1. Beginning of a new series.
A Chara:-
[Matter omitted]
THE TOUR:
I have already dealt in detail with persons seen and particular matters
raised by the more important of them. I shall try now to give you a general survey
of the international position, as it appears to me after the tour, in order to
respond to the President's desire in this regard. Your letter as to a visit to
Hungary came after I had already got to Denmark and I only saw it on returning
here two days ago, so that I was unable to act on it. But I have a friend in Paris,
Dr. de Christian, who is the authorised representative of the Slovaks. I wrote
you about him last year. He declares that the 6 subject races under the Czechs
are combining to overthrow the Czech rule which they all hate and that they
will probably unite with Hungary. The Czechs who run the country are a
small minority and mostly Hussites, while the Slovaks and other oppressed
races are largely Catholic. But I have not seen this gentleman since summer. He
is likely to be in Paris still and O'K[elly] has his address.
When I was in France I had some hopes of the Pan-Latin movement
which would have united the Catholic parts of Germany with France and
Belgium and Italy and Spain and Roumania and what is left of Austria, and the
French movers wanted Ireland to join in, and hoped for America - U.S. - as an
associate. I have quite come round to the view that this combination is not practical
politics and that our interests lie very definitely elsewhere:- France appointed a
brilliant man as a consul at Munich to work up the Bavarians to separate, but,
though, they may yet do so, if things go badly with Germany I do not think that
the French effort was a success and I believe that Bavaria would far rather be
linked with Germany so long as she is not made to submit to Prussian
Domination. Similar attempts to detach the country along the Rhine have met with
even less success. Again, Italy hates the French, for failing to support her at
the Peace only less than she hates the English. Spain hates France rather
more than she hates England, because the French menace seems closer and
there have been constant French aggressions. France itself cannot be depended
upon and is now staking everything on the English Alliance, which looks now more like lasting than it did last year, for the good reason that it is more necessary
to England than it was when she had hopes of nobbling Germany and Russia.
So that the friends of the Pan-Latin Movement have the biggest difficulties
to face.
Look at it in another way:- what is to be said of the stuff of which
that Alliance is made? France is a decadent and a decreasing country, Italy is in
low water, Spain belongs to other days. There is here no vitalising element to
give life and strength to the combination. What a contrast to the Teutons, to
say nothing of the Slavs or even the Saxons, present! These Latins are all
inclined to be friendly to us because they are Catholic and they admire our fight,
but they are all afraid of England and that fear surpasses the love of us
very considerably.
I think we should back a totally different combination[:] the economic
alliance of U.S. and Germany to exploit Russia with German brains and
American dollars, an alliance which incidentally will put Berlin on its feet
financially and enable it much sooner than it otherwise could to resist the aggression
and refuse to submit to the exactions of the Entente. I expect to use
developments in this direction before the New Administration in Washington is very old.
For remember that Russia is too uneducated and undeveloped to stand on its
own feet and must have outside help, that the Germans are the only foreigners
at home in Russia, that thousands of them learnt the language as prisoners
during the war and that the German Foreign Minister who is one of the four live
wires in a tame Cabinet lately offered publicly to treat with Russia 'no matter
what her form of Government' provided the Russians on their side undertook to
do no Bolshy propaganda in Germany. I am convinced that something on the
above lines was arranged when Senator McCormick recently visited Berlin, no
doubt on behalf of Harding, and saw Von Stinnes.
Such a combination seems to me to have all the elements of durability
and to come most opportunely at this time. And it means the active co-operation
of the three big nations who most cleverly have the future in their hands. This
is a tremendous menace to the Bulletin. There is nothing in the Latin Basket
to compare with it! America thus gets the European outlet she wants and
the three countries concerned are all unfriendly to England.
I think our people in the States should be advised to back this
combination with all their power for every reason and to co-operate much more
closely with the Germans in the States now that anti-German feeling is dying
down, for the Germans there need our political help for organisation.
The effect in the Near-East and the Middle-East and India of such
a combination will obviously be far reaching: Russia has already been active
in those parts and she is in great hope of India, now at last waking up.
England will of course do all she can to prevent such an Alliance, but I
think she is too late.
My impression in Germany was very strongly that, while officially they
are glad enough to play off England against France as long as they can, yet
they see through English Professions and do not trust Albion one inch. In
France the impression has been spread abroad that Germany is trying to make up
to England and would welcome an English Alliance. I am persuaded that this
is not so. There is profound distrust of England and ill-concealed anxiety to punish her in all the circles with which I came in contact. Germany as Ally of
the States in case of an Anglo-American War would be an important factor,
even were the Alliance only economical and I have come back with the
strong conviction that the Germans, who consider the war was lost through
bad leadership only, are counting the days till they can start afresh and make
no mistake this time.
England has successfully stopped the chances of rapprochement
between France and Germany, whereby the twain would have ruled Europe, for
to-day Germany hates France for her intransigence more than she hates England!
She thinks France hates her fiercely, whereas in truth France is so crushed by
War that she can think of nothing but her own safety and the need of
avoiding another invasion, and is so entirely overcome with panic as to the future
that she has not time to hate anyone. She is convinced that Germany will finish
her when she comes back, unless England is there to help her out. And in
this conviction she will remain the lap-dog of John Bull, no matter how he
whips her.
The French moreover are as anti-American as on the morrow of the
armistice, and I see no likelihood of an early reconciliation there, so that all these
people have simply been throwing the U.S. into the arms of Germany. Add to this
the fact that the Germans have all great qualities to carve out a big future and
that they are the obvious and the only people to help out Russia, and they
will realise how eager I am to see our people overseas helping them to
penetrate the people who hold the future in the Western World.
I have in a previous [letter?]1
emphasised the urgency and importance of real, hard work on our behalf in Germany. I feel that believing in the rise of Germany as I do, I can hardly exaggerate either the importance of this or
its urgency. I found the Germans exceedingly friendly, but the agencies are
bad and knowledge scanty. There is a certain amount of sentimental admiration,
as everywhere else, for the magnificent bravery of our fight, but I think the
predominant factor in sustaining interest is a lively sense of our potential value
to the enemies of England. But in Germany, as elsewhere I found some
scepticism as to our power of holding out or as to our persistence as to no
compromise against such odds, a feeling that I have had to combat everywhere.
I suppose 322 is the best man for the post, but he is not ideal and I feel I
must report that 10 told me that it was 32 who gave 310 away. 32 is alleged to
be fond of a glass. At all events he was told everything by 310 and proceeded
to repeat what he knew under pledge that if it would not be published to
a journalist who was secretary to the representative of 1200; the latter repeated
it to his master who promptly cabled home ... 32 discovered this and asked 10
to go with him to see the delinquent; 10 did so and the delinquent admitted
having repeated the story and claimed that he was entitled to do so, in as much as
he was a journalist and had undertaken merely not to 'publish' it and in fact
had not published it. I believe 10 to be absolutely straight and thoroughly
reliable and it seems to me necessary that this statement of the matter should be
known in inner circles at home.
As to Spain, there is a big field open and untilled. Here we have the
entrée to all circles, as in Germany, an advantage we have not in France and
scarcely in Italy. This is a big asset, and we stand very high. I believe our most
sincere friends in Europe are here and if A could go out for 6 months or 12
months, you would reap a big harvest. I need not say that enemy propaganda is
very active and quite uncheckered. The appointment of Miss [Maire] O'B[rien]
for Press work for Madrid would be a good step anyway. The line I took with
the principal persons seen, as mentioned in my report, was this:- England has
no sincere friend left unless it be Japan. Being derelict, she is making up to
Spain though she shows no signs of giving up Gibraltar (a very sore point), but
Spain's true interest lies elsewhere. The big coming combination is bound to be
U.S. and Germany and Russia; nothing equally strong can stand up against such
a group; Spain should see that her policy is directed along that line and give
up the hallucination which directs her foreign policy, to the effect that England
is now almighty. We can help Spain; for instances in the States it would be a
big asset to Spain to have the Irish (to say nothing of the German) influence
behind the movement for an economic alliance of N and S America, which
would rebound to the prestige and prosperity of Spain, but which will be
vehemently opposed by the English and the protestant Interests. I found this line took
well and I am convinced it is our interest to take it in the U.S. for it would
certainly injure England in South America. I also pointed out that in making
advances to Spain England had the ulterior motive of improving her own position at
the Vatican. I do not think the Anglo-Spanish Alliance will go through at
present, but if it did the effect in Rome would be most deplorable.
The position in Rome continues to be bad and I await instructions in
response to the suggestions I put forward in my general report from Paris and to
the information that has reached you abundantly from our friends here
during my absence! There is to be at long last a public meeting for us on the 3rd.
inst. but the position continues very menacing in the highest quarters and the
sooner a prelate comes out the better!
Let me take the opportunity of adding that Hales also gives a bad
account of the Over Seas Trading Co; no doubt, it is working under great
difficulties but the results are apt to injure us abroad; perhaps, the suggestion for
changing its office to a convenient place across the water is worth considering.
I trust the above appreciations are what you want; they are necessarily
somewhat speculative; before, I used to be pro-French bad as France was,
because there seemed no alternative but the tour has given me a very different
opinion of the real intentions and sincerity of the Germans and the chance of
American co-operation with them seems to offer a good opportunity for us to take up
a very definite line of foreign policy with fruitful results to all concerned.
Hales is in touch with some of D'Annunzio's people who tell me the
poet wants a new field and thinks of Ireland, India and Egypt. On the whole
his help in Italy would be good, though it would offend some elements, is he to
be seen hereon and encouraged? If so he should be invited to Dublin on a
visit formally. He is by a long way the biggest figure in Italy and he is popular
for what he did at Fiume, in spite of having outstayed his welcome there.
His open and active support would mean a great deal in Italy and I do not
think there is much risk that it would lose us our present friends or any of them to speak of. He is now bitterly against the King of Italy for firing him out of
Fiume and signing the Treaty of Rapallo. He is a man of notoriously bad life.
But weighing pros and cons, I think that as things now stand when the
Italian press is for the most part boycotting us under orders inspired by England,
we would gain by his companionship and the Vatican would be likely to treat
us with a little more respect, if with less affection. If there is anything doing
in this direction, I think I should go to him with a written invitation, from DAIL.
I say nothing of other plans here, as it is premature, but I think I shall
write you on this after settling down and taking my bearings.
I beg to suggest that a letter from the President to Very Rev. D. J.
O'Doherty to thank him for the invaluable help which he gave at great trouble to
himself on the occasion of your Envoy's extraordinary recent visit to Spain would be
a fitting tribute and one likely to be greatly appreciated. I should also like
a letter of thanks to be sent to the Traveller - or to be authorised myself to
thank him on behalf of the DAIL - for his great services in Germany without which
it is not too much to say my visit there would have been quite barren; he has
the entrée practically everywhere and, moreover, uses it, and does a great deal
of very useful, quiet unofficial propaganda for us all the time, unasked, and he
is very popular with our various people in Berlin as well as with the Germans.