politician and that I was a diplomat, and we were capable of saying, each one of us, that what took place within Germany was a matter for Germany and what took place within America was a matter for Americans. Indeed, I should be teh first to contest that what took place within America concerned other people. Nevertheless it could not be expected that such objectivity would be felt by the mass of our population or by the writers. Here Goebbels broke in and said that he had been a writer himself and he knew that every writer must show himself a better general than the commander-in-chief, a better painter than an artist, a better musician than an orchestra director, and, above all, a better politician than the chief of any country. This weak- ness on the part of the wriiters was understandable and natural. I replied that I had talked at considerable length with the American representatives here and that I felt that by and large they were a serious group of men trying to tell the truth as they saw it, but that after all the Minister must not forget that they were seeing it trough American eyes and they were judging it from an American background. Dr. Goebbels agreed with my estimate of the American correspondents and said that in respect to them he would never take stringent action against an American correspondent without talking over first with me what he intended to do and getting my views on the subject. I thanked him for this declaration |