THE HATE CAMPAIGN AGAINST AMERICA
While Germany was professing her friendship
for the United States in every note written following
the sinking of the Lusitania, the government
was secretly preparing the nation for a break in diplomatic
relations, or for war, in the event of a rupture.
German officials realised that unless the people
were made to suspect Mr. Wilson and his motives, unless
they were made to resent the shipment of arms and
ammunition to the Allies, there would be a division
in public opinion and the government would not be
able to count upon the united support of the people.
Because the government does the thinking for the people
it has to tell them what to think before they have
reached the point of debating an issue themselves.
A war with America or a break in diplomatic relations
in 1915 would not have been an easy matter to explain,
if the people had not been encouraged to hate Wilson.
So while Germany maintained a propaganda bureau in
America to interpret Germany and to maintain good
relations, she started in Germany an extensive propaganda
against Wilson, the American press, the United States
Ambassador and Americans in general.
This step was not necessary in the
army because among army officers the bitterness and
hatred of the United States were deeper and more extensive
than the hatred of any other belligerent. It
was hardly ever possible for the American correspondents
to go to the front without being insulted. Even
the American military attaches, when they went to
the front, had to submit to the insults of army officers.
After the sinking of the Arabic the six military
observers attached to the American Embassy were invited
by the General Staff to go to Russia to study the
military operations of Field Marshal von Mackensen.
They were escorted by Baron von Maltzahn, former
attache of the German Embassy in Paris. At Lodz,
one of the largest cities in Poland, they were taken
to headquarters. Von Maltzahn, who knew Mackensen
personally, called at the Field Marshal’s offices,
reported that he had escorted six American army officers
under orders of the General Staff, whom he desired
to present to the Commander-in-Chief. Von Mackensen
replied that he did not care to meet the Americans
and told von Maltzahn that the best thing he could
do would be to escort the observers back to Berlin.
As soon as the military attaches reached
Berlin and reported this to Washington they were recalled.
BLOOD-TRAFFICKERS
Cowards, who kill three thousand miles
away,
See the long lines of shrouded forms increase!
Yours is this work, disguise it as you
may;
But for your greed the world were now
at peace.
Month after month your countless chimneys roar,
Slaughter your object, and your motive
gain;
Look at your money, it is wet
with gore
Nothing can cleanse it from the loathsome
stain.
You, who prolong this hideous hell on
earth,
Making a by-word of your native land,
Stripped of your wealth, how paltry is
your worth!
See how men shrink from contact with your
hand!
There is pollution in your blood-smeared
gold,
There is corruption in your pact with
Death,
There is dishonor in the lie, oft-told,
Of your “Humanity”!
’Tis empty breath.
What shall it profit you to heap on high,
Makers of orphans! a few millions more,
When you must face them those
you caused to die,
And God demands of you to pay your score?
He is not mocked; His vengeance doth not
sleep;
His cup of wrath He lets you slowly fill;
What you have sown, that also shall you
reap;
God’s law is adamant, “Thou
shalt not kill”!
Think not to plead: “I
did not act alone,”
“Custom allows it,” and “My
dead were few”;
Each hath his quota; yonder are your own!
See how their fleshless fingers point
at you, at you!
You, to whose vaults this wholesale murder
yields
Mere needless increments of ghoulish gain,
Count up your corpses on these blood-soaked
fields!
Hear . . . till your death . . . your
victims’ moans of pain!
Then, when at night you, sleepless, fear
to pray,
Watch the thick, crimson stream draw near
your bed,
And shriek with horror, till the dawn
of day
Shall find you raving at your heaps of
dead!
JOHN L. STODDARD.
The League of Truth
Head Offices for Germany:
Berlin W
40 Potsdamer
Str.
July 4th, 1916. Printed by Barthe
& Co., Berlin W.
But this was not the only time von
Mackensen, or other army officers, showed their contempt
for the United States. After the fall of Warsaw
a group of American correspondents were asked to go
to the headquarters of General von Besseler, afterward
named Governor General of Poland. The general
received them in the gardens of the Polish castle which
he had seized as his headquarters; shook hands with
the Dutch, Danish, Swedish, Swiss and South American
newspaper men, and then, before turning on his heels
to go back to his Polish palace, turned to the Americans
and said:
“As for you gentlemen, the best
thing you can do is to tell your country to stop shipping
arms and ammunition.”
During General Brusiloff’s offensive
I was invited together with other correspondents to
go to the Wohlynian battlefields to see how the Germans
had reorganised the Austrian front. In a little
town near the Stochod River we were invited to dinner
by Colonel von Luck. I sat opposite the colonel,
who was in charge of the reorganisation here.
Throughout the meal he made so many insulting remarks
that the officer who was our escort had to change
the trend of the conversation. Before he did
so the colonel said:
“Tell me, do they insult you in Berlin like
this?”
I replied that I seldom encountered
such antagonism in Berlin; that it was chiefly the
army which was anti-American.
“Well, that’s the difference
between the diplomats and the army. If the army
was running the government we would probably have had
war with America a long time ago,” he concluded,
smiling sarcastically.
Shortly after the sinking of the Lusitania
the naval propaganda bureau had bronze medals cast
and placed on sale at souvenir shops throughout Germany.
Ambassador Gerard received one day, in exchanging
some money, a fifty mark bill, with the words stamped
in purple ink across the face:
“God punish England and America.”
For some weeks this rubber stamp was used very effectively.
The Navy Department realised, too,
that another way to attack America and especially
Americans in Berlin, was to arouse the suspicion that
every one who spoke English was an enemy. The
result was that most Americans had to be exceedingly
careful not to talk aloud in public places.
The American correspondents were even warned at the
General Staff not to speak English at the front.
Some of the correspondents who did not speak German
were not taken to the battle areas because the Foreign
Office desired to avoid insults.
The year and a half between the sinking
of the Lusitania and the severance of diplomatic
relations was a period of terror for most Americans
in Germany. Only those who were so sympathetic
with Germany that they were anti-American found it
pleasant to live there. One day one of the American
girls employed in the confidential file room of the
American Embassy was slapped in the face until she
cried, by a German in civilian clothes, because she
was speaking English in the subway. At another
time the wife of a prominent American business man
was spit upon and chased out of a public bus because
she was speaking English. Then a group of women
chased her down the street. Another American
woman was stabbed by a soldier when she was walking
on Friedrichstrasse with a friend because she was
speaking English. When the State Department
instructed Ambassador Gerard to bring the matter to
the attention of the Foreign Office and to demand
an apology Wilhelmstrasse referred the matter to the
General Staff for investigation. The soldier
was arrested and secretly examined. After many
weeks had elapsed the Foreign Office explained that
the man who had stabbed the woman was really not a
soldier but a red cross worker. It was explained
that he had been wounded and was not responsible for
what he did. The testimony of the woman, however,
and of other witnesses, showed that the man at the
time he attacked the American was dressed in a soldier’s
uniform, which is grey, and which could not he mistaken
for the black uniform of a red cross worker.
It was often said in Berlin, “Germany
hates England, fights France, fears Russia but loathes
America.” No one, not even American officials,
questioned it.
The hate campaign was bearing fruit.
In January, 1916, there appeared in
Berlin a publication called Light and Truth.
It was a twelve-page circular in English and German
attacking President Wilson and the United States.
Copies were sent by mail to all Americans and to
hundreds of thousands of Germans. It was edited
and distributed by “The League of Truth.”
It was the most sensational document printed in Germany
since the beginning of the war against a power with
which Germany was supposed to be at peace. Page
6 contained two illustrations under the legend:
WILSON AND HIS PRESS IS NOT
AMERICA
Underneath was this paragraph:
“An American Demonstration On
the 27th of January, the birthday of the German Emperor,
an immense laurel wreath decorated with the German
and American flags was placed by Americans at the
foot of the monument to Frederick the Great (in Berlin).
The American flag was enshrouded in black crape.
Frederick the Great was the first to recognise the
independence of the young Republic, after it had won
its freedom from the yoke of England, at the price
of its very heart’s blood through years of struggle.
His successor, Wilhelm II, receives the gratitude
of America in the form of hypocritical phrases and
war supplies to his mortal enemy.”
One photograph was of the wreath itself.
The other showed a group of thirty-six people, mostly
boys, standing in front of the statue after the wreath
had been placed.
When Ambassador Gerard learned about
the “demonstration” he went to the statue
and from there immediately to the Foreign Office, where
he saw Secretary of State von Jagow. Gerard
demanded instantaneous removal of the wreath.
Von Jagow promised an “investigation.”
Gerard meanwhile began a personal investigation of
the League of Truth, which had purchased and
placed the insult there.
Days, weeks, even months passed.
Von Jagow still refused to have the wreath removed.
Finally Gerard went to the Foreign Office and told
von Jagow that unless it was taken away that day he
would get it himself and send it by courier to Washington.
That evening Gerard walked to the statue. The
wreath had disappeared.
Week by week the league continued
its propaganda. Gerard continued his investigation.
July 4, 1916, another circular was
scattered broadcast. On page 1 was a large black
cross. Pages 2 and 3, the inside, contained a
reprint of the “Declaration of Independence,”
with the imprint across the face of a bloody hand.
Enclosed in a heavy black border on page 4 were nine
verses by John L. Stoddard, the lecturer, entitled
“Blood-Traffickers.” (Printed in
the beginning of this chapter.)
The league made an especial appeal
to the “German-Americans.” Germany,
as was pointed out in a previous article, counts upon
some German-Americans as her allies. One day
Ambassador Gerard received a circular entitled “An
Appeal to All Friends of Truth.” The same
was sent in German and English to a mailing list of
many hundred thousands. Excerpts from this read:
“If any one is called upon to
raise his voice in foreign lands for the cause of
truth, it is the foreigner who was able to witness
the unanimous rising of the German people at the outbreak
of war, and their attitude during its continuance.
This applies especially to the German-American.
“As a citizen of two continents,
in proportion as his character has remained true to
German principles, he finds both here and there the
right word to say. . . .
“Numberless millions of men
are forced to look upon a loathsome spectacle. It
is that of certain individuals in America; to whom
a great nation has temporarily intrusted its weal
and woe, supporting a few multi-millionaires and
their dependents, setting at naught unpunished the
revered document of the Fourth of July, 1776, and
daring to barter away the birthright of the white
race. . . . We want to see whether the united
voices of Germans and foreigners have not more weight
than the hired writers of editorials in the newspapers;
and whether the words of men who are independent will
not render it impossible for a subsidised press to
continue its destructive work.”
Gerard’s investigation showed
that a group of German-Americans in Berlin were financing
the League of Truth; that a man named William
F. Marten, who posed as an American, was the head,
and that the editors and writers of the publication
Light and Truth were being assisted by the
Foreign Office Press Bureau and protected by the General
Staff. An American dentist in Berlin, Dr. Charles
Mueller, was chairman of the league. Mrs. Annie
Neumann-Hofer, the American-born wife of Neumann-Hofer,
of the Reichstag, was secretary. Gerard reported
other names to the State Department, and asked authority
to take away the passports of Americans who were assisting
the German government in this propaganda.
The “league” heard about
the Ambassador’s efforts, and announced that
a “Big Bertha” issue would be published
exposing Gerard. For several months the propagandists
worked to collect data. One day Gerard decided
to go to the league’s offices and look at the
people who were directing it. In the course
of his remarks the Ambassador said that if the Foreign
Office didn’t do something to suppress the league
immediately, he would burn down the place. The
next day Marten and his co-workers went to the Royal
Administration of the Superior Court, N, in Berlin,
and through his attorney lodged a criminal charge of
“threat of arson” against the Ambassador.
The next day Germany was flooded with
letters from “The League of Truth,” saying:
“The undersigned committee of
the League of Truth to their deepest regret felt compelled
to inform the members that Ambassador Gerard had become
involved in a criminal charge involving threat of arson.
. . . All American citizens are now asked whether
an Ambassador who acts so undignified at the moment
of a formal threat of a wholly unnecessary war, is
to be considered worthy further to represent a country
like the United States.”
Were it not for the fact that at this
time President Wilson was trying to impress upon Germany
the seriousness of her continued disregard of American
and neutral lives on the high seas, the whole thing
would have been too absurd to notice. But Germany
wanted to create the impression among her people that
President Wilson was not speaking for America, and
that the Ambassador was too insignificant to notice.
After this incident Gerard called
upon von Jagow again and demanded the immediate suppression
of the third number of Light and Truth.
Before von Jagow consented Mrs. Neumann-Hofer turned
upon her former propagandists and confessed.
I believe her confession is in the State Department,
but this is what she told me:
“Marten is a German and has
never been called to the army because the General
Staff has delegated him to direct this anti-American
propaganda. [We were talking at the Embassy the day
before the Ambassador left.] Marten is supported
by some very high officials. He has letters
of congratulations from the Chancellor, General von
Falkenhayn, Count Zeppelin and others for one of his
propaganda books entitled ‘German Barbarians.’
I think the Crown Prince is one of his backers, but
I have never been able to prove it.”
On July 4th, 1915, the League of Truth
issued what it called “A New Declaration of
Independence.” This was circulated in German
and English throughout the country. It was as
follows:
A NEW DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE
Seven score years have elapsed since
those great words were forged that welded us into
a nation upon many fiery battlefields.
In that day the strong voices of strong
men rang across the world, their molten words flamed
with light and their arms broke the visible chains
of an intolerable bondage.
But now in the red reflex of the glare
cast from the battlefields of Europe, the invisible
manacles that have been cunningly laid upon our freedom
have become shamefully apparent. They rattle
in the ears of the world.
Our liberty has vanished once again.
Yet our ancient enemy remains enthroned in high places
within our land and in insolent ships before our gates.
We have not only become Colonials once again, but
subjects, for true subjects are known by
the measure of their willing subjection.
We Americans in the heart of this
heroic nation now struggling for all that we ourselves
hold dear, but against odds such as we were never
forced to face, perceive this truth with a disheartening
but unclouded vision.
Far from home we would to-day celebrate,
as usual, the birthday of our land. But with
heavy hearts we see that this would now seem like a
hollow mockery of something solemn and immemorial.
It were more in keeping with reality that we burnt
incense upon the altars of the British Baal.
Independence Day without Independence!
The liberty of the seas denied us for the peaceful
Commerce of our entire land and granted us only for
the murderous trafficking of a few men!
Independence Day has dawned for us
in alien yet friendly land. It has brought to
us at least the independence of our minds.
Free from the abominations of the
most dastardly campaign of falsehood that ever disgraced
those who began and those who believe it, we have
stripped ourselves of the rags of many perilous illusions.
We see America as a whole, and we see it with a fatal
and terrible clarity.
We see that once again our liberties
of thought, of speech, of intercourse, of trade, are
threatened, nay, already seized by the one ancient
enemy that can never be our friend.
With humiliation we behold our principles,
our sense of justice trodden underfoot. We see
the wild straining of the felon arms that would drag
our land into the abyss of the giant Conspiracy and
Crime.
We see the foul alliance of gold,
murderous iron and debauched paper to which we have
been sold.
We know that our pretenses and ambitions
as heralds of peace are monstrous, so long as we profit
through war and human agony.
We see these rivers of blood that
have their source in our mills of slaughter.
The Day of Independence has dawned.
It is a solemn and momentous hour for America,
It is a day on which our people must
speak with clear and inexorable voice, or sit silent
in shame.
It is the great hour in which we dare
not celebrate our first Declaration of Independence,
because the time has come when we must proclaim a
new one over the corpse of that which has perished.
Berlin, July 4th, 1915.
AN ANTI-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA DOCUMENT
The League of Truth, however, was
but one branch of the intricate propaganda system.
While it was financed almost entirely by German-Americans
living in Germany who retained their American passports
to keep themselves, or their children, out of the army,
all publications for this bureau were approved by
the Foreign Office censors. Germans, connected
with the organisation, were under direction of the
General Staff or Navy.
In order to have the propaganda really
successful some seeds of discontent had to be sown
in the United States, in South America and Mexico
as well as in Spain and other European neutral countries.
For this outside propaganda, money and an organisation
were needed. The Krupp ammunition interests
supplied the money and the Foreign Office the organisation.
For nearly two years the American
press regularly printed despatches from the Overseas
News Agency. Some believed they were “official.”
This was only half true. The Krupps had been
financing this news association. The government
had given its support and the two wireless towers
at Sayville, Long Island, and Tuckerton, N. J., were
used as “footholds” on American soil.
These stations were just as much a part of the Krupp
works as the factories at Essen or the shipyards of
Kiel. They were to disseminate the Krupp-fed,
Krupp-owned, Krupp-controlled news, of the Overseas
News Agency.
When the Overseas despatches first
reached the United States the newspapers printed them
in a spirit of fairness. They gave the other
side, and in the beginning they were more or less accurate.
But when international relations between the two
countries became critical the news began to be distorted
in Berlin. At each crisis, as at the time of
the sinking of the Arabic, the Ancona,
the Sussex and other ships, the German censorship
prevented the American correspondents from sending
the news as they gathered it in Germany and substituted
“news” which the Krupp interests and the
Imperial Foreign Office desired the American people
to believe. December, 1916, when the German General
Staff began to plan for an unrestricted submarine warfare,
especial use was made of the “Overseas News
Agency” to work up sentiment here against President
Wilson. Desperate efforts were made to keep the
United States from breaking diplomatic relations.
In December and January last records of the news
despatches in the American newspapers from Berlin
show that the Overseas agency was more active than
all American correspondents in Berlin. Secretary
of State Zimmermann, Under-secretaries von dem
Busche and von Stumm gave frequent interviews
to the so-called “representatives of the Overseas
News Agency.” It was all part of a specific
Krupp plan, supported by the Hamburg-American and
the North German Lloyd steamship companies, to divide
opinion in the United States so that President Wilson
would not be supported if he broke diplomatic relations.
Germany, as I have pointed out, has
been conducting a two-faced propaganda. While
working in the United States through her agents and
reservists to create the impression that Germany was
friendly, the Government laboured to prepare the German
people for war. The policy was to make the American
people believe Germany would never do anything to
bring the United States into the war, but to convince
the German public that America was not neutral and
that President Wilson was scheming against the German
race. Germany was Janus-headed. Head N said:
“America, you are a great nation.
We want your friendship and neutrality. We
have close business and blood relations, and these
should not be broken. Germany is not the barbaric
nation her enemies picture her.”
Head N, turned toward the German people, said:
“Germans, President Wilson is
anti-German. He wants to prevent us from starting
an unlimited submarine war. America has never
been neutral, because Washington permits the ammunition
factories to supply the Allies. These factories
are killing your relatives. We have millions
of German-Americans who will support us. It will
not be long until Mexico will declare war on the United
States, and our reservists will fight for Mexico.
Don’t be afraid if Wilson breaks diplomatic
relations.”
The German press invasion of America
began at the beginning of the war. Dr. Dernburg
was the first envoy. He was sent to New York
by the same Foreign Office officials and the same
Krupp interests which control the Overseas agency.
Having failed here, he returned to Berlin. There
was only one thing to save German propaganda in America.
That was to mobolise the Sayville and Tuckerton wireless
stations, and Germany did it immediately.
At the beginning of the war, when
the British censors refused the American correspondents
in Germany the right of telegraphing to the United
States via England, the Berlin Government granted permission
to the United Press, The Associated Press and the
Chicago Daily News to send wireless news via
Sayville. At first this news was edited by the
correspondents of these associations and newspapers
in Berlin. Later, when the individual correspondents
began to demand more space on the wireless, the news
sent jointly to these papers was cut down. This
unofficial league of American papers was called the
“War-Union.” The news which this
union sent was German, but it was written by trained
American writers. When the Government saw the
value of this service to the United States it began
to send wireless news of its own. Then the Krupp
interests appeared, and the Overseas News Agency was
organised. At that moment the Krupp invasion
of the United States began and contributed 800,000
marks annually to this branch of propaganda alone.
Dr. Hammann, for ten years chief of
the Berlin Foreign Office propaganda department, was
selected as president of the Overseas News Agency.
The Krupp interests, which had been subscribing 400,000
marks annually to this agency, subscribed the same
amount to the reorganised company. Then, believing
that another agency could be organised, subscribed
400,000 marks more to the Transocean News Agency.
Because there was so much bitterness and rivalry
between the officials of the two concerns, the Government
stepped in and informed the Overseas News Agency that
it could send only “political news,” while
the Trans-ocean was authorised to send “economic
and social news” via Sayville and Tuckerton.
This news, however, was not solely
for the United States. Krupp’s eyes were
on Mexico and South America, so agents were appointed
in Washington and New York to send the Krupp-bred
wireless news from New York by cable to South America
and Mexico. Obviously the same news which was
sent to the United States could not be telegraphed
to Mexico and South America, because Germany had a
different policy toward these countries. The
United States was on record against an unlimited submarine
warfare. Mexico and South America were not.
Brazil, which has a big German population, was considered
an un-annexed German colony. News to Brazil,
therefore, had to be coloured differently than news
to New York. Some of the colouring was done in
Berlin; some in New York by Krupp’s agents here.
As a result of Germany’s anti-United States
propaganda in South America and Mexico, these countries
did not follow President Wilson when he broke diplomatic
relations with Berlin. While public sentiment
might have been against Germany, it was, to a certain
degree, antagonistic to the United States.
Obviously, Germany had to have friends
in this country to assist her, or what was being done
would be traced too directly to the German Government.
So Germany financed willing German-Americans in their
propaganda schemes. And because no German could
cross the ocean except with a falsified neutral passport,
Germany had to depend upon German-Americans with American
passports to bring information over. These German-Americans,
co-operating with some of the Americans in Berlin,
kept informing the Foreign Office, the army and navy
as well as influential Reichstag members that the
real power behind the government over here was not
the press and public opinion but the nine million
Americans who were directly or indirectly related to
Germany. During this time the Government felt
so sure that it could rely upon the so-called German-Americans
that the Government considered them as a German asset
whenever there was a submarine crisis.
When Henry Morgenthau, former American
Ambassador to Turkey, passed through Berlin, en route
to the United States, he conferred with Zimmermann,
who was then Under Secretary of State. During
the course of one of their conversations Zimmermann
said the United States would never go to war with
Germany, “because the German-Americans would
revolt.” That was one of Zimmermann’s
hobbies. Zimmermann told other American officials
and foreign correspondents that President Wilson would
not be able to bring the United States to the brink
of war, because the “German-Americans were too
powerful.”
But Zimmermann was not making these
statements upon his own authority. He was being
kept minutely advised about conditions here through
the German spy system and by German-American envoys,
who came to Berlin to report on progress the German-Americans
were making here in politics and in Congress.
Zimmermann was so “dead sure”
he was right in expecting a large portion of Americans
to be disloyal that one time during a conversation
with Ambassador Gerard he said that he believed Wilson
was only bluffing in his submarine notes. When
Zimmermann was Under Secretary of State I used to
see him very often. His conversation would contain
questions like these:
“Well, how is your English President?
Why doesn’t your President do something against
England?”
Zimmermann was always in close touch
with the work of Captains von Papen and Boy-Ed when
they were in this country. He was one of the
chief supports of the little group of intriguers in
Berlin who directed German propaganda here.
Zimmermann was the man who kept Baron Mumm von Schwarzenstein,
former Ambassador to Tokyo, in the Foreign Office in
Berlin as chief of foreign propaganda and intrigue
in America and China. Mumm had been here as
Minister Extra-ordinary several years ago and knew
how Germany’s methods could be used to the best
purpose, namely, to divide American sentiment.
Then, when Zimmermann succeeded Jagow he ousted Mumm
because Mumm had become unpopular with higher Government
authorities.
One day in Berlin, just before the
recall of the former German military and naval attaches
in Washington, I asked Zimmermann whether Germany
sanctioned what these men had been doing. He
replied that Germany approved everything they had
done “because they had done nothing more than
try to keep America out of the war; to prevent American
goods reaching the Allies and to persuade Germans
and those of German descent not to work in ammunition
factories.” The same week I overheard in
a Berlin cafe two reserve naval officers discuss plans
for destroying Allied ships sailing from American
ports. One of these men was an escaped officer
of an interned liner at Newport News. He had
escaped to Germany by way of Italy. That afternoon
when I saw Ambassador Gerard I told him of the conversation
of these two men, and also what Zimmermann had said.
The Ambassador had just received instructions from
Washington about Boy-Ed and von Papen.
Gerard was furious.
“Go tell Zimmermann,”
he said, “for God’s sake to leave America
alone. If he keeps this up he’ll drag us
into the war. The United States won’t
stand this sort of thing indefinitely.”
That evening I went back to the Foreign
Office and saw Zimmermann for a few minutes.
I asked him why it was that Germany, which was at
peace with the United States, was doing everything
within her power to make war.
“Why, Germany is not doing anything
to make you go to war,” he replied. “Your
President seems to want war. Germany is not responsible
for what the German-Americans are doing. They
are your citizens, not ours. Germany must not
be held responsible for what those people do.”
Had it not been for the fact that
the American Government was fully advised about Zimmermann’s
intrigues in the United States this remark might be
accepted on its face. The United States knew
that Germany was having direct negotiations with German-Americans
in the United States. Men came to Germany with
letters of introduction from leading German-Americans
here, with the expressed purpose of trying to get
Germany to stop its propaganda here. What they
did do was to assure Germany that the German-Americans
would never permit the United States to be drawn into
the war. Because of their high recommendations
from Germans here some of them had audiences with
the Kaiser.
Germany had been supporting financially
some Americans, as the State Department has proof
of checks which have been given to American citizens
for propaganda and spy work.
I know personally of one instance
where General Director Heinicken, of the North German-Lloyd,
gave an American in Berlin $1,000 for his reports
on American conditions. The name cannot be mentioned
because there are no records to prove the transaction,
although the man receiving this money came to me and
asked me to transmit $250 to his mother through the
United Press office. I refused.
When Zimmermann began to realise that
Germany’s threatening propaganda in the United
States and Germany’s plots against American property
were not succeeding in frightening the United States
away from war, he began to look forward to the event
of war. He saw, as most Germans did, that it
would be a long time before the United States could
get forces to Europe in a sufficient number to have
a decisive effect upon the war. He began to plan
with the General Staff and the Navy to league Mexico
against America for two purposes. One, Germany
figured that a war with Mexico would keep the United
States army and navy busy over here. Further,
Zimmermann often said to callers that if the United
States went to war with Mexico it would not be possible
for American factories to send so much ammunition
and so many supplies to the Allies.
German eyes turned to Mexico.
As soon as President Wilson recognised Carranza as
President, Germany followed with a formal recognition.
Zubaran Capmany, who had been Mexican representative
in Washington, was sent to Berlin as Carranza’s
Minister. Immediately upon his arrival Zimmermann
began negotiations with him. Reports of the negotiations
were sent to Washington. The State Department
was warned that unless the United States solved the
“Mexican problem” immediately Germany
would prepare to attack us through Mexico. German
reservists were tipped off to be ready to go to Mexico
upon a moment’s notice. Count von Bernstorff
and the German Consuls in the United States were instructed,
and Bernstorff, who was acting as the general director
of German interests in North and South America, was
told to inform the German officials in the Latin-American
countries. At the same time German financial
interests began to purchase banks, farms and mines
in Mexico.