man in Tangier, I send you herewith a cable which
has just been received and which indicates that more
follows. The remainder of the report will be forwarded
to you as soon as the decoding has been completed. This
entire matter was discussed with Secretary Knox by
Colonel Buxton of my office this morning.
"With reference to your number 21. Other de-
partments naturally have no evidence corrobora-
ting Secret Intelligence of well organized
French military organization determined to re-
sist the Axis. Only Murphy can confirm and he
is urgently requesting me to finance and supply
on the modest scale requested in my recent dis-
patches. French leaders would be arrested on
slightest suspicion and shot if exposed. They
have no news in advance of Laval government
- 2 -
and fear Vichy surrender of North Africa soon.
If Malta falls, Germans plan to enter Tunisia
with or without Spanish zone attack on Morocco.
More follows."
No. 412
April 15, 1942
12:00 Noon
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
FROM: William J. Donovan
You might be interested in a bit of
information which came to us last night. We were
informed that on yesterday between 11:00 and 12:00
A.M., ten or twelve large packages containing all
of the secret papers and files of the French Con-
sulate in New York City were removed from the
Consulate and taken to the home of the French
Minister in New York, one Jacques d'Aumle. This
information has been passed on to those interested.
No. 413
April 14, 1942
6:00 P.M.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
FROM: William J. Donovan
The following is from a direct source in North
China:
Chief puppet officials Wang Y1 Tang, leader; oni
Haieh Yuan (Chih Sieh Yuan) commander; Chou Tso Jen, educa-
tion; ostensibly under Nanking but actually autonomous.
The numerous Japanese employees in puppet government offices
wield real authority. The puppet government maintains sev-
eral ten thousands poorly equipped troops. The Japs realize
their untrustworthiness if they are used against the central
government. The highways and railways are lined with trenches
and pillboxed masonry. One division of Japanese troops sta-
tioned near Shangshuf Honan. All Chinese must have living
certificates, and if they are caught without one, they are
subject to arrest. A specimen has been furnished to Dr.
Rowe to photograph. The cost of living is tenfold cheaper
than in Chungking. Quantities of Japanese goods are dis-
played in markets. Transport of native produce is prohib-
ited between different areas as ports South China. Japanese
can thus buy cheaply the excess stocks. Participation in
prosperous native businesses being demanded by Japanese.
Opium trade is encouraged. Some municipal improvements
have been made in Peiping. The populace appears mentally
unhappy, but comfortably well off. Free speech is dangerous.
The vernacular Press is occupied with TIIUI and political or
international news. In Manchuria all foodstuffs are comman-
deered by Japanese except at a port whose name has been
garbled in transmission. The Karlan Mines have been taken
over, but all employees, even the British technicians have
been a sked to remain to keep up the output.
Featuring the Burma situation is the lack of air
support for the Allied Forces. Anxiety here leading to high-
est Chinese leader proceeding southward.
Secret unconfirmed reports. This understanding
reached whereby British strength retires to India leaving
Chinese forces to conduct Burma operations. Inadequate
measures to cope with dreadful cholera epidemic on refugee
route to India, via Chittagong, uphold allegations of slack
Burma civil administration.
The objective is now to hold the Japanese on the
Southern terrain until monsoon rains give defending forces
the advantage of the dry northern areas. The burning of
Mandalay was described to me by an eyewitness, who cited the
observed accuracy of Japanese artillery fire.
S-17
April 15, 1942
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
From:
William J. Donovan
The following is the text of a message sent from
Vichy to the French Ambassador yesterday.
"No. 941. Apres examen de la note du Gouvernement
federal, en date du 13 avril, qui vous a eté remise
par M. Sumner Welles, je vous prie de notifier au
Departement d'Etat que le Gouvernement francais ne
saurait accepter les termes de cette note qu'il
rejette en bloc.
"Ce document, en effet, est redige en termes insultants
et son objet est d'essayer de discrediter aux yeuz
du monde, des citoyens francais qui n'ont pas de lecons
5
de patriotisme a recevoir de la part d'étrangers.
"Le gouvernement français, en outre, est oblige de
noter que la publication insolite et immediate de cet
etrange document, montre qu'il a ete concu pour des
fins de propagande et dans le but de troubler l'opinion
publique française."
From a source which we believe to be reliable, the
Irish Minister, Robert Brennan, yesterday informed the French
Ambassador that he (Brennan) had been told by the Turkish
Ambassador that negotiations were actually in progress for the
conclusion of a separate peace between Russia and Germany.
- 2 -
From the same source we are informed that late yester-
day Henri-Haye told his immediate collaborators that he
thought the United States, after having left France to
fight without aid, had forsaken her after her defeat,
for only three Red Cross ships had been sent within twenty-
two months. The only way to resist the Germans was to
help France by letting her purchase American wheat and
canned milk. There remains one last mistake the United
States can commit, and that is to break diplomatic rela-
tions with France. This would deprive America of its ob-
servation posts on the Continent, of its valuable sources
of information and of its listening posts in North Africa,
all of which would delight Germany, because all of her
efforts are precisely directed towards a rupture between
France and the United States, and in the more or less
near future this would involve the risk of tossing the
French fleet into the enemy camp.
S-18
April 15, 1942
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
FROM: William J. Donovan
It has just come to us authoritatively
that the officials at the French Embassy here are
taking the attitude that "the end has come". It
was stated that the Embassy here had received no
communication from Vichy to the effect that Laval
would be appointed, that although the Ambassador
had speculated that he would be "the fait accompli
was a tremendous shock".
The statement was made that there was a
feeling the situation might "cool down" because
of a United Press report from Kuibyshev that the
Russians have not been told of what had taken place
in France. The statement was also made that the
Americans "have lost their heads completely, and
either they will lose them more by going further
and recalling Admiral Leahy or they will let the
whole thing drop -- they might commit the stupidity
of trying to take Martinique, but in that case we
20
1
-2-
(The French) would have sufficient for our defense,
with the German submarines in the Atlantic, not to
mention the Bearn. The Ambassador feels Leahy will
probably be recalled and that Henri-Haye will return
to Vichy and be sent from there to Buenos Aires.
We have been told that one of the officials
at the Embassy made the statement that "we collabor-
ationists are delighted that Laval is in power now
as we will have more benefits from Germany than we
would have if we waited to play the German game after
they had won -- it is obvious which side is winning
otherwise France would hever have taken this step
which is completely in accord with her realistic
policy."
From another source we are informed that
yesterday Darlan sent the Embassy a message annulling
a previous one to the effect that no visit of protest
should be made; that the nature of the protest to Mr.
Welles will be along the lines of a "mind your own
business policy and saying that the United States
has no right to choose France's cabinet for her as
the United States has not yet vanquished France.'
S-19
April 16, 1942
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
FROM: William J. Donovan
On yesterday the following message was sent
from Vichy to the Ambassador here:
"En ce qui concerne le controle postal reclame
par le gouvernement americain, nous acceptons, pour
les courriers transportes par les navires de la ligne
Antilles-Guyane qu'un controle postal soit effectuea
Caraquito, port du Venezuela.
"Par contre, il doit etre entendu que les
services postaux jouiront du libre passage sur le
trajet Fort de France-Casablanca, etant bien entendu
que les courriers francais ne comprendront que des
correspondances provenant de la zone libre. Ces
courriers pourront parvenir jusqu'a New York.
"Sous controle americain, un sac officiel
contenant les communications du Gouvernement francais
aux missions diplomatiques de l'hemisphere occidental
pourra etre achemine par le mem voie Casablanca-New York.
"Veullez en conferer avec le Department d'Etat
des votre prochaine visite."
-2-
The following message was received at Vichy
from the Ambassador:
"Il se confirme que la note de M. Sumner
Welles, concue dans les termes etonnants que le
gouvernement francais a cru devoir relever, a. ete
ecrite, connaissance prise, de la nouvelle orientation
du cabinet francais et de sa transformation.
"Je dois etre recu demain soir a 6 heurs par M.
Sumner Welles, lequel aura vu le President Roosevelt,
avant ma visite.
"La presse et la radio se livrent aux plus
violentes attaques contre la France et plus particuliere-
ment contre la personne meme de M. Piere Laval.
"Toutefois, certains commentateurs insistent
ce soir (en presence des declarations de M. Laval
assurant que sa politique tiendra le juste milieu entre
l'amite americaine et les bonnes relations avec l'Allemagne)
sur la necessite d'attendre l'annonce de la composition
du cabinet francais ainsi que les declarations concernant
sa politique, avant de prendre des positions definitives.
"Entre temps, M. Sumner Welles a annonce a Ha
-3-
conference de presse, la suspension du trafic maritime
avec l'Afrique du Nord et l'arret du depart du Mont-
Everest qui devait appareiller avec une cargaison de
la Croix-Rouge."
We have also received information today that
Henri-Haye now expects to be appointed Minister of
French North African possessions rather than Ambassador
to the Argentine, if he is recalled from Washington.
No. 414
April 16, 1942
to
6:00 P.M.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
FROM: William J. Donovan
The following is from the General Weekly Direc-
tive of the British Political Warfare Executive:
1. Strategy:
(a) Russia - Point out that the Russians still
hold the initiative, maintaining pressure and continuing
to deny the Germans the respite needed to refit and rest.
Extensive areas are being rendered impassable by the
thaws and large scale operations are impracticable.
(b) Malta - Emphasize that the Axis effort against
Libya and Malta represents a considerable diversion,
particularly of the Luftwaffe from the Russian front.
(c) Burma - The outlook is ominous because air
support is lacking and the native population hostile.
(d) India and Ceylon - Avoid the linking of
strategical positions of the European and Eastern theatres
of war. Enemy has air and naval superiority due to pre-
sence of powerful Japanese naval squadrons including
- 2 -
several aircraft carriers in the Bay of Bengal. This is
a threat to the Ganges, Delta, Ceylon, the Malabar Coast
and our sea communications. A large British convoy has
reached Bombay with war material and reinforcements.
2. Propaganda Policy
(a) We should not make a defensive response to
distortions by Germans of closer links between America
and Britain; and between India, Australia and America.
"The helpful interest presently being taken by America
in the security of Australia and India, in close accord
with the British Government, is but another sign of what
the Prime Minister once described as a certain mixing up
of Anglo-American relations as a result of our common
purpose in this war. This form of mixing-up can be repre-
sented as covering both moral and material aspects of war.
The process of Lease-Lend has presently taken the form of
America lending a Commander-in-Chief to Australia and of
the lending of her good services in the settlement of the
Indian problem. America's interest in world affairs,
misrepresented by German propaganda, on the contrary is
welcomed warmly in this country."
(b) The major theme for our propaganda should be
All onz # to will / FITLE &
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1.
- 3 -
the conflict between Hitler's new order and the Christian
church. The great significance of the resignation of
the Norwegian bishops should be pointed out.
8-20
April 17, 1942
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
From:
William J. Donovan
The following is the text of the report of
Henry-Hay received in Vichy last night, following the
Ambassador's visit to Sumner Welles.
"J'ai eté reçu ce soir à 6 heures par le Sous-
Secretaire d Etat. Je lui ai fait part du rejet par le
gouvernement français de la note qu'il m'avait remise et
je lui ai demande comment 11 jugerait la situation si
c'était le gouvernement français qui se soit permis de lui
remettre une note rédigée dans les termes dont il s'etait
servi.
"M. Welles n'a pas fait de difficultes pour
reconnaitre qu'en effet les termes de sa note etaient
destinés au peuple français et avaient ete rediges quand
avait ete connue la venue de M. Laval au pouvoir.
"J'ai fait remarquer à mon interlocuteur que c'etait
une profonde erreur que de vouloir s'adresser au peuple
français par-dessus son gouvernement, erreur que le president
Roosevelt avait déjà commise au mois de mai dernier.
"M. Welles m'a alors dit que le gouvernement federal
n'acceptait pas le rejet de la note, parce qu'il etait convaincu
-2-
que les allemands avaient eu leur mot a dire sur la protestation
française.
"Elevant le debat, le Sous-Secretaire d'Etat m'a
dit qu'au surplus les Etats-Unis se refusaient a conserver
avec un gouvernement preside par M. Laval, les relations
qu'ils avaient eu jusqu'ici avec le gouvernement du Marechal
Petain.
"J'ai mis en garde M. Welles contre les consequences
de decisions precipitées prises avant meme de savoir quelles
seraient les declarations politiques du nouveau gouvernement
français; rappelant mes souvenirs parlementaires, j'ai essayé
de montrer que M. Laval s'etait toujours efforce, meme et
surtout quand 11 préconisait l'amitie franco-italienne, de
neutraliser les volontes d'agression de l'Allemagne ce qui
etait bien evidemment un signe de patriotisme et de clairvoyance.
"J'ai d'autre part rappele à mon interlocuteur les
innombrables avantages et notamment les avantages d'ordre
militaire, que les Etats-Unis avaient retire de leurs bonnes
relations avec la France, depuis l'armistice; j'ai souligné
que le Marechal Petain restait chef de l'Etat et que le
President du Conseil serait responsable devant lui. M. Welles
n'a dit qu'il ne croyait plus que le "arechal Petain soit en
position de resister si M. Laval, chef du gouvernement, voulait
prendre des decisions allant au-dela des assurances donnees
par la France aux Etats-Unis.
-3-
"J'a1 eu a ce moment l'impression tres nette que
le siege de M. Welles était fait, qu'uaucun argument ne pouvait
le faire changer d'idées, car il obéissait evidemment aux
instructions qu'il avait reçues une heure avant au cours d'une
entrevue avec le Président Roosevelt. L'entourage de celui-ci
parait avoir convaineu le Président de la necessite d'une
rupture immédiate avec la France, et peut-etre d'actions
militaires et navales préventives. De renseignements emanant
des milieux navals, il résulte, en effet, que l'hypothese d
une action brusquee contre la "artinique ne doit pas etre
entierement ecartée.
"M. Welles m'a parlé de "la fin du chapitre des
relations actuelles", ce qui parait bien indiquer la volonte
des Etats-Unis de mettre fin à nos relations.
"J'ai conjure le Secrétaire d'Etat de bien reflechir
avant de baisser le rideau de fer entre son pays et la France.
Je me suis efforce de lui montrer a quelles consequences se
heurterait un geste de la nature de celui qu'il me laissait
prévoir. M. Welles est reste insensible à mes arguments, et
tout en rendant hommage à mes efforts tous dirigés vers la
preservation des bonnes relations franco-americaines.
"11 n'a laisse entendre que les positions étaient
definitivement prises par son gouvernement.
"En somme, les Etats-Unis se refusent d'entrer en
relations avec un cabinet frabçais preside par M. Laval ou
-4-
meme comptant celui-ci parmi ses membres.
"Comme j'ai appris, par ailleurs, que M. Welles
avait recommande aux correspondants americains accrédites
auprès de lui d'accentuer demain matin les attaques contre
le gouvernement français, pourtant deja si violentes, je ne
puis que conclure avec une grande tristesse, que les relations
franco-americains sont arrivées au point de rupture desire
par les dirigeants americains."
No. 415
April 17, 1942
12:00 Noon
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
From:
William J. Donovan
The following report has come to us from our
man in Lisbon who has just returned to Lisbon from Madrid:
"In Spain the situation is tense, due to the
rising dissention between the army and Falange and the
growing dissatisfaction with the Franco regime. Recently
in Madrid officers have torn down from the walls posters,
showing workman, Falangist and army officer together.
Immediate outbreak is believed unlikely. Franco will,
however, soon have to choose between the generals or the
party. As there are only two ordinary divisions between
Hendaye and Bordeaux, invasion of the Iberian "peninsula
is not believed imminent, and if the Germans occupy the
rest of France and invade Algeria, pushing overland to
French Morocco, it may be foregone. Utilization of French
Navy contemplated, and destruction of naval base at Gibraltar
should be considered as later phase by operating against the
rock in reverse. Ammunition practically exhausted at Malta.
Heavy German air concentration on Dodacanese pointed to by
Spanish General Staff as indication of an imminent invasion
-2-
of Turkey. There is a growing belief that all out drive
against Russia may not develop. Regrouping and concentration
of divisions inside Germany, particularly air-borne troops,
gives weight to suggestion that we may expect all-out invasion
of England.
No. 416
April 17, 1942
12 Noon
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
FROM: William J. Donovan
I thought you would want to see the directive we are
following for Italy at the moment:
"1. Word has come from Italy of a doubt which is
prevalent among the Italian people throughout the country.
If the United Nations defeat the Axis, will the territorial
integrity of Italy be respected? The people of all classes
and all provinces, regardless of pro-fascist or anti-fascist
leanings, are united on this one point. Memories of what
happened to the defeated nations after the last war have been
revived by fascist propaganda to scare the people. Will Italy
be carved up and distributed among the victors? Our propa-
ganda must be specific upon this point, not only citing the
Atlantic Charter and other expressions of Allied war aims but
also showing that infringement of Italian territorial in-
tegrity would not be to the interest of any of the United
Nations. Also, all of recent history proves that British
and American intentions are just the opposite.
"2. We should stress the difference between this war
and the nationalistic wars of the past. The lines are no
longer drawn between nations but between two conflicting
- 2 -
ideas of life. The line is drawn between the aggressive
dictators - Hitler, Mussolini and Hirohito - who are forcing
their people to fight a war of conquest, in order to throw
the world back into slavery, and the freedom-loving people
who are not only defending themselves and their right to
live in peace, but also the rights of Man throughout the
world. The line outs across frontiers. Thus, within Italy,
there is an enormous group whose aims are identical with
those of the peoples of the United States. The war, then,
is a continuation of the age-old struggle of free men against
tyranny- not a war fought by England, the United States, etc.,
against Italy, Germany, and Japan. All this seems very ob-
vious to us but in Italy there is still enough identifica-
tion of the regime with the fatherland to make the point
worth considerable educational effort. On the other hand we
must not convey the idea that the fatherland is forever lost
because it is now divided. Nor is the time ripe to stress
post-war internationalism. Rather we should show that
national unity and hence the real fatherland can only be
restored by basing it upon the will of a free Italian people.
As soon as this true will can be asserted, the nation will
exist again. To point this truth, many examples may be
given of national strength based on democracy. Italy's own
pre-fascist strength should be stressed and it should be
this to an
grafefore HIFTOR
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Igees
- 3 -
insistently brought home that national collapse is being caused
by Hitler and Mussolini.
"3. An explanation of the disappearance of empire from the
world as obsolete under modern economic and technological condi-
tions is desirable if carefully handled. The desire of the
English people to give autonomy to India is important evidence
of this. If we show that the conquest and attempt to colonize
Ethiopia by Mussolini failed, for this same reason, to benefit
Italy, the people will be comforted for its loss. The fact
that Italians were unable to live off the conquered territory
is a proof of the difficulty of trying to apply imperialism in
the mid-twentieth century. Italians who went to Ethiopia had
to spend Italian money there which would have done more good if
spent in Italy. The cost of the conquest could never have
been recovered. England, which was forced to capture Ethiopia
from the fascist government in order to defend herself against
German threats, has no intention of holding it as a colony. In-
telligent people in England know today that free trade among
independent nations is far more conducive to world prosperity
than the acquisition of new colonies. For the same reasons,
intelligent Italians know that they derived greater benefits
from pre-war trade across the Adriatic than they can ever get
from the present occupation of Albania and Jugoslavia. Only
Hitler and Mussolini and the Japanese imperialists, who continue
to
as
P2 HIGTOL say exbjecefrow
pronEpp Powe FIRES
- 4 -
to think in terms of the dead past, still believe that they
can increase prosperity at home by conquering free peoples.
"4. We must not relax the exploitation of the current
dominant emotion among the Italian people - - hatred of Germany.
There are, however, other approaches to this than by the
mere recital of Germany's ruthless acts. The instinctive
antipathy to Germans is centuries old and is the only real
blood hate which is felt rather than reasoned. Thus reference
may be made to basic opposition of thought and manners -
German rudeness, lack of humor, single-track mind, insensitivity -
and implemented by stories of the German tourists who flooded
pre-war Italy every spring. Italians know today why they were
there with their notebooks, diaries and Leica cameras - that
they were preparing for German invasion and conquest of Italy.
So the deep revulsion of Italians for these people, which even
their natural hospitality and civility could not overcome, is
now seen to be logically justified.
"5. The line to take about Laval is that he is the French
Quisling. Germany has finally forced Petain to step aside for
a real Quisling government. This will be just as successful
in gaining French cooperation for the Axis as the same tactics
have proved themselves in Norway and Holland."
No. 417
April 17, 1942
6:00 P.M.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
FROM: William J. Donovan
The attached is a proposed radio and
pamphlet attack on Italy which I now have up
with the Planning Committee.
DECLASSIFIN By Authority of C/A
007622
2
By DBS Date SEP 1974
ITALIAN PLAN
I
Policy Aims
1. To cause Italy to withdraw from the war.
2. To destroy Fascism in Italy.
3. To lay foundations for Italian cooperation in
the post-war world.
II
Appreciation
1. An appendix to this plan, which may be used either
in connection with the plan or separately by opera-
ting departments, will treat in detail of the char-
acteristics of the Italian people.
The main inherent characteristics which should guide
the use of this plan are frankness, a logical rather
than a sentimental mind, hatred of hypocrisy, desire
for specific facts and directness of approach.
1. Weakness of Italian morale.
The Italian will to Axis victory and Italian
fidelity to the Fascist regime are close to
zero. Distrust and hatred of the Germans is
very high. There is extreme disapproval of war
and resentment of war-time hardships. Cleavages
in Italian political-social structure are numer-
ous and profound.
2. Strength of the regime.
(a) There is, however, an almost total absence
of revolutionary leadership or organization. The
efficiency of police forces at the command of the
State is still very high and the loyalty of the
police in carrying out orders can be counted on.
On top of this, the German civilian and military
control is very close.
(b) The following psychological factors militate
against revolutionary movements: A sense of the
impossibility of resistance to German occupation;
a feeling among the oppositional elements of impo-
tence and despair; the absence of constructive
ideologies and ideologies which have any practical
appeal to the Italian people, and the realistic ap-
praisal of the military situation which is still
favorable from the Axis viewpoint. This last factor
weakens the will to accept the risks of military de-
feat which revolution might entail.
-2-
3, Nature of radio audience.
(a) The reception of medium waves is bad, due to
jamming. Because of the small number of radio sets
equipped with short wave reception and so capable
of receiving foreign programs from long distances,
the listening public on which we may count is
restricted. Socially it is concentrated in the
upper middle classes and aristocracy. Geographically
it is centered in the big cities and in the North.
Such an audience is not adapted to mass appeals -
powerful emotional effects or inspirational programs.
(b) The official propaganda policy of the Fascist
Government has been, however, short-sighted and reck-
less and the censorship has been very severe. The
psychological conditions, therefore, are extremely
favorable to the propagation of rumors, and Italians
of all classes are inveterate rumor-mongers. There
is an extraordinarily effective grapevine in Italy
which often reaches out even from Fascist officials,
who, like other Italians, cannot resist talking when
they are off duty.
Consequently, while our short wave programs should be
directed toward the more intelligent listeners, they
should provide these listeners with concrete facts
which have been suppressed by the Italian censorship
-3-
and presented in anecdotal form suitable for propa-
gation by word of mouth.
(c) The lower strata of the people may be reached by
leaflets, preferably containing brief emotional or
humorous appeals and picture material, especially
cartoons.
III
Political Objectives
1. To nourish and, if possible, extend existing cleavages:
(a) Between Germans and Italians, particularly between
German and Italian Army officials.
Themes:
1. The systematic economic exploitation of Italy by
the Germans should be implemented by specific examples,
such as German confiscation of food, the German use of
the Italian railways and ships to transport their mater-
ials, depriving Italians of their use for essential food-
stuffs, etc.; the weakening of the forces of production
for home consumption by sending Italian labor to Germany,
etc. These examples may be multiplied indefinitely as
there is immense material here.
2. Examples of Nazi contempt for all who are not of
"Nordic" race, and especially for "inferior Latins".
-4-
3. Examples of the German Army's contempt for the
Italian Army (anecdotes). It may be emphasized here
that what military mistakes Italy has made were the
fault of Fascist and Nazi strategy and leadership,
not of the individual officers and men.
(b) Between Fascist leaders and the masses.
Themes:
1. Mussolini from the beginning, while pretending
that all his sympathy was with the masses and all his
desire for their welfare, was actually being supported
by the large commercial interests for which in fact he
was working. He has consistently exploited the masses
for a succession of personal and state objectives.
Examples of this may be shown up in contrast to his
speeches.
2. Examples of immense graft by leaders, especially
the Ciano family, which is said to own one-tenth of
Italy.
3. Stories of political scandals and exposures of
private misconduct.
4. Superstition. Suggestion that certain Fascist leaders
have the universally feared "evil eye" might be used
here. Now that things are going badly with him, this
rumor might be spread about Mussolini.
-5-
*Developed in detail in Appendix.
(c) Between Church and Regime.
In all treatment of Church questions it is well to
remember that Mussolini has prided himself on his
treatment of the Church. His Lateran Agreement of
1929 restored much of the traditional political power
of the Pope. The Vatican, however, has not returned
the compliment and has often bitterly resented and
still resents Fascist dogma and conduct.
It is possible therefore both to attack Fascism from
the Catholic angle and to attempt also to incite Fascist
hostilities towards the Church by a heavy playing-up
of suggestions that the Church is on our side.
Themes:
1. Examples of Fascist offenses to Catholic morals:
murders, lies, deception - contempt of all the com-
mandments - by party acts and the private scandalous
behavior of individual Fascists.
2. Quote the Pope in his attacks on both Nazi and
Fascist philosophies.
3. It must be remembered in all broadcasts on the
Church that (contrary to popular belief in the United
States) adherence to the Catholic religion in Italy is
lax and that the prime appeal of such arguments as the
above will be in the Church's political value as an enemy
of Fascism and as one of our Allies. This last may be
-6-
specifically implemented by the fact that a large part
of the Vatican's financial support has come from the
Americas and is still coming from them, even in wartime.
(d) Between supporters of the Monarchy and supporters
of the Regime. The Monarchy has lost much of its popu-
lar support, which at one time was very great, because
of the King's subservience to Mussolini. Umberto, the
heir, once a real idol, has had an even greater downfall.
There are, however, scattered throughout the country,
individuals still loyal to the Monarchy for sentimental
reasons. As these are among the aristocrats they may
be reached by our broadcasts.
Themes:
1. Stories of the King's famous exploits of bravery
and kindness to the wounded, sick, etc., in the World
War will appeal to those who still feel a sentimental
attachment to Victor Emanuel.
(e) Between rival Fascist chiefs.
Themes:
1. Stories of the social ambitions of Farinacci and
others which have led them into more intimate colla-
boration with the Nazis than was desired by most Fas-
cists, including even Mussolini himself.
2. Stories of how other leaders such as Farinacci
feel toward Ciano who, in spite of his obvious and
-7-
notorious stupidity enjoys the favor of Mussolini
above those who have taken active part in the develop-
ment of the party 'since its beginnings.
3. There is abundant other material available on this
subject which can be found by special research and
which will be included in the Appendix.
2. To discredit Mussolini. Italians are more receptive to
this attack then to any other. The fact that the ob-
jective is already largely achieved does not mean that
constant repetition of facts should be relinquished as
Fascists are alert in combatting it. The objective
lends itself to anecdotal and cynical-humorous treatment.
News may be handled in such a way as to link Mussolini's
name with every unpleasant or disastrous event.
Themes:
A. Examples of broken promises by Mussolini himself,
quoting from his own speeches. Stories of his changes
and inconsistencies in the past, such as his abandonment
of the Socialist Party, his complete reversal of the
original Fascist program, which provided for an Italian
Republic, universal suffrage, abolition of compulsory
military service, the limitation of private fortunes,
land for the peasants, etc.
B. The story of the servile manner in which Mussolini
-8-
became Hitler's vassal. Now, when Mussolini asks Hitler
for food, Hitler sends flattery and Mussolini accepts the
substitute.
C. Humorous stories of Mussolini are immensely popular
in all classes in Italy and should be frequently told -
stories especially of his love life. This theme may be
used in leaflets with cartoons as well as in broadcasts.
3. To discourage Italian workers from going to Germany.
Themes:
A. Examples of hardships, of mistreatment, and es-
pecially of discrimination against Italians working in
Germany by their racial "superiors".
B. Play up regularly the devastating effects of British
raids and the wide prevalence of disease in Germany.
This last will have a special effect among the wives and
families of workers about to go to Germany.
C. Show the depressing atmosphere of Germany upon the
normally gay Italian. A recent report that Italian work-
men walking home from work had been arrested for singing
because the Germans don't like people to sing in so serious
a time, will have special appeal to Italians.
4. To discredit official Axis and Italian news and propa-
ganda. The approaches to this objective should stress
particularly broken promises of quick victory and the
constantly reiterated promises of better economic con-
-9-
ditions. There is a great deal of historical material
on this subject, going back to the founding of the
Fascist Party, which will be developed in the Appendix.
5. To encourage Italian soldiers, sailors and aviators.
to surrender. Propaganda of this sort will have
definite disadvantages unless it is always tied up
with the truly patriotic motives behind the surrender.
The mere urging to surrender because of good treatment
of the prisoners has been worn so threadbare that it is
probably no longer useful.
Themes:
A. Instead of sneering, as is so often done, at the
ease with which Italians surrender as evidenced by
the large number of prisoners taken by the British in
Africa, etc., these men should be applauded as having
special courage in deserting the ranks of the Fascist
army in order to weaken a cause in which they disbe-
lieve.
6. To augment the difficulties of raising Italian levies
for the Russian front and to provoke popular resistance
to any such attempts on the part of the Germans.
Themes:
A. After repeated stories of the disaster which the
Germans have suffered on every part of their front and
the certain continuance of this condition, why should
-10-
Italians who are already suffering from extreme econ-
omic stringency and are even threatened with starva-
tion keep pouring money into this sieve?
7. To stimulate extreme oppositional elements to active
organization, sabotage, and passive resistance. The
best way to accomplish this is to start Italians think-
ing about the possibility of liberation as something
concrete and immediate, not an indirect consequence of
ultimate military defeat.
Themes should concern themselves with predictions of
United Nations' victories and particularly of impending
invasion of the Continent of Europe. The actual in-
vasion of the Italian peninsula should be carefully
handled in propaganda. If used at all it should be
specifically described as an attack against the Nazis,
from whom the Italians wish to be liberated - as a
crusade, in fact, to bring about Italian freedom.
Theme on sabotage in other countries, such as Czecho-
slovakia, France, etc. These stories should always
be given an Italian slant. It is possible, for example,
to describe a bridge blown up in Norway so that it looks
like an Italian bridge and the people who do the jobs so
that they appear like Italians. It is desirable also
to tell what anti-Fascists have done in the past and
some material on this will be included in the Appendix.
-11-
8. To trouble the relationship between Italy and Japan.
Themes:
A. What possible feeling of kinship can exist between
an Italian and a Japanese? Japanese have always been
regarded as comic characters in Italy. We see now that
behind this mask is a monster of cruelty. The atrocities
by Japanese recently exposed in Hongkong, etc., prove
this. But do Italians who are kind, gentle and sensi-
tive people want to be associated with such savages?
Remember that anyone who associates in these days with
the Japanese will share the long hatred of the world
which will follow this war.
B. What has induced Mussolini, who has said so much
against the danger of the destruction of the white
races by these Asiatics to change his whole philosophy
and tie them to Italy with this dangerous military
alliance? Is it his fear of Hitler? In a speech of
September 4, 1934, Mussolini spoke of the danger of
white civilization being destroyed by the expansion
of the yellow race.
9. To convince Italians that an Axis victory would mean
the permanent enslavement of Italy.
-12-
Themes:
A. Exploit fears already present of German invasion
of Italy. Why are there such numbers of Germans now
there, thronging stations and hotels? Why are signs
everywhere printed in German? Is German behavior normal?
What are they planning for the future?
B. Exploit German enslavement of peoples in occupied
countries, and German loot there.
C. Reference to German racial superiority dogmas.
D. Stress Italian labor in Germany and Italian troops
in Russia.
E. An Axis victory would mean endless war.
IV
Propaganda Objectives
1. To destroy German military prestige. Regardless of
strategic values or significance, themes should play
up strongly every example of military inferiority in
combat with any United Nations forces.
2. To convince the people that an Axis victory is 1m-
possible
(a) By describing the strategic blunders committed
by the Axis High Command and the present hopeless Axis
position from the long term point of view;
-13-
(b) By stressing the growing production and inex-
haustible resources of the United Nations, as well as
their unity of purpose. Italians will be receptive to
descriptions of the resources of the Americas in particu-
lar, because the fabulous nature of these countries is a
familiar Italian legend. Stress also vast Chinese man-
power.
(c) By demonstrating the possibility of sensational
Allied victories this year, as well as in the distant
future.
Themes should especially stress Africa, invasion of the
Continent via Norway or France, and failure of the German
spring drive in Russia, as well as new developments under
MacArthur in the Far East.
3. To present the specific American contribution to the
United Nations war effort in the most convincing light
(a) By playing up actual accounts in the sphere of in-
dustrial production as in the German and French plans.
Themes should stimulate the normal Italian response to
ideas of bigness. Like Americans, they have a passion
for large figures, and production statistics should be
constantly repeated.
(b) By making clear the determination, dynamism, offen-
sive spirit and unity of the American people and our
-14-
bitter hatred of Fascism.
Historic themes may be developed here, one especially
being the unity which comes from the kind of federation
which both the founders of the American Republic and
Mazzini (who wished to found an Italian Republic) de-
signed.
4. To convince the Italian people that we are not their
enemies:
(a) By constantly recalling the close ties between Italy
and the United States, due to the immense number of
Italians settled in America.
Themes:
A. Emphasize the long standing of this bond and the
constant correspondence between the peoples of the two
countries which was so tragically cut off when Italy,
against its will and against the desire of the American
people, was forced into this war.
B. A series of broadcasts to particular towns in Italy
by exiles in America who came from those towns to demon-
strate closeness of ties. By emphasizing our respect
for Italian culture and Italian national character as
distinguished from our contempt for Fascism, whether
Nordic or Mediterranean.
Themes on Italian culture in the United States should
dwell especially on fine arts, on the wide study and
-15-
admiration of Dante, and on our respect for Italian
scientists, such as Galvani, Volta, etc. It should be
emphasized that it is impossible to speak of any of
these things in the same breath with Fascism, which
denies and destroys them.
5. To convince Italians that Italo-Americans are loyal to
America.
Themes:
A. The names of soldiers of Italian descent serving
in the United States armed forces who are decorated for
valor should be obtained and broadcast along with the
citations, in the hope that these broadcasts will reach
the home towns of these men's relatives in Italy. In
handling such short wave material announcers should be
used who speak in the accent of particular provinces.
B. Figures should be given on the number of Italians
working in American factories and in various kinds of
civilian war work, as well as totals in the United
States armed forces.
6. To cause Italians to fear that the longer they stick
with the Axis the more surely they will lose the sym-
pathies in America which they still have.
Themes:
A. While Italian exiles in America realize and have
explained to other Americans how difficult it has been
-16-
for Italians to revolt against the Fascist Regime, yet
Americans will come in time to doubt the honor of the
Italian people. While Americans still look upon Italians
as Allies rather than enemies, this feeling will change
if continued inertia in Italy gives the appearance of
consent to Fascist domination.
7. To stress the practical implications of American sympathy
to post-war Italy by describing our plans for rushing
food, engineers, medical supplies to Italy, and aiding
in the resurrection of Italian economy destroyed by
Fascism.
Themes:
A. Historical analogies should be stressed, showing
what our contributions have been in the past to Italian
engineering development, etc., and showing cases in
which we have contributed to relief in times of disaster,
etc.
8. To convince the Italian people that further Axis vic-
tories this summer will not mean the end of the war
but only its indefinite prolongation, while a United
Nations victory would mean a speedy end to the war as
far as Italy is concerned. It will be particularly 1m-
portant in case of German successes this spring to recall
all their false hopes and broken promises of a speedy
termination of the war, starting with Mussolini's original
-17-
blunder of June, 1940, when he thought he could gather
some loot without danger by declaring war on the eve
of an expected Franco-British collapse.
V
Timing and Integration of Campaign
It would seem that at the present moment most of the
purely psychological and even many of the political
objectives of propaganda in Italy have already been
realized, but that no important revolutionary movement
can be expected until something catalyzes the diffuse
revolutionary forces at work in Italy today. Conse-
quently, our propaganda campaign must content itself
with the relatively modest and static over-all objec-
tive of simply keeping open the psychological wounds
already in existence in Italy. For this it will be
sufficient merely to adapt our programs to the preoc-
cupations of the moment based upon the political and
military situation at the time.
At the same time we should constantly be seeking for
the catalytic agent necessary to set off the revolu-
tionary movement without which our political goals
cannot be achieved. The catalytic agent may be either
a spontaneous breakdown of the Fascist machinery, how-
-18-
ever local, or it may be our own military intervention,
however limited. Or it might be a collapse of the Nazi
regime in Germany, revolt against Germany in Hungary,
or any serious breakdown anywhere within the Axis. In
any case we must look for a specific extent, even if
only on a small scale and of short duration, in the course
of which direct action by the people would shatter the
prestige of the Fascist state based upon its police power.
It is possible that a limited attack with parachutists
upon some center which is known to be a hot-bed of anti-
Fascism would stir up a local revolt which might spread and
have large consequences. In the hope of preparing such a
revolt in advance we should, whenever possible, try to
make the Italian people think of a United Nations' in-
vasion attempt as a real possibility - always, of course,
dwelling upon the liberation theme. It is to be assumed
that any British success in Africa which will bring
British forces within striking distance of Southern Italy
would automatically hasten the disintegration of the
Fascist state and might prove the catalytic agent for which
we are looking. Similarly, any successful revolutionary
upheaval in Spain or France might spread to Italy by con-
tagion.
-19-
No. 418
April 17, 1942
12 Noon
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
FROM: William J. Donovan
BBC directive on budget day authorized the follow-
ing:
1. During the coming year the total British ex-
penditure will be five times that of the last year before
the war.
2. Spending directly for the war will account
for all but a very little of the five thousand million pound
total.
3. This will represent over 60 per cent of the
total national income.
4. Therefore the economic mobilization of the
nation is almost complete.
5. There has been no inflation despite the col-
ossal burden. This has been due to the plain sense and patri-
otism of the people and to the wisdom of those responsible for
mobilizing the financial strength of the nation.
6. A high proportion of the resources come from
voluntary savings by workers who, as well as the bigger in-
vestors, are completely confident of victory.
No. 419
April 17, 1942
12 Noon
MENORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
FROM: William J. Donovan
I received the following memorandum this evening,
which I pass on to you at once:
"I had a long talk this afternoon with Raoul
Aglion, the representative here of the Free French,
with whom I have been in close contact for a couple
of months.
"With regard to the situation at the Consulate
in New York, he told me that he had very close con-
tacts there and kept well informed of developments.
He said that it was not correct that there had been
either any substantial transfer of the archives to
the house of the Consul General, Jacques d'Aumale,
as previously rumored, or any unusual destruction
of documents during the past few days. He said
that, however, three small packages, which might
have been codes or d'Aumale's personal correspond-
ence, had been taken to his house. He said the 1m-
pression generally prevailed among the Consul's
staff that there would not be an immediate break.
"Apparently all correspondence with South Amer-
ica, and I believe including Martinique, passes
through the Consul General, and it is therefore
possible that their archives might have consider-
able value.
"Aglion said that for his part he thought that
it would be a mistake for us to break with Vichy,
although he would naturally like to see further as-
sistance and recognition to the de Gaulle movement.
He thought that our position would be much stronger
with the people of France, and the cleavage between
the Vichy Government and the French people much
greater, if we stayed on until Vichy forced the break.
He felt that the collaborationist French would have
a much freer hand if we were out of the way and that
our presence there, even with Laval in, would be a
serious deterrent.
"Aglion did not seem to feel that the change
would be likely to result in any early turning over
of the French fleet. Undoubtedly Darlan, who may
have expected to be the successor, will be serious-
ly miffed by Laval's appointment, and thereby less
likely to fall in with any plans Laval might have
with regard to the fleet. Further, he did not feel
that the fleet would be as likely to take Laval's
orders as they would Darlan's.
"Finally, he said that the appointment of
Laval, for whose character the French people by
and large had no respect, would tend to weaken
the Vichy Government with the people and deprive
the Government of the type of slogans Petain had
tried to use, namely, probity, integrity, etc.
Laval, he said, was everywhere recognized as one
of the most corrupt members of the pre-catastrophe
governments, and while people might recognize his
cleverness, no one had a high regard for his in-
tegrity.
"Aglion also seemed to think that for the
time being Laval would try to propitiate the
United States, realizing the possible effect on
his own career of a break, unless, of course, we
played into his hands by ourselves breaking rela-
tions, which is probably what he wants, so that he
can then say that the United States has deserted
the French people, etc.
"I pass this on for what it may be worth,
and naturally the source should be carefully pro-
tected, as it is somewhat unorthodox coming, as it
does, from a well-known figure in the Free French
Movement."
No. 420
April 18, 1942
8:30 A. M.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
FROM: William J. Donovan
The following is taken from the Weekly
Empire Guidance of the British Ministry of
Information:
"There are still no signs of Axis troop
concentration in the Balkans. There are no signs
in Libya that Rommel intends to advance further.
Apparently he is digging in. The Luftwaffe is
compelled to divert a large proportion of its
forces from the Russian front to attack Malta
which has been subjected to many weeks of the
heaviest air attack ever deliverd on an objective
of comparable size. Stress the unity of the Anglo-
Russian front.
"Far East: Stress Ceylon's present readi-
ness to resist and note that the threat of the
American Navy on rear communications is the most
effective check that could apply to the Japanese
advance.
-2-
"France: Avoid until clearer speculation
on strategic possibilities and continue to refer
to Petain more in sorrow than in anger.
"India: The Cripps mission.was not in vain.
The air is clearer and there are brighter prospects
for further negotiations. Stress the fact that the
Indians are determined to resist the aggression of
the Japanese."
No. 421
April 18, 1942
8:30 A. M.
in
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
FROM: William J. Donovan
The following is the British Home Intelli-
gence report for the week ending April 13. The
mood of the public is variously described with
three main discernable trends:
"l. Expectancy. 'Soon things will really
begin to heppen.' There is an increasing belief
that 'We will not be long in following suit in the
West' when Hitler strikes on the Russian front. It
will be 'like Saint Nazaire or bigger'. Marshall's
arrival is quoted as evidence for this belief;
"2. Detachment. Lack of discussion and
talk about the war is widespread, at the same time.
People are 'unable or unwilling to assimilate most
of the news whether bad or good'. "The war is becoming
too vast, we cannot hope to understand it;'
-2-
"3. Mixture of pessimistic comment on
naval losses, continued Japanese successes in
Philippines and Burma, failure of India proposals,
with restrained satisfaction at heavy raids on
Germany, the increasingly drastic steps by the
government, evidence that "we have tried in India',
the 'end of a hard winter and the coming of better
weather.'
"a. India. General disappointment but also
appreciation of the part Cripps played. 'No one
could have done more.' The failure 'in no way
lowered the public's esteem of him, on the contrary,
his reputation was enhanced.' The public also praises
the government for 'making all possible concessions
short of what might have been disastrous to the Allied
cause'. There are the following minor criticisms,
although to a great extent the responsibility for
the failure is laid to the Indians:
"1. The Cripps' offer came too late;
"2. The Indians must be aware that the
government offered the concessions only because of
-3-
the gravity of the war situation;
"3. Halifax's speech of April 8th
was 'ill-timed'.
"b. Far East - Naval Losses. The public was
considerably shocked at the sinking of two cruisers,
the Hermes and the merchant ships. 'People are
becoming more and more worried about naval losses'.
Chief emotion is confused and bewildered worry at
'apparently complete inability to counter Japan on
land, sea or air', although some anger is expressed
at the lack of protection. The announcement that
dive bombers were responsible occasioned some bitter-
ness 'in view of our lack of them.'
"c. Bataan. Public has accepted its fall as
inevitable and still draws a contrast between the
fall of Hong Kong and Singapore and the American
resistance.
"d. Russia and Second Front: Public expresses
little loss of confidence in Russia's ability to
succeed. However, there is a growing wish for 'a
more effective share in Europe, an order to relieve
them when the German spring drive starts.'
4 of if
-4-
"e. Government. Both criticism of and interest
in the government is slight.
"f. Communism. Reports of increasing interest
in the communist party comes from three regions.
'They are not saying anything to which the average
person could take exception.' 'However, the new
adherents to the cummunist faith want them to be our
own British brand, not that of Lenin and Karl Marx.'
"g. Broadcasting. The public is increasingly
listening to the German radio immediately after it
has noted the preliminary announcement of exciting
news."
No. 422
April 17, 1942
6:00 P.M.
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
FROM: William J. Donovan
the
This report, covering highlights of the week's war
on the propaganda front, is based on recording of short-
wave broadcasts at FCC's listening posts in Washington
and Portland, Oregon; the Columbia Broadcasting System's
listening posts in San Francisco and New York; on medium
wave broadcasts recorded by the British Broadcasting
Corporation, and by our own monitors.
WHAT THE ENEMY DID
The United States won the initiative this week on
one of the key sectors of the Fourth front, and put the
Axis on the defensive.
Axis and Axis-dominated radios devoted more time to
counter-propaganda against our verbal offensive threaten-
ing an invasion of Europe than to any single propaganda
line.
The endlessly repeated Axis line was: "An invasion
is impossible." This marks the first spring since the
- 2 -
war began that the Axis has been snarled up in the war
of nerves, outsmarted, made the victim of its own tech-
nique and forced to take a negative position on a major
military question.
Main pegs for the Axis line that an invasion is in-
possible were: High United Nations' shipping losses in
all the oceans of the world (two million tons since the
war began); inability to replace lost tonnage; inability
to man the ships that are left; American inability to aid
Russia or Britain; production difficulties; German pre-
paredness and ability to transport men and materials any-
where necessary as a result of the Axis inner position
on the Continent.
The United Nations can only talk of an offensive, but
can never do anything about it the Axis declared when
Marshalland Hopkins visited London. Other theories on the
visit were: they had come to stir up stagnant British
armament production; to discover why Britain was afraid
to start an offensive; to warn Britain not to expect Amer-
ican aid, since Russia's need was greater; to take advan-
tage of Britain's difficulties in India; to plan an offen-
sive in the Middle East; to find more cannon fodder after
wide DOLAGE aug dreas COLORS you. to
E /
Posta Tie EXP
20
- 3 -
Russia fell; to divert German troops from the Russian front.
The Axis also said that in addition to lack of ships
and material, lack of men made an invasion impossible.
Berlin invited an invasion attempt *because we could get
rid of the enemy in large numbers instead of having to
look for him."
Perhaps the main feature of the Axis argument against
the possibility of an invasion of Europe was the stress
on United Nations' shipping losses. This was played
harder and more frequently than ever before.
Johnson
The Axis plugged away repeatedly on two other main news
items, developing expected propaganda lines from them. The
two items were the fall of Bataan and the failure of the
Cripps mission to India.
City
According to the Axis, Bataan, once it had collapsed,
suddenly assumed major military importance: Its fall was
as great a blow to the United States as Pearl Harbor.
Difficult terrain, and not American and Filipino troops,
had delayed Bataan's fall, Tokyo said. It added that Japan
had lost only one-fourth the troops she had anticipated
losing. Tokyo further claimed that while the Japanese
troops were heroes, the Americans were cowards: at the
first sign of danger they had fled helter-skelter and
TILAR B TRUE 4 / #
E 6" / To & STASE !
E
- 4 -
begged for a truce. Americans were accused of having
mowed down Filipino troops so that there would be fewer
mouths to feed with the little food available. The
capture of Corregidor was a question of hours, Tokyo
claimed.
The Axis line on the failure of Cripps' mission was
that it was also a failure for Roosevelt, Churchill and
the British Empire. Churchill was said to be secretly
pleased at his rival's failure. New Delhi was called
Roosevelt's Diplomatic Pearl Harbor, while Louis Johnson
was described as having stood by, representing America,
the jackal, waiting to snap up still another part of the
British Empire. Tokyo claimed credit for the "Cripps
Fiasco", declaring that the Japanese naval victory off
Ceylon and in the Indian Ocean had thwarted Anglo-American
designs on India. The result was played by the enemy not
as an Axis victory but as a United Nations defeat.
During the negotiations the Axis said India's choice
was to become a battlefield or a darling of the Axis and
thereby achieve freedom.
At the end of the week, Axis reaction to the Laval
appointment was slight and cautious. Berlin said it was an
internal French matter, but that Laval's entry into the
wakes months to less COLLERPING
E POLICY /
Tot by 1 /
- 5 -
Cabinet, it was believed, would not "affect Germany ad-
versely, but rather to the contrary."
The Axis insisted that the change in the Cabinet meant
France believed the Axis would win the war.
Cousent
By Thursday night the Axis began to get into high gear
and Berlin and Rome claimed that Churchill and Roosevelt
had only themselves to blame for the new French government.
For Churchill had sent the RAF to bomb defenseless French
civilians and Roosevelt is now taking a cheap revenge by
refusing to send food to French widows and orphans, and
is, therefore, starving them.
The Axis slighted the RAF raids over Europe; ignored
United Nations' air successes in the Far East and Germany's
"Spring offensive", which was 80 well advertised during
the cold winter months.
WHAT WE DID
The main emphasis of our shortwave stations during the
week was on the war of nerves. We were careful not to
promise an invasion, nor to set a time for one, but on
every possible occasion the question of an invasion of
Europe this spring was brought up. The Marshall-Hopkins
visit was the main peg for this aspect of the nerve war.
Every new phase of the visit, the people Marshall saw, the
5 E the Day
THE : & s
Captust ASLOCIA*
- 6 -
statement he made, etc., was used to pound away at the
impending United Nations' offensive against some point on
Europe. The German decree about martial law in Brest was
also used to point up the fact that the German High Command
was worried about the possibility of a coming invasion of
the Continent and freightened about what attitude the peo-
ple in France would take. Virginio Gayda's statement that
the United States wanted Britain to launch an offensive
against Europe also was used frequently. Statements by
several well-known officials, such as Litvinov and Bevin,
were quoted to show we wanted action now and were ready to
act this Spring.
We ridiculed reported Nazi efforts to put out peace
feelers in Stockholm. We stressed the effectiveness of RAF
round-the-clock raids over the industrial areas of Germany
and the key points of occupied France.
We emphasized the Russian successes along the Eastern
front, particularly at Kharkov and Bryansk; reported that
the Russians had air superiority in the East and that
Soviet officials were more optimistic than ever with the
arrival of Lease-Lend material in greater and greater
quantities; also emphasized the fact that the first big-
2 BORDS !
Zie
De use. sic.,
Emone*
- 7 -
scale Nazi attacks of the Spring had been repulsed in the
Caucasus.
We praised the defenders of Bataan for their long and
heroic stand, reported frequently our air successes in
the Far East and counter-balanced reports of losses in
the Bay of Bengal with reports of Italian shipping losses
in the Mediterranean.
Our reports on the Cripps' negotiations were vague and
uncertain. They wavered between optimism and lost hope.
At the end of the week we turned our attention to
M. Laval. The handling of the news that he was again to
be in the Cabinet at first indicated that the United States
was taken by surprise and had been disconcerted by an Axis
diplomatic triumph.
But it did not take us long to begin giving Laval the
most severe verbal drubbing ever handed out over our short-
wave radios. Hints from the American press were broadcast
to the effect that the United States would take strong
action on the Vichy situation. It was pointed out that
Italy would not be pleased at the closer collaboration
of France with Germany, since this would endanger Italian
claims on France.
scare Must offects
- 8 -
It was also pointed out that France was dropping to
the status of a Balkan nation.
Our radios quoted frequently and extensively from
the State Department note rejecting Vichy's protest to
our sending a Consul to Brazzaville.
Relations
belongs_to