Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1948 — Page 9

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Author Calls Marshall ‘Worst Offender’ in

Diplomacy of War Il | . Ex-OW! Officer Says Hull Abdicated + And Admirals and Generals Took Over - By WALLACE R. DEUEL, Times Special Writer i WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 19—Military policy during World War II caused harm from which

{the United States is stiff suffering, Wallace Carroll, former |official of Se Office of War Information, charges in a book pub-

can foreign policy

{lished toda

! a at . Marshall, {Secretary of State, . was “the

{tlares—although Mr. Marshall oe a sense of political strat-| waste. (egy to the department, when he it [took it over after the war, which {the department had previously) lacked.

| Mr. Carroll was deputy director of the overseas branch of OWI. {His book, “Persuade or Perish,” {was brought out by the Hough-| |ton-Miflin Co. Wartime Secretary of State kidney | Cordell Hull abdicated his authorjity, according to Mr. Carroll. Gen|erals and admirals seized this ipower, he says, and used it to {carry out policies which, among ed things, gave the United States the reputation of being the champion of reaction all over the, ‘world. i ‘Deals’ By Generals b The generals saw to it that | “deals” were made with reactionlary elements in several countries {which seemed to many to be con{trary to Washington's promises land proclamations of idealistic {war aims, Mr. Carroll declares. | America’s friends all over the world were disillusioned by tke |generals’ “deals,” America’s enemies rejoiced—and the United | States is still suffering, as Mr. {Carroll sees it. “Great mar though he is, Mar{shall was blind tp the political ‘nature of war,” he writes. “By his insistence that foreign {policy had to be subordinated to {military strategy, Marshall pro|foundly influenced American aims |and actions in Spain, the Bal{kans, the Middle East and other |parts of the world. The full ef[fect of his influence cannot yet he lassessed. “The Brit]sh, who had fought a 800d many successful wars, were

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obsession with the military side of war,” he adds. Liaison Held Faulty “It would not have occurred to a British government to permit a |general in the field to make decisions in the realm of foreign policy. “For. the British, an army was an instrument of policy, and policy never became a mere instrument of. the Re : Mr. Carroll also writes thiit Roosevelt and the American military high command decided important questions of foreign policy “on a number of issues” the war without even telling the Stale Department] what these decisiond were. J American representatives there-| fore sometimes worked “in sub-! lime ignorance” of what ge i {

own government's policy was, he| declares. ! British officials knew more about United States policy than) Americans did in some cases, the! writer says. The inside story of the Allies’|

surrender” is also told for the first time by Mr. Carroll. f He defends “unconditional sur-| {render,” subject to some reservations, ! Averted ‘Hoodwink’ Chances are that any retreat] from “unconditional surrender” would have encouraged the Ger-| mans to fight even. longer and | harder than they did, he writes. | After 1918, the Germans suc¢eeded in convincing themselves that the Reich had not been militarily defeated, but had been tricked into surrender by the promises of Woodrow Wilson's 14 points—and had then been treated very badly indeed—Mr. Carroll points out. The Nazis had dinned it into the Germans’ heads that the Allies would try this same “trick” in World War II. ~ Therefore, any Allied promises to treat the Reich well would have seemed to the Germans "to show that the Allies were afraid they couldn't beat the Reich by military means and were trying to hoodwink the Germans into laying down their arms by soft words which the Allies wouldn't] live up to afterwards, Mr. Carroll | says. | This would have made the Ger-| mans fight all the better, the au- |

|

v [shor suggests. {

‘Sinful to Pretend?’

LONDON, Aug. 19 (UP)-—The Rev. W. A. Gibson, vicar of Wimbledon, noting the absence of buttons from church collections these days, concluded it was “not due tothe realization that it is sinful to pretend, but to the fact buttons are costlier than pennies nowadays.”

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