Chapter 13
APPENDIX A
Program of the
National
Socialist German Workers Party
Socialist German Workers Party
Note: This program is important because it demonstrates that the nature of Naziism was known publicly as early as 1920.
THE PROGRAM
The program of the German Workers'
Party is limited as to period. The leaders have no intention, once the aims
announced in it have been achieved, of setting up fresh ones, merely in order
to increase the discontent of the masses artificially, and so ensure the
continued existence of the Party.
1. We demand the union of all
Germans to form a Great Germany on the basis of the right of the
self-determination enjoyed by nations.
2. We demand equality of rights for
the German People in its dealings with other nations, and abolition of the
Peace Treaties of Versailles and St. Germain.
3. We demand land and territory
(colonies) for the nourishment of our people and for settling our superfluous
population.
4. None but members of the nation
may be citizens of the State. None but those of German blood, whatever their
creed, may be members of the nation. No Jew, therefore, may be a member of the
nation.
5. Any one who is not a citizen of
the State may live in Germany only as a guest and must be regarded as being
subject to foreign laws.
6. The right of voting on the
State's government and legislation is to be enjoyed by the citizen of the State
alone. We demand therefore that all official appointments, of whatever kind,
whether in the Reich, in the country, or in the smaller localities, shall be
granted to citizens of the State alone.
We oppose the corrupting custom of
Parliament of filling posts merely with a view to party considerations, and
without reference to character or capability.
7. We demand that the State shall
make it its first duty to promote the industry and livelihood of citizens of
the State. If it is not possible to nourish the entire population of the State,
foreign nationals (non-citizens of the State) must be excluded from the Reich.
8. All non-German immigration must
be prevented. We demand that all non-Germans, who entered Germany subsequent to
August 2nd, 1914, shall be required forthwith to depart from the Reich.
9. All citizens of the State shall
be equal as regards rights and duties.
10. It must be the first duty of
each citizen of the State to work with his mind or with his body. The
activities of the individual may not clash with the interests of the whole, but
must proceed within the frame of the community and be for the general good.
We demand therefore:
11, Abolition of incomes unearned
by work.
ABOLITION OF THE THRALDOM OF INTEREST
12. In view of the enormous
sacrifice of life and property demanded of a nation by every war, personal
enrichment due to a war must be regarded as a crime against the nation. We
demand therefore ruthless confiscation of all war gains,
13. We demand nationalisation of
all businesses which have been up to the present formed into companies
(Trusts).
14. We demand that the profits from
wholesale trade shall be shared out.
15. We demand extensive development
of provision for old age.
16. We demand creation and
maintenance of a healthy middle class, immediate communalisation of wholesale
business premises, and their lease at a cheap rate to small traders, and that
extreme consideration shall be shown to all small purveyors to the State,
district authorities and smaller localities.
17. We demand land-reform suitable
to our national requirements, passing of a law for confiscation without
compensation of land for communal purposes; abolition of interest on land
loans, and prevention of all speculation in land.
18. We demand ruthless prosecution
of those whose activities are injurious to the common interest. Sordid
criminals against the nation, usurers, profiteers, etc. must be punished with
death, whatever their creed or race.
19. We demand that the Roman Law,
which serves the materialistic world order, shall be replaced by a legal system
for all Germany.
20. With the aim of opening to
every capable and industrious German the possibility of higher education and of
thus obtaining advancement, the State must consider a thorough re-construction
of our national system of education. The curriculum of all educational
establishments must be brought into line with the requirements of practical
life. Comprehension of the State idea (State sociology) must be the school
objective, beginning with the first dawn of intelligence in the pupil. We
demand development of the gifted children of poor parents, whatever their class
or occupation, at the expense of the State.
21. The State must see to raising
the standard of health in the nation by protecting mothers and infants,
prohibiting child labour, increasing bodily efficiency by obligatory gymnastics
and sports laid down by law, and by extensive support of clubs engaged in the
bodily development of the young.
22. We demand abolition of a paid
army and formation of a national army.
23. We demand legal warfare against
conscious political lying and its dissemination in the Press. In order to
facilitate creation of a German national Press we demand:
(a) that all editors of newspapers
and their assistants, employing the German language, must be members of the
nation;
(b) that special permission from
the State shall be necessary before non-German newspapers may appear. These are
not necessarily printed in the German language;
(c) that non-Germans shall be
prohibited by law from participating financially in or influencing German
newspapers, and that the penalty for contravention of the law shall be
suppression of any such newspaper, and immediate deportation of the non-German
concerned in it.
It must be forbidden to publish
papers which do not conduce to the national welfare. We demand legal
prosecution of all tendencies in art and literature of a kind likely to
disintegrate our life as a nation, and the suppression of institutions which
militate against the requirements above-mentioned.
24. We demand liberty for all
religious denominations in the State, so far as they are not a danger to it and
do not militate against the moral feelings of the German race.
The Party, as such, stands for
positive Christianity, but does not bind itself in the matter of creed to any
particular confession. It combats the Jewish-materialist spirit within us and
without us, and is convinced that our nation can only achieve permanent health
from within on the principle:
THE COMMON INTEREST BEFORE SELF
25. That all the foregoing may be
realised we demand the creation of a strong central power of the State.
Unquestioned authority of the politically centralised Parliament over the
entire Reich and its organisation; and formation of Chambers for classes and
occupations for the purpose of carrying out the general laws promulgated by the
Reich in the various States of the confederation.
The leaders of the Party swear to
go straight forward — if necessary to sacrifice their lives — in securing
fulfillment of the foregoing Points.
Munich, February 24th, 1920.
Source:
Official English
translation by E. Dugdale, reprinted from Kurt G, W. Ludecke, I Knew Hitler (New York: Charles
Scribner's Sons, 1937),
APPENDIX B
Affidavit of Hjalmar Schacht
I, Dr. Hjalmar Schacht, after having been warned that I will be liable to punishment for making false statements, state herewith under oath, of my own free will and without coercion, the following:
The
amounts contributed by the participants in the meeting of 20 February 1933 at
Goering's house were paid by them to the bankers. Delbruck, Schickler &
Co., Berlin, to the credit of an account "Nationale Treuhand" (which
may be translated as National Trusteeship). It was arranged that I was entitled
to dispose of this account, which I administered as a trustee, and that in case
of my death, or that in case the trusteeship should be terminated in any other
way, Rudolf Hess should be entitled to dispose of the account.
I
disposed of the amounts of this account by writing out checks to Mr. Hess. I do
not know what Mr. Hess actually did with the money.
On
4 April 1933, I closed the account with Delbruck, Schickler & Co. and had
the balance transferred to the "Account Ic" with the Reichsbank which
read in my name. Later on I was ordered directly by Hitler, who was authorized
by the assembly of 20 February 1933 to dispose of the amounts collected, or
through Hess, his deputy, to pay the balance of about 600,000 marks to Ribbentrop.
I
have carefully read this affidavit (one page) and have signed it. I have made
the necessary corrections in my own handwriting and initialed each correction
in the margin of the page. I declare herewith under oath that I have stated the
full truth to the best of my knowledge and belief.
(Signed) Dr.
Hjalmar Schacht
12
August 1947
In
a subsequent affidavit of 18 August 1947 (N1-9764, Pros. Ex 54), Schacht
declared the following with regard to the above interrogation: "I made all
of the statements appearing in this interrogation to Clifford Hyanning, a
financial investigator of the American Forces of my own free will and without
coercion. I have reread this interrogation today and can state that all of the
facts contained therein are true to my best knowledge and belief. I declare
herewith under oath and I have stated the full truth to the best of my
knowledge and belief."
Source: Copy of Document
Prosecution Exhibit 55. Trials of War
Criminals before the Nuremburg Military Tribunals under Control Council Law No.
10, Nuremburg, October 1946-April 1949, Volume VII, I.G. Farben,
(Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1952).
APPENDIX C
Entries in the "National Trusteeship" Account
Found
in the Files of the Delbruck, Schickler Co. Bank
in the Files of the Delbruck, Schickler Co. Bank
NATIONAL TRUSTEESHIP
REICHSBANK PRESIDENT DR. HJALMAR SCHACHT,
BERLIN-ZEHLENDORF |
||||
Feb. 23
|
Debibk (Deutsche Bank Diskonto-Gesellschaft)
Verein fuer die bergbaulichen Interessen, Essen
|
|
Feb. 23
|
200,000.00
|
24
|
Transfer to account Rudolf Hess, at present
in Berlin
|
100,000.00
|
24
|
|
24
|
Karl Herrmann
Automobile Exhibition, Berlin |
|
25
25 |
150,000.00
100,000.00 |
25
|
Director A. Steinke
|
|
27
|
200,000.00
|
25
|
Demag A.G., Duisberg
|
|
27
|
50,000.00
|
27
|
Telefunken Gesellschaft ruer draht lose
Telegraphie Berlin
|
|
28
|
85,000.00
|
|
Osram G.m.b.H., Berlin
|
|
28
|
40,000.00
|
27
|
Bayerische Hypotheken-und Wech selbank,
branch office Munich, Kauflingerstr. In favor of Verlag Franz Eher Nachf,
Munich
|
100,000.00
|
28
|
|
27
|
Transfer to account Rudolf Hess, Berlin
|
100,000.00
|
27
|
|
28
|
I.G. Farbenindustrie A.G. Frankfurt/M
|
|
Mar.
1
|
400,000.00
|
28
|
Telegraph expenses for transfer to Munich
|
8.00
|
Feb.
28
|
|
Mar.
1
|
Your Payment
|
|
Mar.
2
|
125,000.00
|
2
|
Telegr. transfer to Bayerische Hypotheken-und
Wechselbank, Munich branch office, Bayerstr.
|
|
|
|
|
for account Josef Jung
|
400,000.00
|
2
|
|
|
Telegr. transfer expenses
|
23.00
|
2
|
|
|
Account transfer Rudolf Hess
|
300,000.00
|
|
|
2
|
Reimbursement from Director Karl Lange,
Berlin
|
|
3
|
30,000.00
|
3
|
Reimbursement from Dir. Karl Lange,
'Maschinen-industrie' Account
|
|
4
|
20,000.00
|
|
Reimbursement from Verein ruer die
bergbaulichen Interessen, Essen
|
|
4
|
100,000.00
|
|
Reimbursement from Karl Herrmann, Berlin,
Dessauerstr. 28/9
|
|
4
|
150,000.00
|
|
Reimbursement from Allgemeine
Elektrizitaetsgesellschaft, Berlin
|
|
4
|
60,000.00
|
7
|
Reimbursement from General-direktor Dr. F.
Springorum, Dortmund
|
|
8
|
36,000.00
|
8
|
Reichsbank transfer: Bayerische
Hypotheken-und Wechselbank,
|
|
|
|
|
branch office Kauffingerstr.
|
100,000.00
|
8
|
|
|
|
1,100,031.00
|
|
1,696,000.00
|
|
|
1,100,031.00
|
Mar.
|
1,696,000.00
|
Mar.
8
|
Bayerische Hypotheken-und Wechselbank,
Munich, branch office Bayerstr.
|
100,000.00
|
8
|
|
|
Transfer to account Rudolf Hess
|
250,000.00
|
7
|
|
10
|
Accumulatoren-Fabrik A.G. Berlin
|
|
11
|
25,000.00
|
13
|
Verein f.d. bergbaulichen Interessen, Essen
|
|
14
|
300,000.00
|
14
|
Reimbursement Rudolf Hess
|
200,000.00
|
14
|
|
29
|
Reimbursement Rudolf Hess
|
200,000.00
|
29
|
|
April
4
|
Commerz-und Privatbank Dep. Kasse N.
Berlin W.9 Potsdamerstr. 1 f. Special
|
|
|
|
|
Account S 29
|
99,000.00
|
Apr.
4
|
|
5
|
Interests according to list 1
|
|
|
|
|
percent
|
|
5
|
404.50
|
|
Phone bills
|
1.00
|
5
|
|
|
Postage
|
2.50
|
5
|
|
|
Balance
|
72,370.00
|
5
|
|
|
Balance carried over
|
2,021,404.50
|
|
2,021,404.50
|
|
|
|
Apr.
5
|
72,370.00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
APPENDIX D
Letter from U.S. War
Department to Ethyl Corporation
December 15, 1934
Exhibit No, 144
(Handwritten) Mr,
Webb sent copies for other Directors
Copy to: Mr.
Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., General Motors Corp,, New York City, Mr. Donaldson Brown,
General Motors Corp., New York City.
December 15, 1934.
Mr. E. W. Webb,
President Ethyl
Gasoline Corporation, 185 E, 42nd Street, New York City. Dear Mr. Webb: I
learned through our Organic Chemicals Division today that the Ethyl Gasoline
Corporation has in mind forming a German company with the I.G. to manufacture
Ethyl lead in that country.
I have just had
two weeks in Washington, no inconsiderable part of which was devoted to
criticising the interchanging with foreign companies of chemical knowledge
which might have a military value. Such giving of information by an industrial
company might have the gravest repercussions on it. The Ethyl Gasoline
Corporation would be no exception, in fact, would probably be singled out for
special attack because of the ownership of its stock.
It should seem. on
the face of it, that the quantity of Ethyl lead used for commercial purposes in
Germany would be too small to go after. It has been claimed that Germany is
secretly arming. Ethyl lead would doubtless be a valuable aid to military
aeroplanes.
I am writing you
this to say that in my opinion under no conditions should you or the Board of
Directors of the Ethyl Gasoline Corporation disclose any secrets or 'know how'
in connection with the manufacture of tetraethyl lead to Germany.
I am informed that
you will be advised through the Dyestuffs Division of the necessity of disclosing
the information which you have received from Germany to appropriate War
Department officials.
Yours very truly,
Source: United States Senate, Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Military Affairs, Scientific and Technical Mobilization, 78th Congress, Second Session, Part 16, (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1944), p. 939.
APPENDIX E
Extract from
Morgenthau Diary (Germany)
Regarding Sosthenes Behn of I.T.T.
Regarding Sosthenes Behn of I.T.T.
March
16, 1945
11:30 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
GROUP MEETING
Bretton Woods — I.T.&T. — Reparations
Bretton Woods — I.T.&T. — Reparations
Present:
Mr. White
Mr. Fussell
Mr. Feltus
Mr. Coe
Mr. DuBois
Mrs. Klotz
Mr. White
Mr. Fussell
Mr. Feltus
Mr. Coe
Mr. DuBois
Mrs. Klotz
H.M.,
Jr.: Frank, can
you boil down this business on
I.T.&T.?
Mr.
Coe: Yes, sir.
I.T. &T. by the way did transfer or did get $15 million yesterday or a few
days ago of their debts in dollars paid to them by the Spanish Government and
that they are allowed to do under our general license, so that's all right.
However, it is in part in their representation to us, part of a deal for the
sale of the company in Spain, so they are trying thereby to force our hand.
Now, the proposition which they have had up over some years in different forms
now takes this form. They can get their receivables paid off in dollars, which
they say they have not been able to do hitherto — either $15 million now and
$10 million or $11 million later. They will sell the company to Spain and take
in return $30 million worth of bonds — Spanish Government bonds — which are to
be amortized over a number of years and roughly at the rate of $2 million per annum,
and they are to receive 90% of those exports in order to amortize bonds faster,
if they are to export it to the United States.
H.
M. Jr.: Like the
match dealer I mentioned in my speech.
Mr.
Coe: That's right.
The Spanish Government. They are willing, they say — they are able to get from
the Spanish Government assurances, that these will not be, that the shares
which the Spanish Government intends to resell will not go to anybody on the
black list, and so forth. In some negotiations we have had with them over the
last few weeks, they have been willing to come further on that. Our hesitation
on the matter relates to two things; First, that you can't trust Franco, and
that if they are able — if Franco is able to sell $50 million worth of shares
Of this company in Spain in the next period of time, he may very well sell it
to pro-German interests. It seems doubtful that he would be able to dispose of
it to the Spaniards, so that is the first thing. The second thing we can't
document too well, but I think it is more pronounced in my mind than in the
minds of the Foreign Funds and legal people. I don't think we can really trust
Behn either.
Mr.
White: I'm sure
you can't.
Mr.
Coe: We have
records here of interviews, going far back, that some of your men had with Behn
— Klaus was one — in which Behn said that he had had conversations with Goering
with the proposition that Goering was to hold I.T. &T.'s property in
Germany, and as you recall, I.T. &T. here did try to purchase General
Aniline and make it an American company thereby and that was part of the deal
which Behn told State and our lawyers very frankly he had discussed. He thought
it was perfectly all right protecting property: That was before we entered the
war,
H.
M., Jr.: I don't
remember that,
Mr.
Coe: The man in
charge of their properties now is Westrick who you recall came over here and
was mixed up with Texaco. They tried in every way to cook up deals earlier to
escape. They are tied up with top German group and etc. On the other hand,
Colonel Behn has been used several times as an emissary by the State
Department, and I believe he is personally on very good terms with Stettinius.
We have heard from State on this letter saying they have no objections. We
proposed to you earlier — the letter which I sent in to you suggesting that you
ask State, if in view of our safe haven objectives, they still said yes. I am
confident from talking with them on the phone the last day or two, they will
write back and say yes, they still think it is a good deal.
H.
M., Jr.: This is
the position I am in. As you gentlemen know I am overextended now and I can't
go into this thing personally, and I think that we are just going to have to
throw the thing in the lap of the State Department, and if they want to clear
it, all right. I just haven't got the time or the energy to fight them on that
basis.
Mr.
Coe: Then we ought
to license it now.
Mr.
White: First you
ought to get a letter. I agree with the Secretary on this point of view that
this fellow Behn is not to be trusted around the corner. There is something
about this deal that looks suspicious and has been for the last couple of years
we have been dealing with him. However, it is one thing to believe that and
another thing to defend that before the pressure that will be brought in here
that they are trying to deprive this company of the business deal, but I think
that what we might do is get the State Department on record that in view of a
safe haven project they don't think that there is any danger that any of these
assets — I would cite some of them, spell the letter out. Get them down on
record and even make them a little frightened and hold out or they will at
least have had the record and you will have called their attention to these
dangers. This fellow Behn hates our guts anyway. We have been standing between
him and deals for 4 years, at least.
H.
M., Jr.: Follow
what White said. Something along that line. "Dear Mr, Stettinius; I am
bothered about these things due to the following facts, and I would like you to
advise me whether we should or should not .... "
Mr.
White: "In
view of the danger that German assets may be cloaked here, the future —"
and let him come back and say, "No," and we'll watch him.
Mr.
Coe: We said we
wanted to give Acheson something Monday.
H.
M., Jr.: And if
you get that ready for me by tomorrow morning, I'll sign it. Mr. Coe: O.K.
Source: United States Senate, Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act. Committee on the Judiciary, Morgenthau Diarty (Germany), Volume 1, 90th Congress, 1st Session, November 20, 1967, (Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1967), p. 320 of Book 828. (Page 976 of U,S. Senate print.)
Note:
"Mr. White"
is Harry Dexter White. "Dr. Dubois" is Josiah E. Dubois, Jr., author
of the book, Generals in Grey Suits (London:
The Bodley Head, 1953). "H.M., Jr." is Henry Morgenthau, Jr.,
Secretary of the Treasury.
This memorandum is important
because it accuses Sosthenes Behn of attempting to make behind-the-scenes deals
in Nazi Germany "for 4 years, at least" — i.e. while the rest of the U.S. was at war, Behn and his friends
were still doing business as usual with Germany. This memorandum supports the
evidence presented in Chapters Five and Nine concerning the influence of I.T.T.
in the Himmler inner circle and adds Herman Goering to the list of I T T.
contacts.
Selected Bibliography
Allen, Gary. None Dare Call It Conspiracy. Seal Beach, California: Concord
Press, 1971.
Ambruster, Howard Watson. Treason's Peace. New York: The
Beechhurst Press, 1947,
Angebert, Michel. The Occult and the Third Reich. New York: The Macmillan Company,
1974.
Archer, Jules. The Plot to Seize the White House. New York: Hawthorn Books, 1973.
Baker, Philip Noel. Hawkers of Death. The Labour Party,
England, 1934.
Barnes, Harry Elmer. Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace.
Caldwell, Idaho: Caxton Printers, 1953.
Bennett, Edward W. Germany and the Diplomacy of the Financial Crisis, 1931. Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1962.
Der
Farben-Konzern 1928. Hoppenstedt, Berlin, 1928.
Dimitrov, George, The Reichstag Fire Trial. London: The Bodley Head, 1934.
Dodd, William E. Jr., and Dodd, Martha.
Ambassador Dodd's Diary, 1933-1938.
New York: Harcourt Brace and Company, 1941.
Domhoff, G. William. The Higher Circles: The Governing Class in
America. New York: Vintage, 1970.
Dubois, Josiah E., Jr. Generals in Grey Suits. London: The
Bodley Head, 1953.
Engelbrecht, H. C. Merchants of Death. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1934.
Engler, Robert. The Politics of Oil. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1961.
Epstein, Julius. Operation Keelhaul. Old Greenwich: Devin Adair,
1973. Farago, Ladislas. The Game of the Foxes. New York: Bantam,
1973.
Flynn, John T. As We Go Marching. New York: Doubleday, Doran and Co., Inc., 1944.
Guerin, Daniel. Fascisme et grand capital. Paris: Francois Maspero, 1965.
Hanfstaengl, Ernst. Unheard Witness. New York: J.
B.Lippincott, 1957.
Hargrave, John. Montagu Norman. New York: The Greystone Press, n.d..
Harris, C.R.S. Germany's Foreign Indebtedness. London: Oxford University Press,
1935.
Helfferich, Dr. Karl. Germany's Economic Progress and National
Wealth, 1888-1913. New York Germanistic Society of America, 1914.
Hexner, Ervin. International Cartels, Chapel Hill: The University of North
Carolina Press, 1945.
Howard, Colonel Graeme K. America and a New World Order, New York:
Scribners, 1940.
Kolko, Gabriel. "American Business and Germany, 1930-1941," The Western
Political Quarterly, Volume XV, 1962.
Kuczynski, Robert R. Bankers' Profits
from German Loans. Washington, D.C. The Brookings Institution, 1932.
Leonard, Jonathan. The Tragedy of Henry Ford. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1932.
Ludecke, Kurt G. W. I Knew Hitler. New York; Charles
Scribner's Sons, 1937.
Magers, Helmut. Ein Revolutionar Aus Common Sense. Leipzig: R. Kittler Verlag,
1934.
Martin, James J. Revisionist
Viewpoints, Colorado: Ralph Mules; 1971.
Martin, James Stewart. All Honorable Men. Boston: Little Brown
and Company, 1950.
Muhlen, Norbert. Schacht: Hitler's Magician. New York Longmans, Green and Co., 1939.
Nixon, Edgar B. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Foreign Affairs. Cambridge: Belknap
Press, 1969.
Oil and Petroleum Yearbook, 1938.
Oil and Petroleum Yearbook, 1938.
Papen, Franz von. Memoirs. New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1953.
Peterson, Edward Norman. Hjalmar Schacht. Boston: The Christopher
Publishing House, 1954.
Phelps, Reginald H. "Before Hitler Came": Thule Society and Germanen Orden, in the
Journal of Modern History, September,
1963.
Quigley, Carroll, Tragedy and Hope. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1966.
Ravenscroft, Trevor. The Spear of Destiny. New York: G.P.
Putnam's Sons, 1973.
Rathenau, Walter. In Days to Come. London: Allen & Unwin, n.d.
Roberts, Glyn. The Most Powerful Man in the World. New York: Covici, Friede, 1938.
Roberts, Glyn. The Most Powerful Man in the World. New York: Covici, Friede, 1938.
Sampson, Anthony. The Sovereign State of I.T.T. New York: Stein & Day, 1973.
Schacht, Hjalmar. Confessions of "The Old Wizard." Boxton: Houghton
Mifflin, 1956.
Schloss, Henry H. The Bank for International Settlements. Amsterdam; North Holland
Publishing Company, 1958.
Seldes, George. Iron, Blood and Profits. New York and London: Harper & Brothers
Publishers, 1934.
Simpson, Colin. Lusitania. London: Longman, 1972.
Smoot, Dan. The Invisible Government. Boston: Western Islands, 1962.
Strasser, Otto. Hitler and I. London: Jonathan Cape, n.d.
Sonderegger, Rene. Spanischer Sommer. Affoltern, Switzerland: Aehren Verlag, 1948.
Stocking, George W. and Watkins, Myron
W. Cartels in Action. New York: The
Twentieth Century Fund, 1946.
Sutton, Antony C. National Suicide: Military Aid to the Soviet Union. New York:
Arlington House Publishers, 1973..
Sutton, Antony C. Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution. New York: Arlington House
Publishers, 1974.
Sutton, Antony C. Wall Street and FDR. New York: Arlington House Publishers, 1975.
Sutton, Antony C. Western Technology and Soviet Economic Development, 1917-1930.
Stanford, California: Hoover Institution Press, 1968.
Sutton, Antony C. Western Technology and Soviet Economic Development, 1930-1945.
Stanford, California: Hoover Institution Press, 1971.
Sutton, Antony C. Western Technology and Soviet Economic Development, 1945-1965.
Stanford, California: Hoover Institution Press, 1973.
Sward, Keith. The Legend of Henry Ford. New York: Rinehart & Co., 1948.
Thyssen, Fritz. I Paid Hitler. New York: Farrar & Rinehart, Inc., n.d.
"Trials of War Criminals Before
the Nuremburg Military Tribunals Under Control Council Law No. 10," Volume
VIII, I.G. Farben case, Nuremburg, October 1946-April 1949. Washington:
Government Printing Office, 1953.
United States Army Air Force, Aiming
point report No. I.E.2 of May 29, 1943.
United States Senate, Hearings before
the Committee on Finance. Sale of Foreign
Bonds or Securities in the United States. 72nd Congress, 1st Session, S.
Res. 19, Part 1, December 18, 19, and 21, 1931. Washington: Government Printing
Office, 1931.
United States Senate, Hearings before a
Subcommittee of the Committee on Military Affairs. Scientific and Technical Mobilization. 78th Congress, 2nd Session,
S. Res. 107, Part 16, August 29 and September 7, 8, 12, and 13, 1944. Washington:
Government Printing Office, 1944.
United States Congress. House of
Representatives. Special Committee on
Un-American Activities and Investigation of Certain Other Propaganda Activities.
73rd Congress, 2nd Session, Hearings No. 73-DC-4. Washington: Government
Printing Office, 1934.
United States Congress. House of
Representatives. Special Committee on Un-American Activities (1934). Investigation of Nazi and other Propaganda
Activities. 74th Congress, 1st Session, Report No. 153. Washington:
Government Printing Office, 1934.
United States Congress. Senate.
Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Military Affairs. Elimination of German Resources for War.
Report pursuant to S. Res. 107 and 146, July 2, 1945, Part 7. 78th Congress and
79th Congress. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1945.
United States Congress. Senate.
Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Military Affairs. Scientific and Technical Mobilization.
78th Congress, 1st session, S. 702, Part 16, Washington: Government Printing
Office, 1944.
United States Group Control Council
(Germany), Office of the Director of Intelligence, Field Information Agency.
Technical Intelligence Report No. EF/ME/1. September 4, 1945.
United States Senate Subcommittee to
Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act, Committee on the
judiciary. Morgenthau Diary (Germany).
Volume 1, 90th Congress, 1st Session, November 20, 1967. Washington: U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1967.
United States State Department Decimal
File.
United States Strategic Bombing Survey.
AEG-Ostlandwerke GmbH, by Whitworth
Ferguson. 31 May 1945.
United States Strategic Bombing Survey.
German Electrical Equipment Industry
Report. Equipment Division, January 1947.
United States Strategic Bombing Survey.
Plant Report of A.E.G. (Allgemeine
Elektrizitats Gesellschaft). Nuremburg, Germany: June 1945.
Zimmerman, Werner. Liebet Eure Feinde. Frankhauser Verlag: ThielleNeuchatel, 1948.
No comments:
Post a Comment