3 Defendants

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

3 Defendants IN THE DETRWWgPrFfrIES NIGHT Only Detroit Newspaper Carrying International News Service and Complete Sport Dispatches NEWS 41ST YEAR, NO. 122 DETROIT, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30,1941 40 PAGES THREE CENTSj EDITION * Every great leader I* a great talker. Everyone ha* talked himself Into place and hit country into war. Every peaceful HITLER’S SPEECH: home has been invaded and made a forum for contentious discussion. Every quiet fireside has been disturbed, first by the clamor of vvorda, then at last hy the clatter of arms. ‘German Arms Thousand Times Mr. Churchill, Mr. Hitler, Mr. Mussolini are all great orators, masters of seductive s|ieech, but Into what confusion have they led ’ tha world ? Says Macauley: "The object of orator)/ Stronger Than Foes Have not truth but Seen alone in the Itersuu 8 ion." Into what catastrophic* have these orators persuaded us? There comes a time, however, British even with the most deluded public Auto Hits Pole, 2 Hurt: when words will no longer satisfy; 3 Defendants War Aid Vole Britain Will —when there Is need and urgent Capture need to substitute factual achieve- ment for tike of Socialite Admits pleasant mirages III; Drink Monday Terms, Imagination. Adjourn Due Derna Seek of our facile word painters By DESMOND TIGHE ALI.and grainers will eventually Int’l New# vnlr# staff (orrftpondfnl find themselves in such embarras- Graff Trial In House WITH BRITISH IMPERIAL Reich Told sing situations. FORCES AT DERNA. Jan. 30 —| International N>m Service Hire J. HUSS Mr. Mussolini lias arrived there Because of the illness of three British and Australian mechanized: By PIERRE 'm -¦ troops I defendants and one defense attor /at 'd- WASHINGTON, Jan. SO.— today roiled into Derna,' Int’l Newt Service Staff Correspondent now. capturing their major ney. Judge Earl Pugslex President Roosevelt'* lease-lend second Ital- BERLIN, He has talked loudly and prom- Circuit C. ian stronghold in eight days, Jan. 30.—The armed Today adjourned the county graft bill passed its first congressional and ised much and fulfilled little. opened the way to at Ben- strength of Germany is a “thou- Monday test when strike trial until morning. ¦ today the House for- gazi the His troops have been routed in event, however, jJm- in west almost without sand” times that which has been In the ailing eign affairs committee approved- resistance. firms and captured bv wholesale principals already displayed, Reichsfuehrer are recovered sufficiently - Fall of Derna historic Libyan to appear court tomorrow, the ft nwiwwfirimmmi the measure, thus clearing the In Africa. in m BfiSto mmd port once seized by Adolf Hitler said today. trial will be resumed then. Mean- i iiwaa— way for House consideration the United Nowhere the victory he 1 States in 1805 in the war In a lengthy speech at the lias Special Chester Monday. with while. Prosecutor Tripoli, came after a of on eighth anni- promised been achieved, the glory P. O'Hara intimated more stale's siege less Sportspalast the \ The committee took the action than a week. British artillery versary of his dictatorship, he he pictured been gained. witnesses might be endorsed over If blasted the fortifications, the on a reported 17-8 vote. town's So the balcony of the I’alauo week-end. and Sir j again renounced aims of world "AAr were working late last then Gen. Archibald Venezia Is empty. Wavell s motorized and foot troops conquest and insisted that Ger- night," he toid Judge Pugsley many fighting merely to B> WILLIAM S. NEAL . jstormed Derna in a swift frontal ! was Mr. Mussolini is too humiliated after the jury had been excused. throw “British Int'l >r»* Smlrr Staff C orrespondent attack. off the yoke of to fare his public. tiK> embar- "There might be other witnesses Fresh advances were announced domination.” rassed to confront Ills promises. endorsed In this rase. I will WASHINGTON, Jan. 30.—For- at the same time in Eritrea, Abys- Predicting British capitulation, today they The expanded cheat has liecn know later If will be mer Ambassador to Germany sinia and Italian Somaliland. iHitler said: witnesses in this ease or an- “If the war lasts long enough, deflated and ii|m>ii it the prog- James W. Gerard, testifying be- STRIKE ther." s. TOWARDS WEST the time will come vt hen Eng- nathous Jaw falls loose and lax The ill defendants are Harry Jr, fore the Senate foreign relations jlB\¦ jjl “Capture of Derna was com- land la going to send a com- with astonishment and Irresolu- Colburn, former chief investigator 2^'^bßß committee on the lease-lend bill, mittee to us. making ua the pleted morning,” of the prosecutor's office; this said a James 1 today he favored declaration detalla of plan for tion. f ' wry, said a British army bulletin, our aoclal Marano and Charles Moceri. The I L f implyinjg Ho not bite off more than you lof war on Germany, but enigmati- that Aussies launched their ini- justice. ill attorney is Erank P. Dana. The fuehrer again warned Brit- can chew, is an old .American cally added that there is no neces- tial attack last night. Cothum'* temperatur* wmo re- Already, it was believed, ain that when he is ready, he will maxim. ported at 102 today, while hotri sity for it now. wheeled army units were striking farther to- send his into England, prob- This applies to wind as well as Marano and Moceri sat through Maj. Gen. John F. O'Ryan ol ably this year. ¦ wards the west. Only Cirene. 25 yesterday s court session wearing - to other rnastlcatahle material. \b 31 aw New York also had urged a war miles beyond, lies between the “We are standing on the con-, their overcoats because of colds. will ua,” Men do not delight to sec the declaration during House hearings British Empire forces and Ben- tinent, and no one eject ' he said. mighty fallen, but Ihcy do to see Met RE A MOVE- FAILS last week. gazi, and it was understood that lIEM&M ¦" Jr Marshal Rodolfo Graziana “We have built certain basea, >-> with- pretense exposed and arrogance Stressing the current wave of ¦ s# Bb x A ¦ TffißS?liiliffiPpfe The former ambassador, who and when the hour cornea we. major infim rvi. S drew his bodies of troops abased. Arthur Willard defense _ was ordered out Germany be- shall deliver the decisive blow.. ittomey, appealed to Judge Pugs- JQIB of from that base last week. ~ « we * fore the War, “That have made good use - -•*- " * Derna, )< \1 » * World asserted that city 11,000, to . of known important than Mr Mus- y to request the county Board v I - - w fHi will realize this ventila- Germany will attack the United the Italians as the "Pearl of Cyr- of time our foe of Auditors to improve the mmm States if she conquers England year.” MOREsolini's personal collapse, tion of the crowded court room K I t -*MU enaica,” occupies one of the few great “Social justice cannot be com- however, is the signiticance of the money might be well and builds up a fleet. fertile spots of Libya. Also, it was "The promised. It cannot be half- to protect the defensive key to Bengazi, since: Italian defeat in Africa. s|>rnt our health and GERMAN QUOTED way, part-way, eventually Judge 'it lies at a point where the Jebel or half-hearted. The defeat not so save time." -aid nothing. in fireecc is Pugsley Geraid recalled his pre-World Akdar Mountains leave only a It is all or who himself had been “Understanding Is moot serious. to home with illness War days in Germany and quoted narrow corridor along the shore. the confined hi« thing. always It may be retrieved, especially since the trial started. Admiral Von Tirpitz, then head of Important I have RQB-.JfILM' t,2V^^3Tß^, irf *V-S - the navy, declaring PROCEEDING SMOOTHLY been ready to come to an under- If Germany is permitted to par- During yesterday's session, for- German as that Germany would sail for Describing action other standing on any question that ticipate in that conflict. mer Prosecutor Duncan C McCrea. on far- and us.” one of the .I.'s defendants, failed America “to collect from that fat. flung fronts, a communique said: stood between them Hut the defeat In Africa seem* rich, degenerate nation the ex- Agordat-Barentu in an attempt to hamstring the Ca«,ri«M by t),trstt Tl*«k. All rifhti r,Mrv,d “In the sec- CALLS BRITISH ‘FOOLS’ Irreparable. state s graft case against him by penses of the war." tor of Eritrea, concentration of WRECK AT EAST JEFFERSON AND HART WHICH 2 WERE HI RT, 1 HELD The British, he said, were “fools’* The Russian army organ, "The having all testimony relating to IN He asserted that former Kaiser our forces is proceeding or by the Wilhelm once refused to see him smoothly, despite distances and to underrate Germany's determina- Red Star," declares that it is no raids vice investigations The at Gage, 25, hospitals. Searles, police prosecutor's stricken smashup 1:30 a. m.. which to because “I represented a nation physical difficulties. tion to arm and go to war for longer question office from a of the losses the record brought about the arn*st of John Kum- said, struck a parked car before running from which came munitions for “In Italian Somaliland work her rights and added* “They have not seen anything suffered hy Italian troops in Libya, Garfield A. Nichols co-coi d ney Searle* Jr.. 28. Detroit socialite, and onto the sidewalk and into the utility pole, the enemies of Germany.” Is progressing in all sectors to of our strength.
Recommended publications
  • Heroes of the Reich
    HEROES OF THE REICH ADOLF HITLER The Only Democratically Elected Leader of World War Two PUBLISHING REAL HISTORY Mike Walsh BIOGRAPHY MIKE WALSH Mike Walsh is a veteran journalist, broadcaster and historian. A fugitive from renegade Europeans, leftists, palace journalists, he has shrugged off their wrath over 50 years of writing. His Irish-American father, Patrick had fought in four conflicts by the time he reached 40-years of age: The Irish peoples guerrilla war against the British Army‟s Black and Tans. These armed irregulars, dredged from England‟s prisons, were notorious for their viciousness. The Irish War of Independence and on to fight in the most ferocious hand-to-hand battles during the Spanish Civil War. Whilst on the frontlines he was a close associate of American war correspondent, Ernest Hemingway. Mike‟s father formed an enduring friendship with Ireland‟s celebrated playwright, Sean O‟Casey. Eventually his father served in the Royal Air Force during World War Two as an aircraft fitter / flier. Kathleen, Mike‟s well- educated mother also mentored his writing skills. A former novice nun she was a corresponding friend of Spain's Civil War revolutionary La Pasionaria. From the age of 26 the world-travelling Mike was consumed by a passion for truth and justice. Inevitably, this led him to the potpourri of lies, infamies, cover-ups and crimes committed by the Allies that militarily defeated the Workers Reich. By doing so they ensured the spread of Bolshevism, denial of freedom to nearly a score of Central European nations, the dismembering of the British Empire, and surrender to American imperialism.
    [Show full text]
  • Journal Association of Jewish Refugees
    VOLUME 7 NO.4 APRIL 2007 journal Association of Jewish Refugees Prisoners remembered, prisoners forgotten Researching my article on Herbert Sulzbach captives persisted down the decades. for our February issue, I was amazed at the This fascination does not extend to extent to which the history of German British PoWs in the First World War, about prisoners-of-war in Britain has fallen into whom very little is knovro. At most, a few oblivion. Today, nobody seems to know that people will have heard of the camp at there were some 400,000 German PoWs in Ruhleben, near Berlin, where British Britain in 1946, dispersed all over the civilians were interned. The presence of country in some 1,500 camp units. I even numerous British and French PoWs in discovered a mini-camp in Brondesbury Germany during the First World War also Park, London NW6, about two miles from vanished rapidly from German public where I live, where prisoners from Wilton consciousness, unlike that of Russian PoWs, Park in Buckinghamshire, selected to whose suffering is vividly depicted in such broadcast on the BBC, were lodged in bestsellers as Amold Zweig's Der Streit um London. Yet the record of the British in re­ den Sergeanten Grischa and E. M. educating the PoWs in their charge was Remarque's Im Westen nichts Neues. The thoroughly creditable. The official German fate of the Russian PoWs came to symbolise history of German PoWs in the Second the senseless suffering of the ordinary World War explicitly acknowledges that soldier in a hopeless war, which was the Britain surpassed all other custodian powers main lesson of the First World War for in teaching PoWs to respect democratic liberal intellectuals in post-1918 Germany.
    [Show full text]
  • German Prisoners of War in Canada, 1940–1946: an Autobiography-Based Essay
    Canadian Military History Volume 27 Issue 2 Article 19 2018 German Prisoners of War in Canada, 1940–1946: An Autobiography-Based Essay Franz-Karl Stanzel Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.wlu.ca/cmh Part of the Military History Commons Recommended Citation Stanzel, Franz-Karl "German Prisoners of War in Canada, 1940–1946: An Autobiography-Based Essay." Canadian Military History 27, 2 (2018) This Feature is brought to you for free and open access by Scholars Commons @ Laurier. It has been accepted for inclusion in Canadian Military History by an authorized editor of Scholars Commons @ Laurier. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Stanzel: German Prisoners of War in Canada German Prisoners of War in Canada, 1940–1946 An Autobiography-Based Essay FRANZ-KARL STANZEL “What is a prisoner of war? He is a man who has tried to kill you and, having failed to kill you, asks you not to kill him.” —Winston Churchill Abstract : The four years I spent in British and Canadian POW Camps offered ample time to study English Literature. This experience in particular had a decisive effect on my later career as university teacher of English literature. It also helped me to become one of the first Anglicists at German and Austrian universities, who included Canadian literature in his syllabus and a founder member of the German Association for Canadian Studies. In this essay based on my war-autobiography, I describe the experience of German POWs in Canada. I was captured in 1942 when serving as third officer of the watch on board U-331 after my vessel was sunk in the Mediterranean by a torpedo fired from a RAF Albacore.
    [Show full text]
  • Royal Air Force Historical Society Journal 28
    ROYAL AIR FORCE HISTORICAL SOCIETY JOURNAL 28 2 The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the contributors concerned and are not necessarily those held by the Royal Air Force Historical Society. Photographs credited to MAP have been reproduced by kind permission of Military Aircraft Photographs. Copies of these, and of many others, may be obtained via http://www.mar.co.uk Copyright 2003: Royal Air Force Historical Society First published in the UK in 2003 by the Royal Air Force Historical Society All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the Publisher in writing. ISSN 1361-4231 Typeset by Creative Associates 115 Magdalen Road Oxford OX4 1RS Printed by Advance Book Printing Unit 9 Northmoor Park Church Road Mothmoor OX29 5UH 3 CONTENTS A NEW LOOK AT ‘THE WIZARD WAR’ by Dr Alfred Price 15 100 GROUP - ‘CONFOUND AND…’ by AVM Jack Furner 24 100 GROUP - FIGHTER OPERATIONS by Martin Streetly 33 D-DAY AND AFTER by Dr Alfred Price 43 MORNING DISCUSSION PERIOD 51 EW IN THE EARLY POST-WAR YEARS – LINCOLNS TO 58 VALIANTS by Wg Cdr ‘Jeff’ Jefford EW DURING THE V-FORCE ERA by Wg Cdr Rod Powell 70 RAF EW TRAINING 1945-1966 by Martin Streetly 86 RAF EW TRAINING 1966-94 by Wg Cdr Dick Turpin 88 SOME THOUGHTS ON PLATFORM PROTECTION SINCE 92 THE GULF WAR by Flt Lt Larry Williams AFTERNOON DISCUSSION PERIOD 104 SERGEANTS THREE – RECOLLECTIONS OF No
    [Show full text]
  • The One Who (Almost) Got Away
    The One who (Almost) Got Away. Leutnant Heinz Schnabel, 1/JG3. Most people are familiar with the story of Franz von Werra, the Luftwaffe pilot who was the only German to escape from captivity in the West, and return to Germany to continue his service. His story has been well documented, in books, magazines, and in a movie, entitled ‘The one that got away’ , starring Hardy Kruger as von Werra. Perhaps not so well known is the story of another Luftwaffe ‘ace’, Leutnant Heinz Schnabel who, together with Oberleutnant Harry Wappler, carried out an audacious escape attempt which very nearly succeeded. Heinz Schnabel was a 29 year old fighter pilot with the First Staffel, of 1 Gruppe, Jagdgeschwader 3 (1/JG3), equipped with the Messerschmitt Bf109E, and based at Colombert, due east of Boulogne, France, in September 1940. He had already gained ‘ace’ status, by shooting down three R.A.F. Blenheims during the Battle of France, and three Spitfires, the most recent being on 28 th August, but not without cost. During an air battle over France earlier in the year, he had sustained a bullet wound in the lungs and, semi-conscious, force-landed his ‘Emil’. With this wound not completely healed, it transpired that he would never regain full health, but he eventually rejoined his unit to continue flying and fighting. On the morning of 5th September, at the height of the Battle of Britain, JG3 were tasked, along with other units, with escorting a force of Heinkel He111 and Dornier Do17 bombers on a raid against England.
    [Show full text]
  • Prison Escapes 7
    PRISON ESCAPES 7 Canadian prisoner escapes Prisoners have escaped fron institutions across Canada, including Kingston Penitentiary, where bank robber Ty Conn got over a 10-metre perimeter fence at night in 1999 by using a hand-made ladder and grappling hook he constructed in the prison shop. (Canadian Press) When two Quebec prisoners climbed a rope lowered from a helicopter and flew to short- lived freedom this past weekend, their spectacular custody break was only the latest in a long list of escapes. While the reasons for being imprisoned can vary widely, the efforts individuals in that situation make to break free can reflect great daring and ingenuity. Here's a look at some flights to freedom in Canada, or ones elsewhere that involved Canadian prisoners. Franz von Werra, 1941 German pilot Franz von Werra is known as "the one that got away." On his way to a prisoner of war camp in January 1941, he leaped from a train near Prescott, Ont. Helicopter escapes Helicopter prison breaks may be rare, but the Quebec fugitives who used one for their escape are hardly the first to turn to the flying machines in their quest for freedom. Here are other notable helicopter prison breaks: A New York businessman convicted of murder, Joel David Kaplan , used a chopper to escape from a Mexican jail in 1971, and went on to write a book about it. The caper also inspired the 1975 movie Breakout , starring Charles Bronson. What is believed to be Canada's first prison escape by helicopter took place in 1990 when Robert Ford and David Thomas were whisked away from a maximum security facility in British Columbia.
    [Show full text]
  • German Prisoners of War in Canada, 1940•Fi1946
    Canadian Military History Volume 27 | Issue 2 Article 19 1-21-2019 German Prisoners of War in Canada, 1940–1946: An Autobiography-Based Essay Franz-Karl Stanzel Recommended Citation Stanzel, Franz-Karl (2018) "German Prisoners of War in Canada, 1940–1946: An Autobiography-Based Essay," Canadian Military History: Vol. 27 : Iss. 2 , Article 19. Available at: https://scholars.wlu.ca/cmh/vol27/iss2/19 This Feature is brought to you for free and open access by Scholars Commons @ Laurier. It has been accepted for inclusion in Canadian Military History by an authorized editor of Scholars Commons @ Laurier. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Stanzel: German Prisoners of War in Canada German Prisoners of War in Canada, 1940–1946 An Autobiography-Based Essay FRANZ-KARL STANZEL “What is a prisoner of war? He is a man who has tried to kill you and, having failed to kill you, asks you not to kill him.” —Winston Churchill Abstract : The four years I spent in British and Canadian POW Camps offered ample time to study English Literature. This experience in particular had a decisive effect on my later career as university teacher of English literature. It also helped me to become one of the first Anglicists at German and Austrian universities, who included Canadian literature in his syllabus and a founder member of the German Association for Canadian Studies. In this essay based on my war-autobiography, I describe the experience of German POWs in Canada. I was captured in 1942 when serving as third officer of the watch on board U-331 after my vessel was sunk in the Mediterranean by a torpedo fired from a RAF Albacore.
    [Show full text]
  • HOMELAND STORIES: Enemies Within
    HOMELAND STORIES: Enemies Within Character Education • Distinguish between PoWs, internees and refugees • Relate to the difficulties of dealing fairly with enemy aliens • Discern differences in enemy and Allied escape stories • Encourage inquiry into value systems Facts HOMELAND MINUTES • There were 26 prisoner of war camps in Canada of which 12 were in Ontario • During WWII Canada interned over 35,000 individuals • There were approximately 600 escape attempts from Canadian PoW camps • 10,000 men in the Veterans Guard of Canada, mainly WWI veterans, worked in PoW camps Before the Reading • Distinguish between a prisoner of war, internee and a The Messerschmitt Bf 109E–4 of Oblt Franz von Werra shot down on the refugee using Afghanistan as an example 5 September 1940, pictured at Winchet Hill, Love's Farm, Marsden, Kent Fallen Might, June 1983 issue of Aeroplane Monthly www.aeroplanemonthly.com • Canada was far away from the major battlefronts of WWII. Why did it have camps and PoWs? The One That Got Away Oberleutnant Franz von Werra, a pilot shot down • Discuss the pros and cons of older men, WWI veter- during the Battle of Britain was in transit to a remote ans, guarding young WWII prisoners PoW camp on the north shore of Lake Superior in ITHIN • Look up the Geneva Convention and what was January 1941, when he decided to jump off the W required in the handling of WWII prisoners moving train while still within reach of then neutral NEMIES U.S.A. Assisted by fellow PoWs, who included Walter –E Manhard, he managed to thaw the window out of Reading – “Collar the Lot!” Winston Churchill TORIES S which he would dive head first.
    [Show full text]
  • POW Labour Projects in Canada During the Second World War
    Western University Scholarship@Western Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository 2-28-2020 1:30 PM Beyond the Barbed Wire: POW Labour Projects in Canada during the Second World War Michael O'Hagan The University of Western Ontario Supervisor MacEachern, Alan The University of Western Ontario Graduate Program in History A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the degree in Doctor of Philosophy © Michael O'Hagan 2020 Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd Part of the Canadian History Commons Recommended Citation O'Hagan, Michael, "Beyond the Barbed Wire: POW Labour Projects in Canada during the Second World War" (2020). Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository. 6849. https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/6849 This Dissertation/Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship@Western. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Western. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Abstract This dissertation examines Canada’s program to employ prisoners of war (POWs) in Canada during the Second World War as a means of understanding how labour projects and the communities and natural environment in which they occurred shaped the POWs’ wartime experiences. The use of POW labourers, including civilian internees, enemy merchant seamen, and combatant prisoners, occurred in response to a nationwide labour shortage. Between May 1943 and November 1946, there were almost 300 small, isolated labour projects across the country employing, at its peak, over 14,000 POWs. Most prisoners were employed in either logging or agriculture, work that not only provided them with relative freedom, but offered prisoners unprecedented contact with Canada and its people.
    [Show full text]
  • Bf109e-4 3003 1:32SCALEPLASTICKIT
    Bf109E-4 3003 1:32SCALEPLASTICKIT eduard Bf 109 intro No other aircraft of the German Luftwaffe is so intimately connected with its rise and fall in the course of the Second World War than the Messerschmitt Bf 109. This type, by whose evolution outlived the era in which it was conceptualized, bore the brunt of Luftwaffe duties from the opening battles of Nazi Germany through to her final downfall. The history of the aircraft begins during 1934-35, when the Reich Ministry ofAviation formulated a requirement for the development of a single-engined monoplane fighter. Proposals were submitted by Arado, Heinkel, Focke-Wulf and Bayerische Flugzeugwerke. The last mentioned firm featured a technical director named Professor Willy Messerschmitt, who was riding a wave of popularity based on the success of his recent liason aircraft, the Bf 108. His goal was to conceive of an aircraft with the best possible performance for the specified weight, size, and aerodynamic qualities. Over the subsequent months, several prototypes were built that served first and foremost in development flights and further modifications. The aircraft was relatively small, and compared to the prevailing trends of the time, docile with revolutionary features such as low wing design, the use of a retractable landing gear, a wing with a very narrow profile, wing slats, landing flaps, weapons firing through the prop arc, and so on. Even the enclosed cockpit and the method of construction were not very common just four years prior to the beginning of the Second World War.At its conception, the Bf 109 was a very promising asset despite some powerplant troubles.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix 1: Chronology of German- Focused Events, 1939–1941
    Appendix 1: Chronology of German- focused Events, 1939–1941 ‘FH’ in the following text refers to the diary entries of General Franz Halder, Chief of the General Staff, Army High Command (OKH), from August 1938 to September 1942, responsible for directing a force in June 1941 of 5 million officers and men. It is striking that as British anxiety about Operation Sea Lion, the invasion of Britain, grew in September, German commanders including Halder were increasingly focusing on planning for Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of Russia (from Halder, [1962–4] (1988), The Halder War Diary 1939–1942, pp. 155–310). ‘AB’ in the following entries (italicised) refers to Field Marshal Lord Alanbrooke, Commander-in-Chief British Home Forces, from 19 July 1940, and Chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS) from December 1941. It is evident that despite a range of intelligence suggesting Operation Sea Lion was winding down, Alanbrooke remained anxious about the threat into 1941 (from Alanbrooke, 2002, War Diaries 1939–1945: Field Marshal Lord Alanbrooke, pp. 90–132). 23 August 1939 The Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact was signed. 1 September Hitler invaded Poland. 17 September Stalin invaded Poland. 15 October German naval study set out the argument for an economic war against Britain, principally by sea blockade and siege; this was formalised in Hitler’s War Directive No. 9. 15 November Admiral Raeder directed his staff to examine the prospects for an invasion of Britain, this being the earliest recorded date of consideration given to the issue. 1 December General Jodl, Chief of German Army Operations, asked for an Army response to the German Navy’s paper on the prospects for an invasion of Britain; Goering, head of the Luftwaffe, similarly directed that a staff officer respond to the Army paper, but also confirmed his doubts about the feasibility of a landing; the Navy and Army papers became linked as Studie Nordwest.
    [Show full text]
  • Greece Crumbles, Two Armies Surrender
    Flashes of The Ypsilanti Daily Press Late News No. 39 Twelve UNITED PKFgg. ASSiXiIATED PRESS. VOL. XXXVI, Pages Ypsilanti, Michigan, Wednesday, April 23, 1941 INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE Three Cents TH* WEATHER: Thursday: Cloudy, Showsrs SACRAMENTO. Calif—AP A plan to counter-balanct lnereaalnf federal defens* taxes with reduc- tions In state levies wss today CRUMBLES, placad as- * * * * •*»* * # * * «#*» »**• ««»• before the California GREECE TWO ARMIES SURRENDER*««# sembly by Speaker Gordon Garland and met Immediate opposition. LONDON—AP—Many windows Germany to Escape second floors of the Claims Race on snd British Troops Arst Nazi United States Embassy were smashed by concussion from large bombs which fell . ARMY SEES DEMONSTRATION OF. “TRACKLESS Epirus, Macedonia high explosive • -a TANK” nearby In a recent raid. The staff —" i 11 |ii eacaped injury. , i ul.i| wjiii Troops Had Been Merchandising Festival TOKYO—AP—The Tokyo Times Encircled Advertiser, controlled by the Japa- nese foreign office, declared edi- torially today that future relations Abandon Athens Highlighted by Special between Japan and the United States would seem to be in the hands of Washington—that Japan Government in had gone as far as she could to restore original conditions. - Crete Values For Purchasers BERN, Switzerland AP (Rv International New* ,B«rvtc*> Trench Chief of State Marshal Greece crumbled today under tha CROSS LEADERS IN CONVENTION Philippe Petain's mobile guards mighty blows of the Axli powers. RED Event Connected were reported by travelers from Rome and Berlin announced un- Prance today to be conducting an conditional surrender of tha Gre- With Clean-up organized search for arms and cian Armies of Macedonia and munitions in what some sources be- Epirus, the northwestern aectiou of City lieved be move any of the Peninsula v- *•/.**¦:, * to a to counter Hellenic adjacent \i );~ T ',.
    [Show full text]