THE CODEBREAKERS - EXCERPT

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP84-00499R000500080007-7
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 26, 2004
Sequence Number: 
7
Case Number: 
Content Type: 
MISC
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Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP84-00499R000500080007-7 ,re the Il. .,,', i laas ,n rite scone "resLnt, the 1Iuc1:. active il) uong time; wailers of the the German capitalist member of the board of ycstuffs Corporation, an 931 to 1939. After the can Standard Oil trust ustrie under which the from the production of, and in return willingly c gasoline which, it was ring up for war needs. lean capitalist monopolies cations not only of com- existed, on the very eve scnte< t )c , c iro< er interests in London, Co ogne and IJam ' war, between the Federation of British Industries and. (,. , r,:ut Rcichs i ndustric group. 1n 1939, representatives of 0- Monopolies issued a joint statement in Dusseldorf which saiu in part that the purpose of the agreement was "to secure the fullest p;,s,ible cooperation between the industrial systems of their re.spec- tive countries." And this took place at a time when Hitler Ger- ntany had swallowed Czechoslovakia l No wonder that the Lon- don magazine Economist wrote in this connection : "Is there not ,omething in tltc Dusseldorf air that makes reasonable men lose their seltses?"i The well known Schroder Bank in which a leading part: was played by the German steel trust Vcrcinigte Stahlwcrkc, which was organized by Stinnes, Thyssen and other captains of Ruh; industry and had its headquarters in New York and London, furnishes a typical example of the close interweaving of American ;,nd German as well as British capital. Allen Dulles director of plays at lead in role in the affairs of this bank. I he wel-known Su Ivan & Cromwell law firm headed by John Foster Dulles, now Mr. Marshall's chief adviser and closely connected with Rockefeller's world oil trust, Standard Oil, as well as with the Chase National Bank, the most powerful bank in America which made enormous investments in German industry, played the leading role in the New York headquarters of the Schroder Bank. In his hook which appeared in New York in 1947, Richard Sasuly stresses the fact that no sooner had inflation been checked in Germany in the post-Versailles period and the reichsmark had gained strength than a torrent of foreign loans rushed into Germany. Between 1924 and 1930 Germany's foreign debt increased by more than thirty billion reichsmarks. With the help of foreign, chiefly American, capital, German industry, especially the Vereinigte Stahlwcrkc (a German firm), was extensively reconstructed and modernized. Some loans were granted directly ;o 'ompanies 'which played a leading part in rearmament.2 'Corwin D. Edwards, Economic and Political Aspects of International Cartels, 1944. 'Richard Sasuly, 1. G. Farben, Boni and' Gaer, New York, 1947, p. 80. Approved For Release 2004/12/22: CIA-RDP84-00499R000500080007-7 Ap roved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP84-00499800050 0&0007-7 604 THE COD B Z' After everything had been sewn up, it public indiscretion threatened to rip it open again. Representative Elmer J. Holland of Pennsylvania made it speech about the episode on the floor of Congress on August 31 which was carried far and wide by news stories. He was castigating the Tribune's "un- thinking and wicked misuse of freedom of the press." "American boys will die, Mr. Speaker, because of the help furnished our enemies" by the Tribune, he declaimed. But in stating what this help was, he disclosed what; the Tribune had not and trumpeted loud and clear what everyone was trying to hush up: "that somehow our Navy had secured and broken the secret code of the Japanese Navy." Fortunately, the Japanese missed that one too. Potentially the most explosive situation stewed in the cauldron of national politics in the late summer of 1944. Republicans were preparing to run Thomas C. Dewey for President. High among their issues was the charge that inexcus- able administration laxity had permitted the Japanese attack at Pearl i-larbor to succeed so cruelly; there were even hints that President Roosevelt had deliberately invited the attack to get the country into "his" war over strong isolationist sentiment. Buttressing the charge was the knowledge, circulating secretly among many high officials, that the United States had cracked Japan-. ese codes before Pearl Harbor. From this, many Republicans concluded that the decrypted messages had warned Roosevelt of Pearl Harbor and that 11e, with criminal negligence, had done nothing about it. This was false, but evidence to the contrary was not available and many men believed it, As the campaign warmed up, bits and hints about MAGIC began to appear in political speeches. Representative Forest A. Harness of Indiana, for example, told the House on September I 1 that "the Government had ]earned very confidentially that instructions were sent out from the Japanese Gove n- meat to all Japanese emissaries in this hemisphere to destroy the codes." he chief of Army intelligence, Brigadier General Clayton L. Bissell, repo cd these incidents to Marshall, who saw the danger of further revelations in the heat of contention for the greatest office of all. Bissell suggested that Marshall go to the President for help in squelching the talk. Marshall didn't think that -c9 would do, and slept on it. Next morning i hc' dictated a three-page, sinle- sjced letter to the Republican. capdidatc_pointing out the.cX,tl: me danger of disclosing the MAGIC information. Because he felt that the success of his appeal depended on Dewey's conviction that it was nonpolitical, he did not discuss the matter with either the President or the Secretary of War, and he began his letter, "I am writing you without the knowledge of any other person except Admiral King (who concurs)." An Army security officer, tall, slim Colonel Carter W. Clarke, flew out West in a B-25 bomber to deliver the letter to Dewey, who had just given his first campaign speech devoted entirely to an attack upon the national adminis- tration. Clarke gave the sealed letter to Dewey on the afternoon of September 26 in a hotel in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Under "Top Secret" and "For Mr. Dewey's eyes only, such it hii on the ba returning bearer." From vision. A learned t in any ca blind col Whet tion wits they hac Clarke- govcrno Scptcml: the pros, dent of somcthi keeping tclcphol on the He then I' Sept .bcr agre Vic" refer and cou ledg wits per! knc wol wh. or; on] to) sec STAT Approved For Release 2004/12/22 : CIA-RDP84-00499R000500080007-7