OFFICE OF STRATEGIC SERVICES OFFICIAL DISPATCH FROM: Berne TO: DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF STRATEGIC SERVICES Ref. No. 250 RECIEVED by the Red Army must be an orgy of blood. He trembles at the idea of what the foreign workers and prisoners of war would do, when disorder comes, and these millions of aliens are let lose to plunder and ravage the cities and land. He feels that the Allies will disarm Germany, take away its riches, and give up its frontiers to bitter enemies. The soldiers at the front, the workers in the ammunition factories, and the inhabitants of the bombed cities are holding out because they feel that they have no choice, and their existence is at stake. The Nazis are profitting by this state of mind for their own purposes. They are spurring on national energy by painting the colors of defeat in the blackest colors. Berlin complains of the lack of effect of German propaganda in foreign countries, ehich is attributed to the fact that others are incapable of understanding the psychology of the Germans. It is also pointed out that foreign countries fail to realize that the same propaganda satisfies the needs of the people within Germany to an astonishing degree. Mistakes have been made, of course, and even the cleverest propaganda cannot cover up the facts, but, again they still listen to him. Germany's enemies have so far materially facilitated his task by prosecuting the war in a non-political manner in certain respects. Because they wish to forestall any legend of a stab in the back such as was spread after the last war, they deliberately refrain from any promises which might invite the the German people to give in. They do not even announce any concrete peace plan. This may have its advantages, but the price they pay is very high. It took a catastrophe last Summer to bring the internal opposition into the open. Could that opposition offer the German people a better peace than the Nazis? We think not. So far, the Allies have not offered the opposition any serious encouragement. On the contrary, they have again and again welded together the people and the Nazis by statements published, either out of indifference or with a purpose. To take a recent example, the Morgenthau plan gave Dr. Goebbels the best possible chance. He was able to prove to his countrymen, in black and white, that the enemy planned the enslavement of Germany. Goebbels handled the Morgenthau statement in his own way. The press described it as the official policy of the British and Americans, but said nothing about the criticism which the plan aroused in England or America. In general, the German propaganda deliberately exaggerated all statements of this sort. Of course, intelligent newspaper readers were soon aware of this trick, but that did not calm their aaprehensions. The conviction that Germany had nothing to expect from defeat but oppresion and exploitation still prevails, and that accounts for the fact that the Germans continue to fight. It is not a question of a regime, but of the homeland itself, and to save that, every German is bound to obey the call, whether he be Nazi or member of the opposition. |