|
CHAPTER THREE
General Electric
Funds Hitler
Among
the early Roosevelt fascist measures was the National Industry
Recovery Act (NRA) of June 16, 1933. The origins of this scheme
are worth repeating. These ideas were first suggested by Gerard
Swope of the General Electric Company ... following this they
were adopted by the United States Chamber of Commerce ....
(Herbert
Hoover, The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: The Great Depression,
1929-1941, New York: The Macmillan Company, 1952, p. 420)
The
multi-national giant General Electric has an unparalleled role in
twentieth-century history. The General Electric Company electrified
the Soviet Union in the 1920s and 1930s, and fulfilled for the
Soviets Lenin's dictum that "Socialism = electrification."1
The Swope Plan, created by General Electric's one-time president
Gerard Swope, became Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal, by a process
deplored by one-time President Herbert Hoover and described in
Wall Street and FDR.2 There was a
long-lasting, intimate relationship between Swope and Young of
General Electric Company and the Roosevelt family, as there was
between General Electric and the Soviet Union. In 1936 Senator James
A. Reed of Missouri, an early Roosevelt supporter, became aware of
Roosevelt's betrayal of liberal ideas and attacked the Roosevelt New
Deal program as a "tyrannical" measure "leading to despotism, [and]
sought by its sponsors under the communistic cry of 'Social
Justice.'" Senator Reed further charged on the floor of the Senate
that Franklin D. Roosevelt was a "hired man for the economic
royalists" in Wall Street and that the Roosevelt family "is one of
the largest stockholders in the General Electric Company."3
As we probe
into behind-the-scenes German interwar history and the story of
Hitler and Naziism, we find both Owen D. Young and Gerard Swope of
General Electric tied to the rise of Hitlerism and the suppression
of German democracy. That General Electric directors are to be found
in each of these three distinct historical categories i.e., the
development of the Soviet Union, the creation of Roosevelt's New
Deal, and the rise of Hitlerism suggests how elements of Big
Business are keenly interested in the socialization of the world,
for their own purposes and objectives, rather than the maintenance
of the impartial market place in a free society.4
General Electric profited handsomely from Bolshevism, from
Roosevelt's New Deal socialism, and, as we shall see below, from
national socialism in Hitler's Germany.
General Electric in
Weimar Germany
Walter
Rathenau was, until his assassination in 1922, managing director of
Allgemeine Elekrizitats Gesellschaft (A.E.G,), or German General
Electric, and like Owen Young and Gerard Swope, his counterparts in
the U.S., he was a prominent advocate of corporate socialism. Walter
Rathenau spoke out publicly against competition and free enterprise,
Why? Because both Rathanau and Swope wanted the protection and
cooperation of the state for their own corporate objectives and
profit. (But not of course for anybody else's objectives and
profits.) Rathanau expressed their plea in
The New Political Economy:
The new
economy will, as we have seen, be no state or governmental
economy but a private economy committed to a civic power of
resolution which certainly will require state cooperation for
organic consolidation to overcome inner friction and increase
production and endurance.5
When we
disentangle the turgid Rathenau prose, this means that the power of
the State was to be made available to private firms for their own
corporate purposes, i.e., what is popularly known as national
socialism. Rathenau spoke out publicly against competition and free
enterprise. inheritance."6 Not their
own wealth, so far as can be determined, but the wealth of
others who lacked political pull in the State apparatus.
Owen D.
Young of General Electric was one of the three U.S. delegates to the
1923 Dawes Plan meeting which established the German reparations
program. And in the Dawes and Young Plans we can see how some
private firms were able to benefit from the power of the State. The
largest single loans from Wall Street to Germany during the 1920s
were reparations loans; it was ultimately the U.S. investor who paid
for German reparations. The cartelization of the German electrical
industry under A.E.G. (as well as the steel and chemical industries
discussed in Chapters One and Two) was made possible with these Wall
Street loans:
Date of
Offering |
Borrower
|
Managing Bank
in the U.S. |
Face Amount
of Issue |
|
Jan. 26, 1925 |
Allgemeine
Elektrizitats-Gesellschaft (A. E, G.) |
National City Co. |
$10,000,000 |
|
Dec. 9, 1925 |
Allgemeine National
City Co. Elektrizitats-Gesellschaft (A. E.G. ) |
|
10,000,000 |
|
May 22, 1928 |
Allgemeine
Elektrizitats-
Gesellschaft (A.E.G.) |
National City Co. |
10,000,000 |
|
June 7, 1928 |
Allgemeine
Elektrizitats-Gesellschaft (A. E.G.) |
National City Co. |
5,000,000 |
In 1928, at
the Young Plan reparations meetings, we find General Electric
president Owen D. Young in the chair as the chief U.S. delegate,
appointed by the U.S. government to use U.S. government power and
prestige to decide international financial matters enhancing Wall
Street and General Electric profits. In 1930 Owen D. Young, after
whom the Young Plan for German reparations was named, became
chairman of the Board of General Electric Company in New York City.
Young was also chairman of the Executive Committee of Radio
Corporation of America and a director of both German General
Electric (A.E.G.) and Osram in Germany. Young also served on the
boards of other major U.S. corporations, including General Motors,
NBC, and RKO; he was a councilor of the National Industrial
Conference Board, a director of the International Chamber of
Commerce, and deputy chairman of the board of the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York.
Gerard
Swope was president and director of General Electric Company as well
as French and German associated companies, including A.E.G. and
Osram in Germany. Swope was also a director of RCA, NBC, and the
National City Bank of New York. Other directors of International
General Electric at this time reflect Morgan control of the company,
and both Young and Swope were generally known as the Morgan
representatives on the G.E. board, which included Thomas Cochran,
another partner in the J.P. Morgan firm. General Electric director
Clark Haynes Minor was president of International General Electric
in the 1920s. Another director was Victor M. Cutter of the First
National Bank of Boston and a figure in the "Banana
Revolutions" in Central America.
In the late
1920s Young, Swope, and Minor of International General Electric
moved into the German electrical industry and gained, if not control
as some have reported, then at least a substantial say in the
internal affairs of both A.E.G. and Osram. In July 1929 an agreement
was reached between General Electric and three German firms A.E.G.,
Siemens & Halske, and Koppel and Company which between them owned
all the shares in Osram, the electric bulb manufacturer. General
Electric purchased 16% percent of Osram stock and reached a joint
agreement for international control of electric bulbs production and
marketing. Clark Minor and Gerard Swope became directors of Osram.7
In July
1929 great interest was shown in rumors circulating in German
financial circles that General Electric was also buying into A.E.G.
and that talks to this end were in progress between A.E.G. and G.E.8
In August it was confirmed that 14 million marks of common A.E.G.
stock were to be issued to General Electric. These shares, added to
shares bought on the open market, gave General Electric a 25-percent
interest in A.E.G. A closer working agreement was signed between the
two companies, providing the German company U.S. technology and
patents. It was emphasized in the news reports that A.E.G. would not
have participation in G.E., but that on the other hand G.E. would
finance expansion of A.E.G. in Germany.9
The German financial press also noted that there was no A.E.G.
representation on the board of G.E. in the United States but that
five Americans were now on the board of A.E.G. The Vossische
Zeitung recorded,
The
American electrical industry has conquered the worm, and only a
few of the remaining opposing bastions have been able to
withstand the onslaught...10
By 1930,
unknown to the German financial press, General Electric had
similarly gained an effective technical monopoly of the Soviet
electrical industry and was soon to penetrate even the remaining
bastions in Germany, particularly the Siemens group. In January 1930
three G.E. men were elected to the board of A.E.G. Clark H. Minor,
Gerard Swope, and E. H. Baldwin and International General Electric
(I.G.E.) continued its moves to merge the world electrical industry
into a giant cartel under Wall Street control.
In February
General Electric focused on the remaining German electrical giant,
Siemens & Halske, and while able to obtain a large block of
debentures issued on behalf of the German firm by Dillon, Read of
New York, G.E. was not able to gain participation or directors on
the Siemens board. While the German press recognized even this
limited control as" an historical economic event of the first order
and an important step toward a future world electric trust,"11
Siemens retained its independence from General Electric and this
independence is important for our story. The New York Times
reported,
The entire
press emphasizes the fact that Siemens, contrary to A.E.G.,
maintains its independence for the future and points out that no
General Electric representative will sit on Stemen's board of
directors. 12
There is no
evidence that Siemens, either through Siemens & Halske or Siemens-Schukert,
participated directly in the financing of Hitler. Siemens
contributed to Hitler only slightly and indirectly through a share
participation in Osram. On the other hand, both A.E.G. and Osram
directly financed Hitler through the Nationale Treuhand in
substantial ways. Siemens retained its independence in the early
1930s while both A.E.G. and Osram were under American dominance and
with American directors.
There is no evidence that
Siemens, without American directors, financed Hitler. On the other
hand, we have irrefutable documentary evidence (see page 56) that
both German General Electric and Osram, both with American
directors, financed Hitler.
In the
months following the attempted Wall Street take over of Siemens, the
pattern of a developing world trust in the electrical industry
clarified; there was an end to international patent fights and the
G.E. interest in A.E.G. increased to nearly 30 percent.13
Consequently, in the early 1930s, as Hitler prepared to grab
dictatorial power in Germany backed by some, but by no means all,
German and American industrialists the German General Electric
(A.E.G.) was owned by International General Electric (about 30
percent), the Gesellschaft für Electrische Unternemungen (25
percent), and Ludwig Lowe (25 percent). International General
Electric also had an interest of about 16 2/3rds percent in Osram,
and an additional indirect influence in
|
Companies
Linked to
German General Electric through Common Electric Directors:
|
Directors of German
General Electric (A.E.G.) |
Relationship of Linked
Firm with Financing of
Hitler: |
|
Accumulatoran-Fabrik
|
Quandt
Pfeffer |
Direct Finance,
see p, 55 |
|
Osram |
Mamroth
Peierls |
Direct Finance,
see p. 57 |
|
Deutschen
Babcock-Wilcox |
Landau |
Not known |
|
Vereinigte Stahlwerke
|
Wolff
Nathan
Kirdorf
Goldschmidt |
Direct Finance,
see p. 57 |
|
Krupp |
Nathan
Klotzbach |
Direct Finance,
see p. 59 |
|
I.G. Farben
|
Bucher
Flechtheim
von Rath |
Direct Finance,
see p. 57 |
Allianz u.
Stuttgarten Verein
Phoenix |
von Rath
Wolff
Fahrenhorst |
Reported, but not
substantiated
see p. 57
|
|
Thyssen |
Fahrenhorst
|
Direct Finance,
see p. 104 |
|
Demag |
Fahrenhorst
Flick |
see p. 57
|
Dynamit
Gelsenkirchener
Bergwerks |
Flechtheim
Kirdorf
Flechtheim |
Through I.G. Farben
Direct Finance,
see p. 57 |
|
International General
Electric |
Young
Swope
Minor
Baldwin |
Through A.E.G.,
see p. 52
|
|
American I.G. Farben |
von Rath |
Through I.G. Farben
see p. 47 |
|
International Bank
(Amsterdam) |
H. Furstenberg
Goldschmidt |
Not known |
Osram
through A.E.G. directors. On the board of A.E,G., apart from the
four American directors (Young, Swope, Minor, and Baldwin), we find
Pferdmenges of Oppenheim & Co. (another Hitler financier), and
Quandt, who owned 75 percent of Accumlatoren-Fabrik, a major direct
financier of Hitler. In other words, among the German board members
of A.E.G. we find representatives from several of the German firms
that financed Hitler in the 1920s and 1930s.
General
Electric and the Financing of Hitler
The tap
root of modern corporate socialism runs deep into the management of
two affiliated multi-national corporations: General Electric Company
in the United States and its foreign associates, including German
General Electric (A.E.G.), and Osram in Germany. We have noted that
Gerard Swope, second president and chairman of General Electric, and
Walter Rathanau of A.E.G. promoted radical ideas for control of the
State by private business interests.
From 1915
onwards International General Electric (I.G.E.), located at
120 Broadway in New York City, acted as the foreign investment,
manufacturing, and selling organization for the General Electric
Company. I.G.E. held interests in overseas manufacturing companies
including a 25 to 30-percent holding in German General Electric (A.E.G.),
plus holdings in Osram G.m.b.H. Kommanditgesellschaft, also in
Berlin. These holdings gave International General Electric four
directors on the board of A.E.G., and another director at Osram, and
significant influence in the internal domestic policies of these
German companies. The significance of this General Electric
ownership is that A.E.G. and Osram were prominent suppliers of funds
for Hitler in his rise to power in Germany in 1933. A bank transfer
slip dated March 2, 1933 from A.E.G. to Delbruck Schickler & Co. in
Berlin requests that 60,000 Reichsmark be deposited in the "Nationale
Treuhand" (National Trusteeship) account for Hitler's use. This slip
is reproduced on page 56.
I.G. Farben
was the most important of the domestic financial backers of Hitler,
and (as noted elsewhere) I.G. Farben controlled American I.G.
Moreover, several directors of A.E.G. were also on the board of I.G.
Farben i.e., Hermann Bucher, chairman of A.E.G. was on the I.G.
Farben board; so were A.E.G. directors Julius Flechtheim and Walter
von Rath. I.G. Farben contributed 30 percent of the 1933 Hitler
National Trusteeship (or takeover) fund.

Original transfer slip dated
March 2, 1933 from German General Electric to Delbruck, Shickler
Bank in Berlin, with instructions to pay 60,000 RM to the "Nationale
Treuhand" fund (administered by Hjalmar Schacht and Rudolph Hess)
used to elect Hitler in March 1933. Source: Nuremburg
Military Tribunal, document No. 391-395.
Walter
Fahrenhorst of A.E.G. was also on the board of Phoenix A-G, Thyssen
A-G and Demag A-G and all were contributors to Hitler's fund.
Demag A-G contributed 50,000 RM to Hitler's fund and had a director
with A.E.G. the notorious Friedrich Flick, and early Hitler
supporter, who was later convicted at the Nuremberg Trials.
Accumulatoren Fabrik A-G was a Hitler contributor (25,000 RM, see
page 60) with two directors on the A.E.G. board, August Pfeffer and
Gunther Quandt. Quandt personally owned 75 percent of Accumulatoren
Fabrik.
Osram
Gesellschaft, in which International General Electric had a 16
2/3rds direct interest, also had two directors on the A.E.G. board:
Paul Mamroth and Heinrich Pferls. Osram contributed 40,000 RM
directly to the Hitler fund. The Otto Wolff concern, Vereinigte
Stahlwerke A-G, recipient of substantial New York loans in the
1920s, had three directors on the A.E.G. board: Otto Wolff, Henry
Nathan and Jakob Goldschmidt. Alfred Krupp yon Bohlen, sole owner of
the Krupp organization and an early supporter of Hitler, was a
member of the Aufsichsrat of A.E.G. Robert Pferdmenges, a member of
Himmler's Circle of Friends, was also a director of A, E.G.
In other
words, almost all of the German directors of German General Electric
were financial supporters of Hitler and associated not only with
A.E.G. but with other companies financing Hitler.
Walter
Rathenau14 became a director of A,E.G.
in 1899 and by the early twentieth century was a director of more
than 100 corporations. Rathenau was also author of the" Rathenau
Plan," which bears a remarkable resemblance to the "Swope Plan"
i.e., FDR's New Deal but written by Swope of G.E.
In other words, we have the
extraordinay coincidence that the authors of New Deal-tike plans in
the U.S. and Germany were also prime backers of their implementers:
Hitler in Germany and Roosevelt in the U.S.
Swope was
chairman of the board of General Electric Company and International
General Electric. In 1932 the American directors of A.E.G, were
prominently connected with American banking and political circles as
follows:
|
GERARD SWOPE |
Chairman of
International General Electric and
president of General Electric Company, director of
National City Bank (and other companies), director of A.E.G.
and Osram in Germany. Author of
FDR's New Deal and member of numerous Roosevelt
organizations. |
|
Owen D. Young |
Chairman of board of
General Electric, and deputy chairman, Federal Reserve Bank
of New York. Author, with J. P, Morgan, of the Young Plan
which superseded the Dawes Plan in 1929. (See Chapter One.) |
|
CLARK H. Minor |
President and director
of International General Electric, director of British
Thomson Houston, Compania Generale di Electtricita (Italy),
and Japan Electric Bond & Share Company (Japan). |

INTERNATIONAL GENERAL ELECTRIC
AND ITS LINKS TO "NATIONALE TREUFUND" ADMINISTERED BY HJALMAR
SCHACHT AND RUDOLF HESS
| I.G.E.:
Chairman: Gerard SWOPE; President: C.H. MINOR;
V-Pres.: ED. BALDWIN; Director: Owen YOUNG (120
Broadway, NYC) |
|
↓ |
| OSRAM G.m.b.H.: 16-2/3%
ownership |
↔ |
A.E.G.: 25% ownership.
German General Electric: Director: Gerard SWOPE;
Director: C.H. MINOR; Director: E. BALDWIN; Director:
Owen YOUNG |
↔ |
Accumulatoren Fabrik A.G. |
↔ |
Krupp: Patent
exchange agreements |
| ↓ |
|
↓ |
|
↓ |
|
↓ |
|
PAYMENT ORDERS FROM THESE
FIRMS TO DELBRUCK SHICKLER BANK |
| ↓ |
|
↓ |
|
↓ |
|
↓ |
| 40,000 RM |
|
60,000 RM |
|
25,000 RM |
|
600,000 RM |
| ↓ |
|
↓ |
|
↓ |
|
↓ |
|
Company funds transferred
to NATIONALE TREUFUND for March 1933 election |
In brief,
we have hard evidence of unquestioned authenticity (see p, 56) to
show that German General Electric contributed substantial sums to
Hitler's political fund. There were four American directors of A.E.G.
(Baldwin, Swope, Minor, and Clark), which was 80 percent owned by
International General Electric. Further, I.G.E. and the four
American directors were the largest single interest and consequently
had the greatest single influence in A.E.G. actions and policies.
Even further, almost all other directors of A.E.G. were connected
with firms (I. G. Farben, Accumulatoren Fabrik, etc.) which
contributed directly as firms to Hitler's political fund.
However, only the German directors of A.E.G were placed on trial in
Nuremburg in 1945.
Technical Cooperation
with Krupp
Quite apart
from financial assistance to Hitler, General Electric extended its
assistance to cartel schemes with other Hitler backers for their
mutual benefit and the benefit of the Nazi state. Cemented tungsten
carbide is one example of this G.E.-Nazi cooperation. Prior to
November 1928, American industries had several sources for both
tungsten carbide and tools and dies containing this hard-metal
composition. Among these sources were the Krupp Company of Essen,
Germany, and two American firms to which Krupp was then shipping and
selling, the Union Wire Die Corporation and Thomas Prosser & Son. In
1928 Krupp obligated itself to grant licenses under United States
patents which it owned to the Firth-Sterling Steel Company and to
the Ludlum Steel Company. Before 1928, this tungsten carbide for use
in tools and dies sold in the United States for about $50 a pound.
The United
States patents which Krupp claimed to own were assigned from Osram
Kommanditgesellschaft, and had been previously assigned by the Osram
Company of Germany to General Electric. However, General Electric
had also developed its own patents, principally the Hoyt and Gilson
patents, covering competing processes for cemented tungsten carbide.
General Electric believed that it could utilize these patents
independently without infringing on or competing with Krupp patents.
But instead of using the G.E. patents independently in competition
with Krupp, or testing out its rights under the patent laws, General
Electric worked out a cartel agreement with Krupp to pool the
patents of both parties and to give General Electric a monopoly
control of tungsten carbide in the United States.

Original transfer slip dated
March 9, 1933 from Accumulatoren-Fabrik to Delbruck, Shickler Bank
in Berlin, with instructions to pay 25,000 RM to the "Nationale
Treuhand" fund, administered by Hjalmar Schacht and Rudolph Hess to
elect Hitler in March 1933. Gunther Quandt, the dominant
shareholder (75%) of Accumulatoren, was also a director of German
General Electric. Source: Nuremburg Military Tribunal,
document NI-391-395.
The first
step in this cartel arrangement was taken by Carboloy Company, Inc.,
a General Electric subsidiary, incorporated for the purpose of
exploiting tungsten carbide. The 1920s price of around $50 a pound
was raised by Carboloy to $458 a pound. Obviously, no firm could
sell any great amounts of tungsten carbide in this price range, but
the price would maximize profits for G.E. In 1934 General Electric
and Carboloy were also able to obtain, by purchase, the license
granted by Krupp to the Ludlum Steel Company, thereby eliminating
one competitor. In 1936, Krupp was induced to refrain from further
imports into the United States. Part of the price paid for the
elimination from the American market of tungsten carbide
manufactured abroad was a reciprocal undertaking that General
Electric and Carboloy would not export from the U.S. Thus these
American companies tied their own hands by contract, or permitted
Krupp to tie their hands, and denied foreign markets to American
industry. Carboloy Company then acquired the business of Thomas
Prosser & Son, and in 1937, for nearly $1 million, Carboloy acquired
the competing business of the Union Wire Die Corporation. By
refusing to sell, Krupp cooperated with General Electric and
Carboloy to persuade Union Wire Die Corporation to sell out.
Licenses to
manufacture tungsten carbide were then refused. A request for
license by the Crucible Steel Company was refused in 1936. A request
by the Chrysler Corporation for a license was refused in 1938. A
license by the Triplett Electrical Instrument Company was refused on
April 25, 1940. A license was also refused to the General Cable
Company. The Ford Motor Company for several years expressed strong
opposition to the high-price policy followed by the Carboloy
Company, and at one point made a request for the right to
manufacture for its own use. This was refused. As a result of these
tactics, General Electric and its subsidiary Carboloy emerged in
1936 or 1937 with virtually a complete monopoly of tungsten carbide
in the United States.
In brief,
General Electric with the cooperation of another Hitler supporter,
Krupp jointly obtained for G,E. a monopoly in the U.S. for
tungsten carbide. So when World War II began, General Electric had a
monopoly at an established price of $450 a pound almost ten times
more than the 1928 price and use in the U.S. had been
correspondingly restricted,
A.E.G. Avoids the
Bombs in World War II
By 1939 the
German electrical industry had become closely affiliated with two
U.S. firms: International General Electric and International
Telephone and Telegraph. The largest firms in German electrical
production and their affiliations listed in order of importance
were:
Firm and Type
of Production |
Percent of German
1939 production |
U.S. Affiliated
Firm |
|
Heavy Current
Industry |
|
|
|
General Electric (A.E.G.
) |
40 percent |
International General
Electric |
|
Siemens Schukert A.G. |
40 percent |
None |
|
Brown Boveri et Cie |
17 percent |
None |
|
Telephone and
Telegraph |
|
|
|
Siemens und Halske |
60 percent |
None |
|
Lorenz A.G. |
85 percent |
I.T.T |
|
Radio
|
|
|
|
Telefunken (A.E.G.
after 1941) |
60 percent |
International General
Electric |
|
Lorenz |
35 percent |
I.T.T. |
|
Wire and Cable
|
|
|
|
Felton & Guilleaume
A.G. |
20 percent |
I.T.T. |
|
Siemens |
20 percent |
None |
|
A.E.G. |
20 percent |
International General
Electric |
In other
words, in 1939 the German electrical equipment industry was
concentrated into a few major corporations linked in an
international cartel and by stock ownership to two .major U.S.
corporations. This industrial complex was never a prime target for
bombing in World War II. The A.E.G. and I.T.T. plants were hit only
incidentally in area raids and then but rarely. The electrical
equipment plants bombed as targets were not those affiliated with
U.S. firms. It was Brown Boveri at Mannheim and Siemensstadt in
Berlin which were not connected with the U.S. who were
bombed. As a result, German production of electrical war equipment
rose steadily throughout World War II, peaking as late as 1944.
According to the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey reports, "In the
opinion of Speers' assistants and plant officials, the war effort in
Germany was never hindered in any important manner by any shortage
of electrical equipment."15
One example
of the non-bombing policy for German General Electric was the A.
E.G. plant at 185 Muggenhofer Strasse, Nuremburg. Study of this
plant's output in World War II is of interest because it illustrates
the extent to which purely peacetime production was converted to war
work. The pre-war plant manufactured household equipment, such as
hot plates, electric ranges, electric irons, toasters, industrial
baking ovens, radiators, water heaters, kitchen ovens, and
industrial heaters. In 1939, 1940 and 1941, most of the Nuremburg
plant's production facilities were used for the manufacture of
peacetime products. In 1942 the plant's production was shifted to
manufacture of war equipment. Metal parts for communications
equipment and munitions such as bombs and mines were made. Other war
production consisted of parts for searchlights and amplifiers. The
following tabulation very strikingly shows the conversion to war
work:
|
Year |
Total sales
in 1000 RM |
Percent
for war |
Percent ordinary
production |
|
1939 |
12,469 |
5 |
95 |
|
1940 |
11,754 |
15 |
85 |
|
1941 |
21,194 |
40 |
60 |
|
1942 |
20,689 |
61 |
39 |
|
1948 |
31,455 |
67 |
33 |
|
1944 |
31,205 |
69 |
31 |

Original transfer slip dated
February 27, 1933 from I.G. Farben to Delbruck, Shickler Bank in
Berlin with instructions to pay 400,000 RM to the "Nationale
Treuhand" fund (administered by Hjalmar Schacht and Rudolph Hess)
used to elect Hitler in March 1933. Source: Nuremburg
Military Tribunal, document No. NI-391-395.
The actual physical
damage by bombing to this plant was insignificant. No serious damage
occurred until the raids of February 20 and 21, 1945, near the end
of the war, and then protection had been fairly well developed.
Raids during which bombs struck in the plant area and the trifling
damage done are listed as follows:
|
Date of raid
|
Bombs striking plant
|
Damage done
|
|
March 8, 1943 |
30 stick type I.B. |
Trifling, but 3
storehouses outside the main plant destroyed. |
|
Sept. 9, 1944 |
None (blast damage) |
Trifling, glass and
blackout curtain damage. |
|
Nov. 26, 1944 |
14000 lb. HE in open
space in plant grounds |
Wood shop destroyed,
water main broken. |
|
Feb. 20, 1945 |
2 HE |
3 buildings damaged. |
|
Feb. 21, 1945 |
5 HE, many I.B.'s |
Administration bldg.
destroyed & enameling
works damaged by HE. |
Another
example of a German General Electric plant not bombed is the A.E.G.
plant at Koppelsdorf producing radar sets and bomber antennae. Other
A.E.G. plants which were not bombed and their war equipment
production were:
|
LIST OF A.E.G.
FACTORIES NOT BOMBED IN WORLD WAR II |
|
Name of Branch
|
Location
|
Product
|
|
1. |
Werk Reiehmannsdoff
mit Unterabteilungen in Wallendorf und Unterweissbach |
Kries Saalfeld |
Measuring Instruments |
|
2. |
Werk Marktschorgast |
Bayreuth |
Starters |
|
3. |
Werk F18ha |
Sachsen |
Short Wave Sending
Sets |
|
4. |
Werk Reichenbach |
Vogtland |
Dry Cell Batteries |
|
5. |
Werk Burglengefeld |
Sachsen/S.E. Chemnitz |
Heavy Starters |
|
6. |
Werk Nuremburg |
Belringersdorf/
Nuremburg |
Small Components |
|
7. |
Werk Zirndorf |
Nuremburg |
Heavy Starters |
|
8. |
Werk Mattinghofen |
Oberdonau |
1 KW Senders 250
Meters & long wave for torpedo boats & U-boats |
|
9. |
Unterwerk Neustadt |
Coburg |
Radar Equipment |
That the
A.E.G. plants in Germany were not bombed in World War II was
confirmed by the United States Strategic Bombing Survey, officered
by such academics as John K. Galbraith and such Wall Streeters as
George W. Ball and Paul H. Nitze. Their "German Electrical Equipment
Industry Report" dated January 1947 concludes:
The
industry has never been attacked as a basic target system, but a
few plants,
i.e. Brown Boveri at Mannheim, Bosch at
Stuutgart and Siemenstadt in Berlin, have been subjected to
precision raids; many others were hit in area raids.17
At the end
of World War II an Allied investigation team known as FIAT was sent
to examine bomb damage to German electrical industry plants. The
team for the electrical industry consisted of Alexander G.P.E.
Sanders of International Telephone and Telegraph of New York,
Whit-worth Ferguson of Ferguson Electric Company, New York, and
Erich J. Borgman of Westinghouse Electric. Although the stated
objective of these teams was to examine the effects on Allied
bombing of German targets, the objective of this particular team was
to get the German electrical equipment industry back into production
as soon as possible. Whirworth Ferguson wrote a report dated March
31, 1945 on the A.E.G. Ostland-werke and concluded, "this plant is
immediately available for production of fine metal parts and
assemblies.18
To
conclude, we find that both Rathenau of A.E.G. and Swope of General
Electric in the U.S. had similar ideas of putting the State to work
for their own corporate ends. General Electric was prominent in
financing Hitler, it profited handsomely from war production and
yet it managed to evade bombing in World War II. Obviously the story
briefly surveyed here deserves a much more thorough and official
investigation.
Footnotes:
1For the technical details see the
three-volume study, Antony C. Sutton, Western Technology and
Soviet Economic Development, (Stanford, California: Hoover
Institution Press, 1968, 1971), 1973), hereafter cited as
Western Technology
Series.
2(New York: Arlington House Publishers,
1975)
3New York Times, October 6, 1936.
See also Antony C. Sutton,
Wall Street and FDR, op.
cit.
4Of course, socialist pleading by
businessmen is still with us. Witness the injured cries when
President Ford proposed deregulation of airlines and trucking.
See for example Wall Street Journal, November 25, 1975.
5Mimeographed Translation in Hoover
Institution Library, p. 67. Also see Walter Rathenau, In Days
to Come, (London: Allen & Unwin, n.d.)
6Ibid, p. 249.
7New York Times, July 2, 1929.
8Ibid, July 28, 1929.
9Ibid, August 2, 1929 and August 4, 1929.
10Ibid, August 6, 1929.
11Ibid, February 2, 1930.
12Ibid, February 2, 1930.
13Ibid, May 11, 1930. For the prewar
machinations of General Electric, Osram, and the Dutch company
N.V. Philips Gloeilampenfabrieken of Eindhoven Holland, see
Chapter 11, "Electric Eels," in James Stewart Martin,
op cit. Martin was Chief of the Economic Warfare Division of
the U.S. Department of Justice and comments that "The A.E.G. of
Germany was largely controlled by the American company, General
Electric." The assumption by this author is that the G.E.
influence was somewhat less than controlling although
substantial enough. Because of Martin's official position and
access to official documents, not known to the author, his
statement that A.E.G. was "largely controlled" by U.S. General
Electric cannot be lightly dismissed. However, if we accept that
G.E. "largely controlled" A.E.G., then the most serious
questions arise which clamor for investigation. A.E.G. was a
prime financier of Hitler and "control" would more deeply
implicate the U.S. parent company than is suggested by the
evidence presented here.
14Son of Emil Rathenau, founder of A.E.G.,
born in 1867 and assassinated in 1922.
15The United States Strategic Bombing
Survey, German Electrical Equipment Industry/Report,
(Equipment Division, January 1947), p. 4.
16U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey, Plant
Report of A.E.G. (Allgemeine Elektrizitats Gesellschaft),
Nuremburg, Germany: June 1945), p. 6.
17p. 3. Consequently, "production during
the war was adequate until November 1944" and "in the opinion of
Speer assistants and plant officials the war effort in Germany
was never hindered in any important manner by any shortage of
electrical equipment." Difficulties arose only at the very end
of the war when the whole economy was threatened with collapse.
The report concluded, "All important needs for electrical
equipment in 1944 may therefore be said to have been met, since
plans were always optimistic."
18U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey,
AEG-Ostlandwerke GmbH, by Whitworth Ferguson, 31 May 1945.
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