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OCR Page 1 of 2DIARY
Book 382
March 14 - 17, 1941
Regraded Uclassified
- & -
Book Page
Alliver Ingineering Company
Boo Mar Conditions: Airplanes (Ingines)
- B -
Business Conditions
Haas memorandum on situation for week ending
March 15, 1941
382
367
- D - -
Defense Savings Bonds, United States
See Financing, Government
- F -
Financing, Government
3/15/41:
Refunding and possibly some new cash discussed
by HMJr, Haas, Murphy, Hadley, Bell, Eccles,
Draper, Saymesak, Piser, and Sproul - 3/14/41
38
a) Bid prices of new Treasury certificates
hourly, February 25 and 26, 1941
76
Newspapermen to be told "financing next week
will be $500 million cash and a refunding" -
3/14/41
110
"Bond to be used in the financing": Haas
memorandum 3/17/41
289
a) Discussion by HMJr, Haas, Bell, Hadley,
and Murphy
284
HMJr's pencilled notes made during conferences
with various bankers
299
Over-the-counter closing quotations on United
States securities - 3/17/41
306
Defense Savings Bonds, United States:
Odegard's standards for campaign as set forth in
memorandum to Powel (Harford) - 3/14/41
138
- G -
Gardner, Max
See War Conditions: Purchasing Mission (British Financial
Position)
General Counsel, Office of
Report of projects during February 1941
381
Gold
See War Conditions
Greenland
See War Conditions
- 0 -
Book Page
Odegard, Peter H.
See Financing, Government (Defense Savings Bonds,
United States)
- P -
Public Health Service
Parran arranging for 1000 United States doctors to
go to England; HMJr asks Hopkins to arrange for
interview with FDR - 3/15/41
382
251
- R -
Revenue Revision
Inter-governmental tax immunity: HMJr's letter to
FDR - 3/17/41
342
a) Copies sent to Justice, Navy, War, Hillman,
and Knudsen
337
- S -
Salter, Sir Arthur
See War Conditions: Purchasing Mission
- T - -
Taxation
See Revenue Revision
- U -
Unemployment Relief
Work Projects Administration report for week
ending March 5, 1941
396
United Kingdom
See War Conditions: Military Planning
- W -
War Conditions
Airplanes:
Engines:
Allison Engineering Company: Shipments -
3/17/41
364,365
Exchange market resume' - 3/14/41, etc.
167,238,363
Export Control:
Exports of petroleum products, scrap iron, and
scrap steel from United States to Japan,
Russia, Spain, and Great Britain, week ending
March 15, 1941
366
Regraded Uclassified
- Y - (Continued)
Book
Page
War Conditions (Continued)
Gold:
Yugoslavia: $22,500,000 of gold which Yugoslavia
wishes to sell discussed in Cochran
memorandum - 3/14/41
382
136,194,273
2) Welles' reaction to situation reported
by HMJr to Bell, Cochran, Foley, and
Bernstein - 3/17/41
309,314,318,330
b) Cochran memorandum - 3/18/41: Book 383, p.65
Greenland:
Cox memorandum to Hopkins on air base - 3/17/41
270
Lend-Lease:
See also War Conditions: Purchasing Mission
"Quid pro quo": Further discussion by Treasury
group - 3/14/41
1
a) Draft attached
28
b) "Possible sources of payments for
materials sent to England under Lend-Lease":
White memorandum - 3/14/41
34
c) Discussion between FDR, Hopkins, HMJr,
Bell, and Foley - 3/14/41
77
1) "Whereas" substituted for "agreement"
2) Copy
82,83
d) Acheson-HMJr discussion of Hull's
attitude - 3/14/41
103
Chancellor of Exchequer congratulates HMJr on
passage of bill - 3/14/41
93
British placing of all future orders under
Lend-Lease recommended to Purvis by HMJr -
3/15/41
223,224
"Aid to Britain in next 120 days": Cox memorandum
to Hopkins - 3/15/41
229
(See also Book 383, page 354 - 3/19/41)
"Summary of how operations may be conducted from
practical point of view and on organized basis":
Young memorandum to Hopkins - 3/17/41
262
Military Planning:
Reports from London transmitted by Halifax -
3/14/41
173,177,409
War Department bulletin: "The Photographic
Reconnaissance Unit of the British Coastal
Command" - 3/17/41
400
Purchasing Mission:
See also War Conditions: Lend-Lease
Salter (Sir Arthur) to join staff of British Supply
Council and to be charged with matters arising
out of shipping - 3/14/41
88,92
Federal Reserve Bank of New York statement showing
dollar disbursements, week ending March 5, 1941
162
Vesting order sales - 3/17/41
362
Regraded Uclassified
- y - (Continued)
Book
Page
War Conditions (Continued)
Purchasing Mission (Continued):
British Financial Position:
Direct investments - sale of: Situation in
connection with Lend-Lease testimony
discussed by Phillips, Allen, Playfair, and
Cochran - 3/15/41
382
191
a) American Viscose Company: Position of
little companies which are hoping for
no precipitant action presented to
HMJr by Max Gardner - 3/15/41
221
1) Halifax tells HMJr Viscose deal
will be announced Monday morning -
3/15/41
226,250,252,254
a) Treasury representative may
be allowed to work with
Peacock now
b) HMJr congratulates Peacock.
326,329
c) Alsop-Kintner reaction
corrected by Treasury
335
Securities and Exchange Commission:
List of securities issues covering which
registration statements have been filed with
Securities and Exchange Commission and which
may become effective and publicly offered
during week beginning March 17, 1941
357
a) Frank-HMJr conversation - 3/17/41
323
Work Projects Administration
See Unemployment Relief
- Y -
Yugoslavia
See War Conditions: Gold
1
March 14, 1941
8:45 a.m.
AID TO BRITAIN
Present:
Mr. Foley
Mr. Bell
Mr. Cox
Mr. Bernstein
Mr. Kuhn
Mr. White
Mr. Young
Foley:
"Agreement dated as of March 11, 1941 at
the City of Washington, District of Colum-
bia, between His Majesty's Government in
the United Kingdom (hereinafter called the
United Kingdom) and the United States of
America (hereinafter called the United
States).
"Whereas, the President of the United States
(hereinafter called the President) has
determined that the defense of the United
Kingdom is vital to the defense of the
United States,
"Now, therefore, it is agreed as follows:
"1. Pursuant to the Act of the Congress of
the United States of March 11, 1941 (Public
No. 11, 77th Congress and hereinafter called
2
- 2 -
the Act) the United States will transfer,
exchange, lease, lend, sell, or otherwise
dispose of certain defense articles and
defense information to the United Kingdom,
as listed and valued in schedules, appro-
priately identified, now or hereafter to
be attached to this Agreement.
"2. Within such period or periods as de-
termined by the President:
"(a) The United Kingdom agrees to return
to the United States such defense articles
which, in the opinion of the President, are
not used up, worn out, destroyed, or other-
wise rendered incapable of effective use."
And that would be the Coast Guard destroyers
and things that are of more durable and
lasting quality and that are all right, and
the President can just simply take them
back.
"(b) The United Kingdom agrees, in the
case of defense articles, other than agri-
cultural commodities, which in the opinion
of the President are used up, worn out,
destroyed, or otherwise rendered incapable
of effective use, to return to the United
States an equivalent amount of similar de-
fense articles, which, in the opinion of the
President, are of & quality and efficiency
substantially equal to the defense articles
transferred hereunder to the United Kingdom."
And that would be the combustible stuff.
the powder and the ordnance and the stuff
that you use up and don't get back.
H.M.Jr:
Have you seen this, Dan?
3
- 3 -
Bell:
Well, I saw the draft. It has been
changed since I saw it.
H.M.Jr:
All right, let's go ahead.
Foley:
That takes care of the permanent stuff and
the stuff that is used up.
"(c) The United Kingdom agrees,
"(i) in return for agricultural commodities -"
-
That will be the consumer stuff.
"and"
-
"(ii) in return for other defense articles
and defense information
"transferred to it hereunder and for which
the United States has not otherwise received
full reimbursement, to deliver to the United
States an equivalent dollar value of tin,
rubber, jute, and other products and commod-
ities produced in the British Empire and
which, in the opinion of the President, are
needed by the United States. Such products
and commodities shall be delivered in such
quantities and at such time or times as
shall be determined by the President."
Then the over-all.
"(d) The United Kingdom may at its option
and in lieu of the return of the defense
articles or similar defense articles, as
provided in Paragraphs (a) and (b) above,
deliver to the United States any other raw
materials, services, facilities, or other
consideration or benefits acceptable to the
President."
4
- 4 -
H.M.Jr:
What does that mean?
Foley:
Well, that means that if they can't return
in kind the defense articles that have been
worn out or exhausted or if they can't re-
turn - or if they can't make up, rather,
an equivalent dollar value of the stuff
that they don't return in kind out of these
raw - these raw materials or commodities
produced in the British Empire which the
President determines as a need, then they
can give us other things, raw materials,
services, facilities or considerations or
benefits, which the President deems accept-
able.
H.M.Jr:
At the President's option?
Foley:
Acceptable to the President. They have got
to make it all up, and they have got to
make it up either by returning the stuff
that we gave them, by giving us similar
stuff, by giving us an equivalent dollar
value of these raw materials, or by giving
other benefits or services or commodities
or raw materials which the President is
willing to take.
Bell:
This might mean we would have our battle
ships repaired in their docks or any other
benefit.
Foley:
Then we--
H.M.Jr:
I am going all over it once more.
Foley:
Then we give another option.
"3. By future agreement, the parties may
substitute, in lieu of Section 2, any other
payment or repayment in kind or property,
5
- 5 -
or any other direct or indirect benefit to
the United States, which which the President
deems satisfactory."
In other words, the situation as such - if
you want to name the stuff that you want
back, if the things you envisage in 2, (a),
(b), (c), and (a), are not subject to be-
ing made available to the United States,
why then the parties can agree on something
else at that time.
"4. The President shall determine the fair
value of any defense article or other con-
sideration or benefit received by the United
States from the United Kingdom; and the
United Kingdom shall be credited therefor
on account of the defense articles and de-
fense information transferred to the United
Kingdom hereunder."
In other words, he is the fellow who de-
termines the value of the stuff that they
give back. That may seem harsh, but they
are putting themselves in our hands anyway,
and I don't see why he isn't the proper
person to determine the fair value of what
they want to give back of the stuff that he
evaluates at the time he makes the lease.
Bell:
That will be 8. little hard to swallow.
H.M.Jr:
It will save a lot of argument.
Bell:
Well, they might be willing to trust the
present President, but we might have another
Coolidge when it comes down time to repay.
White:
Well, it is a sovereign government. They
don't have to pay if they don't want to.
6
- 6 -
Foley:
It is a sovereign goverment dealing with
another sovereign government at a time
when Great Britain desperately needs the
things; and, while I don't like to take
advantage of the bargaining power that we
have, doing it any other way only leads to
interminable controversy and delay.
White:
Just as they depend on good faith to make
this stuff available, I think they will have
to depend on good faith that you will give
them a reasonable treatment; and, if you
don't give them a reasonable treatment, they
simply may not pay just as in the past they
haven't when they felt it was unreasonable.
H.M.Jr:
Mr. Coolidge didn't do so well on the col-
lection end.
Bell:
But he had that horrible attitude toward the
debtors.
Foley:
Well, that is why, Dan; and I think no mat-
ter what you put in an agreement, the atti-
tude you assume toward the debtor at the
time you make the collections depends on
what you get. There he said, "They hired
the money. Let them pay back the interest
and let them pay back the principal."
Bell:
Well, of course when it comes back you won't
be under war conditions.
Foley:
This next clause is out of the statute.
"5. The United Kingdom agrees that it will
not, without the consent of the President,
transfer title to or possession of any de-
fense article or defense information, trans-
ferred to the United Kingdom hereunder or
permit its use by anyone not an officer,
Regraded Uclassified
7
7 -
employee, or agent of the United Kingdom.
"6. If, as & result of the transfer to the
United Kingdom of any defense articles or
defense information, it is necessary, for
the United Kingdom to take any action or
make any payment in order fully to protect,
pursuant to the Act, any of the rights of any
citizen of the United States who has patent
rights in any to any such defense article or
information, the United Kingdom will do so,
when so requested by the President."
That is out of the statute.
"7. The President may exercise any power or
authority conferred on him hereunder through
such officer or agency as he shall direct
for that purpose. The terms "defense article"
and 'defense information' as used in this
Agreement shall have the same meaning as
defined in the Act."
This relating to the authority of the people
who bind their respective governments. It is
a stock clause.
"8. The parties to this Agreement, and the
officials signing this Agreement on their
behalf, each for itself, himself, or them-
selves, represent and agree that the execu-
tion and delivery of this Agreement have in
all respects been duly authorized, and that
all acts, conditions, and legal formalities
which should have been performed and com-
pleted prior to the making of this Agreement
have been performed and completed as required
by, and in conformity with, respectively,
the laws of the United States and the United
Kingdom."
8
- 8 -
H.M.Jr:
Either I explained it awfully well or you
people are awfully intelligent. I think it
is an excellent document.
Foley:
Thank you very much. It will take a big
load off our minds.
H.M.Jr:
I don't see, in view of - going back to the
President's position as of Monday, how we
could hit this thing any better. I just
don't see how we can hit this thing any bet-
ter. Now, I just would like to approach
this thing a little bit in a novel way, you
see. Ferdie, supposing, if you can, put
yourself in the place of this pressman Lord
Halifax has over here, you see. What is his
name?
Kuhn:
Childs.
Cox:
No, Charles Peak.
H.M.Jr:
He is back in London again. That is press-
man in the foreign office. This document was
laid on his desk 24 hours before it was re-
leased. How do you think he would react,
and the British public would react to a thing
like this right now? That is a fair question,
you see.
Kuhn:
I think the British public, from what I have
seen in their papers, forgets the words
"Lease-Lend Bill." There has been so much
said about our giving this. It will be some-
thing of a shock to them to come back to the
actual words in the title of the bill, "Lease and
Lend", and to the analogy of the garden hose
and 80 on, but if they come back to that, I
don't see how they can have any kick. This
is completely in line with the President's
press conference last December when he drew
9
- 9 -
that picture of the garden hose, isn't it?
H.M.Jr:
You see, as I say, the hour I had with him
Monday, when I cameback, you remember, I
dictated. I said I had never pressed him
80 hard. Not pressed him, probed him is
the word. I probed him you see. "Are you
thinking of a mortgage on the battleships?
Are you thinking of their islands? Are
you thinking of this? Are you thinking of
that?" And everything I got, "No, I am not."
And so - also my conversation with Harry,
I don't think Harry probed him the way I
have. I think, and from his letter, you
see - "I wish you would undertake to nego-
tiate." Then he said, "I should think it
would be best to work out some kind of
over-all agreement. I should like to dis-
cuss it with you when you have developed
further the informal program which we talked
about the other day." So he goes back to
the Monday conference, you see. I think
this hits it pretty well. Let me just ask
you, Dan. Supposing he took it or some-
thing very close to this. Then as each
thing was transferred, I take it this docu-
ment will be constantly added to?
Bell:
Yes, sir.
H.M.Jr:
And the thing would be filed here with the
Treasury?
Bell:
Be attached to this agreement in the vaults
of the Treasury.
H.M.Jr:
And that is all there would be to it?
Bell:
Yes. There would be & little form that they
fill out giving the specifications of the
material and somebody would sign that.
Regraded Uclassified
10
- 10 -
Maybe both ways, we don't know yet.
Foley:
And the value.
Bell:
And the value. That would come over to the
Treasury, and that would be 8. part of our
records both from an accounting standpoint
and as a part of this document.
H.M.Jr:
And that is all there would be. Then when
the war is over, this document would be taken
out and dusted off and whoever is President
then would sit down and say, "Well, so forth
and so on."
Bell:
Yes, and there would be credited against this
document all the material of that kind that
comes back.
H.M.Jr:
I don't think it would take more than one
sheet of paper.
Bell:
To cover the credits? No.
H.M.Jr:
(Secretary talking on White House phone.)
Hello
Hello
You tell him that I have his letter of March
13 which he asked me to work out a form for
the quid pro quo....
No, on the billion three
Now wait a minute. Hello? Quid pro quo
And on the billion three
And I am ready. We would like to come over,
11
- 11 -
and we would like - when We are there we would
like to have Hopkins there, too....
What?
Oh, I will bring Bell and Foley
The sooner the better
Quid pro quo on the billion three
And that is not a fish, either
O.K
H.M.Jr. signing off. Goodbye.
H.M.Jr:
I make a mistake. I always ought to write
these things to him because he can't remember.
As Fox, the President's - what was he, chief
gunner's mate or whatever he is over there,
Assistant to Admiral McIntyre. We were there
one day and I was telling him a naughty story
and Watson asked me a couple of times to go
overit. When he left Fox says, "You know,
he will be back here tomorrow morning and
say, 'What was that story the Secretary told
yesterday?' He can't remember from one day to
the next. But with it all, he is an awfully
nice fellow."
Now let me just study this thing a minute.
Has anybody got an extra copy for Mrs. Klotz?
Now, I understand 1. Now, 2, it ends up with
periods. Does that mean on this first lot
of mosquito boats he has got to name the
period?
Foley:
No, that is left for whenever he wants to sit
down and arrange with them for the kind of
reimbursement he wants and at that time he
12
- 12 -
can say it will be over a period of five
years or it will be at one time or make the
next arrangements at that time.
Bell:
He said, I believe, didn't he, that within
five years after the war - this leaves it
for his later determination.
H.M.Jr:
Have you all been on this? Does anybody see
anything the matter with number 1, section 1?
Harry, have you been on this?
White:
I didn't see the final draft. This is mostly
the lawyers' work.
H.M.Jr:
What were you doing since seven o'clock?
(Facetiously)
White:
Ed suggested and I thought it was a good idea--
H.M.Jr:
About two minutes later everybody was here
and I asked him - he said, was here. Nobody
else was here.
White:
It happens once a year. I had better make
the most of it. He suggested that I draw a
list of all the possible quids that you could
get.
H.M.Jr:
Possible what?
White:
Quids for the pros that you could get.
H.M.Jr:
Tits for tats.
White:
Well, quids for all the possible ones that
could be obtained without recommending any
one of them so that you would know all the
possibilities, whether for this lot or for
13
- 13 -
the next lot, so I have three pages broken
down to their proper classification, just B.
single line at the bottom of each one.
H.M.Jr:
Are those coming along?
White:
That is ready.
H.M.Jr:
It isn't typed yet?
White:
It should be typed now.
H.M.Jr:
But that is for us to work with?
White:
I thought you might want to look at it after
in case the President might ask what other
things could be got or now about this or
how about that.
H.M.Jr:
One looks all right to me. Now, 2, That
looks good. Three, now let me just - listen
you two (Cox and Bernstein). Can you envisage
something where the United Kingdom wouldn't
be the United Kingdom? Let me just raise one.
This is very far fetched. Supposing England
is destroyed, Canada remaining as the only
part of the United Kingdom. Is Canada alone,
as the sole remaining part, liable for this?
White:
Oh,no.
Bernstein:
Not unless she voluntarily assumes it.
White:
Or unless the U. K. Government left U. K.
just as the Dutch Government has left Holland,
but the Canadian Dominion is not responsible
for the obligations of the British.
H.M.Jr:
If that is true, then the things which we
lend-lease to Canada, we should lend-lease
Regraded Uclassified
14
- 14 -
to Canada and not do what they ask us to
do. In other words, they don't want to sign
it. You know the story, don't you?
Bell:
No.
H.M.Jr:
Clark came down here, your opposite number,
and he said, "Now, we will want to lend-lease
from you some airplane engines, from the
United States, which are going into chassis
of planes which are being made in Canada but
the engines are being made here. We would
like to lend-lease the engines instead of
paying you cash. But we are not going to
sign for those. England will have to sign
for them because the completed plane goes
to England.' He gave that as an illustra-
tion.
Bell:
That might be all right.
H.M.Jr:
I am just showing you how they are working,
you see, and I thought - well, I will take
it up with Merle, anyway. We will let Clark
cook until I come back from Tuscon. But I
just - in other words, then if England should
go under, this thing is worthless, which
comes back to what Bernie was talking about
yesterday, a first mortgage. Do you still
thing that is so good, you mortgage broker,
you.
Foley:
He is no mortgage broker. He was trying to
get away from it and you pinned him with it.
He is no Bronx lawyer. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
That is an insult to Eddie Flynn. (Laughter)
Foley:
He was trying to get away from that context
entirely, and you wouldn't let him off the
base.
Regraded Uclassified
15
- 15 -
Bernstein:
I will let my counsel speak for me.
H.M.Jr:
Harry White found he hasn't gotten 30 far
that way so he does his own talking. I mean
on his trip to Mexico.
Bell:
They are both pretty cagey about that. They
are afraid to talk in each other's presence.
H.M.Jr:
So we understand each other, if England
should go under, this piece of paper is
worthless, Canada or Australia or New Zea-
land do not assume this obligation?
Foley:
No.
White:
But it raises the further question, it is
worthless only in the sense that they are
unable to pay. I don't know whether it is
wortless if it gives you the justification
of trying to collect by force. That is a
legal problem.
Foley:
Collecting by force isn't a legal problem.
You are talking about Hitler. (Laughter)
White:
I can't see that. You mean it will become
illegal. You wouldn't consider changing that
"or" to an "and" for the record, would you?
H.M.Jr:
No.
White:
Do you want to pursue that question just one
step further? I am wondering what the status
would be of the British private individuals'
possessions in the Western Hemisphere and
elsewhere in the event of a flight of the
U. K. Government or an elimination of the
U.K. Government. There are still some very
valuable things lying around.
16
- 16 -
Foley:
Well, in so far as the individuals are
concerned, their holdings wouldn't be
effected by a document signed by the sover-
eign. The sovereign's holdings might be
affected if he could enforce it. In other
words, if you said, "Well, England has gone
down, but she owed us seven billion dollars
and now we are going to take over all her
possessions in the Western Hemisphere,"and
sent the fleet and the Marines down to en-
force it, I suppose you would have a color
of legal right to do that.
H.M.Jr:
But let's say that Lord Astor's real estate
which they say is trustee - let's say that
he remains in England as a prisoner and the
Germans take England and Astor and Lady
Astor.
Foley:
And the title to his property in the United
States is vested in the United Kingdom?
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
Foley:
We have got a claim against it.
H.M.Jr:
Ahead of the Germans?
Foley:
I should say so, because possession will be
nine-tenths of the law.
White:
It is not vested in the United Kingdom, it
is vested in a private corporation.
Foley:
No, if they requisition it and give Lord
Astor some sterling for it, and they have got
the title to it, I should say we would have
the first claim at it.
H.M.Jr:
Well, in a case where they have, and how
about that case where they haven't taken
the title.
Regraded Uclassified
17
- 17 -
Foley:
Well, that is a legal matter. We wouldn't
be in such a good position. Maybe as a
practical matter you might be able to work
something out.
White:
In other words, you are lending this stuff
to the Government and not to the British
people.
Bell:
What you have to have in that case, it seems
to me, is an act of Congress taking over all
that property.
H.M.Jr:
What did you say?
Bell:
I should think if you had a situation like
you described, you would have to have an act
of Congress to take over all the property in
this country.
H.M.Jr:
Well, these are hypothetical questions which
the lawyers can play with. If they. see any
danger. I am just raising them. I have got
to press pretty hard to find something the
matter, you see. If you get pressed very
hard, you can retain Eddie Flynn.
Where is the first time it says the Presi-
dent is going to decide?
Foley:
It is paragraph 1. The over-all clause, Mr.
Secretary, is three on page three, or four
on page three, rather. The President shall
determine the fair values." It runs all the
way through there.
Kuhn:
(b) on page 2, the President has to decide
whether these returned implements are of a
quality and so on.
Bell:
I think it is in every paragraph, almost.
18
- 18 -
Foley:
Well, a fair return shall be determined.
And then down here we say, "In the opinion
of the President of a quality equal to that
of what was transferred."
White:
I think it is important, Mr. Secretary, to
point out that there is one power which the
British Government has under this which does
not retain under the present jurisdiction.
H.M.Jr:
Wait a minute. Attention please. (Referring
to Bernstein and Cox)
White:
And that, I take it, that they have the choice
of returning the equipment which is not used
and which is effectively available, and if
they want to return a ship, say, then they
can. The President would have the power to
appraise the value thereof, but they would
have the power to return any equipment that
was effectively used.
H.M.Jr:
Effectively used?
White:
Effectively usable. Beyond that, everything is
determined by the President.
H.M.Jr:
Now, wait a minute, that is terribly important.
You mean to say, for instance - that doesn't
sound right to me. If we give them a Coast
Guard cutter, valued at a million dollars, it
is their option whether they return a Coast
Guard cutter or anything else?
White:
No, it is their - they can return the Coast
Guard cutter if they wish. If they don't
wish to, then the President may require it,
but if they do wish to, the President can say,
"No, won't take it, if it is not effectively
usable."
Uclassified
19
- 19 -
H.M.Jr:
Is that right?
White:
That is in the first clause. The optional
clause applies only to the value, whether it
is effectively usable--
H.M.Jr:
That is not good.
Foley:
No. The United Kingdom, on page 1, (a),
within such period or - 2, (a). "Within
such period or periods as determined by the
President: (a) The United Kingdom agrees
to return to the United States such defense
articles which, in the opinion of the Presi-
dent, are not used up, worn out, destroyed,
or otherwise rendered incapable or ineffec-
tively usable."
White:
Oh, I think I am correct, Mr. Secretary. It
is a legal interpretation.
H.M.Jr:
"Which in the opinion of the President." All
he has got to say is, "They are used up or worn
out, and I don't want them."
White:
That is all right, if he wants to say they are
used up and they are worn out, that is all
right.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I don't need any lawyer to tell me that.
Foley:
Well, in (d) you only say that they can return
things which are acceptable to the President.
Bernstein:
I take it, Harry's point is, supposing there
is a Coast Guard boat which is still pretty
good, and they don't want to return it but
want to give us something else for it?
White:
No, they do want to return it, and the Presi-
dent has to accept it.
20
- 20 -
H.M.Jr:
No. He would either have to say it is used
up or it is worn out or it is not effective.
Cox:
That is right.
Bernstein:
Before he fixes the value?
White:
I think we are in agreement.
Foley:
He (White) is talking the converse, Mr. Sec-
retary, of your point. If they have a Coast
Guard cutter and the President wants it back,
they have got to return it, but the President
can say how valuable that is and then they
have got to make up, out of other things--
White:
I am afraid I haven't made myself clear.
H.M.Jr:
May I state it? Let me see if I understand
him. As I understand Harry's point, Harry's
point says if they have a Coast Guard cutter -
who should go to Dean Acheson? I want him
to see this. Which of these two men do you
want to send over there.
(Telephone conversation with Mr. Acheson
follows:)
21
<
March 14, 1941
9:23 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Dean, the President sent me a letter late
last night asking me to work out a quid pro
quo on the billion three. Hello.
Dean
Acheson:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
We have our first draft, which I'd like very
much for you to see and get your criticism,
and I also would like for Mr. Hull to see it
and get his criticism.
A:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Now, if one of our attorneys came over now,
could you see him, because I hope to see the
President by 11:00.
A:
All right, first rate. I can see him right
away and should I tell Mr. Hull?
H.M.Jr:
Yes. After you get it if you get a chance -
well, it's a legal document, I'd like to get
your own criticisms, you see.
A:
Is this on the substance of it or on the
legality of it?
H.M.Jr:
Both.
A:
I mean, does the quid pro quo on the billion
three - is that - has the President decided
what he wants and the question is now to put
it in form?
H.M.Jr:
I had a talk with him Monday. This is what I
think he wants; I don't know, but everybody
seems to be in doubt. Harry doesn't know.
The President asked us to do it in a formal
letter. This 18 what I think. I hope to
see him this morning, and I'd like to get
your reaction as a lawyer and then as a
public servant.
A:
Yeah. This is & thing that I suppose
Mr. Hull ought to be consulted about, don't
you?
22
- 2 -
H.M.Jr:
Well, that's why I'm calling you. I'd
very much like to get the benefit of Mr.
Hull's advice.
A:
Yes. All right, sir.
H.M.Jr:
I very much would like to have it.
A:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And either Cox or Bernstein will come right
over - one or the other.
A:
And this document contains in the substance
of it what, from your conversation with the
President, you think he wants as a quid pro
quo.
H.M.Jr:
That's right.
A:
Fine. Well, if either one comes over, I
will go right over it immediately and then
arrange 80 we can all go in and see the
Secretary.
H.M.Jr:
Right. Thank you.
A:
Fine.
23
- 21 -
H.M.Jr:
He says if whoever you send will come over,
he will see you and show it immediately to
Mr. Hull.
Foley:
Do you both want to go? Let them both go.
(Mr. Bernstein and Mr. Cox)
H.M.Jr:
All right. As soon as I have a photostat
of the President's letter to me, I will send
one over to Acheson.
Cox:
May I leave just one thought? Cochran yester-
day asked what about the consideration from
the Greeks, and I said, "I understood they
had no money and that hasn't been mentioned
in connection with the letter which you have.
Possibly they might be interested in taking some
pictures of the Parthenon, I don't know."
But you are going to be asked the same ques-
tion, I think, on the Greek thing.
H.M.Jr:
Well, this thing would apply to Greece.
Cox:
That is right. What change?
H.M.Jr:
Change the United Kingdom to Royal Greek
Government.
Cox:
That is all right.
Foley:
We would have to revise it a little bit.
H.M.Jr:
How is Mr. Hull going to like our doing this?
We are showing it to him. Make it clear the
President hasn't seen this yet, and as soon
as this letter is photostated, I will send a
copy over to you for a man to put it in your
hands, and then you give it to Dean Acheson.
Bernstein:
On the Greek thing, you won't have the raw
material consideration.
24
- 22 -
H.M.Jr:
How do you know?
White:
It is pretty flexible.
H.M.Jr:
They have tobacco, olive oil, marble. They
grow a lot of raisins.
Foley:
They have got birds, too.
(Mr. Cox and Mr. Bernstein left the conference.)
H.M.Jr:
Ed, just to cut this thing short - I haven't
got time. I think Harry is wrong. I think
it rests with the option of the President;
one, he can either request that a Coast Guard
cutter be returned, or he can say, "I don't
want it. I want something else. Am I
right?
White:
No.
H.M.Jr:
Well, do you mind saving my time, but that
is where you differ.
White:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
You think the English can--
Young:
Harry doesn't really believe it.
White:
Oh, quite the contrary, I think that I am
right, but I wouldn't set my mind against
three legal-ites. The President can say -
he can either say it is unused or--
H.M.Jr:
I have got to get on this financing now with
the Federal Reserve and--
Foley:
We could clear up any point that Harry has
here.
H.M.Jr:
Ed, please prepare an answer for me to the
President, you see, in which I say I accept
Regraded Uclassified
25
- 23 -
this thing, 80 when I go over there. I am
very much pleased. Now, we will go on with
the financing meeting. Do you have any
qualms?
Kuhn:
No. It carries out the garden hose thing
perfectly.
H.M.Jr:
And it doesn't do any harm, the stuff I
spilled in the papers about the contracts
yesterday.
Kuhn:
I think it cleared it up.
Foley:
The thing that troubled me, you see, when
we were here yesterday and when I went away
I was feeling so down and out about it that
I thought that you were the one that was in-
sisting upon this specific consideration.
H.M.Jr:
When did you feel that way?
Foley:
Yesterday at that meeting.
H.M.Jr:
After I made the talk?
Foley:
Yes, while we were in here. It wasn't until
after I got back at the office and you called
up on the telephone that I saw a way out.
H.M.Jr:
Quite the contrary. In my talk with Harry,
I said, "Let's make this an over-all thing."
Quite the contrary. I don't know how you did -
did everybody in the room get that same im-
pression?
Foley:
Well, I think we all had it a little bit
when we went out. We talked out the thing
and came to the conclusion that with the
facts and the information we had, this was
the only way we could do it, and we thought
26
- 24 -
that this was the best way to do it.
Kuhn:
I wasn't here.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I repeat that--
Foley:
No, no. I think Harry was right. It should
have been "and" instead of "or."
H.M.Jr:
What did that mean.
Foley:
You said either I was or they are, and he
said to strike out the "or" and make it
"and."
H.M.Jr:
All right, it is a good job anyway.
27
See also a revision which HM, Jr left with
the President at lunch on April 7 and which
is dated April 2nd.
28
3-14-41
Dear Mr. President:
Thank you for your letter of March 13
asking me to undertake to negotiate the
"guid pro que", with the British for the
material which you are authorised to trans-
for to them. I shall be very happy to undertake
this assignment.
In accordance with your suggestion,
I have drafted an over-all agreement (copy
attached) which I should like to discuss
with you at your convenience.
Faithfully yours,
(Agd) H. morgenthanf
The President
The White House.
Incleaure
KHFJo/fm
Rewrite 3/14'41
Regraded Uclassified
29
Regraded Uclassifie
AGREEMENT dated as of March 11, 1941, at the
City of Washington, District of Columbia, between
His Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom (here-
inafter called the United Kingdom) and the United
States of America (hereinafter called the United
States).
WHEREAS, the President of the United States
(hereinafter called the President) has determined that
the defense of the United Kingdom is vital to the de-
fense of the United States,
NOW, THEREFORE, it is agreed as follows:
1. Pursuant to the Act of the Congress of
the United States of March 11, 1941 (Public No. 11,
77th Congress and hereinafter called the Act) the United
States will transfer, exchange, lease, lend, sell, OF
otherwise dispose of certain defense articles and de-
fense information to the United Kingdom, as listed
and valued in schedules, appropriately identified, now
or hereafter to be attached to this Agreement.
2. Within such period or periods as determined
Your the President:
(a) The United Kingdom agrees to return
to the United States such defense articles
which, in the opinion of the President, are
30
or I #
not used up, worn out, destroyed, or otherwise
rendered incapable of effective use.
(b) The United Kingdom agrees, in the case of
defense articles, other than agricultural commodities,
which in the opinion of the President are used up,
worn out, destroyed, or otherwise rendered incapable
of effective use, to return to the United States an
equivalent amount of similar defense articles, which,
in the opinion of the President, are of a quality and
efficiency substantially equal to the defense articles
transferred hereunder to the United Kingdom.
(e) The United Kingdom agrees,
(1) in return for agricultural commodities, and
(11) in return for other defense articles and
defense information
transferred to it hereunder and for which the United
States has not otherwise received full reimbursement,
to deliver to the United States an equivalent dollar
value of tin, rubber, jute, and other products and
commodities produced in the British Empire and which,
in the opinion of the President, are needed by
the United States. Such products and commodities
Regraded Uclassified
31
3 -
shall be delivered in such quantities and
at such time or times as shall be determined
by the President.
(a) The United Kingdom may at its option
and in lieu of the return of the defense
articles or similar defense articles, as pro-
vided in Paragraphs (a) and (b) above, deliver
to the United States any other raw materials,
services, facilities, or other consideration
or benefits acceptable to the President.
3. By future agreement, the parties may substi-
tute, in lieu of Section 2, any other payment or repay-
ment in kind or property, or any other direct or indirect
benefit to the United States, which the President doems
satisfactory.
4. The President shall determine the fair value
of any defense article or other consideration or benefit
received by the United States from the United Kingdom;
and the United Kingdom shall be credited therefor on
account of the defense articles and defense information
transferred to the United Kingdom harounder.
5. The United Kingdom agrees that it will not,
without the consent of the President, transfer title to
or possession of any defense article OF defense informa-
tion, transferred to the United Kingdom hereunder or
Regraded Uclassified
32
- 4
permit its use by anyone not an officer, employee, or
agent of the United Kingdom.
6. If, as a result of the transfer to the
United Kingdom of any defense articles or defense in-
formation, it is necessary, for the United Kingdom to
take any action or make my payment in order fully to
protect, pursuant to the Act, any of the rights of any
citisen of the United States who has patent rights in
and to any such defense article or information, the
United Kingdom will do 50, when 80 requested by the
President.
7. The President may exercise any power OF
authority conferred on him hereunder through such of-
ficer or agency as he shall direct for that purpose.
The terms "defense article" and "defense information"
as used in this Agreement shall have the same meaning
as defined in the Act.
8. The parties to this Agreement, and the
officials signing this Agreement on their behalf,
each for itself, himself, or themselves, represent and
agree that the execution and delivery of this Agreement
have in all respects been duly authorised, and that all
acts, conditions, and legal formalities which should
have been performed and completed prior to the making
Regraded Uclassified
33
- 5 -
of this Agreement have been performed and completed
as required by, and in conformity with, respectively,
the laws of the United States and the United Kingdom.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the parties hereto have
executed this Agreement in duplicate.
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
By
(Title)
HIS MAJESTY'S GOVERNMENT IN THE
UNITED KINGDOM.
By
(Title)
Regraded Uclassified
34
s
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE March 14, 1941
TO Becretary Morgenthau
FROM H. D. White
Subject: Possible Bources of Payment for Materials Sent to
England under the Lease-Lend Act.
Many of the kinds of compensation listed below have
grave disadvantages. They are included only as an indication
of possible sources of compensation.
A. Financial
1. British investments in Latin America (nominal value
over $3 billion).
2. British investments in Asia and Africa, exclusive of
Empire (nominal value in excess of $2 billion).
3. British investments in the Empire (nominal value over
$8 billion).
4. British Government promises to pay in sterling (either
in bonds or blocked sterling balances).
5. Portion of remaining Empire gold reserves.
6. Balances of the United Kingdom held in terms of
foreign currencies other than dollars.
7- Gold, dollar balances and dollar securities owned by
Britain's allies and ex-allies ($4 billion in U.S.
and over $1 billion in British Empire).
B. Naval, Military, and Aviation Material and Equipment
1. Used and unused military equipment acceptable to the
U.S.
2. Naval and military equipment built for U.S. order after
the war.
3. Technical information, patent rights and designs.
4. Ships, including naval, commercial, transport and
tankers.
35
- 2 -
Division of Monetary
Research
C. Facilities
1. Naval bases, military and commercial airports (for
use, lease or ownership in all parts of the British
Empire).
2. 011 and coaling stations.
3. Harbor, dock and repair facilities.
D. Raw Materials and Non-Military Goods
1. Stocks of strategic commodities noncompetitive with
American production, e.g. nickel, tin, rubber, Jute,
wool, platinum, radium, chromite, copra, mica, gum,
pyrites, industrial diamonds, etc. (These articles
either to be accumulated for stock piles or to be
delivered over a period of years to be resold for
commercial purposes in the U. 8.)
2. Mines, plantations and factories in Western Hemisphere
producing materials in which U. S. 1s in a deficit
position.
3. Manufactured products of the British Empire that do
not compete with American products.
E. Services
1. Scholarships in British universities for American
students.
2. Special Empire tourist rates for Americans.
F. Economic and Political Arrangements
1. Agreement to cooperate in plans for controlling world
commodity surpluses.
(a) Articles we produce: wheat, timber, cotton, oil,
copper, aluminum, asbestos, iron and steel, shipping
chemicals, rayon, etc.
(b) Articles we consume: rubber, tin, cocoa, sugar,
tea, nickel, platinum, radium, wool, etc.
Regraded Uclassified
36
M 1 I
Division of Monetary
Research
2. Regulation of world output of newly mined gold.
3. Agreements about exchange control, clearing and
payments arrangemente and other aspects of foreign
exchange policy.
4. Commercial agreements, including most-favored-nation
treatment, elimination of bilateralism, quota
allocations, tariffs, preferentials, export subsidies,
dumping protection.
5. Shipping agreements, including allocation of routes
and rate conferences.
6. Communications agreements, including cables, radio, etc.
7. Hours and wages conventions.
8. Passport and visa agreements.
9. Aviation agreements, including airplane routes.
10. Agreement on traffic in arms, narcotics, etc.
11. Continuance of equal opportunity for investment in
British spheres of influence; agreement for joint action
in other areas.
12. Provision for joint action in areas of common interest,
e.g. Latin America and the Far East.
13. Agreement to collaborate on peace aims.
14. Commitments covering the eventuality of the invasion
of the United Kingdom.
G. Territories
1. United Kingdom island and mainland dependencies in
the America.
2. Joint sovereignty over Hongkong, Singapore, and
strategically placed islands (or portions thereof)
in the Pacific,
37
March 14, 1941
9:31 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Wm. S.
Knudsen:
This is Bill.
H.M.Jr:
Good morning. It's Henry.
K:
Good morning. How are you? I'm probably
going over to testify before the committee
this morning. What is the maximum you've
paid out in any one month 80 far in the
Defense Program?
H.M.Jr:
I've paid out?
K:
Yes. You have the sheet of what you pay out,
haven't you?
H.M.Jr:
Yeah. We have that in our daily statement.
How soon are you going over?
K:
Oh, I suppose I'll be going over inside of
twenty minutes.
H.M.Jr:
Well, who can they phone it to in your office?
K:
Phone it to me. I don't want anybody else
to get in on it.
H.M.Jr:
What?
K:
I don't want anybody else to get in on
this. Phone it to me.
H.M.Jr:
I see. Well, give me three minutes and I'll
have it phoned to you.
K:
I'm on REpublic 7596.
H.M.Jr:
Republic 7596.. Have it to you in five
minutes.
K:
Thank you very much.
38
March 14, 1941
9:33 a.m.
RE FINANCING
Present:
Mr. Sproul
Mr. Draper
Mr. Piser
Mr. Szymczak
Mr. Haas
Mr. Murphy"
Mr. Eccles'
Mr. Hadley
Mr. Bell
H.M.Jr:
Well, after talking with the Federal Reserve in
New York yesterday, they cheered me up a little
bit and I took a dive and the water wasn't too
cold and the financial community seemed to like
it.
Sproul:
Reacted very well.
H.M.Jr:
And I was pleased. I suppose they thought I
must know some good news that they didn't.
Szymczak:
And no disappointment.
H.M.Jr:
So what we would like to do is do this refunding
and get some cash. I don't think April is going
to be any more cheerful than March, as far as
the war news goes. I haven't had any chance to
Regraded Hclassified
39
- 2 -
work on this other than I want to do it.
Marriner, have you got any ideas?
Eccles:
Well, I have got some. I don't know whether
they are any good. We favor refunding. There
is some question about getting new money in
the minds of some of us. That was yesterday
before the market closed. Of course it did
close last night on a much more favorable note
than was evident earlier in the day. My feel-
ing is that we ought to do the refunding now
at least. The two and a half percent bond
which has been discussed would be my choice.
First, it seems to me that it would supply a
market that has not been supplied or was not
supplied to insurance companies and the mutual
savings banks, in particular some of the
trustees, but the institutions that are not
paying taxes would - & two and a half percent
longer bond - or long bond, as long as you
could get it in that range, would seem to meet
that demand for those groups. It would also
help to determine what the spread between the
taxable and the non-taxable securities in that
range ought to be. The two percent we find
has been priced almost at the entire tax differential
I must say that I didn't expect it to be as weak
as it has been. I thought that there would be
not as much of a spread as has developed. I
believe as the securities get longer that the
demand coming from the institutions that are
not paying taxes would not make it necessary
to have possibly more than certainly three-
fourths of the tax differential. Speaking then of
8 two and a half percent bond, it would put it
somewhere in the range of 52-54, 53-55, the
way the market looks now. That would give it,
figuring three-fourths of the tax differential,
around a hundred and one and somewhere between
16 and 20 thirty-seconds, which it seems to me
would be plenty, that is, if it was 52-54. Now,
Regraded Uclassified
40
- 3 -
with reference to getting new money, I think
it is possible to get some new money. Personally,
I don't believe I would do it. I would sooner
see us wait until the market has absorbed or
distributed the two's 8. little better than it
has and also see what these securities that
are being refunded - of course, they are notes
and the bonds will likely go to a different
type of investor than the investor that has
been holding these notes. There will be, I
would think, considerable secondary market,
and I would personally sooner see the market
tested out on the two and a half taxable
securities before putting out a billion dollars
in that category. And then later on, in the
latter part of April or the first part of May,
put out a large issue of - a billion dollars
of bonds and possibly some additional two and
a half's and also some two's, giving an option,
maybe putting out some notes as well, that is
giving the market an option. That in general
is about the way I feel about the thing. You
expressed yourself yesterday, Matt, along some-
what the same lines.
Szymczak:
Yes. Of course my first feeling was to do noth-
ing, and this morning it is refunding plus new
money, but that is the tempo of the market.
H.M.Jr:
I don't know what happened. But it seems to
me that the announcement showed that we had
enough confidence and the fact that we had
the confidence, the market got the confidence
from that. Is that so or is that hooey?
Sproul:
I think it really had never lost its confidence.
That dip we had was a speculative dip on a
thin market, and the confidence was there all
the time, but I think the fact that you came
out emphasized that situation.
41
- 4 -
Hadley:
There was a feeling--
Szymczak:
A two and a half percent bond with a possi-
bility of also cleaning up this three-
quarter note, I think would take. I think
we ought to do 500 million of new money
plus the refunding. That is the way it
looks this morning.
H.M.Jr:
Draper?
Draper:
I feel a little more optimistic about the
chances of getting new money, but I can't
determine in my own mind whether that is be-
cause of psychological or actual feelings.
H.M.Jr:
This is the way I feel, and some of the men
in the Treasury feel, that I don't see how
the war news can - it can only go one way
in April and that is getting worse. I mean,
I don't see how it possibly can get any
better as we get near spring, and we have
to do something for Jesse Jones. He needs
500 million.
Szymczak:
That is 500 million. When does he need
that?
H.M.Jr:
Well, he ought to get it in April.
Szymczak:
Could you just do your refunding now and
then go in in April and give him 500 mil-
lion and take 500 million new money and
in that time you would be able to test your
two and a half percent bond?
(Mr. Bell entered the conference.)
H.M.Jr:
Did you take care of Knudsen?
Bell:
Yes. He wanted quite a story before I got
42
- 5 -
through it.
H.M.Jr:
Did you give it to him?
Bell:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
He wrote it down?
Bell:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you very much. But it keeps him
satisfied.
Bell:
Yes, he said he was satisfied.
H.M.Jr:
Well, we are just talking. Marriner Eccles
would just like to do the refunding, two
and a half percent. Szymczak. - maybe he
will go a little bit further. Draper
hasn't said, have you?
Draper:
That is right. I haven't said anything
definitely because I can't make up my mind
as to whether the demand is actual or
whether it is more or less stimulated by
an encouraging statement of the Treasury.
I have a feeling that it is actual.
Szymczak:
Well, I feel pretty much like Marriner does;
that is, do your refunding now and get your
money next month after you have tested out
the market on a two and a half percent
taxable bond.
H.M.Jr:
Excuse me. These people are going up to
testify and they all want to talk to me
before they go up.
Sproul:
Horse shedding, I take it.
H.M.Jr:
No, I begged off, you see, on going before
43
- 6 -
the committee so not being there, they
want to talk. I am sorry, Szymczak.
Szymczak:
That is all right. I say, the way the
market looks this morning I think you can
get 500 million of new money without any
trouble, but then comes the question as to
what--
Eccles:
I don't think the April situation is going
to - I am not thinking of that from the
standpoint of an improved international
situation. I agree with you fully.
H.M.Jr:
Excuse me. I am sorry, but these people
have to be serviced.
(Telephone conversation with Mr. Harold
Smith follows:)
44
March 14, 1941
10:45 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello, Harold.
Harold
Smith:
Yeah. Say, I was Just going to tell you
that these hearings are resumed this morning.
I'm going down there. They got through with
the formal testimony and they spent all after-
noon quizzing Knox and Stimson and Hull.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah.
S:
Now, I'll call you when I get back. The
only thing that I think we have any concern
about, as I see it, unless they put me on
the pan pretty heavily this morning, 1s
British assets. Two or three of the Republicans
were hammering on that and everybody dodged
it. Now, whether we'll be able to dodge it
indefinitely I don't know.
H.M.Jr:
Well, what I'd like 18, if you could say to
them, well, now, if you'll just write your
question out, the Treasury will supply the
answer in a written answer.
S:
All right. Now, the President did tell them
the other day when they were over there -
Woodrum mentioned that, I think - that they
were liquidating now something like - 80 many
million dollars worth of United States steel
investment and apparently everybody - I think
Hull was saying, well, this problem 1s being
currently worked on. That's true, isn't it?
H.M.Jr:
Yes, but the trouble is this, Harold, and
that's where I'm in an awful difficult spot,
and I don't want to make an appearance -
and this is for you. They have not sold one
single dollars worth of their direct invest-
ments. They are selling their listed
securities at the rate of about $10 million
a week, but on their direct investments,
they haven't sold a dollar.
S:
They are selling their listed?
45
- 2 -
H.M.Jr:
At the rate of about 10 million a week.
That's about what they're averaging. But
the other thing, which they've promised me
to do faithfully, they haven't.
8:
Is that due to the possibility of loss in
forcing that or 1s 1t - - I mean, they want
more time on it.
H.M.P:
Well, what they say is - their story is
that when they go into a thing and try to
sell it - dispose of a property like Viscose,
they find that there are no records, they've
got to have appraisals made, they've got to
bring the English manager over and are having
great difficulty in finding out what the
worth is. Now, that's their story, and
they assure me that they are moving heaven
and earth to sell them, but it's damn hard
to explain to the Congress why they haven't
sold one single property, which they haven't.
S:
That's right.
H.M.Jr:
And that's why I want to try and duck it.
S:
Well, I can see that it's going to be
embarrassing.
H.M.J.:
Because it makes an awful poor appearance.
S:
And it doesn't have & devil of a lot of
bearing upon the immediate situation, if
they could just be assured that the thing
was going to be done.
H.M.Jr:
Well, that the English - - I have their word
on that they will sell all of their direct
investments in this country, but they're just
damn slow about getting started. Hello?
8:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
And I go up there and they say, well, you
told us six or seven weeks ago that they
were going to do it; why haven't they done
it, and aren't they keeping faith and all
the rest of that stuff.
Regraded Uclassified
46
- 3 -
S:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
And if they press me, I've just got to
say, well, they haven't sold them. Now, as
far as .....
8:
Your suggestion is that they prepare some
definite questions that they want answered
and ......
H.M.Jr:
We'll answer them.
8:
And I can say, well, I'm very confident
or I have the assurance - no, maybe I
shouldn't bring it in too personally. I'll
say, I'm confident that the Secretary of the
Treasury will be able to give you all the
information that you need.
H.M.Jr:
That's right. I think if you can do that,
you'll save a lot of embarrassment for the
whole Administration.
S:
Well, that's what I wanted to get your
reaction on, and I'll let you know when I
get back .....
H.M.Jr:
And the other thing, Harold. If you pick up
the Journal of Commerce, you'll see how they
are going after us on this tax thing and
tying it up with the $7 billion.
S:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
Give me a ring when you get back.
8:
O.K. Thank you.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
Regraded Uclassified
47
- 7 -
H.M.Jr:
Do you agree with me? The point is, he
says three or four Republican Congressmen
have asked, "Well, what about the British
assets? What is happening?" you see, and
it seems that the President told them a
little bit about how they were selling us
steel and that sort of thing. Evidently
they want to know what else, but I am in
the damnedest spot, you see, because they
haven't sold & single factory, and I have
just the - the pressure that I have put on
them is just unbelievable. I mean, I have
begged them, I implored them, and cajoled
them, and threatened them.
Szymczak:
Why don't they do it?
Draper:
Why, they don't want to sell anything if
they can help it.
H.M.Jr:
Well, they say they are going to sell them,
that there is this difficulty and that,
they can't get the thing appraised, they
don't know what it is worth.
Eccles:
I guess it isn't the easiest matter in the
world.
H.M.Jr:
And the records are bad, and they have found
factories they didn't know existed, and there
is a great mystery about the things and so
forth and so on.
Bell:
It is lucky it wasn't the other way, Mar-
riner, that they thought they owned it and
they didn't.
H.M.Jr:
As a matter of fact, the study which Harry
White made with eight people, we find their
direct investments are nearer a billion
than they are 900 million. We have got a
48
- 8 -
damn good idea of what they are worth'
because we have gone into the income tax
returns of all of them.
Eccles:
The difficulty with a thing of that sort,
the market for it, for plants and companies,
is usually pretty limited.
H.M.Jr:
Well, in the room, Marriner, SEC - I shush
all these people over there. I don't like
to get in on this thing. We have got the
Treasury clean, and I want to keep it clean.
I don't want a lot of brokers around. So
I send them over to the SEC. And they say
they have got a man ready to plunk down 90
million dollars for Viscose and this and
that. Of course this is all in the room.
Well, to go up on the Hill and say the
British won't sell their real estate would
be terrible.
Eccles:
It wouldn't help get the bill through.
Draper:
That would be bad.
H.M.Jr:
And now, Mr. Morgenthau, how much are you
going to increase our taxes in order to
finance this seven billion dollars?
Eccles:
Yes, the public doesn't accept very well
increasing the taxes with the British hold-
ing on to 8. lot of assets.
It isn't timed very well, is it?
H.M.Jr:
Well, this is the Journal of Commerce.
Eccles:
They should have gotten the bill through
and then talked about taxes.
Draper:
There is 8. lot of talk about 5 percent payroll
Regraded Uclassified
49
- 9 -
tax.
Bell:
I don't know where that comes from.
Haas:
Economy League.
H.M.Jr:
This is Victor Ridder who always - he owns
this German paper in New York, you know.
What is it called, that big German paper?
Draper:
Staats-Zeitung.
H.M.Jr:
I suppose that is his idea.
Sproul:
Aren't there some smaller properties they
could sell relatively quickly and have a
symbolical sign of activity.
H.M.Jr:
I have done everything but physically get
on my knees to these fellows in order to
implore them, as a token, to sell one. I
have done it since last June, and I have -
I have done everything humanly possible in
order to get those people to sell one property.
There are hundreds. Now I have got to take
the position until I am proven wrong that
they really want to do it, but I can't con-
vince some of these hard-boiled babies up
on the Hill that that is true. On their
securities, this man Gifford has done a
nice job. He goes along and has done it
but - I think everybody in the room wants to
see the seven billion go through, but I have
been trying awfully hard not to have to go
up on the Hill and testify.
Szymczak:
Do they know this now, that that question
is being put to the committee and what it
means to that bill? They should know that.
H.M.Jr:
Since Monday, I have refused to receive any
Regraded Uclassified
50
- 10 -
British representative until they give me
the answer. I laid down the law on Monday
to Halifax in person. Of course this is all
very much - and I said, Until you can send
somebody to me to say you sold the property,
I don't want to see anybody. That is how
far I have gone.
Draper:
You can't go much further than that.
H.M.Jr:
I told them I would have to testify and
explained the whole thing to Halifax him-
self. I said, "I will not receive anybody
now.
Szymczak:
Can't he hear in both ears? Maybe you got
the wrong ear.
H.M.Jr:
I mean, you can't go any further than that.
Draper:
No, I don't see how you can.
H.M.Jr:
I say, "Please, please, let's keep it just
as a Treasury - one of our secrets we are
not trying to advertise." I can't do any
more than that, and I haven't seen anybody
since Monday, and I am not going to see any-
body. That is why I gave that statement out
yesterday, because it was all around town
that we were going to take over all their
contracts, so I gave out the facts just how
much we were and no more.
Eccles:
They are not helping much, are they?
H.M.Jr:
They are not helping at all, Marriner. Well,
anyway, I didn't want to bother you, but
they don't make life any easier for you.
Szymczak:
That is the strangest thing about this market
this morning. Seven billion in the paper
Regraded Uclassified
51
- 11 -
and all of this and the market is so strong
this morning.
H.M.Jr:
I think that luck is still with us, and we
had better take advantage of it.
Eccles:
The - I am not thinking of - as I started
to say when you got on the phone, I am not
thinking of the marketing - conditions be-
ing any more favorable so far as the war is
concerned later on. The market will be, it
seems to me, more accustomed to taxable
securities. At the present time it hasn't
entirely absorbed the two's. There is a
certain amount of secondary distribution
that is going on. Now, putting out the two's
and a half, you will have the same thing.
It just seems to me that in 30 days the
market will have had an opportunity to ap-
praise the relative values of the relation-
ship between your two issues of taxable
bonds and the issues of the non-taxables.
It is easier, it seems to me, for the market
to do that without new financing, and then
have the new financing come on at whatever
amount is necessary with all the courage in
the world because I think that is the atti-
tude we have got to take. We have got to
assume that in the final analysis a financ-
ing has got to be done, and between the
Treasury and the Federal Reserve System, it
is going to be done and it is going to be
done on a basis that is reasonable, and it
is going to be done with courage and I
think that is the attitude we have got to
take and I don't - my hesitancy to put out
new money is not for the reason that I don't
think that we have got to take advantage of
this market when it comes and pick another
market. I think we have got to do whatever
financing we need to have done whenever we
52
- 12 -
need it. We don't need the new money
immediately. As I understand it, you have
about 8, billion dollars of balances with
the - with your note - I mean your bill
market.
(Mr. Foley entered the conference.)
H.M.Jr:
Will you just excuse me one minute?
(Discussion off the record with Mr. Foley.)
(Mr. Foley left the conference.)
H.M.Jr:
You think it is a mistake?
Bell:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
I am sorry, Marriner.
Eccles:
It is all right.
Szymczak:
Marriner is still on the refunding.
Eccles:
No, I am through. I think I said my story
on it.
H.M.Jr:
About three times, wasn't it?
Well, I have got - you think do the refunding
and wait?
Eccles:
Yes, I think that, but it isn't because I
don't think you could get new money, neces-
sarily, and I don't think that the conditions
are going to be more favorable, but I just
think that it is easier to price a five
hundred million and then test your market
out now when you don't need new money so
53
- 13 -
that when you do go out for new money, go
out for whatever you need. I don't think
we have got to face this thing except with
courage. The thing can be handled, and we
have got to get what we need, and I for one
am only willing to pay what is & fair price.
Now, that is that. But I do think that in
the absence of taxable securities, we have
only had one issue, and that is the two's,
that the market hasn't had very much of a
chance up to date to establish what may be
the relationship between the taxable and
the non-taxable and to add to 500 million
of refunding another 500 million of new
money at this time just seems to me, inas-
much as you don't have to have the money,
to not be advisable, that the smartest
thing to do in order to get this market
tested for new money is to do the refunding,
and that would tend to establish a price
relationship. Now, that is the way I feel
about it.
Szymczak:
Particularly because you are refunding notes
with bonds.
Eccles:
That is right, that is another reason.
Bell:
Do you think that just a cash offering alone
and leave the refunding until later might
be a better test of the market?
Eccles:
Well--
Szymczak:
Probably would.
Eccles:
I think the logical thing to do, though, is
do the refunding. The point is, you don't
need the new money immediately and to take
it now is to indicate you are afraid you
can't get it later. I think it shows courage
54
- 14 -
to do your refunding and let it be known
that with the financing with bills that
your cash situation is taken care of for a
month except this RFC and that along in
the first part of May you expect to get
whatever new cash you need.
H.M.Jr:
Well, you don't mind if I differ with you?
Eccles:
No, no, not at all. I am used to people
differing.
Draper:
He has a lot of that over in our shop.
Eccles:
Yes, I am accustomed to it. I wouldn't be
happy if I didn't.
H.M.Jr:
The way I feel is this, Marriner. We have
got to do somewhere around 4 billion dollars
in the next 12 or 15 months.
Bell:
You will have to do more than that.
Szymczak:
I thought about six.
Bell:
Yes, nearer six. It all depends of course
on our campaign which we are going to start
May 1, but it is nearer six.
H.M.Jr:
And I wouldn't go into the market if I felt
it was weak, but all the indications are
that the market can take it, and I think we
have just got to press a little bit.
Eccles:
I think the market will take it.
H.M.Jr:
I mean we have just got to press a little
bit.
Eccles:
You could pay a little more maybe, than you
need to, if you put out a billion instead of
Regraded Uclassified
55
- 16 -
500 million.
Szymczak:
I don't doubt you can get your new money
without any trouble, but you have got to
watch it a little closer than if you did
your refunding.
H.M.Jr:
I think it would be & mistake, from what
they tell me, to do 500 million of notes
-for Jesse just now because the note market
hasn't straightened out yet, but the other
thing, I think the market will take it,
and I don't like to, as you people know -
I have got an eccentricity, I don't like
to reopen old issues, so if we did 500
hundred, say of two and a half's, refund-
ing, I wouldn't like to, say, 2. couple of
weeks from now reopen another 500 million
of the same issue. We have got so much to
do that I would like to keep the issues over
a billion.
Szymczak:
Would you offer- give an option of the old
note?
Bell:
Reopen the old note just for safety.
Szymczak:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
Unless New York tells me now that the market
is sick and it is a bad time, I would like
to go ahead. Sproul has been very good. He
has listened to all of this.
Sproul:
I differ somewhat from Marriner on this oc-
casion. I assume that you need some cash
or will be more comfortable getting some cash
now, that you will have the RFC to do in
April and you will have a substantial job
to do in both May and June, about & billion
dollars in each month, so that there is going
56
- 17 -
to be no lack of financing to do in those
months. I would rather get my cash at this
time by opening up the two and a half per-
cent area than by continuing to issue bills
beyond April 2, which is using entirely the
bank credit mechanism to get your money. I
think this is an appropriate time to begin
getting some of the funds of institutions
such as insurance companies and savings
banks, which would be attracted by the two
and a half. I wouldn't want to do that if
at this stage you were going to be forced
to put such & rate on your offering that
you were going to set a tone, or arrange
for your whole future program, which would
be too high, but I don't think a two and a
half percent obligation at this time at the -
and at the maturity which I think you can go
to, which is somewhere around 13 years,
would be setting too high a rate for your
whole financing program. I think it would
be within the range where you would not be
embarrassed in the future if and when you
come to the conclusion that the roof on the
financing of this program is such and such
a rate. I don't think this two and a half
percent offering would embarrass you on
that. I should think you could do a two
and a half percent bond of somewhere around
13 years, reopen the last note issue, and
that you would take care of your own needs
and satisfy & requirement of the market at
this time because I think that longer market
is a little starved at the moment and it is
a good place to get some cash, and I would
rather get it there right now than by
further use of bills which I think is &
flexible instrument. You throw it in as
you did the last time, a very good place to
use it. You are going to have other times
when you will need to use it, and I wouldn't
Regraded Uclassified
57
- 18 -
want to over work it right now.
Szymczak:
Allan, you don't mean to say you would dis-
continue the present program on bills?
Sproul:
I would discontinue it as of April 2, say.
You will have gotten 500 million as of then?
Bell:
I would do it the week before. I believe
I would go until the 26th.
Sproul:
That all depends on how much cash you want
to go through April with. You can stop a
week sooner or later, depending on how much
cash you want to go through April with.
H.M.Jr:
You are figuring one more than I am. That
is a detail. It is a hundred million one
way or the other.
Eccles:
By 13 years, you mean a 13 call date?
Sproul:
I think you could do it for that, but the
market now is not looking so much at call
dates because they don't think you will call
these issues on the call date, they will
probably go to maturity, so I would want to
have a short call period, and I think--
Szymczak:
A longer maturity? That is, two or three
years?
Sproul:
Twelve-thirteen or a fourteen-fifteen, be-
cause your call period isn't being looked at
so now.
Bell:
A two year call period is nice for a billion
dollar issue.
Szymczak:
Yes.
Regraded Uclassified
58
- 19 -
Sproul:
One other thing, I think I would go for
a billion or less rather than crowd it too
much now because there is still some re-
distribution on the two's and if your need
for cash isn't pressing, I don't think you
should crowd the market too much on the
two and a half issue.
H.M.Jr:
You were talking 54-56. Is that what you
were talking about?
Sproul:
Yes, or 53-55, if you want to split it in
there.
Eccles:
We will know what the market is Monday.
Today, the way the market closed, 53-55
looks all right, I think.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I will tell you the way I feel, gentle-
men, unless somebody says to me, "Look, you
can't get it; it is & mistake, I would
like very much to go ahead.
Szymczak:
Five hundred?
Eccles:
I don't think there is any question about
getting it.
H.M.Jr:
I would like to get six hundred because I
would like to get the - well, around - you
know, a billion or 11 hundred million. Is
that crowding it 8. little bit?
Sproul:
I think so, but no one can be dogmatic about
that.
Bell:
Allan Rich says that the market in the two
and a half and two and three-quarter area
is starved, that it takes very little buy-
ing to shove all those bonds from 53 on up
to the 65's right out the roof. It takes
very little buying to shove those up.
59
- 20 -
Eccles:
Isn't that the tax free--
Bell:
That is the tax free aspect, and he says
the institutions will go for this taxable
bond. They are not worried about the tax
exempt features.
Eccles:
You mean the ones that are not paying taxes?
Bell:
That is right. There will be a lot of them
that would rather have this higher yield
bond.
Sproul:
But when you are going to have to come back
month after month after month, I don't
think you want to over crowd them on this
first issue. You want to keep their appe-
tite a little keen for security.
Bell:
Well, if we come out with a billion dollars
worth of bonds now, we won't have any other
bond until May. That gives them a month and
a half to digest it. The only thing they
will have will be a short RFC.
Sproul:
There may be some corporate financing in
between, too.
H.M.Jr:
But not for us, end if we told them that if
we do this there would be RFC in April, and
we would stay out of the market for April--
Bell:
I think SO.
H.M.Jr:
Would you want me to say that?
Bell:
I would say Monday when you announce this
that you will not be in the market again
until about the middle of April for RFC.
Sproul:
I would definitely say that, to give them a
60
- 21 -
little look ahead.
Bell:
The Treasury won't be in the market until,
on its own account, until possibly May.
H.M.Jr:
That is a long time to commit me.
Sproul:
Well, you will have a sizable balance, and
if you get in a jam you can have bills
-
again.
Eccles:
Well, don't you think, though, if you are
going to get new money you will have a bet-
ter market if you do say that? They know
there is no chance of having anything offered
until that time.
Bell:
I think so. I think the market would like
to have some sort of a program, and I think
they would like to know that the Treasury
is getting back on its old basis, refund-
ing ahead of time and taking its cash ahead
of time.
H.M.Jr:
Well, Dan, supposing we do what you say,
supposing we take - go to the market twice
more. You wanted to go the bills twice more?
Bell:
Yes. I would like to go through March and
take 400 million of bills.
H.M.Jr:
You would?
Bell:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
But if you did that and 600 of cash, where
would we be about the first of May?
Bell:
Well, I have got 400 million bills and 500
million cash. We would go out of March
with about a billion seven, and I have got
Regraded Uclassified
61
- 22 -
750 million RFC in April, and we have got
some very heavy commitments which we have
got to analyze and it may reduce that 500
million. With that basis, We would go out
of April with a billion three. It would
cut that 75 down by five, then you would
go out with about a billion.
H.M.Jr:
That is not too bad.
Eccles:
My thought was if you didn't get the new
money, you would keep on putting out bills;
but if you are going to get 500 million
of new money, there is no point in continu-
ing to issue bills.
H.M.Jr:
I don't see why we should do the bills more
than once more.
Eccles:
I don't either. If you are going to get
new money, I would cut out bills just as
soon as possible. I agree with Allan it is
preferable to get funds outside of the bank
and in using the bill market, it is only
with the idea that later on you can do
enough financing to take up the bills.
H.M.Jr:
We are committed to do the bills next week.
Eccles:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
But I don't see why we shouldn't stop after
next week.
Sproul:
There is just a question of your cash posi-
tion and not making this new issue too large,
that is the way it strikes me.
H.M.Jr:
I don't know whether you gentlemen saw this,
but to me this is one of the most interest-
ing charts that I have ever seen. George
62
- 23 -
Haas did an hourly thing on the 25th and
26th showing these two percent bonds -
every time they got down to the price of
our notes, they bounced back up again. I
have never seen the thing as interesting
as that.
Sproul:
We were watching that. That was the re-
sistance.
H.M.Jr:
Every time they hit that note they would
bounce up again.
Sproul:
Like a net under them.
Eccles:
Unless the net gave way.
Sproul:
It couldn't give way.
H.M.Jr:
But I mean I have never seen--
Eccles:
Well, of course, there would naturally be
a certain amount of arbitration in there,
that if it would get down where it was more
profitable to buy notes, they would switch,
of course. That would be a factor, wouldn't
it, Allan.
Sproul:
Well, it got down to the point where there
was no possible advantage in buying notes,
then they went into the two's.
Murphy:
When it got down to the notes, they saw they
couldn't get any lower because the exchange
could go into the notes at that price and
there not being any more room down, the only
way was up or across, so they bounced.
Sproul:
They never go across.
Murphy:
They always want to move.
Regraded Uclassified
63
.
- 24 -
H.M.Jr:
It was a nice demonstration of usefulness
million. of the notè even though it was only 32
Sproul:
They pegged them at about five and a half,
didn't they?
Murphy:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
If that worked then, I think it is a pretty
good thing to use it again. Do you think
it will work twice?
Sproul:
I don't think you would need it this time.
H.M.Jr:
You don't?
Sproul:
I am for having the note reopened, but I
don't think you will need it to perform that
function this time.
Haas:
But it would be there in case it was called
on.
H.M.Jr:
Same note at the same price.
Bell:
Yes, reopen that old note.
H.M.Jr:
How would you feel about it?
Eccles:
I would certainly not go into another one,
because you have only got 32 million of that
outstanding.
H.M.Jr:
Would you reopen this?
Eccles:
Yes, I would reopen.
Bell:
Just for the exchanges, not for cash.
H.M.Jr:
Yes. Let me ask this, because we have got
64
- 25 -
this idea and it is kind of late. Would
it be rushing things to do it Tuesday?
We could do it Wednesday.
Sproul:
I would prefer to do it Wednesday, but I
think you could do it Tuesday, if you wanted
to. I prefer it Wednesday from this stand-
point, that the two's are really just com-
ing out, being issued on Monday, and you
would have a couple of days for that mechan-
ical operation to be cleared up before the
new issue came out.
H.M.Jr:
It would help a little bit?
Sproul:
Yes, to do it Wednesday instead of Tuesday.
H.M.Jr:
You wouldn't have to leave it open on the
refunding more than two days because these
note holders are all big ones.
Sproul:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
How do you feel about that?
Bell:
That is all right with me, Wednesday.
H.M.Jr:
One thing that I was interested on this
bill thing that my boys told me, I guess
they got it from the Federal, that this last
bill was the General Motors and some of those
big corporations buying.
Eccles:
They were the buyers? You see, you put 32
out. We took 10 of them in the exchange
80 that left 22 million.
Bell:
General Motors took how much?
H.M.Jr:
Fourteen million I think.
65
- 26 -
Sproul:
This is on bills.
Eccles:
Oh, the bills.
Sproul:
There was a much wider list of bidders, and
I think as more people waked up to what was
going on, you would have even more of that.
H.M.Jr:
I think it is interesting to know it.
Bell:
That is one reason I would like to let it
go this month again, just to see what hap-
pens.
Szymczak:
You mean to spread it out a little more?
Bell:
Yes, to get people interested in that bill
market.
Eccles:
The trouble is what people take compared
with the banks is small.
Bell:
General Motors took 14 million and A. T. &
T. was in for eight or nine million. That
is just as good as selling to the public.
Eccles:
That is right, and that is so much to the
good, but when you are putting out 200
million a week, you take the aggregate amount -
I would like to see you consider at some time
pretty soon the suggestion that I made when
we were discussing that savings scheme. I
think I mentioned it to you. The idea of
issuing up to a two year note with the quarter
for the first six months, the half for the
second--
H.M.Jr:
You told me about that.
Eccles:
I am sure that you would get a lot of funds
of corporations, and wealthy individuals,
Regraded Uclassified
66
- 27 -
not take less than 10 thousand, for instance,
of the registered, and - so that it really
is a six months' maturity or a year maturity,
8 year and a half, or two years, and you
would keep in those funds. I think it in-
volves idle funds that won't go into long
bonds and bills because there is no yield--
H.M.Jr:
You have got to do a little more selling
over here, Marriner. You haven't got the
Treasury quite sold on that yet.
Eccles:
Well, I am going to keep on doing some talk-
ing about it because I really think that
that is - you have got a field of deposits
that run up into billions that we haven't
found a way to get them out. Now, if you
can get a bill rate of a quarter, you would
get them out. But you are not going to get
a quarter bill rate so long as you have got
your large volume of excess reserves. You
can't deal with the excess reserve problem.
Therefore, this is another way--
H.M.Jr:
Would you mind repeating that last?
Eccles:
I said you can't deal with the excess reserve
problem. (Laughter) So that until you can
get a short term rate that will attract the
corporate and individual idle funds, they are
going to continue to be idle, and I think
that before we get through financing that has
to be done. We have got to find ways and
means of tapping all the sources of funds
that are not in use rather than create new
bank deposits.
H.M.Jr:
Well, could we decide it this morning?
Allan, would you break out into a cold per-
spiration if we say 600 million new money?
Regraded Uclassified
67
- 28 -
Sproul:
No, I would not. I would prefer to see you
say 500 million, but I wouldn't have any
palpitations if you said six.
H.M.Jr:
How about you, Dan?
Bell:
I wouldn't either. I think probably five
is enough, and your half billion makes just
& round - you would get around 40 or 50
million out of an issue, S0 I don't think
there is much difference between five and
six.
H.M.Jr:
Have you got any opinion, George?
Haas:
On that question I think I would take the
five.
H.M.Jr:
Henry?
Murphy:
As between the two, the five.
Eccles:
How do these boys feel? Do they figure new
money?
Haas:
We came in figuring just the refunding.
With all the optimism around, I think we
would like to think about it.
H.M.Jr:
You have got to think awfully fast.
Haas:
I don't feel strongly.
H.M.Jr:
Which way?
Haas:
I mean, I came in with the idea of just the
refunding, because I thought it was safer,
but I don't feel strongly that way. I think
you could probably go ahead and get your
cash. I am a bit bothered with the pricing.
68
- 29 -
H.M.Jr:
You fellows have got all Saturday and Sunday.
You have got nothing to do. What the hell?
Szymczak:
They are not going any place.
Bell:
If they are, they can cancel it.
H.M.Jr:
They did a good job three or four weeks ago.
Murphy:
Three weeks.
H.M.Jr:
They did a good job three weeks ago. How
about it?
Murphy:
It is about as hard this time.
H.M.Jr:
How about the pricing. I am not worrying
about that.
Bell:
We are going to have a lot of hard times in
pricing securities between now and May 1,
I am afraid.
H.M.Jr:
Cash?
Murphy:
I am & little disturbed about the six. I
am 8. little concerned that there is no net
under the five, but there can be. This part
has to perfrom its act out in the open, its
high trapeze act. What it really amounts
to, if I can put the thing baldly, is that
in order to get the prices that Hadley and
Mr. Sproul give, you have got to tear up your
charts and jump out the window, and I think
they are probably right in doing it. You
would never get 54-56 really on a chart.
We have really strained ourselves and gotten
out to 52-54. I think probably the thing to
do is to tear up the charts, but I hate to
tear up the charts, and carry a weight as
I jump out the window. I tend to want to
69
- 30 -
keep it fairly light. I share the opti-
mism; but, being 8. chart-ist, I feel a
little uncomfortable after I have torn
up the charts and left it behind.
Hadley:
Might I say it depends on whose charts you
are going to tear up.
Sproul:
I would agree that if you don't need the
cash, keeping it light, so as to not unduly
burden this.
Eccles:
Piser, do you still feel as pessimistic as
you did yesterday?
Piser:
No, the market reacted much better than I
expected, but I would be inclined to leave
the cash on the bond issue with 500 million
and take another week of bills.
Draper:
I think you are pressing your luck on six,
Mr. Secretary.
Murphy:
It sounds bigger than five.
Draper:
Psychologically it sounds much bigger.
Sproul:
A billion one sounds a lot bigger than a
billion.
H.M.Jr:
I was talking to R. H. Macy. He wanted
99.9.
Hadley:
I am in favor of the 500 because I think
that the market would be a little bit upset
by an issue that is over a billion when it
is in a new area. I think the smaller issue
is better and later on we can put out 8. big-
ger one.
H.M.Jr:
I guess I am over-ruled. Supposing we ask
Regraded Uclassified
70
- 31 -
Bob Rouse how the thing looks. He is in
New York, isn't he?
Sproul:
Yes, he is.
H.M.Jr:
I don't think I will argue about the 500
million because I think it would give us
a little more time to prepare the market
if we do it Wednesday morning. It will
give you a little more time in New York,
won't it?
Sproul;
Yes, it will.
H.M.Jr:
I mean, if we tell them - if we told them
tonight there would be 500, that would be
time enough, wouldn't it, after the market
closes, for Saturday morning papers?
Sproul:
Yes, it would.
H.M.Jr:
It gives us all day to watch it.
Sproul:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
Then we could have two days to watch the
market on the pricing.
Bell:
It gives us a little more time. Last time
we didn't get the papers out of the Treasury
until late and that was all right because it
was & refunding, but here you have got &
cash and open only one day. You really ought
to give them a little more time in order to
catch the evening trains.
Eccles:
Speaking of pricing, do you think they ought
to be priced allowing - you have got to
start from either giving them the full
differentiation on the taxable and the non-
taxable or seven-eights of it or three-quarters
Regraded Uclassified
71
- 32 -
of it. You have got - the pricing has got
to take that into account. Now, if you
give three quarters of the tax differential,
would give, according to the figures I have,
on a 52-54, about a hundred and one and a
half. If you take seven-eights, if you are
going to allow for that, then you have got
a hundred and about fifteen- or twenty-
thirty-seconds. After all, pricing is just
a question of what premise you start from.
It isn't like it used to be when you priced
it. I agree with you--
Murphy:
It is original this time.
Eccles:
I would go out the window on this thing. I
would certainly not take into account more
than three-quarters, I mean allow for more
than three quarters of the tax differential.
I wouldn't allow seven-eights. Three-
quarters would be - when you are talking
about pricing, Allan, what do you have in
mind?
Sproul:
Well, we figure that - you can figure it
another way, not say here is the tax exempt
line and then you add a certain differential
to it and it must be a taxable line. You
can also take a look at what market you have
for taxable securities and see where you
think a Treasury taxable should fit in.
(Telephone conversation with Mr. Rouse
follows?)
Regraded Uclassified
72
March 14, 1941
10:30 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Mr. Rouse.
Robert
Rouse:
Good morning, Mr. Secretary.
H.M.Jr:
You're on the air here and your people,
Eccles, Sproul and some of us are sitting
here. We want to know how the market was
this morning.
R:
Well, it was a very slow market, and it 1s
firm and somewhat higher. The longer bonds
are up about 3/32nds; the new bonde at 101.7
bid. There 1s a supply of bonds in the market
at 101.8. There are fleeting, small bids
to date which were filled from that source.
The general situation though is firm.
H.M.Jr:
Any gossip?
R:
Not particularly. We talked to the dealers
this morning and they were, of course,
interested in this deal that was reported
yesterday in the refunding of the June notes
and possibly some cash. The only comment,
as far as particular dating was concerned,
was from the Bankers Trust Company which in
looking over that ticker notice yesterday
afternoon - the gossip notice - were looking
at a'53-55 or '532-5 and they were figuring pretty
much the tax equivalent there. And others -
Ben Levy was saying that you could do anything
you wanted to do and 80 on. But in general
the idea of doing it appealed to everybody
and they thought it was good, but they
weren't prepared to get down to brass tacks
as far as prices were concerned.
H.M.Jr:
How much cash do they think we're going to
do? What are they guessing?
R:
Well, the only guessing 18 taking its tune
more or less from the press, which was
guessing 500 million.
73
- 2 -
H.M.Jr:
I see. Just a moment, please.
R:
There has been no crystallization and not
as much talk yet to have a real idea of
what they are thinking.
H.M.Jr:
Just a moment. (Eccles: Ask him what the
dealers' position is on the 2's? How long
they are on bonds, particularly the 2's?)
Chairman Eccles wants to know what the
dealers' position is on the bonds, particularly
in the new 2's.
R:
Well, I couldn't tell him off-hand on the
2's themselves, but their position in the
5 to 12-year group is that they are long
111 million, and they are short about a like
amount of over 12 years, and the poor fellows
have taken an awful whipsawing the last two
or three weeks as far as their making money
is concerned. One interesting thing,
Devine's people told me this morning, is
that ....
H.M.Jr:
Devine?
R:
Yeah. He said that they had distributed
over 200 million of the 2's at '48-50 all
over the country, he thought they were well
placed and there was only one lot in that
that was of good size - big size.
H.M.Jr:
Well, that's good news, isn't it?
R:
That's good news and they said that they had
bought 75% of them in the Street; that is,
from financial houses of one sort or another,
some other dealers, and the like.
H.M.Jr:
Well, that's all to the good. Is there
any private financing that has gone sour?
R:
The 16 million Public Service of Oklahoma
last week did not go well and the Wheeling
Steels this morning are moving slowly but
they expect that that will work out better
as the day wears along.
74
- 3 -
H.M.Jr:
Good.
R:
The New York State deal hasn't gone well.
H.M.Jr:
Well, we were thinking that maybe towards
tonight after thinking about it all day
that we might announce for Saturday morning's
papers what the deal is going to be except
for the rates.
R:
I see.
H.M.Jr:
And we also were thinking of not doing it
until Wednesday morning. What do you think?
R:
I think it's all right.
H.M.Jr:
Could we do it Tuesday morning if we wanted
to?
R:
Yes, sir. I think you can. Personally, I
prefer Wednesday to have the two full days
trading after the delivery of the new bonds
takes place on Saturday.
H.M.Jr:
Well, that's what Mr. Sproul said. We can
wait until Wednesday. It gives us all a
little more time. Thank you very much.
R:
Yes, sir.
Regraded Uclassified
75
- 33 -
Eccles:
The dealer's position looks all right. I
mean, apparently they are pretty well bal-
anced out.
H.M.Jr:
Well, let's leave it this way. We will
watch it and I will come back after Cabinet
and talk with Dan and get in touch with you
people and unless something changes, some
where along at five o'clock tonight, we
will give it out for tomorrow morning's
papers that after consultation with the
Federal Reserve System we have decided to
do the refunding and 500 million cash as of
next Wednesday.
Szymczak:
Sounds all right.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Eccles:
Then it will be just a question of pricing
it.
H.M.Jr:
Just that and these men can--
Eccles:
I hope you don't give them too much.
Hourly, February 25 and 26, 1941
DOLLARS
DOLLARS
1011
1014
1011
101+
2% BONDS, MARCH 15, 1948-'50
1011
101
101
101
1001
100$
to NOTES, MARCH 15, 1943
100}
100}
1001
100
100
100
10
11
12
I
2
3
4
10
11
12
1
2
3
4
FEBRUARY 25
TIME
FEBRUARY 26
Office of the Secretary of the Treasury
76
Division of and Relitive
F - 202
Regraded Uclas
77
March 14, 1941
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY'S DIARY
Secretary Morgenthau, D. W. Bell, Harry Hopkins, and
Ed Foley conferred today with the President on a draft over-
all Agreement covering the defense articles which the President
is authorized to dispose of under the Lease-Lend Bill. The
conference took place at the Executive Offices, starting at
11:45 and concluding at 12:30.
Secretary Morgenthau handed the President his reply to
the President's letter of March 13, and the draft Agreement,
(copy attached).
The President suggested that the word "Agreement" be
deleted and whereases substituted. He pointed out that he did
not want the contract in any way to be considered as a treaty
which will require a two-thirds vote of the Senate for ratifi-
cation. Mr. Foley said that the suggestion was a good one,
although the document was considered to be an Executive Agree-
ment to carry out the powers conferred by Congress on the
President in the Lease-Lend Bill, and it in no sense should
be looked upon as a treaty.
The President raised the question as to the mutuality
of the provision in regard to the return of defense articles
Regraded Uclassified
78
- 2 -
which, in the opinion of the President, are not used up, worn
out, or destroyed. The President was concerned that the
British might consider this to be too harsh. After some
discussion pro and con, the President said he was willing
to leave it the way it was for purposes of negotiation.
In Paragraph (b), on page 2, the President suggested
that the words "and relative value" be inserted after the
word "efficiency" and before the word "substantially". He
thought this would give him a little more leeway if he did
not want exactly the same kind of articles returned by Great
Britain as were made available.
On page 2, Paragraph (c), the President suggested that
the words "dollar value of" be deleted and the word "in" inserted.
This change, the President said, would get away from the dollar
standard of value and would more nearly carry out the purposes
of the lend-lease arrangement as he envisaged it. The President
also suggested, in the same paragraph, that the words "or else-
where" be inserted after the words "British Empire" and before
the word "and". In this way, the President said, the British
could obtain Bolivian tin for other Empire commodities, and
the tin could then be made available to the United States if
there was need for it.
Regraded Uclassified
79
- 8
On the balance of the Agreement the President had no
suggestions. He asked several questions in regard to soms
of the provisions, but was satisfied when he was told that
they were either usual or inserted because of the provisions
of the statutes. When the President concluded reading the
draft, the Secretary asked him how he liked it. He said he
thought that it was a good first draft and embodied sub-
stantially what he had in mind. The Secretary then asked
where we go from here, and the President replied that the
draft should be taken up, first, with the State Department,
second, with the Attorney General, and third, with the
Director of the Budget.
The President said that he was in no hurry to get it
signed. His tentative plans were to leave Washington on a
ten-day holiday next Wednesday. He added that he did not want
to sign the document until after he returns to Washington.
Secretary Morgenthau asked the President about taking
the Agreement up with the British during the interval. The
President said that he did not want the British brought in
until after the $7-billion appropriation measure passed the
Senate. When this happened the President said he wanted
the discussions with the British to commence even though he
Regraded Uclassified
80
- 4 -
had not returned to Washington at that time.
Secretary Morgenthau then asked the President whether
the negotiations should be conducted by the Treasury or by
the State Department. The President replied that, strictly
speaking, the matter was one for the Treasury to handle, and
drew upon his World War experience for precedents. The
President pointed out, however, that he did not want to have
the Secretary of State "get his nose out of joint" because
the negotiations were being taken out of diplomatic channels.
At this point, Secretary Morgenthau said that, for his part,
he wouldn't be the least offended if the President asked Mr.
Hull to take up the burden.
Harry Hopkins said he thought the Treasury should
handle the negotiations since they were primarily financial.
The President then suggested that Harry Hopkins speak informally
to Dean Acheson and tell him that the Treasury would handle
the negotiations unless this would unduly upset Cordell Hull.
The President asked Secretary Morgenthau with whom he
would commence his discussions. Mr. Morgenthau said that he
would take the matter up in the first instance with Sir
Frederick Phillips. The President made some jocular references
Regraded Uclassified
81
- 5 -
to Sir Edward Peacook, whom he likened to Sir Ronald Lindsay,
and told a humorous story of his experience with Lindsay's
lack of a sense of humor.
Harry Hopkins suggested that the Agreement be changed
so that the President could ask for bases in the Pacific and
British defense information and experience on a two-way basis.
Secretary Morgenthau then asked that action be taken
on his letter suggesting that the liaison committee for con-
tacts with foreign purchasing missions be terminated. The
President said that he wanted Harry Hopkins to handle the
Polish, Iceland, Greenland, Norway, British Empire, Greece,
Holland, and China missions, and the remaining purchasing
missions to be handled by the State Department. The President
asked Harry Hopkins to prepare a letter to accomplish this
objective.
March 14, 1941
82
Dear Mr. President:
Thank you for your letter of March 18
asking me to undertake to negotiate the
"quid pro quo". with the British for the
material which you are authorised to trans-
for to them. I shall be very happy to undertake
this assignment.
In accordance with your suggestion,
I have drafted an over-all agreement (copy
attached) which I should like to discuss
with you at your convenience.
Faithfully yours,
The President
The White House.
Inclosure
EHFJe/fa
Remrite 3/14°41
Regraded Uclassified
83
AGREEMENT dated as of March 120 1941, at the
City of Washington, District of Columbia, between
His Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom (here-
inafter called the United Kingdom) and the United
States of America (hereinafter called the United
States).
WHEREAS, the President of the United States
(hereinafter called the President) has determined that
the defense of the United Kingdom is vital to the do-
fense of the United States,
NOW, THEREFORE, it is agreed as follows:
1. Pursuant to the Act of the Congress of
the United States of March 11, 1941 (Public No. 11,
77th Congress and hereinafter called the Act) the United
States will transfer, exchange, lease, lend, sell, OF
otherwise disposedof certain defense articles and de-
fense information to the United Kingdom, as listed
and valued in schedules, appropriately identified, now
OF hereafter to be attached to this Agreement.
2. Within such period or periods as determined
by the President:
(a) The United Kingdom agrees to return
to the United States such defense articles
which, in the opinion of the President, are
Regraded Uclassified
84
- 2 -
not used up, worn out, destroyed, or otherwise
rendered incapable of effective use.
(b) The United Kingdom agrees, in the case of
defense articles, other than agricultural commodities,
which in the opinion of the President are used up,
worn out, destroyed, or otherwise rendered incapable
of effective use, to return to the United States an
equivalent amount of similar defense articles, which,
in the opinion of the President, are of a quality and
efficiency substantially equal to the defense articles
transferred hereunder to the United Kingdom.
(o) The United Kingdom agrees,
(1) in return for agricultural commodities, and
(11) in return for other defense articles and
defense information
transferred to it hereunder and for which the United
States has not otherwise received full reimbursement,
to deliver to the United States an equivalent dollar
value of tin, rubber, jute, and other products and
commedities produced in the British Empire and which,
in the opinion of the President, are needed by
the United States. Such products and commedities
Regraded Uclassified
3
80-
shall be delivered in such quantities and
at such time or times as shall be determined
by the President.
(a) The United Kingdom may at its option
end in lieu of the return of the defense
articles or similar defense articles, as pro-
vided in Paragraphs (a) and (b) above, deliver
to the United States any other raw materials,
services, facilities, or other consideration
or benefits acceptable to the President.
S. By future agreement, the Parties may substi-
tute, in lieu of Section 2, any other payment or repay-
ment in kind or property, or any other direct or indirect
benefit to the United States, which the President deems
satisfactory.
4. The President shall determine the fair value
of any defense article or other consideration or benefit
received by the United States from the United Kingdom;
and the United Kingdom shall be credited therefor on
account of the defense articles and defense information
transferred to the United Kingdom hereunder.
5. The United Kingdom agrees that it will not,
without the consent of the President, transfer title to
or possession of any defense anticle or defense informa-
tion, transferred to the United Kingdom hereunder or
Regraded Uclassified
86
- 4 -
permit its use by anyone not an officer, employee, or
agent of the United Kingdom.
6. If, as a result of the transfer to the
United Kingdom of any defense articles or defense in-
formation, it is necessary, for the United Kingdom to
take any action or make any payment in order fully to
protect, pursuant to the Act, any of the rights of say
citizen of the United States who has patent rights in
and to any such defense article OF information, the
United Kingdom will do so, when so requested by the
President.
7. The President may exercise any power or
authority conferred on him hereunder through such of-
ficer or agency as he shall direct for that purpose.
The terms "defense article" and "defense information"
as used in this Agreement shall have the same meaning
as defined in the Act.
8. The parties to this Agreement, and the
efficials signing this Agreement on their behalf,
each for itself, himself, or themselves, represent and
agree that the execution and delivery of this Agreement
have in all respects been duly authorised, and that all
ests, senditions, and legal formalities which should
have been performed end completed prior to the making
Regraded Uclassified
87
- 5 -
of this Agreement have been performed and completed
as required by, and in conformity with, respectively,
the laws of the United States and the United Kingdom.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the parties hereto have
executed this Agreement in duplicate.
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
By
(Title)
HIS MAJESTY'S GOVERNMENT IN
THE UNITED KINGDOM.
by
(OTATE)
Regraded Uclassified
88
March 14, 1941
Dear Mr. Ambassador:
Thank you for your letter of
March 13, in which you tell me of the
coming visits of Sir Arthur Salter
and Mr. Brand.
I appreciate your courtesy in
sending me this advance information.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) If Morgesthau, In
His Excellency
The Right Honorable
The Viscount Halifax, A.G.
British Ambassador.
FK:nmc
m Manager
Regraded Uclassified
89
March 14, 1941
Dear Mr. Ambassador:
Thank you for your letter of
March 13, in which you tell me of the
coming visits of Sir Arthur Salter
and Mr. Brand.
I appreciate your courtesy in
sending me this advance information.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) 1. Morgenthau, 326
His Excellency
The Right Honorable
The Viscount Halifax, A.G.
British Ambassador.
FK:nme
By Measures 2"
Regraded Uclassified
90
March 14, 1941
Dear Mr. Ambassador:
Thank you for your letter of
March 13, in which you tell me of the
coming visits of Sir Arthur Selter
and Mr. Brand.
I appreciate your courtesy in
sending no this advance information.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) H. Norgenthau, 320
His Excellency
The Right Honorable
The Viscount Halifax, A.G.
British Ambassador.
FK:mme
By
Regraded Uclassified
91
Dear Mr. Ambassador,
Thank you for your letter of March 13, in which you tell me
of the coming visits of Sir Arthur Salter and Mr. Brand.
I appreciate your courtesy in sending me this
advance information.
Sincerely,
92
Frinch
BRITISH EMBASSY,
WASHINGTON, D.C.
13th March, 1941.
Dear Mr. Secretary,
I have just had a telegram from the Prime Minister
saying that Sir Arthur Salter has agreed to come out here
to be particularly charged with matters arising out of the
shipping position. In that capacity he will be a member of
the British Supply Council. I think this will be useful.
He will bring with him & statement of our shipping
and import position, and will be fully briefed to give those
concerned here complete information as to the measures which
His Majesty's Government are taking to meet a situation that
is difficult, and to concert measures with your administration
as to the best means of meeting it.
It has also been arranged that Mr. Brand should be
head of the new Food Mission, and in that capacity that he
also should be a member of the British Supply Council.
I am taking steps to communicate this to the
State Department, but I thought it right that you also
should have advance information on these matters, which are,
I understand, likely to be announced in the British Press
tomorrow.
I am,
Dear Mr. Secretary,
Yours sincerely,
Halifer
ae Honourable Henry Morgenthau, Junior,
Secretary of the Treasury.
93
March 14, 1941
Dear Mr. Ambassador:
Please convey to the Chancellor
of the Exchequer my good wishes and By
sincere thanks for the message which
he has been kind enough to send m.
Yours sincerely,
His Excellency
The Right Honorable
The Viscount Halifax, K.G.,
British Ambassador.
Sent by
missinger 3/15/41
Regraded Uclassified
94
March 14, 1941
Dear Mr. Ambassador:
Please convey to the Chancellor
of the Exchequer my good wishes and my
sincere thanks for the message which
he has been kind enough to send me.
Yours sincerely,
His Excellency
The Right Honorable
The Viscount Halifax, K.G.,
British Ambassador.
Regraded Uclassified
95
March 14, 1941
Dear Mr. Ambassador:
Please convey to the Chancellor
of the Exchequer my good wishes and w
sincere thanks for the message which
he has been kind enough to send m.
Yours sincerely,
His Excellency
The Right Honorable
The Viscount Halifax, K.G.,
British Ambassador.
Regraded Uclassified
96 #
BRITISH EMBASSY,
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Personal.
13th March 1941.
Dear Mr. Secretary,
The Chancellor of the Exchequer
has telegraphed to me the following personal
message which he asks me to convey to you:-
"I send you my warm congratulations on-
the passing of the Lease-Lend Bill and my
very sincere thanks for all that you have
done to secure its passage. Apart from
the invaluable material help which we
shall receive from you, it is a great
encouragement to us all to know how
strongly your people feel that the best
way in which they can defend America is by
helping us to defend ourselves. We shall
have many problems to solve together from
now onwards and I know it will be your
wish, as it is mine, that we shall deal
/with
The Honourable
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
United States Treasury,
Washington, D.C.
97
BRITISH EMBASSY,
WASHINGTON, D.C.
with these not merely as colleagues but
as trusted friends. If
Believe me,
Dear Mr. Secretary,
Yours very sincerely,
Halifax
98
March 14, 1941.
EVOLUTION OF THE MINORITY
Enactment of the Lend-Lease law has transformed, but has by no means
ended, the opposition to it. During the progress of the debate over the bill,
this opposition was heterogeneous in character: it embraced many who favored aid
to Britain, yet disliked this particular method of granting it; some who were
merely timorous; a few who saw political expediency in recording their resistance
to an inevitable current of events which may have tragic consequences.
But these moderate elements no longer participate in the active opposi-
tion. Their point of view was expressed by Senator Vandenberg who remarked that
inety out of ninety-five members of the Senate voted for aid to England" and by
Senator Wiley who said of the bill "we must all accept it as the law of the land."
The Minority Leader of the House echoed these sentiments by voting for the Senate
version of H. R. 1776. Newspaper editorials commenting on the bill's passage
beseech a closing of the ranks and speak piously of national unity.
This very anxiety for national unity eloquently discloses the absence of
it, bespeaking a grave uneasiness now on the part of these moderate members of the
minority over the fury of the prejudices which they helped to arouse. The fight
against effective aid to Britain will certainly continue. Henceforth, however, it
will be in the hands of the strong-stomached, full-fledged isolationists, the
fanatic fringe.
99
- 2 -
Senator Wheeler has already made it plain that he intends to continue
418 crusade for "peace." The America First Committee, which now boaste 650
chapters and 500,000 members, goes right on recruiting with the evident intention
of mobilizing public opinion against the settled foreign policy of the United
States, The Chicago Tribune has declared its determination to "save the Republic."
The Daily Worker, Social Justice, The Tablet, William Dudley Pelley's Liberator
and Senator Robert Rm Reynolds' Vindicator have all donned the robes of peace,
clasped American flags to their bosome and premised to preserve America from the
international bankers. John L. Lewis is reported to be ready to lead the left
wing of Labor into a national political alliance of crackpots.
It is necessary to understand the character of this opposition to appre-
ciate the menace it presents. It has achieved now a certain degree of homogeneity -
C.1th distinct fascist implications. Most of the leaders bear one or more of the
hallmarks of fascism: opposition to labor, anti-Semitism, rampant nationalism
and resistance to all organized community efforts to improve social circumstances.
Even the "respectable" supporters - the men who chipped in the funds
to finance the America First movement -- bear a curious resemblance to the in-
dustrialist group which financed Hitler's rise to power in Germany. Notable
among the major contributors are such names as Ernest T. Weir of National Steel,
and Max Babb of Allis-Chalmers, notorious for their anti-unionism, If their
association with John Lewis and the Communist Party seems incongruous, it is no
more so than it was in the elction campaign of last November, nor than the co-
operation of the National Socialists, Communists and reactionaries which produced
the end of the Germon Republic. The fanatics of the right and the left are not
at opposito ends of a straight line; they are merely the tail ends of a loop and
Regraded Uclassified
100
- 3 -
have now joined hands to complete the circle.
Freed from the restraining influence of the moderates who accom-
panied them in the fight against H, R. 17/0, this coalition can now be
expected to engage in more violent tactics. Senator Burton K. Wheeler,
in his radio address of March 3. Kave A startling foretaste of the
recklessness of which he is capable. He pictured the "international
bankers joining with their friends the Royal Refugees, and with the
S-ssoons or the Orient -- and with the Rothchilds and the Warburgs of
Europe If This was conscious use of anti-Semitiem AS 8. political
instrument. More of the same sort of thing can be looked for in the
future. For the tactics of the isolationists, plainly, are to play
upon prejudice and to exploit emotion.
The denger of these tactics lies only partially in the
impediments they may place in the way of effective aid to Britain.
They may succeed in frightening Americans, to some extent, away from
forthright action. They nave already managed to dilute enthusissm for
dealing generously with the British. Their ain is to obscure the
genuine issues and undermine public confidence in the purposes of the
Administration.
But P. far greater danger lies in the domestic bitterness
which they may evoke. By dealing in so loose a fashion with deep-
sented mass emotions, they unleash internal discord and distrust which
can have disastrous consequences in n future all too likely to make a
vital test of American unity and morale.
The ideas which the bitter-end isolationists are propagating
can be combatted only by denouncing them forthrightly for what they
are-- the doctrines of Doctor Joseph Goebbels. They will be accorded
Regraded Uclassified
101
- 4 -
)
public patience and credence only 80 long AS the propagators are
permitted to disguise themselves AB apostles of poace. It will
be better to expose and answer them now than to let them germinate
and spread. A few swashing blows are in order.
102
Stabilization Fund MAR
14 1941
100
ROOSEVELT
11.50
WASHN - MR ROOSEVELT PRAISED THE STABILIZA-
TION FUND FOR HAVING MADE A PROFIT SINCE 1934
AND RIDICULED WHAT HE CALLED TERRIBLE BEDTIME
STORIES ABOUT ITS DEPLETION AND SECRECY -
MANY INTERESTED GROUPS HAVE TRIED TO GET THEIR
HANDS ON THE 2 000 000 000 DLS FUND BUT THE
GOVERNMENT HAS MANAGED TO KEEP IT INTACT AND TO
MAKE A 22 000 000 DLS PROFIT ON THE FUND-S
TRANSACTIONS HE SAID - THE PRESIDENT DECLARED
THAT THIS is A GOOD ILLUSTRATION THAT THE
AMERICAN GOVERNMENT IS NOT WHOLLY AMATEURISH
I N ITS FINANCIAL DEALINGS
ThePreo. Praises
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT SAID TODAY THAT THE GOVERNMENT'S $22,000,000
PROFIT FROM THE $2,000,000,000 STABILIZATION FUND IS AN OUTSTANDING
ACHIEVEMENT FOR FISCAL EXPERTS WHO, HE ADDED, HAD BEEN DESCRIBED AS
AMATEURS BY CERTAIN WRITERS AND COLUMNISTS.
THE FUND HAS ACCOMPLISHED A GREAT DEAL IN STABILIZING WORLD TRADE
BOTH PRIOR AND SUBSEQUENT TO THE OUTBREAK OF THE WAR, THE PRESIDENT SAID
IN THE YEARS SINCE 1934, MR. ROOSEVELT SAID, SOME COLUMNISTS
HAVE WRITTEN PERFECTLY TERRIBLE BEDTIME STORIES ABOUT THE FUND, INTI-
MATING IT WAS BEING DEPLETED WHILE THE FACTS WERE BEING KEPT FROM THE
PUBLIC.
3/14--R1211P
Regraded Uclassified
103
March 14, 1941
11:53 a.m.
H.M.Jr:
Hello.
Operator:
Dean Acheson.
Dean
Acheson:
Yes, Henry.
H.M.Jr:
Dean, have you had a chance to show that
to the Secretary of State?
A:
I've just come out and I was Just talking
to Bernie and Oscar about it - what
happened and I'm telling them the general
H.M.Jr:
Would you mind telling me because I want to
get it before I go to the White House. I've
got the time 80 I'd like to have it.
A:
It's a little bit vague and confused, Henry,
as you can see it would be because it's a
large subject and a short time.
H.M.Jr:
Oh.
A:
I think there were two questions that came
up and which were discussed, and I don't
think the Secretary had any clear view about
it; he just had some worries. First of all,
he thinks this 1s a good basis - this 1e
the way you would start out to do it, and
everything in it he thinks 18 probably the
way it ought to be. One thing which worried
him was whether in the actual administration
of this you might tend to build up such a
very large claim that you might at the end of
the war have the same problem as you had at
the end of the last war, only presented in
terms of goods instead in of terms of
dollars. He did not have time to analyze
that or see how it would work out. He's
just thinking about it. Then the other
question, which was discussed but without
any conclusion or recommendation at all,
18 whether we were in a sufficiently strong
position to have some voice in saying that
these materiels which we turn over should
Regraded Uclassified
104
- 2 -
be used in 8. way which was clearly to the
national advantage in this country. In the
event that the objects or the course of the
war should change in some way, would we be
able to say, well, now don't use these to
attack some country whose defense 16 important
to us. We don't want you attacking Brazil
or China or some other place. I mean, that's
merely the vaguest sort of & question which
arose.
H.M.Jr:
Well, that's & 2-edged sword.
A:
It's very much of a 2-edged sword and that
was pointed out at once, and I think probably
that had better be written off as an idea.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah. That would kind of frighten me
because .....
A:
I think it would frighten the Secretary
because when this was suggested, he imme-
diately said, "Well, if you're going to run
the war, you've got to go in and fight it
as well as run it."
H.M.Jr:
Oh, that wasn't his suggestion?
A:
No, that was not his. That was brought up.
He asked two or three people to come in and
have this read and advise him. Now, I
think what he really said is that he did not
know enough about it and couldn't in the
short time that he had have any view which
would really be helpful, except that he
thinks that this 18 the basis of & good
agreement.
H.M.Jr:
Now, may I have Dean Acheson's opinion?
Well, I think it is the basis of a good
agreement. My chief worry is the first one,
that under this, it may be - the result may
follow that you'll have such a tremendous
claim against the British that it never can
be liquidated and that we will have the seeds
of trouble in the future. If I were the universal
czar, I would just give these things to the
British without anything.
Regraded Uclassified
105
- 3 -
H.M.Jr:
That's what I would do.
A:
And, therefore, I would like the quid pro
quo agreement worked out in such a way
that it would liquidate itself as it went
along instead of waiting, perhaps, until
1948 when we don't know who 1s going to be
in control and they might do silly things.
H.M.Jr:
Well, there is no argument with me on that,
but I have stated my position that I'd like
to give this stuff to them, but I think the
President feels he has to do something and
if he has to do something, this seems about
as innocuous a draft as we can think up here.
A:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
Because it leaves it all to future settlement.
A:
Well, just as a technical matter, since I -
the way it is now drafted it 16 80 the
depreciation wear and tear 18 on the British.
If we could sort of eneak that in 80 1t was
on us, I'd like it a little better. If
they could return a thing even if it had
a few shell holes through it, that would be
better with me, instead of valuing it when
you turn it over and then valuing it when
you get it back.
H.M.Jr:
Yeah. Well, of course, the President could
do that the way it 18 written.
A:
He could, yeah.
H.M.Jr:
On the other hand, if they gave them some
of these high-speed misquito boate, at the
end of six months they are completely worn
out and they're worthless.
A:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
But Roosevelt, or whoever 1s President,
could - I mean, the thing that we didn't
know whether the British would take, is to
really leave all these decisions in the
hands of the President, and they've got to
take it and like it the way it 18 written.
Regraded Uclassified
106
4 -
A:
Yeah.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I would gather from what you tell
me that there are really no basio differ-
ences other than you'd like to give the
stuff, but lacking that, this is pretty
good would you say?
A:
Yes, I think SO. That 1s my own view.
I really don't know what the Secretary's
view is because he just - you know - he
gets these thinge and he has to sit down
and think about them for a little while
and he didn't have time.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I'll leave it this way. We're going
over to see the President shortly, and
when we come back, Foley will call you and
tell you just what happened.
A:
All right. What 18 the time scheduled?
Do you want to get this signed up by the
British right away - today or tomorrow?
H.M.Jr:
Well, the President 18 putting the pressure
on me. Did the letter come over that he
wrote me - a copy of it?
A:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
You can see from the letter. I got that
letter last night - somewhere around four
or five last night, and the boys worked
right through the night on this, 60 that's
all the time I've had. I don't know -
the President has been putting such terrific
pressure on all of these things. But when
we come out of the meeting, Foley will
phone you and let you know just where it
stande and then I'd like to get all the help
I can.
A:
All right. Well, we will certainly turn
this place loose if we can do anything for
you.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you 80 much.
A:
All right, Henry.
Regraded Uclassified
107
March 14, 1941
4:30 p.m.
GROUP MEETING
Present:
Mr. Bell
Mr. Cochran
Mr. White
Mr. Graves
Mr. Haas
Mr. Young
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Thompson
Mr. Sullivan
Miss Chauncey
Mr. Schwarz
Mr. Foley
Mr. Kuhn
H.M.Jr:
Herbert, it seems that the person that asked
Maritime Commission to go ahead and investi-
gate, although the President asked me to do
it at Cabinet, was Stimson. He must have
gone right out of Cabinet a week ago and
went right over and asked the Maritime,
although the President asked me to.
I said, "Somebody must have asked the
Maritime, and Stimson spoke up and said
he had.
Well, I mentioned the fact that they weren't
loading their ships properly, and that the
ships had to go to several ports, so would
you send to Mr. Hull whatever you have?
Regraded Uclassified
108
- 2 -
Gaston:
Yes.
(Mr. Graves entered the conference.)
H.M.Jr:
And the President asked Hull to tell this
to Halifax, you see. You might let me see
a copy of it, but don't hold it up for me,
you see.
(Mr. Bell and Mr. Cochran entered the
conference.)
Gaston:
All right. It seems just a little bit round
about.
(Mr. White entered the conference.)
H.M.Jr:
Then at Cabinet, Stimson gave this release
to the President, and he wanted the President
to give it out. This is for you two fellows.
(Mr. Sullivan and Mr. Foley)
If you don't mind, give me back the original,
and you can keep the photostat for you two
boys. (See attachment No. 1)
They are all ready to have it go, and I said
to the President, "Give us another 24 hours
on it. I don't know whether it is good or
bad." So I asked Bob Jackson to state our
case on this question of going out and fighting
these contractors, because they won't take
Government contracts on one cent gasoline
in Florida. I said to Bob, "I don't know
the legal end. I can't state the case.
You do it."
So he said, "Well, it is hopeless to intro-
duce this year 8. bill which will make the
Iclassified
109
- 3 -
states pay Federal taxes on their bonds,"
and the President said, "Oh no, it isn't,
oh no it isn't."
Foley:
It will be if they introduce this legislation.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I didn't know whether that thing was
any good. Bob, you could see, wasn't interested.
He said you fellows have been talking to the
Solicitor General.
Foley:
He doesn't want to see us.
H.M.Jr:
Well, you have got 24 hours. I said to the
President that you two men were in the process
of filing a brief, because you thought that
this was wrong, and you wanted to file this
brief; and I again said to Bob, "Won't you
please state the Treasury case although you
don't believe in it, because it is too
technical for me."
Well, he did it in a kind of half-hearted
way, but at least the President said, "Well,
I won't give that out until we hear from
the Treasury."
Now, I don't know if that is good or bad, but
I said to Stimson, "Somebody said it was a
hundred million dollars, and my -" no, I said
it was only forty-five million, and somebody
said something else.
Foley:
It isn't even forty-five. It is only around
four or five.
H.M.Jr:
Well anyway, I have again got my finger in
the dike, and it is getting cold, my
finger. (Laughter).
You fellows get busy. Where is Harry White?
He should think of something.
Regraded Uclassified
110
- 4 -
White:
I have, but - (Laughter) It was all right
if it wouldn't have been delayed.
H.M.Jr:
Well anyway, will you please relieve my
finger.
White:
He is asking you and not me.
Foley:
I know. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
Now what else happened over there? Oh,
Chick Schwarz, where is he?
Schwarz:
Right here.
H.M.Jr:
Unless Bell knows something else, will you
tell your newspaper cohorts for tomorrow
morning that the financing for next week,
still calling it next week, will be five
hundred million cash and a refunding. We
haven't said it yet. This is new.
Schwarz:
That is right.
H.M.Jr:
But the cash requirement will be five hundred
million dollars, and would you say Wednesday?
Bell:
I think I would unless you don't want to
tie your hands.
H.M.Jr:
Let's say next week.
Bell:
Early next week.
Schwarz:
Five hundred million in cash.
H.M.Jr:
All right, Dan? I just talked to Bob Rouse.
Bell:
Did you? I hadn't since 2:30 and the market
was still pretty good.
Regraded Uclassified
111
- 5 -
H.M.Jr:
It is all right.
Schwarz:
You are not ready to tell them whether it
will be one way or two ways?
H.M.Jr:
No, but five hundred million cash. All right,
Dan?
Bell:
Fine. Very good.
H.M.Jr:
All right, and notwithstanding the fact that
the ticker said we were over there on taxes
and the President said we were over on taxes,
and when we came into the room, John, he thought
we were coming over on taxes; we finally con-
vinced him it wasn't taxes, and we didn't talk
taxes. We said we wouldn't introduce any bill
until the seven billion was out of the way.
And then I got a good laugh, because it wasn't
at my expense.
The President said, "I see by the papers,
Jesse, that you are going to let the English
have three hundred million dollars."
He says, "I didn't say so. That came out
of the White House." I thought it was wonder-
ful, and I just sat there and didn't say a
word.
Schwarz:
He had better find out when you hold your
press conferences.
H.M.Jr:
He knew. And that is about all that happened.
I wanted to divest myself of - are you (Gaston)
going to take care of Senator Bone?
Gaston:
I wanted to ask you about that. It is quite
unusual for a Senator to say that he wants to
bring 8. collector of Internal Revenue down
to instruct him on patronage.
112
- 6 -
H.M.Jr:
He didn't say that.
Gaston:
No, he said he wanted to talk things over.
He made it pretty plain. I imagine John
can bring him down here to indoctrinate
him on Internal Revenue, but I think Ed Flynn
would be very much interested in Homer Bone's
idea of how they are going to handle patronage.
H.M.Jr:
Well, Homer Bone is a very difficult fellow,
and I realize maybe I was a little softy,
but here he is. He says he and the whole
delegation from his state want to sit down and
talk with this fellow. He is a swell appoint-
ment, and they have been getting all these
letters and they just would like to come to
an understanding with him, who is he going
to fire and who not; and I said we would
bring him on.
Gaston:
I think you have probably met him. He was
down here as a newspaperman representing the
Scripps Pacific Coast League papers here a
couple of years ago.
H.M.Jr:
I doubt it. But you can see him first. Any-
way, I gave him my word on it anyway.
Gaston:
All right, it can be done.
Sullivan:
I think Mr. Gaston's point is that he might
very properly bring him here for something
else and if while he is here he calls on his
Senator and they have & lunch, that is all
right; but I think Herb's point is --
H.M.Jr:
Bring him here to show him the cherry blossoms.
Sullivan:
I think that is a very good idea. (Laughter)
113
- 7 -
Gaston:
My point is that I can't bring him here,
but John can.
H.M.Jr:
Bring him here to show him the cherry blossoms.
Is that all right?
Sullivan:
Bring him here to show him some returns.
H.M.Jr:
All right. Now, what other unimportant or
important business is there that won't take
more than five - who wants a yes or no out
of me?
Bell:
Well, we want some time on these questions
that are going up to the House Committee
before five o'clock.
H.M.Jr:
Well, you had your time. I sat around here
at a quarter of two.
Bell:
Well, I couldn't write the answers in that
time. I want you to see the answers.
H.M.Jr:
Right after this meeting?
Bell:
No, they are in the machine and it will re-
quire about - nine out of twelve questions
will be ready. We had the other three in
process when we came in here.
H.M.Jr:
How many are ready?
Bell:
I would say nine will be ready. Coe is
working on the other three.
Schwarz:
I have asked Stephens for about two minutes.
H.M.Jr:
What?
Schwarz:
I asked Stephens for about two minutes.
Regraded Uclassified
114
- 8 -
H.M.Jr:
I don't know what it is about.
Schwarz:
It is about this matter of two thirds,
one third, borrowing revenue.
H.M.Jr:
Oh, well not today. Talk to this fellow
(Sullivan). What is it? Do it now.
Schwarz:
I would like to sign 8. letter to Mr. Ludlow,
after talking with the newspapermen. They
asked if we would handle it that way rather than
for us to write the press agents.
H.M.Jr:
Have you shown this to anybody else?
Schwarz:
Ferdie. I showed him our alternative proposal
to the heads of the press agencies.
H.M.Jr:
What will happen?
Schwarz:
I will send it to Ludlow with copies, and
ask him to give it out and if he doesn't,
we will.
H.M.Jr:
All right. What else?
Bell:
That is all I have got. I just wanted to
get those questions up there tonight and get
them in the record this evening.
H.M.Jr:
I thought you would do that without showing
them to me.
Bell:
I didn't get any such instructions.
H.M.Jr:
You (Foley) heard. Come on, what did he
say?
Foley:
You (Secretary) said you would be available
at ten minutes of two if anybody had any
instructions. Otherwise, go ahead.
115
- 9 -
Bell:
Gosh, what a pal. (Laughter)
Foley:
I will bet I will regret it.
Bell:
I will bet he will, too.
Foley:
I will bet I will regret that. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
He is General Counsel to the Treasury, ain't
he? I am in the Treasury. All right.
Harold?
Graves:
Nothing.
H.M.Jr:
Got any posters or pictures or anything
amusing?
Graves:
Shall I tell him?
H.M.Jr:
Where is that rendition? Have you got it?
Graves:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Let's see it. I have got to have something
to chin with.
Graves:
You will probably make us all mad.
H.M.Jr:
Who all mad?
Kuhn:
We have cleared Carole Lombard's record,
Mr. Secretary. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
Did you, through the National Committee woman?
Kuhn:
Irey.
H.M.Jr:
But you call up - Helen Gahagan. Get in touch
with Helen Gahagan, the National Democratic
Committee woman from California, will you?
117
- 11 -
the market and having something for you
Monday morning.
Bell:
Monday we will talk.
H.M.Jr:
All right, O.K.
Bell:
You don't need to come in tomorrow.
H.M.Jr:
O.K.
Haas:
We can use another day on the market.
H.M.Jr:
All right. Anything else? Did you ever
do Gano Dunn's report?
Haas:
Yes, sir, you will get it this evening.
H.M.Jr:
Are you with him or against him?
Haas:
Against him.
H.M.Jr:
I thought you were.
Young:
George is right.
H.M.Jr:
Philip?
Young:
I have got a contract.
H.M.Jr:
Is it within the --
Young:
Yes, easily.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Young:
I saw Dean Acheson this afternoon. Wonders
will never cease. The State Department has
written & letter giving their Russian policy
which they tried to pass off on me, and they
showed it to me first, and I told them I
wouldn't take it.
118
- 12 -
H.M.Jr:
Right.
Young:
So Dean Acheson want ed me to ask you if it
were addressed to you without prejudice
by the Secretary of State what would happen.
H.M.Jr:
Well, you can tell him what would happen.
I would send it right back to him. The
President of the United States asked the
Secretary of State in my presence to handle
it. I don't want anything to do with it.
That is what you call cooperation. (facetiously)
I am very serious.
Young:
I told him I thought that was your answer.
H.M.Jr:
He shouldn't write me any letters. The
President of the United States told him to
take care of it, and I would like to see
something once taken care of over there.
White:
How could he write a letter without prejudice?
What does that mean?
H.M.Jr:
Seriously, It is between the State Department
and the Soviet - USSR. We haven't got anything
more to do with it. We are finished with it.
Young:
Have you had any reaction on your purchasing
letter?
H.M.Jr:
Counselor Foley will tell you about that
afterward. It is in the works. I think
there will be a letter forthcoming. Talk
nicely to Dean and say, Thank you very much,
but we feel that that is over, finished."
Young:
That is what I told him.
H.M.Jr:
Right. And if you ask Ed after, he will
explain to you why I am so emphatic, because
119
- 13 -
the President wants the State Department
to take everything except the British Empire,
Greece, and Norway.
Foley:
Holland?
H.M.Jr:
Holland.
Bell:
Dutch East Indies?
White:
China?
Foley:
Iceland and Greenland and China.
H.M.Jr:
Right, but ask Ed what happened to that, see,
will you?
Young:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
And I can't understand why Dean wants to send
me back something on Russia when the whole
thing is going over there with the exception
of these countries mentioned.
Young:
I am glad to hear it.
Kuhn:
I haven't anything except a document that
Ed probably wants to talk to you about.
H.M.Jr:
All right.
Cochran:
Nothing, sir.
Sullivan:
Senator Mead talked with you about a taxpayer
named Birdsell, who liquidated his corporation
and did not comply with the requirements.
H.M.Jr:
I washed my hands of it.
Sullivan:
You asked me to follow it through and give
Regraded Uclassified
120
- 14 -
you a memorandum. There just isn't any
authority under the law to give him any
immunity whatsoever. That is my memorandum.
H.M.Jr:
What do I do?
Sullivan:
Do you want me to call Senator Mead and
advise him?
H.M.Jr:
If you don't mind.
Sullivan:
I will be glad to. If you want to see me
some time on the returns of members of the
diplomatic corps --
H.M.Jr:
But there no hurry. Where is the last - the
President got one, the last thing showing
how much taxes came in. He got it in Cabinet.
Bell:
He asked about it this morning, 80 I thought
you might want it.
H.M.Jr:
How is it?
Bell:
A hundred and sixty-four million up to date.
We are about six million ahead of the esti-
mates.
H.M.Jr:
Good.
Sullivan:
Over at the Bureau, they have been ranning
about sixty-four hundred returns a day. I
mean people here in the District going in
there and filling out returns. They have
got desks set up in the hallways and lobbies
and so on. About five a minute.
H.M.Jr:
Ask me about the diplomatic corps again
some time.
Sullivan:
I will, sir.
Regraded Uclassified
121
- 15 -
H.M.Jr:
Everything all right?
Sullivan:
Yes, sir.
Foley:
John Pehle --
H.M.Jr:
Excuse me. Will you (Sullivan) see that
you and I talk with Doughton before I leave
next Thursday night?
Sullivan:
I will.
H.M.Jr:
Please. I talked with Pat. Pat called me
before he left.
Sullivan:
Yes. He asked us if you wanted to have any
conferences to talk with George, Connally,
and Brown.
H.M.Jr:
All right, sir, I am listening.
Foley:
Pehle wants permission to call Dean Acheson
and suggest that Acheson call in the Hungarian
Charge D' Affaires and say that we would be
much happier if we knew why they had with-
drawn the nine hundred thousand dollars. They
only got the six, you know. The nine hundred
got away.
H.M.Jr:
They got the nine but not the six?
Foley:
That is right. The six was blocked, but they
got the nine. Ask them why they withdrew
the nine, and ask them if --
H.M.Jr:
What happened was --
Foley:
If they would redeposit the nine.
H.M.Jr:
What happened, you can ask them, but it will
bring this to light. The Charge of the Hun-
garian Legation called on one A. A. Berle and
122
- 16 -
explained the whole thing to them, and
A. A. Berle forgot to tell us, and when
Dean Acheson heard about it, to repeat his
own language, he said, "I just gave A. A. Berle
unshirted hell." That is what he said. He
came in and explained the whole thing. I
am very glad to have Pehle go through the
motions, because that will bring out the
fact that the fellow went in to see Berle
and we haven't yet got any report other than
what Dean told me over the telephone; namely,
that the Hungarians wanted it to pay the
expenses for all of their Legations and
Consular Offices in the western hemisphere,
but I am all for John asking.
Foley:
All right. They can still suggest that
the money be deposited, blocked, and then
we will give them a license.
H.M.Jr:
What else?
Foley:
We have --
H.M.Jr:
This is not a regular conference. You know
it is ten minutes to five. I mean, it isn't
nine thirty. (Laughter)
Foley:
We have got a release on this action in
connection with taxing the income from the
Port Authority bonds. Ferdie has gone over
it very carefully and --
H.M.Jr:
Well look, gents, is that what we settled?
Foley:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Do I have to take you for another ride around
the block?
Foley:
No, but I just wanted you to know about it,
123
- 17 -
because I think there will probably be
quite an uproar when the thing goes out.
H.M.Jr:
Is it all right?
Foley:
I think it is all right, yes. I think the
press release is very good, and I think it
sets forth our case as well as it can be
set forth; and Ferdie tells me he thinks
it has in it now everything that a newspaper-
man would like to know in order to write a
complete story.
H.M.Jr:
It is dynamite?
Foley:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
Good.
Bell:
Will it hurt our bond market on Monday?
Foley:
It may.
Bell:
Better have it Friday of next week.
Foley:
Well, you see the statute runs tomorrow
on those returns.
H.M.Jr:
Why can't it be in tomorrow morning's paper?
Foley:
It will. We can release it tonight, can't
we, Ferdie? I am ready.
Kuhn:
Sure.
H.M.Jr:
That is all right.
Foley:
I don't know how much it is going to affect -
I don't see how it can affect your market,
because yours are all taxable anyway. It
is bound to have an effect on the municipal
market.
Regraded Uclassified
124
- 18 -
H.M.Jr:
I am surprised at Dan on two counts. One,
that you want to postpone some financial
knowledge just before, and second, it
might help us indirectly by knocking down
the municipals.
Foley:
That is right.
Bell:
I am worried about the municipals. I am
worried about this other bond market. I
don't want something to happen like happened
before when we get out an issue. I don't
know just what effect it will have on our
market.
H.M.Jr:
I don't think so.
Foley:
Not so much now, since all our stuff is
taxable.
Bell:
I am a little jittery.
H.M.Jr:
I think it is all right.
Foley:
It will be interesting to see how much
effect it has on the Port Authority bonds.
H.M.Jr:
It is all right, I will take a chance on it.
Foley:
Let her go?
H.M.Jr:
Let her go. Anything else?
Foley:
The men are A. J. Shamberg, Howard Cullman,
Mauris Bouvier, Henrietta Bouvier, Willis
Sharp Kilmer, Dr. D. N. Bell, and Martin
S. Paine.
Gaston:
Since you are to be here tomorrow, shall I
write that letter? Shall I make it for your
signature?
125
- 19 -
H.M.Jr:
No, you do it. Just let it go.
Gaston:
All right. Do you have any feeling about
a member of the Treasury staff going to
the Italian Embassy for dinner?
H.M.Jr:
No.
Gaston:
O.K. It is not me.
H.M.Jr:
No, I have no feeling about it. Who is it?
Gaston:
Johnson. Ballerini, the Commercial Counselor,
has been right chummy with him, and evidently
had him invited.
H.M.Jr:
No. Well, I am not crazy about it, but has
he accepted?
Gaston:
No, he hasn't. He asked my advice.
H.M.Jr:
I would let it go. Sure, he can go. I hope
he doesn't ask me, though, before he goes
to the German Embassy.
All right, I am at your service.
Sullivan:
Are we going to see the picture?
Bell:
It looks good.
H.M.Jr:
Carole Lombard? Let's see it, Harold.
(Mr. Graves exhibits posters.)
Graves:
These are several --
H.M.Jr:
Can you bring it closer? I can't see it.
Graves:
That is a bad sign to begin with. (Laughter)
126
- 20 -
White:
Not so hot from here. (Laughter)
H.M.Jr:
Class is dismissed.
for the President
127
My attention has been called by the War and Navy
Departments to & serious condition caused by uncertainty as
to the application of state sales and similar taxes levied on
contractors engaged on national defense projects on a cost-plus-
a-fixed-fee basis.
Eighteen states have held that taxes of this nature
are not applicable because of Federal immunity, and & number have
not ruled on the question. However, several states have held
that such taxes do apply and have taken active steps to make
collection. The position taken by these states has caused such
uncertainty that materielmen are threatening not to sell and con-
tractors are threatening to stop work. It is obvious that, if
these taxes are paid, certain favored states will be unduly enriched
at the expense of the national defense program and of other states.
Im having suggesting a bill prepared for to the Congress
tion designed to clarify this situation. T Until the matter is adjusted,
the Government will refrain, where practicable, from placing any
cost-plus-a-fixed-fee contracts in those states which insist upon
applying their taxes to transactions covered by such contracts.
128
March 14, 1941
12:57 p.m.
Judge
Samuel
Rosenman:
Sam.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, Sam.
R:
I just wanted to say thanks for the kind
words.
H.M.Jr:
Oh. Well, I meant them.
R:
Kindest words I've heard in Washington.
H.M.Jr:
I don't know whether you're kidding me.
R:
No, I mean it. This is not a place for
kind words.
H.M.Jr:
I still don't know. Are you serious?
R:
I'm serious. I mean it.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I meant it.
R:
I appreciate it a whole lot.
H.M.Jr:
O.K., Sam.
R:
I want you to know I do, because I know
what this place is and you don't hear kind
words very often.
H.M.Jr:
You're telling me.
R:
(Laughs). Good luck.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
R:
Remember me at home.
H.M.Jr:
I'll do that.
R:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
Good-bye.
128
March 14, 1941
12:57 p.m.
Judge
Samuel
Rosenman:
Sam.
H.M.Jr:
Yes, Sam.
R:
I just wanted to say thanks for the kind
words.
H.M.Jr:
Oh. Well, I meant them.
R:
Kindest words I've heard in Washington.
H.M.Jr:
I don't know whether you're kidding me.
R:
No, I mean it. This is not a place for
kind words.
H.M.Jr:
I still don't know. Are you serious?
R:
I'm serious. I mean it.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I meant it.
R:
I appreciate it a whole lot.
H.M.Jr:
O.K., Sam.
R:
I want you to know I do, because I know
what this place is and you don't hear kind
words very often.
H.M.Jr:
You're telling me.
R:
(Laughs). Good luck.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
R:
Remember me at home.
H.M.Jr:
I'll do that.
R:
All right.
H.M.Jr:
Good-bye.
129
March 14, 1941
4:27 p.m.
H.M.Jr:
Rouse.
Robert
Rouse:
Yes.
H.M.Jr:
What happened during the day?
R:
Well, it has been a rather quiet day -
mostly switching and pretty healthy on the
whole.
H.M.Jr:
Pretty healthy on the whole.
R:
Some of the notes have been better and
the rights were better. They were better
in the late market and they are about where
they were in the late market last night.
On the long bonds, the longest bonds are
2-3/32nds better. They fluctuated during
the day but nothing big. I've talked to 8.
number of people to get a preliminary idea
and - well, the last one was Garner at the
Guaranty. He thought that a 21% bond of
13 to 15 years, that's '54-56, would be
worth on 2.35 basis about 11 points, that
if there was nothing else to compare with
it, it would be regarded as very attractive.
He said, because of the 2-7/8ths and that
break which succeeds that it might not be
regarded as highly as it otherwise would,
but it seemed like a natural to him. He
thought that a billion would be O.K., but
it would be on the other hand the maximum.
He said he would not offer a short bond or
a 5-year note to go with it. As far as a
2-year note was concerned, he didn't think
it would make any difference. He made a
point that the banks had been surfeited
with securities in recent months with the
two defense notes, and so on, and this last
bond, and that you'd have insurance
company, savings bank and country bank
support as well as the big banks being
willing to take some of it.
H.M.Jr:
Yes.
130
- 2 -
R:
Burgess called this morning and - it seems
I have to find my note on the - well, in
any event he said that he thought the
next step in this financing, although they'd
like to see a 2-3/4% bond, that the next
step would probably be a 21 in the mid-
fifties.
H.M.Jr:
I see.
R:
He had in mind that they'd refine it
later, say, next week, but 11 to 13 years
or possibly 12 to 14 years. He said that
as far as the amount is concerned he
definitely wouldn't want to go over a
billion dollars.
H.M.Jr:
Now, are you going to be there in the
morning?
R:
Yes, I'm coming in.
H.M.Jr:
I'll call you again.
R:
All right, fine.
H.M.Jr:
Thank you.
moted P.M.
3/19/41 131
war DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
March 14, 1941.
The Honorable
The Secretary of the Treasury
Dear Mr. Secretary:
16.
Reference is made to your letter dated February 28,
1941, concerning British requests for clearance pending in
the War Department.
I an pleased to inform you that the comments of the
War Department on the requests listed have been forwarded
to the Office of Production Management in accordance with
the usual procedure.
I regret that there has been delay on these items and
can assure you that requests of this kind will be more ex-
peditiously handled in the future.
Sincerely yours,
Therey h Stinson
Secretary of War.
12 Vii
RS
182
March 14, 1941.
The Honorable
The Secretary of the Treasury
Dear Mr. Secretary:
Reference is made to your letter dated February 26,
1941, concerning British requests for clearance pending in
the Mar Department.
I 48 pleased to inform you that the comments of the
War Department on the requests listed have been forwarded
to the Office of Production Management in ascurdance with
the usual precedure.
I regret that there has been delay on these items and
can essure you that requests of this kind will be sere ⑉
peditiously handled in the future.:
Sincerely years,
Secretary of War.
Regraded Uclassified
133
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
WASHINGTON
March 14, 1941
MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY'S DIARY:
On Friday, March 14, 1941, Pehle asked Foley to mention
to the Secretary that he should like to ask State to call the
Hungarian Charge d'Affaires in and request him to redeposit in
the Legation's account at the Riggs National Bank the $900,000
in cash which he recently withdrew from such account. Foley,
later in the day, advised Pehle that the Secretary was agreeable
to this course of action.
Pehle called Acheson Saturday morning, March 15, 1941,
and explained the matter to him. Acheson said that such action
would appear to be proper and that he would take the matter up
further in the State Department. Shortly thereafter Mr. Livesey
mentioned to Pehle that the Hungarian Charge d'Affaires was
coming in to see him and was advised of Pehle's conversation with
Acheson.
A short time later Mr. Livesey called Pehle back and
said that the Hungarian Charge d'Affaires was at his desk and
that he had discussed with the Charge d'Affaires the cash with-
drawals. Livesey said the Hungarian Charge d'Affaires had indi-
cated that the cash was being held in the Legation and wanted to
discuss how the licensing system would work with regard to the
funds which the Hungarians had in the United States. The Charge
d'Affaires had mentioned to Livesey that he believed the Hungarian
Central Bank had $5,000,000 at the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York. Livesey said that the Hungarian Charge d'Affaires wanted
to know what to cable his government with respect to the reasons
why the freezing order was applied to Hungary. With regard to
this latter inquiry Pehle told Livesey that he was not prepared
to discuss this matter under the circumstances, nor to partici-
pate in this informal way of handling the matter. With regard
to the Hungarian funds in the United States Pehle advised Livesey
that applications might be filed in the normal way and would be
given careful consideration by this Department. With regard to
the cash being held at the Legation Livesey was told that Pehle
did not think we should be in the position of bargaining with the
Charge d'Affaires with respect to the licenses which would be
granted if the funds were redeposited in the account.
Regraded Uclassified
134
- 2 -
A short time later Mr. Gaston called Pehle to say that
Berle had called him and indicated that Acheson had advised him
of Pehle's conversation with Acheson and that Berle was going to
handle the matter. Pehle told Gaston that Livesey was in Pehle's
other office on another matter and that Livesey had just told
Pehle that the Hungarian Charge d'Affaires had told him that
Berle had been advised of the cash withdrawal by the Hungarian
Charge d'Affaires at the time it was made. Mr. Gaston said that
Berle was willing to take the matter up with the Charge d'Affaires,
but that he wanted to be able to give the Charge d'Affaires some
idea of the licenses we would be willing to grant and put it on
the basis that it would be in the Charge d'Affaires' own interest
to have the funds redeposited to the account. Berle had also
said that the Hungarians would probably want to be able to pay
for their diplomatic expenses in London out of their funds here.
Pehle told Gaston that in order to give the Hungarian Legation
some assurances on the matter without binding this Government too
much it might be advisable to advise the Charge d'Affaires that
the State Department was prepared to recommend to the Treasury
that appropriate licenses be granted covering diplomatic and con-
sular expenses in the Western Hemisphere and London. In this way
if conditions changed State could tell the Hungarians that the
Treasury had refused to follow its recommendations. Pehle also
told Gaston we would not be troubled by payment of diplomatic
expenses in London out of Hungarian funds here.
Berle subsequently telephoned Pehle and made the follow-
ing points:
1. That he felt that the mere act of asking the
Hungarians to put the cash back into the account suggested
assurances that they would be allowed to use them.
2. That the Hungarian Charge d'Affaires told him about
the cash withdrawals the same day but after they were made and
at the same time he was told that they intended to withdraw the
$600,000 also.
3. That the suggestion that the State Department would
advise the Hungarians that it was prepared to recommend certain
action to the Treasury was not particularly agreeable to him
since he felt it envisaged that the Treasury might not follow the
recommendations of the State Department. Pehle told him the sug-
gestion with regard to using the "recommendation" approach was
merely to take care of changed fastual situations and it was not
to be assumed that the Treasury would not follow the State Depart-
Regraded Uclassified
135
- S -
ment's recommendations if the State Department wanted them fol-
lowed.
4. That he did not know why the Treasury pressed for
freezing of Hungarian funds. Pehle explained the circumstances
with regard to our information as to the cash withdrawal and
pointed out that the freezing of Hungarian funds had been partici-
pated in by the State Department.
Berle was called away by Secretary Hull, but called back
at 2:30 to say that he had joined in the recommendation that
Hungarian funds be frozen; that he had done 80 because the State
Department was of the view that there was nothing to be lost in
freezing Hungary and that the Treasury undoubtedly had some
information on which it had based its recommendation that Hungary
be frozen. He said, with regard to the treatment to be accorded
Hungary under the license system, that we should keep in mind that
the present Governmental group in Hungary was anti-Nazi when it
was in a position to be and pro-Magyar, and that if given a chance
it seemed likely they might be of some help in the future in the
general Balkan picture.
JARtshle
136
Harsh 24, 1941
Mr. Cockram
Mr. Districh
Vith reference to the $22,500,000 in gold which the National Bank of Tugeslevia
visits to sell, Mr. Cuseres, of the Federal. informe - that 10 has instructions to
pay $11,225,000 out of the account of the Tugeslavism Bank to the Chase Fational Bank
for account of the National Bank of Taged avia. the Chase has instructions from
Tugeslavia to transfer this amount to the account of the Banco 4a Brasil.
Be also informe 20 that en March 12 the Federal received a cable free the B.I.S.
to dobit its account $900,000 and M that amount to the Chase Bank w order and for
account of the National Dank of Tugeslavia. the Federal applied for e license to
name this transfer. which was received today. and the payment was más. Mr. Comeren
also inferes at that the the had instructions to pay $1,100,000 free the Tugeslavise
account to farkish account.
No also stated that the Federal had paid today from the Tugeslavise Bank $917,000
to Chase. No thought that this payment end the ⑉ from the B.1.8. my be the -
transaction insurance as there was a delay is granting the licence for the B.I.S. pay-
seat. These two payments accebined nate a total of approximately $1,060,000 paid to
Chase by order of and for account of the Tegeslovism leak.
the Federal also received instructions today free the 3.1.5. to transfer ⑉ its
books $1,800,000 to the Svice National Dank. the D.I.S. explained that this amount
represented counter value of Svice frease brught by the D.I.S. free the Avice National
lest by order and for account of the National Bank of Pageslavia to GOVOR the latter's
payments vithin Ovitserland. the Federal 10 applying for a lieense to nover this
transaction.
FD:ek:1ap:3/14/41
Regraded Uclassified
137
Secretary Morgenthau:
This is a copy of the brief note
which I sent to Mr. Powel last
week, and which was mentioned in
our conversation last evening.
3/14/41.
138
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE
March 14, 1941
TO Harford Powel
FROM Peter H. Odegard
If I were setting out to sell securities for a private business
concern I would place great emphasis on the basic goals, resources,
stability and future prospects of the enterprise in which I was asking
people to invest. Following this line of thought, we should not lose
sight in our own program of the goals, tremendous resources, power and
stability of the United States of America.
For many years the American people have been wearing sack-cloth
and ashes. They have been conscious of their trials and tribulations
and not conscious enough of their triumphs. They have been immidated
with propaganda of & defeatist variety emphasizing the weaknesses in
our economic and political structure. Not even the heroic efforts of
the New Deal have succeeded in dissipating this psychology of frustra-
tion and failure. The result is that many of our people have fallen
prey to the specious claims of Nazi, Fascist and Communist superiority
in solving the insistent problems of contemporary life. There has been
a tendency, not alone among the underprivileged and the semi-literate but
among others more highly placed, to gasp in amazement and admiration at
Hitler's public works, at the Communist "liquidation of illiteracy", at
Fascist achievements in "solving the problem of unemployment". The time
is over ripe for a campaign to restore confidence in ourselves and to
restore the balance between immolation and self-righteousness, between
cynicism and complacency. I an not suggesting that we become Pollyannas
but only that we cease listening exclusively to the voice of Cassandra.
Time and circumstance demand that we discard our sack-cloth and ashes
and don our working clothes.
More particularly I would like to see running through all of our
copy a note of faith, courage, confidence and determination. Faith in
our destiny, in the people and institutions of America, in the method
of freedom and in equal justice under law; courage to meet the challenge
of despotism; confidence in our inner strength, in our unity and integrity
of purpose, in our capacity to solve our problems by the cooperation of
men standing upright and not on their knees; determination that we shall
leave no stone unturned to accomplish this end.
I would emphasize the truly spectacular achievements of the American
people in every walk of life; the tremendous size, rescurces and potential-
ities of the Nation. I would remind people insistently and continually
of the activities of their Government in serving them; ask them to look
Regraded Uclassified
139
- 2
around their own commities to note the schools, the highways, play-
grounds and other public works; to remind them of the inmumerable services
rendered by national, state and local governments. Never let them forget
that these things have been done without sacrificing their freedom of
expression, their right to worship as they please, and without subjecting
them to the terror of an insidious and all pervasive secret police. I
would ask the American farmers to compare their lot with that of farmers
living in totalitarian countries. Remind the worker of the difference
between a society which protects his right to organize with those which
deny it as a matter of principle. In like manner I would try to impress
upon every major group in the Nation the advantages which come to it
through living under the stars and stripes.
I would do all this without excessive flag waving, without insisting
that we have achieved Nirvana. I would not deny the existence of inequities
nor the fact that we have not solved all our problems but I would place major
emphasis on the plus rather than the minus side.
So far as possible, I would avoid abstractions except as these can be
particularized and even personalized. The story of Black Beauty is vastly
more effective in promoting kindness to animals than reams of statistics
or dozens of abstractions relating to the common kinship of all living things.
In the SEINO way a better appreciation of what this country means and stands
for can be conveyed by personalized stories of Anthony Zobrowsky, the steel
worker, Silms Dean, the farmer, and Johnny Jones, the school boy.
The basic material for this kind of a campaign can be found in abundance
in the literature available in Washington: - The Offices of Information in
Agriculture, in the Department of Labor, in the Public Health Service and in
over one hundred other service agencies of the United States Government. We
can also use the data provided by business organizations, labor unions, patri-
otic societies, and other groups which take an affirmative view of American
life.
I mention all this because I am persuaded that the success of our Savings
campaign will depend in the final analysis upon the extent to which we can get
the American people to believe in themselves. I wouldn't like to try to sell
securities for a concern that my prospects believed was on the verge of bank-
ruptcy or that had a record of failure. I realize that to write to you in
this vein is like carrying coals to Newcastle. But if we are to do our job of
selling Government securities to the largest possible mimber of investors we
can do so only to the extent that we contribute to the strengthening of national
norele.
Regraded Uclassified
140
MAR 14 1941
My dear Mr. Ludlow:
It has come to my attention that the printed record
of the hearings December 17, 1940, on the Treasury-Post
Office Appropriation Bill for the 1942 fiscal year incorrect-
by indicates that I believed the cost of Government, as
increased by national defense needs, should be financed on
a ratio of one-thire from revernes and two-thirds from
borrowing. This unfortunate impression has since been
referred to as fact by a mumber of reporters and editorial
writers.
On February 12, 1941, in testimony on the Public Debt
Act of 1941 before a subcommittee of the Senate Finance
Committee, I responded as follows to a question by Senator
Byrd:
"If the Congress would adopt a program under
which Y/O could raise through revermes an amount
sufficient to finance two-thirds of all expendi-
tures, and one-third from borrowing, I think it
would be & very wholesome method to follow."
I shall appreciate any help you can give me in clearing
up my position in the minds of members of the Congress, writers
and others interested.
With sincere personal regards, I -
Faithfully yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury.
The Honorable Louis Ludlow, Chairman,
Subcommittee on Appropriations for Treasury
and Post Office Departments,
House of Representatives,
Washington, D. 0.
CS:efe
Regraded Uclassified
CONFIDENTIAL
141
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE March 14, 1941
TO
Secretary Morgenthau
FROM
Mr. Haas
Subject: Comments on Gano Dunn steel report
I am submitting herewith, in response to your request,
an analysis of the Gano Dunn report on the adequacy of our
steel capacity.
This analysis, while not carried out in extensive
detail, 18 sufficient to reveal that the apparent surplus
of steel capacity indicated by the Dunn report 18 based on
& number of unrealistic and erroneous assumptions. When
allowance is made for these, it seems very likely that any
eurplus may be wiped out before the end of this year, and
certainly by 1942.
Since the entire question of the speed of our defense
effort is bound up in the adequacy of our steel capacity,
it would seem that any differences of opinion should be
resolved on the side of providing too much capacity rather
than too little.
Attachments
Hass speakts my
M
Prepared by:
Mr. Daggit
I
Mr. Lindow
Mr. Haas
Regraded Uclassified
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
142
Comments on the Gano Dunn Steel Report
I. The Treasury's relation to the question of steel capacity
1.
For some time, concern has been felt in various
quarters over the adequacy of our steel capacity. On
December 18, 1940, a letter was sent to the President by
the Secretary of the Treasury in which he expressed oon-
cern over this problem, saying that "no expert knowledge
is necessary to see that the steel industry will be unable
to handle the volume of orders that lies ahead." The need
was indicated for an immediate expansion of steel capacity
in order to forestall potential inflationary developments,
which would react unfavorably on the economy of the country
as well as on our whole fiscal program, and to guard against
possible shortages of defense materials.
2.
The President appointed Mr. Gano Dunn to make a thorough
study of the steel industry and to submit a report, compar-
ing probable steel requirements with the capacity of the
steel industry to meet those requirements. Mr. Dunn con-
ferred with Secretary Morgenthau regarding the Treasury's
interest in the subject, and was offered all information on
steel requirements available in the Treasury.
3.
On January 17, 1941, the Division of Research and
Statistics completed a statement converting into equiva-
lent terms of ingot steel the quantities of various com-
modities required by Great Britain, as listed in a secret
document prepared in London and presented to Secretary
Morgenthau early in January by Mr. Arthur B. Purvis,
Chairman of the British Supply Council in North America.
The rates of conversion used by the Treasury were very
conservative, and were determined after consultation with
the steel expert of the Bureau of Research and Statistics
of the National Defense Commission. In line with Secretary
Morgenthau's offer of assistance to Mr. Dunn, the statement
was sent to him by the Secretary immediately upon completion.
4.
On January 22, Mr. Philip Young sent Mr. Dunn a copy
of the December monthly report of the British Iron aná
Steel Corporation, the purchasing agent of the United
Kingdom for commercial steel in the United States. This
report presented, among other things, certain figures
which were stated to be estimates of the future monthly
exports of commercial steel.
1/ A copy of this letter, together with other letters referred
to, 1s attached to this report.
Regraded Uclassified
143
- 2
5.
On January 27. Mr. Dunn wrote the Secretary raising
certain questions about the Treasury conversions of
British requirements. In the absence of the Secretary,
the questions raised by Mr. Dunn were answered in a letter
of Acting Secretary Gaston, dated February 3. In order
that Mr. Dunn might make his own conversions into ingot
steel, Mr. Gaston also enclosed for his confidential use
& copy of the estimates of requirements for selected com-
modities shown in the "London secret document" previously
referred to.
II. Some general comments on the report
1.
The conclusions of the Dunn report may be briefly sum-
marized as follows:
(a) Steel capacity is larger than calculated by
the American Iron and Steel Institute because the in-
active time allowed for repairs and maintenance may
be reduced, and certain capacity for making steel
castings may be added.
(b) The total steel requirements for defense,
British, and civilian needs are sufficiently lower
than capacity to indicate a surplus for the calendar
year 1941 of from 10 to 14 million tone, depending
upon whether national income is $80 billions or
$77 billions. For 1942, the surplus would be from
2 to 6 million tons depending upon whether national
income were $90 billions or $87 billions.
(o) To make the calculated steel capacities ef-
fective it would be necessary to make certain in-
creases in blast furnace and coke capacity.
2.
No comprehensive analysis of the Dunn report can be
made without undertaking a lengthy project. No such
analysis is necessary, however, to conclude that the
position taken in Secretary Morgenthau's letter of
December 18 was well advised. This may be seen by consider-
ing some of the assumptions and calculations in the report
which appear to be erroneous. Most of these seem to
arise as a result of what appears to be a consistent ef-
fort in the report to use every possible means to increase
the indicated steel plant capacity and to decrease the
indicated requirements for steel.
144
III. Considerations in Dunn report regarding plant capacity
1.
The Dunn report exaggerates the ingot capacity of the
steel industry by assuming that the industry can operate
at an average of 1021 per cent of capacity, B.B rated by
the American Iron and Steel Institute. Even allowing for
additional capacity coming into production, an average
rate of 1022 per cent seems an excessive expectation,
particularly in 1941, for the following reasons:
(a) Since much old and obsolete capacity has
been brought into production, repairs will be more
frequent and a high operating rate more difficult
to attain.
(b) The steel rate has not currently risen higher
than 98.8 per cent of rated capacity, despite all the
pressure on steel production facilities that has been
exerted in recent months.
Since the first quarter of 1941 is nearly
past, with the steel rate averaging only 97 per cent
of capacity, the rate would have to go immediately
to nearly 1041 and hold at that level for the re-
mainder of the year to average 1021 per cent in 1941.
(c) Historical precedent provides no basis for
such an expectation. Even during the World War period
this rate was not reached. The Dunn report contains
a chart (labelled Appendix A) and table (Appendix B)
purporting to show that during the World War the out-
put of steel reached a peak of 101.6 per cent of rated
capacity in the year 1916, The figures used in this
chart and table, however, do not accurately represent
the rate of output, since they are based on capacity
at the end of the previous year (a customary but fal-
lacious method) which fails to take into account the
effect of increases in capacity during the year. In
another section of the report (page 29), Mr. Dunn
recognizes the desirability of taking such increases
into account, saying "If such capacities had been
added as they came into operation, the percentages by
which production exceeded capacity would be reduced."
Using his figures (Appendix B of the report) the
average rate of steel output in 1916, based on average
capacity during the year, was 97.6 per cent.
Regraded Uclassified
145
2.
The steel capacity figure 1s exaggerated by the addi-
tion of 1,320,000 tons of capacity for "outside steel ount-
ings" as of December 31, 1940 and 1,387,000 tons as of
December 31, 1941. If these are included in the capacity
figures, steel oastings should also have been included in
the estimatee of steel requirements,
3.
The Dunn report similarly exaggerates the pig iron
capacity by assuming that blast furnaces can operate at
an average of 1021 per cent of rated capacity in 1941 and
1942. In view of the fact that the pig iron rate in
January 1941, as estimated by the American Iron and Steel
Institute, was only 95.5 per cent of capacity, and in
February only 95.2 per cent, the rate would have to rise
immediately to 104 per cent of capacity and hold at that
level until the end of the year to average 1021 per cent
in 1941.
IV. Considerations in Dunn report regarding requirements
1.
A serious understatement of steel requirements 1s
made in presenting the estimates as for the calendar
years 1941 and 1942, when in reality the essential data
apply to the years ending 6 months earlier. Thus it is
said (page 50) that "the estimates in this report are in
terms of calendar years" and the estimates of total steel
requirements are given as 77.5 million tons "for the
calendar year 1941" (page 62) and 89.0 million tons "for
the calendar year 1942" (page 63). Yet the figure of 61.0
million tons of steel used for civilian requirements in
the estimate for calendar year 1941, for example, is the
de Chazeau estimate of requirements during the year end-
ing June 30, 1941, (not "at the end of the year as stated
in the report) and similarly for calendar year 1942. To
correct this one item, it would be necessary to project
the de Chazeau estimate 6 months ahead, which would add
4.5 million tons to civilian requirements in calendar year
1941.
The only possible Justification for this might be that
the author wished to be conservative as to national income
levels. That is to say, the Dunn report may have taken the
de Chazeau national income figures on a fiscal year basis
as a calendar year estimate. If this be the case, the
Dunn report assumes a level of national income 5 billion
dollars lower in the calendar year 1941, and a correspond-
ingly lower volume of steel requirements for civilian
consumption, than 1s consistent with the de Chazeau basic
estimates which the Dunn report claims to accept.
Regraded Uclassified
146
5 -
2.
The estimates of steel required for direct defense
needs of the United States are obviously too low,
(a) Because they are based only on appropria-
tions actually made (for the Army, Navy, and Maritime
Commission) as of the end of November. The actual
requirements, particularly in view of the passage of
the lend-lease b1ll, will obviously exceed appropria-
tions as of that date.
(b) Because they are for fiscal years, and cover
periods 6 months earlier than the calendar years to
which the estimates of total requirements are stated
to apply. A correction for this error would add
700,000 tons to direct defense requirements for the
calendar year 1941, without allowance for any require-
ments in excess of those for which appropriations
had actually been made as of the end of November.
(c) Because, except for requirements of the
Bureau of Docks of the Navy, they make no allowance
for the construction steel directly or indirectly
required for the defense program. These requirements
are not included in any other category.
3.
The Dunn report does not allow for ingot steel re-
quired for American plant expansion to take care of certain
projected British programsin this country. This item 16
mentioned in connection with British requirements for ex-
port with the explanation that it 1s being transferred to
the classification of civilian consumption, but the amount
involved has not been added to the other items included in
estimates of civilian consumption in the Dunn report. The
Treasury statement had included British estimates for this
item as prepared by the British Purchasing Commission.
4.
British requirements for steel, according to the Dunn
report, are reduced considerably as compared with the
figures arrived at by the Treasury through translating
into ingot steel the requirements listed in the "London
secret document". The reductions are achieved by various
means, but all are unwarranted. In this connection, the
Dunn report gives the impression that the Treasury itself
estimated what the British needs were, rather than merely
translating into steel ingots the specific quantities
of particular items cited in the "London secret document".
Regraded Uclassified
147
- 6 -
The major weaknesses in this section of the Dunn report
may be described briefly 88 follows:
(a) The figures used for commercial steel are
based on exports considerably lower than were indicated
AE requirements in the "London secret document.' The
latter figures were in Mr. Dunn's hands but instead he
used information taken from the monthly report of the
British Iron and Steel Corporation. The commercial
steel figures in the Corporation's report are not as
comprehensive nor 8.B newly estimated as those in the
"London secret document."
(b) The Dunn report allows ingot steel for British
ships to the amount of only 120 ships per year, whereas
the "London secret document" calls for 2* to 3 times
as many. From the Treasury conversions of figures cited
in the "London secret document", the Dunn report cal-
culates that 334 ships are involved in 1941 and 300 in
1942 but deems these quantities excessive" in view of
the capacity of our yards built, building and to be
built; and the large additional demands upon them for
the construction of American ships."
(c) The Dunn report also reduces the Treasury con-
version figure for ammunition in 1942 on grounds that
the rate of conversion was too high. No change was made,
however, in the Treasury figure for 1941, although exactly
the same ammunition items were covered and the same con-
version factor was used.
(a) To offset all these reductions, the Dunn report
sets up & special allowance which 1s intended to appear
AB being generous in providing for British export, but
the allowance 18 80 small that it 18 only a gesture when
compared with the amounts by which British requirements
were written down.
(e) The Dunn report makes its figures for British
export compare favorably with the Treasury figures by
adjusting the Treasury figures to take out something
which 1s not in them. The adjustment is made by taking
out almost 2,000,000 tons of pig iron and scrap iron as-
sumed to be in the Treasury figures for ingot steel,
which were not 80 included.
5.
The discussion in the Dunn report of the Treasury con-
versions inadvertently releases to the public important
derivative information from the "London secret document." From
the converted figures, it 18 possible by converting back-
wards to determine the magnitude of items listed in that
highly confidential report. The Dunn report did this
in the case of ships and actually cited an exact number of
Regraded Uclassified
148
7
ships BD computed from the Treasury conversions of the
secret figures. As it stands, the British stated re-
quirements for shipe 18 accurately portrayed in the Dunn
report which has been made available for public inspection.
V. Summary and conclusions
In an apparent effort to magnify the indicated steel plant
capacity and to minimize indicated requirements for steel, the
Dunn report makes use of & number of unrealistic and erroneous
assumptions, leading to conclusions regarding the adequacy of
our steel capacity which are untenable.
1.
He assumes that steel furnaces can operate at & rate
2t per cent higher than the capacity as rated by the American
Iron and Steel Institute, despite a lack of historical
precedent, despite an increased number of over-age plants,
and despite the evidence afforded by lower current operat-
ing rates.
2.
He adde a substantial tonnage of steel casting
capacity, although steel castings are not included in the
estimates of requirements.
3.
He under-estimates direct defense requirements by in-
cluding only actual appropriations as of the end of Novem-
ber 1940, by using figures for fiscal years and applying
them to calendar years ending six months later, and by
failing to include most of the construction steel directly
and indirectly involved in the defense program.
4.
He under-states British steel requirements by fail-
ing to use the most comprehensive and recent of the British
figures. Instead, the uses older and smaller figures for
commercial steel requirements, and drastically writes down
the amount involved in British ship requirements.
5.
He under-states the United States civilian require-
ments as compared with the de Chazeau estimates, by using
fiscal year estimates to apply to the calender years end-
ing six months later.
After allowances are made for the various erroneous 8.8-
sumptions underlying the estimates in the Dunn report, and
particularly if provision be made for steel requirements in
excess of those for which appropriations actually had been
made as of November 1940, it seems very likely that the steel
surplus envisaged in the Dunn report may be completely wiped
out before the end of this year, and certainly by 1942.
Regraded Uctassified
149
- 8 -
Since the entire question of the speed of our defense
effort 18 bound up in the adequacy of our steel capacity,
it would seem that any differences of opinion should be
resolved on the side of providing too much capacity rather
than too little.
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
150
COPY
December 18, 1940
My dear Mr. President:
My interest in forestalling potential inflationary developments
that would react unfavorably on the economy of the country, as well as
our whole fiscal program, and in guarding against possible shortages
of defense materials, leads me to express my serious concern over the
growing congestion in the steel industry.
No expert knowledge is necessary to see that the steel industry
will be unable to handle the volume of orders that lies ahead. In addi-
tion to the huge British orders that are now in prospect, the bulk of
our defense orders are still to be placed with the steel mills, and the
ordinary non-defense demand will undoubtedly be enlarged as the national
income rises. As you will note on the chart which I am attaching, there
is very little capacity available in any steel district for & further
increase in output.
A system of priorities, applied except as a temporary expedient,
would seriously hamper the program for achieving full employment of la-
bor and resources.
I have not been greatly encouraged by recent press announcements of
expansion plans by certain steel companies. In an attached table I have
listed all of the proposed increases in steel ingot capacity that I know
about, plus the new capacity (electric furnace) completed this year or
under construction. Taken together, this amounts to a prospective in-
crease in ingot capacity of only 2.7 per cent, the bulk of which apparently
will not be completed for 12 to 18 months.
You will recall the large steel expansion that was found necessary
during the World War, when the ingot capacity was increased about one-
third between 1914 and 1918. In view of the increasingly urgent need
for more steel, it seems to me that an immediate major expansion program
for the steel industry is clearly called for.
Faithfully yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
The President,
The White House.
Regraded Uclassified
151
COPY
New steel capacity completed, under construction
or authorized since January 1, 1940
Net tons
Bethlehem Steel Corporation
850,000
U. S. Steel Corporation
400,000
American Rolling Mill
50,000
Electric furnaces
(American Iron and Steal Institute
estimate of capacity of 21 new
electric furnaces now in operation,
or expected to be in production
early in 1941)
900,000
2,200,000
152
STEEL OUTPUT AND RATED CAPACITY*
Weskly Tonnage
1939
#
.
g.
A
E
4
J
A
a
o
1940
.
5
,
F
a
A
-
(94)
TOME
,
A
.
o
N
a
-
-
1
Millions
U.S. Total
TOME
L4
Copecity
Milliams
1.8
1.4
1.4
1.2
1.2
Outputi
1.0
1.0
.
.
.
6
4
4
I
.
0
# - A M 1939 di J A . D N a - , M A M # - A . . H a J F M o
1940
1941
PRINCIPAL PRODUCING DISTRICTS
1929
1948
1941
1989
1940
M
1941
TOMB
TONE
9
1
Thousands
Thousands
THE
Chicago
Theveands
440
340
⑉
Centerly
Pistaburgh
===
445
⑉
⑉
...
⑉
⑉
240
144
140
145
⑉
⑉
100
Details
200
THE
Outpute
168
les
140
123
180
IN
120
⑉
"
es
so
40
42
40
2
#
.
Youngstewn
0
.
⑉
194
180
Philadalphia
168
140
ISS
132
129
110
120
#3
es
⑉
se
:
48
40
48
.
.
e
.
Cleveland
Buffale
"
##
"
-
:
45
48
42
1
.
.
#
Birmingham
42
40
-
=
Whesling
E
.
.
.
Cinsinnati
48
48
40
46
Detrait
.
a
#
/
#
A
.
a
.
8
di
,
as
A
M
A
.
e
.
e
#
# 4 # - - . a . = . - A. . M
1939
1940
1941
1939
1940
1941
"Ined - par Age date
/ I / - I ,
0-041
- -
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
153
COPY
THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY
WASHINGTON
January 17, 1941
Dear Mr. Dunn:
With reference to our conversation last
week, I am sending you herewith an estimate
of British Government requirements for steel
in the United States, which is based upon a
British Government report just recently compiled.
Sincerely,
(signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
Mr. Gano Dunn,
Senior Consultant,
Advisory Commission on National Defense,
Room 2807 Munitions Building,
Washington, D. C.
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
COPY
154
ESTIMATED BRITISH GOVERNMENT REQUIREMENTS FOR STEEL
IN THE UNITED STATES, IN TERMS OF INGOTS
The attached table shows the estimates which we have made
on the amount of steel required by the British Government in the
United States during 1941 and 1942. These estimates were made on
the basis of the most recent information available concerning
British requirements but they are known to represent an under-
statement in view of the fact that requirement figures were not
available except for major items.
The total estimate for the two years is 25,000,000 tons of
ingots, of which about two-thirds is for commercial steel items and
one-third for steel in manufactured goods, including steel required
for plant expansion purposes. The total requirements thus represent
an ingot output of slightly more than 1,000,000 tons per month. This
compares with a present capacity of about 7,000,000 tons of ingots
per month. The British requirements would thus take up approximately
15 percent of the capacity - assuming the demands were spread over
the two years. It is probable that the actual immediate need is
even larger, since the British estimate of requirements must have
been framed with allowance for United States priorities and for the
availability of bottoms.
It should be noted that our estimates do not include the
requirements of Canada or the other Dominions, and exclude British
requirements in connection with certain manufactured items for which
no data are available.
Attachment
Office of the Secretary of the Treasury,
Division of Research and Statistics.
January 17, 1941.
Regraded Uclassified
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
155
COPY
ESTIMATED BRITISH GOVERNMENT REQUIREMENTS
FOR STEEL, IN TERMS OF STEML INGOTS
(In thousands of tons)
Form of requirement
--
:
Total
--
:
1941
--
:
1942
Commercial steel
16,502
8,251
8,251
Manufactured goods
Ships
2,857
1,504
1,353
Aircraft
347
122
225
Tanks
371
234
137
Ordnance
220
182
38
Amminition
3,197
918
2,279
Machine tools
66
33
33
Total mamifactured goods
7,058
2,993
4,065
Plant expansion
960
480
480
Total requirements
24,520
11,724
12,796
Office of the Secretary of the Treasury,
Division of Research and Statistics.
January 17, 1941
156
COPY
ND ADVISORY COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL OF NATIONAL DEVELSE
4 Washington, D. 0.
Monday
January 27, 1941
The Honorable Henry Morgenthan, Jr.
Secretary of the Treasury
Washington, D. 0.
Dear Mr. Secretary:
I want to thank you for the estimate of British Government
requirements for steel in the United States, which you sent no
in your letter of January 17 and which I have carefully studied.
Since receiving your letter I have received the Monthly
Program Statement of the British Iron and Steel Corporation, Ltd.,
giving their estimates for the coming year. There is considerable
difference between these estimates, which I should like to submit
for your advice as to whether they can be harmonized.
The British figures from their Institute indicate for the
calendar year 1941 approximately 5 million gross tons in semi-
finished and finished commercial carbon steels. If ve assume
(which may not be warranted) that 60% of this amount is in semi-
finished steel and convertible into ingots at an inverse ratio
of 85%, and if we assume that 40% is similarly convertible at
an inverse ratio of 72%, it yields an annual delivery of
6,380,000 gross tons, which 1s equal to 7,120,000 net tons.
The figure in your estimate is 8,251,000 net tone, or 1,131,000
net tons more.
In your estimate 1,504,000 net tons is set aside for ships
during 1941, but I am informed that these ships, which are of a
157
- 2 -
Regraded Ucla
cargo type, call for 3,500 net tons of finished steel of which
the ingot equivalent is approximately 4,000 net tons. At the
rate of 1,504,000 net tone of requirements this would repre-
sent 376 ships, which seems way beyond what might be expected to
be the right mimber, as it is beyond the present and future
capacity of our shipyards. I an informed that the British
program at present calls for only 60 ships of which only half
are expected to be off the ways this year.
Would not 500,000 tons for ships seem nearer the possible
requirements than 1,504,000 tons?
The estimate with which you have been kind enough to supply
me gives for the calendar year 1941 918,000 net tons for amminition.
It is my understanding that a large portion of this ammunition
steel is for demolition bombs, which are not made of ingot
steel but of cast steel in foundries whose steel-making capacity
is not included in the ingot capacity figures reported by the
American Iron and Steel Institute for the steel industry. It
would seen, if I am not in error, that & reduction by 500,000
tons to 418,000 tons would be & more likely figure for the
ingot steel for ammunition.
Your estimate also gives 480,000 tons for plant expansion,
but is it not true that this plant expansion is in the United
States, in which case the whole of this item would be included
in the figures for United States civilian consumption and should
not be entered in the export requirements?
158
-3 -
If we add together the differences 80 far accumulated between
your estimates and the e stimates of the British Iron and Steel
Corporation, Ltd., they amount to 3,115,000 net tons,aná if we
subtract this from your figure for 1941 of 11,724,000 net tons, it
leaves for British export 8,609,000 net tons instead of the
11,724,000 tons of your estimate.
If to the British export we add 1,800,000 tons for Canada
and 2,000,000 tons for other exports, we will get a total export
figure of 12,409,000 tons, which is considerably within the figure
of 14,500,000, which up to now we have been using.
Your estimates did not indicate whether the tons were gross
or net, but inquiry from your office brought the reply that they
were net, excepting for possibly a few items of small amount
which were gross, of which the inclusion would not materially
affect the result.
Appreciating very much your help in this matter, I am
Sincerely yours,
(signed) Gano Dunn
Gano Dunn
Sanior Consultant
Industrial Materials Division
Regraded Uclassified
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
COPY
THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY
159
WASHINGTON
February 3. 1941
Dear Mr. Dunn:
Receipt is acknowledged of your letter of January 27. in
which you discuss the estimates of British Government require-
ments for steel in the United States.
The first three questions which you raise concerning the
Treasury estimates submitted to you apparently arise because
of a difference in the basic data considered. The Treasury
estimates (except for plant expansion) were based on a secret
comprehensive statement of British requirements which VBS
recently received from Mr. Purvis. This statement showed, for
selected items, the estimated quantity or dollar value required
from the United States in 1941 and 1942. Naturally, in some
cases, these requirements represent an amount greater than
present available productive capacity in the United States.
This is the case with ships. If the British are to secure the
ships which they estimate they need, however, it will of course
be necessary to attack the problem of increasing ship-building
capacity where it is deficient, as well as supplying the steel
for the ships.
For your confidential use, I an attaching a table listing
the requirements of selected items referred to above. It should
be noted that the figures for commercial steel have now been
cleared up as to the basis of measurement, and the original
Treasury estimates will have to be revised upward accordingly.
Your attention is also called to the fact that no demolition
bombs are included in the ammunition figures, so that the
Treasury estimates do not include cast steel for their mam-
facture, as you suggest.
The last question that you raise concerns the amount of
steel required for plant expansion in order to meet British
requirements in this country. The estimate for plant expan-
sion included in the statement of British steel requirements
prepared by the Treasury was taken from data prepared by the
British Purchasing Commission recently but prior to receipt
of the secret comprehensive statement of British requirements
referred to above. This means that the estimate was based on
160
Mr. Dunn - 2
8 less comprehensive list of requirements than is now available,
and the figure included in the Treasury table is therefore
probably too low.
In any event, you suggest that steel required for plant
expansion to cover British export requirements should be con-
sidered as already allowed for in estimates of civilian consump-
tion of steel, and that, therefore, such requirements should not
be considered along with the British needs for export. One
question occurs to no, however, in connection with estimates made
from the point of view of domestic consumption. Is it possible
for such estimates of steel requirements to cover plant expansion
required for British export needs beyond the orders or inquiries
already known to manufacturers? On the other hand, the estimate
for plant expansion in the Treasury table covered not only such
orders but also programs which were in the initial stages of
development.
I should like to call to your attention the fact that the
attached list itself is not all-inclusive, but covers only the
principal kinds of articles required. For example, no estimate
is included for motor vehicles, although it is obvious that
British purchases of trucks, scout cars, and the like will call
for at least a small amount of steel.
Sincerely yours,
(signed) Herbert B. Gaston
Acting Secretary of the Treasury
Mr. Gano Dunn, Senior Consultant,
Industrial Materials Division,
The Advisory Commission to the
Council of National Defense,
Washington, D. C.
Attachment
161
Note: The table referred to in the letter to
Mr. Dunn is not included because of its
very confidential character.
162
<
giss Chauncey
March 14. 1941
CONFIDENTIAL
Dear Mr. Ensirer
Permit se 10 acknowledge, is behalf of the
Secretary, the receipt of your letter of March 5. 1941.
with which you transmitted your compilation for the
vesit ended March 5. 1941. showing dollar disbursements
out of the British Empire and French accounts at the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York and the means by which
cush expenditures were financed.
Faithfully yours.
(Signed) E. Merle Cochran
1. Marle Cechran
Technical Assistant to the Secretary
b. 1. Emake, Bequire,
Flse President,
Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
New York, New York.
HN0:1ap-3/14/41
Regraded Uclassified
163
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK
16UR
March 13, 1941.
CONFIDENTIAL
Dear Mr. Secretary:
Attention: Mr. H. Merle Cochran
I am enclosing herewith our compilation for the
week ended March 5, 1941, showing dollar disbursements
out of the British Empire and French accounts at this bank
and the means by which these expenditures were financed.
Faithfully Whiter yours,
L. W. Knoke,
Vice President.
Honorable Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury,
Washington, D. C.
Enclosure
1841 - 57 24 nisk
s
Regraded Uclassified
Regraded Uclassified
ANALYSIS DE BRITISH AND ERENCH ACCOUNTS
linek Ended March 5. 1941,
(In Millions of Dollars)
Confidential
BANK OF ENGLIND (BRITISH GOVERNMENT)
BANK
or
FRANCE
DEBITS
CREDITS
DEBITS
CREDITS
Proceeds of
Not Incr,
Not Incr.
Gov't
Sales of
(+) or
Cov't
Proceeds
(+) or
Total
Expendi-
Other
Total
Securities Other
Door. (-)
Total
Expendi-
Other
Total
of Gold
Other
Door. (-)
PERIOD
Debita
tures(a)
Debite
Credite
Gold
()ffsoinl) (b)
Credita(s)
in Balance
Debite
tures (4)
Debite
Crodite
Sales
Crodito
in Belance
1939
Aug. 31 - Sept. 22
94-3
3.6
90.7
207.8
185.4
-
22.4
+113.5
12.6
6.0
15.4
11.3
,
11.3
- 8.1
Sept.28 Nov. 1
106,7
5.8
100.9
142.0
3.2
-
138.6
+ 35.3
88.6
1
76.2
35.0
41.2
- 18.4
61.8
105.4
Nov. 2- 29
191.7
8.9
182.8
105.8
57.8
-
48.0
- 85.9
78.6
)
82.9
55.1
27.8
+ 4.3
Nov. 30 Jan. 3.
97.7
8.7
89,0
75,2
50.6
-
24.6
- 22.5
86.8
28.1
56.7
109,2
93.9
15.3
- 22.4
1940
Jon. 4- 31
54.8
16.8
38.0
43.4
20.6
-
22.8
- 11.4
61.5
31.5
30.0
55.9
50.1
5.8
- 5,6
Feb. 1 - 28
124.2
15.4
108,8
108.3
56.7
I
51,6
- 15.9
72.7
32.8
39.9
71.5
54.8
16.7
- 1.2
Feb. 29 Apr. 3
115.5
14.5
101.0
94.0
60.9
14.0
19.1
- 21.5
99.6
35.9
63.7
105.0
75.4
29.6
+ 5.4
Apr. 4- May
1
113.4
26,1
87.3
86.4
46.8
20.0
19.6
- 27.0
84.8
29.4
55.4
78.7
60.7
18.0
- 8.1
MAY 2 - 29
100.9
23.6
77.3
126.2
93.2
12.0
21.0
+ 25.3
1014
57.0
44.4
145.4
126.2
19.2
. 44.0
KAY 30 - July S
283.2
145,3
137.9
319.3
301.3
3.0
15.0
+ 36.1
B6.7(e)
127.3 (0)
29.4
345.1@
335.6
9.56)
+188.4
July 5 - 31
249.7
156.7
93.0
225.0
212.3
2.0
10.8
- 24.7
7.3
5.3
1.0
3.2
3.0
0.2
- 4.1
Aug. 1- 26
261.1
180.2
80.9
294.8
267.4
1.0
26.4
+ 33.7
8,9
0.5
8.4
10.9
10.4
0,5
* 2.0
First year or war
1,095.2
605.6
1187.6
1,828.2
1,356.1
58.0
480.1
* 35.0
866.3
416.6
449.7
1095.3
900.2
195.1
+225,0
AUG. 29 - Oct,
2
316.8
244.3
72.5
308,9
271.5
6,0
31.4
- 7.9
8.6
4.4
4.2
1.3
-
1.3
- 7.3
Oct, 3.4 30
196.7
167,9
28.9
198.5
160.5
6.0
38.0
+ 1,8
0.5
0.3
0.2
0.5
-
0.5
-
Oct. 31 - Nov. 27
241.0
201.1
39,9
259.5
210.0
18.0
31.5
+ 16,5
0.8
0,1
0.7
0.7
-
0.7
- Onl
Nov. B8 - Dec. 31
234.6
206.8
37.8
198.0
111.4
26.0
60.6
- 36.6
2.1
-
8.1
0.6
-
0.6
- 1,5
R period through Das.
2,762.3
1,425.6
1356.7
2,793.1
2,109.5
108.0
575.6
- 10.8
878.3
421.4
456.9
1098.4
900,2
198.2
+820.1
Jane X - 29
162.7
34.7
259.9
176.2
52.0
31-7
+ 62.5
LY
1
STAR
-
U.S.
- 122
Jen. 30 - Feb. 26
164.6
137.8
26.8
101.4
26.6
26.0
48.8
- 63.2
0.2
-
0.2
0.2
#
0.2
4
Feb. 27 Apr. 2
VISIX 2020;
Feb. 11
37.4
31.9
5.5
14.1
-
6,0
0.1
-23-3
,
-
.
0.1
-
Oal
+ 0.1
19
40.7
38.2
25
19.6
-
60
13.6
-21.1
0.1
.
0,1
0.1
-
0,1
-
26
40.0
27.0
130
44.5
26.6
400
13.9
+ 45
-
-
.
-
Mar. 5
56.9
4%0
1,1
50.1
24.8
19.0
63
-6.6
-
-
Average Weekly Expenditures Since Dutbreak of Yer
Transfers from British Purchasing Commission to
(See footnoted on reverse side)
France (through June 19)
$19.6 attlics
Bank of Canada for French Account
Veek ended March 5
$
2.3
million
England (through June 19)
27.6 million
Cumulation from July 6
$
134.8
million
England (since June 19)
55.2 million
164
Street
ANALYSIS OF BRITISH AND FIGNICH ACCOUNTS
Week Ended Marab 5. 1941.
Confidential
(In Millions or Dollars)
BANK OF ENCL.ND (BRITISH GOVERNMENT)
BANK
OF
FRANCE
DEBITS
CREDITS
DEBITS
CREDITS
Proceeds of
Net Incr.
Not Inor.
Sales of
(+) or
Cov't
Proceeds
(+) or
Cov't
Total
Expend -
Other
Total
Securities Other
Decr. (-)
Total
Expendi-
Other
Total
of Gold
Other
Deor. (+)
PERIOD
Debite
turea(a)
Debite
Credite
Cold
(b)
Credita(s)
in Balunce
Debits
tures (d)
Debite
Credits
Sales
Credits
in Balance
1939
6.0
13.4
11.3
11.5
- 8,1
Aug. 31 - Sept. 27
94.3
3.6
90.7
207.8
185.4
-
22.4
+115.5
19.4
-
Sept.28 - Nov. 1
106.7.
5.8
100.9
142.0
3.2
138.8
+ 35.3
88.6
76.2
35.0
41.2
- 18.6
-
61,8
105.4
Nov. 2 - 29
191.7
8.9
182.8
105.8
57.8
-
48.0
- 85.9
78.6
)
82.9
55.1
87.8
- 4.3
Nov. 30 Jan. $
97.7
8.7
89,0
75.2
50.6
34.5
- 22,5
86.8
28.1
58.7
100.2
93.9
15,3
- 20,4
-
1940
Jon. 4 31
54.8
16.8
38,0
43.4
20.6
-
22.8
- 11.4
61.5
31.5
30.0
55.9
50,1
5.8
- 5.4
Feb. 1 - 28
124.2
15,4
106,8
103.3
56.7
-
51.6
- 15.9
72.7
32.8
39.9
71.5
54.8
16.7
- 1.2
tab. 29 Apr. 3
115.5
14.5
101.0
94.0
60.9
14.0
19.1
- 21.5
99.6
35.9
63.7
105.0
75.4
29.6
. 5.4
84.8
29.4
55,4
78.7
60.7
18.0
- 6.1
Apr. 4 May
1
113.4
26.1
87.3
86.4
46.8
20.0
19.6
- 27.0
May 2 29
100.9
23.6
77.3
126.2
93.2
12.0
21.0
+ 25.3
1014
57.0
44.4
145.4
126.2
19.2
. 46.0
Cag 30 - July
3
283.8
145,3
137.9
319.3
301.3
3.0
15.0
+ 36.1
56,7(e)
127.3 (0)
29.4
345.1(e)
335.6
9.5(a)
+188.4
156.7
93.0
225.0
212.2
2.0
10.8
- 24.7
7.3
5.3
1.0
3.2
3.0
0.2
- 4.1
July 5 - 31
249.7
Auge 1- - 28
261.1
180.2
80.9
294.8
267.4
1.0
26.4
+ 33.7
8.9
0.5
8.4
10.9
10.4
0.5
# T.O
First year of wer
1,795.2
605-6
3287.6
1,828.2
1,356.1
52.0
420.1
. 35.0
865.3
416.6
449.7
1095.3
900.2
195.1
$223.0
AME. 29 Oct. 2
316.8
244.3
72.5
308,9
271.5
6,0
31.4
- 7.9
8,6
4.4
4,2
1.3
-
1,3
- 763
+ 1.8
0.5
0.3
0.2
0.5
0.5
-
00% 3 - SO
196.7
167.8
28.9
198.5
160.5
6.0
32.0
*
Dot. 31 - Nov, 27
241.0
201.1
39.9
259.5
210.0
18.0
31.5
+ 18.5
0.8
0,1
0.7
0,7
,
0.7
- 0.1
Nov. 28 - Dee. 31
234.6
206,8
27.8
198.0
111.4
26.0
60.6
- 35.6
2.1
-
2al
0.6
#
0.6
- 1,5
- period through Des
2,782.3
1,425,8
1356.7
2,793.1
2,109.5
108,0
575.6
+ 10.8
878.3
421.4
456,9
1098.4
900.2
198.2
+220.1
34.2
259.9
176.E
52.0
31.7
+ 62.5
1.7
-
BY
ONE
-
DIE
1
June 2 - X
197.4
168.7
Jen. 30 - Fabe 26
164.6
137.8
26.8
101.4
26.6
26.0
48.8
-6302
0.2
-
0,2
0.2
-
0,2
Feb. 27 - Apr. 20
WREX ENDSD:
37.4
31.9
5.5
-
6.0
61
-23.3
-
-
-
0,1
-
0,1
+01
Febs 11
14.1
-21.1
0.1
1
Owl
0.1
E
0.1
-
"
40.1
18.2
2.5
19.6
.
60
13.6
26
40.0
27.0
13el
44.5
26.6
4x0
13,9
+ 4,5
-
,
1
-
Mar, 5
56.7
4%0
1.1
50.1
24.8
19.0
63
- 6.6
-
-
-
#
a
Average Weekly Expenditures Since Outbreak of War
Transfers from British Purchasing Commission to
(See footnotes 02 NAME side!
Bank of Canada for French Account
France (through June 19)
$19.5 willion
Week ended March 5
23
million
England Rhrough June 19)
27.6 million
Cumulation from July 6
134.8
million
England {sinse June 19)
55.2 million
Regraded Uclassified
(a) Includes Timber payments for account and of Britiab Purchasing Commission, British Air Ministry, British, Supply Board, Ministry of
Supply Control, Ministry of Shipping.
(b) Estimated figures based on transfers from the New York Agency of the Bank of Montreal, which apparently
to proceeds the official of official British. sales of. American securities, including those. effected through direct negotiation. represent In the
warly to data months the war, the althbugh the receipt of the proceeds at this Bank cannot be identified with-any during the
of selling, substantial diquidation of securities for privgta. British account occurred, particularly addition
of supplied by British Treasury and-released by Secrething Morgenthau, total official and prévate securecy. British liquidation Ascording
our securities through December 1940 anounted to $334 million.
04 (o) Includes about the $85 million received during October from the sccounts of Aritish-authorized banks with Now York banks,
apparently represent acquisition of proceeds of exports free the sterling area and-nther currently accruing dollar receipts.
reflecting requisitioning the of private dollar balances. Other large transfere from-such scorunts during more recent presumably months
(4) Includes payments for account of French Air Commission and French Purchasing Commission.
(e) Adjusted to eliminate the effect of $20 million paid out nn June 26 and returned the following day.
Strietly
ANALYSIS OF CANADIAN AND AUSTRALIAN ACCOUNTS
Week Ended March 5. 1941.
Confidential
(In Millions of Dollars)
BANK
OF
CANADA
COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA
DEBITS
CREDITS
DEBITS
CREDITS
Transfers
Transfers
Proceeds
Transfers from Official
Net Iner.
to
Proceeda
Set Incr.
to
Official
Other
Total
British A/C
Other
(+) or
Total
Official
Other
Total
of
Other
(+) or
Total
of
Gold
For Own
For French
Credits
Deen (-)
Debits
British
Debite
Credits
Gold
Credits
Door. (-)
Debits
Britiah
Debita
Credits
A/C
Sales
A/C
A/C
in Balance
A/C
Sales
in Balance
PERIOD
1939
Aug. 31 Sept. 27
17.5
15.1
0.8
5.9
+ 4.3
-
#
-
-
I
I
-
0.6
16.9
21.8
-
9.6
0.3
9.3
16.7
7.3
-
7.3
+ 7.1
-
-
-
-
1
-
,
Sept.28 Nov. 1
2.1
13.3
1.1
, 4.5
-
-
-
1.9
1.9
-
+ 129
9.9
0.7
9.2
14.4
-
-
Now. 2- 29
30.0
22.8
13.3
3.0
-
6.5
- 7.2
2.5
-
2.5
5,8
5.8
-
- 3.3
Nov. 30 - Jen. 3
30.0
-
1940
23.5
25.7
21.1
-
-
4.6
+ 2.2
5.2
0.3
4.9
3.3
5.0
0.3
- 1.9
Jan. 4- 31
23.5
-
16.1
0.9
- 6.1
3.3
0.1
3.2
2.4
2.2
0.2
- 0,5
Feb, 1 28
23.1
23.1
17,0
I
-
-
3.0
0.3
2.7
2.8
1.6
0.6
- 0,8
42.3
42.3
29.5
29.3
-
-
0.2
- 12.8
Feb. 89 - Apr. 3
#
Apr. 4 - May 1
38.2
23.2
42.9
24.8
15.0
3.1
+ 4.7
2.3
I
2.3
2.0
1,8
0.2
- 0.3
-
-
37.9
50,2
50.0
-
0.2
+ 12.3
1.2
0.2
1.0
2.6
1.7
D.9
. 1.4
-
May 2 - 29
37.9
15.0
0.3
+ 28,4
2.3
-
2.3
5,9
4.4
1,5
+ 3,6
May 30 - July a
44.1
-
44.1
72.5
72.2
-
I
4.2
0.8
28.2
117.6
96.3
-
19.2
2.1
+ 89.4
4.6
-
4,6
5.0
- 0,4
July 4- 31
28.2
-
53.9
19.5
0.2
+ 54,9
6.8
3.0
3,8
5.0
3.4
1.6
- 1.8
Aug. 1- 28
18.7
18.7
73.6
I
-
323.0
16.6
306,4
504.7
412.7
20,9
38.7
32.4
+181.7
31.2
3.9
27.3
36.1
30.0
6,1
+ 4,9
First year of war
16.4
27.3
0.2
- 0.4
8.7
2,5
6.2
8.0
6.7
1.3
- 0.7
44.3
-
Aug. 29 - Oct. 2
44.3
-
43.9
26.7
26,7
28.6
14.0
-
14.3
0.3
+ 1.9
10.1
7.5
2.6
7.9
6,5
1.4
- 2.2
Oct. 3 - 30
-
69.6
49,2
16.7
3.7
+ 34.4
3.1
0,6
2,5
3,5
2.1
1,5
- 0,5
Oct. 31 - Nov. 27
35,2
35,2
-
-
.
13.7
4.4
- 12.6
4.8
-
4.8
6,8
4.8
2.0
- 2.0
Nov. 28 - Dec. 31
48,0
-
48.0
60.6
42.5
14,5
43.4
62.4
50.1
12.3
+ 4.5
16.5
460,6
707.4
534.8
20.9
110.7
41.0
+230,2
57.9
War period through Dec.
477.2
33.7
33.9
15.0
2.0
+ 0.8
4.8
-
4.8
6.8
5.1
1.7
- 2,0
Jan. 2 - 2 29
33.7
16.9
-
-
341
24.3
14,3
-
6.8
3,2
- 6.8
5,0
107
3.3
3+2
0.6
2.6
1.8
Jan. 30 - Feb. 26
32.1
-
Febs 22- 27 ADT. a
WEEK ENDED:
4,3
2.0
+7.8
1,0
.
LO
0.5
-
0,5
- =0.5
19
9.1
304
-
Feb 11
1,9
-
-
0,2
0.6
-84
0,2
-
0.2
0.3
-
0.3
+ 0,1
19
12.9
-
139
4.5
309
-
0,4
- 49
12
-
1.2
0.2
-
0,2
-10
1.9
-
1,9
300
2.6
-
26
13:6
-
23
Ll
- 5.9
1,8
0.8
40
6,6
but
0,2
+4,8
March 5
136
-
1.7
4.3
Weekly Average of Total Debite Since Outbreak million of Mr
Through March 5, 1941
$7.0
Regraded Uclassified
166
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
Missip
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE March 14, 1941
TO
Secretary Morgenthsu
FROM Mr. Cochran
Testerday afternoon Mr. David Schenker of the Securities and Exchange Commission
telephoned requesting that I receive Mr. Arthur Bunker, a partner in Lehman Brothers
of New York, to obtain his observations upon the question of British disposal of
direct investments in this country.
I received Mr. Bunker, accompanied by Mr. Schenker, at 3:30 p.m. Mr. Bunker told
no that some days ago he had called on Sir Edward Peacock. He explained to me that
he had no business to present, but did offer some suggestions. He had not been favor-
ably impressed with the reception extended him.
At some length Mr. Bunker set out to me his own ideas as to the establishing of
8. corporation in New York for taking over and liquidating both direct and marketable
investments of the British. As the visit vas concluding, I was called out of the
office, but arranged that Mr. Schenker should draw up a memorandum setting forth the
Bunker proposition for submission to the Treasury.
I talked by telephone with Mr. Schenker at 11:30 this morning. He is enthusiastic
over Mr. Bunker's ideas, and promised to let us have the memorandum which he is pre-
paring as soon as completed.
10ml.
167
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER OFFICE COMMUNICATION
Secretary Missing Morgenthau
DATE March 14, 1941
TO
CONFIDENTIAL
FROM Mr. Cochran
Registered sterling transactions of the reporting banks were as follows:
Sold to commercial concerns
£58,000
Purchased from commercial concerns £16,000
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York sold £10,000 in registered sterling to
the American Express Co.
Open market sterling remained at 4.03-1/2. Transactions of the reporting
banks were as follows:
Sold to commercial concerns
£2,000
Purchased from commercial concerns 22,000
The Argentine free peso strengthened to .2315 by mid-afternoon. It closed
# .2310, as against .2300 last night.
The Cuben peso, which has shown a. moderately firm tone of late, improved to
6-1/16% discount today. A week ago, that currency was quoted at 6-7/8%.
In New York, the closing rates for the foreign currencies listed below were
as follows:
Canadian dollar
15-1/8% discount
Swiss franc (commercial)
.2321-1/2
Swedish krona
.2384
Reichsmark
.4005
Lira
.0505
Brazilian milreis (free)
.0505
Mexican peso
.2066
In Shanghai, the yuan in terms of our currency was quoted at 5-15/324. off
1/324. and sterling vas 1# lower at 3.92.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported that the Bank of the Colombian
Republic shipped $2,232,000 in gold from Colombia to the Federal for its own account,
disposition unknown.
The London spot silver price was 23-1/24, up 1/16a. Forward silver Vali
unchanged at 23-7/16d. The U.S. equivalents were 42.674 and 42.56#.
Regraded Uclassified
168
- 2 -
Handy and Harman's settlement price for foreign silver was unchanged at 34-3/44.
The Treasury's purchase price for foreign silver was also unchanged at 35#.
Ye made one purchase of silver amounting to 75,000 ounces under the Silver
Purchase Act. This amount consisted of new production from foreign countries, for
forward delivery.
N.M.P.
CONFIDENTIAL
6841
Treasury
169
EH
GRAY
Buenos Aires
Dated March 14, 1941
Rec'd 4:56 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
199, March 14, 4 p.m.
The Ministry of Agriculture informed the press
yesterday that a credit of 160,000,000 PESOS is being
negotiated with the Spanish Government and that pending
the settlement of final details the Vice President has
authorized the immediate delivery of 29,347 metric tons
of wheat. This latter action is attributed to the urgency
of beginning shipments at once. A sale of 400,000 tons of
wheat is anticipated under this credit as well as the
Exportable surplus of the current cotton crop estimated
at about 40,000 metric tons. Consideration is being given
to the sale of other products under this credit according
to the press announcement,
ARMOUR
EMB
170
JT
PLAIN
LONDON
Dated March 14, 1941
Rec'd 12:30 p.m.
Secretary of State,
Washington.
982, March 14.
Embassy's 4058, December 12, 1940.
British Treasury today informed the Embassy
of the following concessions in connection with the trans-
fer of estate proceeds to American citizens resident in the
United States:
(1) The transfer of all legacies of sterling 100
or under will be permitted as & matter of course.
(2) In cases of legacies above that amount involving
particular hardship, the higher authorities in the
Exchange Control will give full consideration to applica-
tions for ameliorating action.
In discussing the meaning of "hardship", the British
Treasury official interviewed this morning stated that in
the opinion of the Treasury and the Bank of England the
application of any other standard would be distinctly
unfair, in that it would give the beneficiaries of "pure
windfalls" (the term applied by him to most legacies)
preference
Regraded Uclassified
171
-2-
preference over persons applying for the transfer of their
own property, 1.0., sterling securities and other capital
assets belonging to themselves. Es felt that we should,
in spite of the considerations presented to the British
Treasury by the Embassy on the basis of the Department's
3751, December 10, and other instructions received since
then, understand their difficulties in making a broader
concession. It was made fairly clear that the British
Treasury is reserving & loophole as a means of handling
any peculiarly embarrassing or difficult cases, 1.0., in
the elastic meaning that can be assigned to "hardship".
The official instanced the case of substantial legacies
left by a former popular actor to cousins in the United
States whom he had never seen, and intimated that in such
cases no transfers would be permitted. At the other end
of the scale would be the usual cases of close relatives
badly needing funds for necessary living expenses, etc.
In a few days we should have decisions on the cases that
have been presented, which should indicate the way the
above standard is to be applied.
SHT
WINANT
WSB
Copy:bj
172
RESTRICTED
0-2/2657-220
M.I.D., W.D.
No. 339
March 14, 1941
12:00 M.
SITUATION REPORT
I. Western Theater of War.
Air: German. Last night's activity over Great Britain
18 estimated to have involved 300-400 bombers. Foci of attack were
the Glasgow and the Liverpool areas, but widespread minor raids were
also conducted. The attack on Glasgow marks a new "farthest north"
in German large-scale operations.
British. An unusually heavy attack was launched
against Hamburg, Bremen, Enden, and objectives in Holland were also
bombed.
II. Balkan Theater of War.
Ground: Bulgaria. No change.
Albania. Heavy fighting continues in the Viosa
River sector.
Air: Normal close support operations on the Albanian front.
Italian shipping in Valona harbor was attacked by torpedo planes.
III. Mediterranean and African Theaters of War.
Ground: Abyssinia (Ethiopia). Iavello which is about
95 miles north of the Kenya border has been occupied by British
forces.
Italian Somaliland. The British report their
advance continues in all sectors.
Air: German. Usual harrassing operations in eastern
Libya.
British. The Island of Rhodes was raided.
Note: This military situation report is issued by the Military In-
telligence Division, General Staff. In view of the occasional in-
clusion of political information and of opinion it is classified as
Restricted.
RESTRICTED
173
BRITISH EMBASSY,
WASHINGTON, D.C.
PERSONAL AND
14th March, 1941
SECRET
Dear Mr. Secretary,
I enclose herein for your
1
personal and secret information a
copy of the latest report received
from London on the military situation.
Believe me,
Dear Mr. Secretary,
Very sincerely yours,
Halifan
The Honourable
Henry Norgenthau, Jr,
United States Treasury,
Washington, D.C.
174
THEORAM RECEIVED FROM LONDON
DATED 19th MARCH, 1041.
1.
NAVAL
Hipper class cruiser at Brest use
exercising in Douarnenes Bay Pella 11th. Later
observed returning to Breat. She was unsuccese-
fully attacked by coastal aircraft night of 10th
to 11th but several bembs close to target.
:
NIGHT OF 10th to 11th.
Reported eight mines dropped in three
separate parts of Sues Canal. Three exploded.
3.
Further report on Portsmouth raid night
of 10th to 11th. Tynedale, Marshal Soult, and
two tawlers slightly damaged, Two trealers damaged,
4.
Navel casualties 87 killed, 224 seriously
injured. Camper Nicholson burnt out. Total of
eight enemy aircraft destroyed that night.
8.
Worcester escerting convoy off Southwold
1.00 some March 11th drove off B boats and believed
hit one with pou pome
6,
Ursula on February stat west of Tripoli
sank Sicilia class transport heavily laden and
believed carrying troops, with her were one merchant
vessel and escort of three general E torpedo boats
and sir eccort. Heavy counter attack feiled to
damage Ursule.
%
Report received that Italian cruiser
Arwands Dias troop ship Conte Rosso 18,000 tons and
Citte di Nessina 2,500 tons have been sunk with
havy loss of life.
a.
MILITARY. YUGOSLAVIA.
Report no far unconfirmed states that
Regraded Uclassified
175
that strength of Yageslev aray mearing 800,000,
9.
ROYAL 1 IR FORCE,
Daylight 11th. Blenheim registered direct
hit on petrol storage cistern at Rotterdam.
10.
NIGHT OF 11th/19th.
Twenty- seven Wellingtone despatched
to attack nevel ship yard at Kiel. All have
returned.
11.
GERMAN AIR FORCE.
NIGHT of 10th/11th,
Now known eight enemy aircraft were
destroyed.
18.
DAYLIGHT 11th.
Activity alight. One enemy fighter
destroyed,
13.
NIGHT OF 11th/19th.
206 sircraft, 8 minelayers operated. Main
effort directed against Birmingham-Ceventry area
though reids were widespread over Nidlends, as far
north as Manchester and Liverpool. One bember
probably destroyed and another damaged by night
fighters.
14.
Malts was attacked en night of March 10th/
11th by twenty bembers. Damage was dons to dock yard
and Luqa aeredrome. One bomber destroyed by our
fighters.
16.
Aircraft casualties in operations over
and from British Iales 1-
GERMAN Destroyed, benbers 6,
(Night of 10th/11th additional report)
probably dostroyed, 1, damaged, 1, fighter destroyed,
5
Regraded Uclassified
176
BRITISH: wil.
16,
HOME FRONT NIGHT OF 11th/19th.
Manchester area suffered most. Serious
fire now under control was started at Angle-
American 011 Company premises at Trafford Park.
Ships in Salford Docks and Manchester Ship Canal
were attacked with some success. Casualties do
not appear to be heavy.
k7,
In Birmingham area bomba were mostly
incondiaries damage was well restricted by fire-
fighters.
18.
At Southampton fires were started and
some 250 people rendered homeless.
19.
PORTSMOUTH, bombs fell on centre of
city and nine people were killed and seven seriously
injured.
20.
In London there were only minor incidents.
Regra Uclassified
177
BRITISH EMPAGGY,
WASHINGTON, D.C.
March 14th, 1941.
PERSONAL AND
SECRET
Dear Mr. Secretary,
I enclose herein for your
personal and secret information a
copy of the latest report received
from London on the military situation.
Believe me,
Dear Mr. Secretary,
Very sincerely yours,
Halifax
The Honourable
Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
United States Treasury,
Washington, D.C.
178
TELEGRAM RECEIVED FROM LONDON DATED MARGH
1941.
1. (A) Naval. Name vaters: streets by aircraft.
Nervegian ship (1,580 tons) damaged off weat coast
on 10th has reached port in ton.
Night of the 11th/18th. Attack on ships in
Manchester ship Canal resulted in one British (6,000 toma)
and one Gwedish ship (1,200 tons) being sunk and too British
ships (totalling 16,900 tons) damaged. Daylight of the
18th. One British ship (7,000 tons) in home-bound convay
with cargo of wheet seriously demaged off west English
coast and two British ships (totalling 8,670 tons) were
bombed off the East Coast.
(B) By mines. One Datch ship (400 tone) demaged off
the south west English coact.
a.
Nediterraneen. Two French ships (totalling 5,060
tons) passed Gibralter west bound March 11th escorted by a
French mine sweeper.
3.
Military, Huttion Someliland. Our troops occupied
Dagahbur (100 miles south south cast of Jijiga). On March
10th. Enemy losses since our crossing Jube River on
February 17th now estimated at ever $1,000.
4.
Yueselavis. All armies now mobilising. covering
troops in position on all frontiers on which attack by
Cermany anitaly can come.
5,
Burbey. One division has noved to Recomma area
from near Usunkapre and a second division from the name area
is reported to have noved to Feet Brgen river in support.
Troops in Catales line have been reinforced w one division.
6.
Royal Mr FORM. Night of 19th/15th. Total of
266 aircraft dispatched. Main targets Berlin (78), Handrarg
(88), Dremm (84), Boulegns and Caleis (7). Preliminary
/reports
Regraded Uclassified
179
reports show that & large per cent of bombers attacked
their primary targets. Seven aircraft have failed to
report to their base, Five fighters were dispatched on
offensive operations against aerodromes in North France.
Six Beauforts carried out a special sweep in skagereek
and a direct hit by torpedo was made on one enemy destroyer.
7.
Tripoli. Night of 10th/11th. Three Wellingtons
successfully attacked the harbour and another destroyed
five aircraft on the ground at Makina (forty miles south
of sirte) and damaged several others.
8.
Rhodes. Night of the 10th/11th. Aerodrames at
Catavia and Calate were attacked by twelve bombers.
9.
Albania. Daylight. Gladiators destroyed four
fighters (0.50) and damaged three others.
10.
All our aircraft returned safely from the above
operations in the Middle East.
11.
German Air Force. Daylight of the 18th. Knemy
made two small fighter-sweeps off Bast Kent and an increased
number of sea reconnaissances. After an attack on Hawkings
serodrome, our fighters destroyed one Meeserschmidt 109 and
damaged a second.
12,
Night of the 12th/13th. 230 to 250 aircraft
attacked this country, the larger proportion operating in
Liverpool area. Reports no for received show that our
fighters destroyed five, probably destroyed four and damaged
two enemy aircraft. One enomy aircraft was destroyed w
beloon barrage.
13,
At home. Home security. Heaviest and most wide-
spread attacks for some months. Greatest concentration on
Merceyside where many bombo fell on docks at Liverpool,
Vallasey and Birkenbeed, but none of the damage appears
/vital
Regraded Uclassified
180
vital. A large floating orane was sunk. Reaforth wire-
less station mar Liverpool suffered a major breaklown.
House property and utility services in Liverpool area have
suffered extensively. Casualties - at present - difficult
to assess but do not appear to be heavy in proportion to
the scale of the attack. In the rest of the country,
major incidents cocurred only at Southampton where damage
was caused to reservoir and to Harl and and Wolff's Yard
and at St. Eval aerodroms.
14.
Aircraft casualties over and above British Isless-
German
Destroyed.
Probably destroyed.
Damaged.
Bombers
e
5
5
Fighters
1
0
1
Totals
9
B
6
British: seven bombers missing.
Regraded Uclassified
181
CONFIDENTIAL
of Code Indiagram
Reserved at the Ver Department
at 13:10, North 14, 1941.
London, filed 17145, March 14, 1941.
1. a Therelay, March 13, planse of the British Constal -
secred direct hits a two of five Imm cargo bosts attached off the
Norwagism coast. During the - day eight openárous of British fighter
planes mL 13 British beabers shot dom two German fighter planos and
damaged - other during a successful attack an the March sixtrams new
Calais. No British planse were Lost during these operations. Buring the
preseding night six Constal Command planes torpodood & German destruger
and carried out raids a morehant vessels in the Singer Bask. During the
same night the British used a total of 254 benbers in successful attacks
against various targets in Germany and Frence. Eighty-eight beathers were
dispatched to Busburg, 72 to Berlin, 86 to one to Calais and COTTA
to Boulogne. Better of the British bankers need in these attacks failed to
return. In addition, an offensive patrol was earried out by five British
fighter plance over scorpied airfields in northern Image.
2. Buring the night of March 13-14 a Large under of German planed
ware over Britain. While mall raids were videly menttered over mouth
Scotland, and over all of Britain and Walse, the min target of the German
attacks - the area currenting Glasgev and Liverpool. there me no loss
of British planes and doman leases M 6 result of the activities of
British fighters ware five confirmed, two probable and four damged. During
the proceding day a total of 250 Comm fighter planse - and ever the
Borne Straits a defensive patrols. the Fort William, Scotland, abainum
festory was the barget of Lane - raiders during this day and the
CONFIDENTIAL
Regraded Uclassified
CONFIDENTIA
182
airfields as Smitings and Agagas - attached w as - fighter
planed. - Leases during - operations use five please declaraged
and - dangel.
3. Buring the wight of Health 10-13, so - also laying planse,
so fighter planse and - benbers - plotted - Britsin ml Britten
vaters. Considerable damage - inflicted a the n. ml sirfield and
a a large shipbuilding yourd and a public wher reservate at
Barber facilities at Liverpool suffered considerable damage as are the
Liverpool redio station. A Leoge fleating - at this part we amit.
- aircraft Leases as a result of the activities of Brittich might
fighter planse we five confirmed, four probable ml too damged.
4. 4 March is a formation of Comma benkere inflicted -
damage a three British - bosts totalling 16,000 teas off the const of
Britain. During the proceding night the - raid an the Number
ship channel. assest the staking of two British vessels and great damage to
too others. the chips that use out totalled - then 7,000 teams and
the the damaged vessels total 17,000 team.
5. la the medio Each plance of the Reyal Air Force carried ask
raids - airfields an the Inle of Thodes eat a the cities of
Amare and the British lest no planse during these raids.
6. - - benter - over Malta and a function of -
banbere carried ost a said a the airfield at the Libyan city of M Manu
7. Ver Office - indicate that Creak farees along the
watern cas-third of the Balgarian-Srook barder are composed of three divi-
stems, - of which has no artillery. Five - divistme, - of which
is - are - the border from this direct form.
a. the - Office feels that - to halding back in order w
CONFIDENTIAL
Regraded Uclassified
183
CONFIDENTIAL
- if the Italian Any in Alberta - - - of the - there.
If the Greeks embinee to be against the Italians in this
I I I as = I THE I I I I
invespective of whether w not they have the pomission of the Regular
- with the intention of hitting at Salentim and at the - time
cutting off the Greeks ta Albenta.
9. the Italians in Albenta - saking a desporate but -
ful attempt to puch bask the Greebs principally I of the feet that
Messelini to MM is that thember.
10. Another faster thought to w helding w - operations in
the fallures is that they are waiting to ⑉ vist the estemo of the Tage-
slavion negotiations will be. All frentiers of Taguelavia which night be
n I This 1 I 3 A to 1 I I E . 5
the Tugeslav Amy. the complete achilisation of the Any has be eriered
in Ingeslevia.
11. It is felt w the Mr Office that read conditions and the
terrada in the fallow thesters give M adventage w the British at Greek
defenters state the operation of aschentant foress in this area would be
greatly hospered.
I
Distribution:
Becretary of the
State Department
Decretary of Treasury
Asst. Secretary of Mar
thief w Staff
Ver Plans Division
Office of Heral Intelligence
Air Garge
6-3
CONFIDENTIAL
Regraded Uclassified
184
THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY
WASHINGTON
March 15, 1941
MEMORANDUM FOR THE FILES:
Yesterday, about noon, Mr. Harold Smith handed me a list of ques-
tions which had been presented to him by Congressman Ditter, a Republi-
can member of the subcommittee of the Appropriations Committee con-
sidering the $7,000,000,000 estimate under the Lend-Lease Act, and asked
that he furnish the answers for the record that afternoon.
Messrs. White, Cochran, Coe, and I prepared the answers in the
afternoon and showed them to the Secretary about five o'clock, at which
time a few suggestions were made for changes. The Secretary said that
he would like to have me show the questions and answers to Sir Frederick
Phillips and Mr. Playfaire of the British Treasury.
We called Sir Frederick and Mr. Playfaire over at six o'clock.
They went over the questions and answers, made a number of suggested
changes, which in most cases were adopted. As Sir Frederick was leaving,
he said that he would like to take a copy home to show the Ambassador
during the evening, and he would telephone Mr. Cochran if the Ambassador
had any suggestions.
About 11:30, Sir Frederick called Mr. Cochran and said that generally
speaking the answers were all right, with the exception of the statement
made to the effect that the British would use all of its dollar resources
and any dollars in its hands in the immediate future to meet the existing
dollar liabilities in this country. The Ambassador thought, and he
agreed, that some reference should be made to the possibility of the
United States Government in its own interest taking over some of the
existing contracts under the Lend-Lease Act, which would relieve the
British of this liability. There is attached a. memorandum of the questions
and answers with suggested changes by the British Ambassador.
Mr. Cochran brought this matter to my attention at nine o'clock this
morning and we went over the suggestions. I took the position that while
the statement made in answer to the question is not literally correct and
possibly some of the contracts will be taken over under the Lend-Lease
Act and the British will get that temporary relief, yet from a practical
Regraded Uclassified
185
- 2 -
angle it should not make any difference because whatever relief the
British get from this action, the dollars thus saved should be used
on other war purchases in this country, which may not fall under the
Lend-Lease Act. I instructed Mr. Cochran to advise Mr. Phillips that
we had delivered the memorandum to Director Smith in the same form as
he had seen it the night before and, therefore, had not adopted his
suggested changes. I did not think that we should again raise this
whole question before the Appropriations Committee at this time.
I related the above to the Secretary at his staff meeting this
morning and he said that he thought we were absolutely right in that
decision.
DWB
186
Final draft 3-14-41, with
changes suggested by the
British to Mr. Cochran.
These changes were not used.
F
Question 1: It is understood that the British orders up to January 1, 1941
were about $3 billion, and that expenditure was about $600 million. Is that
correct? What have the British spent here since that time?
The total of the orders placed in this country by the British Purchasing
Mission up to January 1, 1941, was approximately $2.7 billion. Up to January 1,
1941, the British Purchasing Missions had made payments of approximately $1.3
billion on these orders.
From January 1 to March 12, 1941, payments by the British Purchasing
Mission were $382 million.
Question 2: Has the policy been to pay cash or securities for orders up to
this time?
The practice of the United Kingdom has been to pay cash on all orders
placed in the United States up to this time. All goods delivered have been
fully paid for, A substantial portion of the value of the goods delivered
was paid for in advance and & portion of the value of the goods yet to be
delivered has already been paid for. Generally, they have paid 25 per cent
cash when ordere were placed in addition to capital investments required.
The dollars to pay for these orders have been derived by the British
Government partly from the sale of British investments in the United States,
partly from the liquidation of British dollar balances, partly from the sale
Regraded Uclassified
187
- 2 -
of British gold holdings to the U. S. Treasury, and partly from dollars
acquired from a variety of other sources.
Question 3: What is the proposal as to paying for deliveries of existing
orders?
Part of the cost of the future delivery under existing orders has
already been met by advance payments/ the remaining liabilities of the
exapt
F
the the " interest S. goot. Been
so
cases
United Kingdom in respect to such orders, will be met from her exteting
to take
dollar resources and with dollars which she will acquire in the future.
the contract, & wet
Such dollars will come from further sales of British holdings of U. S.
will
from
specting
securities, sale of Britain's direct investments in the United States,
12
x
&
resources
gold acquired by the British Government, and the net dollar proceeds of
British exports of goods and services to the United States and elsewhere.
Question 4: What is the value of British holdings in the United States
and the Western Hemisphere outside of the United States?
The value of British holdings in the United States as of January 1,
1941, is estimated by the Treasury at $616 millions of marketable securities
and $900 millions of direct investments.
The nominal value of United Kingdom investments in Canada is nearly
the equivalent of 2 billion U. S. dollars, and of United Kingdom invest-
ments in Latin America is the equivalent of over $3-1/2 billion. This
refers to the nominal value; the market value would, of course, be much
less. In the case of the Canadian investments the market value is much
Regraded Uclassified
188
3 -
closer to the nominal value than in the case of the Latin American
investments. The United Kingdom is using a substantial amount of these
each month to pay for war materials obtained from Canada, Some of the
investments in Latin America are in complete default, many are in partial
default. whereas nearly all are payable either in sterling or in local
currencies. The liquidation value in U. S. dollars of these Latin American
securities, particularly in view of widespread controls of foreign exchange
transfers, is very uncertain. The details of these investments will be
found on page 54 of the hearings before the House Committee on Foreign
Affairs on H. R. 1776.
Question 5: What steps, if any, have been taken to meet prior commitments
and what steps are to be taken as to commitments yet to be made?
Einght as explained - the Quower to question 3
The United Kingdom will meet her liabilities on existing orders
from her existing dollar resources and from dollars which she will acquire
in the future. The steps by which these dollar resources are being acquired
have been indicated in the answer to question 3 above.
The British Government does not have funds adequate to meet additional
for which the hand bease arrangements are designed.
commitments, A It is for these additional commitments that the Lend-Lease
arrangemontewill be required.
Question 6: What is the monthly rate of expenditure by England and its
dominions for war purposes?
The monthly rate of expenditures for United Kingdom, Canada, New
Zealand, Australia, South Africa and India taken together is, according
Regraded Uclassified
189
- 4 -
to our information, roughly the equivalent of $1-3/4 billion. Nearly
$1.5 billion of this is the expenditure of the United Kingdom alone.
Question 7: What are the British dominions, and particularly Canada,
prepared to do for aid to Great Britain?
Canada is, of course, helping directly with troops, naval and air
forces. and is paying all expenses of Canadian forces operating abroad
as well as at home. It is anticipated that during the coming year Canada
will spend a total of $1.2 billions on her direct war effort. This alone
constitutes almost 30 per cent of her expected material income. In
addition, Canada is supplying Britain with large increasing amounts of
goods and services in return for a considerable part of which she is
getting either sterling in excess of her nseds or the repatriation of
Canadian securities andrdebt to the United Kingdom.
Just as in the case of Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa
and India have under way and are financing themselves, a war effort of
considerable magnitude in relation to their national income. In addition,
these countries are acquiring excess sterling in London and repatriated
securities as payment for exports of merchandise, services and gold to
the United Kingdom and to the dollar exchange areas. This is a form of
economic and financial assistance of considerable value to the British
var economy.
Question 8: What has Great Britain, its dominions and particularly
Canada, appropriated for this war?
Regraded Uclassified
190
5 -
This information is not readily available; but we have requested
it for the committee. However, because of differences in budgetary
practice, such figures will not be at all comparable with the defense
appropriation figures for the United States.
Question 9: What are the potach and borax holdings of the British in
the western part of the United States?
Our preliminary information is that there are three large potash
and borax companies with properties in the western United States in which
the value of the British investment is estimated to be roughly more than
$20 million. These properties are included in the British direct invest-
ments referred to in answer to question 4.
Question 10: What have we bought in the way of gold from Great Britain
and its dominions, including Canada, since 1934 (by years)?
The net imports of gold from British Empire by years are given in
the table below. It should be pointed out that London has been, prior
to the var, the leading gold market of the world and hence gold imports
from the British Empire were not solely for British account.
Net Imports of Gold from British Empire, 1934-1940
(Million dollars)
Other British
Total
United Kingdom
Empire
500
183
683
1934
1935
316
184
500
1936
174
182
356
1937
892
204
1,096
1938
1,209
144
1,353
1939
976
2,802
1,826
1940
633
2,995
3,628
Total 1934-40
4,868
10,418
5.550
Regraded Uclassified
191
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION
DATE March 15, 1941
Secretary Morgenthau
TO
FROM Mr. Cochran
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
When celling on me yesterday noon Mr. Pinsent, Financial Counselor of the British
Imbassy. asked me when the week expired for the initial sale of British direct invest-
monts. I told him it was my understanding the week ended with today, Saturday.
Pinsent told ne in strict confidence that Sir Edward Peacock was on the point of con-
sumating a very important transaction. It VES hoped that this could be completed on
Saturday. but there was the bare possibility that legal difficulties over patent rights
sight delay the closing of the deal until perhaps Tuesday of next week. Pinsent asked
whether it would be satisfactory to defer mentioning this deal until it is actually
terminated. I told Pinsent that it was imperative that either the Ambassador report
directly to the Secretary. or that Pinsent or one of his colleagues give me word for
comunication to the Secretary, before Saturday night. If the transaction should not
have been completed by Saturday, the actual status of the negotiations should be made
known in confidence to us. I re-emphasized the importance of this question of celling
British direct investments, particularly in connection with Congressional hearings on
the Lease-Lend Appropriation Bill, and other financial matters which may go to Congress.
'insent agreed that he would see that some report was made to us before Saturday
vening.
Testerday afternoon Messre. Bell, White, Coe and I worked on answers to questions
which the Budget Director had been asked in the House hearings on the Lease-Lend
Appropriation Bill. When we discussed the questions with the Secretary he instructed
us to let Messrs. Phillips and Playfair see what we had prepared. I came out from the
Secretary's office and telephoned Phillips, asking that they come to Mr. Bell's office
at 5:30. Phillips replied that he had a visitor coming in just at that hour but
would try to get over at 5:45.
It we almost 6:00 when Phillips and Allen reached my office, and Pleyfair did not
arrive until a few minutes later. As soon as Phillips and Allen came to my office I
emlained the situation. The Secretary himself had not felt that he could properly
& before the House Appropriation Committee on this bill and give testimony, in view
of the fact that he would be unable to state that the British had no for done no
liquidating of their direct investments in this country. I added that this problem
would continue to exist while the bill is being considered by the Senate 8.8 well as the
House.
I gave the visitors copies of the questions and of the draft answers which our
Treasury group had prepared. We then went to Mr. Bell's office, where we joined him
and Mr. White. The discussion lasted until almost 8 o'clock. Sir Frederick Phillips
had questions on the phraseology of the answers to paragraphs 3 and 5. He desired
to refer this matter to his Ambassador. It was arranged with Mr. Bell that the Briti
abould call me later in the evening after the Ambassador had been consulted.
Regraded Uclassified
192
it 11:30 last night Mr. Playfair phoned ne at sy home, He said that as a result
the consultation at the the following changes were found desirable from
of the British standpoint. In answer 3 there should be A period instead of A samicalon
sur "sivance payments". The sentence beginning imediately thereafter should here
- following "to such orders' and the following be inserted thereafter: *except
8 is cases in which it is in the interest of the United States Government to take over
the contract, will be net from existing United Kingdom dollar resources" etc. The
gnower to question 5 should begin as follows: "Except as explained in the answer to
question 3. the United Kingdom will meet" etc. The final paragraph of the answer to
question 5 should consist of one sentence, there being a come instead of & period
after "commitments", to be followed by the following: "for which the lond-lease at
rangements are designed". This would eliminate the final sentence of this paragraph
as originally drafted.
I told Playfair that I doubted whether our Treasury would consent to such mend-
sents, since there was a. fundamental difference on the point of raising now before the
Congress the question as to whether we should take over contracts which had been
entered into prior to the hearings on the Lend-Lease Bill. Playfair and I agreed that
there would be no useful purpose served in trying to get the Ambassador and the
Secretary together on this point of drafting. It was understood that if the Treasury
could not agree to the British suggested changes, our own original draft should be
sent to the Congressional Committee, with the understanding between the two Treasuries
that the British thank the Americans for letting them see the questions and answers,
but have not subscribed thereto.
Shortly before 9 o'clock this morning I gave the above suggested amendments to
Mr. Ball's secretary and then discussed them with him. Kr. Bell decided that the sug-
gestions were unacceptable. He reported this to the Secretary in the Staff meeting
at 9:30. Mr. Bell had despatched the documents to the Office of the Director of the
Budget.
At 10:40 this morning Mr. Pinsent telephoned me that Ambassador Halifax was seek-
ing an appointment with Secretary Morgenthau for 5:30 this evening. Pinsent told me
that the investment deal had not yet been completed. but was nearing conclusion. The
transaction had progressed so far that it has now been necessary to communicate with
twenty or thirty persons in regard thereto. There may, consequently. be some leak
of information during the day. The Ambassador will discuss this transaction with the
Secretary this afternoon, but the British did want to be the first ones to give the
Secretary neve of this transaction. Pinsent then raised the question as to whether
Sir Edward Peacock should attend to any announcements and publicity. I told Pinsent
that I would speak with the Secretary and call him later.
At 11:30 I saw the Secretary and reported my conversations of yesterday and this
seraing with Mr. Pinsent. The Secretary vas glad to have an explanation of the pur-
pose of the Ambassador's visit. He agreed that Sir Edward should attend to any
publicity in connection with the sale in question. I called Pineent back at once, but
could not reach him until 12 o'clock at the British Purchasing Mission. I gave him
the nessage in regard to Peacock being the proper one to make my comunique to the
press, I asked, however, that we have such information as may appropriately be given
us prior to the Secretary's press conference on Monday. lest this matter right be in
the press of Monday and the Secretary be questioned thereon.
Regraded Uclassified
193
-3 -
I told Pinsent to let Sir Frederick Phillips know that the suggested amendments
to the draft answers of yesterday, for use before Congress, had not been accepted by
the Treasury, and that our original draft as shown to Sir Frederick yesterday ovening
had been despatched to the Director of the Bureau of the Budget this morning.
RMP.
194
TREASURY DEPARTMENT
INTER-OFFICE COMMUNICATION
Regraded Uclas
DATE March 15, 1941
Files
TO
FROM Messrs. Cochran and Districh
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
45 4:40 yesterday afternoon Mr. Long of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
called Mr. Districh and said that the National Bank of Yugoslavia wished to sell
approximately $22,500,000 in gold from its earmarked account. At about 4145 p.m.
Xr. Districh mentioned this matter to Mr, Cochran, when the latter stepped into his
office to do some telephoning before returning to a conference in which he was parti-
cipating in the Secretary's office. When Mr. Cochran vas leaving the meeting in the
Secretary's office five minutes later he inquired as to whether the Federal Reserve
Bank had by any chance mentioned this important offer of gold to the Secretary. He
replied in the negative,
When Mr. Cochran came out into the Secretary's reception room, Mr. Dietrich
showed. him the memorandum which the latter had just drawn up setting forth the details
of contemplated and actual transactions involving the Tugoslav account. Mr. Cochran
imediately showed this to Under Secretary Bell, who vas with them in the reception
room. Messre. Bell and Cochran decided that the Secretary should at once be informed
hat the Yugoslav National Bank was requesting a transfer of almost half of the dollar
old proceeds from American to Brasilian account, Mr. Bell spoke with the Secretary
by telephone and was instructed to have Mr. Cochran call Assistant Secretary Acheson
in the Department of State and request the desires of that Department with respect to
freezing Yugoslav accounts.
Mr. Cochran then returned to his office and found that at 4:50 Mr. Districh had
obtained from Mr. Cameron in the Federal Reserve Bank at New York detailed information
as to the payments made or to be made for Yugoslav account. As Mr. Cochran picked up.
the telephone a few minutes after 5:00 to call Mr. Acheson, he found Mr. Pehle on the
vire and told him of the instructions of the Secretary. namely, that the gold offered
by Tugoslavia should not be purchased yesterday evening, and that Mr. Cochran should
get in touch with Mr. Acheson, to bring him to date on developments and to learn the
vishes of the Department of State in regard to extending our control to Tugoslav assets.
Mr. Pehle Vas at the Raleigh Hotel and asked Mr. Cochran to defer his telephone call
to Mr. Acheson until Mr. Pehle might arrive in the Treasury.
When Mr. Pehle reached Mr. Cochran's office & few minutes later. they discussed
the situation. Mr. Cochran then called Mr. Acheson and submitted to him the details
of the contemplated gold sale, as well as the payments that had been made or were
sought to be made. The question Vas posed as to whether or not a freesing order should
be applied to Yugoslavia. After Mr. Cochran had spoken with Mr. Acheson he passed the
phone to Mr. Pehle who also spoke with Mr. Acheson on the question of & freezing order.
Mr. Cochran had explained to Mr. Acheson that the gold would not be purchased last
night, Mr. Acheson stated that he would endenver to get a group together in the
Department of State for consultation, and would give the Treasury an enswer later in
the evening in regard to Tugosiaria.
195
- e
Kr. Dochran telephoned Xr. Exclos around 3:40 p.m. and advised his of the decision
not 4a purchase the gold yesterday. Xr. Dockran further explained that the decision
to dat 10 do with respect to Tuguslavia rested with the State Department, and that
at as nover might not be received until later in the overlag. Hr. Kasks then trought up
the question of cabling the Yugeslay Bank, After scour discussion visa Mr. Envoice,
Houses. Cochran and Pahle left to Mr. Looks's judgment whether a coblegram to despetable
Lest night by the Federal to the Central Bank of Tugonlavia to the effect that the Let-
tar's cablegram No. 119 had been executed, but that their No. 122 CARB "ton late far
ection today". Mr. Inoke explained that the latter masage, which 1a the one requesting
the gold transaction, had not been delivered to the Federal Reserve Bank until 4:04 p.m.
yesterday. and had then to be decoded. Mr. Knoke made the point, however, that it was
the usual practice for the Federal to answer such wires on the day they ware received.
even though they might have arrived too late for action to be taken thereon that day.
Mr. Knoke promised to forward copies of the exchanged cablegrame to the Treasury. It
or agreed that Mr. Pehle or Mr. Cochran would be in touch with Mr. Knoke or
Mr. Camaron later in the evening if necessary.
As the meeting between the British and American Treasury officials was about to
terminate in Kr. Bell's office & little before 5 o'clock last night, Mr. Pehle came to
report to Mr. Bell that Mr. Acheson had called back to state that Secretary Full had
taken up with the President the Yugeslav matter and that it had been decided that
there would be no freesing this weekend. Mr. Foley had communicated with Secretary
Morgenthau. It was consequently confirmed that nothing was to be done last night,
following the decision that action on purchasing the Yugoslav gold should be delayed.
At 9 o'clock this morning Mr. Cochran spoke by telephone with Mr. Cameron. Ee
stated that no decision had yet been taken toward freesing, and that Cameron should do
nothing other than hold up the gold transaction. Mr. Pable visited Mr. Cochran Just
before 9:30. Mr. Cochran informed Mr. Pable of his conversation with Mr. Cameron.
They agreed that there was evidently nothing that could be done in the circumstances
to prevent movement of private Tugoslav capital out of American accounts today. At
the 9:30 Staff meeting Mr. Pehle reported to the Secretary on the Ingoslav situation.
When Mr. Cochran saw the Secretary at 11:50. shortly after Assistant Secretary of
State Acheson had called on the Secretary. Mr. Coehran inquired as to whether there
vas anything new on Yugoalavia. The Secretary replied that neither he nor Mr. Acheson
had had any further word from the President. Instructions were, therefore, on the
highest authority of the land, to hold up the gold transaction. When I saked the
Secretary whether this also meant that the Federal need send no wire today to the
Tugoslav Central Bank, he replied in the affirmative.
At 12 o'clock I called Mr. Cameron and gave his the above information. He said he
would pass this on to Mr. Knoke, since the latter was concerned lest the Federal might
have some liability for purchasing the gold, especially in view of written instructions
from the Treasury to the Bank on this point, which said nothing about not purchasing
gold when the Assay Office is closed. We had been basing our action of refusing to take
the gold today on the ground that the Assay Office vas closed to business, although
no word to this effect is being communicated to Yugoalavia as of today. Mr. Knoks
called no a few moments after I had spoken with Hr. Cemeron, and raised this point
of the Federal's I told his that it was my understanding that our Chief
Counsel's office had liability. a full understanding of the situation when Mr. Foley had spoken
with the Secretary last night. I promised, however, to speak with Mr. Foley st once,
and let Mr. Knoke know the result of our conversation.
196
Consequently I telephoned Mr. Foley shortly after 12 o'clock. Es vse fully
familiar with the situation. He felt that the Federal Reserve Bank at New York would
have no liability. It vas acting as agent for the Treasury, and our special instruc-
tions to the effect that the gold should not be purchased superseded any prior
general instructions. I telephoned this word back to Mr. Knoke immediately, and mg-
gested that the Federal's legal adviser, to whom Knoke had referred this matter, be
asked to communicate directly with Mr. Foley or Mr. Bernstein if they had any question
as to our position.
At 1:05 Mr. Foley telephoned to discuss this case further. He had understood
that Mr. Pehle had told Knoke last night that no cablegram should be sent to the
Tugoslav Central Bank. I told Mr. Foley that this vas not exactly correct. Mr. Pehle
vas seated at my desk when this question vas discussed at length with Mr. Knoke last
right. Both Pehle and I indicated our preference that no cablegram be sent. When
Xr. Inoke insisted, however, that central banking customs required an answer, and when
he submitted a text to which we could not take exception, Pehle and I then told Knoke
ve left this matter to his discretion. I read to Mr. Foley the vire which Knoke had
despatched last night, and also cablegram No. 125 from Yugoslavia today. I explained
again that I had instructed the Federal not to send any message to the Tugoslav Central
Bank today.
10ml.
197 /
March 15. 1941
My dear Mr. President:
At yesterday's hearings before the Appropriation
Committee on the MII to provide funds to earry out
the Lend-Lease Act, the Director of the Bureen of the
Budget was asked a number of questions conserning the
British dollar resources in this country. I have fur-
nished him answers to these questions and he is inserting
them in the record today.
I - attaching hereto & copy of the questions and
answers given to the Director this morning.
Faithfully yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
The President,
The White House.
Enc.
I X
DUB:ce
2 copies to D.W. Bell
DWB
CC to Mr. Thompson
Regraded Uclassified
198
Question.,It 10 is understand that the Brittich orders - to James 1, 1941
we about 03 billion, and that expenditure - about 0600 million. Is that
cerrect? what have the British spent here clase that time?
the total of the orders placed is this country w the Britten Purchasing
Mesion up to Jamuary 1, 1941, me approximately $2.7. billion. Up to January 1.
1941, the British Purchasing NiceLone had nate payments of approximately n.3
billion ea these orders.
From Jumary 1 to March 12, 1941, payments w the Britich Purchasing
Mesion were *yes million.
Question.,21 Nos the policy hom to pay cash or securities for orders - to
this time?
The practice of the United Kinglon has boom to pay cash on all orders
placed in the United States up to this time. All goods delivered have been
fully paid for. A substantial pertion of the value of the goods delivered
- paid for in advance and a portion of the value of - goods yet to to
delivered has already been paid for. Generally, they have pase 25 per -
each when orders ware placed is addition to capital Investments required.
the dollars to pay for these orders have been derived w the British
Government partly from the sale of with investments is the United States,
partly from the liquidation of British dollar balances, partly from the sale
of British gold heldings to the U. S. Treasury, and partly from dollars
asquired from a variety of other course.
Regraded Uclassified
199
- I -
that is the proposal as to paying for deliveries of onleting
orders?
Part of the cost of the fature delivery under existing ordere has
already been ast w almass payments; the resulated lisbilities of the
United Kingdom in respect to cush orders will be ml) free her edeting
dollar resources and with dollars which she will copire in the fature.
thesh dollars will come from further sales of British holdings of & s.
securities, sale of Initain's direct investments la the United States,
gold asquired w the >witish Deverment, and the not dollar procede of
British experts of geods end services to the United States and closchers.
Question 41 That is the value of British holdings is the United Whates
and the Vestern Hend sphore outside of the United States?
the value of British holdings in the United States as of Junuary 1.
1941, to extinated w the Treasury at 8616 millions of marketable committies
at $900 millions of direct investments.
the noudnal value of United Englen investments is Ganada is many
the equivalent of 2 billion U. 9. dollars, and of United Kinglen terret-
masts in Letin America is the equivalent of over 03-1/2 Willion. This
refers to the novinal values the market value would, of - be mush
less. In the - of the Consider Investments the market value is muh
door to the nominal value than in the - of the latin
investments. The United Kinglen to waing 8 substatial - of these
soah month to per for w micricle obtained from Camela. Same of the
Investments in Latte Amrie are is complete defails, my are in partial
default, whereas nearly all IN payable after is starting w in 1000l
Regraded Uclassified
200
- 3 -
the liquidation value in U. s. dollars of these latte Assima
securities. particularly in view of widospread controle of foreign exclange
transfere, 10 very unecrtain. The details of these investments will be
found on page 54 of the hearings before the Home Committee on Foreign
Affairs # He 11. 1776,
Question 50 what stops, If my, have book taken to most yrier comitrents
and what stops are to be taken M to commitments yet to be made?
The United Kington will meet her liabilities # existing orders
from her existing dollar recources and from dollars which she will angeire
is the future. The stops w which these dollar reseurces are being sequired
have been indicated in the show to question 3 alove.
the British deverument does not have funds adequate to neet additional
cominents. It to for these additional comitments that the Lend-Lease
arrangements will be required.
Question 6s what is the monthly rate of expenditure w Tagland and its
docisions for w purposes?
The monthly rate of expenditures for United Elegion, Canada, New
Fealand, Australia, Month Africa and India taken together in. according
to our information, reughly the aquivalent of $2-3/4 billion. Hearly
02.5 billion of tide to the expenditure of the United Singlen alone.
Question 70 That are the With deminions, and particularly Canada,
propared to de for aid to Great Britain?
Canada 10. of awares, helping directly with treepo, noval and dr
forces, and to paying all expenses of Canadian forces operating abroad
201
- h -
- will as at home. It is anticipated that during the coming year Canada
will spend a total of $2.2 billions # her direct w effort. This alone
constitutes almost 30 per cest of her expected material income. is
addition, Canada is emplying Britein with large increasing amounts of
gode and services in return for a considerable part of which she is
getting either sterling in - of her needs or the repatriation of
Canadian securities to the United Kinglen.
Just as in the - of Canada, Australia, New Sealand, Seath Africa
and India have under my and are financing themselves, a var effort of
considerable negalitute in relation to their national Income. In addition,
these countries are acquiring 020000 sterling in Lenden and repatrinted
securities as payment for exporte of merchandise, services and gold to
the United Kingdom and to the dollar exchange areas. This 10 a form of
economic and financial accistance of considerable value to the British
war economy.
Queskien 8t that has Great Britain, its deminions and particularly
Canada, appropriated for this was?
This information in not verily available; but w have requested
11 for the consittee. Recever, because of differences in bulgetery
practice, each figures will not be at all comparable with the defense
appropriation figures for the United States.
Question 91 What are the potach and terex holdings of the British is
the vestern part of the United States?
Regraded Uclassified
202
- 5 -
Our proliminary information to that there are three Large potuch
of have companies with properties in the vertern United States is shich
/
the value of the brittich Investment 10 estimated to be reaghly INFO the
⑉ million. These proporties allo included is the British direct Invost-
name reforred to in - to question me
Question 100 What have # bought in the my of sale from Great Britein
and its dominiens, instating Canada, stase 1934 (by yours)?
the not imports of seld from Brittich Employe w yours an given in
the table below. 20 should be pointed out that Leaden has born, prier
to the mr, the leading gold market of the will and home gold Importe
from the British Repire were not solely for British mem.
1934-1940
(Millies dollars)
Other Pritich
Amire
Tatal
103
316
174
182
1,209
244
1.353
1,800
976
minus
to
633
2,995
Total 1934-40
5.550
4,550
10,418
Regraded Uclassified
203
March 15. 1941
My dear Mr. Secretary:
For your information, there is transmitted here-
with copy of a memorandum furnished the Director of
the Bureau of the Budget this morning to be inserted
in the record of the hearings before the Appropriation
Committee on the appropriation bill to carry out the
provisions of the Lend-Lease Act. The questions
presented in this memorandum were given to Mr. Smith
yesterday with the request that he get the answers from
the Treasury.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) E. Morgenthau, Jr.
The Nonorable,
The Secretary of the Havy.
Enc.
DWBICE
&
Memorage
ruB
2 copies to D.W. Bell
CC to Mr. Thompson
Regraded Uclassified
204
March 15. 1941
My dear Mr. Secretary:
For your information, there to transmitted here-
with copy of a memorandum furnished the Director of
the Buream of the Budget this morning to be inserted
in the record of the hearings before the Appropriation
Committee en the appropriation will to carry out the
provisions of the Land-Lease Act. The questions
presented in this nemorandum were given to Mr. finith
yesterday with the request that he get the answers from
the Treasury.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr.
The Honorable,
The Secretary of War.
Enc.
DEBICE
By Measenger
DWB
2 copies to D.W. Bell
CC to Mr. Thompson
Regraded Uclassified
205
March 15. 1941
My dear Mr. Secretary:
For your information, there is transmitted here-
with copy of & memorandum furnished the Director of
the Bureau of the Budget this morning to be inserted
in the record of the hearings before the Appropriation
Committee on the appropriation bill to carry out the
provisions of the Lend-Lease Act. The questions
presented in this memorandum were given to Mr. Smith
yesterday with the request that he get the answers from
the Treasury.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) H. Morgenthau, Jr,
The Homorable,
The Secretary of State.
Enc.
By Measenger
swift
2 copies to D.W. Bell
DWB:ce
CC to Mr. Thompson
Regraded Uclassified
206,
March 15, 1941
My dear Harry:
For your information, there is transmitted here-
with copy of a memorandum furnished the Director of
the Buresu of the Budget this morning to be inserted
in the record of the hearings before the Appropriation
Committee on the appropriation Mill to carry out the
provisions of the Lend-Lease Act. The questions
presented in this memorandum were given to Mr. Smith
yesterday with the request that he get the answers from
the Treasury.
Sincerely yours,
19 Henry
Honorable Harry L. Hopkins,
The White House.
Enc.
By Memorager
Drub DWB:ce
2 copies to D.W. Bell
CC to Mr. Thompson
Regraded Uclassified
207
March 15, 1941
9:30 a.m.
GROUP MEETING
Present:
Mr. Bell
Mr. Graves
Mr. Young
Mr. Thompson
Mr. Cochran
Mr. Kuhn
Mr. Wiley
Mr. Gaston
Mr. Pehle
Mr. White
Mr. Foley
Mrs. Klotz
Mr. Sullivan
Mr. Schwarz
H.M.Jr:
I just thought the easiest way - there are so
many things happened, and I got so many tele-
phone calls last night, that I wanted to clear
my own mind and do it collectively. I thought
it was a mistake, Dan, to get out our publicity
on National Defense Savings Bonds on the 20th,
while we still had our big thing open. I think
we ought to postpone that publicity until the
21st.
Bell:
I was just talking to Harold about it. We
thought about that the other day, but we didn't
think it would hurt. After all, it has been in
the hands of twelve Federal Reserve banks, and
it is pretty well known.
208
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H.M.Jr:
I just don't --
Bell:
I should think it might help rather than hurt.
On the other hand, we have made arrangements
with the A.B.A. people for 8. speech on Thurs-
day, but I guess we can postpone it until
Friday.
H.M.Jr:
If you don't mind, on that I would like to
postpone it. They are there for three days,
aren't they?
Bell:
Yes. He makes his speech on Thursday, however.
He said he could make another one on Friday.
H.M.Jr:
Well, he will have to.
Bell:
Now, Harold has talked to the "Time" people,
and they are not giving out any great detail,
but some of it, and it comes out on Thursday.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I told him to kill it.
Schwarz:
We can ask them to save that until the following
week.
Bell:
Well, all right.
H.M.Jr:
No, I told Time magazine through Harold to kill
it. They have got to kill it.
Schwarz:
We would rather have them postpone it.
H.M.Jr:
I don't care how. I don't want the details on
the thing made public until Friday, if you don't
mind. I am very definite on it. I mean, there
are just two things, Time magazine and this
speech, and they are both going to have to wait.
Bell:
Yes. All right.
H.M.Jr:
Now, Yugoslavia? I am to hear from the Presi-
209
- 3 -
dent?
Pehle:
Well, I gathered from Mr. Acheson that Mr.
Hull thought the President was going to call you,
but apparently he didn't.
H.M.Jr:
No.
Pehle:
The last we heard was, the President felt that
we should not buy the gold over the weekend,
but he was not prepared to freeze them on the
hope that they would be taking a firm stand,
and it might hurt the picture. The Yugoslavian
Minister apparently cabled his government,
telling them that we wanted those transfers
withdrawn and that we want an explanation.
Whether he will get a reply or not, we don't
know.
H.M.Jr:
Well, that holds it up until Monday.
Pehle:
It holds the gold. Of course, any cash that is
here will go ahead.
H.M.Jr:
Now, John, you and Ed Foley, this is the most
important thing, ought to not later than Monday
morning have 8 brief for me on this whole
question of state taxes, what we are doing
here with the Port Authority, in the form of
a letter for transmission to the President
Monday morning, you see.
Sullivan:
Yes, sir.
H.M.Jr:
Because if we don't get it to the President,
then nobody else will.
Sullivan:
Yes, sir.
H.M.Jr:
And then we can send a copy of that brief over
to Mr. Stimson. I would send it just to the
Regraded Uclassified
210
- 4 -
four members of OPM. Also to the Attorney
General. But I gather from what the Presi-
dent said he was very much in sympathy with
what we are trying to do, but it is too
legal for me to try to explain it to him,
but if you will have it to lay on my desk
Monday morning.
Sullivan:
We will have it for you.
H.M.Jr:
The kind of a brief that you prepare to a
court, you see.
Sullivan:
I doubt if he would want us to go into that
much detail. I mean, we can do it. We have it
right now, but --
H.M.Jr:
Do you have the brief?
Sullivan:
No, I mean we have all of that material. We
can assemble it very readily, and all the cases
to cite and all that sort of thing.
H.M.Jr:
Well, I would do it and then a non-legal docu-
ment in the form of & letter of transmission
for me to the. President.
Sullivan:
Right. Giving a resume of the legal principles
involved?
H.M.Jr:
Does that fall inyour shop or Ed's?
Sullivan:
We talked it over last night, and we were going
to do it together today.
H.M.Jr:
I would like to have it Monday morning. I don't
like to put so much pressure on, but I can't
help it.
Sullivan:
That is all right.
H.M.Jr:
The President might like to go through the thing.
211
- 5 -
You never know. So give the references and
so forth and so on, and then my letter
would be in non-legal language, state our
case, what we are doing with the Port
Authority and the whole business, and I think
it should go to the Attorney General and then
to the four members of the OPM, and each of
them have their lawyers, you see. Don't you
think so?
Sullivan:
Yes, I do, sir.
H.M.Jr:
Right. That was one of the principal things.
Is everything all right on the questions to
Harold Smith?
Bell:
Well, I sent them along, and we had them up
last night with the British and made several
changes, and they took it up with the Ambassa-
dor. We are not satisfied with one change
that came back, and I didn't accept it. Merle
got it at 11:30. It is in answer to Question
Three, "What is the Proposal as to Paying for
Deliveries of Existing Orders?"
(Mr. White entered the conference.)
H.M.Jr:
What?
Bell:
The question was, "What is the Proposal as to
Paying for Deliveries on Existing Orders."
We had it reading, "Part of the cost of the
future delivery under existing orders has
already been met by advance payments. There
are many liabilities of the United Kingdom in
respect to such orders that will be met from
the existing resources and with dollars which
she will acquire in the future."
Now, that is what you said before the Committee,
and we realize that there is some negotiation
Regraded Uclassified
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going on for taking over those contracts
under the Lease-Lend Bill, but we thought the
net effect would be the same, because you are
forced to use the dollars they acquire otherwise
to pay for other things, but the Ambassador
insisted on putting in, "Remaining liabilities
in the United Kingdom in respect to such orders
except in cases in which it is in the interest
of the United States government to take over
the contract, will be met from existing United
Kingdom dollars."
H.M.Jr:
What is the significance?
Bell:
What they are doing is telling Congress that the
negotiations are on for taking over contracts
under the Lease-Lend Bill, and I thought it
would just throw the thing up in the air. That
would have to be explained, and you would
probably have difficulty.
H.M.Jr:
Now, what I would like you to do this morning,
just as soon as you can, I want to write & letter
to the President of the United States this
morning, saying "My dear Mr. President: I have
been asked the following questions. These were
furnished to Harold Smith to take up on the Hill
this morning, and my questions and answers are
attached herewith." And then I don't think I
would - would you say these were shown to the
British? I don't think SO.
Bell:
No, I don't believe I would either.
H.M.Jr:
And then also whatever I send to the President,
send a copy to Harry Hopkins. Don't you suppose
between now and 12:00 0' clock you can have that
for me?
Bell:
Oh, yes.
Regraded Uclassified
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H.M.Jr:
And then I also - the letter goes to the
President, and then one to Hull, Stimson,
and Knox, and Hopkins a copy.
Bell:
Enclosing copies of the questions?
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to