-3- #10115, November 18, 3 p.m., from London a peace of vengeance and no sympathy for the general destruction of all German industries. Two. Economists and industrial technicians in the Iron and Steel Control of the Ministry of Supply expressed the view that adequate control of strategic materials needed in the metallurgical industries would be an effective check on renewed German aggression. They thought that thorough control of chrome, tungaten, molybdenum, manganese and nickel would probably suffice. However, they stressed the difficulties of such control and the necessity of thoroughgoing measures. They thought that a complete international control would be essential. By this they meant that an international body would have to make a complete check on world production of the minerals in question and on the manufacture of products which inorporate them together with trade in both raw materials and manufactured products so that all raw material produced anywhere in the world is accounted for. German stocks should not be allowed to rise above specified low working levels. They particularly stressed that neither control of imports at the frontier by the ACC or other body nor visits |