A Reminder – Bank of England and US Federal Reserve financed Adolf Hitler
Sat 12:08 pm +01:00, 11 Feb 2023About the Author
Yuri Rubtsov is a doctor of historical sciences, an academician of the Russian Academy of military sciences, and a member of the International Association of historians of World War II.
Wall Street helped the Allies finance their World War ll triumph. But as usual, they hedged their bets.
J.P. Morgan assisted Germany’s rebuilding after World War I. J.P. Morgan, under the instruction of the Governor of the Bank of England, spearheaded the renegotiation of reparation payments and organised other Wall Street banks to bail Germany out with loans. It didn’t stop there.
According to John Strausbaugh, the author of the book ‘Victory City, A History Of New York and New Yorkers During World War II’:
Below is an article written by Russian historian Yuri Rubtsov. The original source of this article was Fort Russ as translated from Russian by Ollie Richardson for Fort Russ. The Fort Russ version is no longer available on the internet. However, a version in Russian published in 2016 can be found on ru-polit.livejournal HERE. It was originally published in 2009.
History: Hitler was Financed by the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England
By Yuri Rubtsov republished from Global Research
More than 80 years ago was the start of the greatest slaughter in history – World War II.
If we are to approach the problem of “responsibility for the war”, then we first need to answer the following key questions:
- Who helped the Nazis come to power?
- Who sent them on their way to world catastrophe?
The entire pre-war history of Germany shows that the provision of the “necessary” policies were managed by the financial turmoil, in which the world was plunged into in the wake of World War I.
The key structures that defined the post-war development strategy of the West were the central financial institutions of Great Britain and the United States – the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve System (FRS) – and the associated financial and industrial organisations set out as a means to establish absolute control over the financial system of Germany and its ability to control political processes in Central Europe.
To implement this strategy, the following stages were envisaged:
- From 1919 to 1924 – to prepare the ground for massive American financial investment in the German economy;
- From 1924 to 1929 – the establishment of control over the financial system of Germany and financial support for Nazism (“national socialism”);
- From 1929 to 1933 – provoking and unleashing a deep financial and economic crisis and ensuring the Nazis come to power;
- From 1933 to 1939 – financial cooperation with the Nazi government and support for its expansionist foreign policy, aimed at preparing and unleashing a new World War.
WWI “War Reparations”
In the first stage, the main levers to ensure the penetration of American capital into Europe began with WWI war debts and the closely related problem of German reparations.
After the US’ formal entry into the first World War, they gave the allies, primarily England and France, loans to the amount of $8.8 billion. The total sum of war debts, including loans granted to the United States in 1919-1921, was more than $11 billion.
To solve this problem, creditor nations tried to impose extremely difficult conditions for the payment of war reparations at the expense of Germany. This was caused by the flight of German capital abroad, and the refusal to pay taxes which led to a state budget deficit that could be covered only through mass production of unsecured German Marks.
The result was the collapse of the German currency – the “great inflation” of 1923 -when the dollar was worth 4.2 trillion Marks. German Industrialists began to openly sabotage all activities in the payment of reparation obligations, which eventually caused the famous “Ruhr crisis” – the Franco-Belgian occupation of the Ruhr in January 1923.
The Anglo-American ruling elites, in order to take the initiative in their own hands, waited for France to get caught up in a venturing adventure and to prove its inability to solve the problem. US Secretary of State Hughes pointed out: “It is necessary to wait for Europe to mature in order to accept the American proposal.”
The new project was developed in the depths of JP Morgan & Co. under the instruction of the head of the Bank of England, Montagu Norman. At the core of his ideas was representative of the “Dresdner Bank” Hjalmar Schacht, who formulated it in March 1922 at the suggestion of John Foster Dulles, future Secretary of state in the Cabinet of President Eisenhower and legal adviser to President W. Wilson, at the Paris peace conference.
Dulles gave this note to the chief Trustee JP Morgan & Co., which then recommended Schacht in consultation with Montagu Norman, Governor of the Bank of England.
In December 1923, Schacht became Manager of the Reichsbank and was instrumental in bringing together the Anglo-American and German financial elites.
In the summer of 1924, the project known as the “Dawes plan” – named after the Chairman of the Committee of experts who created it, an American banker and Director of one of the banks of the Morgan group – was adopted at the London conference. He called for halving the reparations and solved the question about the sources of their coverage. However, the main task was to ensure favourable conditions for US investment, which was only possible with the stabilisation of the German Mark.
To this end, the plan gave Germany a large loan of $200 million, half of which was accounted for by JP Morgan.
While the Anglo-American banks gained control not only over the transfer of German payments but also over the budget, the system of monetary circulation and to a large extent the credit system of the country.
The Weimar Republic
By August 1924, the old German Mark was replaced by a new, stabilised financial situation in Germany and, as researcher G.D Preparta wrote, the Weimar Republic was prepared for:
The consequences of this were not slow to appear.
This was primarily due to the fact that the annual reparations were to cover the amount of debt paid by the allies, formed by the so-called “absurd Weimar circle”.
The gold that Germany paid in the form of war reparations, was sold, pawned, and disappeared in the US, where it was returned to Germany in the form of an “aid” plan, who gave it to England and France, and they, in turn, were to pay the war debt of the United States. It was then overlayed with interest and again sent to Germany. In the end, all in Germany lived in debt [were indebted], and it was clear that should Wall Street withdraw its loans, the country would suffer complete bankruptcy.
Secondly, although formal credit was issued to secure payment, it was actually the restoration of the military-industrial potential of the country.
The fact is that the Germans were paid in shares of companies for the loans so American capital began to actively integrate into the German economy.
The total amount of foreign investments in German industry during 1924-1929 amounted to almost 63 billion gold Marks, 30 billion was accounted for by loans, and the payment of reparations – 10 billion Marks. 70% of revenues were provided by bankers from the United States, and most of the banks were from JP Morgan. As a result, in 1929, German industry was in second place in the world, but it was largely in the hands of America’s leading financial-industrial groups.
US Investments in Nazi Germany. Rockefeller Financed Adolf Hitler’s Election Campaign
“Interessen-Gemeinschaft Farbenindustrie,” the main supplier of the German war machine, financed 45% of the election campaign of Hitler in 1930, and was under the control of Rockefeller’s Standard Oil.
Morgan, through General Electric, controlled the German radio and electrical industry via AEG and Siemens (up to 1933, 30% of the shares of AEG owned General Electric) through the Telecom company ITT – 40% of the telephone network in Germany.
In addition, they owned a 30% stake in the aircraft manufacturing company Focke-Wulf.
General Motors, belonging to the DuPont family, established control over Opel.
Henry Ford controlled 100% of the shares of Volkswagen.
In 1926, with the participation of the Rockefeller Bank Dillon, Reed & Co. the second largest industrial monopoly in Germany after I.G Farben emerged – metallurgical concern Vereinigte Stahlwerke (Steel Trust) Thyssen, Flick, Wolff, Feglera etc.
American cooperation with the German military-industrial complex was so intense and pervasive that by 1933 the key sectors of German industry and large banks such as Deutsche Bank, Dresdner Bank, Danat-Bank (Darmstädter und Nationalbank), etc. were under the control of American financial capital.
The political force that was intended to play a crucial role in Anglo-American plans was being simultaneously prepared. We are talking about the funding of the Nazi party and Adolf Hitler personally.