Freedom Betrayed, by Herbert Hoover
With his analysis of the war complete with Hoover’s
documentation regarding the decision by Truman to use the atomic bombs against
Japan, Hoover turns to specific case studies regarding specific nations and
regions in the conflict. Whereas the preceding
sections of his magnum opus were written in chronological sequence, he now takes
a slice by geography in order to tell the narrative one selected region at a time.
Much of the information is repeated in this section from the
previous chronological analysis.
However, there is also much new information, as well as new
interpretations from Hoover that were not so strongly emphasized earlier.
One of these case studies regards Poland. Hoover begins by outlining the
behind-the-scenes actions of Roosevelt in convincing Britain to offer the
infamous guarantee to Poland, and additionally to convince Poland to not
negotiate with either Germany or Russia.
President Roosevelt had on January
4, 1939 announced what had amounted to a revolution in American foreign
Policy. He proposed action by the United
States “stronger than words and less than war” on activities of foreign nations
with which he disagreed.
The President at once took action
under this new policy with respect to Hitler’s demand of March 21, 1939 on
Poland.
The U.S. Ambassador to Britain, Joseph P. Kennedy, played a
supporting role in implementing Roosevelt’s desires. He regularly urged firmness on the part of
Britain when it came to dealing with the Germans. The German Charge d’Affaires in London
confirmed Kennedy’s position, informing his government on March 20 that:
…Kennedy…is playing a leading
part. He is said to be in personal contact
with the Missions of all the States involved, and to be attempting to encourage
them to adopt a firm attitude by promising that the United States…would support
them by all means (short of war”).
Further American activities were
disclosed after the Germans had invaded Poland in September 1939 and seized the
Polish Foreign Office records. The
Germans released a mass of documents which certainly indicated that the
American Ambassador to France, William C. Bullitt, who could only act on Mr.
Roosevelt’s authority, had made a profusion of oral assurances to officials of
Poland and France which they could only interpret as a promise of assistance of
some kind of force from the United States.
When these documents were published, their authenticity was
denied by both Bullitt and by the Polish Ambassador to the U.S. The Polish Ambassador later informed Hoover
that he denied their authenticity at the request of the State Department. Further, Hoover has evidence of the authenticity
of these German-released documents via Polish Embassy documents later given to
the Hoover Institute. Besides minor
differences in translations, these documents confirmed those released by the
Germans as authentic. Hoover goes on to
quote from a sampling of these documents – documents received directly from the
Polish Embassy in Washington. From the
Polish Ambassador Potocki to the Polish Foreign Office, dated two months before
the British guarantee to Poland, in which he summarizes his conversations with
U.S. Ambassador Bullitt:
…2) the war preparations of the
United States on land, sea, and air, which will proceed in an accelerated tempo
and will cost the colossal sum of $1,250,000,000. 3) the definite opinion of the President that
France and Britain should abandon all policy of compromise with the
totalitarian countries and should not enter into any discussion with them which
might be directed towards any territorial changes. 4) a moral assurance that the United States
is abandoning the policy of isolation and is ready, in case of war, to
participate actively on the side of Great Britain and France, placing all its
resources, financial and in raw materials, at their disposal.
In another dispatch, also dated two months before Britain’s
guarantee to Poland, from the Polish Ambassador in Paris to the Polish Foreign
Office stated:
As Ambassador Bullitt puts it: “If
a war breaks out, we probably would not participate in it at the beginning, but
we would finish it.”…One thing, however, appears to be certain, namely that
President Roosevelt’s policy in the immediate future will tend to…weaken
Britain’s tendencies toward a compromise [over Poland].
Hoover confirms that documentation from the U.S. State Department
on this had not yet been released.
However, based on conversation Hoover later had with Ambassador Kennedy,
the U.S. positions portrayed in these dispatches were confirmed. During the war, Hoover met with Kennedy
approximately 20 times. Kennedy
apparently profoundly disagreed with Roosevelt’s foreign policy.
Hoover would document his conversations with the various
people he met with. An example is
provided of Hoover’s meeting with Kennedy on May 15, 1945. Kennedy indicated he had over 900 dispatches
which he could not print without consent of the U.S. Government. He hoped one day to receive such permission
as it was Kennedy’s intention to write a book that would:
…put an entirely different color on
the process of how America got into the war and would prove the betrayal of the
American people by Franklin D, Roosevelt.
…Roosevelt and Bullitt were the
major factors in the British making their guarantees to Poland and becoming
involved in the war. Kennedy said that
Bullitt, under instructions from Roosevelt, was constantly urging the Poles not
to make terms with the Germans and that he Kennedy, under instructions from
Roosevelt, was constantly urging the British to make guarantees to the Poles.
He said that after Chamberlain had
given these guarantees, Chamberlain told him (Kennedy) that he hoped the
Americans and the Jews would now be satisfied but that he (Chamberlain) felt
that he had signed the doom of civilization.
Kennedy said that if it had not
been for Roosevelt the British would not have made this most gigantic blunder
in history.
Kennedy told me that he thought
Roosevelt was in communication with Churchill, who was the leader of the
opposition to Chamberlain, before Chamberlain was thrown out of office….
James Forrestal, Under Secretary of the Navy, documented in
his diaries a substantially similar conversation with Kennedy.
Much of the rest of Hoover’s case study through the
beginning of the war regarding Poland was documented well earlier in this volume. After Britain made the guarantee, it
attempted to reach a deal with Stalin.
Why a deal was not struck prior to the guarantee is a mystery to Hoover. Stalin, now in the cat-bird’s seat – with Britain
having backed itself into a corner – was free to sell his services to the
highest bidder: Germany or Britain.
Stalin’s price was to annex much of Eastern Europe. Chamberlain’s “moral scruples” prevented him
from signing this death warrant on a large swath of Europeans, despite the
constant “violent attacks” on Chamberlain by Churchill, Lloyd George, and Eden
to do so.
On August 21, Moscow announced that a non-aggression pact
was to be signed between Russia and Germany.
On September 1, Hitler invaded Poland.
Hoover then takes up the situation of Poland during and after
the war. He documents the change in Roosevelt’s attitude toward the Atlantic
Charter, and its (in)applicability to the Russians and to lands overtaken by
Russia. Needless to say, Roosevelt’s
interpretation of the Charter and its application to Russia were twisted in such
a manner to ensure Russia was able to keep all war-related gains.
The Polish by this time are starting to feel a bit betrayed
by Roosevelt.
The Polish Ambassador on Washington
records his last conversation with Sikorski (on January 10, 1943) at which time
they reviewed Sikorski’s visit:
…Sikorski regretfully admitted
that…for the first time he was beset by the fear that American policy was
beginning to drift in direction of appeasement of Soviet Russia….
Of course, at this point there was little choice for the
U.S., unless it was willing to continue the fight against the Russians directly. This appeasement was cemented between
Roosevelt and Stalin at Tehran. For
Poland, their fate was likely sealed once the West made alliance with the
Russians – or even prior, once Poland decided not to find a middle-ground in
negotiating between the two tyrants on either side at the encouragement of the
U.S. Perhaps once Hitler came to power
Poland’s fate was sealed one way or another.
This certainly had to be understood by Roosevelt before any guarantee
was made, calling into question the true
purpose behind the making of the guarantee in the first place.
The rest of this story demonstrates the cynicism and
immorality of the political leaders of this war, and would be laughable if it wasn’t
for the death and destruction brought to countless millions by the actions
taken by the leaders of the so-called free democracies. For example:
On February 20, Mr. Roosevelt
replied to [Polish American Congressman from Buffalo, Joseph] Mruk, stating
that the issue was one between the Russians and the Poles.
In other words, Roosevelt said tough luck for Poland.
On February 22, 1944, Mr. Churchill
made a speech in the House of Commons stating that the British Government had
never guaranteed “any particular frontier line to Poland….”
Perhaps Churchill thought Poland could be satisfied by
moving to Wales?
Mr. Roosevelt urged the Polish
Prime Minister Mikolajczyk to go to Moscow and discuss these questions with
Marshall Stalin. According to the Prime
Minister’s account, Mr. Roosevelt also said:
“… you Poles must find an
understanding with Russia. On your own,
you’d have no chance to beat Russia, and let me tell you now, the British and
Americans have no intention of fighting Russia.
“But don’t worry…Stalin
doesn’t intend to take freedom from Poland.”
Roosevelt perhaps was not aware of Stalin’s previous actions
wherever the Communists had influence?
In July 1944, the Russian armies arrived just across the
river from Warsaw. Stalin urged the
Poles to fight the Germans. The Poles
did so, soon seizing a large part of the city.
Stalin, instead of coming to the aid of the Poles in this uprising, left
them alone to fight the Germans, saying “nothing can be done for Poland if you
do not recognize the Curzon line…”
Stalin left the Poles to fight the Germans, until October 3, when,
exhausted and out of supplies, the Polish resistance failed. After the uprising, the Germans destroyed
virtually the entire city of Warsaw.
In this action of betrayal to the Polish fighters, Stalin
both reduced the German army as well as the best fighters the Poles had to
offer in any possible later resistance to the Russians.
In early March 1945 Moscow offered
safe conduct to a group of sixteen leaders of the democratic Polish underground
to journey to Russia to negotiate the setting up of a new government…. The sixteen Polish leaders vanished
completely on March 27.
At the end of the war, the eastern borders of both Poland
and Germany were moved to the west. This
entailed the relocation of approximately six million Poles from the Soviet
annexed area into that region annexed from Germany, and an additional six
million Germans from the former German lands into what remained of Germany.
Neither group was allowed to take
more of their belongings than they could carry on their own backs or the backs
of their children…. Hundreds of
thousands streamed the roads, the veritable picture of exhaustion and despair –
a sodden heart-broken, dispirited horde.
Thousands died by the roadsides.
Thousands of fleeing Polish and German women were raped and the men were
plundered by Russian soldiers of occupation.
Hoover counts over one million orphans or half-orphans in
Poland. An organization of Polish women
was picking up one thousand abandoned children per day. According to Mikolajczyk, non-Communist
Polish leaders were being executed or deported daily.
According to a lieutenant colonel to Eisenhower, “The
liberation of Poland by Russian Armies brought with it pillage, loot, rape,
mass arrests, executions and deportations.”
Thus ends Hoover’s account of the betrayal of Poland. It seems Poland was used only as a pawn – a cynical
guarantee provided by Britain at the urging of Roosevelt not for the sake of
securing a free Poland, but for the purpose of providing an excuse for the west
to enter the coming war between Germany and Russia.
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