- 2- The duration of the broadcast of the translator's summary was about forty-five minutes. With regard to Hitler's attacks on democracies, I was able to check verbatim the following passage which is identic with the full translation of that passage from the text of tne speech: "In certain democracies it is apparentiy one of the special prerogatives of political democratic life to cultivate an artificial hatred of the so called totalitarian states. A flood of reports, partly misrepresentations of the facts, partly pure invention, are let loose, the aim being to stir up public opinion against nations which have done noth- ing to harm tne other nations and have no desire to harm them, and which indeed have been for years the victims of harsh injustice. When we defend ourselves against such agitators as Mr. George Cooper, Mr. Eden, Mr. Ickes, and the rest, our action is denounced as an encroacnment on the sacred rights of the democra- cies. According to the way these agitators see things, they are entitled to attack other nations and their governments, but no one is entitled to defend himself against such attacks. I need hardly assure you that as long as the German Reich continues to be a sover- eign state no English or American politician will be able to for0id our Government to reply to such at tacks. And the arms tnat we are forging are our guarantee for all time to come that we sall remain a sovereign state, our arms and our choice or friends. Actually, the assertion tnat Germany is planning an attack on America could be disposed or by a mere laugh, and one would preI'er to pass over in silence the incessant agitation of certain British war mon- gers." Chancellor Hitler's speech was issued in Germany in the first nignt issue of tne semi-official German News Bureau Bulletin of Monday, January SO, 1939. I have made a careful comparison of this German text with the printed translation |