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OCR Page 1 of 2DIARY
Book 307
September 19 - 23, 1940
- A -
Book Page
Allison Bagineering Company
Seo War Conditions: Mirplanes (Engines)
Appointments and Resignations
Collector of Customs - St. Albans, Vermont )
Collector of Internal Revenue - Toledo, Ohio)
Geston memorands giving resume - 9/18-19/40
307
9,34
Cox, Oscar: Complimented and promoted for work on
Vultee contracts 9/20/40
174
Maryland: Appointments (General Watson's memorandum)
discussed by HMJr, Helvering, Gaston, and Thompson - -
9/19/40
23
a) Magruder (Collector of Internal Revenue,
Baltimore) offered job on Processing Tax
Board of Review and FDR advised - 9/20/40
215
1) Welles' connection surmised by Gaston
292,311
2) Watson tells Gaston "OK to drop matter" -
9/25/40: See Book 308, page 172
Argentina
See Latin America
- B -
Balfour, Harold H. (Captain)
See War Conditions: United Kingdom
Belgian Congo
See War Conditions: Foreign Funds Control
Burgess, W. Randolph
"Financing the National Defense Program": Address before
American Bankers Association, Atlantic City - - 9/23/40.... 394
Business Conditions
Haas memorandum on situation for week ending 9/21/40
332
- C -
Central Republic Trust Company
HMJr, Helvering, Wenchel, and Foley discuss - 9/20/40
130
China
See War Conditions: China; U.S.S.R. (Russia-China-United States
agreement)
Collector of Customs - St. Albans, Vermont
See Appointments and Resignations
Collector of Internal Revenue - Toledo, Ohio
See Appointments and Resignations
Cox, Oscar
See Appointments and Resignations
Crane, J. E. (Standard Oil Company of New Jersey)
See War Conditions: Oil
Customs, Collector of - St. Albans, Vermont
See Appointments and Resignations
- B - -
Book Page
Enforcement Agencies, Treasury
Brandon, Edmund J. (United States Attorney for
Massachusetts) addresses monthly coordination
meeting in Boston - 9/21/40
307
247
Export Control
See War Conditions
- F -
Financing, Government
Refunding discussed by HMJr, Bell, Haas, Viner, Hadley,
and Murphy - 9/23/40
382
"Financing the National Defense Program": Address by
Burgess (W. Randolph) before American Bankers
Association, Atlantic City - 9/23/40
394
Financial Transactions
See War Conditions
Foreign Financial Transactions
See War Conditions: Financial Transactions
Foreign Funds Control
See War Conditions
France
See War Conditions
- G -
Germany
See War Conditions: Foreign Funds Control; Germany
Gold
See War Conditions
Graphite
See War Conditions: Strategic Materials
Greece
See War Conditions
Gunpowder
See War Conditions
- H - -
Heinkel 113
See War Conditions: Airplanes
- I -
Internal Revenue, Collector of - Toledo, Ohio
See Appointments and Resignations
Italy
See War Conditions: Foreign Funds Control
- J -
Book Page
Jacemy, Colonel (French Indo-China group)
See War Conditions: Export Control
Japan
See War Conditions: Export Control (discussion of
embargo on scrap iron and oil); Japan; U.S.S.R.
(Russia-China-United States agreement)
- K -
Klaus, Samuel
See War Conditions: Foreign Funds Control
-- I I
Letin America
Treasury representatives convention: Second meeting
at Quito, Ecuador, on September 21, 1940
307
183
a) United States Government agenda attached
Argentina:
New Minister of Finance, Dr. Federico Pinedo:
Resume of career by Norman Armour - 9/19/40
36
Financial negotiations discussed by Ambassador
with White and Bell - 9/23/40
278,281
a) Minister of Finance will head delegation -
9/23/40
303,305
b) Resume of situation reported by American
Embassy, Buenos Aires - 9/23/40
308
Luxembourg
See War Conditions
- M - -
Magruder, M. Hampton (Collector of Internal Revenue,
Baltimore, Maryland)
See Appointments and Resignations
Maryland
See Appointments and Resignations
Merry-Go-Round, Washington
See War Conditions: Airplanes (Plant Expansion)
Mexico
Hochschild transmits report - 9/20/40
214
Military Planning
See War Conditions
- 0 -
Book Page
Obsolescence
See War Conditions: Airplanes (Plant Expansion)
Ohio
Collector of Internal Revenue, Toledo:
See Appointments and Resignations
Oil
See War Conditions
- P - -
Pehle, John W.
See War Conditions: Foreign Funds Control
Petroleum
See War Conditions: Oil
Phillips, Sir Frederick
See War Conditions: United Kingdom
Plant Expansion
See War Conditions: Airplanes
- 8 -
Switzerland
See War Conditions: Foreign Funds Control
- U - -
Unemployment Relief
Works Progress Administration report: Decrease of
3000 from previous week - 9/23/40
307 356
U.S.S.R.
See War Conditions: Foreign Funds Control; U.S.S.R.
United Kingdom
See War Conditions: Military Planning; United Kingdom
- V -
Vermont
Collector of Customs, St. Albans:
See Appointments and Resignations
Vultee Aircraft, Incorporated
See War Conditions: Airplanes
- W -
Book
Page
War Conditions
Airplanes:
Coordination of British orders and defense orders
for United States discussed at conference;
present: HMJr, Knox, Forrestal, Patterson, and
Young - 9/20/40
307
246-A
Employment by regions as shown by map - 9/20/40
239
Heinkel 113: Further information concerning
from London - 9/23/40
379
Plant Expansion: Obsolescence: Resume by Sullivan
of steps taken while Hanes was Under Secretary,
in connection with Merry-Go-Round article -
9/19/40
91
a) Pearson and HMJr discuss - Doughton angry -
9/20/40
123
b) Doughton-HMJr conversation - 9/20/40
227
1) Copy of proposed letter to Doughton
signed by Sullivan
236
Progress reports acknowledged by War and Navy
Departments - 9/19/40
88,90
Vultee Aircraft, Incorporated: Contract as submitted
to Canadian Government - 9/19/40
84
Engines: Allison Engineering Company: Schedule of
deliveries - 9/23/40
272
China: Loan of $20 million against tungsten discussed
by Jones and Soong; Jones repeats conversation to
HMJr - 9/23/40
294
a) HMJr suggests to Jones making loan through
Universal Trading Corporation - 9/24/40:
See Book 308, pages 111 and 176
Exchange market resume - 9/19/40, etc.
60,208,
253,366
Export Control:
Exports of petroleum products, scrap iron, and scrap
steel from United States to Japan, Russia, Spsin,
and Great Britain, as shown by departure permits
granted for week ending 9/21/40
270
Iron and Steel Scrap Embargo: Hull calling meeting
"to discuss situation on which he is on a day-to-day
basis" - Henderson informs HMJr - 9/23/40
392
Financial Transactions: State Department inquires as to
what information Treasury receives of interest to
national defense regarding financial transactions
with foreign countries - 9/20/40
126
Regraded Unclassified
- -W- - (Continued)
Book Page
War Conditions (Continued)
Foreign Funds Control:
Belgian Congo: Situation discussed by Cochran
and State Department - 9/23/40
307
396
Italian and German accounts as reported by Federal
Reserve Bank of New York - 9/19/40
64,204
Klaus to work on German, Russian, and Italian
payments in United States under Gaston and
Cochran - 9/19/40
83
Pehle to act as head of group when Chamberlain
returns to Columbia University - 9/19/40
82
Switzerland: Requirements of United States control
discussed by Swiss Minister and Cochran -
9/23/40
395
U.S.S.R. transactions with Chase National Bank -
9/19/40
62
France: Rueff and Matthews discuss situation - 9/23/40
296
Germany:
Economic resume at end of first war year: American
Embassy, Berlin, report - 9/19/40
10
Germany-Greece trade agreement reported 9/21/40
259
Gold:
Inflows since outbreak of war: White memorandum -
9/23/40
359
Greece:
Germany-Greece trade agreement reported . - 9/21/40
259
Gunpowder:
Chinese have too much - Lochhead worried; HMJr suggests
arrangements for turning over to British - 9/19/40
1
a) Cochran memorandum - 9/20/40
111
Japan:
Economic sanction . possible courses: Foley memorandum -
9/23/40
371
Luxembourg:
German foreign exchange control now in force - 9/21/40.
255
Military Planning:
Tentative Lessons from the Recent Active Campaign
in Europe: War Department bulletins
British Comment on Divisional Artillery -
9/19/40
39
Rhine Crossing and Penetration of Maginot Line -
9/23/40
315
German attacks on England, etc. - 9/19/40
43
Reports from London transmitted by Lothian -
9/19/40, etc.
94,98,222,274
Balloon barrages effect of - 9/23/40
375
Oil: Proposed method of payment for petroleum supplies to
Grest Britain, Canada, Argentina, and Australian area
as drawn up by Crane (Standard Oil Company) - 9/20/40...
237
Petroleum: See War Conditions: Oil
- W - (Continued)
Book
Page
War Conditions (Continued)
Purchasing Mission:
Statement of dollar payments as of 9/1/40
307
251
Vesting Order: Official sales of British-owned
dollar securities - 9/23/40
397
Strategic Materials:
Graphite: Facilitation of imports from Madagascar
discussed by State Department and Cochran -
9/23/40
381
Iron and Steel Scrap:
See Mar Conditions: Export Control
U.S.S.R.:
Inducements to cooperation as suggested by White -
9/19/40
55
a) Trade agreement - resume of
56
Russia-China-United States agreement: Discussion at
Cabinet meeting reported by HMJr to Bell, Gaston,
Foley, and White - 9/19/40
65
a) HMJr states this would be one way "to set
Japan back on our heels"
b) Hull apparently not too familiar with
conversations going on between Oumansky
and Welles
c) FDR finally orders conference between Jones,
HMJr, and State Department
d) Welles-HMJr conversation
76
e) Hull-HMJr conversation - 9/20/40
141
f) Conference; present: Oumansky, Jones, HMJr,
and White - 9/20/40
148
1) State Department representative did not
come
145,147
2) Proposal as drawn up
189
3) Copy of transcript (confidential) of
meeting sent to Jones - 9/24/40:
See Book 308, page 94
g) HMJr tells Jones he will see Hull at his
apartment tomorrow - 9/23/40
368
United Kingdom:
Balfour, Harold H. (Captain): Back in England;
thanks HMJr for assistance rendered in connection
with plane mission - 9/19/40
78
Phillips, Sir Frederick: Reports to be made by
United Kingdom to United States following talks
with HMJr - 9/21/40
269
War Department
Military Intelligence Division bulletins:
See War Conditions: Military Planning
Works Progress Administration
See Unemployment Relief
1
GROUP MEETING
September 19, 1940
11:15 a.m.
Present:
Mr. Foley
Mr. Graves
Mr. Sullivan
Mr. Thompson
Mr. Bell
Mr. Cochran
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Chamberlain
Mr. Schwarz
Mr. Young
Mr. White
Mrs Klotz
H.M.Jr:
I have got several memoranda that I would
like to get rid of. Archie Lochhead has
got too much powder.
Young:
What kind of powder?
H.M.Jr:
Gunpowder. He is worrying about it and I
thought that you could get the English to
buy it, with an agreement that if they want
some later, they will let them have it, but
if he has got too much powder and they are
short, why not sell it to the English with
the arrangement they can have it later on,
you see. Get the idea?
Young:
Yes, sir.
H.M.Jr:
They are worrying about storage. The best
place to store it is in an English gun.
I never saw so much fussing in my life about
Mr. Baruch and this man Butler.
Gaston:
Is anything more coming to you on that?
H.M.Jr:
Well, it is just a memorandum from Merle
Cochran.
Gaston:
Oh well, that is all taken care of.
2
BH
- 2 -
H.M.Jr:
I would like to know about it in writing.
Gaston:
I will give you a memorandum on it.
H.M.Jr:
Would you? I have to know something about
this. Could I have the facts?
Gaston:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Is this fellow Butler coming back?
Gaston:
No, he is staying in Paris. The only man
we have left over there is him, but Johnson
ordered him to get rid of this Chinese ser-
vant who had been in a scandal and after some
demurrer and protest, he finally did it.
H.M.Jr:
And he cabled to Baruch about that?
Gaston:
Yes, through the State Department.
H.M.Jr:
Well, why do we keep B. man like that?
Gaston:
Well, up to that point, there didn't seem to
be any good reason for getting rid of Butler.
He is a good man, but of course that going
outside of the Department is quite a repre-
hensive thing.
H.M.Jr:
I think it is terrible. Could you give me
a report on it, Herbert?
Gaston:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Customs is under you.
Where is Merle Cochran?
This cable which you wrote, Harry, to go to
the Argentine, I have no objection to sending
it out.
3
- 3 -
White:
All right, because we just got another
cable. It was cleared with Merle and Dan.
H.M.Jr:
Well, this man is coming in at 11:30 to
talk to me. Supposing I ask him about
this?
White:
All right; I think it would be a good idea.
H.M.Jr:
If he says okay, I will give it to you.
Merle, on this fellow they are sending down
to South America, the British, before he
goes, I would like to talk to him.
Cochran:
You mean someone from here? There is no
one --
H.M.Jr:
This memo that you wrote me. Is he going
from here?
Cochran:
No, they are sending a mission out from
England, you see, a trade mission.
H.M.Jr:
Do you know about this, Harry?
White:
Yes, I do.
H.M.Jr:
All right. That is all.
Thompson:
You might be interested sometime, Mr. Secre-
tary, in seeing how we have housed the
Foreign Funds Control Unit.
H.M.Jr:
Oh, yes.
Thompson:
We have quite a force there. There are 135
employees.
H.M.Jr:
Are they in the middle of that corner there?
Regraded Unclassified
4
- 4 -
Thompson:
Yes.
Bell:
It is very nice.
H.M.Jr:
All right, I will go down there.
On that, I have taken this recommendation
now, of this group. Bell, did you report
that back?
Bell:
No, I did not. I haven't seen them.
H.M.Jr:
Just the way Bell wrote it to me on Mr. Pehle.
Bell:
Just like we agreed on it the other day.
H.M.Jr:
I take it that was unanimous.
Bell:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Professor Chamberlain was in on that meet-
ing, wasn't he?
Bell:
No, he was not, because you asked us to con-
sider that.
H.M.Jr:
He was not?
Bell:
No. I will be glad to tell him about it,
though.
H.M.Jr:
Before I decide, I would like to ask him
whether he thinks that is wise. I thought
he was in on it.
Bell:
No, he wasn't. You asked Gaston and I and
Dr. White and Foley to consider it.
H.M.Jr:
Then I will talk to Professor Chamberlain
myself. I didn't realize that. Tell him
it is my mistake. It is on me.
Regraded Unclassified
5
- 5 -
Harry?
White:
I have nothing.
Cochran:
Yesterday, Archie Lochhead phoned me about
this Chinese powder, getting some facilities
for storage, and I want to speak to Phil
about it, if you have no objection.
H.M.Jr:
While you weren't in the room, I told him
to buy it for the English.
Cochran:
Is that so? Because the State Department
mentioned it to Colonel Burns, who is in
the Ordnance Department, and he said if it
is the right fineness, the right quality,
that the Army would be willing to take it
over.
H.M.Jr:
It is sold, sold to the English.
Cochran:
All right, if the Chinese are willing. I am
not sure about that.
H.M.Jr:
Oh, sure they will be willing.
White:
Maybe it is wet.
H.M.Jr:
They have got a new system now between the
lawyers for taking the stuff, on those
Swedish planes. The deal was signed last
night, you know, with Vultee.
Foley:
I knew they had the contract. I didn't know
the contract had been signed.
Young:
It will be signed this morning.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Professor Chamberlain?
UInclassified
6
- 6 -
Chamberlain: May I see you for just a minute, Mr. Secre-
tary?
H.M.Jr:
Right after this, sure.
Chamberlain: It won't take long.
H.M.Jr:
Take as much time as you want.
Chamberlain: I won't take much.
H.M.Jr:
Phil?
Young:
We are working out the Swedish machine guns
on the same basis as the Swedish planes.
H.M.Jr:
Okay.
Chick?
Sullivan:
I have nothing.
H.M.Jr:
What about tonight?
Foley:
I don't know whether they will drive me down
or not.
H.M.Jr:
Let me know at 7:00 o'clock. How is that?
Foley:
I will let you know before 7:00.
Gaston:
The British Purchasing Commission want to
know if they can use our shooting range
down here in the basement for training 15
or 16 guards that they are employing here
in Washington. I just don't know.
H.M.Jr:
The answer is no.
Gaston:
All right.
7
- 7 -
H.M.Jr:
The answer is no.
Gaston:
I have some --
H.M.Jr:
There is enough shooting going on now.
White:
Who are they going to protect themselves
against, the Americans?
Gaston:
There are other kinds here, Harry.
White:
We have got an adequate police force.
Gaston:
I have a recommendation for purchasing air-
planes. Do you want to look at it?
H.M.Jr:
For what?
Gaston:
Funds we have now. We have a half a million
dollars for airplanes. This is a recommenda-
tion for the purchase of three Grumman twin
motors. It is about the only thing we can
get and it is about the most suitable of any-
thing that we have had up to date.
H.M.Jr:
Can you get delivery?
Gaston:
We can get delivery. The planes are in con-
struction now. If it is all right with you,
I would approve it.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Gaston:
We are also in the market for the new Grumman
called the Widgeon. I don't know whether
you have seen anything about it or not. It
is an in line six cylinder motor on each side.
It only costs half as much as these other
twin-motor Grummans. It carries about four
men. I will bring you in & picture of it,
if you would like.
8
- 8 -
H.M.Jr:
I would like to see it.
Gaston:
We have money enough to buy ten of those.
H.M.Jr:
Well, buy those three.
Gaston:
This is just for these three, yes.
H.M.Jr:
Okay. All right?
Gaston:
That is all I have. I talked to Ed Flynn.
H.M.Jr:
What are you going to do about it?
Gaston:
Well, I suppose it will be what Ed Flynn
wants. His proposal is to come on here
and go with Bowen to the White House. When
they come out of the White House, Bowen will
announce that he is going out to campaign
in the State of Washington for the President.
He will tell who is going to direct the cam-
paign in Washington. The man has resigned
as Collector of Customs.
H.M.Jr:
All right, gentlemen.
3
do take &
wit 9-19
September 18, 1960.
TO: Secretary Norganthan
FROM: Mr. Gaston
You may wish to discuss either or both of the following political
situations with the President:
(1) Collector of Internal Revenue at Toledo, Chio. Charles H.
Graves, former Collector, died August 15th. General Watson phoned on
August 24th that the President had just been talking to Charles Sawyer
of Cincinnati, National Committeeman, and that nothing was to be done
toward filling this vacancy until the President had had & chance to
talk to you. 1 don't believe the President will wish to make any
appointment before election but I should like to confirm this so we
can be guided accordingly.
On August 23rd Senator Donahey wrote to the President recommending
the imediate appointment of Ralph 0. Snyder, Secretary to Representative
John Hunter, and also stating that the appointment of one Frazier Reans,
a Lawyer of Tolede, would likewise meet with his approval. Is received
this letter August 26th. Both Donahey's and Runter's offices have called
us up frequently pressing for action. I finally told Hunter yesterday
that nothing would be done until " got further directions, which seesed
to stump him. Three persons have written or wired advising that no
appointment be made until after the election. They are: Samuel R. Young,
an attorney of Toledo; I. 1. Gotschall of Toledo, who gives John Biggers
as reference, and Tell Thompson, County Chairman of Bancock County.
(2) Frank Duffy, National Committeemen from Vermont, wants to
have his son, Frank Duffy, Jr., appointed to succeed the late Stephen M.
Driscoll, formerly Collector of Customs at St. Albans, Verment, who died
several sonths ago. Duffy vas in to see you shortly after Driscoll's
death and you introduced him to M. Be asked that nothing be done about
the appointment until after the conventions, but he brought in and intro-
duced his son at that time and told me that he hoped his son could be
appointed. Duffy, Jr., is an engineer, formarly employed by the New York
State Highway Department and more recently on P.W.A. bridge projects in
Vermont. Duffy can, of course, produce an adequate number of letters of
recommendation for his son, but doesn't wish to do so unless he gets the
go sign. One John Picher, 8. member of the Prench-Canadian colony at
Wincoski, near Burlington, has been emergetically advocated by residents
of that town. Duffy says they are not an important element of the
Democratic Party of Vermont.
Regraded Unclassified
10
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Embassy Berlin, via Bern
DATE: September 19, 1940, noon.
Rec'd: September 23, 1:08 p.m.
NO.: 4062
The following telegram is for the Treasury from
Heath, and for the information of the Department.
There are two recurrent themes in the economic press
in Berlin and in conversations with German officials, now
that the first year of war has ended. They are: (1)
The wartime performance of the German economy has triumphed.
(2) Germany has been strengthened to the point of economic
invulnerability through victories and territorial acquisi-
long
tions, however shouxt the war may be. The last point,
however, usually is accompanied by a statement of the
prescribed official point of view that the war will
soon come to an end with complete victory for the German
Government.
In connection with the first point, it must be admitted
that the German economy did come through the first year
of war without breaking down, and also without serious
difficulties, with the exception of the tie-up in transporta-
tion which resulted from the unusually severe winter of
1939-40, defects in rolling stock, and personnel which
was inexperienced, causing a temporary shortage in the
larger cities of certain essential foodstuffs. The German
people
Regraded Unclassified
11
- 2 -
people as a whole were adequately fed with the exception
of this period. Fuel shortage was the main result of
the difficulties of transportation, which caused vocal
discontent as well as physical distress and illness. The
warmer weather and German victories, however, brought to an
end the vocal discontent.
In connection with the second point, it must also be
admitted that Germany in general 1s much stronger economically
for another year of war than the country was last September.
The fiscal policy of Germany, first of all, is much more
sound than it was in the first World War. Through efficient
control over consumption and distribution, Germany has
avoided price and monetary disturbances of wartime. It 1s
true that only 1/2 of the expenditures of the Government
are met by Germany's present tax collection of about
2 billion marks a month, but only 1/10 of the outlays of
the Government were met by taxes in the first World War.
It has been necessary for the Government to borrow at the
monthly rate of 2 billion marks, but there has been no
difficulty in accomplishing this, and the present national
debt 18 not inordinate. The disclosed debt of the Reich
on the last day of June was 60 billion marks. This figure
has probably gone up to 65 billion marks now, compared with
the figure at the outbreak of the war of 37 billion marks.
Regraded Unclassified
12
- 3 -
The undisclosed debt of the Reich must be added to this
figure - an amount probably greater than 10,000,000,000
marks - which was accumulated during the first years of
rearmament under the National Socialist Party. The war
has been financed for the most part by taxation and genuine
savings resulting from enforced consumption curtailment
rather than by recourse to currency and credit inflation.
There was an increase in note circulation of the Reichsbank
to 12.1 billion marks on August 23, 1940, as compared with
8.7 billion marks on August 23, 1939. To a large extent
this expansion can be explained by the introduction of the
mark into western territories in Poland which were incor-
porated into the Reich, and by the cash reserves which
German military units carried and the decreased velocity
of note circulation because of the difficulties and restric-
tions on purchases. Currency circulation increase was
accompanied by an almost negligible rise in the prices of
goods and services essential to the population due to
the striot controls over prices, wages and rations which
Germany now has over almost all economic goods and services.
There was a rise in the cost of living index - using 1913
as 100 - to only 133.1 in August 1940 as compared with
127.3 in August 1939. Leaving out rents, which were statio,
the
13
- 4 -
the food and clothing increase was the largest. For
clothing the increase was from 133. to 140, and for food
from 124.9 to 133.0. Approximately the maximum has been
reached for revenues under war conditions and at present
rates of taxes. However, the cost of maintaining the
German military forces 1s to a large extent now being borne
by the countries occupied by Germany. This 1s a help to
the monetary position of Germany as well as to the fiscal
burden of the Reich; troops abroad are being paid either
in a special mark scrip which the occupied territories must
accept, or in currencies of the occupied countries.
There is as yet no information available here concerning
the stocks of raw materials which Germany acquired in the
countries occupied by the military. It 1s understood that
these stocks include substantial amounts of textile materials,
non-ferrous metals and copper, and oil. New sources of
raw materials have been acquired by Germany in addition
to the stocks; she now has access to the French (omission)
iron ore, the Silesian zine mines, Norwegian molybdenum,
and important manufacturing facilities. In view of Germany's
military domination of the whole continent of Europe, she
is in a position to force increased deliveries of supplies
of various commodities from European neutrals. The position
of iron ore has changed to one of surplus over present needs,
where heretofore it was one of potential shortage in a long
Inclassified
14
- 5 -
war. In addition to the oil stocks which Germany acquired
by occupation, it should be possible for her to import
from Rumania in & short time petroleum products at least
at the annual rate of 3,000,000 tons, as contrasted with
the quota conceded by Rumania in the early part of the
war of 1.5 million tons. I can perceive no evidence that
there is any great concern on the part of German military
authorities over the supply of petroleum in the war's present
phase and scale. If there should be a shortage of the
petroleum supply, Germany would not permit operation of the
considerable number of passenger cars and trucks which are
still operating and which are not performing vitally
essential services.
There are certain potential economic weak spots, as
contrasted with the foregoing economic gaine and elements
of strength. One gains the impression from talks with German
officials that behind the officially optimistic facade there
18 some concern over the fact that practically the whole
continent of Europe is now under blockade - and Europe
neither feeds nor clothes its people nor can it meet its
minimum needs in most non-ferrous metals and in oil.
It is known, specifically, that the problem of coal produc-
tion and transportation is of some concern to the economic
authorities. During the summer efforts have been made to
transport to German cities a sufficient supply of coal
to
15
- 6 -
to avoid the shortages which occurred last winter. However,
if this winter should be as severe as the last one, according
to informed sources, these stocks will not be sufficient.
The outlook 18 far more serious in the countries under
occupation and in the neutral countries. This Embassy has
authoritative information that the Netherlands 1s the only
country outside of Germany which 1s secure from severe
shortage by reason of its considerable domestic output.
The coal industry of Germany 1s one in which the Third
Reich has not been able to obtain any important enlargement
of output during the past two years, and it is hardly likely
that there will be an early increase which would at all
make up for the 30,000,000 tons which Britain ships to
Europe normally. A point of significance is that Dr. Ley
in a speech he made recently promised to place the pay
of the miners at the peak of wages in Germany.
The supply of petroleum, as previously stated, does
not present a serious problem in the present stage of the
war. However, note should be taken of the fact that the
synthetic gasoline plants present identifiable aerial targets
as do the overburdened systems of rails and canals - and
the air force of Germany and part of her motorized land
forces now depend on the synthetic gasoline plants. It 1s
to be noted particularly that despite the fact that Germany
has been drawing on the rolling stock of the countries under
16
- 7
occupation, it has been necessary for the German State
Railways to advise German shippers to use freight cars
as sparingly and 88 promptly as possible.
In the event of a long war, Germany cannot count with
certainty upon imports from Russia, which imports have
been a comparatively important factor in the war economy
of Germany. Germany at war would definitely have added
troubles should there be elimination or even substantial
reduction of imports from Russia of manganese and 011, which
it 1s claimed by German officials are being received now
at an annual rate of more than 1,000,000 tons, plus feed
grains, and the 500,000 tons of Russian phosphate fertilizer.
It would seem that the German food supply 1s assured
for another year of war. However, thereafter German
observers believe it likely that the rations of fats and
eventually meats will have to be decreased because of
an insufficient supply of fodder. There have taken place
already greater than normal slaughterings of livestock in
Holland, Denmark, Germany and Belgium. It 1s the hope of
agricultural authorities in Germany to raise French agri-
cultural production in 1941 through ordering increased use
of fertilizer and labor, but it 1s uncertain to what extent
this can be achieved. Aside from the fats and meat question,
an eventual grain shortage can be envisaged due to the
insufficient supply of phosphatic fertilizers - although
shipments
Regraded Unclassified
17
- 8 -
shipments from the northern part of Africa may remedy this
situation. A contributing factor to eventual grain shortage
would be the exhaustion of reserve stocks which in Germany
will be drawn upon relatively lightly but which in states
under German military occupation would be drawn upon heavily
since they are grain deficit countries with the exception
of France.
There 1s still another question of which account must
be taken, i.e., the effect of the prospect of prolonged
warfare accompanied by air raids - on morale, which latter
has been an important factor to date in the economic
productivity of Germany. The efficiency of the consumption
restrictions and controls has not been solely responsible
for Germany's success in avoiding inflationary results
from its tremendous financial operations; the acceptance
of all this by the German people has been partly responsible.
The German people have been instilled with the belief that
their sacrifices would be brought to an end by an early
decisive military victory by Germany.
Should the European war continue to be limited as it
is now to an aerial and naval attack against the British
Isles with relatively unimportant aerial counterattack
being suffered by Germany, these potential weaknesses in
the future food supply and in transportation, the eventual
deficiency of non-ferrous metals and alloys, the European
coal
Regraded Unclassified
18
- 9 -
coal supply problem and the cumulative effect of re-
strictions and shortage on Germany's civil population
and on the civil populations in occupied countries
should present to Germany no critical economic dif-
ficulties. Should the area and the participation in
the war increase and Germany, instead of being in the
position of attacker, also be the object of a continued
attack genuinely destructive without the compensation
of continued successes, then the military nek scales
might eventually be tipped by the aggregation of these
weak places, strains and deficiencies with their
BECEINED DELVE THE
material and also paychological effects and conse-
quences.
(END OF MESSAGE)
BID 2E
KIRK
EA:LWW/msg
Regraded Unclassified
19
21524
GRAY
231333A
$8 Mr. AS
30 -
JACKHOST
YRAT YAAT38338 3HT OT
Buenos Aires
Dated September 19, 1940
Rec'd 11:55 a.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
423, September 19, 1 p.m.
Embassy's 422, September 19, noon.
This noon the Director of the Exchange Control
office informed the Embassy that the suspension applies
to all (repeat all) applications for prior permits to
import American merchandise including prospective purchases
of such goods by Argentine Government departments. Thus
the embargo is temporarily complete.
TUCK
WWC
COPY
ime
20
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM
No. 422, dated September 19, 1940
Noon, from Buenos Aires.
The Embassy was requested this morning by the Minister
of Finance to inform the Department that the suspension
of prior import permits for American merchandise was not
intended in any way to put Argentina in a bargaining
position in connection with the visit of Warren Lee Pierson.
He said that the measure became necessary due entirely
to the fact that Argentina's supply of exchange had been
seriously depleted.
The Minister of Finance referred again to the prob-
lem of an exchange and monetary agreement and asked if
it were possible to do anything to have the United States
act more quickly on this matter. He expressed the hope
that it might be possible to arrange some form of a tri-
angular agreement in connection with the current Anglo-
Argentine negotiations regarding the proposed British
purchase of 40 million pounds sterling of Argentine
products.
The Minister stressed the fact that the present
economic and financial situation in Argentina is desperate
and that help is urgently needed from the United States.
RA:AED:CBT
COPY
bj
21
September 19, 1940.
MEMORANDUM
TO: Secretary Morgenthau
FROM: Mr. Gaston
THE
In view of your conversation with Assistant Secretary of
State Breckenridge Long on September 3rd, you will be interested
to know that the State Department has approved the request of
Herbert L. May on behalf of the Permanent Central Opium Board
and the Opium Supervisory Board under the 1931 Convention, both
of Geneva, Switzerland, to establish temporary so-called branch
offices in the United States. May, a rich American who has made
control of the opium traffic his main interest, is a member of
both boards. The State Department has accorded diplomatic visas
to the five permanent members of the staffs of the two organiza-
tions who are to come from Geneva. One of the staff, Leon Steinig,
Secretary of the Supervisory Board, is already in the United States.
This action came about in a. rather odd way. Various indirect
approaches had been made and early last week May called up Harry
Anslinger to ask if he could suggest any way in which they could
get action- Anslinger said: "I suggest you make formal application
to the State Department for permission to establish these offices."
May did it and the application was granted. Long receded from
his objections in view of Secretary Hull's strong interest.
The offices will probably be housed at Rockefeller Center,
New York. While they will be called branch offices, they will
actually transact all the business of gathering statistics and
regulating the international narcotics trade for the duration of
the war in Europe. Operation from Switzerland has become impossible
because of the great delays even in diplomatic mail.
l
22
September 19, 1940.
EMCRANDUE
TO: Secretary Morgenthau
FROM: Mr. Gaston
In view of your conversation with Assistent Secretary of
State Breckenridge Long on September 3rd, you will be interested
to know that the State Department has approved the request of
Herbert L. May on behalf of the Permanent Central Opius Board
and the Opium Supervisory Board under the 1931 Convention, both
of Geneva, Switserland, to establish temporary so-called branch
offices in the United States. May, a rich American who has made
control of the opium traffic his main interest, is & member of
both boards. The State Department has accorded diplomatic visas
to the five permenent members of the staffs of the two organize-
tions who are to come from Geneva. One of the staff, Leon Stainig,
Secretary of the Supervisory Board, is already in the United States.
This action came about in a rather odd way. Various indirect
approaches had been made and early last week May called up Harry
Anslinger to ask if he could suggest any way in which they could
get action. Analinger said: "I suggest you make formal application
to the State Department for permission to establish these offices."
May did it and the application was granted. Long receded from
his objections in view of Secretary Hull's strong interest.
The offices will probably be housed at Rockefeller Center,
New York. While they will be called branch offices, they will
actually transact all the business of gathering statistics and
regulating the international nareotics trade for the duration of
the var in Europe. Operation from Switzerland has become impossible
because of the great delays even in diplomatic mil.
HEG/mah
Regraded Unclassified
23
September 19, 1940
10:50 a.m.
Present:
Mr. Helvering
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Thompson (for latter part)
HM,Jr: Good morning, gentlemen. Will you sit
down? This 1s the memorandum which the President gave
me.
Pa Watson.
(Reading) "Memorandum for General Watson.
"Senator Tydings and Senator Radcliffe handed
me the enclosed list of the Maryland appoint-
ments in which they are interested. Three
of the four are re-appointments.
"The Collector of Internal Revenue, Wm. S.
Gordy is a splendid selection. He is from
the Eastern Shore, and was a candidate for
Governor about four years ago polling a large
vote.
"After the President told me that he would
make these appointments, I talked with Helver-
1ng suggesting to him to appoint Magruder, the
present Collector, to some place in the Wash-
ington office. This would leave no bad feel-
ing on the part of Magruder or his friends.
I have not yet heard from Helvering about the
appointment.
"Tydings tells me that if I can assure him that
the President will make these appointments, he
will comply with my request to issue a state-
ment supporting the ticket without waiting for
the appointments to be sent to the Senate. I
think it should be done today. Some one should
advise Morgenthau to immediately appoint Magruder
to come place in the Treasury Department."
Unclassified
24
-2-
HM,Jr: You know you (Helvering) and I talked
about this. What can you do?
Mr. Gaston: The point is we are asked to find
another job in the Treasury for Magruder.
HM,Jr: He (Helvering) knows about it.
Mr. Helvering: Yes. Byrnes talked to me at
length about it.
HM,Jr: Jimmie Byrnes. Got a job?
Mr. Helvering: We haven't anything in the Bureau.
HM,Jr: How much do you pay on that Tax Board?
Mr. Helvering: That Tax Board is $10,000.
HM,Jr: Does Charlie West get $10,000?
Mr. Helvering: Yes. Is he on the Tax Board? Oh,
yes! Yes. $10,000.
HM,Jr: There is a vacancy there. I think there 1s.
Mr. Helvering: You mean the Board of Tax Appeals?
Mr. Gaston: You are talking about the Processing
Tax Board of Review that Charlie West 18 on.
Mr. Helvering: I am not sure of their salaries.
HM,Jr: It's $7,000 or $7,500.
Mr. Gaston: There isn't any salary. I think the
man is an employee of the Treasury Department and he's desig-
nated by you to be a member and he can be appointed out of
that to a job in the Treasury Department.
HM,Jr: They want an answer right today on this
thing.
Mr. Helvering: The way they put it up to me, as I
Regraded Unclassified
25
-3-
explained to you -- I don't know that you recall --
that we find a place in Internal Revenue to advance
him to 1t. But of course me can't advance anybody
by reducing the salary and the only places we have
that pays more than Magruder, or as much, are all
filled by excellent men now. Only myself and the
Deputy Commissioner and the Special Commissioner and
Assistant and the Head of the Technical Staff.
HM,Jr: Is it the fellow who formerly ran for
Governor they want to take care of?
Mr. Helvering: Oh, yes! He was Comptroller
of Maryland.
HM,Jr: Why wouldn't it be easy to take care
of him and leave Magruder where he 1s?
Mr. Helvering: What they want is to show they
have enough influence to put Magruder out.
Mr. Gaston: Magruder turned against Tydings.
Mr. Helvering: Tydings will not have any objec-
tion, but he wants to show Maryland
Mr. Gaston: Magruder supported Lewis.
(Mr. Thompson came into the Secretary's office
at this point.)
HM,Jr: Will you handle this and let me know today
what you can do?
Mr. Helvering: There isn't anything we can do
in the Bureau.
HM,Jr: Talk it over with Norman Thompson.
I
won't go over it again, but go in and see Norman and
sometime tomorrow morning I will see you if you two can
work out something on that.
(HM, Jr then read Gaston's memo of Sept. 18th *
the first two paragraphs of which referred to the posi-
tion of Collector of Internal Revenue at Toledo.)
Regraded Unclassified
26
HM,Jr: What the President said was this. You
two fellows can handle this between you. I don't care
how you do it. Call Charles Sawyer, of Cincinnati, and
tell him what these fellows want and get his advice and
after you know what Charles Sawyer wants I am to again
talk to the President, but in order to save my time,
Herbert, I am going to ask you to call up Pa Watson and
tell him what Charles Sawyer said.
Mr. Gaston: Yes. Yes.
HM,Jr: You call up Charles Sawyer and give him
this rigamarole and say the President wants to know what
he thinks of it, what is his advice, and after you get it
report back to Pa Watson.
Mr. Gaston: Sawyer is a pretty week sister.
HM,Jr: Well
(The Secretary then read the last paragraph of
Gaston's memorandum of Sept. 18th which referred to the
desire of Frank Duffy, National Committeeman from Vermont,
tohave his son, Frank Duffy, Jr., appointed to the vacant
position of Collector of Customs at St. Albans, Vermont.)
HM,Jr: The answer to Frank Duffy 18 this: The
President remembers Frank Duffy, Jr., very well. He can't
do anything Just now, but the chances are very good that
after election he will take care of his son.
Mr. Gaston: In other words, we will leave this
thing alone for the present Just as it has been.
HM,Jr: That's the story. Does that clean up the
politic?
Mr. Gaston: Yes. I was going to mention that
Pa Watson called me a minutes ago and Donahey and Hunter
were in his office and he wanted to know what to say to
them. I told him there was nothing to say to them ex-
cept no decision had been reached as to whether there
would be an immediate appointment.
Regraded Unclassified
27
-5-
HM,Jr: Anything on your (Helvering) mind?
Mr. Helvering: One matter I want to speak to you
about.
HM.Jr: Now?
Mr. Helvering: Yes.
About a year ago I made a recommendation that we
take all these bank cases where they had disassociated
their facilities under the Act of 1934 and set them on
a certain basis. There was some opposition to it and
I wrote up a memorandum distinguishing between the two
cases which the Supreme Court had decided and settled,
the ones under -- one case as having the divorcement
provision in there that told us very clearly, showed us
very clearly, that there had been divorcement of the af-
filiate in the bank stock and there was a possibility of
avocation of values. The Department of Justice, however,
has some cases pending and they don't want that done.
I want to state to you that recommendation over
here to you and Mr. Hanes 0. K'd it. Since Hanes went
out this situation in the Department of Justice has come
up. Now, Hanes has written us a letter in which he de-
mands us, under that provision in the recommendation, that
we made and he O. K'd, that we go ahead and settle certain
cases under these affiliates.
HM,Jr: Hanes!
Mr. Helvering: Yes, because that was the ruling
and we should follow it. We discussed with the Depart-
ment of Justice yesterday and they think they can now
overrule the so-called Hageman case, which was the one
we were getting the act under, but if we think adminis-
tratively all these 400 - 500 cases could be settled
better under the provision of that recommendation they
will withdraw, but I know they don't like to. They
think they can reverse the Hageman case. That is the
quandary presented to us.
HM,Jr: What is Hanes' interest in it?
Regraded Unclassified
28
-6-
Mr. Helvering: He has a friend who has a big
tax case.
HM,Jr: Who did he address the letter to?
Mr. Helvering: Me. Of course, he remembered
about this recommendation of mine that he 0. K'd. So
he is contending there was a proposition passed by the
Treasury and should have been acted on.
HM,Jr: I will have to have -- could you bring
Foley up to date and I will talk to the two of you to-
morrow?
Mr. Helvering: I would like to bring Wenchell.
HM,Jr: Bring Wenchell along and bring the letter
from Hanes.
000-000
29
September 18, 1940.
MEMORANDUM
TO: Secretary Morgenthau
m5.
FROM: Mr. Gaston
You may wish to discuss either or both of the following political
situations with the President:
(1) Collector of Internal Revenue at Toledo, Ohio. Charles H.
Graves, former Collector, died August 15th. General Watson phoned on
August 24th that the President had just been talking to Charles Sawyer
of Cincinnati, National Committeeman, and that nothing was to be done
toward filling this vacancy until the President had had & chance to
talk to you. I don't believe the President will wish to make any
appointment before election but I should like to confirm this so we
can be guided accordingly.
On August 23rd Senator Donahey wrote to the President recommending
the immediate appointment of Ralph O. Snyder, Secretary to Representative
John Runter, and also stating that the appointment of one Frazier Reams,
a lawyer of Toledo, would likewise meet with his approval. We received
this letter August 26th. Both Donahey's and Hunter's offices have called
us up frequently pressing for action. I finally told Hunter yesterday
that nothing would be done until we got further directions, which seemed
to stump him. Three persons have written or wired advising that no
appointment be made until after the election. They are: Samuel R. Young,
an attorney of Toledo; I. W. Gotschall of Toledo, who gives John Biggers
as reference, and Tell Thompson, County Chairman of Hancock County.
(2) Frank Duffy, National Committeeman from Vermont, wants to
have his son, Frank Duffy, Jr., appointed to succeed the late Stephen M.
Driscoll, formerly Collector of Customs at St. Albans, Vermont, who died
several months ago. Duffy was in to see you shortly after Driscoll's
death and you introduced him to me. He asked that nothing be done about
the appointment until after the conventions, but he brought in and intro-
duced his son at that time and told me that he hoped his son could be
appointed. Duffy, Jr., is an engineer, formerly employed by the New York
State Highway Department and more recently on P.W.A. bridge projects in
Vermont. Duffy can, of course, produce an adequate number of letters of
recommendation for his son, but doesn't wish to do go unless he gets the
go sign. One John Picher, a. member of the French-Canadian colony at
Winooski, near Burlington, has been energetically advocated by residents
of that town. Duffy says they are not an important element of the
Democratic Party of Vermont.
30
Originals returned to General Watson
9/19/40
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
September 19, 1940.
MEMORANDOM FOR GENERAL WATSON:
Senator Tydings and Senator Radcliffe
handed me the enclosed list of the Maryland ap-
pointments in which they are interested. Three
of the four are re-appointments.
The Collector of Internal Revenue, Wm.
S. Gordy, is & splendid selection. He is from
the Eastern Shore, and was & candidate for Governor
about four years ago polling a large vote.
After the President told me that he would
make these appointments, I talked with Helvering
suggesting to him to appoint Magruder, the present
Collector, to some place in the Washington office.
This would leave no bud feeling on the part of
Magruder or his friends. I have not yet heard from
Relvering about the appointment.
Tydings tells me that if I can assure
him that the President will make these appointments,
he will comply with my request to issue E state-
ment supporting the ticket without waiting for
the appointments to be sent to the Senate. I
think it should be done today. Some one should
advise Morgenthau to immediately appoint Magruder
to some place in the Treasury Department.
JAMES BYRNES
Regraded Unclassified
Carlcolor of toh held until after election,
United States Senate m
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Callector 7 Internal Revenue-
we S. Gordy, gr. Salisburg. ma
was maryland for 15 years state Comptroller of
f. Brnard Flyme Baltimor md
U. S. District atty -
(evenmbent)
august Recka, august Bactemors
Y
a.s. marohall
(weembrut)
S. Scott Back - Chestertown md
Comptrollr f Customs
Regraded Unclassified
THE WHITE HOUSE
Hill
WASHINGTON
9-12-40 Talk Deer blead it
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT:
Henry Morgenthau 'phoned me that Guy
Helvering was told by Senator Byrnes that the
President wanted to promote Collector Magruder in
Baltimore, to make a vacancy so that the two
Senators could make a new appointment. Helvering
is in a quandary as to how he could be promoted.
Gurr-
E. M. W.
Regraded Unclassified
34
September 19, 1940.
MEMORANDUM
TO: Secretary Morgenthau
W
FROM: Mr. Gaston
I talked to Charles Sawyer, National Committeeman of Chio,
on the telephone this afternoon. He said he would rogard it as
very unfortunate if any appointment of Internal Revenue Collector
at Toledo were made before the election. He strongly urged that
the ap pointment be delayed until after the election. As to
Snyder, Secretary to Congressmen Hunter, whom Hunter and Senator
Donahey have recommended, Sawyer said he was "no good"; that he was
for Lemke in 1936 and before that a Republican. He added that John
Hunter, the Congressman, "has never been with the President." I
reported the substance of this to General Watson's secretary, General
Watson being out of the office at the time.
Soon after I had made this report to Pa Watson, Jim Rowe called
me and said that the President wants to do all that he can to fill
vacancies in Presidential offices immediately. He would like to have
us start the tall rolling right away. Rowe had a list of vacancies
in various departments and said the President would like some action
on all of them except the Collectorship of Customs at Savarnah, as
to which he said no, and the Collectorship of Internal Revenue at
Little Rock, as to which he had a question mark: He added that the
President wanted us to consult Ed Flynn before sending any of the
nominations over. I told Rowe I would give him a list of our vacan-
cies and explain the situation on each. It was Rowe's impression
that Flynn might be in town this afternoon and would probably talk
to us.
At my request Johnson sent a telegram to Saul Haas today, sug-
gesting that he telegraph a request for permission to come to
Washington on Customs business.
In talking to Ed Flyrin today I told him that I was here nearly
all the time and that he could reach ne directly on matters affecting
Treasury employees or appointments.
35
September 19, 1940.
MEMORANDOM
TO: Secretary Norgenthau
FROM: Itr. Oaston
I talked to Charles Sawyer, National Consitteem of Chio,
or. the telephone this afternoon. Be said he would regard It as
very unfortunate 1f any appointment of Internal Revenue Collector
at Toledo were rude before the election. He strongly urged that
the pointment be delayed until after the election. As to
Snyder, Secretary to Congressnan Bunter, whom Runter and Senator
Donahey have recomended, Sewyer said he was "no good"; that he vas
for Leake in 1936 and before that a Republican. He added that John
Hunter, the Congressman, "has never been with the President." I
reported the substance of this to General Watson's secretary, General
Watson being out of the office at the time.
Soon after I had made this report to Pa Watson, Jim Rome called
ne and said that the President wants to do all that be can to fill
vacancies in Presidential offices immediately. Be would like to have
us start the tall rolling right away. Rome had a list of vacancies
in various departments and said the President would like some action
on all of them except the Collectorship of Customs at Sevennah, as
to which he said no, and the Collectorship of Internal Revenue at
Little Rock, as to which be had & question mark. He added that the
President wanted us to consult Ed Flynn before sending any of the
nominations over. I told Rowe I would give him a list of our vacan-
cies and explain the situation on each. It was Rowe's impression
that Flynn might be in town this afternoon and would probably talk
to us.
At my request Johnson sent a telegran to Saul Hass today, our
gesting that he telegraph 8 request for permission to come to
Washington on Customs business.
In talking to Ed Flynn today I told bin that I was here nearly
all the time and that he could reach ne directly on matters affecting
Treasury employees or appointments.
HEG/mah
Regraded Unclassified
36
Dr. Federioo Pinedo, Minister of Finance
in the new Argentine Cabinet
with the appointment of Dr. Federico Pinedo as
Minister of Finance in the new Argentine Cabinet, there
has been a decided change both in personality and in the
general outlook of the occupant of this position.
Dr. Pinedo, who is about forty-five years of age, possesses
one of the outstanding financial minds in Argentina. While
he was educated as a lawyer, he is also an economist of
note and is highly respected in both fields. After ob-
taining his doctorate in jurisprudence in 1915, he prac-
ticed law and served three terms 8.8 National Deputy for
the Federal District. From 1933 to 1935 he was Minister
of Finance under President Justo and 18 a member of the
Board of Directors of a number of prominent financial and
business houses in Buenos Aires.
Dr. Pinedo was instrumental in the reorganization of
the administration of Argentina's finances, including
the creation of the machinery for the Central Bank and
the unification of taxes. Although Dr. Pinedo, with the
Minister of Agriculture, inaugurated the bilateral system
of trade balances in Argentina which was detrimental to
American interests, he has not been uneympathetic towards
this country and during intervening years his opinions
have changed 80 that they are no longer in direct conflict
with the principles of freedom of trade supported by
Mr. Hull. He is a man of broad outlook and experience
and in numerous recent conversations with members of the
American Embassy staff at Buenos Aires has expressed
himself
Regraded Unclassified
37
-2-
himself emphatically in favor of greater continental
solidarity and in particular in favor of a Pan-American
Customs Union and cooperation with the United States both
economically and in continental defense. In a telegram
of June 10, 1940 from the Embassy at Buenos Aires, it was
reported that an article which had appeared in the local
press signed by Dr. Pinedo in which he took a firm stand
against the Nazis and asserted that the future well-being
of Argentina would be threatened should they win the war.
He urged closer cooperation with this country in con-
tinental defense and by inference warned against the peril
of "fifth column" activities, calling upon Argentina not
to make the mistake of delivering over its Government,
through fear of a possible enemy, into the hands of
sympathizers with this enemy. It is reported that he
maintains & very close touch on all the problems of the
Ministry of Finance doing 8 great deal of the work himself
and taking the responsibility of initiating and conducting
negotiations. Dr. Pinedo is & close friend of Julio Roca,
the new Foreign Minister, and they are reported to be in
complete accord on political and economic questions. This
fact, coupled with the fact that Roca is not in good
health, makes it inevitable that Pinedo will take a leading
part in Argentine negotiations with the United States.
In a recent conversation with a member of the Embassy
staff Pinedo stated that the Argentine Government has de-
cided to do everything possible to cooperate fully with
the United States in matters pertaining to further inter-
American cooperation and solidarity. He added that
Argentina is now in a position somewhat similar to that of
Great
Regraded Unclassified
38
-30
Great Britain with respect to the necessity for looking to
the United States for aid in working out its problems.
He continued that while Argentina formerly considered
Great Britain as its chief interest, it is now felt that
Argentina's future lies in developing closer relations
with the United States.
Regraded Unclassified
89
CONFIDENTIAL
0-2/2657-235
M.I.D., W.D.
Tentative Lessons
Bulletin No. 51
September 19, 1940
TENTATIVE LESSONS FROM THE RECENT
ACTIVE CAMPAIGN IN EUROPE
NOTICE
This document is being given an approved distribution,
and no additional copies are available in the Military In-
telligence Division. Its reproduction in whole or in part
is subject to the provisions of letter TAG, November 15,
1939, AG 350.05 (11-1-39) M-B-M, "Dissemination of Military
Information by the Military Intelligence Division and by
Recipients of M.I.D. Information".
The information contained in this series of bulletins
will be restricted to items from official sources which are
reasonably confirmed. The lessons necessarily are tentative
and are in no sense mature studies.
BRITISH COMMENT ON DIVISIONAL ARTILLERY
SOURCE
The information in this bulletin came from a high British
authority through an official American source. Reports were made in
mid-August, 1940.
CONTENTS
I. BRITISH DOCTRINE ON COMMAND OF DIVISIONAL
ARTILLERY.
II. CHANGES IN ORGANIZATION
CONFIDENTIAL
-1-
40
CONFIDENTIAL
I. BRITISH DOCTRINE ON COMMAND 07 DIVISIONAL ARTILLERY,
After study of operations in Planders end France, the
British have not changed their doctrine of command and methods of
control of the Divisional Artillery.
Perfect cooperation between all Artillery commanders and
the Infantry commanders they support is emphasized more than ever,
as is the necessity for instant and automatic change from "support-
ing" to "attached" whenever communications to the higher echelon
are broken. The British also stress the change from "attached" to
"supporting" whenever divisional control is possible.
The doctrine of employment of Infentry tends more and
more towards rapid movement in the opening stages of an engagement,
with Infantry brigades¹ and their normally supporting Artillery
operating more or less independently as & brigade group². Natural-
ly there will be many occasions during rapid movement when Division-
al Field Artillery regiments will be "attached", under command of
the Infantry brigade commander,
However, when enemy resistance is met in forward move-
ment, or when it is decided in withdrawal to establish resistance
and the divisional commander is in a position to control his In-
fantry brigndes, the Field Artillery regiments must at once revert
to divisional control, The commander of the Divisional Artillery
must therefore be able to establish his own communication with his
regiments.
As set up in the British divisional organization, one
section³ of the Divisional Signals⁴ is permanently designated,
organized, and trained to provide communications for the commander
of the Royal Artillery. He does not share the Infantry net nor de-
pend upon others to exercise his command functions.
According to a recent War Office letter:
"The divisional commander controls the employment of
Divisional Artillery.
"The commander of the Royal Artillery is in command of
the Divisional Artillery and prepares detailed Artillery plans to
implement the plans of the divisional commander.
1. The British Infantry brigade is the equivalent of our regiment.0-2
2. The British brigade group is the equivalent of our combat team.0-2
3. i,e,, one company. G-2
4, i.e., a signal battalion under command of a lieutenant-colonel.C-2
CONFIDENTIAL
&
41
CONFIDENTIAL
"The staff consists of & brigade major, a staff captain,
B. lieutenant for Artillery intelligence duties, three clerks from
the Royal Artillery, 1 draughtaman from the Royal Engineers and
20 other ranks. Two Royal Air Force radio operators join on arrival
in the theatre of operations and remain permanently attached to the
staff.
"Communications are provided by the Divisional Signals.
Three motorcycles are assigned to the brigade for employment by
orderlies acting as dispatch riders. The attached Royal Air Force
personnel are provided with one radio set."
II. CHANGES IN ORGANIZATION.
As a result of a thorough study of operations in Flanders
and France, the General Staff Artillery Committee has recommended
that, for the creation of a more flexible and more easily handled
Artillery regiment, the battery should consist of only two troops
of four guns each, The regiment will have three batteries instead
of two, but the number of guns in the regiment, 24, will remain as
before. It is authoritatively stated that this recommendation will
be approved and put into effect.
The British unit designated as 8. troop is a captain's
command of four guns similar to our battery, but lacking certain
elements of the maintenance platoon which are concentrated for
economy of men and road space in the next higher echelon under a
staff officer. The British unit designated as a battery is similar
to our battalion and is a major's command,
Another advantage of this reorganisation should be pointed
out, As the British division is triangular throughout, the contem-
plated change in the Field Artillery regiment will greatly facili-
tate Artillery support. A regiment of Field Artillery (24 guns)
will support the Infantry brigade, and a battery of Field Artillery
(8 guns) will support each of the three battalions of the Infantry
brigade.
CONFIDENTIAL
-3-
42
0-2/2657-220
RESTRICTED
M.I.D., W.D.
September 19, 1940.
No. 198
SITUATION REPORT
12:00 M.
This military situation report is issued by the Military
Intelligence Division, General Staff. In view of the occasional
inclusion of political information and of opinion it is classified
as Restricted.
I. Western Theater of War.
1. No ground operations.
2. Air Force Operations.
Apparently German daylight attacks on the London area
on the 18th were successfully intercepted. German night attacks
over London followed the usual pattern and. caused widespread damage.
The air alert lasted 9½ hours, The Germans state they attacked num-
erous docks and port facilities in London. Elsewhere in England,
Liverpool, Newcastle, the Billingham chemical works and an airdrome
were attacked.
The British made some daylight attacks on the Channel
ports on the 18th and renewed them more heavily that night. There
was limited British activity over Germany. The R.A.F. is now en-
ploying up to 200 bombers during each 24 hours in offensive opera-
tions.
II. Mediterranean and African Theaters of War.
1. The Italians are consolidating their hold on Sidi Bär-
rani. There is still no reliable information concerning activity
farther south.
2. The Italians claim air attacks on Mersa Matruh and on
naval units off Sidi Barrani. The British claim to have bombed
Italian forces between Bucbuq and Sidi Barrani. There were also
widespread raids, presumably by small elements of the R.A.F., over
East Africa, the Sudan and the Dodecanese Islands.
RESTRICTED
43
CONFIDENTIAL
M
Paraphrase of Code Cablegram Received at the
Nar Department 1:46 Polley Sept. 19, 1940
London, Filed 13:06, September 19, 1940
During the night of September 18-19 182 planes of the Reyall
Air Force attacked energy ports and commissions across the English
Channel. Six planes were lost. The Coastal Command carried out their
usual reconnaissance and photographic mission, losing tmo planes out
of the 77 employed.
During the daylight hours of the 18th the Genam Mr Force
operated about 800 aircraft, the attack centering generally along the
Thanes River and the southeast part of Londen. Little damage was dans
to important targets. Houses were demolished here and there, one all
tank was hit and there were some civilian casualties.
German attacks during the night of September 18-19 lasted
all night and were consentrated on London, with raids on northeast
England that did little damage. There was considerable randon damage
done to houses in the Nest End of London, many streets were blocked
with debris, and five good sised fires were started. Fire in the
plant of the Pleasey Company, Ilford, Essex, did extensive damage.
A fire in the gurponder factory at the Imporial Chemical Industries
at Haltham me soon under control, production in the Royal Small Areas
Pactory, Safield, was affected by an unexploded delay action banb,
and there as a fire at the plant of Beston and Sans, Acton.
German aircraft losses were 46 confirmed, 16 probable and 19
damaged. The Royal Air Force lost 12 planes and 3 pilots. Estimated
CONFIDENTIAL
Regraded Unclassified
44
CONFIDENTIAL
commIttee in the Landon area were 90 billed and so injured.
Three British skips totalling 13,500 tome were make
There are as changes in the information of plans for invoice.
Yesterday I mb a visit to the Amy an the coast. All
I endorse any I E in s I I ] I
Beaverbreak stated that there to 20 question but that Generary -
business as Miss on - barges indicate that they were loaded with
mummition. The Royal do Force is holding considerable air power
in receive, including - powerful new humbers, for use against
- sen-borne forces,
From the might benberdamts of Lenden recently 10 -
to be proved conclusively that both searchlights and aread leasters
are ineffective, at least choolessent. Insury boulding planes during
the last few nights have boom almost unappeced. In the mer future
the British expect so equip their night fighters with a new detes-
tion device that will enshle them to locate and dectroy beabers n
night.
German planse have been dropping parachute-borne nines -
London, These result in extressly severe blasts but no far casualties
have book moderate. They are reported to be about three foot in
disector, with a terpods wall and a time fune.
It has boen found necessary to estad all - out of tom
n night. Cowerth Park (7) is beabed out and all are eleepless.
No are all will hare. CONFIDENTIAL
LEE
Copies too Military Adde to President
Amt. Secretary of Var
Secretary of Map
Chief of Staff
State Department
our
Secretary of Treasury +
UPD
Regraded Unclassified
CONFIDENTIAL
AM
45
Paraphrase of Code Radiogram
Received at the Var Department
at 6132 P.M., September 19, 1940.
Berlin, filed 19:28, September 10, 1940.
The missions of the present Gerwan Air Activity sppear
to bei
1. The obtainment of air supremacy.
2. The destruction of vital British industries and other
objectives.
3. The undermining of public morale with the ultimate foreing
of capitulation or bringing about a change of government and the ⑉
tablishment of a cabinet amenable to negotiation.
The Germans continue preparations for an attack by all
arms, thus containing England while preparing to conduct operations
in other theatres. It is my opinion that Germany is apprehensive as
to the success of an offensive against England at the present time.
PETTON
Distribution:
Aide to the President
Secretary of Mar
State Department
Secretary of Treasury
Asst. Secretary of War
Chief of Staff
Var Plans Division
Office of Naval Intelligence
CONFIDENTIAL
48
CARLI
FROM: Commercial Attache, Nicholaca
Shanghai, China.
DATE: September 19, 1940
For the Secretary of the Treasury.
Current situation Shanghai for week ending September 14th
STOP Exchange market was dull and steady throughout week with
chief interest centered on Europe but no definite trend apparent
STOP Market uncertain during most of period turning easy at
close but still maintaining good volume with prices only moderately
off STOP Sugar monopoly STOP Reported that Japanese military
about to place in hands of four Japanese first exclusive privilege
of importing all sugar destined for interior of China that a
guarantee will be required that none of such imports go into
unoccupied territory STOP Local cotton mills now operating at
about 50% capacity but are considered likely to reduce to 30%
either October or November STOP Prospects not bright as transport
to interior is virtually cut off while local yara stocks estimated
at 350,000 bales and increasing STOP Of local spindle capacity
about 70% is Japanese mostly associated with Osaka interests
and while operating in China is more profitable than in Japan
apparently an effort will be made for Japanese domestic political
reasons to give Osaka mills an increased share of China business
which remains STOP Only bright aspect for China as that domestic
supplies of raw cotton should for some time be adequate to meet
requirements with substantial termination of foreign imports
which during past year had such adverse effect on exchange STOP
Japanese military however, apparently preparing to fix price of
Chinese raw cotton 80 that industry proper will apparently gain
little or no advantage.
NICHOLSON
Regraded Unclassified
3
47 6"
"The Department has discussed with the Treasury the possi-
bility of sending to Buenos Aires an important Treasury
official who would be capable of and authorized to discuss and
conclude a monetary and exchange arrangement with the Argentine
authorities. After giving careful and sympathetic consideration
to all of the points raised by Dr. Pinedo 1/ the Secretary of
the Treasury believes that considering all the circumstances
such a negotiation could more appropriately take place in
Washington. Please discuss the situation with Dr. Pinedo and
inform him that the Secretary of the Treasury would be glad
to discuss in Washington the possibility of such arrangements
with him personally or any representative which he may choose to
name.
O.K. 1/m.
9-19-40.
48
September 13, 1940
Mr. Whiter
Mr. Collado called and dictated the following, which it is proposed
to include in a cable to Argentina. (He wanted you to understand that
we have already given the Argentines an opportunity tell us that they
would like to have the discussions, so the Treasury is not inviting
the discussions.)
"The Department has discussed with the Treasury the possi-
bility of sending to Buenos Aires an important Treasury
during
official who would be capable of and authorized to discuss and
The
conclude a monetary and exchange arrangement with the Argentine
metances
authorities. After giving careful and sympathetic consideration
1
to all of the points raised by Dr. Pinedo the Secretary of the
more
Treasury believes that such a negotiation could take place only
appropriately
in Washington because he is extremely desirous of playing an
active role in 4t. Please discuss the situation with Dr. Pinedo
and inform him that the Secretary of the Treasury would creatly
glod to
welcome the opportunity of discussing in Washington the possi-
bility of such arrangements with him personally or any representa-
tive which he may choose to name.
"Phease also inform Dr. Pinado that the Department and the
Treasury É sonsider such discussions would deal with basic
monetary and exchange relationships of & lone term character and
20 such would not greatly conflict with the discussions of Mr.
Pierson which will consist of commercial banking arrangements, the
financing of long term development projects and similar matters.
The new Minister of Finance.
49
QUINTUPLICATE
Buenos Aires, Argentina,
September 6, 1940.
No, 1206
A SUGGESTED MONETARY AND EXCHANGE
ARRANGEMENT BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES
AND ARGENTINA
The Honorable
The Secretary of State,
Washington.
Sir:
With reference to the Embassy's telegram no. 391 of
September 4, 7 p.m., I have the honor to enclose a copy
of a memorandum of the conversation in which Dr. Federico
Pinedo, the Minister of Finance, inquired whether the
Treasury Department would attach an appropriate official
to Mr. Pierson's staff so that the matter of a monetary
and exchange arrangement might be looked into during the
course of Mr. Pierson's visit to Buenos Aires.
& true copy of
Respectfully yours,
risk
the signed HB origi-
For the Charge d'Affaires
Monnett B. Davis
First Secretary
ENclosure: as stated.
CMR:jk
Regraded Unclassified
50
MEMORANIUM OF CONVERSATION
Busnos Aires, September 5, 1940.
Messrs. Tuck, Davis and Revndal called on Dr. Fede-
rico Pinedo this afternoon, at the latter's request, to
discuss the Embansy's memorances of August 19 which indicated
that if the Argentine Government should be interested in
effecting a monetary and exchange arrangement with the
United States, the Treasury Department would be pre pared
to discuss the matter in washington. Dr. Pinedo said that
r. Roca, the Minister for Foreign Affaire, had drawn the
question to his attention last night and had asked him to
draft an appropriate reply to the Embassy's communication.
Be added that before making an official reply he wanted to
discuss the matter informally with e. view to obtaining a
fuller understanding of the background of the question.
The Charge d'Affaires explained that members of the Argen-
tine Delegation to the Habana Conference had discussed the
Argentine economic situation in great detail with members
of the United States Delegation and had emphasized the
desirability of taking up the questions of a trade agree-
ment, monetary arrangements, Export Import Bank credits,
a corn agreement and possible purchases of surplus commo-
citles. The Charge d'Affaires went on to say that it was
felt that the question of a trade agreement could not be
reised at this time, that we had already proposed B corn
agreement which we understood was being studied by com-
petent efficials of the Argentine Government, and that
matters such as monetary arrangements fell within the prov-
Ince of the Treasury which had indicated that if the AP-
gentine Government wished to take the initiative Treasury
officials were prepared to discuss a monetary and exchange
arrangement in washington, (The question of the possible
purchase of hides and skins specifically use at no time
mentioned).
Dr. Pinedo then remarked that both he and IT. Roca
were of the opinion that since he is to take an active
personal part in endeavoring to work out satisfactory
agreements with the United States it would be very help-
ful if the Treasury Department would be willing to send
someone to Buenos Aires. Be recognized that the Depart-
ment might have the same objections to the visit of 9.
Trensury official as had led it to withhold the Hawkins
sission, but suggested that perhaps these objections
night be not 1f the Treasury expert were attached to Mr.
Pierson, ostensibly in connection with business relating
to the Export Import Bank. He pointed out that Mr. Pierson
had been here before and that his coming at this time
would be regarded as perfectly natura) in the light of
publicity given the granting of the twenty million dollar
Export Import Bank credit to the Central Bank. According-
ly, he felt that If a Treasury official should come with
Mr.
Regraded Unclassified
51
- 2 -
Mr. Pierson there would be no publicity which aight be
construed as succeeting that trade agreement negotistions
were being reopened.
Dr. Pinedo also pointed out that there is a conneo-
tion between a monetary and exchange agreement and the
matters which Mr. Pierson is to discuss and that it would
therefore seem to be reasonable to have the conversations
held in the seme place rather than to have one part of
related matter handled st Mashington while the greater
part was being considered in Buense Aires. However, he
went on to say, if the Treasury Department should not be
plaposed to send an officiel to Argentina at this time,
OF to authorize ar. Pierson's mission to handle the matter,
the Argentine Jovernment would send 8 competent represen-
tative to the United States at 9.0 early date. Be added
Last ne sernestly hoped that 11 the Argentine Government
should senu someone to the States, the Repartment would
not use the same reasons ne had used and suggest that the
argentine mission also discuss the matters which it ie now
planned willbe considered during Mr. Merson's visit. in
other NOTUR, it is hoped that any arrangement mace with
regard to the monetary and exchange question will not be
permitted to obviate the Plerson mission.
. Pineco stated that the Argentine Vovernment is
decised to do everything possible fully to cooperate -1th
the Government of the United States In matters tensing to
further inter-Americon aviluarity, smaing that argentina
1a now in 8 position annewhat similar to toat of Jrout
oritain with respect to the necessity of looking LO the
United States for 010 in working out its or blems. he want
on to aay in this regard that midle Argentina Tomerly
considered Great Aritain as its chief concern, it is now
falt that Argentina's future interests lle In developing
closer relations -ith the United States.
r. Pinedo vas informed that the Embasey had for some
time been considering making a recommendation to the
opertment that the United States Novernment, purely ss c
political measure, airchase some of Argentina's export
surpluses es a eymbolic gesture of its firm intention to
assist Argentine out of its cirriculties. P. Pined
thought the Icea an excellent one but hopeu that the pur-
chares would not be callue antil it could be annunceu that
nog Liations looking towerds closer relations between the
too countries were in progress. ne naid it would be must
unfortunate to .lasipate ony of the political credit which
aight be obtained from such purchases.
with regard to the matter of naving a [reasury of-
ficial included In dr. Pierson's biesion for the purpose
of working out 8 monetary MTKL exchange arrangement, the
Charge d'Affaires, just before leaving, again drew .r.
Pineco's attention to the fact that matters such 12
monetory arrangements fall within the province of the
Treasury, but added that he would be ¿lea immediately to
submit the Minister's views to the epartment and Inform
nin in the premises #8 8:00 Ad pussible.
and
Regraded Unclassified
52
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
NOTONIHSVM
September 19, 1940
In reply refer to
EA 840.51 Frozen Credits/581
The Secretary of State presents his compliments to
the Honorable the Secretary of the Treasury and encloses
for such reply as he may consider appropriate a copy of
a letter from Mr. Jack Gross of Brooklyn, New York
requesting information concerning the bearing of Executive
Order No. 8389 on commissions owed to him by a firm in
Cognae, France. Mr. Gross has been informed of this
reference.
Enclosure:
From Mr. Jack Gross,
September 16, 1940.
dm
53
1162 East 13th St.
Brooklyn, New York
Sept. 16, 1940
State Department,
Washington, D. C.
Gentlemen:-
This letter has to do with FROZEN BANK CREDITS held
here by a New York bank, to the order, however frozen, of
a. French firm, in Cognac, France, - and by whom I was
employed as a commission merchant, and salesman.
For several months prior the capitulation of France,
this firm in Cognac, France advised me that they had ap-
plied to the Exchange Control for the right to send my
commissions to me-and nothing was forthcoming.
After the Order was issued from Washington, freezing
funds here, for credit to French Nationals, at least one
draft was presented here in behalf of a shipment made by
my firm of Cognac, - and paid by the consignee. Therefore,
this money must be held frozen here.
I doubt very much that the firm in France, under strict
surveillance as it is, would write me to-day, to help; al-
though after the capitulation I did receive a letter from
France, mentioning that they hope my commissions may be
paid when matters become right.
In order to establish my right to a claim on funds
held here-please advise whether it is necessary for me to
sue my French principals at law, and recover a judgment?
If perchance, I could receive a letter from France,
authorising the bank holding the funds here, to release
to me-would that suffice? However, I fear there is little
likelihood of such permission coming from France, - due to
restrictions imposed.
Will you refer this letter to the proper governmental
department, in event I have mis-directed it?
Respectfully yours,
JACK GROSS
jg/h
mg
Regraded Unclassified
AMBASSADE DE HELGIQUE
Washington, September 19th, 1940.
54
D. 8187
No. 3749
Dear Mr. Cochran,
Referring to my letter of August 28th, No. 3378, may
I take the liberty of calling again to your kind attention,
the question of the "Banque Italo Belge". I am informed
that the "Banque Belge pour l'Etranger" in New York, which
has on deposit one of the accounts of the "Banque Italo
Belge" in the United States" has requested, in connection
with the license which expires on September 30th, that the
United States Treasury consider the possibility of the total
release of this account. You will recall that in my letter
abovementioned, I had inquired whether it would be possible
to release the accounts of the "Banque Italo Belge" up to
50%, and as an experiment. If the Treasury Department is
unable to follow this suggestion, could it not at least, re-
lease in its entirety, one of the accounts of the "Banque
Italo Belge", for example, that on deposit at the Banque Belge
pour l'Etranger in New York, while still maintaining the
restrictions on the others, where the amounts on deposit, as
you are sware, are quite large.
Yours sincerely,
The Counselor of the Embassy
(s) Baron de Gruben
Mr. H. Merle Cochran
Technical Assistant to the Secretary
Department of the Treasury
Washington, D. 0.
COPY
bj
Treasury Department
Division of Monetary Research
55
Date
September 19,
1940.
To:
Secretary Morgenthau
Below are a few suggestions that might be
worth thinking about as possible concessions
that might be made to the Russians if any
inducement is necessary to get them to cooperate.
1. Informal assurance that gold sent here
by Russia which does not come from
Germany, or from occupied territories,
shall receive the same treatment as
that accorded gold coming from any
other country. (She has asked for
something like that in & recent cable
which has doubtless come to your
attention.)
2. Informal permission for Russia to buy
any materials she needs here, such as
machine tools, possibly molybdenum or
anything else that does not constitute
a violation of any existing law here.
3. We might see what can be done about
relinquishing the Baltic ships in our
ports which are now being tied up with
legal and foreign fund obstacles 50
that they shall not fall in Russian
hands.
4. Possibly American technicians who were
recalled at the time of the Finnish
episode might be permitted to return.
MR. WHITE
Branch 2058 - Room 208
Regraded Unclassified
Treasury Department
56
Division of Monetary Research
Date Sept. 19, 1940.
To:
Secretary Morgenthau
From:
Appended is the report of
the consummation of the trade
agreement with Russia. You will
be interested in the date, which
is August 6, 1940.
MR. WHITE
Branch 2058 - Room 210
57
Commercial Policy
AGREEMENT WITH THE UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS
[Released to the prese August T)
As in the previous three agreements, the So-
The Acting Secretary of State, Mr. Summer
viet. Government has informed the American
Welles, made the following statement regarding
Government that the Soviet economic organi-
the commercial agreement with the Union of
zations intend to purchase during the next 12
Soviet Socialist Republics:
months American goods to the value of at least
It may be noted that notes were exchanged August
$40,000,000. The agreement takes into account
6, 1940, between this Government and the Soriet Gov-
the possibility that various export restrictions
ernment extending ontil August 6, 1941, the commercial
imposed by the United States in carrying out its
agreement which in Its present form was first con-
eluded between the two countries on August 4, 1937.
national-defense program may make it impos-
The present agreement la similar to those In effect dur
sible for these organizations to carry out their
Ing the previous three years in all respects except (hat
intentions,
there has been added a proviso to the Dote referring
The Government of the United States under-
to the minimum amount of purchases ($40,000,000) to
takes in the agreement to continue to accord to
be made In the United States by the Soviet economic
the commerce of the Soviet Union unconditional
organizations. This proviso takes into account the
possibility that various export restrictions imposed by
most-favored-nation treatment, with a reserva-
the United States In the course of Its national-defense
tion in respect of coal, deemed necessary be-
program may make It Impossible for these organiza-
cause of the nature of the coal-tax provisions of
tions to earry out their Intentions,
the Revenue Act of 1932, Under this agree-
It le a surve of deep gratification that we are able
ment, therefore, the Soviet Union will continue
by means of this agreement to continue our commercial
relations with the Union of Soriet Socialist Itepublics
to receive the benefits of concessions granted
ou the present basis, and It le to be hoped that during
by the United States in trade agreements with
the coming year they will develop in a manber advan-
countries other than Cuba entered into under
tageous to both partles,
the authority of the Trade Agreements Act.
The Soviet Government has renewed in 11
[Relexed to the press August 61
nôte accompanying the agreement. its commit-
The commercial agreement between the
ment to export to the United States in the next
United States of America and the Union of So-
12 months not more than 400,000 tons of Soviet
viet Socialist Republics which was proclaimed
coal which was approximately the quantity of
and became effective on August 6, 1937, and
Soviet coal exported to the United States in the
which was renewed for successive periods of
calendar year 1936. While there were imports
one year on August 5, 1038, and August 3, 1939,
of coal during each of the first three agreement
was continued in force for another year, that
years, such imports did not in any such year
is until August 6, 1941, by an exchange of iden-
amount to 115 much ILS one hulf the 400,000-ton
tie notes at Moscow on August 6, 1940, between
limitation. Since October 1939 there have been
the American Chargé d'Affaires ad interim, Mr.
no imports of Soviet coal.
Walter C, Thurston, and the People's Commis-
The following table gives the value in dollars
sar for Foreign Trade of the Soviet Union, Mr.
of United States exports to and imports from
A. I. Mikoyan.
the Soviet Union in the agreement years:
105
Regraded Unclassified
DEPARTMENT OF STATE BULLETER
106
AUGUST 18, 1960
107
revied by tata DATE the following Approvement wills to
110
been martied between the Gevernments of any
the United Blates of America, to lectitories or pos
à
the Daion of Service Socialist Bepublics intends
pente
9 1
IIVE contries:
- the Philippine falands, or the Permise Canal
-
- -
Zive for - another of to the Republic of Cube shall
to make in the United States during the next 12
-
The United WE Anterios will USM 3 Be
le excepted from the speration at like special.
months in connection with the commercial
Unive of Soviet Sociallst Republics operaditions) -
Nothing to this agreement whall be to you-
agreement entered into two the United
&
muntricied la all et
vent the adoption of prohibiting - restrict-
States and the Saviet Union ON August B, 1940:
tera cocorrating customs daties and charge of my
Inc the expertation at Importation of goid - alver,
-
0.30
klad and to the estated of levying Judies, and total
or la prevent the adoptine of such all the
Monore, August 4. 2940.
0,00
Excuration:
-
18,474
to all mailer omerning the miles firmalités -
Government of the Unlied Sintes of America may -
M,200
24,7%
charges Imposed to with the dearing of
EL wird respect tu the control of the export of sale
I have the have to refer the OUT PROMIE
(lm a
60, mm
2,016
poils (Drongh the and with request to all Ises
te export of armin, amminition, or Emplements of war,
in regurd to the name letween the United States
et regulations effecting the sale or - of Imported
and, in exergtional all ather military reppttes.
of America and the Union of Honialist Reposities
geçde withle the country.
it understood that any metion which may In talme
and tn link posi to DAL the know the value wt acticles,
Principals.
Accordingly, natural of mannfactured postacts bay
by the President of the United States of America unile
the produces or manifactore of the Uslied
The test of the identic notes eschanged at
log their origin in the Calon of Borden Secialist
the actively of Hertlin 2 (D) of the Neutrality Act
States of America, which the Government of the Union
Mcscow between the American Charge, Mr.
lice shall in no care to in regard to the -
of 1507 in maint to the passage of DUe to shall
of Meviet Socialist Repoldies intends to purchase in the
reforred to to any deties, taxes are charge offer
ont be considered as enntraventag any of the provide
United States of America during the set before
Walter C. Thorston, and the People's Com-
of higher, ist ta any rules or formalities niber lie an
of This servement relating a the experiation of natural
months for export to the Dutos of Beriet
missar for Foreign Trade of the Union of
Hepablics
than the to which the like products lay.
or masafactured productiv Ernor the territory of the
Except [etc]
Soviet Socialist Republics, Mr. A. L Mikeyan,
the their origin in any third country are of may ben-
United States of
WALLON C.
is as follows:
after be subject.
Subject to the requirement that - athiltzary dis-
Mosnew, August c. 1910.
Bireitaria, natural un products rejusted
crimination shall to effected by the United States of
from the terribors of the United Braten of Addition of
Aneries against Importations from the Union of Bortet
(Trandative)
Executive:
consigned to the territory of the Union at Savid Sod)
Sociallst Republics and in Divor of those frues easy third
In acciptance with the which BATA
Missow, 6, 1540.
taireu place, I have the - is on behalf et
us shall le DU am be subject with income To
emurry, the fortgiving provisions shall beit extend to
Mr. Customer Animal
by Genernment the agreement which las been muched
exportation und in report to the nai
probilitions DF restrictions (I) Impard as moral or
In regily to your Inquiry regarding the Introded pur
termiterias grounds. (2) designed to probet homen,
Between the Governments of nur repretive restries
ten, to any daties, taxes, of charges other un higher, -
chairs by the Union of Boxist Sociallat Bepublics in
that the agreement registration emmercial relating be
16 any rules iif formalition utter HT more
animal, ut plant HA, (a) relating to prison-mado goods,
the United States of America in the of the next
than the to which the like products when chaiged
if (4) relating to the enformement of pulice BE revenue
terms the United Blaim of America and the Unive of
twere moths, I have the hour to infurms you that
Soviet Socialist Republics reverbed in the eschange of
to the territory of any third country are or pay M
laws
the eronomie organizations of the Union of Sortes No-
after be misject.
Two On its part the Givernment of the Union of
claims Requisties intend to buy in The United Stares of
zeles of August 4, 1987, between the of
Any advantage. favor, privillege or Immunity which
Swirt Socialist Depabtics will take steps in
the United Blates of America and the Poojdo's Com-
America In the incime of the boxt Emelve months Amon-
nime für Affaire of the Talun of Strict &
Bown or may breather be granted by - Dornal
substantially the anumint of purchase In the Upited
me parata to the rates of at Irant
claims Repeddies, with came bilo furne - August &
BIUDS at America in mgant to the
States of America for export to the Union of Bordet
If, luwever, restrictions impossit - Experts by the
III il united OF manufactured product udd
of articles the growth. produce, the
Government of the Cuited States should render le die-
1007 (MY the date 12 previsination thered by the Presi
nating in any third country or consigned to the terditory
contacture or the United States of Abetica.
cult for Suriet organizations to satisfy flate
dell of the Colted States of America and apprival
of any third country shall be accorded Immediaty and
Tures This agreement stall once NOMI form on the
thread hy the of People's Dimisimars of the
mede in the United States, " may to Impressible for
without comperation in the like product neiginating to
dat of predemation thereof by the President of the
them to marry nut their Infentions. The
Union of Bostet Socialist Bepublics, and which was re-
userd on August & 1916, and Arigun = non, shall
or overged to the territory of the Cokin of Borth
United Rate of America und ni upproval thereof by
Gevernment of the Unlim of Hoviet Bocialist Depotities
the Suriam of People's Commisses of the Daten of
Socialise Republics.
la therefore net in a position at (be present the to
exatince is Isne máil August e. DAL The present
It M undervised that NO long M and in - for -
Burriel Socialist Republics, which prodomation and
should be givelalment for the Presider of the
guarablee the value of the purchase
existing law of the United State of America may
suprival shall take plane on the same day. It shall
in the United States,
Crited Rate of America and approved by the Comeil
otherwise regative, the foregolog procisions is en for BA
outine lo for twebe months Buth parties
Anneyt [etc]
WALTER c,
of People's Commission of the Union of Social Sociallet
Republics.
they would otherwise relate 5 datim, texts or clarme
RETTL that not Loss than thirty days prior to The
Accept (ven)
on and cake therefrim, IF mail - -
expiration of the aforemid period at insire months
WALTER C. Terms
best start negotiatives returning the extension
Briquittes, stall out apply no much products importal
of the period daring which the present agreement shall
(Relessed - the - August 191
The following test is that of the signaturent
into the United States of America. If the law of (b)
motinge le firm.
Called States HE America shall nne permits the -
The commercial agriement between the
of August 4, 1987:*
operation of the foreining provisions with respect us de
United States and the Union of Soriet Socialist
With reference to ment WORD have
above-mentioned products. the Union of
Republics, signed on August 6, 1940, was pro-
Indoss plan line regard to commerce between the Dested
Repubiles reserves the right within Blives days not
The following communications, exchanged
claimed by the President on August 7. On the
States of America and the Union of Soriet Socialist
Junuary 1, 1008, to terminate than agreement - -
between the American Chargé and the People's
Requires, I have the to matirn stat DO make of
- day, the agreement ITM approval by the
entirely (1) thirty days' written aution.
Commisse for Foreign Trade, concern the
Couneil of People's Commissrs of the Union
1: is understood, forthermore. that the advancise
Agriment Series No 100,
of purchases which the Government of
now amorded or which may Service for account ley
of Soviet Socialist Republics.
ACQUET 10, 1940
109
The Foreign Service
Jamb D. Boam, of Princeton, N. J., Third
Masurios Pasquet, of New York, N. Y, Vice
Secretary of Embany at Herlin, Germany, has
Consul al Daireo, Manchurie, has bonu usigned
lass usigned for duty in the Department of
45 Vice Commi at St. Pinrro-Miqualon, where
State,
PRESS INTERVIEW BY THE AMERICAN AMBASSADOR TO BELGIUM
an American Consulate will be required.
Statement of the Acting Secretary of State, Mr. Welles
- the prom Americant es
ple, an interest which is shared by the people of
Treaty Information
I have DOW received from the Amarican Em-
the United States. Nevertheless, the intervise
havey in Location a transcript of the botes of the
given was in violation of standing instructions
promo interview given by Ambassador Codahy
of the Department of State, and certain of the
Compiled in the Treaty Division
in London nn Tuesday, August 6, last.
views expresed by the Ambassador are DOB to
From the transcript it would appear thet Am-
las construed as representing the views of this
OPIUM
yet mitded to the enpervision contrated under the
besadar Cudshy received at an informal gath-
Government.
International Opium Convention (1925)
Hele Impiriation en now undergeting
oring some American correspondents and mp-
The incident illustrates DUES again the import.
the acceptance by the Poteral activerities of
resentives of the British press who had no
Bance which must be attributed by American
Switzerland
The Halth Committee's cansot take office
quested interviews with him.
within Switzerland and the - Federal law -
representatives abroad to the Department's in-
With reference to the circular letter from the
lero force.
As I previously stated, the Ambussador's in-
structions to refrain at this critical time tme
Leigue of Nations dated October 85, 1939," com-
Requiring the to bring the faregoing to
terview was given without prior authorization
making public statements other than those made
municating for information the text of a Inter
the attention of the Generale constried. The
from, or without prior notification to, the De-
in accordance with the instructions of the Dr.
Department has (De Me
addressed to the states parties to the Interna-
partment of State
partment of State,
limite, November 18th, 2020.
tional Opium Convention of February 14, 1925,
To the Secretarist of the
I am sure that DO one will question the sin-
By direction of the President. Ambasander
ismeerning the acceptance by certain states, in-
Lengue of Nations, General
earity of the Ambastador's sympathetic inter-
Cadahy has ben requested to return to the
cluding Switzerland, of A new resolution of the
et in the future well-being of the Belgiun peo-
United States immediately for consultation.
Health Committee applicable to the prepara-
COMMERCE
tions band on Indian-hemp extract or tincture,
Agreement With the Union of Soviet
the Secretary General of the League transmitted
Socialist Republies
PERSONNEL CHANGES
to the Secretary of State with a circular letter
dated May St, 1940, the following letter from the
An regarding the commercial
Swim Foderal Political Department dated
agreement between the United States and the
to du press digit (@)
France, has been assigned as Consul at Marseilk,
Novembre 18, IDAD:
Union of Servict Socialist Republics, signed
The following changes have occurred in the
France,
August 6, 1940, appears in this Bulletin under
Foreign Service since August 3. 1940:
In a cirridar lither dated October 20th list. the Rec-
Samuel H. Wiley, of Salishory, N. C, Co.
the heading "Commercial Policy".
di the Lengtor of Natima Informed the Federal
Leland B. Morris, of Philadelphia, Pa, Con-
sul at Havre, France, has been issigned at
Nites Department Hat, several metries, locksding
INTERNATIONAL LAW
end General at Vieuna, Germany, has been desig-
Consul at Lisbon, Portugal.
luving accepted the Bealth Committer's
nated Counselor of Embassy and Consul General
George J. Haering, of Huntington Station,
resolution of May IDO comming the application of
International Institute for the Unification
Article 10 of the of February 14th, Her, to
al Berllu, Germany, and will nerve in dual
N. Y., has beeu unigned 4a Consul as Vigo,
of Private Law
erroretime bund Indian hemp extract or Unclure,
capacity,
Spain.
Lie provisions of that agreement had berme Imme-
The assignment of James J. Murphy, Jr., of
The assignment of Joseph F. Burt, of Fair-
Sintaty applicable to the preparations reternal to by the
The American Ambessador to Italy trans-
and in rélations between States. This -
mitted to the Secretary of State with a despatch
Pennsylvania, (M) Consul General at Rotterdam,
Beld, Ill, as Consul at Prague, Bobensia, has
- was immediately transmitted to the Federal
dated May 16. 1940, a mpy of the EMW Funds-
Netherlands, has been canceled. Mr. Murphy
ben canceled, Mr. Burt has now been assignal
Public Health Service.
mental Statute of the International Instituto
Itms now been amigod an Consul General at
as Consul at Valparaiso, Chile.
la approved with this Berview and referring to lle
for the Unification of Private Law. The Insti-
Hamburg, Germany.
Thomas C. Wasmin, of Newark, N. J., Charal
DANTE if August Ttis the Potities! Department has
rute which is now established in Rome - for-
Hugh 6, Fullertim, of Springfield, Ohio,
at Vigo, Spain, has been assigned as Cormi all
(Se butwar tn draw the Servetariate attention to the
fact that, as Indian being extract and finctare are bed
werly . part of the Leugue of Nations with
First Secretary of Embasy and Consul at Paris,
Dakar, French West Africa, where an American
headquarters in Geneva,
Consulate will be established.
308
the of December a una (vol, 1. no. 24),
According to information furnished by the
to
Italian Foreign Office the statute, which is dated
Regraded Unclassified
110
DEPARTMENT OF STATE BULLETTS
March 15, 1940, entered into force on April 21,
1940. The following countries have adhered
Publications
to the statute: Belgium, Bolivia, Colombia, Fin-
land, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland,
Italy, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Nicaragua,
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Rumania, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and
Uruguay,
Reciprocal Recognition of Load Line Regulations for
Vensela Engaged in International Voyages on the Great
Lakes: Arrangement between the United States of
America and Canada-Effected by exchanges of hotes
Legislation
signed April 29, 1988, August 24, 1988, October 22, 1988,
September of 1939, October 18, 1989, January 10, 1940,
and March 4, 1940. Executive Agreement Series No.
Two Supplemental Estimates of Appropriations for
172 Publication 1482. 9 pp. 5f.
State Department, 1941: Communication from the
Achievements of the Second Meeting of the Foreign
President of the United States transmitting two supple-
Ministers of the American Republica: Statement of the
mental estimates of appropriations for the Department
Honorable Cordell Hull, Secretary of State, at the doe
of State, for the fiscal year 1941, amounting to $305,500.
of the Meeting, Habana, July 30, 1940, Conference
(B. Doe, 802, 76th Cong., M sens.) 2 pp. 54.
Series 47. Publication 1488, 8 pp. Se.
#: B. PRINTING mo. nase
For male by the Superistendent of Domments, Washington D. C-Price 10 centa
Reherription price, $2.75 a yest
PUBLISHED WINELY WITH THE APPROVAL OF THE DIRECTOR OF THE STREAT or THE BUDGET
THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE
BULLETIN
AUGUST 10, 1940
Vol. III: No. 59-Publication 1493
Contents
GENERAL:
Page
Statement by the Secretary of State
103
Licenses under the Export-Control Act
104
AMERICAN REPUBLICS:
Dinners in honor of delegations to the Habana Meeting
of the Ministers of Foreign Affairs:
Brazilian delegation
104
Argentine and Uruguayan delegations
104
LIBRARY AUG 2 4
COMMERCIAL POLICY:
Agreement with the Union of Soviet Socialist Republica
105
THE FOREIGN SERVICE:
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
Press interview by the American Ambassador to Bel-
gium: Statement of the Acting Secretary of State,
Mr. Welles
108
Personnel changes
108
TREATY INFORMATION:
Opium:
International Opium Convention (1925)
109
Commerce:
Agreement with the Union of Soviet Socialist Repub-
lics
109
International Law:
International Institute for the Unification of Private
Law
109
LEGISLATION
110
PUBLICATIONS
110
General
STATEMENT BY THE SECRETARY OF STATE
(Reland to the press August 4]
The strong belief of the representatives of
unless and until they recognize that there exists
unbreakable resistance,
the 21 American nations at the recent Habana
Meeting was that the military and other sinister
At Habana we forged new instrumentalities
activities on the part of some nations in other
of continental defense, These will be of Tast
large areas of the world present real possi-
importance to our Nation and to every Afteri-
bilities of danger to the American republics
can nation. But there are other and immunse
tasks still before us.
It was universally recognized that & threat to
any important part of the Americas means a
I would greatly prefer to my that we are safe
threat to each and all of the American nations.
in this country and in this hemisphere from
It was, therefore, agreed that full and adequate
outside danger. But I am firmly convinced that
preparations for continental defense could not
what is taking place today in many areas of the
be taken too BOOD if the threatened danger from
earth is a relentless attempt to transform the
abroad was to be checked and terminated. It
civilized world as we have known it into a world
was also the unanimous view at Habana that
in which lawlessness, violence, and force will
the prompt strengthening of unity and
reign supreme, as they did a thousand years ago,
solidarity for the purpose of continental defense
The people of this country cannot recognize too
and for its implementation by concrete pro-
soon this fact and its overwhelming significance
grams supported by the 21 nations was indis-
for our national safety and for the maintenance
pensable to the safety, security, peace, and wel-
of our national institutions.
fare of this hemisphere.
The one and only sure way for our Nation to
There was general agreement that if the
avoid being drawn into serious trouble or actual
peaceful nations of Europe had thus promptly
war by the wild and destructive forces now
organized themselves for self-defense on the
abroad elsewhere in the world and to command
most effective cooperative basis, the chances are
respect for its rights and interests abroad is for
that their situation and that of Europe would
our people to become thoroughly conscious of
be vastly different today. Instead, many of
the possibilities of danger, to make up their
those countries complacently relied upon utter-
minds that we must continue to arm, and to
ances of peaceful purpose and upon their own
arm to such an extént that the forces of on-
neutrality to safeguard them against the mighty
quest and ruin will not dare make an attack on
forces of invasion, conquest, and destruction.
us or on any part of this hemisphere. To this
Some of them have been overrun and destroyed
end, each citizen must be ready and willing for
by the ruthless invader. Their fate should be a.
real sacrifice of time and of substance and for
Iragic lesson to us.
hard personal service. In the face of terrific
The vast forces of lawlessness, conquest, and
problems and conditions, and until the present
destruction are still moving across the earth
serious threats and dangers have disappeared,
iko a savage and dangerous animal at large.
we cannot pursue complacently the course of
By their very nature, those forces will not stop
our customary normal life.
253007-40
100
Regraded Unclassified
104
DEPARTMENT or STATE BULLETTS
I feel constrained thos to offer my views in
The Honorable Dr. Autonio Camillo de Oliviers, to
the light of what is already a dangerously wide-
her of Brazilian Delegation
spread movement for world conquest and for
Dr. Delegation Abelardo Bueno do Prado, Member of
the destruction of most of the worthwhile things
which civilization has given the human race.
The epiture Honorable Henry A. Waltace, Secretary of les
The Honorable Key Pittman, United States Senate
LICENSES UNDER THE EXPORT-
The Honorable Bol Bloom, House of Representative
CONTROL ACT
The Honorable Charles A. Eaton, Bonse of Bepowests-
tives
(Keleased la the press August ")
The Honorable James A. Shanley, Blouse of loss
During the period July 5-81, 1940, inclusive,
sentatives
the Division of Controls received 6,242 applica-
The Honorable Jesse Jones, Federal Loan Admisis
tions for license to export articles or materials
trator
listed in the President's proclamation of July
Mr. Drew Pearson
2. 1940,' establishing export restrictions under
the authority of section 6 of the act of Congress
Argentine and Uruguayan Delegations
upproved the same day. Of this number, 5,397
(Released to the press August TI
applications were disposed of on or before July
31, and 845 remained pending at the end of the
The following guests attended the dinner
month. Of the applications disposed of, 4,361
given at the Mayflower Hotel, Washington, An-
were granted, 236 were rejected on the ground
gust 7, 1940, by the Acting Secretary of State,
that the articles or materials in question were
the Honorable Sumner Welles, in honor of the
essential to the national defense, 104 were re-
Argentine and Uruguayan delegations to the
turned with the request that further data be
Habana Meeting of the Ministers of Foreign
submitted, and 696 were returned with the
Affairs:
statement that no license was required for the
His Excellency Señor Don Felipe A. Espil, Ambande
contemplated exportation.
of Argentina
Bis Excellency Dr. Leopoldo Meto, Choirman of lie
Argentine Delegation to the Habana Conference
American Republics
The Honorable J. Richling, Minister of Uruguay
His Excellency Dr. Pedro Manial Bios, Chairman of
the Uraguayan Delegation to the Habaus Conferme
DINNERS IN HONOR OF DELEGATIONS
The Honorable Dr. José A. Mora Otero, Member of the
TO THE HABANA MEETING OF THE
Uruguayan Delegation to the Habana Conference
The Honorable Frank Knox, Secretary of the Navy
MINISTERS OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
The Honorable Tom Connally, United States Senste
Brazilian Delegation
The Honorable Elbert D. Thomas, United States Benefits
The Honorable Guy M. Gillette, United States Benale
(Released to the press August 6]
The Honorable Luther Johnson, Bouse of Represso
The following guests attended the dinner
tives
given 00 August 6, 1940, by the Acting Secre-
The Honorable Ed. V. Isae, House of Representative
tary of State, the Honorable Summer Welles,
The Honorable Foster Stearns, House of Represents
tives
at his home, Oxon Hill, Md., in honor of the
General George C. Marshall, Chief of Staff
Brazilian delegation to the Habuna Meeting of
Admiral Harold R. Stark, Chief of Naval Operation
the Ministers of Foreign Affairs:
The Honorable Henry F. Grady. Assistant Becretary of
State
His Excellency Carlos Martins, Ambustador of Brazil
His Excellency Dr. Mauricio Naburo, Chairman of the
The Honorable Breckinridge Long. Assistant Service
of State
Brazillen Delegation and Undersecretary of State
for Foreign Affairs of Brazil
Mr. Fells Belair, Jr.
Mr. Constantine Brown
'See the Bulletin of July 6, 1940 (vol. III, no, 54),
Mr. Ernest Lindley
DD. 12-12.
Mr. Philip W. Bonsal, Department of State
Mr. H. Charles Spruks, Department of State
58
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Washington
In reply refer to
September 19, 1940
EA 840.51 Frozen Credits/592
The Secretary of State presents his compliments to
the Honorable the Secretary of the Treasury and encloses
herewith copies of the paraphrase of & telegram received
from the American Consulate General at Beirut regarding
funds of the Banque de Syrie which are deposited with
the French-American Banking Corporation and the Chase
National Bank.
Enclosure:
Copies of paraphrase
of telegram no. 91,
from Beirut,
September 18, 1940.
COPY
imc
59
PARAPHRASE OF TELEGRAM RECEIVED
FROM: American Consulate General, Beirut.
DATE: September 18, 1940, 6 p.m.
NO. : 91.
This is in reference to my telegrams numbered 46, 74,
76 and 83, concerning frozen French credits.
I have been informed by the Banque de Syrie that its
license permitting partial release of its funds deposited
with the French-American Banking Corporation will expire
on September 20, and that & similar license concerning
their funds in the Chase National Bank will expire on
September 27. The Banque de Syrie has communicated with
these American banks by telegraph, requesting that these
licenses be renewed. Because of the essential requirements
of this mandated territory, the importance of this was
stressed by the High Commissioner in a conversation which
I had with him today.
PALMER
es MR 05 938 one
HPD
JACKHOST
DIVIDOR
311 R
10 THE RECUEIVEL
EA: VCL
COPY
imc
Regraded Unclassified
60
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE September 19, 1940
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM Mr. Cochran
confidential
The six reporting banks executed the following transactions in registered
sterling:
Sold to commercial concerns
£55,000
Purchased from commercial concerns
£ 4,000
Open market sterling remained at 4.03-3/4 all day. Transactions of the
reporting banks in open market sterling were as follows:
Sold to commercial concerns
£6,000
Sold to foreign banks (Venezuela)
£5,000
Total
£11,000
Purchased from commercial concerns
-0=
Continuing its improvement, the Canadian dollar reached a discount of 15-7/8%
at the close today. It will be recalled that this currency reached & current
low of 17-1/26 on September 14.
The other currencies closed as follows:
Swiss franc
.2279
Swedish krons
.2385
Lira
.0505
Reichsmark
.3992
Mexican peso
.1996 bid, .2016 offered
Cuban peso
8-7/8% discount
There were no gold transactions consummated by us today.
The Federal Reserve Bank informed us that it had made another three-months
loan of $50,000 to the Central Bank of n Salvador. As collateral, the Federal
set aside gold valued at $56,988 from the Salvadorean bank's earmarked account.
The total of such loans now outstanding amounts to $350,000. secured by $397.753
in gold.
Regraded Unclassified
61
CONFIDENTIAL
2
The Federal Reserve Bank reported that the Bank of Canada was shipping
approximately $50,000.000 in gold from Canada to the Federal, to be earmarked
for account of His Britannic Majesty's Government.
The report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York listing deposite for the
account of Asia as reported by the New York agencies of Japanese banks on September
11, showed that such deposits totaled $85,301,000. a rise of $40,719,000 since the
last report as of September 4. Included in this total were $34,210,000 in deposits
with the Yokohama Specie Bank, New York, made by its branches in China, up
$5,130,000 from September 4, and $42,110,000 in deposits made by Japanese banks in
Japan and Manchuria, up $34,795,000. Loans made to Japanese banks by Yokohama's
New York agency totaled $14,791,000, showing no change from the September 4 figure.
We understand that the Federal Reserve Bank is investigating the above-mentioned
deposit increases, in the belief that other unreported cash balances may be involved.
It will be recalled that, in its investigation of changes in reports of Tokohama's
New York agency for the two weeks ended August 7. the Federal learned of the
existence of a custody account held for the Bank of Japan. The results of this
investigation were summarized in our daily report of August 14.
The Bombay gold price was slightly higher at the equivalent of $33.91, while
the silver quotation was unchanged at 44.56#.
In London, the price fixed for spot silver was unchanged at 23-7/16d. The
orward price moved off 1/8d to 23-5/16d. The dollar equivalents were 42.56# and
#2.33# respectively.
Handy and Harman's settlement price for foreign silver was unchanged at 34-3/4#.
The Treasury's purchase price for foreign silver was also unchanged at 35#.
We made two purchases of silver totaling 161,000 ounces under the Silver
Purchase Act, both of which consisted of new production from foreign countries,
for forward delivery.
62
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE September 19, 1940
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Cochran
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
Mr. McKeon of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York gave us the following
information regarding transactions in the account of the State Bank of the U.S.S.R.
maintained with the Chase National Bank,
Principal changes in the account during the period September 12 to September 18,
inclusive, were as follows:
Date
Amount Credited
Received From
Amount Debited
Paid To
September 12
$106,000
Commercial Letter
of Credit Account
$ 137,000
National City Bank
September 14
200,000
Skandinaviska Banka,
500,000
Amtorg Trading Co.
Stockholm
100,000
Swies Bank Corp. by
136,000
Commercial Letter
order Reichsbank
of Credit Account
September 16
300,000
Hungarian General
Bank, Budspest
95,000
Bank of Sweden
63,000
Commercial Letter
of Credit - Import
54,000
Hungarian Commercial
Bank, Budapest
September 17
294,000
Commercial Letter
950,000
Amtorg Trading Co.
of Credit - Import
98,000
Narodni Bank, Prague
418,000
Commercial Letter
of Credit Account
69,000
Mellon National Bk.
Regraded Unclassified
63
- 2 -
Date
Amount Credited
Received From
Amount Debited
Paid To
September 18
$10,951,000
Advance against gold
$119,000
Commercial Letter
shipment by U. S.
of Credit Account
Mint, San Francisco
304,000
Finlands Bank
183,000
Narodni Bank, Prague
175,000
Commercial Letter of
Credit - Import
118,000
J. Henry Schroeder
Banking Corporation
P.M.P.
64
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE September 19, 1940
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Cochran
STRICTLY CONFIDENTI
Mr. McKeon of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York gave us the following
information regarding the transfers listed below from Italian and German accounts.
Italian
National City Bank
Date
Amount Debited
Account Debited
Paid To
September 9
$ 60,000
Bank of Naples Trust
Chase National Bank
Company
September 10
150,000
Credito Italiano,
Cash withdrawal
New York
Chase National Bank
Date
Amount Debited
Account Debited
Paid To
September 16
$ 463,000
Credito Italiano,
The Bank of Italy, Rio
New York
de Janeiro
September 17
$1,122,000
If
Post and Flagg
September 17
500,000
Banca Commerciale
IN
Italiano, New York
September 18
920,000
Credito Italiano,
#
New York
German
Chase National Bank
Date
Amount Debited
Account Debited
Paid To
eptember 17
$ 80,000
Reichsbank
Narodni Bank, Prague
AMP
65
September 19, 1940
3:45 p.m.
RE RUSSIA-CHINA-U. 8. AGREEMENT
Present: Mr. Bell
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Foley
Mr. White
Mrs. Klotz
H.M.Jr:
Just sit down, everybody, and I will reserve
the right of getting my chest clean first.
I had a chance at Cabinet to talk about
refunding next week, and if my memory serves
me right, I said we could go out 14 or 15
years on & 2% bond.
Bell:
Well, a little far.
H.M.Jr:
You said '53-'55?
Bell:
That is right. That 1s 12-3/4. That is about
right. On that sheet, 88 I recall --
H.M.Jr:
From 1940 to 1955 makes 14 years.
Bell:
Well, the callable period is a little shorter
than the maturity.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I think I got across today the most
important thing I have done this year. In
the usual discussion at Cabinet - of course,
this 1s in the family - Hull said, "Now,
within a day or two the Japanese are going
to walk into China," and we would have to
do something on scrap iron and loan 20 or 25
million dollars to China.
(Unrecorded telephone conversation.)
H.M.Jr:
Welles is calling now to try to block this
thing. At least I am going to make a record
of it all.
Regraded Unclassified
6S
- 2 -
After Mr. Hull said that he wanted to do
something, then he went on to say there is
no use doing anything on 011. So I said,
"Well, if they really want to do something
to set Japan back on our heels, take the
President's suggestion of a couple of
months ago of A. three-cornered deal with
Ruesia, China, and ourselves. That would
really mean something to Japan," and they
said, "How," and I said, "Well, for example,
if you bought somo manganese from Russia
and had the understanding that Russia would
sell some arme, with that money, we would
give credit for arms and China could pay
them with Tungsten or something like that--!
They went on and on and on discussing it.
of course, Stimson is always very helpful.
I was going to Bay something again to make
my point again and I didn't, because I
thought - I was playing it down. I drove
it pretty hard. This went on for about 20
minutes to 8 half hour, and then the
conversation ceased.
During the thing I said that if the President
would direct me to do this, I said with the
help of Jesse Jones I would like to do it,
if the President wanted me to, That was all.
Then they went on and on and on. The con-
versation stopped and the President said,
"Henry, I guese you had better get hold of
the Russians and start your talk." So Jones
spoke up - or Hull spoke up and said, "Well,
before you have the final arrangement and
give it out to the press, I would like to
be consulted,' and I said, "Well, absolutely,"
and I said, "If it is agreeable to Mr. Jones,
I would like to have Mr. Henderson, who looks
after Russia, sit in and listen to the
discussion." He said that was fine. So at
11:30 tomorrow we are on our way. Now we
will get Welles.
Klotz:
He may surprise you.
Regraded Unclassified
67
- 3 -
H.M.Jr:
I am going to tell him to do his arguing with
Mr. Hull.
Bell:
Is Hull in favor of this suggestion?
H.M.Jr:
He never said & word. He never said yes or
no and he said that I must have misunderstood
Welles because he didn't know anything about
it. I said it was Welles that said I couldn't
do this and mustn't do this thing until he
gets through with this trade treaty with
Russia.
Bo somebody said, "Well, how is this going
to hurt the trade treaty?" Hull said he
didn't know and he showed he didn't know
anything about this thing and I kept stressing
the point that this was the President's sug-
gestion. There 1e no question that if you
want to set Japan back, this 1s the way to
do it.
White:
Sure. If they think they are forcing us
into an arrangement with Russia by their
steps in Indo-China, they would be more
worried by that than anything else. They
might reverse their position entirely.
H.M.Jr:
Hull is out on the end of the limb. He
has twice scolded Japan if she goes into
Indo-China. According to Hull, she 1a
going into Indo-China and he is going to
say, "Boys, I am going to lend some money
to Indo-China," which they know they can't
buy arms with. I pointed that out at the
meeting. He 1s going to do something about
scrap iron, but he won't touch oil, and I
made a big talk on oil.
White:
Did you notice the figures --
H.M.Jr:
But I thought it was one of the most
important things I have sat in and Mr. Welles
can just - I don't give a hoot what he says,
I am going ahead with it.
Bell:
What is the reason for not touching 0119
Regraded Unclassified
68
- 4 -
H.M.Jr:
What Hull said was that if we shut down on
oil here, they would go down to Indo-China
and could get all they want.
Bell:
Indo-China?
H.M.Jr:
Dutch East Indies. So the President said,
"Well, I am kind of dumb, but I don't see
why you want us to stop giving the oil to
Japan if she can get all she wants from the
Dutch East Indies." So I said, "The answer
18, she can't," and Hull said, "Yes, that
is right."
White:
The answer 1s she can't?
H.M.Jr:
She cannot get all the oil she needs in the
Dutch East Indies.
White:
She can if they will give it to them unless
it 1s destroyed.
H.M.Jr:
I know.
Foley:
That is what he means.
H.M.Jr:
I read the report.
White:
Two and two makes six.
H.M.Jr:
Stimson covered me up nicely by saying
what it makes - I threw a little bluff and
Hull, who didn't have his figures, agreed
with me, but Stimson covered up nicely for
me.
(Telephone conversation with Sumner Welles
follows:)
P-16
UInclassified
69
- 5 -
H.M.Jr:
I an willing to be shaken hands with by
anybody. Champ for one minute. How much
is that worth to you, Harry?
White:
It sounds good to me right away. He is
mad as hell.
H.M.Jr:
Well, did you hear? I said it was too bad --
White:
That last crack set him back.
H.M.Jr:
What was that?
White:
That his own Secretary doesn't know what he
1s doing.
H.M.Jr:
Well, it 1s too bad.
White:
Well, there is something peculiar. I thought
that trade agreement was already arranged in
the first place. In the second place,
apparently there are other things. What
did he say about our citizens there?
H.M.Jr:
Sure, Singer Sewing Machine and everything
like that.
Klotz:
If it goes back to the German Embassy --
White:
Did you tell Oumansky anything that you
wouldn't want the Germans to know?
H.M.Jr:
I haven't seen Oumansky. He is coming here
tomorrow. The meeting hasn't taken place
yet. Cabinet is just over.
White:
oh, he has reference to what he told Oumansky?
H.M.Jr:
Evidently. I haven't seen Oumansky.
Klotz:
Well, this will help. I said that 16 all
to the good.
White:
You are taking on a fight.
H.M.Jr:
Did you hear what Mrs. Klotz said? She said
Regraded Unclassified
70
- 6 -
we should tap Oumansky's wire and I said no,
Welles's.
Didn't I sound perfectly pleasant?
White:
I mean, you are taking a fight on your hands.
There is no question about that in my mind,
and I think you ought to proceed very
cautiously, because he will exploit any
failure to the fullest opportunity.
H.M.Jr:
That 18 all right, Harry, and I have got to
a point - I have got to a point where people
like Mr. Welles and the rest of them, I am
going to fight him tooth and nail up to the
point that this place gets too hot for one
of us. I have reached that point.
White:
There 1s a question of being careful 80 --
H.M.Jr:
That 18 all right. I am not any more going
to be careful with people like Mr. Welles.
I am through. I crossed that bridge on the
planes and look where I have got. I am
going to have & stenographer sitting here
and Jesse Jones here and Mr. Henderson and
you and if the President of the United States -
I have a direct order from him on this thing
and BO has the Secretary of Commerce. Now,
if Mr. Welles wants to go up against Jesse
Jones and me and the President, okay, let's
see what happens. I appreciate your personal
friendship in warning me, but I am not going
any more just the way I did. Just the way
I decided, I am going to put in this young
fellow Pehle and give the young fellows a
chance whose hearts are in the right place.
I am not going to fool around with any more
appeasements.
White:
It does do the - I mean, make the best possible
step by step that you can, because it would be
well to be successful in this particular event.
H.M.Jr:
Look, Mr. Welles and the rest of them have
made a complete failure with our negotiations
from the day we recognized Russia, from the
Regraded Unclassified
71
- 7 -
day we recognized Russia. And the whole
peace of the Pacific is at stake, and it
is worth my taking on a fight with Mr. Welles.
The whole peace of the Pacific. And this
damned nonsense of Cordell Hull saying he
1s going to tell them he is going to make
& loan to China and that way slow them up -
the minute the word leaks out that the
United States 1s talking with Russia and
China, that is something, and I hope it
leaks. I can take on Mr. Welles as long
as I have got the President with me.
White:
Well, you don't want to make any false
steps.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I have been pretty lucky without
being over-confident, but, Harry, I am
through with the Welleses.
Now, on the train, between two and three
o'clock in the morning, after continuous
drinking from eight o'clock on, Welles
began to talk and he told Wallace, who
was my informer, and who doesn't drink,
what a great guy Mussolini 1s and how we
must do BO and 80 and 80 and 80. He still
thinks that Mussolini is a great guy and
80 forth. The sooner the people get onto
it, the better.
White:
Do you have - are you going to have something
specific for tomorrow, or is it just going
to be first --
H.M.Jr:
Talk. Where is that memorandum of yours?
Right here on top. What do you want me to
do with Sumner Welles?
White:
No, I am glad to see you take him on, but
having taken him on, I don't want to miss
any bets, that 1s all.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I have taken --
White:
He 1s a --
Regraded Unclassified
72
- 8 -
H.M.Jr:
He is a what?
White:
He 16 a tough adversary, and you want to
watch each move.
H.M.Jr:
All right, he had better watch out. I am
tough, too, and as I say, I went far more
dangerously in this airplane thing a year
and a half ago, and we have come to the
position now - this is also in the room -
where I go to the President of the United
States and want additional planes for England,
and you know what his answer was this morning?
They can have anything they want. That is
the answer I got today, and they are going
to get it, too.
Of course, the Gallup Poll has nothing to
do with my policies.
Klotz:
That is wonderful.
H.M.Jr:
My God, when Harry begine to want to slow
me up - where is that memorandum that you
have been needling me with?
White:
I don't want to slow you up. I Just want to
put a brick in your glove.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Gaston:
Gallup gives 38 states to Roosevelt in a
private poll.
H.M.Jr:
I made a note. Someplace or other, there
18 a list which came through - you will have
to get together with Miss Chauncy - someplace,
& list of war material which Russia had sold
to China. Now, one of these many things
that come my way, 80 many guns --
White:
Did we get it from China?
H.M.Jr:
I think it came from Nicholson, but you will
have to go through with it.
Regraded Unclassified
73
- 9 -
Gaston:
Archie may know something about it.
Whit e:
Do you have any idea --
HM.Jr:
It is within the last month.
White:
I see. That will be easier to find, then.
H.M.Jr:
Good night, everybody. I will read anything
you will send to the house, Harry, on Russia,
and don't go around and make a deal with
Sumner Welles tonight, either, see.
Regraded Unclassified
74
September 19, 1940
9:17 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Paul Appleby was asking about.
Herbert
Gaston:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Why don't you call up Ed Flynn yourself?
G:
Well, I thought of doing that.
H.M.Jr:
And ask him what it's all about. You've got
the background.
G:
Yes, I know all about this situation.
H.M.Jr:
Just see it through for me will you?
G:
Yes, yes, I'll call him.
H.M.Jr:
Will you do that? And just ask him what he
has in mind about Saul Haas and all the rest
of it, please.
G:
Yeah. I'll do it.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
75
September 19, 1940
3:50 p.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Mr. Purvis just went out to keep an appointment
and she doesn't know how long he'll be. She
said Mr. Young arranged the appointment with
Mr. Vance.
H.M.Jr:
Oh. Well, does she know whether he's leaving
town tonight?
Operator:
I'll ask her. Just a second. (Pause) She
says she doesn't think he knows yet, but she
doesn't.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I'd like to talk to him in the morning.
Operator:
All right, and Mr. Welles is calling you.
H.M.Jr:
Who?
Operator:
Welles.
H.M.Jr:
Welles?
Operator:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I can't take it just now.
Operator:
All right.
3:53 p.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Mr. Welles said he'd like to call you back.
H.M.Jr:
Well, tell them he'll have to do it in the next
three or four minutes, if he wants to talk to
me.
Operator:
Right.
76
September 19, 1940
3:55 p.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Sumner
Welles:
Sorry to bother you again, Henry.
H.M.Jr:
That's all right.
W:
I wanted to ask you, because Mr. Hull told me
that he wasn't sure what it was about, what
the meeting is that you're going to have
Oumansky at with one of our people and Jesse
tomorrow.
H.K.Jr:
Well, I don't know why Mr. Hull didn't
understand it. We went over it three times.
W:
Well, he told me that he didn't.
H.M.Jr:
Well, the question came up about what Mr. Hull
could do to Japan if she walked into Indo-
China and I reminded the President of his
suggestion of a 3-cornered deal between the
United States, Russia and Japan and China, and
if he directed Jesse Jones and me to go ahead
I'd be willing to, and after the discussion
ran along twenty minutes he said he wanted
Jones and me to do it.
W:
Uh-huh.
H.M.Jri
And Hull sald that before any final arrangement
was made he'd like to Bee it and I said well
I'd like whoever watched Ruseia for him to sit
in at all of the meetings and he said the man
was Henderson.
W:
Yes. Does this - what you have in mind - does
this involve the loan to China?
H.K.Jr:
It might and it might not, but I also said, 80
that you have the whole story, that when I
broached it to you that you said that you
definitely didn't want me to do anything about
it because it might hamper you on your trade
deal with Russia.
Regraded Unclassified
77
- 2 -
W:
Well, that's the reason that I wanted to have
the chance of talking to you. I'm just in the
middle of these conversations with Oumansky
and the Russians have taken the most completely
uncooperative attitude after the first two
conversations and we haven't gotten anywhere
with the treatment of our own citizens in
Ruasia and on many other things that we con-
sider necessary.
H.M.Jr:
Well, maybe this will help you.
W:
Well, I wanted to give you this background
so that you'd know it.
H.M.Jr:
Right.
W:
In addition to that I want to tell you that
we have positive information that everything
that is told to Oumaneky here in the Department
of State 1s immediately communicated by him
to the German Embassy.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
W:
And I have no doubt that the German Embassy
would inform the Japanese Government of anything
that you might say in regard to that problem.
H.M.Jr:
Well, that would be helpful wouldn't it?
W:
Possibly; possibly not. In any event,
Henderson will be there at your meeting and
I wanted to tell you personally what the
situation here was with regard to my negotiations
with him.
H.M.Jr:
Well, it's too bad that Mr. Hull didn't seem
to be familiar with your negotiations. He
didn't seem to know anything about it.
on
W:
Well, they've been going/as you know for two
months. Of course he was away for three weeks
out of that time.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
W:
All right, Henry, I just wanted to let you
have that dope.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
78
September 19, 1940.
Dear Caption Balfour:
I vas very and to have your letter of
September 6th, and to 10am that you had reached
home safely. I approciate your writing as as
you did about our discussions here, and I all
find to have the information you sent no.
with cordial regurds,
Sincerely,
1 m I $
Captain Harold E. Belfeur,
Purliamentary Undersearetory of State
for Mr,
Mr Ministry, Department O.A.,
King Charles Street,
Whitehall, So we 1.
Ingland.
sent X state Dept. 9/20
to go by aliplomatic Pouch
GEF/dbs
Regraded Unclassified
79
Stytember 19, 1940.
Dear Captain Balfours
I was very glad to have your letter of
September - and to 10am that you had reached
home sefely. I appreciate your writing - no
you are about - discussions here, and I -
did to have the information you - -
VEth cordial regurds,
I
(Signed) &
Captain Herold 1. Belfour,
Parliamentary Undersearetely of State
Sent to State Dept 9/20
for ALP,
to go by Diplomatic pouch
MP Matery, Department O.A.S
ring Charles Street,
indichalls & V. 1.
Regiant,
GEF/dbs
y
Regraded Unclassified
80
September 19, 1940g
Dear Captain Balfour:
I we very and to have your letter of
September 6th, and to 10am that you had reached
home safely. I appreciate your writing me as
you did about our discussions here, and I a
glad to have the information you sent no.
vish cordial regards,
Sincerely,
(Sagned) H. Morgepthau, J1
Captain Harold 1. Balfour,
Partiamentary Undersearstary of State
Sent to State Dept 9/20
for Air,
to go by Diplomatic pouch
Mr Hindway, Department O,Acg
King Charles Street,
19 i d
Ingland.
GEF/dbs
Regraded Unclassified
81
Dept.O.A.
6th September, 1940.
Dear mr morgenthan
I am so sorry that before leaving the American
Continent I could not send you a personal letter of thanks
for your hospitality on Sunday, and also to express my
appreciation of the opportunity of meeting you. I left
Montreal early yesterday morning and we got in safely this
afternoon - so I lose no time in making up for my deficiency.
When I went to New York I took up the question of
the secret aircraft about which you spoke to me. I find that
your words of three weeks ago did not fall upon barren ground,
in that we have been making enquiries in a discreet way as to
what is the position. I gather that the aircraft is not very
far advanced as the prototype has not yet flown, and it may
be 1942 before production can get into swing. We are, however,
vitally interested.
As regards your suggestion of connecting up the
supply of the particular fitment you mentioned with the
ordering of this type of aircraft; if, of course, the 1942
date 1s anywhere near correct this would make it an unduly
long time. I think you know that Sir Henry Tizard is at
Washington dealing with these very matters, and I have taken
steps to see that he has been made acquainted with our
conversation.
With kind regards - and may I be allowed to add
en expression of the sentiment which all of us feel, of
gratitude to you for your personal help in what I believe is
our common cause.
Joins survey
Bagen
The Hon. Henry Morgenthau,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D.C.
Regraded Unclassified
82
September 19, 1940
8:55 a. m.
Present:
Mr. Bell
Mrs. Klotz
HM,Jr: On this thing, your memorandum of Sept.
17th, on the recommendation of who should work on the
German, Russian and Italian payments, I accept that
recommendation.
Number 2. Your recommendation about Professor
Chamberlain -- in regard to Pehle, I accept that.
Mr. Bell: He ought to understand that is tenta-
tive.
HM,Jr: If you will tell somebody, I would like
to see Pehle myself.
He ought to get a little more money.
Mr. Bell: We thought not for the moment. Maybe
on January 1, if he is still in charge, you would give
him more money, but he has been promoted pretty fast in
the last four months.
Regraded Unclassified
83
THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY
WASHINGTON
September 17, 1940
MEMORANDUM TO THE SECRETARY:
Messrs. Gaston, Foley, White, Thompson, Cochran, and I have con-
sidered the following matters suggested by you at yesterday's conferences
and make the recommendations indicated herein:
1. German, Russian, and Italian payments in the United States
We discussed this at some length and feel that all of the material
which we have in our possession should be studied by one of Dr. White's
employees and Mr. Klaus, who should report thereon to Mr. Gaston and
Mr. Cochran, making whatever suggestions they care to regarding further
procedures to obtain additional information. We suggest that, for the
time being, they confine their studies to the material already in
possession of the Treasury. If, after discussing it with Mr. Gaston
and Mr. Cochran, it is decided that further information is needed from
either the Federal Bureau of Investigation or the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York, Mr. Gaston and Mr. Cochran will make those contacts and
request whatever 18 necessary.
If it is later decided that there is sufficient work to require
the full time services of an employee in addition to Mr. Klaus, we will
then undertake to secure the services of such an employee.
2. Recommendation concerning Professor Chamberlain's position
After some discussion of this matter we recommend that Mr. Pehle
temporarily be given the title of "Assistant to the Secretary" and be
authorized to administer the Foreign Funds Control section in the same
manner that Professor Chamberlain has administered it, except that it might
be understood with Mr. Pehle that this is a tentative arrange-
ment and that after election you may want to bring in some one from the
outside to handle this matter.
The committee arrangement should continue, but every effort should
be made to reduce the number of cases to be submitted to the committee
and also to reduce the length of its meetings. It might even be possible
to meet three times & week instead of every day.
AWB
Deeraded
COPY
84
September 19, 1940
His Majesty's Government
In Right of the Dominion of Canada
c/o British Purchasing Commission
37 Well Street,
New York, New York.
Dear Sire:
We submit this proposal to enter into a contract
with you for the construction and delivery of 144 Vultee
Model #48-0 Single-Engine Pursuit airplanes, in accordance
with Vultee Specification #544-6 Change C. dated January
31, 1940, except as modified herein, plus 15 additional Pratt
& Whitney Twin Wasp two speed engines, Model R-1830-$204-0,
plus 15 Hemilton Hydromatic Standard propellers, plus spare
parts for the above Model #48-C Vultee sirplanes to be selected
by you within forty-five days efter your acceptance of this
proposal, which, however, must include such spare parts for
said sirplanes as are now in process of manufacture at our
factories or have been heretofore ordered by us from the pur-
veyors thereof.
The terms and conditions of this proposal are 08
follows:
1. This proposal is subject to acceptance within twenty-
four hours from the delivery thereof, and if accepted, e de-
finitive contract is to be executed and delivered within ten
days thereafter.
2. The price of each of said airplanes completed in AC-
cordence with the specifications and including engine, pro-
peller and accessories, and automatic manifold end optical gun-
sights not covered by said specifications, but exclusive of
charges for boxing and crating or delivery charges shall be
$61,043. The price of each of seld additional engines shall
be $17,508. The price of each of sald additional Hamilton
Hydrometic Stendard propellers shell be $3.764, end your or-
der for spare parts shall aggregate B. total amount of not less
then $1,758,054.81 United States dollars. The total price of
All of the sircraft. engines, propellers end aircraft spare
perts to be manufactured, sold end delivered hereunder shall be
$10,867,422.39, unless said aggregate total price is increased
by reason of your having ordered aircreft spare parts in ex-
ceea of the minimum of $1,758,054.81, and the down payment of
Regraded Unclassified
85
His Majesty's Government
In Right of the Dominion of Canada
- 2 -
September 19, 1940
50% of said total contract price, or $5,433,711.19 1a to be
made by depositing said sum in United States dollars to our
credit at The Chase National Bank of the City of New York, con-
temporaneously with your acceptance of this proposal. The remain-
1ng portion of the contract price of each item to be delivered
hereunder is to be paid to us when said items respectively are ready
for delivery at one of our plants or at the plants of purveyors
thereof, in the case of spare engines and propellers and such other
articles as we may antually agree are to be shipped direct by such
purveyors to you. The foregoing prices are exclusive of boxing
end creting charges, sales, use and processing taxes imposed upon
the manufacturer, if any, insurance and delivery charges which are
in every case to be added to the contract price and paid by you,
end at your risk and expense we agree to make delivery of all of
the aircraft, engines, propellers and sircraft spare parts covered
by this contract at such place outside the State of California but
within the United States of America as you may designate. Your
obligation to accept delivery of said airplanes and to make pay-
ment of the balance of the purchase price thereof shell not be
dependent upon the procurement of B. license to export same from
the United States, but we agree to cooperate with you in endeavoring
to obtain an export license.
3. The airplanes and materials to be manufactured and sold
hereunder are to be ready for inspection as follows:
Ae to airplanes -
2 airplanes not later than October 31, 1940;
3 airplanes not later than November 30. 1940;
7 airplanes not later than December 31. 1940;
10 airplanes not later than January 31, 1941:
15 airplanes not later than February 28, 1941:
20 sirplanes not later than March 31, 1941;
22 airplanes not later than April 30. 1941;
22 airplanes not later than May 31, 1941;
23 airplanes not later than June 30, 1941:
20 airplanes not later than July 31, 1941.
As to spare engines, spare propellers end spare parts, delivery
will be made of seven spare engines and spare propellers not later
than June, 1941. and of the remaining 8 spare engines and spare pro-
pellers not later than July, 1941. Our spare parte price list and
recommendations 08 to the airplane parts you should purchase will
be delivered to you within two weeks after your acceptance of this
proposal. Your complete order for spare parts is to be given to us
Regraded Unclassified
86
His Mejesty's Government
In Right of the Dominion of Canada
- 3 -
September 19, 1940
n.e. soon 88 precticable thereafter, and in any event not later
than 45 days after the receipt of sold price liet and recommen-
dations. Having BO received said order, we agree promptly to
order from our own purveyors such materials end supplies as
are required to complete the ваше, and to commence deliveries
thereunder within sixty days after the receipt of said order
end complete the anme in monthly installments in substantially
the same proportions 80 deliveries of the balance of the Bir-
planes hereunder with final delivery not later than August 31,
1941.
All obligations with respect to delivery are subject to
force majeure and other excueable causes of delay as set forth
in Article X of the agreement between the undersigned end His
Najesty's Government in the United Kingdom, dated na of July 3.
1940, and are also to be excused without payment of loss or damage
by us if consummation of the contract contemulated by this pro-
posel 18 enjoined by final decree of B. court of competent juris-
diction, or if we are required by government order or final de-
cree of eny court to make delivery of said sirplanes end material
elsewhere than to you, and upon the happening of any such event
so preventing performance of our contract by reeson of government
order or final decree of a court of competent jurisdiction, we
agree to repay to you All moneys advanced by you to us pursuant
to this proposel, less the contract price of any sirplanes or
material actually delivered to you hereunder, and after deducting
AD amount equal to All costs, damage and expense not otherwise
veid by you which we neve sustained by resson of the making and
acceptance of this proposal.
4. The definitive contract to be executed if this proposel
10 accepted 1s to contain the same guarantees and warranties with
respect to the construction and performance of the sirplanes to
be manufactured And delivered hereunder based upon the specifi-
cations applicable thereto 89 are contained in the contract be-
tween this corporation and His Mr jesty's Government in the United
Zingdom, dated D.D of July 3. 1940, end in general, substantially
the same provisione with reference to taxes, insurance, represen-
istion of purchaser et seller's plant, inspection and tests, change
orders, Neutrality Act, labor standards, patents, copyrights and
Regraded Unclassified
87
His Majesty's Government
In Right of the Dominion of Canada
- 4 -
September 19, 1940
tradesmarks, contingent fees, corrupt gifts to persons in His
Majesty's service, confidential treatment and other applicable
provisions.
VULTEE AIRCRAFT, INC.
By V.C. Schorlemmer,
Vice President
The foregoing proposal is hereby accepted this
17th
day of September, 1940.
HIS MAJESTY'S GOVERNMENT
IN RIGHT OF THE DOMINION OF
CANADA ACTING THROUGH THE DIRECTOR
GENERAL OF THE BRITISH PURCHASING
By A. C. Boddis
COMMISSION
FOR AND IN BEHALF OF THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL
88
WAR DEPARTMENT
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF STAFF
WASHINGTON
September 19, 1940.
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Morgenthau:
Thank you very much for the following re-
ports, which you sent me this date:
Part I - Airplanes
Deliveries of and New Orders for Airplanes,
June 9 - September 14, 1940; Unfilled Orders
and Estimated Deliveries on September 14, 1940.
Part II - Airplane Engines
Deliveries of and New Orders for Airplane
Engines, June 9 - September 14, 1940; Un-
filled Orders and Estimated Deliveries on
September 14, 1940.
Faithfully yours,
Chief of Staff.
89
OCS
ON
OCS 17840-203
September 19, 1940.
Honorable Henry Morgenthen, It.,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Borgenthau:
Thank you very much for the following re-
ports, which you sent ne this date:
Part I - Airplanes
Deliveries of and New Orders for tirplanes,
June 9 September 14, 1940; Unfilled Orders
and Pst ated Deliveries on September 14, 1940.
Part II - Airplane Engines
Deliveries of and New Orders for Airplane
Engines June 9 - September 14, 19/0; Une
filled Orders and Estimated Deliveries on
September 14, 1940.
Faithfully yours,
(sed) G. C. MARSHALL
Chief of Staff.
DISPATOHED
SEP 180 1940
FROM A C
are
Regraded Unclassified
90
C
In mply refor to Initials
and No.
NAVY DEPARTMENT
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS
WASHINGTON
19 September 1940
Dear Mr. Morgenthau:
Receipt is acknowledged of Parts I
and II of the latest confidential reports furnished
by the Treasury Department on airplane and airplane
engine deliveries.
Your courtesy in continuing to fur-
nish these reports is much appreciated.
Sincerely,
W.R.Smedberg, III,
Lt.Comdr., U.S.Navy,
Aide to Chief of Naval Operations.
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D.C.
JUEVER DELY8JMEWL
BIO 26 so VN a 13
at
91
Farm
MEMORANDUM
September 19, 1940.
TO:
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM:
Mr. Sullivan
On November 24, 1939, in a conference with Under Secretary
[lanes which was attended by Mr. Foley, Mr. Kades and myself, Mr. Hanes
showed us a photostatic copy of a mémorandum of November 9, 1939,
initialed by the President directing you to work out a policy of depre-
ciation allowance by which the abnormal investment in plant expansion
that will be required by the airplane motors manufacturers will be
absorbed over the life of the contracts or during the emergency period.
At that conference Mr. Hanes asked ne to furnish him with a memorandum
indicating the extent to which closing agreements might be used to
expedite erection of additional facilities for National Defense.
That afternoon Messrs. Lauchlin Currie, Kades, Burrus, Appel
and Reiling net with me at the Bureau of Internal Revenue and on Novem-
ber 25, 1939, we completed a memorandum which I submitted to Mr. Hanes.
This memorandum stated that the objective of the President's memorandum
might be more effectively approached by revising regulations relating
to obsolescense than by any attempt to expand the functions of a closing
agreement.
On November 28, 1939, in a conference in Mr. Hanes' office
which was attended by Mr. Wenchel and Mr. Kades, Mr. Hanes approved the
memorandur of November 25th and suggested that the regulations relating
to obsolescence might be clarified insofar as the Vinson-Trammell Act
was concerned.
Mr. Hanes asked me to bring everything I had on Consolidated
Aircraft to a meeting the following day to be held with the Secretary.
At the conference with the Secretary on November 29, 1939, Mr. Hanes
submitted the memorandum dated November 30th stating that Congressional
action was required and outlining the two methods which Congress could
use to solve the problem: (1) direct appropriations to the Army and to
the Navy for the construction of additional facilities and (2) a statute
authorizing the Treasury Department to provide for special deductions
for amortization.
The Secretary disapproved the last part of this mémorandum
and Mr. Kades and I prepared a new memorandum which was approved by Mr.
Foley, and which on December 1, 1939, the Secretary took to give to the
Regraded Unclassified
92
- 2 -
President at the Cabinet Meeting. On December 2, 1939, Mr. Kades
prepared a memorandum developing in detail the scope of the Treasury
authority to assist in the program for National Defense by exercising
powers conferred upon it by the Internal Revenue laws in respect to
closing agreements, obsolescence allowances and remedies of taxpayers.
On December 11, 1939, Mr. Kades prepared drafts of identical letters
to the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy, outlining the
scope of the Treasury authority and summarizing the applicable laws
and regulations. On this same day Mr. Foley submitted to the Secretary
a draft of a memorandum for the President which had attached a copy
of the letters to the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy,
which memorandum stated that the only two solutions of the problem
were: (1) the erection of the Federal Government of shadow factories
to be leased to private industry, and (2) the construction or financing
of construction of such plants by the Federal Public Works.
JLS
Regraded Unclassified
53
Washington Daily
Roosevelt, and on November 10
he decided to make Morgenthau
co-ordinator for. the sale of air
Merry-Go-Round
planes to France and Great
Britain Later, on December d.
(Trade Mark Registered)
Undersecretary of, State Sum
ner Welles approved plan
By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN
whereby the Treasury, rather
EXPIRE disastrens news
It la a mixed story. Sume
than the State Department
escaped the British
buziness firms have been 100
passed on the shipment of air-
planes to the Allies.
recently la the Inct that
por ceni patriotic in their
sliempt to aid national defense
Hitler Goms the Works
Grated arma factory in south-
England has been severely
On the other frand, a great
The Morgenthau Idea seemed
by German bombs.
many have not. Some have
to work all right during the win-
news has come back to
been very much like British and
ter, and the Allies laid plans for
spending about $7,000.000 on
via the diplomatic
French munitions firms in their
U. S. factory expansion. They
millary cables,
procrastination over vital was
didn't do this very willingly, DUE
Anstol plant is one of the
orders.
Louis Johnson, hard-boued As-
important munitions fac-
The story goes back to Novem-
sistant Secretary of War. saw 10
it that they didn't get the Interal
in England. and appar-
ber A, 1939, when John Hanes.
types of planes unless they paid
nos been virtually put
then Undersecretary of the
extra for plant expansion, and
business Coming on top
Treasury, submitted a confi-
MargentHau backed him up.
camage to the Rolls-Royse
dential memorandum to the
Thus the British paid $739
President advising that Industry
to the Curtise Aircraft Company
motor plant, this is dev-
would have to be given tax con-
for putting in new :ools, not only
information
cessions if It was to expand for
for British, but for new U. 3,
Numbermore the Germans
national defense. Specifically
planes.
causing a lot more
Haney pointed out that airplane
One factor upset this program
manufacturers could not be es
-namely, Adolf Hitler. For by
than arta on the press
pécted to build new plants to
the time he had gone into Nor-
end UD the whole the
speed up production if, after a
way, Belgium and Holland IL
diustion nas worsened
year or-two, the wat would be
became apparent that the United
the past week.
over and they would be Reft with
States was gains til need an
emply plants un their hands
planes a great deal faster Date
motale is still high.
So Hanes proposed that the
either the British or the United
Delley Uvan during the
COFE of these new plants lat
States could linance plant N.
World War, and British
amortized in a relatively short
pansion-in fact. much faith
full are patting up an
time so that Industry would not
than anyone could build
have to pay taxes on them after
plants.
bettle, Tar surpassing
the wer emergency was over.
in undividual skill
Companies Fear Taxes
However, Bravery
Morgenthan's Idea
Shortly after the invesion
airme will nos win
Ronsevelt approved this pro-
the Low Countries the
when the output of
social. But when the Hanes'
entered into a deal with the We
factories such as the
memorandum went back to
Department and-they though:
artne plant is stopped. it.
Secretary of the Treasury
with Ford LO mantifacture
Alergenthau, It ran imo storm?
0,000 Roll=Royce airplane
the British may
weather. In Tart. this memo
tops, 6,000 for Britain and 200
morein and bravery
was one of the things over
für the United States The
which Morgenthau and his
was increased somewhall in
für optimistic side, have
undersecretary quarreled.
der to take care of the mus
Hanes and Morgenthau both
expense to be incurred by Ford
Rogal Air Force aviators
it) equipping tile plant. an
wreaking terrifie dam-
are millionaire both able men
Congress rushed through a spo-
Oerman gasofine plants
But Hanes A director or ene
CA) appropriation of $43,500.000
factories. The claim-
Glenn Martin Attoraft Corpora-
to pay for the order.
Then Peru reneged dr. IDA
Cleiman plants is greater
Non, looks A.C. taxes mois from
Brink end of the order and
mately Only trouble
the businessman 5 viewpoint
the affer was made to Packard
British don't have
while Morgenthau looks at taxin
which immediately raised the
Blany planes AA the
Com the viewpoint of collection
question of tas amortization. In
in perform bombing
money to run the Government
other zuro Packard said that
kind.
If they mare to enlarge these
in British bombing
Therefore, Morgenthau soin
plant they didn't want LO have
the 420 va 12
Receivelt that he world secure
to pay taxes on It after the
British hember
capacity:
enough factory expansion from
receipts was over
lbe airplane companies. but =
This WAS agreeable to the
now but not
Treasury and the White House.
staid of taking is out of govern-
But abdut this time the Treas-
ment tax revenue, he would
ury and the congressional com-
make the French and Bruish
matters opsidering new taxes
struggle
pay for it He pointed out time
proposed a limit of 6 per cent
Bastomal
defense
gradit on all Army orders This
the Allies were placins isrge
the same profit limitation
the
all-
suplane orders. and that they
enforced OR Navy orders under
restain
manu-
ouid pay American factories a
the Vinson Trammell Act, which
adjusted
eight price E ordes to finance
was Inserted in the 1935 naval
los
most
hill through an amendment
plans enlargement and pow
by Senator Tobey of New
III
the
millibe todis.
Hampshire However, the Army
This assed a cood to
escaped any profit restriction
DES Its contracts except for atr
planes on shink manufacturer
CACE make a profit of 13 per
and
Regraded Unclassified
94
BRITISK EMBASSY,
WASHINGTON, D.C.
September 19th, 1940
PERSONAL AND
SECRET
Dear Mr. Secretary,
I enclose herein for your
personal and secret information 8 copy
of the latest report received from
London on the military situation.
Believe me,
Dear Mr. Secretary,
Very sincerely yours,
Loluzan
The Honourable
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
United States Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
95
Telegram from London dated
September 19th, 1940
Royal Air Force
During September 17th Blenheim aircreft
attacked cargo boats at Zeebrugge and barges at Detend,
Antworp, and stelburg.
During September 17th/18th, 208 aircraft
attacked barges and shipping in French, Belgian, Dutch
and German porto, end reilway marshalling yards. Mine
laying WGB also carried out. 2 aircreft missing.
2. German Air Force
Considering widespread nature of attacks on
London during the night of September 16th/17th,
comperatively little major damage was done. several
railway stations and lines were damaged, but not in e
manner to affect main line traffic which is now normal from
many termini. Some damage was done to electric power
stations, but this is not serious. There were no
cosualties in hospitals reported damaged in my telegram of
September 17th. Certain main roads in London were blocked
and treffic has been temporarily diverted. Preliminary
reports indicate that 20 to 30 were killed and 250 to 350
injured, but these figures my be increased when final
reports are received. Blight damage and no casualties
are reported from l'idlands, except Coventry where 14
people were killed and 21 seriously injured. House
property damagetat Liverpool and one person killed and 9
injured.
The/
Regraded Unclassified
go
96
+
The principal energ activity yesterday was
attack by approximately 300 circraft during the afternoon.
Leading 110 sirereft reached Maldetone, reminder
spreading out over Rest Xent. Our fighters obtained
interceptions before the energy aircraft withdrew, and
Themes Natuery was not crossed. Single enemy aircraft
sttacked many places in South Hast England and Portemouth
but only alight damage end for casualties resulted.
Lest night London was frequently bosbed, and
in the provinces chief areas of attack were Liverpool,
South Wales and Glasgow. Extensive use was made of
incendiary bombs. what are believed to be magnetic mines
were dropped in London suburbs end at Tunbridge Wells.
Some fires caused in London dooks but no serious damage
resulted. Southern Reilway again suffered damage, but
not to sein lines. Large number of fires reported in London
area, but all are under control. Pigures of casualties
not yet available. In Liverpool property was damaged and
24 fires started. Dock in Glesgow damaged by fire.
Incendiary bombs dropped at Stranges - no serious damage.
Bombing caused considerable damage to house property in
Exeter.
3. Summary of air casualties.
Enemy by day
Destroyed probable damaged
by fighters
benber
1
-
1
fighters
4
4
1
by anti-aircreft fire
fighters
2
by night
by fighters
bomber
3
-
by anti-airoroft fire
unknown
2
-
-
Totals
20
4
2
British/
Regraded Unclassified
97
97
-30
British: 5 aircraft (1 pilot killed or missing).
be shipping
Casualties. One british ship (5,300 tons) ank by
torpedo on September 14th while honeward bound.
Convoy of 39 ships, including 19 Allied and 3
neutrel, has crrived in home waters. Cargoes include
8 of pit-props, 15 of lumber, and 8 of steel.
5. Hiddle East
Italian advance from Libya reported to be led
by 2 motorized metropolitan divisions extended between
Sidi Barrani and Sollum, while Libyan division 10
dispersed between sidi Come and Helfaye repering
defensive positions.
On September 16th Blenheims attacked
mechanical transport concentrations East of Buq-Duq,
and fleet air arm aircrart made successful attack on
shipping in Derna herbour. Hangere and aircraft also
destroyed by British air attack on Benina nerodrome.
Sudan. Our positions at Bone and Gallebat bombed.
September 15th. No casualties.
Situation on Kenya front reported all quiet.
5, Projected setion against the United Kingdom.
There is no material change in the situation
regarding invasion.
Regraded Unclassified
98
BRITISH EMBASSY,
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Personal & Secret
September 20th, 1940.
Dear Mr. Secretary,
I enclose herein for your personal
and secret information a copy of a supplementary
resumé from London for the period September 5th
to 12th.
Believe me,
Dear Mr. Secretary,
Very sincerely yours,
L Arron
The Honourable
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
United States Treasury,
Washington, D.C.
99
Telegram from London dated September 18th.
The following to a supplementary
resumé of operational events covering the
period September 5th to September 12th.
1.
Naval.
German attack on London docks has
caused appreciable casualties to merchant vessels
Sinkings by U-boat have decreased.
Reports of raiders in the South Atlantic and
Indian Ocean have been received.
There has been a very marked movement
of enemy merchant ships and barges westward
along the southern shores of the North Bea and
the English Channel.
Our light forces have been earrying
out sweeps off the French, Belgien, and Dutch
coasts, during which they have encountered and
sunk several enemy vessels.
Sweeps have also been carried out
towards Iceland and the Norwegien coast by heavy
forces, but, spart from a few merchant veasels
near the coast, nothing was encountered.
2.
Military.
In Itelian Sast Africa there are
indications that an attack may soon be launched
against the Sudan along Asmara-Kassala axis.
This/
Regraded Unclassified
100
this offermive may be accompanied by a thrust
continuer& towards Kenya, although no abnormel
troop concentrations have yet been reported in
this region.
there 10 further evidence in Italy
of & lack of enthusiam for the war) of a desire
to preserve intact as long as possible the Italian
areed forces in the hope that German offensive
against Great Britein will bring victory at
little cost in Italian blood and of serious
effects on the morale and industry of R.A.F.
attacks on Northern Italy.
3.
Royal Air Force.
Our bombing operations against
Germany were on a similar scale to those of the
previous week, but, in addition to continuing
our offensive against the usual targets, a
considerable sugmentation of series of attacks
vas directed against concentrations of barges
and shipping along the coaste of France and
Holland. A number of varied targets in Berlin
were bombed with satisfactory results. Attacks
against Italy were restricted to a night raid on
Turin.
The enemy's tactics at first consisted
of reserve and unsucceseful attempts to break
drum our fighter defense by further attacks on
British serodromes. Later G. now phase developed
and attacks were directed with the object of
disrupting communications and creating chaos in
Loadon dock area. & third phase followed which
comed to have M its aim the demoralisation
of/
Regraded Unclassified
101
of the civilism population by indicoriminate
night bouhing. Although general demage has
been considerable no serious dislocation of
the country's war effort was caused.
It is satisfactory to note that in
spite of the enemy's attacks on our aerodromes
no aircraft were lost on the ground during this
period.
Our aircraft successfully attacked a
number of enemy aerodromes on Libyan
In East Africa several Italian aircraft were
destroyed or damaged on the ground by bombers
of the South African Air Force.
The most destructive raid took place
on the afternoon of September 7th against London
dooks area by about 250 aircraft, and continued
throughout the night. Bombing was accurate and
considerable damage resulted. Righty of the
ensay were destroyed by our fighters, and large
seale deylight attacks were not repeated until
the 11th, when equally heavy losses were sustained
w the attackers, this time without any 002-
peneating success. A feature of the enemy's
daylight attacks has been the very heavy fighter
protection provided for his bombers.
led
Regraded Unclassified
102
4a
German Air Force.
The dispositions of the German Air
Force remain substantially unchanged. The
two long range bomber formations from Norway
are now stationed in Belgium. The short range
dive bomber force, which was withdrawn from
operations against this country on August 18th,
has not been concentrated in the Calais area.
The examination of over 100 prisoners
shows that the morale of the German Air Force
is still high. This is specially 80 amonget
fighter pilots - high morale of heavy bomber
crews being not quite so outstanding. A report
by a medical officer says however that many of
the prisoners show signs of nervous exhaustion.
There is no apparent shortage of trained pilote.
Italy.
The 200 Italian pilots who were
undergoing dive bombing instruction in Germany
were recalled to Italy before the completion of
their training. The reason for this curtailment
was stated to be that the physique of the
Italians was unequal to the strain.
5.
Switzerland.
There is reason to believe that the
Swime Government under German and Italian pressure
may be forced to take more serious measures to
secure interceptuon of belligerent aircraft.
It 10 reported that an order has been given to
station anti-aireraft batteries high in the
Swice mountains.
60/
Regraded Unclassified
103
6.
Home Security.
Damage caused by enemy bombing has
been regularly reported in daily telegrams during
the week as it occurred.
Nearly all of those factories in
Birmingham and Coventry, which in the last few
weeks have sustained demage, are now on full
production.
None of the damage caused to electric
power stations has caused more than a temporary
failure of electric light or power; but a large
area of East London has been out off from gas
supplies for at least a week, owing to damage
caused at a gas works.
Casualties for the week ended September
11th were 1,211 killed and 5,547 wounded. These
figures include 976 killed and 4,149 injured in
the London area.
Unexploded Bombs.
Arrangements have been made not only to
strengthen bombs disposal sections, but to add
to them a number of trained men, who can carry
out reconnaissance of the site of reported
unexploded bombs. It is hoped that this procedure
will save a considerable waste of effort on the
part of the sections themselves, who are frequently
called to places unnecessarily.
Although/
Regraded Unclassified
104
Although there have been many casse
of direct hits and near mines on shelters of
all types, public confidence in them remains
high, Large number of people take their beds
to a public shelter every night.
One shelter had a direct hit while
some thousand people were inside, 162 casualties
resulted, whereas of 600 refugees in a school
which was hit in West Ham over 200 people were
killed and many more severely injured.
The civil defence services have been
very heavily engaged and have endured long hours
of very heavy duty with efficiency and cheerful-
ness. Remarkable examples of skill and determina-
tion have been reported from all services, and
in at least one area they have been officially
thanked for their work by a deputation of members
of the public.
7+
Operational Aircraft Casualties.
British
In the Air
On the ground
Bombers
25
-
Fighters
114
-
Coastal
4
-
Total
143
-
At least 69 of the fighter pilots are
known to be safe.
Destroyed
Probable
Damaged
Bombers
114
51
62
Fighters
153
44
51
Missellaneous 32
2
21
Total
299
97
154
N.B./
Regraded Unclassified
105
1,4
Included in the above are 15 destroyed,
2 probable and 10 damaged by anti-aireraft fire.
No account is taken of German aircraft destroyed
on the ground.
Middle Rast.
British
In the air On the ground
3
-
Italian
Destroyed
Probable
Damaged.
17
11
14
8.
No. 1 Canadian Squadron Hurricanes
has been in action on most days during the
period September 1st to 15th. This squadron has
destroyed 8 enemy aircr ft (and probably a further
6) and damaged 16 others. During this period
the squadron has lost 11 aircraft, 4 of the
pilots of which were killed.
During the same period the Natal
Squadron (Spitfires) has also been heavily
engaged. They have destroyed 26 enemy aircraft
and probably a further 15, while they have
damaged 16 others. During these engagements
they lost 8 aircraft, although some of the pilote
were saved.
Regraded Unclassified
108
September 19, 1940
MEMORANDUM
To: The Secretary
From: Mr. Young
Re: Possible Increase in Production Rate
of Sperry Bomb Sights.
At the present time Sperry Gyroscope Company
has an order for 100 Sperry 0-1 bomb sights for the
Air Corps. These will be produced at a rate of 20
per month and 15 have been delivered already. The
Air Corps has planned to start production on a
slightly improved bomb sight (Sperry F-1) in April
thus losing any advantage which might be secured
in price and in quantity by increasing the rate of
production of the 0-1 bomb sight now being delivered.
If Sperry could secure an order of 1,000 of
these 0-1 bomb sights, 500 for the Air Corps and 500
for the British, the production rate would be increased
to 100 per month in approximately six months and the
cost would be cut by 30 to 40 percent. The additional
expense necessary to bring about this increased rate
of production would be relatively negligible and
represented solely by some additional tooling.
P4.
107
September 19, 1940
MEMORANDUM
To: The Secretary
From: Mr. Young
Re: Increase in P-40 Production.
The production rate of Curtiss P-40's will be
stepped up by 33% because the Advisory Commission,
the Air Corps and the British Purchasing Commission
have agreed to build this one type for a definite
period and so take advantage of mass production
methods. Specifically, the production rate of increase
is from 6 planes per day to 8 per day, or from 132 per
month to 176 per month. The approximate cost of this
production increase is only $190,000 ($150,000 for
tooling and $40,000 for building) as against the
initial cost value of the plant of $6,200,000.
This specific instance of the P-40 demonstrates
how the production rate can be increased from 20 to
40% at little additional cost where there is a sufficiently
large order for a standardized product over a period of
time long enough to take advantage of modern production
methods.
Py.
108
September 19, 1940
4:00 p.m,
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Mr. Purvis.
Arthur
Purvis:
Hello. Good afternoon, Henry.
H.M.Jr:
Hello, Arthur.
P:
Yes, Henry.
H.M.Jr:
Where are you?
P:
I'm over with Mr. Vance for a few minutes on
machine tools.
H.M.Jr:
Oh.
P:
I'd like to see you too - could I? Would
ten minutes from now be all right? We're in
rather an important meeting on that machine
tool .....
H.M.Jr:
No. I can't do it just now, I just wanted to
tell you that the mission I undertook which I
told you I was going to
.....
P:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
You've heard about it?
P:
No, but you told me you were going to.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I met with even more favorable reception
than I possibly could have hoped for.
P:
Oh, really.
H.M.Jr:
Yes. And if you think that that word would
be encouraging .....
P:
I think it would be, very.
H.M.Jr:
I think you might send that along.
109
- 2
P:
Can I translate it into any practical issue.
H.M.Jr:
No, I think we'll have to wait. They hope to
get it down in black and white and get his
formal okay on it by the middle of next week.
P:
By the middle of next week.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
P:
But it might be better than one-for-one, do
you think?
H.M.Jr:
Pardon?
P:
Do you think it might be better than one-for-one?
H.M.Jr:
No, just what I said yesterday.
P:
Just what you said.
H.M.Jr:
No, but through until the first of July.
P:
Uh-huh. Oh, yes, I mean, that could be very
valuable.
H.M.Jr:
Oh, yes. You saw the figures.
P:
Yes. Oh, yes, I think that's simply wonderful.
H.M.Jr:
Right. No, I think that you'd better go through
with your machine tool thing and if you're in
town tomorrow and still want to see me why
maybe we can fix it up.
P:
I think I'll stay over in the hope of having a
word with you tomorrow because I think I'd like
to sit down and ask your - just advice on the
other question of the financing thing - just
to sit with you for three or four minutes and
get your central thought.
H.M.Jr:
Oh, that's fine. Are you going to stay over
Just for that?
P:
I think I shall stay over just for that.
H.M.Jr:
Good heavens!
110
- 3- -
P:
Well, after all, these are the important
things.
H.M.Jr:
Well, will you call up McKay in the morning?
P:
I will.
H.M.Jr:
Right.
P:
Thank you very much.
H.M.Jr:
Good-bye.
P:
Good-bye.
111
H
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE September 20, 1940
TO
Secretary Morgenthan
FROM Mr. Cochran
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
At the Staff meeting yesterday forenoon I brought up. the question posed to me
on the preceding day by Mr. Lochhead in regard to Chinese contracts for powder in the
United States. The Secretary told me that this powder should go to the British and
that I should, with the assistance of Mr. Philip Young, work toward such an arrange-
ment between Mr. Lochhead and the British.
After coming out from the meeting I telephoned Mr. Lochhead in New York. I
told him that I had spoken with Mr. Adams of the Far Eastern Division of the State
Department the preceding evening. Mr. Adams had called ne back this morning. stating
that he had discussed the matter with Dr. Hornbeck and Mr. Hamilton of the Department
of State, and also with Mr. Green of that Department. There was no objection on the
part of the Department of State to the Chinese obtaining storage facilities from
Government departments in this country. The State Department was, in fact, desirous
of rendering any appropriate assistance to the Chinese. With this in mind, the
tate Department had talked with Colonel Burns of the Ordnance Department of the
Aray. The latter had stated that if the powder contracted for by the Chinese is of
suitable gramulation, the United States Army would be willing to take this over and
then repay the Chinese with a similar amount at such time as the Chinese may desire
delivery.
I also told Mr. Lochhead of the Secretary's views on this proposition. Lochhead
stated that there were plenty of opportunities to sell the powder, but that China
was particularly interested in having the facility for imediate delivery of a
similar amount of powder whenever shipment into Chine may be feasible. Ee promised
to talk over the question further with his associates, and to get directly in touch
with Mr. Young whenever their study in New York is completed.
At 10:15 this morning Mr. Young telephoned to ask no if I bed heard from
Mr. Lochhead. I replied that I had spoken with Mr. Lochhead yesterday after the
meeting, and that it vas my understanding that Mr. Lochhead would call Mr. Young as
soon as he was ready to talk on the matter. Mr. Young told ne that Mr. Purvis was
in his office, and had shown him a memorandum of the Chinese powder situation, giving
details along the same lines of those which Mr. Lochhead had provided me. In
response to my inquiry. Mr. Young stated that the duPont people had given this infor-
nation to Mr. Purvis. Mr. Young stated that Mr. Purvis thought an arrangement could
be made whereby the British, if permitted to take over the Chinese powder deliveries
now, would allot from their own deliveries such repayment as and when the Chinese
desired.
After this conversation, I again telephoned Mr. Lochhead and reported that
Mr. Purvis vas here, with full information on the Chinese powder contracts. and
Regraded Unclassified
112
- 2 -
interested in making some sort of a deal. Lochhead stated that his people had not
yet taken a decision, but that he would get in touch with Mr. Young as soon as
practicable, with the possible view to a meeting with Mr. Purvis or one of his
assistants. Lochhead still has certain reservations about selling to the British,
especially considering the fact that it is the British blocking of the Burma Road
which makes impossible the delivery of this powder to the Chinese. I told
Mr. Young of this last conversation with Mr. Lochhead.
jush
113
September 20, 1940
9:00 a.m.
HM Jr: I am a little under pressure this morning so
I will let you talk.
Purvis: Fine. I won't bring anything - the first thing
I wanted to ask your advice on was this RFC situation. We have
now got them with a couple of letters which I think put the is-
sue on the real basis; namely, that U.S. defense needs are 20
per day, and whereas the appropriation only enables them to
order 10 per day, and we, of course have the advantage that if
our order goes in - the U.S. has the advantage that skilled
labor and executive talent is trained on a larger basis, and
they don't lose but are taking the products in the meantime.
That has been put crystal clear to the RFC, and we are terribly
anxious to get this patent established even if it is only this
once. And, of course, it all depends now as to what is the
way to crystallize it with the RFC. I have hesitated to go
to them because both Young and myself feel, I think, that
to go over there introduces and emphasizes too much the British
angle to the situation which Jesse Jones does not want in the
picture. He has said and Schram has said in a meeting that
if it is a fact that the Army and the Defense Advisory Com-
mission want a capacity of 20 per day as being essential to U.S.
defense needs they would go ahead and do the thing. Now he
said that to me you see in a way, but I know he was rather
sheering off for the time being. Nevertheless to hold up the
defense program, because that is what it comes to almost, must
be 8. rather difficult thing from his view, and it was just a
question of how it could be brought home to him.
HM Jr: What do you think, Phil?
Young: I think if it does not jell this week I don't
know when it will, and it is ready for the final pushover the
top. I think this is the strategic time to have it done
because if it is not done in this instance I don't know when
it ever will be.
Regraded Unclassified
114
- 2 -
HM Jr: Why don't you do this, Phil - there are so
many personalities in this thing - go over and see Schram and
say now look, the English Purchasing Mission are on your neck;
when can we get an answer; what if anything can they do to
accelerate it? Ask Schram, "Will you, Schram, advise Phil
Young what to do?" See? I think I would try that this morning.
Young: No, I don't think it will do any good. Schram
is going to talk to Jones this morning, I know, on that.
HM Jr: Didn't Schram tell you?
Young: He told me the other day he couldn't do anything
except present it to Jones which he is doing.
HM Jr: Well, Jones is coming in this morning. Supposing
I ask him point blank?
Purvis: For it is on the basis of U.S. defense needs
with the British not there at all.
HM Jr: The last time I talked to him they were waiting
for something from you.
Purvis: We have given him two letters. We haven't, but
both the Defense Advisory and the Army have given him specific
four-line bald letters that this is required essentially for
U.S. defense.
HM Jr: This is just the Continental thing?
Purvis: Yes, but it is the patent for the whole thing.
HM Jr: Supposing I call him up on the phone and ask
him?
Purvis: I think it is a good idea because it is based
purely on U.S. defense. We can keep the British end out.
Regraded Unclassified
115
- 3 -
Young: It has nothing to do with the British.
Purvis: It is really on the U.S. basis now.
HM Jr: This is the Continental engine?
Young: Yes.
Purvis: Yes. They have gone so far - I mean the Army
has burned its boats completely and with full approval of
Patterson and Stimson.
HM Jr: Supposing I do it another way? Supposing I ask
Stimson to ask Jones?
Young: I thought of that yesterday and almost suggested
it to him last night. I think that's much better. If Stimson
would call Jones and say, "I told you I wanted a production
capacity of 20 tanks a day."
Purvis: "What are you going to do about it?"
HM Jr: I think that's better.
Young: And remember - - Stimson called in Patterson to
write the letter, and Stimson is going to be after you to follow
this through because Stimson brought in Patterson to get the
letter written, and Patterson got Gen. Harris and Colonel Lewis
very enthusiastic about it.
(At this point HM Jr tried to reach Secretary Stimson
on the phone but he was not available.)
HM Jr: I think that's the best way.
Young: The stage is completely set.
Purvis: The job has been done well.
116
- 4 -
HM Jr: Do you (Young) think that's the best way?
Young: Yes. If you can get Mr. Stimson to call up
Jesse Jones and say, "Look here" - and say nothing about the
British
Purvis: That's the point.
Young: ... "I want my tank engines."
Purvis: And that fits in with what Mr. Jones said to
me, "If they come to me at the top and don't get it too far
down and put it on that basis, I am prepared to do it."
HM Jr: Is that what you had in mind?
Purvis: That was the chief thing. The other thing Mr.
Jones would probably say he is waiting on the British. That is
not so on this purely national defense basis.
HM Jr: If that is 80 then I would say to Stimson that
if they say they are waiting on the British, could he suggest
to Jones that Jones send for Purvis at once?
Young: No.
HM Jr: Why not?
Young: Because that brings the British into the picture
and you don't want them in the picture.
Purvis: Could you in that case get Patterson to work
it with Young? Put them together on it.
HM Jr: I will just ask Stimson to get the low-down on
it and see if he could push the thing through, and if there is
anything I can do let me know.
Purvis: I think this is very vital because with that
patent established we have something which I think could be
used as 8 spearhead of a very important move.
Regraded Unclassified
117
- 5 -
HM Jr: I think the thing to do is to do it through
Stimson.
Purvis: I suppose the President himself would not take
a part just now.
HM Jr: No.
Young: Did Jones talk to the President?
HM Jr: I don't know. Anything else?
Purvis: The only other thing is whether you had any
particulars you could give me in a general way 80 I could indi-
cate what it might mean
...
HM Jr: No. I don't want to make the mistake - I never
have - of making any half-forecasts and then disappointing you.
Purvis: No. Quite.
HM Jr: But what I am going after for your information ...
Purvis: Quite.
HM Jr:
...
is wherever the Army has an excess - not
excess - has deliveries in excess of what you people are getting
between now and the first of July on fighting planes ...
Purvis: Fighting planes?
HM Jr: I am going to go for everyother one ...
Purvis: And it looks as if it might happen?
HM Jr:
...
on every manufacturer, and where it is nec-
essary to supplement the orders, I'm going to make 8. commitment
on your behalf.
Purvis: Yes. Quite.
Regraded Unclassified
118
- 6 -
HM Jr: You can always throw me down.
Purvis: We have not been in the habit of doing that
very strongly.
HM Jr: I am going after - and I will give you 8. little
indication - I have a memo here where they have worked out
on the PBY 5s - it's all worked out but it only went for 50.
I said, "That's very nice but it's no good." What do you
mean?" I want to do it to the first of July. This only ran
through April.
Purvis: Yes. I see.
HM Jr: So I said, "Run it through to the first of July."
Purvis: Yes. I see.
HM Jr: What I am crowding for is that the Army and Navy
have this thing so they can put it on the President's desk
the middle of the week so he can say yes or no, and I think
he is going to say yes. And I haven't figured it up but it
ought to be good for 500 or a thousand battle planes between
now and the first of July. And with this thing - these are
all bombers - should go the new bombsight, but I am meeting -
both Patterson and Forrestal are coming at 10:30 this morning -
on this. I haven't lost any ground. I have got my clearance
from the President, but I think it is much better to play it
down.
Purvis: I think that's right.
HM Jr: Play it down and be able to say, "Now, we have
got this, particularly in view of this whole destroyer mess.
Purvis: By the way, I have got Lothian to hold off any-
thing except those four items which originally came in, and he
has written his letter to Secretary Hull along the lines of what
his understanding was from the President in regard to those four
items, and he has cleaned out the balance.
Regraded Unclassified
119
- 7 -
HM Jr: And another thing by not sending messages on
this it won't mix the two deals up. No ground is lost. I am
pushing for all I am worth. You are not losing anything, and
if another message came that might mix the two things up.
Purvis: Could very easily happen.
HM Jr: So I think you have everything to gain. And
if you would make a mental note - for Heaven's sake, whoever
is handling publicity - on the radio this morning - - you don't
want the Nile to ask for any submarines for the next day or two.
Purvis: Is there something?
HM Jr: I have heard of it. But I think what happens -
Louis Beal feeds this stuff to the White Committee and the
White Committee gets it
...
Purvis: Submarines is an entirely new thing.
HM Jr: Anything in the next few days, I think if they
just lay off.
Purvis: Yes.
HM Jr: And I sent word to the White Committee, "For
Heaven's sake, lay off," because I gather somebody is pushing
on the old flying fortresses.
Purvis: Which frankly I think is a great mistake.
HM Jr: You don't want it if you can get this stuff,
80 put a bee in somebody, "For Heaven's sake, pipe down."
Purvis: Absurd. I must see. I don't know about that
or where it is coming from.
HM Jr: I imagine Beal is using this other committee as
a front. Ike Bergen - - whatever his name is of the White Com-
mittee ...
Regraded Unclassified
120
- 8 -
Purvis: I have never met any of them. If there is
anything coming out of ours, we will stop it.
HM Jr: Because I don't want - the other thing - are
you catching a plane?
Purvis: No. No.
HM Jr: The other thing - I am not saying anything to
them at this time about any training planes.
Purvis: No.
HM Jr: See? But over the weekend and not later than
Monday have in my hands - I say Monday, if I could have it
Monday afternoon - what your minimum needs are on training
planes from now until the first of July.
Purvis: Yes.
HM Jr: Because if you could squeeze out some - I'm
not saying anything to anybody about this - but if you could
squeeze some out between now and the first of July, it would
leave a much better taste.
Purvis: Quite.
HM Jr: Because I had Knudsen last night and Knudsen
said, "Well, you know you need not sell me on anything for the
British. They can have it all as far as I am concerned." But
he said, "What we need is training planes." If it is something
you could squeeze out ...
Purvis: On the training end?
HM Jr: If you could squeeze out something on the train-
ing planes and say, "We are doing the fighting and you are doing
the training," it would leave a much sweeter taste.
Purvis: I can see that.
Dearaded
121
- 9 -
HM Jr: Tell them to take all the padding out and get
down to bed-rock - what's the minimum they could get along
with between now and the first of July? And you could say
in view of what is coming you could forego this if there is
something. It would make a much better aftermath.
Purvis: It is a good approach if we can do it.
HM Jr: Say to the fellows in Canada who have the train-
ing program, "Look, boys, no kidding. You have so many on
order and this is what you want. What do you really need?"
One of the things - - I don't know if it is at all practical - -
if they bring these fellows down to train them in these commer-
cial schools, haven't these commercial schools got planes?
Purvis: I don't believe 80. We are always up against
the need for advanced trainers.
HM Jr: You have sufficient confidence in me so I can
put it in my vest pocket so at the right moment I could say,
"Look, gentlemen, in view of what you have done
...
Purvis: Yes.
HM Jr:
"
I am going to do this," but I will only
do it as a last resort.
Purvis: Quite. Fine.
I don't want to bother you about anything else. I have
one or two minor things but I won't bother you.
I am terribly anxious about this RFC thing. That weighs
on my mind.
122
Persphrase of Code Radiogram
Received at the Har Department
at 8:40 A.M., September 20, 1940
CONFIDENTIAL
Chungling, filed 05115, September 20, 1940.
Japanese expected shortly to enter Inde-China according
to the American Consul at Hanoi. Informed opinion here is that
there will be little if any French resistance. While Chinese
military headquarters has restated the Chinese intention to enter
Indo-China regardless of French action, the recent destruction
by the Chinese of the railroad bridge spanning the Red River at
Laokay (en the border) and their reported intention to destroy
the southern 70 kilomsters of the rail line through Tunnan prov-
ince cause most observers here to think that Chinese action will
probably be confined to taking up positions along the border, with
possible limited penstrations at some points.
Chinese military leaders feel that Admiral Decoux and
the Vichy Government have both been attempting to mutually shift
responsibility for the French decision. They likewise state that
they (the Chinese) have from the beginning expected the French
to eventually capitulate.
BARRETT
Distribution:
Aide to the President
Secretary of War
State Department
Secretary of Treasury
Asst. Secretary of War
Chief of Staff
War Plans Division
Office of Naval Intelligence
CONFIDENTIAL
Regraded Unclassified
123
September 20, 1940
9:00 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Coerator:
Drew Pearson.
R.K.Jr:
Hello.
Drew
Good morning, sir.
Feareon:
E.K.Jr:
Hello, Drew.
is
Sorry to bother you. I wanted to warn you
that my - our friend Bob Doughton is on the
warpath and I think he's coming down to see
you.
H.M.Jr:
Well, this is what I know about it. I told
Johnny Sullivan to keep his shirt on yesterday
and do nothing, which he did.
P:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
Yesterday afternoon publicly Doughton was very
affable. Then after the meeting he again got
hold of Sullivan and gave him hell and he is
demanding to seo me, SQ in B little while I
was going to call him up on the phone and find
out what it was all about, see.
is
Yeah.
H.R.Jr:
But my attitude 16 - well, I'm not responsible
for what you fellows write.
#:
Well, absolutely, or you would have changed
some of the thinge we wrote about you.
H.K.Jr:
And how often.
P:
(Laughs).
H.h.Jr:
As a matter of fact, I can't remember whether
I did or didn't tell you about this president
of the tobacco company.
Regraded Unclassified
124
2
P:
Well, you gave me a tip on it but naturally
I haven't divulged that to anyone. He called
me up and raised hell first with me and then
he said, well, where did this come from - the
Treasury? And I said Congressman you know that
I can't divulge any sources as to where I get
stories and as a matter of fact, I said, the
Treasury in the past has always been singing
your praises, said you were cooperating very
excellently with them. I said, I don't think
they feel quite the same way about you this
time but I said they didn't inspire this story
if that's what you mean.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah. I appreciate your calling me up. He
also - I gathered that he hoped to see you.
P:
Well, I have an engagement with him at 12:30
this morning and I thought I'd try to soft-
soap him and calm him down, but he's threatening
to go on the floor of the House, which I don't
give a damn if he wants to do that, and
denounce us. That's all right, but I just
didn't want to get you into any trouble about
it because he's on the warpath against you.
H.M.Jr:
Well, we are right now in hot water on it,
but we've been there before and as far 86 the
tax bill is concerned, I've got a clear
conscience and I don't think that he has.
P:
Well, I don't think that he has either. I
told him - the nearest hint that I gave about
the story, I said, well, I'd talked to some
of the members of the Committee - your
Committee - and I indicated, I didn't exactly
say it, that that was the chief source of the
story.
H.M.Jr:
(Laughs). Good for you.
P:
But when he tried to pin me down on the
Treasury I said, well, I can't tell you anything
about that. I said the Treasury has been fine
in singing your praises in the past. I sort
of let it go at that.
125
- 3 -
H.M.Jr:
Well, did some of the members of the Committee
help you out?
P:
Well, we did 8. little - I didn't do it personally,
but we did a little checking up there and I
think Jere Cooper feels pretty much as the
story indicates.
H.M.Jr:
Well, the Committee is a big Committee, they're
26 members.
P:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I appreciate - we are in a hot spot,
and I gather he's angrier than he's ever been
before.
P:
Well, I may have to write something just to
kid him along and make him feel better. I'm
going to try to soft-soap him if I can. When
are you going to talk to him?
H.M.Jr:
I'm going to talk to him in the next fifteen
or twenty minutes. Foley and Sullivan are
coming in here.
P:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
I'm going to talk to him while they're here.
P:
All right, swell, and if anything happens that
I ought to know before 12:30, let me know.
H.M.Jr:
I'll have one of the boys call you. I may
not be able to do it myself.
P:
All right. Thanks ever BO much.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
126
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE September 20, 1940
TO Secretary Morgenthau
FROM Mr. Cochran
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
At 9:30 this morning Mr. Collado called no from the Department of State. He
inquired as to what information the Treasury Department was receiving in regard to
financial transactions with foreign countries which might be of interest in connec-
tion with our national defense. Collado was familiar with the reports of capital
movements which the Treasury requires from the Federal Reserve Banks.
I reminded Collado that the Treasury's Secret Service was not in the field of
gathering information of this type, which had been left to the F. B. I. I did tell
him, however, that through the Federal Reserve Bank in New York we are currently
receiving data with respect to important transactions carried out by the leading
banks in New York for Italian, German and Russian account. Furthermore, the 7. B. I.
gives us certain information on transactions of this character and has been re-
quested by us to amplify its reporting on international financial transactions.
Mr. Collado informed me that he was making this inquiry since the question was
up with a group in the Department of State as to whether some system should be
created for obtaining information of the type under reference for the benefit of
this Government. Collado thought the Treasury was the proper agency for assembling
such data. I confirmed that the Treasury was doing as much as it thought could
wisely be undertaken in the circumstances, but would endeavor to improve its system,
with the cooperation of the F. B. I. and the New York banks. To avoid duplication
and possible embarrasement to the Government, I suggested to Mr. Collado that no
new investigations should be started. I told him that such information as we
obtained would naturally be made available by us to the State Department if the
latter is interested. I stressed. however, the fact that the various reports reach-
ing us required a lot of sifting and analysing and that it would be of little use
to the State Department to give it the material as received. Mr. Collado agreed to
inform the State Department committee along the above lines and to keep in touch
with ne on the subject.
B.M.P.
127
September 20, 1940
9:40 a.m.
Secretary
Stimson:
on that kitty for South America -
you know - you know the project?
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
S:
Now apparently Pan America wants to
borrow money from Jesse first for the
first three months or after, and Jesse wants
me to write a letter virtually guarantee-
ing that out of the kitty - in case - that
it'll come out of that in case of any trouble
with Pan America. Well, now it seemed to me
all right as it all comes out of Uncle Sam
and it's just a question of whether it comes -
if there's any loss whether it comes out of
Uncle Sam's 12 million kitty or his R.F.C.
Now, I thought that Jesse WAB entitled to the
- he wants to keep it in the form of - which
would be regular under commercial banking
and I thought he was entitled to that, but
I don't know what your custom has been in
regard to that kitty. I ran into a block
from -- my Judge Advocate General presented
me with a block based, as I think, upon a
false premise, that I couldn't spend that
money from an appropriation - I couldn't make
the guarantee - but it isn't a War Department
appropriation. I retaliated by pointing out
that I was not speaking as Secretary of War;
I was speaking as the President's agent -
it was his money.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
S:
Now, has that come up before?
H.M.Jr:
No. It's something brand new.
S:
Well, do you think I'm right or wrong?
H.M.Jr:
I don't know. I'd have to have something &
little bit more. Would you want one of my
attorneys to go over there and take a look
at it?
128
- 2 -
B:
Well, I'll wait until I hear what my Judge
Advocate says to my retort.
H.M.Jr:
I see. Well, if you want any
.....
S:
I'll see.
H.M.Jr:
I wouldn't - I just don't know enough about
it.
S;
I mean, I don't know how - the principle -
I have a good opinion of Jesse, as I think we
all have, and I've been trying to help him
in his efforts to keep the R.F.C. on sound
banking principles.
H.M.Jr:
That's right.
S:
And as this 1s really - - in substance, this
16 really a payment by the U. S. from the kitty
for certain expenditures and Jesse comes in
simply as an interim banker and why he
shouldn't be allowed to shape up on that
H.K.Jr:
Well, I wouldn't know. Of course, my feeling -
1f you ask me my feeling on it
.....
3:
Yes, I do.
R.M.Jr:
as between the R.F.C. and a kitty of
.....
the regular appropriation, when this thing 1s
over it's all going to come out of the Treasury
anyway because If the R.F.C. has a loss, we've
got to make it up; if this fund 18 lost, we
have to make it up so it's six of one and
seven of the other and of course let Jesse
3:
We have to make it up. What do you mean?
R.M.Jr:
The Treasury. I mean, let's say
.....
3;
You mean you have to make it up out of texation.
H.M.Jr:
That's what I mean.
in
Well, that I understend, but I mean the kitty
fund was made for just these purposes.
129
- 3 -
H.M.Jr:
Well, from what you tell me and if it's legal
and it makes Jesse happy, I think I'd do 1t.
S:
Yes, that was my opinion.
H.M.Jr:
I think I'd do it.
S:
That was just my opinion. It seemed to me
that it didn't make a bit of difference as
far as Uncle Sam was concerned
H.M.Jr:
I don't think it does.
S:
..... and it kept Jesse's banking methods
above suspicion.
H.M.Jr:
And I know how he feels about those things.
No, I think from what you tell me I would be
inclined to go along with him.
S:
Well, that's what I thought.
H.M.Jr:
If after you've talked to him on this
Continental engine thing for these tanks
you could give me a word why I could pass it
on to Purvis
.....
S:
Well, I'll try to pass it on. I'll try to
do it, Henry.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you 80 much.
S:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
130
RE CENTRAL REPUBLIC TRUST COMPANY
September 20, 1940
10:00 a.m.
Present:
Mr. Helvering
Mr. Wenchel
Mr. Foley
H.M.Jr:
All right, let's go.
Helvering:
These cases all have arisen, a great many
of them, as a result of the legislation
passed in 1933, effective June 3 of 1933,
which divorced the trust affiliates from
national banks and caused them to dis-
associate themselves from the national
banks. Those were accomplished during the
latter part of 1936. A great many of these
banks had weak affiliates. In some of them,
the banks were weak and in some of them, they
were rearranged. That is what caused it.
Now we come up to the place where these
people commenced to adjust their taxes
in ¹³⁴ as a result of these various actions
taken. The Central Republic Bank of Chi-
cago was one of them among a great many
cases.
Foley:
That is the Dawes bank.
Helvering:
I would like to have Mr. Wenchel give you
the detail as to what happened there in
that bank. Go ahead.
H.M.Jr:
Go ahead. My time is limited today.
Wenchel:
I will make it very short.
The Central Republic Trust Company, andaffili-
ate - the Central Republic Trust Company went
sour and that left only the stock --
H.M.Jr:
Excuse me a minute. I have a telephone call.
(Unrecorded telephone conversation)
131
- 2 -
Wenchel:
That left the owners of the stock with just
the investment company, which was the affili-
ate. There never was any stock issued. It
was simply endorsed on the shares of the
bank stock and gave them a beneficial interest
in the investment trust. Then the owners
wanted to take the losses on the basis of
the stock bank.
We will take one particular case. They
wanted to deduct $300,000 for losses sus-
tained by reason of the bank stock going
sour, and then put a value of $38 on the
rest of it, and we said no, they couldn't
do that. You can't tell what the value is
until you have sold both. We lost the case
when we - the first case we tried, the Hager-
man Case. Then we tried another case, the
DeCoppet Case, and we won that. Then came
along a third case and we won that. However,
a number of people thought that we should
follow the Hagerman Case.
H.M.Jr:
Which you lost?
Wenchel:
Which we lost, and there is, of course, some-
thing to the argument that you can't differen-
tiate them. However, we think - that is, I
thought that under the DeCoppet decision the
language used was sufficient to overrule the
Hagerman Case if we ever got another case up
before the Supreme Court.
H.M.Jr:
Have you one now?
Wenchel:
Well, we won the DeCoppet Case in this way.
H.M.Jr:
What is that?
Foley:
That is the one that held you couldn't make
a severance and that you had to sell both
fully before you could determine the value
132
- 3 -
and establish 8 loss. We had conflicting
rulings of the Third Circuit in Philadelphia
and the Second Circuit in New York, and we
appealed from the decision in the Second
Circuit to the Supreme Court, and they won.
Certiorari was denied. This case, as I under-
stand it, is before the Board that Clark wants
to settle now, and there is also another case
involving the same shares of stock, or stock
in the same investment company, in the District
Court out in Chicago. So I don't see as we
can settle this case at all. I think we have
to let the Board decide, and if they want to
appeal from the Board's ruling, we will let
the case go on up. Otherwise, it seems to
me we will just have the administration of
the Bureau in a hodgepodge. We won't know
what to follow.
H.M.Jr:
What is this memorandum that Hanes refers to?
Helvering:
Well, I don't know whether you recall or not.
We were in and talked to you on that and you
told us to go out there and get together and
you told Sullivan to go with us and get to-
gether on this and work out something.
H.M.Jr:
Was Hanes here at that time?
Foley:
Yes, and Sullivan was still over in the Bureau.
H.M.Jr:
I couldn't remember.
Helvering:
Oh, you don't --
Foley:
I didn't remember that, either. I talked to
John last night and he said that at first he
agreed with Sullivan - or I mean, with Hanes,
and then when he talked with Philip afterwards,
Philip showed him that John was wrong, and he
agreed, after he talked with Philip, with Phil's
position, and he agrees now that we shouldn't
133
- 4 -
settle the Clark Case, and apparently John
Hanes had told the taxpayer that he would
have the thing settled, and he was quite
annoyed with Phil, Phil tells me now, and
I remember him mentioning it to me at the
time, because Phil refused to go along with
his interpretation of the law and what he
thought ought to be done.
Helvering:
Well, it was perfectly natural for Hanes to
tell this fellow that, because I made a recom-
mendation that we, in those cases where it
was clearly a divorcement, go ahead and settle
it. I sent this memorandum over here and
Hanes endorsed it, or I mean he signed it.
Wenchel:
Then the Commissioner talked to me and I
told him I thought it was wrong, and then
he told John that I said it was wrong, and
then another conference was called and it
was decided not to do anything about it.
H.M.Jr:
It was decided not to do anything?
Wenchel:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
Then your record is all right.
Helvering:
Hanes, though, had told this fellow that that
was all settled; he remembered signing the
memorandum. And Clark told him it wasn't
settled. So that is a --
Foley:
I think we have to let the case go to the
Board, Mr. Secretary, and let the Board
decide.
H.M.Jr:
Are you all in agreement on that.
Helvering:
Well, I have always looked at it like this:
Basically, these men had losses, there is
134
- 5 -
no question about that, and we were in a
way taking advantage of & technicality about
the losses; that is, he was not getting the
benefit of losses which he actually had,
but at the same time if we - we understand
now that the Department of Justice has a
case which they say they can absolutely over-
rule --
H.M.Jr:
Well, the point is, after this memorandum
came over and after Hanes signed it, there
was a subsequent meeting in which Philip
Wenchel --
Foley:
The lawyers wouldn't go along with the
administrative determination.
H.M.Jr:
Did you make a record of it?
Wenchel:
No, there was no record made.
Foley:
Well, you had & memorandum.
H.M.Jr:
Did you write any record in your office?
Wenchel:
That memorandum came afterward.
Foley:
After the meeting with Hanes?
Wenchel:
No, that was after the meeting with - in which
Hanes talked about the specific case, but not -
there was no memorandum made after this meeting
in Mr. Hanes' office where he and I had this
little difference. What really happened was
this, Mr. Secretary. The Commissioner said,
"Well, you heard what my lawyer tells me.
What can I do?" He said, "Well, I would fire
my lawyer."
H.M.Jr:
Who said that?
Helvering:
Hanes.
135
- 6 -
Wenchel:
To the Commissioner.
H.M.Jr:
Fire your lawyer?
Helvering:
You see, Hanes was really tromping on me
because I had agreed to do something. I
told him I had submitted it to my lawyer
and he said no. I said if that was the
case, what would I do. He said, "Well, I
would fire the lawyer."
H.M.Jr:
I don't see that this is such a difficult
problem. You fellows want to let this case
go to the Board of Tax Appeals.
Foley:
And let the Supreme Court decide.
H.M.Jr:
Let it go.
Foley:
If we don't do it, we are going to upset
a theory of law that the Department of
Justice is pursuing in a case involving
stock of the same affiliate, and there are
lots of these stockholders, Mr. Secretary,
holding shares of the same company that don't
want to take losses in '34. They want to
take their losses at the time they sell the
stock when their income is high, so you are
not going to satisfy all the people if you
follow what Mr. Clark wants.
Mr. Clark wants to take his loss in '34 be-
cause Mr. Dawes tore up a note of his for
$330,000 in '34. He wants to establish
this loss.
H.M.Jr:
Wouldn't you establish the principle every-
body has to go back?
Foley:
Everybody has to go back.
Regraded Unclassified
136
- 7 - -
H.M.Jr:
How many stockholders are there?
Wenchel:
169, I think.
Helvering:
In this particular bank, we have 8,000 cases
all over the country.
H.M.Jr:
I have always had a rule, when in doubt let
the Court decide.
Foley:
That is right, and if we don't, we wouldn't
have any theories --
H.M.Jr:
Meeting is adjourned.
137,
Reptember 20, 1940
Files
Mr. Cookres
AS 10:00 this noraing Mr. Enske told M by telephone that the Chase Beat bed
informed his that 11 was expecting 1,122,000 cunses of silver to arrive on the
American steamship President Adams, which is completing a world cruise. This
silver. consisting of coins etc., 10 being handled w the Shanghai and Beng Zong
Banking Corporation, but to suppesed to com from the Central Bank of Chisa. It
is to be melted w isto hars and then offered for sale is the United States.
Mr. Knoke to sending no a nonorandes on this subject.
30ml
HM0:1ap-9/20/40
138
September 20, 1940
Mr. Jones called to speak to the Secretary on
the phone at 10:28, but the Secretary was at a meeting.
When the meeting was over, HM, Jr asked Lieut.
McKay to call Mr. Jones and ask him if it could wait
until he came over to the Secretary's office for the
11:30 conference with the Russian Ambassador. The
answer from Mr. Jones office was yes.
Later, Mr. Jones office phoned again and said Mr.
Jones would like to come in at 11:25 in order to see the
Secretary alone before the conference with the Russian
Ambassador and the State Department representative, Mr.
Henderson, at 11:30. Following this call, Mr. Jones
office again phoned and said he was on his way to the
Secretary's office but would be a little late for the
11:30 meeting.
CONFIDENTIAL
MA.
139
Paraphrase of Code Radiogram
Received at the Var Department
at 10:46 A.K., September 20, 1940.
London, September 20, 1940.
During the night of September 19-30 the Nomber Command
of the Royal Air Force dispatched 53 planes against Channel parts
and railroads leading thereto, and to lay magnetic mines. Eight
planes of the Constal Command attacked shipping.
German daylight activities on the 19th were on a reduced
scale, with about 70 planes participating, mostly operating singly.
There were no major attacks.
London was attacked again during the night of the 19-20th,
with bombs falling in 39 different areas. Some streets are blocked
by unexpleded bombs or nines. Production in one munitions factory
vas partially, and in another entirely, stopped.
German plane lesses were six confirmed and one probable.
The British had no losses. Civilian casualties have not been reported,
but are probably small,
One 1,035 ton ship was sunk.
There has been no further advance in Libya. An increase
in the amount of shippingat Trondheim has been observed. The French
cruisers that passed into the Atlantic are being shadoved by British
varships.
The general situation remains unchanged.
LES
CONFIDENTIAL
Regraded Unclassified
CONFIDENTIAL
Distribution:
Aide to the President
Secretary of Var
State Department
Secretary of Treasury
Asst. Secretary of Var
Chief of Staff
Var Plans Division
Office of Naval Intelligence
CONFIDENTIAL
141
September 20, 1940
11:05 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Secretary Hull.
Cordell
Hull:
Hello, Henry.
H.M.Jr:
Hello, Cordell.
H:
Why, that Russian-Chinese matter yesterday,
I'd never heard of it before naturally and
I didn't have a minute's time to think. Now,
what we've got in mind here is to give you
anything we've got as sidelights and background
with reference to the whole Chinese loan -
their whole idea of helping China.
H.M.Jr:
Right.
H:
In the first place it's this Russian outfit -
I don't think you could depend on them a split
second to do anything for China more than what
they are doing or would be disposed to do any-
how. They are supposed to be even more
interested in helping her than we are and yet
in Welles' conversations they've tried to
strike up a bargain with him to allow a few
planes to fly over a little strip of Russian
territory to get into China.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
H:
It's that kind of a spirit that they've got.
Well, now on the question of getting away from
Brazil and others here that we do need to give
every attention to, and buying large
of manganese over there, to hire them in effect
to do what they are more interested and more
obligated to do than we, and when they are
utterly as unreliable as Jesse James -- now
that'e the -- then here's the other side now.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
142
- 2 -
H:
Suppose you people should - suppose we should -
the Government - let them have tungsten ore
to be paid for in tungsten and we give them
cash or credit facilities. They can buy any-
thing then they want in the way of munitions
or other things and have the fullest latitude.
In other words, we'd try to give them the
fullest encouragement. Now that doesn't
include the question that you had primarily
in mind and that's actual delivery of armaments.
H.M.Jr:
That's right.
H:
Well, now I have this morning 8. pretty strong
report from Grew at Tokyo to the effect that
the Japs have had & 3-hour conference with
the king - or whatever they call it - and they
have decided to go into an open alliance -
military defensive alliance they call it - with
Germany.
H.M.Jr:
I see,
H:
That's like Jesse James and Colt Young were
going into an alliance for self-defense. At
any rate that means that they are - that
Germany 18 probably telling the Vichy Government
to let Japan into Indo-China.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
H:
And so on and so on. Now, we want to go as
far as possible on a loan and on an iron
scrap embargo as quickly as Japan settles in
Indo-China, and it's a question of how far we
can go without running too much risk of a
military crash. Now this sort of a loan to
China would obviate that. They couldn't make
serious complaint about a purchasing loan
like we made before if the Chinamen are disposed.
So I thought - - there are some other phases
connected with the situation - but from the
standpoint of getting - of helping China
actually that we could very well - and from
avoiding possibly two brash acts with Japan
all at once - the iron scrap and everything -
embargo - and we might consider this other
method than the Russian method if you and the
President, after we talk a little further,
should .....
143
- 3 -
H.M.Jr:
Well, this Russian Ambassador is coming in
here at 11:30 this morning.
H:
Yes, I know and you can be sure that the
German Embassy and the Italian Embassy here
in Washington will know everything that takes
place between you and him in one hour. That's
what he's been doing with Welles' conversation.
H.M.Jr:
Well, there's one thing I don't understand
that Welles said. He called me up right
afterward about - I got the impression that
this trade treaty with Russia had not been
consummated and I see it was consummated on
August 6th.
H:
No, that was that annual arrangement we have
with them.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, and 80 there's nothing pending with
Russia.
H:
Nothing except that Welles has been having
two and three hour conversations at a time
on the whole situation between Russia and
the United States to see whether anything
could be finally worked out.
H.M.Jr:
Well, they couldn't have been very effective.
H:
No, I haven't - I wa.e away you know at
Havana and the Springs and BO on and I haven't
kept up with that.
H.M.Jr:
Well, Cordell, unless you tell me definitely
you object - this fellow will be here in twenty
minutes - and I thought I'á very diplomatically
just throw out a hint along the line that the
President asked me to.
H:
Well, that's your business. I'm just giving
you my views if they're worth anything to you.
H.M.Jr:
Well, they're worth a lot and I only wish that
you had said them yesterday at Cabinet.
H:
Well, if you had given me notice that you
were going to spring that thing
......
144
- 4
H.M.Jr:
Well, I couldn't give you notice because I
didn't know that you were going to bring it
up.
H:
You mean bring up the
......
H.M.Jr:
Doing something for China.
H:
Well, of course we've had that up at every
session nearly.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I brought this up
.....
H:
And that was something new as to the method.
I didn't have time to think it out, but
anyhow I Just wanted you to know that what
you say to him will be repeated by him to the
German Embassy and to ours.
H.M.Jr:
Well, it may make them think twice.
H:
Well, that's all right then.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I'll be just 8.8 careful as I know how.
Henderson is here and he can report back to
you what I said. I realize that it's a very,
very ticklish thing and if the President
hadn't specifically said to go ahead, I
wouldn't have dreamed of doing it.
H:
Yes. Well, of course, we are here trying to
help him from this angle and sometimes we see
something that's very patent, and we hold
it up until we can get to see him and that's
with you on that.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I'll try my best not to make it more
difficult and I hope that I can make it.
145
September 20, 1940
11:38 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Secretary Hull has a newspaper man with him
and he'd like to call you back.
H.M.Jr:
Well, let me talk to his - Gray.
Operator:
Gray? All right.
H.M.Jr:
Gray, is that his name?
Operator:
Mr. Gray.
Cecil
Gray:
Hello, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr:
Yes. Mr. Henderson, in charge of the Russian
desk of the State Department, was supposed to
be here at 11:30. He's not here. I wondered
if there was a change in the orders.
G:
I haven't heard & thing
.....
H.M.Jr:
Well, I wish you'd find out because - well,
it's very embarrassing to me that Mr. Henderson
isn't here. The appointment was made yesterday
and if he isn't going to be here, I think
that the least the State Department could
have done is to extend me the courtesy of
telling me he wasn't coming.
G:
I'll look into this matter immediately, sir.
H.M.Jr:
I mean, it seems I'm entitled to the courtesy
if Mr. Henderson has been ordered not to come.
G:
Yes, I feel that he must be on his way or
something, sir.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I'd like to know.
Regraded Unclassified
146
- 2 -
G:
I'll report right away, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr:
And let Mr. McKay know, please.
G:
I'll do it sir.
147
Sept. 20, 1940
11:40 a.m.
Mr. Gray phoned Lieut. McKay and told him
that Secretary Hull said he thought the meeting had
been or should be cancelled.
148
September 20, 1940
111 45 a. m.
Present:
The Russian Ambassador, Mr. Oumansky
Mr. Jesse Jones
Dr. White
HM.Jr: Mr. Ambassador, I am sorry to have de-
layed you.
Mr. Ambassador, Mr. Jones and I asked you to
00:00 down to 000 us because we have had an idea. You
most likely know Mr. T. V. Soong has been here for
some time on the question of getting a loan and in
the discussions which we have had -- as you most likely
know, with the money that we lend them they cannot buy
munitions -- and the suggestion 1s made that they could
get more help from Russia.
Mr. Jones: I said to him, "Suppose we don't do
this. Who's going to help you?
"Russia. The only people we can get. And they
can only help 80 much."
HM.Jr: Now, the thing that we had in mind
.....
Mr. Jones: I think he suggested, Henry, that"if
you people in buying your defense supplies could buy
more from Russia, more metals, manganese and some other
things that they have got to sell, they might be able to
do more for us" or something of that kind.
Ambassador: If the United States buys more man-
ganese from Russia?
Mr. Jones: That was his sug estion. I guess he
was floundering around looking for something. Probably
been talking to you about it?
Regraded Unclassified
149
+
Ambassador: I had several talks with Mr. T. V.
Soong, but not quite along this line and the suggestion
of an increase in South American trade was not advanced
by him.
Mr. Jones: South Americant
Ambassador: I mean Soviet-American trade. This
suggestion he did not advance.
Mr. Jones: The last time I saw him was two or
three days ago. Probably you have not seen him since
that.
Ambassador: No; I have not.
Mr. Jones: And he indicated -- maybe it was his
own idea; maybe he thought if we would do something
more in the way of the things we are doing already, buy-
ing these metals, accumulating for stock piles, which we
are doing on a large scale now and expect to continue to
do.
Ambassador: One thing I noticed with Mr. T. V.
Soong. 1 had several talks with him since he arrived
here. He has been in very friendly contact with me all
the time. I did notice his general worry, I would say,
and disappointment about the rather lamentable state of
affairs in Russian-American relations. He was very much
discouraged to nee our relations, far from getting better,
are getting worse between our two countries.
Mr. Jones: You mean our relations ....
Ambassador: Economic and political relations
between the United States and my country. And this, of
course, disappointed him very much. Exactly by the same
reasons you just mentioned.
Mr. Jones: Maybe he was acting in the role of
good Samaritan talking to m. Maybe he thought he could
do some good.
Ambassador: I think he has these intentions.
150
Mr. Jonest Yes. Undoubtedly.
Ambassador: And I understand his motives per-
fectly and they are very good notives, but of course
the reality in our relations right now is very gloomy.
This I want to make clear at once. And his approach
to this is that exactly along the lines you are talking,
that such a triangle requires good relations between
every two angles of that triangle. Our relations with
China are very close, very friendly. Your relations
with China are very close, very friendly. Sorry that
we cannot qualify in the same relations between my
country and your country. But that's a general remark.
HM.Jr: I understand, but I think we can both
make the assumption we are both friendly disposed to
China.
Ambacador: This is a common denominator which
does exist.
HM.Jr: I think 16 are both interested in peace
in the Pacific.
Ambasandor: Certainly!
HM.Jr: And with those two common denominators
and possibly in the interest of both of those worthy
causes, the question comes up of either manganese or
chromite, quicksilver, nica, things that we need and
things that you may or may not have a surplus of and
want to sell.
Mr. Jonest Are you helping Ohina a great deal
now?
Ambassador: Oh, yes!
Mr. Jones: What do you sell them?
Ambassador: Munitions.
151
Mr. Joness Munitions.
Ambassador: well, according to the information
which the same Dr. 7, v. Boong gave m, I don't think
they could have resisted as long as they do if they had
not had
....
Mr. Jones: .... your help.
Ambassedor: Yes; help. without wanting to
discourage any scheme of the kind you mention, I Just
think of a few factual questions I would like to
raise.
HM.Jr: Please.
Anbassador: A few practical questions. My
first question being, how could you get our manganess
which, as you well know, is concentrated on the Black
Sea coast?
Mr. Jonest That's very difficult. Very diffi-
oult. to get out.
Ambassador: Not only is it difficult, but as a
matter of fact, the situation has changed very much.
A year ago w eat at this same table, & year ago, and
I complained about you not buying enough of our manga-
nese which you could have received, at that time, in
great quantities. Unfortunately, I did not succeed.
The Secretary of State promised to consider our oug-
gestion that about 800,000 tons of our manganese be
bought within four years, but nothing came of this. At
that time, the communications were free. Today this
manganese, as you will see, I can point to you, if you
want, the particular spot. (The Ambassador referred to
the world map hanging in the Secretary's office.) The
gbeatest deposit in the world is here.
152
+
HM.Jrs That's not far from
Ambagsador: And this, Poti Port, all the de-
posits are very close to the doast and the other is
Mariupol, here. This route 10 out of the question
now. So is this. To transport manganess are by
rail.1s commercially unthinkable. Physically possible,
but commercially .....
Mr. Jones: How far 1s it across here?
Ambassador: About 9,000 miles, at least. So
this is the first practical question which occurs to
no. After Italy went into the war, I understand como
American boats which were on their my to Poti just
had time enough, in late May. to slip out and bring
the last shipments. I don't think there have been
any since.
Mr. Jones: No way to get up here, huh?
Ambagandori well, that, of course, is shorter,
but by reasons not known to me this sone here, where
not a single combat has over taken place, has been pro-
claimed by your Executive to be combat sone, so American
ships cannot enter.
Mr. Jones: Mr. Boong's idea does not seen to be
very practical then.
Ambassador: This is my first doubt about it.
Now, whether manganese is the only thing, I don't know.
You mentioned other commodities.
HM.Jr: I mentioned others.
Ambassador: what did you mention?
HM.Jrs The ones I jotted down, just as possi-
bilities - asbestos, nica, seroury ....
Ambassador: Platimen?
Regraded Unclassified
153
-
HM.Jr: Yes. Chromium. That's the whole group.
Aubassador: Gold is not a commodity?
HM.Jr: We buy that. I just bought 10 million
from you the other day.
Mr. Jones: Do you produce all those things?
Ambassador's Asbestos, yes. Mica, yes. About
meroury, I must check. Platinum, yes. Chromium, yes.
HM.Jr: (To Mr. Jones) We just bought 10 million.
Nr. Jonest Where did you get the gold?
Ambassador: Plenty!
Mr. Jones: Dig it out of the ground?
Ambassador: (Laughed but made no reply.)
HM.Jr: They have lots of it.
Ambassador: That was my first question.
HAdr: We don't consider it a commodity. The
Ambassador and I had this discussion & couple of years age -
lot of gold coming out -- as to whether gold was a commodity
or not and he and I came to a very good understanding and
from that day we have seen eye to eye on this gold question.
Ambassador: That's correct.
HM.Jr: And the working agreement 1s good today.
Ambassador: with one exception, just departing as
you did for one moment from our disoussion. In my con-
versations with Mr. Summer welles I had quite some diffi-
culty in obtaining a very simple statement. We took that
up about three or four times among other questions, a very
modest request of ours, of being given a general assurance
Regraded Unclassified
154
&
that there would be no discrimination toward Russia
in the question of importation of gold; that w ye-
alised you cannot give us a specific statement that
you always will buy it and always at the same price.
the know your laws. But - asked one very modest
and very reasonable thing: That your fixed policy in
the gold question be applied without discrimination
to Russian gold. Sorry to say that this question,
which I considered as being of third or fourth import-
ance, as a very subsidiary question which I raised
only because I had my instructions, I was surprised
to see that on this question I did not obtain the
necessary assurances. To have not finished our con-
versations yet. Perhaps I will obtain it. But even
on this technicality, which unfortunately does charae-
terise the gloomy situation to which I was referring
before.... That's just being nasty for a moment.
HM.Jr: Well, Mr. Jones and I are neither of
us diplomats. He's a newspaper publisher and I an
a farmer. Is that right?
Mr. Jonest Yes.
HM.Jr: So we don't know anything about diplomacy.
Ambassador: I have not known recently anything
about
diplomacy. I have been a newspaper man myself
for 18 years.
HM.Jrt well, you are talking to a newspaper man
and a farmer, so we don't know anything about diplomacy.
Ambassador: My second question, coming back to
Mr. T. V. Boong's scheme is ...
Mr. Jones: Call that "suggestion" instead of
"scheme".
Ambassador: Suggestion.
Mr. Jones: Would you mind?
Regraded Unclassified
155
Ambessadors No. I don't adnd at all.
x
second question is be or anybody who has brought for-
ward that suggestion assumes that the amount of help
we are giving our Chinese friends is limited by our
financial resources; that we give only as much as w
can afford financially. I don't know enough about
the matter, but as a first reaction to what you told
me I would say I an not sure of this. I think w are
giving China that amount of help which we can afford
from the point of view of available
....
Hr. Jones: Materials?
Ambassador: .... materials. And, as far as
I know, financial difficulties between ourselves and
China have not arisen, but this is my private reaction
to a suggestion which is new to - and which, of course,
I will refer to my Government.
Mr. Jones: These talks or suggestions were more
or less vague on his part; were not specific; to be
reduced down to a definite suggestion.
HM.Jr: You know by now in our previous discussions
we have either agreed or not agreed. There has never
been
.....
Ambassador: That's correct.
HM.Jrt It's either black or white. There has
never been any grey, and I think I never have talked to
you on a matter like that unless I had full authority.
Ambassador: I realize that perfectly.
HM.Jr: You appreciate that, because I don't take
up your time talking about
....
Ambassador: I realise that perfectly.
Mr. Jones: How about your trade balance with
this country?
Regraded Unclassified
156
&
Ambassador: It remains chronically passive.
Mr. Jones: You have not been able to correct
that?
Ambassador: No. As to our trade in general
between our two countries, if things continue as they
are going on now, the moral embargoes, the retainment
of goods which - have bought two years ago and which
now in & retroactive way are being retained (they al-
legedly are necessary for National defense) and so on,
if these measures continue I don't think that our trade
relations or any relations will develop in a antisfactory
way. So far I cannot boast about any achievements in
by conversations with your Government.
Mr. Jones: I wish you would import more caviar
than you do.
Ambanandor: I share your desire very much. I an
getting short of it.
HM.Jr: That's one thing - I like it, but I could
perfectly well get along without it the rest of my life.
Mr. Jones: He taught no to drink vodka and like
it and to eat saviar and that other fish ....
Ambassador: (7) sturgeon, from which caviar comes.
Night I ask you, Mr. Secretary, to repeat ....
HM.Jr: The have two Secretaries. Mr. Jones is a
Secretary since yesterday.
Mr. Jones: My feathers are still pin feathers.
HM,Jr: But you are drybbehind the ears.
Ambesendor: Mr. Morgenthau, I don't quite under-
stand.
Imagine the situation is a practical one, just
for the sake of this conversation. How would that man-
ganese be purchased? It would have to be purchased by
Regraded Unclassified
157
Regraded
-10-
our two customers, U. 5. Steel and Bethlehen Steel or
would it be the Federal Government?
HM.Jri You (itr. Jones) would buy it, wouldn't
you?
Mr. Jones: I suppose no. I think that would
be a practical matter to work out.
HM.Jr: You see, Mr. Jones in his many capacities,
also has a - what do you call the corporation that buys
these raw materials? Do you buy manganese or do IT
Mr. Jonest We bought manganess. We have what
w call the "Metal Reserve Company* and we have already
bought over 1,000,000 tons.
Ambassador: Imagine this is gold. Is credit
open in this country here e what? How would that tri-
angular arrangement work, speaking abstractly?
HI.Jr: First we want to find out whether the will
is there.
Ambagsadort I understand.
HM.Jr: But the 1dea ....
Mr. Jonest If the will 1s there and the desire,
we would have to work out the mechanics.
HM.Jrt We have to work out some way, if we bought
what to call strategic materials and paid you cash that
you, in turn, would find some way to gosist our Chinese
friends in an even bigger way than you have in the past.
Ambassador: I understand.
HM.Jrt Financial protection or whatever it is.
The have no way of knowing, but we do know they are in
great need. We also know that today Russia is the only
place left, practically, that they can get supplies and,
158
-11-
as I say, as you put it, very much better than I can,
there are three points to a triangle and from Russia
to China is friendly and from the United States to
China is friendly.
Ambassador: That's right. The rest is blank.
HM.Jr: I an an optimist and I always have hopes.
Ambassador: I tried to be for a long time.
HM.Jr: And if and when you hear from your Govern-
ment
Ambassador:
...
I will lot you know.....
HM.Jr:..let me know and Mr. Jones and I will be do-
lighted to see you.
Ambassador: Mr. Secretary (Mr. Jones) I would be
glad to come to you without any practical thing on my
sind should you be interested in knowing what Russian-
American trade looks like now.
Mr. Jones: I will be glad to see you.
Ambassador: I will be glad to come and ⑉ you
and tell you about the very bad condition it is in now.
Mr. Jones: I will be very glad to ... you.
000-000
159
G-2/2657-220
RESTRICTED
M.I.D., W.D.
September 20, 1940.
No. 199
SITUATION REPORT
12:00 M.
This military situation report is issued by the Military
Intelligence Division, General Staff. In view of the occasional
inclusion of political information and of opinion it is classified
as Restricted.
I. Western Theater of War.
1. No ground operations.
2. Air Force Operations.
All operations in the vicinity of England were ham-
pered by rainy weather.
In daylight of the 19th there was German bombing in
the London area, in Essex, Sussex, and in the west of England but
no large-scale attacks. During the night raids were steadily con-
ducted over the London area but apparently this activity was less
intensive than the night before.
The British bombed along the Channel and in Western
Germany on the night of September 19-20.
According to news reports, large-scale German raids
are in progress today, focussing on main junction points of the
Southern Railway.
II. Mediterranean and African Theaters of War.
1. No apparent Italian movements beyond Sidi Barrani,
where consolidation continues.
2. The R.A.F. operated intensively against communications
and concentrations west of Sidi Barrani. Italian planes continued
their bombing of British forces in Egypt and also bombed a camp at
Galladat, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.
RESTRICTED
160
HSM
GRAY
Berlin
Dated September 20, 1940
Rec'd 12:06 P. m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
4072, September 20, 10 a, m. (SECTION ONE)
My 4036 of September 17, 5 P. m.
The decree of the Reich Finance Minister relating
to the incorporation of the protectorate into the
customs territory of the REich dated September 16 has
now been published in the REICHS GESETZBLATT of September
18, 1940. It provides for the abolishment of the customs
frontier between the REICH and the protectorate Bohemia
and Moravia on October 1, 1940 at which time the German
customs regulations will bE introduced in the protectorate.
Customs revenues and consumption taxes will thereafter
bE collected and administered by the Reichs administra-
tion. A separate decree issued by the Reich Finance
Minister also dated September 16 provides for the creation
of a Reich revenue office for the district (Oberfinanz-
bezirk) of Bohemia and Moravia for administering customs
EXCISES and monopolies.
Effective
Regraded Unclassified
161
ham ⑉2⑉ No. 4072, September 20, 10 p.m. from Berlin (SEO, 1)
Effective October 1, the Reich tax laws relative to
tobacco, sugar, salt, beer, brandy, electrical bulbs,
playing cards, sacharin, mineral oils and fats are to
bE introduced in the protectorate. The Reich turnover
and slaughter taxes will also bE introduced in the pro-
tectorate on the same date.
According to an editorial appearing in the ESSENER
NATIONAL ZEITUNG of September 18, the compatency of the
Reichs Stellen or Reich monopoly boards for the various
agricultural products will also bE Extended to the pro-
tectorate. Therefore, in the future these boards will
also compute purchases for the protectorate on a central-
ized basis.
Although considerable progress has been made in
adjusting the price and wage levels to those of the
Reich during the one one-half years of German occupation
of the protectorate certain transitory measures are still
deemed necessary to ensure B. smooth incorporation of the
protectorate into the Reichs customs territory. Import-
ant among these measures are agreements between the
industries of the protectorate and the REich which have
been worked out lately to reduce the Evil Effects which
might arise on both sides from free competition after
the ramoval of tariff barriers between the two territories.
KIRK
DDM
Regraded Unclassified
162
RDS
GRAY
BERLIN
Dated September 20, 1940
Rec'd 4:05 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
4072, September 20, 10 a.m. (SECTION TWO)
The details of these agreements vary considerably
for the different industries. Doctor Bernhard Adolf, the
Reich protector's special commissioner with the associa-
tion of Bohemian and Moravian industries, has summerized
their general characteristios however in an article pub-
lished in the Frague newspaper NEWERTAG on September 16
as follows:
One. The markets of the Protectorate and of Slovakia
are reserved for the Protectorate's manufacturers and those
of the old Reich for German manufacturers.
Two. The Austrian market is to bE supplied in common
by both industries in respect to certain goods.
Three. The Sudstenland market is in some instances
reserved for Sudeten factories and in others for those
of the Protectorate.
Four. Some of the agreements provide for unilateral
or reciprocal sales quotas, fixed for a certain period of
time,
163
-2- #4072, September 20, 10 0.10. (SECTION TWO) from Berlin,
time, and based on percentages of 1937 deliveries.
Five. In some instances, the Protectorate manufac-
turers have agreed to join the respective Reich cartels
which make special measures for market protection super-
fluous.
Six. In some branches of industry, Protectorate
manufacturers are forbidden to produce certain goods "in
order to SAVE raw materiols", according to the official
explanation.
Many agreements contain provisions in regard to prices:
Protectorate monufacturers undertake to adjust their offers
to prices prevailing in the old Reich and ViCE vers..
The agreements in some industries are limited to a recip-
rocal undertaking to abstain from sales propaganda and
advertising in the other territory.
In regard to the compensation for Exchange losses on
foreign balances in Czech crowns referred to in telegram
No. 4036, Doctor Friedrich Musller, the Reich's commissioner
with the National Bank for Bohemic and Moravia, states in
in article appearing in yesterday's NEUERTAG that all
holders of such balances abroad who wish to take advantage
of higher rate must offer such foreign holdings to the
National Bank not later than October 1, 1940. HOWEVER,
persons
164
-3- #4072, September 20, 10 a.m. (SECTION TWO) from Berlin.
persóns who have claims in foreign currency which result
from the sale of merchandise and cannot bE collected before
October 1, may obtain compensation at the higher rate
after that date.
INFORM TREASURY
(END OF MESSAGE)
KIRK
YOUNGAT
RECEIVED
06/26 XX 2Eb SI MI IS 35
LITE
THE 217 IT OT
THE
165
September 20, 1940
12:40 p.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Mr. Wallace calling.
H.M.Jr:
Who?
Operator:
Wallace.
H.M.Jr:
Wallace?
Operator:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
All right. Hello.
Henry
Wallace:
Hello, Henry.
H.M.Jr:
Hello, Mr. Vice President.
W:
Henry, I have no intention of making a speech
on taxation on this Western trip which I'm
starting, but I notice however Willkie dealt
with it quite at length yesterday - I didn't
know whether any of your people would care to
fix up any information for me or not 80 that
.....
H.M.Jr:
Sure, if you'd give us an inkling of what
you'd like.
W:
Well, I'd say it would be the natural things
that would come to their mind in defense of
your taxation policy in view of what Willkie
has said about it.
H.M.Jr:
My own thing that went through my mind - but
I'll be guided by you - is, I thought I'd give
him a little more rope.
W:
Well, I had no intention of saying anything
but .....
H.M.Jr:
You see Johnny Hanes is there advising him
.....
W:
I get you.
166
- 2 -
H.M.Jr:
.....
and I thought if he went out a little
bit further and really put his foot in it,
then we might haul him up short.
W:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
My own hunch after reading it was just to
sit back and see whether Johnny Hanes didn't
get him to say some more.
W:
Yeah. You know Johnny Hanes and know what
he'll likely do, huh?
H.M.Jr:
Pardon?
W:
You know what Johnny would likely get him
to do.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah, and I thought we could wait a little
bit.
W:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
And if something happens - I'll keep it in
mind - I can telegraph it to you or give it
to Paul Appleby and he can get it to you.
W:
Yeah. Well, I have no intention whatever of
making a speech on taxation but I thought
perhaps it's conceivable that the information
might come in handy in an emergency of some
kind.
H.M.Jr:
Well, Sullivan is coming in now and I'll
mention it to him when he comes in.
W:
Well, it would be good education for me anyway
to know the - a little bit about the
.....
H.M.Jr:
Well, we'll get something out for you.
W:
No tremendous rush on it - if you could have
somebody slop it together and you can give
it to Paul to mail it to me.
H.M.Jr:
R-r-right! 0. K.
W:
I talked with my brother-in-law and find
167
- 3 -
that it's the - in the other Department
and not in yours.
H.M.Jr:
Oh.
W:
It 18 what you suspected. I got the thing
twisted from - Mrs. Wallace had got it twisted
when she wrote me, and when I talked to him
about it why he said he didn't have any idea
(laughs)
H.M.Jr:
Well, wasn't he pleased the way we had taken
care of it?
W:
Yes, yes.
H.M.Jr:
What?
W:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Because we had stretched a point to do it.
W:
Yes, he felt that your folks had been most
cooperative.
H.M.Jr:
Good.
W:
Yes, I got it all twisted. You see, it was
one of those things that came in a conversational
letter from my wife and she got it twisted.
H.M.Jr:
0. K.
W:
I just thought I'd let you know that he
seemed to be greatly pleased at what you folks
had done.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you, Henry.
W:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Good-bye.
168
GROUP MEETING
September 20, 1940
2:30 p.m.
Present:
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Foley
Mr. Cochran
Mr. Schwarz
Mr. Young
Mr. White
Mr. Graves
Mr. Thompson
Mrs Klotz
H.M.Jr:
Has this gone through?
Cochran:
We were working on that yesterday.
White:
I thought we agreed on it.
H.M.Jr:
It is all right with me. Anybody object?
Sold. Who will inform the Conmittee?
Cochran:
I can do that.
H.M.Jr:
I will keep this. It is blocked dollars,
Harry.
White:
This was my understanding, that it was
limited to that, although the discussion --
H.M.Jr:
And in unoccupied France.
White:
Well now --
H.M.Jr:
What?
White:
Is that stated 80 limited there?
H.M.Jr:
The majority of the - a number of refugees
in unoccupied France.
White:
Oh.
H.M.Jr:
Unoccupied.
169
- -2-
Cochran:
But there was one operation which they
had under consideration yesterday. That
was Miss Ann Morgan's $10,000. I think
that was to help her get out of occupied
France.
H.M.Jr:
I am so sick and tired of hearing of Ann
Morgan. I had Mrs. Bliss here for half
an hour and we told them we would give them
enough money to get her out of France and
she should get out. Chamberlain sat here.
I was willing to give her some money, and
he said no, only give her the money to help
her get out.
Cochran:
My only point was that part of this --
H.M.Jr:
She will get out of France, yes, but I was
willing to give her the money for the time
being and he said no, Chamberlain did.
Cochran:
We referred this case specifically to him
yesterday.
H.M.Jr:
And what did he say?
Cochran:
I thought they were putting that through,
didn't you, Harry?
White:
Well, I think that would be an exceptional
case and this is a general case and there-
fore it is not included in there.
H.M.Jr:
I would give her $10,000 if she would come
home. Chamberlain was handling it and he
knew all about it. I don't have to get in
on it, do I?
Cochran:
No. I mean, that is the general rule.
H.M.Jr:
Herbert?
170
- 3 -
Gaston:
You got my brief report on the status of
this recruiting thing?
H.M.Jr:
Yes, and I sent a telegram to Pa Watson
from what you told me, and I have sent a
copy of it in to you. I said as soon as
we heard anything further we would advise
him. That was the easiest way.
Gaston:
Yes. You haven't any objection to my giving
out a list of the Presidential appointees
and their statuses to this man?
H.M.Jr:
He is entitled to them.
Gaston:
I am terribly afraid the first thing we are
going to get is a nomination for Appraiser
of Customs in New York and Comptroller of
Customs in San Francisco. It might do some
good.
H.M.Jr:
If he wants it, he can have it.
Gaston:
Yes. I will give it to him today.
H.M.Jr:
Anything else?
Gaston:
No, I don't think so. I wrote you & memo-
randum on Butler, Homer Butler, Attache in
Paris.
H.M.Jr:
I haven't got it yet.
Gaston:
I signed it today.
H.M.Jr:
When?
Gaston:
Just a little while ago.
H.M.Jr:
It just hasn't come yet. It will come.
171
4
Gaston:
I will see that you get a copy.
H.M.Jr:
What else?
Gaston:
I haven't anything else.
H.M.Jr:
I am trying to hurry so as not to spoil any-
body's golf.
Gaston:
Are you flying?
H.M.Jr:
Right. I am taking the second best plane.
Gaston:
What is the matter with the other?
H.M.Jr:
They sent a message the plane would be grounded
until their personal representative could come
in to look at something. Maybe something has
gone wrong. They have grounded all those models
pending putting in something in the tail.
Gaston:
All of them?
H.M.Jr:
I guess so; certainly this one.
Gaston:
Well, there was something, you know, about
that speed.
H.M.Jr:
That was changed.
Gaston:
For & time, you know, they wouldn't let them
land under 75 miles.
H.M.Jr:
Then we sent the plane out there and it was
fixed, and now it is something else.
Edward?
Foley:
I haven't gotten Nelson Rockefeller yet. He
is in New York.
H.M.Jr:
Anything further on the Doughton thing?
172
- 5 -
Foley:
No. John had some funny statement from
Doughton. He didn't have the letter, but
John told him he would sign it and bring
it up to him. He went up there this after-
noon. He said something that didn't make
any sense to me or to John, about he was
going to indemnify Pearson against suit,
and then he was out and the matter was be-
tween the Treasury and Pearson, which I
don't understand at all. It didn't make
any sense to John, either.
Cochran:
Do you want to take along this statement
of Jay Crane?
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
Cochran:
He didn't get to sign it, but he dictated
it.
H.M.Jr:
I would like White and Bell to each have a
copy of that. Anything else?
Cochran:
No, sir.
Schwarz:
I wanted to ask if we would be able to give
out this decision about the remittances for
the charitable organizations. The Associated
Press has gotten a story in which they say
that a lot of Americans are complaining about
their difficulties.
H.M.Jr:
I never give you those stories. I don't know
how you get them.
Schwarz:
We get them through the Legal Division. Is
this going to be & general license?
H.M.Jr:
I don't know.
Cochran:
I don't think it is 8 general license.
Regraded Unclassified
173
- 6 -
White:
Just general policy here, but not in the
form of & general order.
H.M.Jr:
I don't know.
Schwarz:
We ought to do something 80 as to counter-
act it. They say there are many people
there complaining that our Consulates are
allowed to pay out ten pounds to any Bri-
tisher who comes in there acting as repre-
sentative of the British Government.
Bell:
Is this a new order or the one that we gave
out about two weeks ago?
H.M.Jr:
This is the one we talked about just before
you came in.
White:
Why don't we see if something can be drafted?
Schwarz:
All right. We will see if we can't draft
that into something.
H.M.Jr:
Who do you see when you get one of these
statements?
Schwarz:
Pehle, usually.
H.M.Jr:
You know, I'm giving Pehle a chance to run
this show on a make-good basis after Chamber-
lain leaves.
Schwarz:
He always explains them well and translates
it.
H.M.Jr:
Maybe you can get it out of him.
Schwarz:
I will try, sir. I think it is worth doing.
Young:
No difficulties.
174
- 7 -
H.M.Jr:
Will you compliment Cox on the work that
he did on those Vultee contracts for me,
Ed? According to Philip Young, he W&S
very good.
Foley:
Yes, sir.
H.M.Jr:
Send him my compliments. Is he Assistant
General Counsel?
Foley:
Assistant to the General Counsel.
H.M.Jr:
Are you one of those, also? Assistant to,
and Assistant General Counsel?
Foley:
His title is Assistant to the General Coun-
sel. He has the job that Jack Harlan had
when he was here.
H.M.Jr:
Which pays more?
Foley:
He gets eight thousand.
Bell:
The same grade.
Foley:
It is in the same grade. We could give him
eighty-five hundred.
H.M.Jr:
I think I would.
Foley:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
It is a cumulative thing.
Thompson:
If he is on your regular roll, you couldn't
promote him because there is a prohibition
on Administrative promotions.
Foley:
We will find a roll.
H.M.Jr:
He will give you a legal opinion, Norman.
175
- 8 -
If necessary, Cox will write it. Well,
the boy is doing good work and I think
he has earned it. I would like to give
a letter to him myself Tuesday.
Foley:
I will have it ready for you.
H.M.Jr:
Provided the President doesn't come down
Sunday night.
White:
I have here a letter that needs to be
signed before you go, if possible, and
it has an agenda there. This is on the
Latin-American meeting. The agenda I
had a chance to clear with Gaston, and I
would like to show it to Dan Bell.
H.M.Jr:
I am surprised you fool around with South
America. I thought your middle name was
Soong.
White:
It is not going so well in that direction.
I am looking for new fields.
H.M.Jr:
What do you mean, after this morning?
Anything else, Harry?
White:
No, that is all. Oh, yes, something else.
Mr. Jones called up and wanted some informa-
tion and a suggestion with regard to Costa
Rica, and I said that if it would be all
right with him, we would send him a memo-
randum Monday and prepare something for him.
H.M.Jr:
He was going to give me a memorandum on
Costa Rica.
Young:
That is going to be the one.
White:
He didn't ask for a memorandum. He asked
for some - he wanted to know whether I
176
- 9 -
thought something would be all right that
they had contemplated doing, and I said --
H.M.Jr:
Three for one on the money? Taking the
money deposit out of the issued currency
against it?
White:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
He asked me about that and I said I couldn't
give him an offhand opinion and he said,
I will give you a memorandum on it."
White:
Well.
H.M.Jr:
I am going to get one, all right.
White:
I suppose it will be all right if I send him
that?
H.M.Jr:
Sure. If he would like the financial reports
that Ambassador Kennedy gets out, they are
written by Butterworth. What else?
White:
That is all.
H.M.Jr:
Harold?
Graves:
I just received from Mr. Helvering a report
on the activities of the Bureau of Internal
Revenue in Chicago in connection with this
labor union.
H.M.Jr:
I saw it in the paper this morning.
Graves:
Yes. I can give you Mr. Helvering's memo-
randum or I can tell you.
H.M.Jr:
Tell me, please.
Graves:
Well, as I understand the situation, the
177
- 10 -
State's attorney in Chicago, that is, the
prosecuting officer for Cook County, has
for a long time been investigating the
activities of various unions which, according
to this report, and evidently the newspapers
have it, have to some extent been taken over
by the hoodlum racketeer element. Now, as
disclosures appear in the press, the Collector
of Internal Revenue in Chicago has been follow-
ing those inquiries to see whether the money
that apparently has changed hands in these
racketeering operations has been properly
accounted for for tax purposes, and they have
gone from one union to another, following
more or less the activities of the State's
attorney.
Now, no statement was sent out yesterday by
the Revenue people in Chicago. There are
reporters who are stationed at all times in
the Customhouse Building in Chicago and they
have been in touch with this situation. They
see people coming into the Collector's office
and their story is sort of a rehash of what
has been happening there for a long time when
these investigations have been going on. That
is roughly the picture.
H.M.Jr:
I see by the papers that Tom Dewey is starting
an investigation of the State tax of Scalise,
you know. We gave Tom Dewey some help on
that.
Gaston:
We couldn't give him what he wanted. He wanted
a very unreasonable thing.
Foley:
He wanted our investigation, which we couldn't
give him.
H.M.Jr:
Oh.
178
- 11 -
Foley:
He didn't protest, and he got the con-
viction without it.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
Foley:
Our investigation isn't completed, as you
know.
H.M.Jr:
No, I don't know.
Foley:
It has been going on for several months.
H.M.Jr:
On Scalise?
Gaston:
Yes, entirely independent of his.
H.M.Jr:
When are you going to finish it, after he
is in jail?
Foley:
Well, he put him in jail for a violation
of the State law. We have an income tax --
H.M.Jr:
But when are you going to break it?
Foley:
I don't know. That is up to Herbert.
Gaston:
No, no, that is up to Elmer and --
Foley:
Well, he is under you.
Gaston:
No, he isn't. I didn't know about the tax
investigation, but I did know something about
this Tom Dewey thing, because that went through
me, They just haven't completed their case,
that is all.
Schwarz:
This story, Mr. Secretary, was undoubtedly
requested by Pegler's United Feature Syndi-
cate of the United Press in order to keep
his stories lively and newsy. He has been
pushing along on this subject.
179
- 12 -
H.M.Jr:
If you (Graves) could give our income tax
investigation a push. Is it Scal-ee-se or
Scal-i-ce? Probably Scalouse.
Everything else all right?
Daniel, are you going to rip those people
back from Atlantic City?
Bell:
It is a little difficult to get one of them.
Sinclair has arranged for a dinner on Monday
evening at which he is the host. It will be
a little difficult for him to get here before
1:00.
H.M.Jr:
11:00 o'clock, Tuesday. Have you told McKay?
Bell:
Yes. How about doing it, so far as they are
concerned, by telephone?
H.M.Jr:
Marvelous.
Bell:
Let Ransom and Chester Davis and Szymczak
come over here. Bob Rouse can do a little
scouting around on Monday if you want to
make any announcement about whether its
going to be just refunding or --
H.M.Jr:
We will see.
Bell:
Well, I think it might be well to give that
out Monday before he starts the conferences.
That will help. We will do that after I
talk to you on the phone Monday.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Bell:
Swell.
H.M.Jr:
Going to get a little golf in tomorrow?
180
- 13 -
Bell:
I don't think so.
H.M.Jr:
Who is on duty tomorrow?
Bell:
I will be here. Sullivan, I think, is going
away.
H.M.Jr:
Hope you all have a good week-end.
30 staff meeting
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
181
DATE
September 20, 1940
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
J. P. Chamberlain
The majority of the Foreign Funds Control Committee authorized
the sending of france to France against blocked dollare by charitable
organizations which give satisfactory guarantees that the funds will
be disbursed in France solely for relief purposes, and under control
of agents of the American organization sending the funds.
This authorization will only apply ao long as france are made
available in France against dollare blocked in the United States.
The large number of refugees in unoccupied France, both of French
and of other nationalities, including Spaniards, Poles, Germans and
Russians, creates a difficult relief problem, and the importance of
permitting relief to go especially to the foreign refugees has been
persuasively urged.
In accordance with your instructions the licenses will only be
given to unoccupied France. No license will be granted for more than
one month, and it is understood that this authorization applies only
no long as france are available in France against blocked dollars de-
posited in the United States.
go Chambuton
Regraded Unclassified
182
paraphrase or TELEGRAM SENT
TO: American Embassy, Buenos Aires.
DATE: September 20, 1940, 4 P.M.
NO.: 219.
CONFIDENTIAL.
The possibility of sending an important officer of
the Treasury Department to Buenos Aires who would be
capable of and have the authorization to disouss a
monetary and exchange agreement with authorities of
the Argentine Government and bring it to a conclusion
has been discussed with the Treasury by the Department.
The Secretary of the Treasury, after carefully and
sympathetically considering all the points which
Dr. Pimado raised, believes that in view of all the
circumstances Washington would be & more appropriate
place for such & negotiation. You are requested to
talk this over with Dr. Pinedo. Inform Dr. Pinedo
that the Secretary of the Treasury will gladly disouse
the possibilities of such an agreement in Washington
with Dr. Pinedo personally or with any representative
Dr. Pinedo desires to send.
HULL
(BW)
EA:EGG: OMS
EA
EA:MSG
Regraded Unclassified
183
SEP 2 0 1940
My dear Mr. Under Secretary:
This 10 in reply to your letter of September 16,
1940, your reference IC, inquiring as to whether
December 9, 1940 is entisfactory to the Treasury as
the date for convening the Second Neeting of Treasury
Representatives at Quite, Reunder, and asking that
any suggestions for the agenda of the Meeting be sub-
mitted to you by September 21, 1940.
December 9, 1940, the date suggested by the
Reunderen Government for convening the Second Heating
of the Treasury Representatives, is satisfactory to
this Department. In accordance with your request the
suggestions being submitted by this Department for
the agenda of the meeting are appended hereto.
Sincerely,
(Signed) & Morgenthan, 4.
Secretary of the Treasury.
The Honorable Summer Welles,
Under Secretary of State.
Attachments
cc to ms. Thompson
By Measenger 3ʳᵈ
you
HRS:dla
HRS 9/18/40-VC
FINE COPY
Regraded Unclassified
184
Suggested Agenda for the Coulng Inter-imerican Treasury Conference
The following suggestions for - agenda for the Becond Inter-
incrican Treasury Conference are submitted for consideration by American
Republics:
It would sem that effective work could be accomplished at the
conference by having a series of round table discussions. Each round
table would be presided over by the Treasury representative of a selected
country which possibly has a more than ordinary interest in the problem,
and the representative of another country that also has had some special
experience or special interest would contribute the leading paper for
discussion. The representative of the country designated in charge of
the round table would have the duty not only of acting as chairman dur-
ing the discussion, but would have the responsibility of preparing in
advance an agenda of questions and topics relating to the subject. It
is thought that the Inter-American Committee holdings its meeting in
Washington might select the country whose Treasury representative might
act as Chairman for a particular round table discussion, as well M the
countries assigned to prepare particular papers.
In view of the fast that the working period will probably only be
five or six days, and in order to provide for the usual exchange of
amenities, etc., it would probably be found desirable to limit the must
of round table discussions to eight or ten. The following dosen topics
are suggested out of which a final selection might be made:
1. Standardisation of budgetary and accounting practices in the
Federal Government.
(In view of Brasil's recent conferences to consider standardise-
tion of budgetary and accounting practices of states and munici-
pelities abs might wish to contribute an interesting paper on this
topic.)
2. Unification of tames,
(Argentina night wish to report on her experience since 1936 with
the Federal collection of provincial taxes.)
3. A bulletin of American Treasuries.
(Proposal by the United States, with a formal outline of the sug-
gested bulletin.)
4a Smuggling and counterfeiting as Treasury problems.
Regraded Unclassified
:
185
- 2 -
5. The handling of the exchange problems arising at
enties and clearing agreements.
6. The internal organization of American Treasuries.
7. The work of the General Accounting Office.
8. Administrative experience with the income tax.
9. Training personnel for Treasury work.
10. Problems in improving customs administration.
11. 1 comparison of budgetary procedure in American countries.
12. Short-term financing policies and procedures of American
Treasuries.
HINGLrs
9/20/40
- OFFICIAL COMMUNICATIONS TO
186
THE SECRETARY or STATE
di a I
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
WASHINGTON
In reply refer to
IC
September 16, 1940
My dear Mr. Secretary:
Dr. L. 8. Rowe, Director General of the Pan American
Union, informs me that he has received a request from the
Government of Ecuador that the Pan American Union desig-
mate the date for the Second Meeting of Treasury Repre-
sentatives which will be held in Quito, Ecuador. The
Organizing Committee appointed by the Government of
Ecuador has suggested December 9, 1940 as the date for
the convening of the Second Meeting, and Dr. Rowe has
inquired informally whether that date would be convenient
for this Government. In view of the fact that this will
be a Meeting of Treasury Representatives to discuss tech-
nical problems, this Department perceives no objection to
the suggested date. I shall appreciate it very much if
you will let me know not later than September 21 1940
whether this suggested date 1a agreeable to you.
It
The Honorable
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury.
Regraded Unclassified
187
-2-
It is important that the agenda for the Meeting be
formulated at the earliest possible date and I therefore
suggested to Dr. Rowe that the Governing Board of the
Pan American Union consider suggestions for the agenda
at the same time that it sets the date for the Meeting.
I shall therefore appreciate it if you will submit any
suggestions which you may have for the agenda 80 that I
may receive them not later than September 21. The sug-
gestions for the agenda will then be communicated to the
governments of the twenty-one American republics for their
TO
comments, after which the definitive agenda will be
formulated.
Sincerely yours,
ZECHEIVKA Ot. HEYORD
OBSICE
Under Secretary
CANDLINE
current
amounts
Regraded Unclassified
9/20/40
188
HM, Jr gave Mr. Jesse Jones the
original ribbon copy of this
after their conference with the
Russian Ambassador today.
189
COPY
July 15, 1940
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY:
Proposal for a possible three-vay arrangement between
to China
the United States, and China to give assistance
The following tentative plan is put forward " -
possible feasible method of carrying out the President's
which would include Russia.
suggestion of giving aid to China through an arrangement
A.
We would purchase from $100 to $200 million
of strategic and critical commodities from Russia
for delivery as repidly as possible but probably
extending over several years. We would make advance
payments for part of the purchase, preferably in
proportion as Russia extends effective equivalent
credits to China.
According to an estimate based on the avail-
able data, which are neither comprehensive nor up
to date, Russia can supply us with about #25 million
etc. (In addition to her normal exports to the
per annual of manganese ore, asbestos, platinum, chromite,
United States). (See Exhibits A and B.) Further
information from the Soviet Government would be
needed to ascertain the volume of such exports
that could be made.
B.
Russia on her part would agree to extend to
the Government of China credits equivalent to our
advance payments for Russian strategic materials.
Russia's pquivalent credits to China would be in
addition to the #50 million or so of Russian credits
reported by Mr Soong in the middle of July to be
still outstanding which Chine is using up as rapidly
as Russie will permit. Russia's equivalent credits
to China would become effective simultaneously with
our advance payments to Russia.
c.
To eliminate the risk of Russian non-delivery
of goods for which ve have made advance payment,
Russia could be requested to agree to leave gold on
earmark with the United States to an amount equivalent
to the cuse we pay in advance. The gold would be
unblocked, and if desired withdrawn, concomitantly
with our receipt of Russian goods already paid for.
Regraded Unclassified
190
- 2 -
D. AO a possible guid pro quo to the Russians
" might allow them to use our advance payments
to them for the purchase of such American goods
as can be exported without detriment to our u.
tional defense.
Advantages of plan:
1. It would make possible increased aid to China
at a time when no other means -- except perhaps a our-
reney stabilization loan -- is open, and thus by
strengthening Chinese resistance to Japanese aggression
improves the United States' defensive position in the
Pacific.
2. The aid to China would be made without our insur-
ring any risk and only at the cost of payment in advance
for strategic and critical materials which ve need anyhov.
3. We would increase our foreign trade by making
possible larger exports to Russia.
4. If the international situation develops in such
a way as to make it to our advantage to improve our N-
lations with Russia, this three-way agreement would
constitute a convenient opening wedge for this purpose.
HDW:WLU:SA:lrs
9/12/40
Regraded Unclassified
191
EXHIBIT A
September 12, 1940
The U.S.S.R. is a Sewree of Strategie and Critical Materiale¹
The United States may be able to purchase strategic and critical
enterials from the U.S.S.R. to the extent of from $100 million to
$200 million for delivery over a four-year period. (This our is in
addition to our normal trade with the Soviet Union, which amounted to
824.5 million in 1939.)
According to this estimate, the following materials might be
annually obtainable in the following quantities and values:
Material
Quantity
Value
Manganese (ore)
450,000 long tone
$10,000,000
Chromite (ere)
100,000
long tene
2,000,000
Mercury
7,000 flasks
1,400,000
(76 lbs.)
Asbestes (mmanufactured
100,000
tens
5,000,000
Platinum (ingets)
60,000 trey cunces
3,000,000
Fluorspar (are)
301000 tons
1,000,000
Tin (ore or metal)
2,000 tone
2,000,000
(metal con-
tent)
Mica (strategic - unmanufactured) 10,000 tone
500,000
Graphite (natural)
10,000 tome
250,000
Total
$25,150,000
The above estimates are based on published data available to
w, but the data is not up to date, nor is it comprehensive. There
are many strategic materials which are known to be produced in the
U.S.S.R., but for which no adequate statistical information is
readily accessible. Before any definite conclusion can be reached
as to the extent of pessible purchases, it would be desirable to
obtain the necessary information from the Seviet Government as &
basis for a nore detailed survey.
Prepared by Mr. Ullasm
Division of Menetary Research
Regraded Unclassified
192
In Manganeso is a strategic unterial, need is the of steel.
It is emaldered of "first priority*.
United States Commuttion: 1937
Produced in the United States
73,000 1mg tem and
Imported - from U.S.S.R.
384,000
Imported - from other
538,000
countries
Total importe
912,000 long tons are
Apparent consumption
985,000 long tome are
Importe from "other countries" came principally from the Gold Coast,
Cuba, Brasil. Ression are has a higher manganess content than Western
Hemisphere are.
United States Energency Requirements: 12 months (Army estimate)
Domestic Production
185,000 long tens are
Importe
277,000 lang tens are
Total requirements
602,000 long tame are
(Deficiency to be unde up from inventories)
This appears to be an undersstimate of inport tennage requirements.
Estimated cost of importer $6,000,000.
Soviet Manganess Production
1938 U.S.S.R. production
2,273,000 netric tone are
Known U.S.S.R. resources
785,000,000 netric teme
Conclusion
import requirements from the U.S.S.R. The War Department estimates of
The United States can probably obtain a large part of its usaganese
manganess requirements appear low, especially in view of the 1937 volume.
the cost of imported manganess would amount to about $10 million per year
If, however, the United States were to import half the total 1937 quantity,
(using the Army estimates of energency prices.)
Regraded Unclassified
193
Anbestos is a critical material, used in the automative ininstries
for brake linings and gasbets, 20 is also important for heat to-
gulstion in various types of construction and oquipment.
the United States has been largely dependent a imports to asbostes,
with Canada the principal supplier (supplying about 90 percent). the
Seviet Union was accord with 3 persent. United States consumption in
1937 was as follows:
Domestic production
12,000 tens (unsenufactured)
Imports from U.S.S.R.
10,000
Importe from other comtries297,000
Total imports
307,000 teams
Less exports
3,000 tax
Apparent consumption
316,000 tone
Seviet Asbesteg Production
The U.S.S.R., in 1936, produced 125,117 motris tons of unanaufactured
asbestos, which use a rise of 30 percent from 1934. If Seviet production
continued to increase at the 8420 rate, it probably will reach over 200,000
tens this year.
The Soviet Union, in 1937, exported 27,000 motrie team.
Conclusion
The United States, faced with an energency, might have to import more
asbestos from the U.S.S.R. If that country were able and willing, 10 might
be able to sell the United States 100,000 tens of TOW asbestes at, perhaps,
$50 per ten (The 1938 value of our imports from the W.S.S.R.) or $5,000,000.
WLUedlm/iem
9/12/40
194
du
Deagn Mica is a strategic material used in the electric and radio inten-
trice. A large part of the world's nica production is of -
strategic vica, ground and pulverised for many purposes, including
roofing.
United States Inergency Requirements: 12 menths (U.S. Army estimate)
The War Department has estimated that the United States would need
2,600 short tons of strategic nica annually during an emergency (this
appears low in view of pease-time consumption). It estimated that our
production plus normal stocks could more than supply this demand. Now-
over, this conclusion was based on "contemplated exploitation of all don-
estie resources at unrestricted cests
In the past, the United States has imported chiefly from Dritish
Indian. If anything should out off the Indian supply, the United States
night find it practical to import sion from the U.S.S.R. in order to -
tail too sharp a price rise.
Soviet Vica Production
In 1935, the U.S.S.R. produced over 8,000 tons of nica, twice the
1934 output and exceeding British India's output. If the U.S.S.R. produc-
tion expanded as rapidly as India's, Seviet production in 1938 would
amount to over 14,000 toms.
The United States has imported no Soviet vica, nor is it known that
the Seviet Union has exported any.
Conclusion
The United States might find it practical to import 1,000 tene of
unsanufactured vica from the Seviet Union, which might cost $500 per tos
or $500,000.
Regraded Unclassified
195
Marquez
Does Mercury 1a a strategic material, used in manufacturing fulninate
for detenating high explosives and fixed committes. It to used
also in drugs (calemel, corresive sublimate, ets.) in paints for
theracneters, etc.)
ship bottoms, in electrical apparatus, and instruments (haromaters,
United States Consumptions 1937
The United States has in the past imported a substantial partien of
its consumptions approximately half in years of high consumption and less
in other years, with donsetic consumption reasining relatively steady.
Importe have come principally from Spain and Italy, with leaser anounts
from Mexice. 1937 consumption was as follows:
Denestic production
Importe from U.S.S.R.
16,508 flasks (76 pounds)
Name
Imports from other countries
18,917 flacks (76 pounds)
Less experts
456 flaske (76 permis)
Apparent consumption
35,000 flasks (76 pounds)
United States Increancy Requirements: 12 months (Army actimates)
The Mar Department has estimated that requirements in an energency
would rise. The Burosu of Mines has recently (1939) extimated that the
energency requirements would amount to 86,000 flasks samually. Since
domestic production has follows prices, it has been estimated that the
United States output might reach 30,000 flasks under conditions of high
energency prices, to which can be added 2,200 Clasks from Mexico. This
would leave a deficit of approximately. 14,000 Macks which could be sup-
plied only by imports.
Since Spanish and Italian sereary might be out off from a rising
American market, the price might readily reach $100 per flask (10 was
$2,400,000. $96.55 in I'm 1937). The cost of importing 14,000 flasks would be
Seviet Mercury Production
Beliable information about Seviet production is not available. The
Minerals Yearbook (quoting the Imporial Institute) places Seviet production
at exactly 8,700 flasks in 1935, 1936, and 1937 (the latest year reported),
196
(Continued)
which appears to be insccurate in view of the rapid expension of Seviet
production in all other fields. This figure, however, would place the
U.S.S.R. fourth in the world's mareury-producing countries,
It is probable that Seviet production has expanded rapidly in recent
years. As far as can be determined, the U.S.S.R. has exported no nereury.
Conclusion
The United States is faced with a deficiency in mercury, since require-
ments are rising and since its two most important foreign sources of supply
may be out off. The U.S.S.R. may be able and willing to supply us with
perhaps 7,000 flasks annually, which would cost approximately $700,000.
Regraded Unclassified
197
Grate
Use: Chresive is a strategic material (of "first prierity"), used in
alloy steels, in refractories, is pigments, and in chrend un
plating (e.g., machine pm barrels).
United States Consumptions 1937
The United States depends almost entirely on importe for its suply
of chromite, importing chiefly from British Africa, from the Phillippine
Islands, Cuba, and Turkey. The Cuban are is of 2air grade, and is there-
fore used in refractories. It is understood that Turkey has agreed to
sall chromite to Germany, a fector which (together with shipping diffi-
culties) miss Turkey a desbiful serve of supply. 1937 consumption was
as follows:
Domestic Production
Importe from U.S.S.E.
2,000 long tone on
lieu
Importe from other countries
Apparent consumption
556,000 long tome we
United States Increasey Requirements: 12 months (Army estimate)
The Var Department has estimated that in an mergancy, the United
States would need 285,000 tene of chroctte per year, using all possible
substitutes. It estimated that domestic wines could produce 64,000 tea
annually, which appears high in view of actual production (812 tone in
1938). Assuring its estimates to be correct, however, the United States
would need to import approximately 200,000 tons per year.
Soviet Chromits Production
their output will 217,000 netric tens. Production 10 probably appreciably
Seviet production data are not svailable for years since 1936, when
higher at present, since it 18 known to have risen sharply through 1936;
1934
-
127,400 taxe
1935
-
177,900 tome
1936
-
217,000 tons
in 1936, while they clained requirements to be 200 percent astisfied in
Furthermore, Seviet publications claimed an Inadequacy of chronite
1938, when Soviet industry had expended appreciably from 1936 levels.
Regraded Unclassified
198
Chromium
(Continued)
Soviet production now, it is felt, is probably well over 300,000 tone
per year, a part of which the U.S.S.R. might be willing to export, -
pecially since sales ef the are would in no way tax her refining
facilities.
The United States has imported no chromite from the U.S.S.R. since
1936. As far as can be determined, the Soviet Union has exported none
since that time.
Conclusions
If the United States, under an emergency and using substitutes, were
to import half its 1937 importations, it would need to purchase abroad
277,000 tons of chromite per year, which would involve an approximate cost
of $7,000,000 (using Aray estimates of mergency prices). If the Seviet
Union were willing to sell us 100,000 tone annually, the cost involved
would anount to, roughly, $2,000,000.
Regraded Unclassified
199
Plations
Regr Platinum is a critical material, wood is making sulfuris and
mitrie acids, as wall as in may laboratory instruments, electrical
emtasts, and manufacturing processes.
United States Consumptions 1937
The United States is largely dependent a importe for platinum, at-
though & large part of the importe are in crude forms which are refined
domestically.
U.S. Production (from imported materials)
87,000 tray cunces
U.S. Production (from demestic materials)
5,000 tray ounces
Imports of ingote, bars, sheets, etc.
From U.S.S.R.
15,000 tray curces
From other countries
47,000 trey -
Less experts (estimated
50,000 troy -
Apparent consumption
104,000 tray -
Importe of refined metal have come largely from the United Eingdon.
Columbia bas supplied a large part of our crude patinum importe.
U.S.S.R. production
The U.S.S.R. 10 known to produce annually between 100,000 and 200,000
troy ounces of platinum, probably nearer the latter figures.
Conclusion
The United States, in - energency, would necessarily increase these
industries which use platinum. However, the sale of platinum in
consumers' goods (jewelry) would probably decline, possibly enough to
effect the industrial increase. Nevertholess, R will have to inpart consi-
derable quantities. The U.S.S.R., already - an export basis, night be willing
to soll - 60,000 troy curress annually, which would cost approximately
$3,000,000.
Regraded Unclassified
200
Subibit 3
United States Trade with the U.B.S.R., 1937 - June, 1940
(Thousands of Dollars)
-
1937
:
1938
1
I I 1939
I
1940
116 months)
U.S. Exports (including
resuports)
Vegetable food products
0
3
#
V
$ 1,719
$ 2,351
Crude rubber
-
-
2,521
37
Other inedible vegetable
products
711
59
35
47
Non-ustallic minerals
6,362
5,844
3,020
186
Copper
5
13
6,940
10,898
Volybdenum and ferro
alloys
3,776
3,268
6,984
241
fin
-
-
1,012
1,852
Iron and steel products
and other metals and
asnufactures
9,535
8,961
5,092
5,289
Metal working mohinery
6,954
35,163
18,655
10,082
Aircraft and parts
3,213
5,171
2,905
-
Other machinery and
vehicles
10,028
9,108
6,942
4,075
Chemicals and related
products
424
846
213
-
Other articles
1,449
1,258
599
7,044
Total Exports
$42,892
469,691
456,637
$42,102 a/
1/ Less than 8500
2/ Preliminary and not yet classified
Regraded Unclassified
201
Rehibit 1. Continued
United States Trade de the 5.8.5.2., 1937 - June, 1940
(Thousands of Dollars)
# 1937
I
1938
-
1939
I
2940
(6 monthe)
U.S. Importe
Edible animal products
$ 2,176
$1,328
$ 1,610
.
77
Pare
11,698
12,397
12,454
6,095
Other inodible enimal
products
1,299
760
1,176
260
Inedible vegetable
products
635
779
1,229
544
Textile fibers and man-
ufsctures
1,856
1,566
960
331
Wood and paper
1,939
511
317
-
Asbestos
458
261
110
-
Other non-setallie sin-
erals
1,185
1,199
1,359
-
Manganese are
3,960
2,662
2,204
2,698
Platinum
695
964
540
-
Other metals
258
13
565
-
Chemicals
638
752
1,163
-
Other products
245
310
607
1,443 V
Total Importe
$27,240
$23,502
$24,494
$12,448
Treasury Department, Division of Monetery Research. September 3, 1940
V Preliminary and unclassified
Sources U.S. Department of Connerce
WLU:lrs
9/12/40
Regraded Unclassified
Relations
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