Train Your Populace

The book, Travellers in the Third Reich by Julia Boyd, is full of first-hand accounts by way of diary notes, reports, articles, and reported conversations of ordinary travellers in Germany in the 1930s.

The author describes how the NSDAP used every trick on the propaganda book to blind foreign visitors to what was going on and to get the populace on board. The Party used torchlight processions, mass parades, control of the media, etc. backed up by the essential fascist tool of violence as a first resort.

Violence and antisemitism were hidden from visitors and thrust in the face of the populace. As an example, during the 1936 Berlin Olympics, antisemitic posters and signs were taken down, and then put up again after the games had finished.

Yet looking back, I cannot help but think that many people look for any excuse to behave badly. Just give them a justification. Just give them an idea onto which they can latch. Give them reason why an idea is more important than a life.

That was then. What I see now is that people are being whipped up with new tools in the propaganda armoury.

Observers say that the danger of social media and online news commenting is that the commenters can be annonymous.

That is not the danger of social media; it is the beauty of it.

People’s anger is being whipped up. They are being taught, trained, to see things as though the differences between them and those who think otherwise are separated by an unbridgeable divide.

They are being taught, trained, that there is no space in between for compromise, for unity, for community, for talking, for getting together.

The reason they are being trained is so that they become trainable.

So I was reading the book this morning, and then I read the news. I read that last night, Mark Field MP, Minister of State for Asia and the Pacific, MP for Cities of London & Westminster, attacked a climate protester who gatecrashed a dinner where the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Philip Hammond, was speaking.

The BBC have a nice video of what happened, so there is no saying it was anything other than what it was. The MP attacked the protester, and it is clear that he did so because he thought it was OK to do so.

The protester was a woman, so he didn’t have to worry that a burly protester would floor him.

Field later apologised for ‘grabbing’ her (he didn’t grab her; he attacked her), and then made his situation worse by his patently untrue claim that he was worried the protester may have been armed.

What made his ‘instinctive grab’, his attack, on the woman seem to him to be OK and the thing to do?

I think one can make a good case for saying that thirty years ago, a little voice in his head would have restrained him. Not today. No one is immune from being trained, much less the people in the thick of it.

The Election Of Civic Leaders In London

Cordovan is the name given to a rich burgundy colour. It gets its name from the city of Cordoba in Spain, where many workers in leather had their businesses.

Workers in leather, originally meaning workers from Cordoba who worked in goatskin, were known as a cordewans, then cordewaners, and now in English as cordwainers. Cordwainer is an alternative word for a shoemaker, mostly used in connection with a guild.

The distinction is more than academic. Cordwainers make new shoes: In contrast, cobblers repair shoes. Since the Middle Ages, craftsmen have formed guilds to regulate their trades by allowing only members to work in that field.

By having the law recognise that only guild members can carry out the work, they protect the quality of their wares and services, and their prices. Guilds also train apprentices and support members who have fallen on hard times.

The Worshipful Company of Cordwainers continues today, based in Mincing Lane in London. Although the word cordwainer refers to a maker of shoes, the guild encompasses workers in fine leather as well as shoemakers.

The term ‘worshipful’ denotes a guild as a livery company, which marks out the Cordwainers as having special status. The term ‘livery’ refers to the clothing that guild members were entitled to wear to show their status, and as of today there are over 100 livery companies in the City of London.

Senior members of livery companies have rights over the civic life of London, with local government powers. One of their special powers concerns the election of civic leaders.

Behind the scenes, the senior liverymen elect the City’s sheriffs and approve the candidates for election to the office of Lord Mayor of London.

The Kaiser’s Table

I am readingTravellers In The Third Reich by Julia Boyd. It is a book full of contemporary accounts by various people of their impressions of Germany from the period from after the First World War to the beginning of the Second World War.

The kaiser’s table is a minor footnote I will describe here for its oddity. One thing, though, that I have gathered from the book is that the reparations forced by France and the United States were doubly hated. They were hated because the Allies took over the means of production. They took over the coal fields of the Saar Region and the heavy industry regions of the Ruhr.

Therefore, felt the Germans, they were required to pay reparations without the means to earn the money to pay them.

The reparations were also hated because of the long period of uncertainty between the end of the war in 1918 and the signing of the Treaty of Versailles in 1920.

Another thing I read repeatedly is the observation that Germany was clean and well tended. That is not so surprising given that the battlefields of Europe were in France and Belgium, and the countryside of Germany escaped comparatively unscathed.

Still, it’s an observation I made when I first travelled to Germany when I was fourteen. On the return journey by bus up the A1 in England to Leeds, I saw for the first time with new eyes how dismally untended the road verges and the central reservation were. It was an eye opener.

For the moment though, I just want to record here one of those little footnotes of history – about the Kaiser’s table at this castle residence, no longer occupied by him after the war.

The Kaiser’s Table

On Page 72 of Travellers In The Third Reich there is an extract from a letter that Lady Rumbold, wife of the British ambassador to Germany wrote to her mother.

She wrote after the Duke (later King George VI) and Duchess of York’s visit to Berlin in March 1929 en route to the wedding of Prince Olaf in Germany.

The extract from the letter:

The Duke and Duchess were given a private tour of the Kaiser’s former residence.

Even his tiny bedroom which is never shown, and which looked rather tragic lumbered up with: things, and wall paper very dilapidated. It was quite small and dark looking on to a courtyard, with a tiny dressing-room next to it.

In his study is the famous table on which he signed the order for the mobilisation of the Army on 1st August 1914.

This writing table is made out of wood from The Victory, and the huge inkstand is a model of it, with the famous Nelson signal ‘England expects etc.’ in coloured flags. Curious isn’t it?

The Trafalgar Campaign was a series of fleet manoeuvres by the French and Spanish fleets working together to force a passage through the English Channel, and thereby allow the French to invade England. The Battle of Trafalgar was the culmination of that campaign, ending in victory for the British.

HMS Victory was Lord Nelson’s flagship at the Battle of Trafalgar on 21 October 1805. In 1922, the ship was moved to a dry dock at Portsmouth, England, and preserved as a museum ship.

So one wonders who made the writing table made out of wood from The Victory, and by what route did it come into the possession of the Kaiser.

Britain, and the Bombs Dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki

British Foreign Policy Since Suez 1956-1968 by Donald Maclean is an interesting book quite apart from its contents. Maclean was a British civil servant who was also one of the Cambridge Five who spied for Russia from the 1930s until 1951.

Maclean wrote the book in 1970 when he was living in Moscow. Hodder and Stoughton published the book in the UK with Foreign Office approval.

I bought a second-hand copy (which I am still reading) after it was mentioned by Roland Philipps in his biography of Maclean published last year under the title A Spy Named Orphan: The Enigma of Donald Maclean. I enjoyed reading Maclean’s biography for a couple of reasons. It showed Maclean to be a complex, tortured, principled and highly intelligent and capable man.

And it made me reflect on how I would have behaved if I had been similarly motivated as a young man. I don’t think I would have lasted five minutes, and it is a reflection of Maclean’s capability that he did it for years.

It also showed how divided loyalties involve some kind of self-delusion – a young man’s (or woman’s) game.

I knew of Donald Maclean and the Cambridge spies, after all I am British and grew up with the revelation in 1979 of Anthony Blunt’s spying.

Blunt was Professor of the History of Art at the University of London, director of the Courtauld Institute of Art, and Surveyor of the Queen’s Pictures.

He was giving immunity from prosecution (why?) in 1964 in return for spilling the beans, but it was kept secret from the public for another fifteen years.

And I grew up with the talk of the fifth spy, the unknown man in the UK establishment, a big secret until an MI5 agent revealed what he knew in a book he wrote and had published in Australia.

It was all exciting stuff, but until I read Roland Philipps’ biography of Maclean I thought Maclean was a minor civil servant.

In fact he was high up in the service, privy to all kinds of secrets at the highest level, and in line for an appointment as British Ambassador to the United States.

There’s a lot of interesting stuff in British Foreign Policy Since Suez 1956-1968 about Britain’s relationship with Europe and the United States. Maclean talks about the changing fortunes of Britain and the history of the uneasy straddling of Europe and the United States that Britain has been pursuing since the Second World War. I will write something about that when I have read a bit more. It interests me not least because of the the looming Brexit.

For the moment I want to talk about the dropping of the atomic bombs on Japan.

I knew that the pursuit of a viable weapon was a joint British and US effort. I thought, though, that the decision to drop the bombs rested solely with the USA.

What I learned from Maclean’s book was that there was an agreement between Britain and the United States that the bomb would only be used with the consent and agreement of both countries. In plain English, Britain gave approval to the use of the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

I googled to see what I could find about this and found an article from 2013 in Japan Times which states:

Britain supported the use of atomic bombs by the United States against Japan in World War II about a month before the first one was dropped on Hiroshima, documents recently declassified by the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration showed.

Really though, they just had to read Donald Maclean’s book in which he says, on page 53

The presence of U.S. nuclear bases on U.K. soil and other aspects of the Anglo-American alliance exposes Britain to the risk of nuclear counter-attack should the United States use nuclear weapons against the Soviet Union. This remains true whether the US. fires its first salvo from British bases, from a Polaris submarine in mid-Atlantic from the United States or from some other quarter.

From the point of view of the British sponsors of the alliance, the logic of this situation requires that there should be a binding overall agreement that the United States will not in any circumstances use nuclear weapons against the Soviet Union without British consent. Washington has not been willing to tie its hands in this way, but, besides the guarantees relating specifically to the use of bases in Britain, gave unofficial assurances of a wider character. At the earliest stage of Anglo-American co-operation in nuclear matters—during the manufacture of the first, wartime, atomic bombs—such a binding agreement existed and was applied. From the signing of the Quebec Agreement by Roosevelt and Churchill in August 1943 until its disavowal by the Truman Administration at the end of the war, both countries had a clear-cut obligation, set out in the second clause of the Agreement, not to use nuclear weapons against third parties without each other’s consent. This clause was strictly complied with before the American atomic attack on Hiroshima.

The hiatus was subsequently partially filled by personal assurances from the President to the Prime Minister, given orally and requiring renewal with each change of President.

For an official account of the conclusion of this agreement, and its text, see Margaret Gowing. Britain and Atomic Energy 1939-1945. London. 1964. pp. 164-171