Washington Report, November 2005, pages 44-50
Special Report
The Hidden History of the Balfour Declaration
By John Cornelius
IN THIS article the author relates what he believes to be the
true story of how the British government came to issue what has
come to be known as the Balfour Declaration.
The Balfour Declaration took the form of a letter, dated Nov.
2, 1917, from Arthur Balfour, foreign secretary of the British
government, to Lord Walter Rothschild, head of the organization
of British Zionists. This letter promised that the British government
would work to bring about “a national home for the Jewish
people in Palestine.” (See box.)
I have written three earlier articles in the Washington Report on
this subject, and my views have evolved with the passage of time.1,2,3
What has not changed is my belief in a British-Zionist trade whereby
the Zionists assisted in bringing America into the war and, in
return, the British promised them Palestine.
Among the things that have changed is my concept of the timing
of the agreement. The earliest article contained a chronology showing
that the British received a plain-language copy of the Zimmermann
telegram (ZT) a few days after it was sent, encoded, from Berlin
to Washington, on Jan. 16, 1917, and that the first formal meeting
between British Zionists and the British government took place
on Feb. 7, 1917. It now appears that the basic agreement was made
several months before that time and what was betrayed to the British
was not the text of the ZT, but rather the code in which it was
sent.
Autumn 1916
The story can begin about halfway through the First World War,
in the autumn of 1916. We will examine three components of the
situation at that time: the military and naval positions and the
status of British Zionist negotiations.
On land, the war began in August 1914 with the German army facing
enemies on two fronts. In accordance with a long-standing plan,
the Schlieffen plan, Germany attacked France first, hoping for
a quick victory there, after which it could turn its full attention
to the Russian front. Events did not work out that way. The Germans
did advance, through Belgium, deep into France, but they did not
succeed in enveloping Paris from the west, as had been the intention.
By the end of 1914 a sort of stalemate had developed. A year and
a half later the location of the front had not changed greatly,
and a continuous line of trenches ran from the Swiss border almost
to the North Sea. Both sides mounted offensives from time to time,
with heavy loss of life, but the location of the front changed
by only a few miles.
The Germans fared better on the Russian front, but that does not
concern us here.
By the middle of 1916 the French army was largely exhausted, and
the next big Allied offensive was undertaken primarily by the British.
The battle of the Somme began on July 1, 1916 and was one of the
bloodiest in history. The British suffered 60,000 casualties (19,000
dead) on the first day alone. Total casualties were over a million,
more or less equally divided between the two sides. The location
of the front shifted by a few miles.
Well before the battle ended, the British must have concluded
that they would not be able to drive the Germans out of France
by frontal assault.
At sea, the situation was delicate. Early in the war, on Nov.
3, 1914, Britain had declared the whole of the North Sea a theater
of war and instituted an illegal blockade of the adjoining neutral
coasts and ports. The purpose of the blockade was to starve Germany
into submission. The American government protested but took no
action.4
On Feb. 4, 1915 the German ambassador informed the American government
that from Feb.18 a counter blockade would be in force, and the
territorial waters of Great Britain and Ireland, including the
whole of the English Channel, were declared a war area.
On May 7, 1915 the British liner Lusitania, traveling from
New York to Liverpool, was struck off the Irish coast by a single
torpedo, which provoked a much larger secondary explosion. The
ship sank quickly, with the loss of almost 1,200 lives, 128 of
them American.
There was strong American reaction to the sinking of the Lusitania, both
popular and diplomatic, and the U.S. came close to breaking off
diplomatic relations with Germany. A meeting between the German
ambassador and President Woodrow Wilson on June 2 had the effect
of calming matters for a time, but an exchange of diplomatic notes
occurred. The second American note, of June 10, led to the resignation
of the American secretary of state, William Jennings Bryan, who
believed that neutrality required that American citizens be forbidden
from traveling on ships bearing the flag of any belligerent nation.
And, in fact, Americans could perfectly well have traveled on American,
Dutch, or Scandinavian vessels.
Although there had been no settlement of the Lusitania case, feeling
died down for a time. Then on Aug. 19, 1915 the British passenger
steamer Arabic was sunk off the coast of Ireland, with the
loss of two American lives. Once again the possibility of war between
the U.S. and Germany loomed. In this case, however, Germany revealed
that, following the Lusitania sinking, German submarine
commanders had been ordered not to sink liners without warning,
and apologized and offered compensation. Although the Lusitania matter
still was not settled, following the Arabic apology German-American
relations remained tranquil for several months.
The next cloud on the horizon was the “Sussex incident.” On
March 24, 1916 the French trans-channel steamer Sussex was
reported torpedoed and sunk in the English Channel, with the loss
of several American lives. There seems to be some question as to
whether the Sussex was in fact torpedoed and sunk at all,
but in any case, the American government issued an ultimatum, and
the German government was forced to acknowledge that the Sussex had
been sunk by a German submarine and to agree that henceforth German
submarines would abide by the rules of “cruiser warfare,” a
severe restriction which seriously handicapped the submarine as
a strategic weapon.
Throughout the war, there were two schools of thought within the
German government. One held that the submarine was a major strategic
weapon, with the potential of winning the war for Germany. The
other held that the continued use of submarines against merchant
shipping would lead to continual incidents and ultimately bring
America into the war on the side of the Allies, and that therefore
the use of submarines against merchant shipping was against Germany’s
interest. By the fall of 1916 this issue had not been resolved.
British-Zionist negotiations date back at least to 1903. In that
year the sixth Zionist congress took place in Basel. It is referred
to as the “Uganda” congress because it dealt with an
offer by the British government to make available land in Uganda
for Jewish settlement. The offer was seriously considered and was,
in fact, approved by a majority of the delegates, but the debate
proved to be very divisive, and ultimately the offer was not taken
up.
During that period Arthur Balfour was British prime minister,
and the Zionists had retained the London law firm of Lloyd George,
Roberts and Co. This firm was chosen because one of the partners,
David Lloyd George, was an MP and thus in touch with Foreign
Office thinking.5 Both Balfour and Lloyd George
must have given serious thought at that time to the question of
what the British government and the Zionists could do for each
other.
That Balfour continued to think about this is shown by his statement
at what Chaim Weizmann calls their second meeting in 1915 (the
first was in 1906): “You know, I was thinking of that conversation
of ours, and I believe that after the guns stop firing you may
get your Jerusalem.”6
British-Zionist negotiations date back at least to l903.
On the other hand, in her 1983 book, Dear Lord Rothschild,
Rothschild’s niece, Miriam Rothschild, states that Balfour
and Weizmann had met on several occasions between 1905 and 1915
and had established an excellent rapport.7
In any case, it would seem that a pattern of British-Zionist negotiations,
and in particular of Balfour-Weizmann negotiations, had been established
well before the fall of 1916.
It is interesting to note that the Encyclopedia Britannica states
that Balfour succeeded Winston Churchill as first lord of the admiralty
in May 1915, whereas in Trial and Error Weizmann states
that in March 1916 he was summoned to the British admiralty in
connection with a chemical process he had developed and was subsequently
brought into the presence of “the First Lord of the Admiralty,
who was at that time Mr. Winston Churchill.”
Whatever the truth of the timing may be, Weizmann established
a pattern of frequent visits to the admiralty, ostensibly in connection
with his chemical process, but which would also have provided the
opportunity for frequent, prolonged and secret negotiations between
Weizmann and Balfour.
What Happened Next
Once it became clear, in the fall of 1916, that the battle of
the Somme would not result in the German army’s being forced
out of France, the British, with their resources approaching exhaustion,
had to consider what to do next.
Herbert Asquith, who had been prime minister since 1908, had begun,
reluctantly, to consider a negotiated peace, but negotiations with
the Zionists, through Weizmann and Balfour, provided another option
for Britain, although not for Asquith. That option was the possibility
of a formal, but secret, alliance between the Zionists and the
Monarchy, whereby the British Monarchy would undertake to facilitate
the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine and the Zionists
would undertake to help bring America into the war on the side
of the Allies, thus assuring an Al-lied victory. An agreement with
a British government would certainly be necessary, but British
governments come and go, and a commitment from something less ephemeral
than a British government would have been required by the Zionists.
It is proposed that such a secret agreement took place. There
seems to be no way to date it accurately, but it seems likely to
have occurred sometime in October 1916.
Once a formal agreement was in place, the next step was to arrange
for several changes in personnel—on both the British and
the German sides.
- The first change was in the leadership of Room 40,
the name given the British codebreaking organization. Room 40 was
destined to play a key role in the vast deception to follow, and
it was necessary to have a trusted actor at its head. Room 40 was
first set up in the fall of 1914 under the direction of Alfred
Ewing, who retained that position until October 1916. At that time
Ewing was replaced by Captain Reginald Hall, director of naval
intelligence. Balfour found a suitable position for Ewing in academia.
See “Five Books,” p. 47.
- In Germany, Gottlieb von Jagow, who had been foreign
minister since 1913, resigned in November 1916 over the issue of
unrestricted submarine warfare, which he opposed. Speaking of the
situation in Berlin at that time, the then German ambassador to
the U.S. stated, “the unrestricted submarine campaign was
only made possible by the resignation of Herr von Jagow, who was
the chief opponent of the submarine campaign,” and “as
long as Herr von Jagow remained secretary of state, a breach with
the United States was regarded as impossible.”8
- Von Jagow was replaced by Arthur Zimmermann, undersecretary
for foreign affairs since 1911. Before 1914, Berlin was the
center of Zionist activity, and in 1912 the organization which
was to become the Technion, or Israel Institute of Technology,
in Haifa had placed itself under the protection of Germany, and
Zimmermann had arranged with the Turkish government for the purchase
of land and the erection of a building.9 Zimmermann clearly enjoyed
good relations with German Zionists and was thus susceptible
to Zionist influence.
- In November 1916, Woodrow Wilson was re-elected to
a second term as U.S. president with the slogan, “He kept
us out of war.” It was understood that Wilson’s aim
was to bring about a negotiated end to the war without victory
for either side.
- In early December 1916, a political crisis, probably
engineered, occurred in Britain, and Herbert Asquith, who had
been prime minister since 1908, was forced to resign. The denouement
came on Dec. 6, 1916. That afternoon King George V summoned
several prominent political figures, including Balfour and Lloyd
George, to a conference at Buckingham Palace. Later that same
evening, Balfour received a small political delegation, which
proposed that the difficult political situation could be resolved
with Lloyd George as prime minister, provided Balfour would agree
to accept the position of foreign minister, which he did.10
- Lloyd George then quickly imposed a war dictatorship,
and direction of the war was entrusted to a “War Cabinet” of
five members, including himself as prime minister and Balfour
as foreign minister. Mark Sykes was named secretary.
At that point, all necessary changes in personnel had been accomplished.
- On Dec. 18, 1916, the American ambassador to Britain
conveyed an “offer of peace” on behalf of the Central
Powers to the Allies.
- On the following day, David Lloyd George, in his
first speech to Parliament as prime minister, heaped scorn on
the peace proposal and vowed that Britain and its allies would
fight on until victory.
In retrospect, it seems clear that this speech was a bluff and
was meant to goad the Germans into resuming unrestricted submarine
warfare.
That this was indeed the case is indicated by a series of messages
from the U.S. ambassador to Britain, Walter Page, to President
Wilson and the secretary of state, written in June 1917.11 These
messages make it clear that Britain was on the verge of financial
collapse, and that only American support could avert disaster.” These
messages were made public only in 1925 and are, in my opinion,
too little known.
- On Jan. 9, 1917 the German government made the
fateful decision to resume unrestricted submarine warfare at
the beginning of the following month.
- Date unknown—What would come to be known
as the Zimmermann telegram was concocted in London. My source
for this information is a letter to the Washington Report written
in response to my first (1997) article, by author Russell Warren
Howe.12 Howe stated that he had been taught at Cambridge that
the ZT was “concocted in London to encourage Washington to join
the Allies against the Central Powers.” My first reaction
to this letter was doubt—because Zimmermann subsequently
accepted responsibility for the ZT. But of course he had to,
because he was responsible, even if the idea came from someone
else.
- Date unknown, possibly before the previous two entries—The
key to German code 7500 (in which the ZT was to be sent) was provided
to Room 40 by an informant. Howe states that Britain broke code
7500 (he calls it 0075) “a few weeks before the ZT.” By “broke,” he
presumably means “acquired.”
- Date unknown—One Herr von Kemnitz, an East
Asia expert in the German foreign office and presumably a Zionist
agent, presented Zimmermann with the text of a proposed telegram,
the ZT, that he had supposedly drafted but had more likely received
from London.13 Against the opposition of some of his colleagues,
he persuaded Foreign Minister Zimmermann to send it.
- On Jan. 16, 1917, two telegrams were sent sequentially,
by cable, from Foreign Minister Zimmermann, in Berlin, to the
German ambassador in Washington, Count Bernstorff. The first,
which both Zimmermann and Bernstorff considered to be by far
the more important, informed Bernstorff of the decision to resume
unrestricted submarine warfare on Feb. 1, 1917, and gave him
instructions on when and how to inform the American government.
The second was what has come to be known as the Zimmermann telegram.
(See box on facing page.) This second telegram was relayed to
the German Embassy in Mexico City on Jan. 19, 1917.
- The British intercepted the ZT on the day it was
sent and promptly decoded it.
It should be noted that Zimmermann sent the ZT on his own authority.
Neither the Kaiser nor Chancellor Bethmann-Hollweg knew anything
of it until it was made public in America.
After seeing these cables, Bernstorff attempted to have the German
government rescind the unrestricted submarine warfare decision,
but was unsuccessful.
- Jan. 31, 1917—Bernstorff informed the U.S.
government that unrestricted submarine warfare would commence
the following day.
- Feb. 3, 1917—The U.S. broke off diplomatic
relations with Germany, and Bernstorff was told to leave the
U.S.
- Feb. 7, 1917—The secretary of the War Cabinet,
Mark Sykes, met with Weizmann and other Zionist leaders in London,
in what is widely, but incorrectly, believed to have been the
first contact between the British government and the Zionists
during the war. It is doubtful that Sykes himself had any knowledge
of the October 1916 British-Zionist agreement.
- Feb. 14, 1917—Bernstorff left New York on
the Danish steamer Friedrich VIII to return to Germany.
Safe conduct had been granted by the British.
- Feb. 16, 1917—The Friedrich VIII entered
Halifax, Nova Scotia harbor. Bernstorff remained incommunicado
for almost two weeks.
- Feb. 26, 1917—The State Department received
a telegram from the American ambassador in London containing
the plain language text of the ZT.
- Feb. 27, 1917—Friedrich VIII permitted
to sail from Halifax.
- March 1, 1917 —Text of ZT published in U.S.
- March 15, 1917—Czar Nicholas II abdicated,
following the first of two 1917 revolutions in Russia. A provisional
government was formed, later headed by Alexander Kerensky. Democracy
appeared to have taken hold in Russia.
- April 2, 1917—President Wilson addressed Congress.
He spoke of the “wonderful and heartening” events in
Russia, stated that “the world needs to be made safe for
democracy,” and asked Congress to declare war on Germany.
- April 6, 1917—Congress declared war on Germany.
- Aug. 6, 1917—Zimmermann replaced as foreign
minister in Germany.
- Early November 1917—The Bolshevik revolution
took place in Russia. The promise of democracy disappeared. The
ex-Czar and his family were subsequently put to death. Kerensky
was removed from power but came to no harm.
- Nov. 2, 1917—Arthur Balfour sent a letter, including
what has come to be known as the Balfour Declaration (BD), to Lord
Walter Rothschild. For a number of years it was not known that
the BD took this form. Lord Balfour’s obituary in The
New York Times of March 20,1930 stated that the BD was the
text of a speech delivered by Balfour on Nov. 4, 1917. See box
p. 44.
- March 8, 1918—Weizmann had a private and secret
audience with King George V. According to Weizmann’s account
in Trial and Error, the meeting consisted of an exchange
of pleasantries, and one must wonder whether the meeting did
not have some unstated purpose. One wonders, for example, if
Weizmann did not emerge from the meeting in possession of a document
signed by the King of England, possibly committing to more than
did the BD.
- Nov. 11, 1918-World War I ended.
Five Books: How the Betrayal of German Code 7500 to the British
Was Covered Up
To establish that German Code 7500 was obtained by the British
in 1917 by means other than codebreaking, it is instructive briefly
to review five publications. These will be examined in the order
in which they were published, which—because book three was
first published classified and later declassified—is different
from the order in which they were made public.
Our first book is The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page by
Burton J. Hendrick.14 Walter Page was a long-time (since 1881)
friend of President Woodrow Wilson and was appointed by him to
be U.S. ambassador to Great Britain, serving from 1913 until his
death in 1918.
Volumes I and II of this three-volume work have a common index
and were both published in 1922. Volume III deals largely with
Page’s correspondence with President Wilson and Secretary
of State Robert Lansing and was published in 1925, after Wilson’s
death. It is important to remember that these volumes were written
not by Page himself, who died in 1918—less than two months
after the end of World War I—but by his biographer, Hendrick,
who assembled the letters from many sources. We are concerned here
only with Volume III.
Hendrick relates that in late February 1917 Balfour personally
handed Page a copy of the document which has come to be known as
the Zimmermann telegram. This document can be found in the box
at right, and is referred to there as ZT-2. It is the version of
the telegram that was forwarded by the German Embassy in Washington
to the German Embassy in Mexico City on Jan. 19, 1917. Balfour
stated that the telegram had not been obtained in Washington but
had been bought in Mexico City.
Two other versions of the Zimmermann telegram may also be found
in the box at right. These are ZT-1, the original telegram as cabled
from Berlin to Washington on Jan. 16, 1917, and what we may call
ZT-Hendrick. ZT-Hendrick appears nowhere else than in Hendrick’s
book. It seems to be something the British gave Page, with an indication
that it was an early, partial, decipherment of ZT-2 made sometime
before Page was given the completely deciphered version. It is
evident, however, that ZT-Hendrick is derived from ZT-1, not ZT-2.
ZT-1 and ZT-2 are, of course, English translations of German originals.
There is no German original of ZT-H.
Some people in the U.S. government must have learned in early
1917 that ZT-1 and ZT-2 were sent encrypted in two different and
unrelated codes. This did not become public knowledge, however,
until F&M (see Book 3, below) was declassified in 1965.
It is difficult to see how the national interest was served by
hiding from public knowledge for 48 years the simple fact that
ZT-1 and ZT-2 were encrypted in different codes.
It was fortunate for the British that Page died when he did in
1918. Page was clearly an anglophile and eagerly accepted everything
Balfour told him. Nevertheless, had he learned that the two versions
of the ZT had been sent in different codes and that ZT-Hendrick
could only have been derived from ZT-1, he would surely have realized
that he had been deceived.
The second book is Arthur James Balfour by Lord Balfour’s
niece, Blanche Dugdale, published in two volumes in 1936 (London)
and 1937 (NY).15 This is a lengthy work, covering Lord
Balfour’s
entire life and political career. We are concerned here only with
Chapter 10 of the second volume, in which the following significant
paragraphs appear. The year referred to is 1917.
Ever since the middle of January, however, a piece of information
had been in the possession of the British Government, which would
move, if anything could, the vast populations behind the Atlantic
seaboard States, who still read of the European War with as much
detachment as if it had been raging on the moon. This was the
famous telegram from Zimmermann, the German Foreign Minister,
to the German Minister in Mexico, instructing him, if and when
the United States should enter the War on the Allied side, to
propose to Mexico an alliance which would restore to her,
when peace came, her “lost territories in Texas,
Arizona and New Mexico.”
The method by which this information had reached the British
Intelligence Service made it impossible for some time to communicate
it to the United States Government. Therefore for over a month
Balfour read his dispatches from Washington of the slow wakening
of the American will to war, but could do nothing to hasten the
process. Till—at last—information about the Mexican
plot reached London through channels which enabled the Intelligence
Service to cover up the traces of how it had first been got.
This appears to open the possibility that the British government
obtained either the Zimmermann telegram or the code in which it
was sent from an informant, rather than by code-breaking, and in
any case indicates that the British possessed the full text of
ZT-1 shortly after it was sent.
The third work to be examined is a U.S. Army Signal Corps Bulletin, The
Zimmermann Telegram of January 16, 1917 and its Cryptographic
Background, by William F. Friedman and Charles J. Mendelsohn
(F&M).16 This work was published, classified, in 1937 and
was declassified in 1965. The senior author was born Wolfe Friedmann
in Kishinev, Russia in 1891 and ultimately became known as the
Father of American Cryptanalysis.
Friedman and Mendelsohn (F&M) undertake to determine how the
British were able to intercept the Zimmermann telegram and how
they were able to decipher it.
They reveal that the ZT (ZT-1) was first transmitted by submarine
cable from Berlin to the German ambassador in Washington, Count
Bernstorff, on Jan. 16, 1917, encrypted in German code 7500, and
that Bernstorff then relayed it (ZT-2) as a Western Union telegram
encrypted in German code 13042, to the German legation in Mexico
City on Jan. 19. Two different codes were used because the German
legation in Mexico did not possess code 7500, and the ZT had to
be relayed to them in an older and less secure code.
The texts of the two versions of the ZT, the Berlin-to-Washington
(7500) version and the Washington-to-Mexico City (13042) version,
were identical, but they had different preambles. The preamble
of the 7500 version was “For your Excellency’s personal
information and to be forwarded to the Imperial Minister in Mexico
by a safe route.” The preamble of the 13042 version was simply “The
foreign office telegraphs on January 16.” (See “Three
Versions” box on previous page.)
Code 7500 was a new and difficult code, only recently delivered
by submarine to the U.S., and it is the professional judgment of
F&M that the British would have been able to make, at best,
a very rudimentary decipherment of the ZT by the time they made
the verbatim text of the ZT available to the U.S.
F&M’s explanation of how the British obtained the text
of the ZT is that, after making a meager beginning in deciphering
the 7500 version, they were able to obtain a copy of the 13042
version, after which decipherment was soon accomplished. This fails
to explain, however, how the British were able to obtain the text
of the preamble of the 7500 version of the ZT, which they did.
The more likely explanation of how the British were able to obtain
a verbatim copy of the original 7500 version of the ZT is that,
at the time the ZT was sent, the British already possessed the
key to that code.
Although F&M reproduce the Dugdale quotation given above,
they are remiss in having failed even to consider the obvious possibility
that the British might have obtained the text of ZT-1 (or code
7500) through an informant rather than by code-breaking. The possibility
must be considered that this failure was by design rather than
through oversight.
The fourth book to be considered is The Zimmermann Telegram,
by Barbara Tuchman.17 This work first appeared in 1958, and a second
edition appeared in 1966, i.e., after F&M was declassified
in 1965.
The first edition of Tuchman’s book states that the British
picked up the encoded ZT by wireless on Jan. 16, 1917, and found
it to be in code 13042, which was related to codes the British
already had deciphered. They were thus able, in short order, to
produce a nearly complete copy of the decoded ZT.
In fact, the ZT was transmitted by cable, not radio, and encrypted
in code 7500, not 13042.
Normally, the second edition of a book provides an opportunity,
and also the duty, for the author to correct errors in the first
edition. That did not happen with this book. The text is unchanged,
but a “Preface to New Edition” has been added. In it,
Tuchman reports the declassification of F&M and acknowledges
that it “appears to modify my account”—a gross
understatement. She acknowledges having been aware of the existence
of F&M and acknowledges having been in contact with Friedman
but professes to have been unaware of the content of the book.
The heart of Tuchman’s book is the de-tailed story in Chapter
1 of how the British deciphered the ZT in code 13042 on Jan. 16,
1917. A reading of F&M makes it clear that this story is false.
It is conceivable that Tuchman believed this story when she first
wrote it, but it is not possible that she still believed it when
the second edition of her book was issued. It is the belief of
this writer that Tuchman fabricated a false story of how the British
obtained the text of the ZT in order to conceal the fact that they
obtained it by betrayal rather than by codebreaking.
It is remarkable that Tuchman’s book continues to be read
and believed more than 30 years after hard evidence has become
available that the story is false.
The fifth and final book on our list is The Codebreakers,
by David Kahn, published in 1967.18 This a lengthy work of 26
chapters and over 1,000 pages. We are interested primarily in Chapter
9, entitled “Room 40.” About half of that chapter is
devoted to the ZT. A second edition appeared in 1996, but it does
not alter Chapter 9.
Kahn’s explanation of how the British were able to decipher
the ZT in code 7500 (which, like Tuchman but unlike F&M, he
calls 0075) is that “somehow” the British obtained
enough material in code 7500 to make a start at breaking it. Kahn
quotes an incomplete version of the ZT as being what the British
were able to produce. This same incomplete version is referred
to by F&M as the “Hendrick version,” of which they
say: “When all is said and done, the decipherment of the
7500 version of the Zimmermann telegram, even to the degree given
in the Hendrick version, approaches the unbelievable.” Note
that, unlike Kahn, who is a writer on cryptography, F&M were
professional cryptographers.
One’s confidence in Kahn is eroded by the fact that, in
discussing the question of why, after the ZT was made public, Zimmermann
admitted authorship of it, Kahn states, “to this day no one
knows why Zimmermann admitted it” (p. 297). This is disingenuous.
Anyone who has looked into the matter knows exactly why he admitted
it. The Germans were as much taken by surprise by the publication
of the ZT as anyone else and wanted to know if it was genuine.
Zimmermann was called on to testify before the Reichstag and had
no choice but to admit it.
As an aside, note that Room 40 was the name given to the cryptoanalytic
bureau set up in the British admiralty early in the war under the
direction of Sir Alfred Ewing. Kahn reveals that Ewing remained
the head of Room 40 from the fall of 1914 until October 1916, when
he returned to academia, whence he had come. His departure was
facilitated by Lord Balfour, and his replacement was Captain Reginald
Hall, R.N., director of naval intelligence. We may infer that at
this time British-Zionist negotiations were well under way and
that Room 40’s role was being broadened from cracking German
codes to include pretending to crack German code 7500.
We have examined our five books one-by-one. Let us now relate
them to each other.
It is the unproven belief of the present writer that German code
7500, in which the original ZT was sent in January 1917, was obtained
by a Zionist agent inside the German government, possibly either
by means of photography or a photographic memory, and provided
to the British government.
The second book cited, by Blanche Dugdale, is consistent with
this belief in that it contains a veiled hint that the British
might have obtained the plain language text of the ZT by means
other than codebreaking, whereas the three following books totally
ignore this possibility. Interestingly, the other three books give
different, and incompatible, stories of how the British did obtain
the text of the ZT.
It is clear that the authors of books three, four and five were
acquainted with each other.
Since it was the first of these three books, F&M, of course,
make no mention of Tuchman or Kahn.
In her “Preface to New Edition,” written after the
declassification of F&M, Tuchman acknowledges having known
of the existence of F&M, though not its content, and having
spoken to Friedman. (There was no mention of either of these facts
in the first edition.) Also in the same preface, Tuchman states
that decipherment of code 7500 (which she calls 0075) will be analyzed
in Kahn’s, at that time forthcoming, book. This implies contact
between them.
Interestingly, Kahn makes no mention of Tuchman, nor does her
name appear in the index, although Kahn’s account of the
historical circumstance of the ZT seems to be largely borrowed
from her book. Kahn does, however, mention Friedman. In the preface
to The Codebreakers. Kahn mysteriously thanks Friedman for “a
gift made in 1947, upon my graduation from high school, that was
a major step in my cryptographic education.” One wonders
if that “gift” might not have been the secret of how
the British first obtained German code 7500 and of the need to
protect that secret in perpetuity.
“Services Rendered”
In his seminal work, Arab Awakening (1938), George Antonius
points out that in early 1917 three major obstacles stood in the
way of Zionist efforts to obtain a commitment from the British
government in support of their goals in Palestine.19 First
was the bargain concluded in 1915 with Sharif Husain of Arabia
for an independent Arab state whose territory included Pales-tine.
Second was the Sykes-Picot agreement, dividing the Middle East
between Britain and France and placing the Holy Land under some
sort of international administration. And third was the hostility
toward political Zionism of an influential group of British Jews.
Antonius then continues:
“Undeterred, however, by those obstacles, Mr. Lloyd George
appointed Sir Mark Sykes to open negotiations with the Zionists.
What his motives were in wishing to come to an understanding with
the Zionist leaders, and what the considerations were which induced
the British Government eventually to issue the Balfour Declaration
are questions to which the answers have been obscured by a smoke-screen
of legend and propaganda. It is alleged, for instance, that the
Jews used their financial and political influence to bring the
United States into the War on the side of the Entente and that
the Balfour Declaration was a reward for actual services rendered.
All published evidence goes to disprove that allegation, and one
can only infer either that it does not rest on any foundation or,
if it does, that the services rendered by international Jewry in
that connection were of so occult a nature that they have hitherto
escaped the scrutiny of all the historians of America’s intervention.”
The initial meeting between Sykes and the Zionists took place
on Feb. 7, 1917, and we can now see why the “services rendered” toward
bringing America into the war have hitherto escaped the scrutiny
of all the historians of America’s intervention. One would
expect that Zionist actions aimed at bringing America into the
war would have taken place sometime after the first British-Zionist
meeting, but the first acknowledged contact between the British
Government and Zionists was the Sykes meeting of Feb. 7, 1917.
Yet by that time the Zionist contributions toward bringing America
into the war already had largely been accomplished, although it
is likely that Sykes himself was unaware of that.
The Balfour-Weizmann agreement of October 1916 was and remains
entirely secret.
The Sykes meeting served as a sort of decoy.
In the few months between these two events, the following had
taken place:
- The civilian head of codebreaking “Room 40” in
London had been replaced by the director of Naval Intelligence.
- Von Jagow, who had served since 1913, was replaced
by Zimmermann as German foreign secretary.
- Asquith, who had served as British prime minister
since 1908, was removed from power, and a new War Cabinet was formed,
in which Lloyd George was prime minister and Balfour foreign minister—both
friends of Zionism since 1903.
- The key to German code 7500 was betrayed to Room
40.
- A draft of the ZT was concocted in London and presented
to Zimmermann by one of his subordinates in Berlin.
- The ZT was transmitted by cable from Berlin to Washington
on Jan. 16, 1917. It was copied by Room 40 and promptly de-coded.
Note that this is incompatible with Tuchman’s story but entirely
consistent with Dugdale’s account.
Thus, by the time of the Sykes-Zionist meeting of Feb. 7, 1917,
the Zionist part of the bargain had been accomplished, and America
was as good as at war. All that remained was for the British to
find the best time and method for revealing the contents of the
ZT to President Wilson and for him to convince Congress and the
American people to go to war.
References:
- Cornelius, John. “The Balfour Declaration and
the Zimmermann Note,” The Washington Report on Middle East
Affairs (WRMEA), Aug./Sept. 1997.
- Cornelius, John. “Answering Critics of the Theory
that Balfour Declaration Was Payoff for Zionist Services in WWI,” WRMEA,
Sept. 1998.
- Cornelius, John. “Palestine, the Balfour Declaration,
and Why America Entered the Great War,” WRMEA, Oct./Nov.
1999.
- Bernstorff, Count Johann Heinrich. My Three Years in
America, New York: Scribner’s, 1920.
- Dugdale, Mrs. Edgar. The Balfour Declaration-Origins
and Background, London: The Jewish Agency for Palestine,
1940, pp. 15-16.
- Weizmann, Chaim. Trial and Error, Westport,
CT: Greenwood Press, 1949, p. 152.
- Rothschild, Miriam. Dear Lord Rothschild, Glenside,
Pa.: Balaban Publishers, 1983, p. 341.
- Bernstorff, pp.310-311.
- Weizmann, p. 143.
- Dugdale, Blanche. Arthur James Balfour, NY, Putnam’s,
1937, Vol. II, pp. 127-9.
- Hendrick, Burton J. The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page,
NY, Doubleday, Page & Co., 1925, Vol. III, Chap 14.
- Howe, Russell Warren. WRMEA, Letters to the Editor,
Jan./Feb. 1998, p. 110.
- Link, Arthur S., Wilson, Vol. 5, Princeton, NJ, 1965, Princeton
University Press, pp 433-5.
- Hendrick, Vol. III.
- Dugdale, Arthur James Balfour, Vol.
II.
- Friedman,
William F. and Mendelsohn, Charles J. The Zimmermann
Telegram of January 16, 1917 and its Cryptographic Background, Laguna
Hills, CA: Aegean Park Press, 1994.
- Tuchman, Barbara
W. The Zimmermann Telegram.
New York: Ballantine Books, 1958, 1966.
- Kahn, David. The
Codebreakers. New York:
Macmillan, 1967, 1996
- Antonius, George. The
Arab Awakening. Philadelphia,
NY: Lippencott, 1939.
John Cornelius is the nom de plume of an American with long-standing
interest in the Middle East.
SIDEBAR
Three Versions of the Zimmermann Telegram
ZT-I as sent in code 7500 from Berlin to Washington on
Jan. 16, 1917
Source: German Hearings
Telegram No. 158.
Strictly confidential.
For your Excellency’s exclusively personal information
and transmission to the Imperial Minister at Mexico by
safe hands:
Telegram No. 1.
Absolutely confidential.
To be personally deciphered.
It is our purpose on the 1st of February to commence
the unrestricted U-boat war. The attempt will be made
to keep America neutral in spite of it all.
In case we should not be successful in this, we propose
Mexico an alliance upon the following terms: Joint conduct
of war. Joint conclusion of peace. Ample financial support
and an agreement on our part that Mexico shall gain back
by conquest the territory lost by her at a prior period
in Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. Arrangement as to
detail is entrusted to your Excellency.
Your Excellency will make the above known to the President
in strict confidence at the moment that war breaks out
with the United States, and you will add the suggestion
that Japan be requested to take part at once and that
he simultaneously mediate between ourselves and Japan.
Please inform the President that the unrestricted use
of our U-boats now offers the prospect of forcing England
to sue for peace in the course of a few months.
Confirm receipt.
ZIMMERMANN
ZT-2 as sent in code 13042 from Washington to Mexico City
on Jan. 19, 1917
Source: Friedman and Mendelsohn, translated from the German
version
The Foreign Office wires (telegraphiert) January 16:
No. I.
Absolutely confidential.
To be personally deciphered.
It is our purpose on the 1st of February to commence
the unrestricted U-boat war. The attempt will be made
to keep America neutral in spite of it all.
In case we should not be successful in this, we propose
Mexico an alliance upon the following terms: Joint conduct
of war. Joint conclusion of peace. Ample financial support
and an agreement on our part that Mexico shall gain back
by conquest the territory lost by her at a prior period
in Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. Arrangement as to
detail is entrusted to your Excellency.
Your Excellency will make the above known to the President
in strict confidence at the moment that war breaks out
with the United States, and you will add the suggestion
that Japan be requested to take part at once and that
he simultaneously mediate between ourselves and Japan.
Please inform the President that the unrestricted use
of our U-boats now offers the prospect of forcing England
to sue for peace in the course of a few months.
Confirm receipt.
ZIMMERMANN
ZT-Hendrick, date unknown
Source: Hendrick found among Ambassador Page’s papers
Zimmermann to Bernstorff for Eckhardt W. 158.
I6th January, 1917
Most secret for your Excellency’s personal information
and to be handed on to the Imperial Minister in ? Mexico
with Tel. No. 1...by a safe route.
We purpose to begin on 1st February unrestricted submarine
warfare. In doing so, however, we shall endeavor to keep
America neutral....? If we do not (succeed in doing so)
we propose to (? Mexico) an alliance upon the following
basis:
(joint) conduct of the war
(joint) conclusion of peace
Your Excellency should for the present inform the President
secretly (that we expect) war with the U.S.A. (possibly)
(...Japan) and at the same time to negotiate between
us and Japan...(indecipherable sentence meaning please
tell the President) that...our submarines...will compel
England to peace in a few months.
Acknowledge receipt.
ZIMMERMANN
SIDEBAR 2
Mr. Morgenthau Doesn’t Go to Istanbul
A little known historical incident took place in the spring
of 1917, shortly after the U.S. entered World War I on
the side of the Allies. President Woodrow Wilson devised
a plan for bringing about an early end to the war by detaching
Turkey from the Central Powers. To this end, he sent a
mission to Europe, where it was to meet with representatives
of Britain and France in Switzerland and then make its
way to Turkey. The mission was headed by Henry Morgenthau,
Sr., who had been American ambassador to Turkey from 1912
to 1915 and had many contacts there. This story is related
in Chapter 17 of Chaim Weizmann’s 1949 autobiography, Trial
and Error.
The American mission never arrived in Switzerland, let
alone Turkey. In early June of 1917, Weizmann, who was
then in London, received a cable from Louis Brandeis in
the U.S., informing him of the mission and suggesting that
he contact it. Weizmann immediately contacted members of
the British government and learned the nature of the mission.
Weizmann was concerned that the Morgenthau mission might
result in the war ending with the Ottoman Empire still
intact, eliminating the possibility of a Jewish state in
Palestine.
A subsequent conference with Lord Balfour lead to Weizmann’s
being sent as the official British representative to meet
with the American mission and a French representative.
This meeting took place at Gibraltar after the American
mission disembarked at Cadiz on July 4, 1917.
Weizmann reports that he had no difficulty persuading
Morgenthau to drop the whole matter, so instead of proceeding
to Switzerland and Istanbul, Morgenthau went to Biarritz,
in the South of France, where, he said, he would communicate
with General Pershing and await further instructions from
President Wilson.
The Morgenthau mission was apparently secret, for Weizmann
says he does not know how the story got out. He also says
that in 1922, when Congress was looking into the merits
of a Jewish homeland in Palestine, a senator stated that
the leaders of the Zionist movement were unworthy men and
that Weizmann, in particular, had prolonged the war for
two years by scuttling the Morgenthau mission.
Morgenthau seems to have shown more loyalty to Zionism
than to his president or his country.
Interestingly, author Barbara Tuchman was Morgenthau’s
granddaughter.—J.C. |
|