September 29, 1944 MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY OF STATE I do not think that in the present stage any good purpose would be served by having the State Department or any other department sound out the British and Russian views on the treatment of German industry. Most certainly it should not be taken up with the European Advisory Commission which, in a case like this, is on a tertiary and not even a secondary level. The real nub of the situation is to keep Britain from going into complete bankruptcy at the end of the war. Somebody has been talking not only out of turn to the papers or on facts which are not fundamentally true. No one wants to make Germany a wholly agricultural nation again, and yet somebody down the line has handed this out to the press. I wish we could catch and chastise him. You know that before the war Germany was not only building up war manufacture, but was also building up enough of a foreign trade to finance re-arming sufficiently and still maintain enough international credit to keep out of international bankruptcy. I just can not go along with the idea of seeing the British empire collapse financially, and Germany at the same time bullding up a potential re-armament machine to make another war possible in twenty years. Mere inspection of plants will not prevent that. |