-4 - The converse of this is that agreements by the generals, even in the Control Council, would be subject to interference by the Governments. It is true, the generals could ask for governmental agreement, but our experience in dealing with the Russians has shown that it is easier to get agreement prior to occupation than after occupation. If the position stated by the British and Russian Governments in the European Advisory Commission is in any way a criterion of the position of their respective Governments, they mean to force the central German government agencies, after stripping them of Nazi political leadership, to carry out their will in Germany. The question of an orderly decentralization of political Germany can come later. Both the Russian and British concept is to prevent disorder and disease, for the protection of Allied occupying forces, by making full use of German administrative functionaries. This has nothing to do with a "hard" or "soft" policy that may be adopted toward Germany. The suggestion in the overall Civil Affairs Directive (revised JCS 1067), which has just been sent to me, runs counter to this concept, and, as far as I can understand it, sets up an economic control within each of the three or four separate military zones with-out taking account of the existing nationalized transport system and prior provision for common utilization of the food surpluses, most of which will be in the Russian zone, and of coal, all of which will be in the British and Russian zones. These are only examples of problems that must be faced There are two other considerations that I believe should not be lost sight of. One, that contradictory basic regulations in the separate zones are likely to lead to serious friction between the allied forces of occupation and would encourage the Germans to try to play one ally against another. Two, since we have insisted in the Surrender Instrument that the signatory Powers are "acting in the interests of the United Nations", we have taken on a trustee obligation to other European United Nations which we will fail to discharge |