Wall St.
and the Rise of Hitler by Antony C. Sutton from reformation.org
CHAPTER
FIVE
I.T.T.
Works Both Sides of the War
Thus while I.T.T. Focke-Wolfe planes were bombing Allied ships, and I. T. T. lines were passing information to German submarines, I.T.T. direction .finders were saving other ships from torpedoes. (Anthony
The multi-national giant International Telephone and Telegraph (I.T.T.)1 was founded in 1920 by Virgin Islands-born entrepreneur Sosthenes Behn. During his lifetime Behn was the epitome of the politicized businessman, earning his profits and building the I.T.T. empire through political maneuverings rather than in the competitive market place. In 1923, through political adroitness, Behn acquired the Spanish telephone monopoly, Compania Telefonica de Espana. In 1924 I.T.T., now backed by the J.P. Morgan firm, bought what later became the International Standard Electric group of manufacturing plants around the world.
The parent board of I.T.T. reflected the J.P. Morgan
interests, with Morgan partners Arthur M. Anderson and Russell Leffingwell. The
Establishment law firm of Davis, Polk, Wardwell, Gardiner & Reed was
represented by the two junior partners, Gardiner & Reed.
DIRECTORS
OF I.T.T. IN 1933:
|
|
Directors
|
Affiliation
with other
Wall Street firms: |
Arthur
M. ANDERSON
|
Partner,
J.P. MORGAN and New York Trust Company
|
Hernand
BEHN
|
Bank
of America
|
Sosthenes
BEHN
|
NATIONAL
CITY BANK
|
F.
Wilder BELLAMY
|
Partner
in Dominick & Dominicik
|
John
W. CUTLER
|
GRACE
NATIONAL BANK, Lee Higginson
|
George
H. GARDINER
|
Partner
in Davis, Polk, Wardwell, Gardiner & Reed
|
Allen
G. HOYT
|
NATIONAL
CITY BANK
|
Russell
C. LEFFINGWELL
|
Partner
J.P. MORGAN and CARNEGIE CORP.
|
Bradley
W. PALMER
|
Chairman,
Executive Committee, UNITED FRUIT
|
Lansing
P. REED
|
Partner
in Davis, Polk, Wardwell, Gardiner & Reed
|
The National City Bank (NCB) in the Morgan group was
represented by two directors, Sosthenes Behn and Allen G. Hoyt. In brief,
I.T.T. was a Morgan-controlled company; and we have previously noted the
interest of Morgan-controlled companies in war and revolution abroad and
political maneuvering in the United States.2
In 1930 Behn acquired the German holding company of
Standard Elekrizitäts A.G., controlled by I.T.T. (62.0 percent of the voting
stock), A.E.G. (81.1 percent of the voting stock) and Felton & Guilleaume
(six percent of the voting stock). In this deal Standard acquired two German
manufacturing plants and a majority stock interest in Telefonfabrik Berliner
A.G.I.T.T. also obtained the Standard subsidiaries in Germany, Ferdinand
Schuchardt Berliner Fernsprech-und Telegraphenwerk A,G., as well as Mix &
Genest in Berlin, and Suddeutsche Apparate Fabrik G,m.b.H. in Nuremberg.
It is interesting to note in passing that while
Sosthenes Behn's I.T.T. controlled telephone companies and manufacturing plants
in Germany, the cable traffic between the U.S. and Germany was under the
control of Deutsch-Atlantische Telegraphengesellschaft (the German Atlantic
Cable Company). This firm, together with the Commercial Cable Company and
Western Union Telegraph Company, had a monopoly in transatlantic U.S.-German
cable communications. W.A. Harriman & Company took over a block of 625,000
shares in Deutsch-Atlantische in 1925, and the firm's board of directors
included an unusual array of characters, many of whom we have met elsewhere. It
included, for example, H. F. Albert, the German espionage agent in the United
States in World War I; Franklin D. Roosevelt's former business associate yon
Berenberg-Gossler; and Dr. Cuno, a former German chancellor of the 1923
inflationary era. I.T.T. in the United States was represented on the board by
yon Guilleaume and Max Warburg of the Warburg banking family
There is no record that I.T.T. made direct payments
to Hitler before the Nazi grab for power in 1933. On the other hand, numerous
payments were made to Heinrich Himmler in the late 1930s and in World War II
itself through I.T.T. German subsidiaries. The first meeting between Hitler and
I.T.T. officials — so far as we know — was reported in August 1933,3 when Sosthenes
Behn and I.T.T. German representative Henry Manne met with Hitler in
Berchesgaden. Subsequently, Behn made contact with the Keppler circle (see
Chapter Nine) and, through Keppler's influence, Nazi Baron Kurt von Schröder
became the guardian of I.T.T. interests in Germany. Schröder acted as the
conduit for I.T.T. money funneled to Heinrich Himmler's S.S. organization in
1944, while World War II was in progress,
and the United states was at war with Germany.4
Through Kurt Schröder, Behn and his I.T.T. gained
access to the profitable German armaments industry and bought substantial
interest in German armaments firms, including Focke-Wolfe aircraft. These
armaments operations made handsome profits, which could have been repatriated
to the United States parent company. But they were reinvested in German
rearmament. This reinvestment of profits in German armament firms suggests that
Wall Street claims it was innocent of wrongdoing in German rearmament — and
indeed did not even know of Hitler's intentions — are fraudulent. Specifically,
I.T.T. purchase of a substantial interest in Focke-Wolfe meant, as Anthony Sampson
has pointed out, that I.T.T. was producing German planes used to kill Americans
and their allies — and it made excellent profits out of the enterprise.
In Kurt von Schröder, I.T.T. had access to the very
heart of the Nazi power elite. Who was Schröder? Baron Kurt von Schröder was
born in Hamburg in 1889 into an old, established German banking family. An
earlier member of the Schröder family moved to London, changed his name to
Schroder (without the dierisis) and organized the banking firm of J. Henry Schroder
in London and J. Henry Schroder Banking Corporation in New York. Kurt von
Schröder also became a partner in the private Cologne Bankhaus, J. H. Stein
& Company, founded in the late eighteenth century. Both Schröder and Stein
had been promoters, in company with French financiers, of the 1919 German
separatist movement which attempted to split the rich Rhineland away from
Germany and its troubles. In this escapade prominent Rhineland industrialists
met at J. H. Stein's house on January 7, 1919 and a few months later organized
a meeting, with Stein as chairman, to develop public support for the separatist
movement. The 1919 action failed. The group tried again in 1923 and spearheaded
another movement to break the Rhineland away from Germany to come under the
protection of France. This attempt also failed. Kurt von Schroder then linked
up with Hitler and the early Nazis, and as in the 1919 and 1923 Rhineland
separatist movements, Schröder represented and worked for German industrialists
and armaments manufacturers.
In exchange for financial and industrial support
arranged by von Schroder, he later gained political prestige. Immediately after
the Nazis gained power in 1933 Schroder became the German representative at the
Bank for International Settlements, which Quigley calls the apex of the
international control system, as well as head of the private bankers group
advising the German Reichsbank. Heinrich Himmler appointed Sehroder an S.S.
Senior Group Leader, and in turn Himmler became a prominent member of Keppler's
Circle. (See Chapter Nine.)
In 1938 the Schroder Bank in London became the German
financial agent in Great Britain, represented at financial meetings by its
Managing Director (and a director of the Bank of England), F.C. Tiarks. By
World War II Baron Schrader had in this manner acquired an impressive list of
political and banking connections reflecting a widespread influence; it was
even reported to the U.S. Kilgore Committee that Schrader was influential
enough in 1940 to bring Pierre Laval to power in France. As listed by the
Kilgore Committee, Sehroder's political acquisitions in the early 1940s were as
follows:
SS
Senior Group Leader. Iron Cross of First and Second Class.
|
|
Trade
Group for Wholesale and Foreign Trade – Manager.
|
Swedish
Consul General.
|
|
Akademie
fur Deutsches Recht (Academy of Germany Law) – Member
|
International
Chamber of Commerce – Member of administrative committee.
|
|
City
of Cologne – Councilor.
|
Council
of Reich Post Office – Member of advisory board.
|
|
University
of Cologne – Member of board of trustees.
|
German
Industrial and Commerce Assembly – Presiding member.
|
|
Kaiser
Wilhelm Foundation – Senator.
|
Reich
Board of Economic Affairs Member.
|
|
Advisory
Council of German-Albanians.
|
Deutsche
Reichsbahn – President of administrative board.
|
|
Goods
Clearing Bureau – Member.
|
|
|
Working
Committee of Reich Group for Industry and Commerce – Deputy chairman.5
|
Schröder's banking connections were equally
impressive and his business connections (not listed here) would take up two
pages:
Bank
for International Settlement – Member of the directorate.
|
|
Deutsche
Verkehrs-Kredit-Bank, A.G., Berlin (Controlled by Deutsche Reichsbank) –
Chairman of board of directors.
|
J.H.
Stein & Co, Cologne – Partner (Banque Worms was French correspondent).
|
|
Deutsche
Ueberseeische Bank (Controlled by Deutsche Bank, Berlin) – Director.6
|
Deutsche
Reichsbank, Berlin. Adviser to board of directors.
|
|
|
Wirtschaftsgruppe
Private Bankegewerbe – Leader.
|
|
|
This was the Schröder who, after 1933, represented
Sosthenes Behn of I.T.T. and I.T.T. interests in Nazi Germany. Precisely
because Schröder had these excellent political connections with Hitler and the
Nazi State, Behn appointed Schröder to the boards of all the I.T.T. German
companies: Standard Electrizitatswerke A.G. in Berlin, C. Lorenz A.G. of
Berlin, and Mix & Genest A.G. (in which Standard had a 94-percent
participation).
In the mid-1930s another link was forged between Wall
Street and Schröder, this time through the Rockefellers. In 1936 the
underwriting and general securities business handled by J. Henry Schroder
Banking Corporation in New York was merged into a new investment banking firm —
Schroder, Rockefeller & Company, Inc. at 48 Wall Street. Carlton P. Fuller
of Schroder Banking Corporation became president and Avery Rockefeller, son of
Percy Rockefeller (brother of John D. Rockefeller) became vice president and
director of the new firm. Previously, Avery Rockefeller had been associated
behind the scenes with J. Henry Schroder Banking Corporation; the new firm
brought him out into the open.7
I.T.T. had yet another conduit to Nazi Germany,
through German attorney Dr. Gerhard Westrick. Westrick was one of a select
group of Germans who had conducted espionage in the United States during World
War I. The group included not only Kurt von Schröder and Westrick but also
Franz von Papen — whom we shall meet in company with James Paul Warburg of the
Bank of Manhattan in Chapter Ten — and Dr. Heinrich Albert. Albert, supposedly
German commercial attache in the U.S. in World War I, was actually in charge of
financing yon Papen's espionage program. After World War I Westrick and Albert
formed the law firm of Albert & Westrick which specialized in, and profited
heavily from, the Wall Street reparations loans. The Albert & Westrick firm
handled the German end of the J Henry Schroder Banking loans, while the John
Foster Dulles firm of Sullivan and Cromwell in New York handled the U.S. end of
the Schroder loans.
Just prior to World War II the Albert-Papen-Westrick
espionage operation in the United States began to repeat itself, only this time
around the American authorities were more alert. Westrick came to the U.S. in
1940, supposedly as a commercial attache but in fact as Ribbentrop's personal
representative. A stream of visitors to the influential Westrick in-eluded
prominent directors of U.S. petroleum and industrial firms, and this brought
Westrick to the attention of the FBI.
Westrick at this time became a director of all I.T.T.
operations in Germany, in order to protect I.T.T. interests during the expected
U.S. involvement in the European war.8 Among his
other enterprises Westrick attempted to persuade Henry Ford to cut off supplies
to Britain, and the favored treatment given by the Nazis to Ford interests in
France suggests that Westrick was partially successful in neutralizing U.S. aid
to Britain.
Although Westrick's most important wartime business
connection in the United States was with International Telephone and Telegraph,
he also represented other U.S. firms, including Underwood Elliott Fisher, owner
of the German company Mercedes Buromaschinen A.G.; Eastman Kodak, which had a
Kodak subsidiary in Germany; and the International Milk Corporation, with a
Hamburg subsidiary. Among Westrick's deals (and the one which received the most
publicity) was a contract for Texaco to supply oil to the German Navy, which he
arranged with Torkild Rieber, chairman of the board of Texaco Company.
In 1940 Rieber discussed an oil deal with Hermann
Goering, and Westrick in the United States worked for Texas Oil Company. His
automobile was bought with Texaco funds, and Westrick's driver's license
application gave Texaco as his business address. These activities were
publicized on August 12, 1940. Rieber subsequently resigned from Texaco and
Westrick returned to Germany. Two years later Rieber was chairman of South
Carolina Shipbuilding and Dry Docks, supervising construction of more than $10
million of U.S. Navy ships, and a director of the Guggenheim family's Barber
Asphalt Corporation and Seaboard Oil Company of Ohio.9
In 1939 I.T.T. in the United States controlled
Standard Elektrizitats in Germany, and in turn Standard Elektrizitats
controlled 94 percent of Mix & Genest. On the board of Standard
Elektrizitats was Baron Kurt von Schroder, a Nazi banker at the core of Nazism,
and Emil Heinrich Meyer, brother-in-law of Secretary of State Keppler (founder
of the Keppler Circle) and a director of German General Electric. Schroder and
Meyer were also directors of Mix & Genest and the other I.T.T. subsidiary,
C. Lorenz Company; both of these I.T.T. subsidiaries were monetary contributors
to Himmler's Circle of Friends — i.e., the
Nazi S.S. slush fund. As late as 1944, Mix & Genest contributed 5,000 RM to
Himmler and Lorenz contributed 20,000 RM. In short, during World War II
International Telephone and Telegraph was making cash payments to S.S. leader
Heinrich Himmler.10
These payments enabled I.T.T. to protect its investment in Focke-Wolfe, an
aircraft manufacturing firm producing fighter aircraft used against the United
States.
The interrogation of Kurt von Schröder on November
19, 1945 points up the deliberate nature of the close and profitable
relationship between Colonel Sosthenes Behn of I.T.T., Westrick, Schröder, and
the Nazi war machine during World War II, and that this was a deliberate and
knowledgeable relationship:
Q. You have [told] us in your earlier testimony, a
number of companies in Germany in which the International Telephone and
Telegraph Company or the Standard Electric Company had a participation. Did
either International Telephone and Telegraph Company or the Standard Electric
Company have a participation in any other company in Germany?
A. Yes. The Lorenz Company, shortly before the war,
took a participation of about 25 percent in Focke-Wolfe A.G. in Bremen.
Focke-Wolfe was making airplanes for the German Air Ministry. I believe that
later as Focke-Wolfe expanded and took in more capital that the interest of
Lorenz Company dropped a little below this 25 percent.
Q. So this participation in Focke-Wolfe by Lorenz
Company began after Lorenz Company was nearly 100-percent owned and controlled
by Colonel Behn through the International Telephone and Telegraph Company?
A. Yes.
Q. Did Colonel Behen [sic] approve of this investment by the Lorenz Company in
Focke-Wolfe?
A. I am confident that Colonel Behn approved before
his representatives who were in close touch with him formally approved the
transaction.
Q. What year was it that the Lorenz Company made the
investment which gave it this 25 percent participation in Foeke-Wolfe?
A. I remember it was shortly before the outbreak of
war, that is, shortly before the invasion of Poland. [Ed: 1939]
Q Would Westrick know all about the details of the
participation of Lorenz Company in Foeke-Wolfe, A.G. of Bremen?
A. Yes. Better than I would.
Q. What was the size of the investment that Lorenz
Company made in the Focke-Wolfe A.G., of Bremen, which gave them the initial 25
percent participation?
A. 250,000 thousand RM initially, and this was
substantially increased, but I don't recall the extent of the additional
investments that Lorenz Company made to this Focke-Wolfe A.G. of Bremen.
Q. From 1055, until the outbreak of the European War,
was Colonel Behn in a position to transfer the profits from investments of his
companies in Germany to his companies in the United States?
A. Yes. While it would have required that his
companies take a little less than the full dividends because of the difficulty
of securing foreign exchange, the great bulk of the profits could have been
transferred to the company of Colonel Behn in the United States. However,
Colonel Behn did not elect to do this and at no time did he ask me if I could
accomplish this for him. Instead, he appeared to be perfectly content to have
all the profits of the companies in Germany, which he and his interests
controlled, reinvesting these profits in new buildings and machinery and any
other enterprises engaged in producing armaments.
Another one of these enterprises, Huth and Company,
G.m.b.H., of Berlin, which made radio and radar parts, many of which were used
in equipment going to the German Armed Forces. The Lorenz Company as I recall
it [had] a 50-percent participation in Huth and Company. The Lorenz Company
also had a small subsidiary which acted as a sales agency for the Lorenz Company
to private customers.
Q. You were a member of the board of Lorenz Company's
board of director, from about 1935 up to the present time. During this time,
Lorenz Company and some of the other companies, such as Foeke-Wolfe with which
it had large participation, were engaged in the manufacture of equipment for
armaments and war production. Did you know or did you hear of any protest made
by Colonel Behn or his representatives against these companies engaged in these
activities preparing Germany for war?
A. No.
Q. Are you positive that there was no other occasion
in which you were asked by either Westrick, Mann [sic], Colonel Behn or any
other person connected with the International Telephone and Telegraphic Company
interests in Germany, to intervene on behalf of the company with the German
authorities.
A. Yes. I don't remember any request for my
intervention in any matter of importance to the Lorenz Company or any other
International Telephone and Telegraph interests in Germany.
I have
read the record of this interrogation and I swear that the answers I have given
to the question of Messrs. Adams and Pajus are true to the best of knowledge
and belief. s. /Kurt von Schröder
It was
this story of I.T.T.-Nazi cooperation during World War II and I.T.T.
association with Nazi Kurt von Schröder that I.T.T. wanted to conceal — and
almost was successful in concealing. James Stewart Martin recounts how during
the planning meetings of the Finance Division of the Control Commission he was
assigned to work with Captain Norbert A. Bogdan, who out of uniform was vice
president of the J. Henry Schroder Banking Corporation of New York. Martin
relates that "Captain Bogdan had argued vigorously against investigation
of the Stein Bank on the grounds that it was 'small potatoes.'"11 Shortly
after blocking this maneuver, two permanent members of Bogdan's staff applied
for permission to investigate the Stein Bank — although Cologne had not yet
fallen to U.S. forces. Martin recalls that "The Intelligence Division
blocked that one," and so some information on the Stein-Schröder
Bank-I.T.T. operation survived.
Footnotes:
1For an
excellent review of I.T.T.'s worldwide activities, see Anthony Sampson, The
Sovereign State of I.T.T., (New York: Stein & Day, 1973).
2See also
Sutton, Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution, op. cit.
3New York
Times, August 4, 1933.
4See also
Chapter Nine for documentary proof of these I.T.T. payments to the S.S.
5Elimination
of German Resources, p. 871.
6Ibid.
7New York
Times, July 20, 1936.
8Anthony
Sampson reports a meeting between I.T.T. vice president Kenneth Stockton and
Westrick in which the preservation of I.T.T. properties was planned. See
Anthony Sampson, op. cit., p. 39.
9There is
no substance to reports that Rieber received $20,000 from the Nazis. These
reports were investigated by the F.B.I. with no proof forthcoming. See United
States Senate, Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the. Internal
Security Act, Committee on the Judiciary, Morgenthau Diary (Germany), Volume I,
90th Congress, 1st Session, November 20, 1967, (Washington: U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1967), pp. 316-8. On Rieber see also Appendix to the
Congressional Record, August 20, 1942, p, A 1501-2, Remarks of Hon. John M.
Coffee.
10See pp.
128-130 for further details.
11James
Stewart Martin, op. cit., p. 52.
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