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This is an archive of past discussions about Morgenthau Plan. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
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thumb|Broschüren mit Annexionspropaganda (von 1945) I found in the german wikipedia the Bakker-Schut-Plan.a dutch annextion plan for wide areas in north-western germany .does somebody know the connection betwen this and the
the morgenthau plan. ist a variation of it.
--131.173.252.9 22:54, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
Having read the article I remain puzzled: Are you saying the Morganthau Plan was never carried out? It is my understanding it was carried out (killing between 5.5 and 15 million nice white Germans - the range of figures simply represents my ignorance) while the U.S. authorities denied it was being carried out. The policy was reversed circa ?1950. [Incidentaly I have a copy of the plan, which is fairly brief; should I post it?] Source: the book 'Crimes and Mercies'.
The Morgenthau Plan was broadly implemented. Not just the division of Germany and the lose of a third of its territory (Silesia, Danzig) but first of all by the complete dismantling of whole economic sectors in which Germany had a leading technology, like Aerospace. Germany lost most of its Aircraft industry, being the most important part of it sent to the U.S. I don´t know how many patents were stolen by the U.S. but it is evident an great part of American post-War economic recovery was led by patents, factories and brain drain stolen from Germany. Just a little part of it was returned under the Marshall Plan....but whole economic sectors were never returned neither by the U.S. nor by the USSR.--88.24.242.203 (talk) 04:09, 9 July 2009 (UTC)
The following text does not appear to be relevant to this article, and (in my opinion) it definitely doesn't belong in the Overview section.
In 1945 the German Red Cross was dissolved[11][12] , and the International Red Cross and other international relief agencies were kept from helping ethnic Germans through strict controls on supplies and on travel.[13] The few agencies permitted to operate within Germany, such as the indigenous Caritas Verband, were not allowed to use imported supplies. When the Vatican attempted to transmit food supplies from Chile to German infants[14] the U.S. State Department forbade it.[15] In early October 1945 the UK government privately acknowledged in a cabinet meeting that, German civilian adult death rates had risen to four times the pre-war levels and death rates amongst the German children had risen by 10 times the pre-war levels.[16] In early 1946 U.S. President Harry S. Truman finally bowed to pressure from Senators, Congress and public to allow foreign relief organization to enter Germany in order to review the food situation. In mid-1946 non-German relief organizations were finally permitted to help starving German children.[17] During 1946 the average German adult received less than 1,500 calories a day. 2,000 calories was then considered the minimum an individual can endure on for a limited period of time with reasonable health.[18]
--Boson (talk) 06:04, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
James Bacque's "Crimes and Mercies: The Fate of German Civilians Under Allied Occupation 1944-1950" . Does not appear to be referenced. This is particularly disturbing because I put it in, so it has been actively removed. This is a basic book on the subject of the plan. Its tone is moderate, excessively so.
Contrast this with the inclusion of a large list of Time articles. Time is very "patriotic" as we all know well.
By covering up atrocities we make ourselves complicit; we make it possible for further atrocities to occur; we have blood on our hands.
I'm afraid this is a particularly clear example of Wikipedia having been turned. Anybody give a toss?
Thousand apologies if the reference is still there. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Sporus (talk • contribs) 17:14, 12 June 2010 (UTC)
Belgische Annexionspläne nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg (= Belgian Annexion plans after World War Two [Uwe, a german friend ;o])
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belgische_Annexionspl%C3%A4ne_nach_dem_Zweiten_Weltkrieg —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mullerkingdom (talk • contribs) 22:20, 5 November 2010 (UTC)
Luxembourgian Annexion plans after World War Two [Uwe, a german friend ;o]
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luxemburgische_Annexionspl%C3%A4ne_nach_dem_Zweiten_Weltkrieg —Preceding unsigned comment added by Mullerkingdom (talk • contribs) 22:23, 5 November 2010 (UTC)
Keeling is a primary source for this article? Really? So much for grabbing a few quick facts and references from wikipedia.... --184.99.178.223 (talk) 05:27, 13 June 2011 (UTC)
I've pruned this heavily, removing those that were already used as references. Our MOS says " A bulleted list, usually alphabetized, of a reasonable number of editor-recommended publications that do not appear elsewhere in the article and were not used to verify article content. Editors may include brief annotations." I'm not sure the list of Time articles is 'reasonable'. I also removed some links that required Flash, see WP:ELNO. Dougweller (talk) 18:41, 10 August 2010 (UTC)
A phobia is a psychological disorder characterized by an irrational and persistent fear. This categorization implies that Wikipedia is ascribing such a psychological disorder to the proponents of the Morgenthau Plan. Apart from the article on germanophobia itself, it is difficult to imagine a case where the category can be assigned without violating NPOV.--Boson 21:41, 20 June 2007 (UTC)
Let's be frank, the real reason for the Morgenthau Plan was anger, hate and revenge against the Germans, and given what the Germans did, who can blame them??? What the Nazi's did was a million times worse than anything Islamic terrorists have done, and look at how most people hate them.68.164.0.172 (talk) 03:00, 20 July 2009 (UTC)
Excuse me, what the german did in 1944 to evoke "anger, hate and revenge" from the USA? The holocaust only came out when the war was over... Also, what the nazi did was far worse than anything Islamic terrorist have done, that maybe right, but it wasn't worse of what the US did to the natives or England/ France/ Belgium did to Africa or what Israel is doing in Palestine or what USSR did in Ukrain (Holdomor anyone?) So? The only clear point is: FDR administration was a warmonger administration like Bush, and FDR was a Germanophobic.201.79.44.87 (talk) 23:40, 25 July 2011 (UTC)
Google ("Morgenthau's Pastoral Policy") and a man, who visited the university where Woodrow Wilson's papers were kept was supposedly escorted by a grad student with access to them to see the document. Reference:
A person on the web has setup a blog to call Lyne a liar about various things, but instead of asking a UT official if at any time UT Law School had any courses there taken by William R. Lyne, the blogger instead asks if Lyne was an alumni (which typically means a graduate class member who UT Law would likely hit up for a yearly donation?).
Lyne is a older person who writes about UFOs originating from Earth derived from Tesla electromagnetic propulsion systems. Lyne promotes in his various books that Germany was raided for its scientists, etc, for project paperclip, that resulted in two programs at NASA being run--An UFO covert op, and the public rocketry program for satellites, unmanned exploration, and moon shots.
In Lyne's account of events, he claims to have seen these historical documents where Morgenthau post WW1 during the time of the Treaty of Versailles Peace Talks proposes / advances a plan to Woodrow Wilson and the assembled negotiators to make Germany into farming pasture land, (devoid of people?), to prevent the German people from entering into wars in the future. A 90 minute Google video explains Lyne's alternative conspiratorial (fantasy/plausible?) views on history involving Hitler, UFOs, Nasa, the Military Industrial Complex, etc. In this video, the claims about the pastoral policy are present.
When I did my initial search for this William R. Lyne mentioned "Morgenthau's Pastoral Policy" via Google, one of the links lead me to this "Plan" wiki article. However, given that this plan also seems to have had the same goals as to preventing Germany from getting involved in future wars, this Morgenthau guy might have advised Woodrow Wilson just as Lyne claims that he did in this early 1900s document?
Has anyone else seen mention of or the actual pastoral policy papers in order to make reference to this in this wiki article about this later plan? Oldspammer (talk) 07:40, 2 August 2011 (UTC)
Is there any way we can have a medical expert analyze this and tell us just how many people would've died due to the systematic starvation/forced heavy labor policy imposed by the allies? Several years of less than half the required nutrients in addition to lack of shelter & over crowding/poor sanitation aren't liable towards long-term survival. I can just imagine how many miscarriages/child deaths resulted as well. Plus the fact that desperate mothers, trying to save their children would've been forced into prostituting themselves to GIs to get a few scraps... it's mass rape by extortion & worse than the Soviets atrocities. (Charles Lindberg himself took advantage of at least 3 such women in such fashion)
It's a shame our media (what would Oprah say about this?) refuses to cover this, it was the greatest atrocity in America's history. We had an OBLIGATION to feed them all after stealing a quarter of their land from them. Unlike Hiroshima/Nagasaki, WE HAD NO EXCUSE for doing this, it was torturing Germans for the crime of being German, Nuremberg's 'intention' (only the leaders were guilty) notwithstanding, we conditioned them to believe they were ALL EVIL AND DESERVED MISERY. As a result, no other people is filled with more self-hate as they are.96.238.134.140 (talk) 21:31, 10 December 2010 (UTC)
Even if this all actually took effect (which most of it really didnt eisenhower shipped in a ton of food in the first year) the soviets would still have us beat, by far. This plan was more of a dont give them anything type plan, wheras the soviets were openly raping and murdering people. I know people like to make the americans look evil but the fact is we treated the germans, for the most part, alright, the germans actually fought across their country to surrender to the americans because the americans treated them better. (although we turned them back voer to the russians because we really had no idea how bad they were and we didnt have the resources to feed them).
"The general German view, as expressed by their government, is that the Morgenthau Plan was of no significance for the occupiers' policy toward Germany but that Nazi propaganda on the subject had a lasting effect and that it is still used for propaganda purposes by extreme right-wing organizations"
Can sombody translate that! — Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.240.206.155 (talk) 11:08, 24 November 2012 (UTC)
Fachressorts der britischen und amerikanischen Außenministerien diskutierten unter anderen Plänen auch folgende Grenzziehungsvarianten.
Insbesondere auf Drängen Stalins wurden diese Pläne jedoch erheblich verändert. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.240.206.155 (talk) 11:04, 24 November 2012 (UTC)
Internally, the British and American foreign ministries discussed a number of other plans, including the following alternative territorial changes.
Under pressure from Stalin, however, these plans were altered considerably. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Boson (talk • contribs) 23:57, 24 November 2012 (UTC)
What we have hear is the same that has happened in the article on Drang nach Osten: the text has been taken by contributors with clear German nationalist sympathies to a place far beyond that taken by the corresponding articles in the German wikipedia.
For that matter, it would be interesting to see what sort of factual arguments can be given to support Hoover's position. What is not analysed here is the extent to which pro-German sympathies and early Cold War panic contributed to the shelving of the plan. Feketekave (talk) 22:39, 12 November 2008 (UTC)
with mostly the section by Wiggers. Here is an academic review of the work: . Some quotes from the review:
" the piece by Robert H. Whealey downplays the severity of ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslavia, accuses the U.S. media of being anti-Serb, and is both confused and strangely obsessed with the role of "Zionists" in discourse on the former Yugoslavia."
" The introduction specifically states that Germans have been the greatest victims of ethnic cleansing during the twentieth century in Europe"
"These are among the most poignant and heart-wrenching contributions in the entire book, but their academic or analytical value is strictly limited. "
"The contributions on ethnic Germans are mixed in quality. On the one hand, the chapter by de Zayas makes wild accusations and excoriates the Allies and particularly Czech President Eduard Benes, while those by Scott Brunstetter, Janos Angi and Nicolae Harsanyi are superficial."
"For all the breadth of case studies, a vital missing element prevents this book from actually being a study of twentieth-century ethnic cleansing in Europe, and turns it into a much narrower, parochial affair: there is not a single paper on the ethnic cleansing of any ethnic or religious group by Germans or Germany, and there is no specific analysis, even comparative, of the Holocaust. This lends an often surreal air to the book: Jews and the Holocaust are mentioned more than twenty times in individual essays, and the ethnic cleansing carried out by the Germans (including, but not limited to the Holocaust) is clearly the largest and most important instance of ethnic cleansing in Europe, but not a single essay is devoted to it. This was a deliberate choice"
" this volume is very good at describing the suffering of German minorities in individual (national) cases, but does not ask why so many Eastern and Central European countries expelled and persecuted their German minorities after the Second World War. Only very slight mention is made of the collaboration of these German minorities with the Third Reich in war crimes and other exactions against the non-German populations, and no analysis of them is made. The reader is left with a string of often heart-rending stories of suffering and injustice, but little or no analysis of why such injustice might have occurred, except to evoke communist thugs, venal neighbors or the evil ethnic nationalism of President Benes. But the problem runs even deeper. Many of the contributions are implicit or even explicit pleas for the acknowledgment of the suffering of the ethnic group with which the author identifies, and the book skates very close at times to a frankly revisionist exercise in comparative ethnic suffering. This impression is only accentuated by the fact that a majority of contributions are based mainly on secondary sources, and many are superficial. The quality of contributions varies greatly."
All of this is a polite, academic, way of saying the source is propaganda. Anyways, most of the text sourced to this book is not even directly relevant to the Morgenthau Plan. Removing. Volunteer Marek (talk) 11:24, 5 February 2014 (UTC)
Article fails to mention reasons for the plan being developed by Morgenthau. He mentions them in original document.--MyMoloboaccount (talk) 19:54, 5 February 2014 (UTC)
Re: . Please stop removing text sourced to reliable, academic sources. The initial given reason was that "the bpb has revised it". This was false - the bpb didn't "revise" anything, a link simply went dead as happens all the time. Additionally there was a second source given for the content. Hence, even if "the bpb did revise it", the second source would still support the text. Finally, I updated the link to the source, which is from Handbuch des Antisemitismus: Judenfeindschaft in Geschichte und Gegenwart, Volume 3, a publication of Walter de Gruyter, a "a scholarly publishing house specializing in academic literature."
Please stop removing the content.Volunteer Marek (talk) 06:04, 2 March 2014 (UTC)
To article:
The original proposal outlined three steps: - Germany was to be partitioned into two independent states. ??? - so the Allies were already "planning" that East and West-Germany would be "created" in August 1944!!!! RIDICULOUS! — Preceding unsigned comment added by 151.136.144.248 (talk) 12:56, 15 September 2014 (UTC)
The remaining portion of Germany should be divided into two autonomous, independent states,
- (1) a South German state comprising Bavaria, Wuerttemberg, Baden and some smaller areas and
- (2) a North German state comprising a large part of the old state of Prussia, Saxony, Thuringia and several smaller states.
I've just removed the material referenced to the book The Morgenthau Plan: Soviet Influence on American Postwar Policy as it does not appear to be a reliable source. The book's publisher Alora Publishing looks like a publisher of WP:FRINGE-type works judging from what it chooses to highlight on its website, and I could not find any reviews of the book in reliable sources, and many of the references to it on the internet are to extremist websites. The author's website is also not typical of that of a neutral historian. Nick-D (talk) 22:41, 11 October 2014 (UTC)
If there are no objections, I will shortly configure auto-archiving for threads that have been dormant for more than 90 days. --Boson (talk) 17:14, 1 October 2016 (UTC)
That's an official assessment from a national org - respectable source, but still not historical consensus among scholars. Also even had the plan had no significant effects on later events (not true, considering the already sourced details in the main texts), one should not give the impression that the bad things that actually happened (and like in many other historical occasions, were put under the umbrella term of "Morgenthau Plan" by some people, not necessarily neo-nazis but also people who lack detailed knowledge) were not real and these were the results of Hitler's propaganda.
I.e. German people heard the propaganda that if they surrendered, the Jews should enslave them. they surrendered, one Jewish person suggested a vengeful plan, it was not followed throughly, but bad things did happen (some victorious powers actually tried to impose retro-development, wanted to annex lands, kept the living standard low...etc until the more far sighted views of some leaders like Churchill and Hoover prevailed due to these nations' own interests). Then fact is, bad things did happen, not propaganda. Will add more later. Deamonpen (talk) 08:31, 13 August 2016 (UTC)
Herbert Hoover said that in order to reach the goal the Allies would have had to kill or deport 25 million people. Did he mean they did not possess the means to do that? Or did he mean it would be genocide to try? His use of the word “people” indicates the later.
2015-01-03 Lena Synnerholm, Märsta, Sweden.
What makes Dietrich book unreliable? the author who is a former DIA official or Algora? Deamonpen (talk) 17:03, 3 October 2016 (UTC)
Book is recommended by multiple authors. The revisionism itself is a controverisal topic depending on which circles of historians you belong to. As wikipedia is neutral, an author should not be dismissed just because he is a revisionist. about being unverifired, Benn Steil describes him as such. also what part of the article describes The_Agora as lacking academic quality? And I am unaware that wikipedia says only professors should be presented. If a work, a relatively new one at that, is discussed buy other authors without having a widespread negative reputation, I think that meet the conditions. We do not say here that we support the author's opinions or anything. If being professor is the only criteria, I'm afraid many renown scientists and scholars, even genius, fail that test. Trevor J. Barnes and Jeremy Crampton has the following opinion
so according to them, revisionism itself does not mean that the author's opinions have no merits.
Deamonpen (talk) 23:09, 3 October 2016 (UTC)
I don't see much in that to support the argument that Dietrich is a reliable source, though it depends, of course, on what the reliable source is supposed to be supporting. Sources that present non-mainstream views can be reliable sources for those views - providing those views are presented as such and are not given undue weight. If we fail to do that, we mislead readers. If the geographer qualifies his quotation from Dietrich as an "admittedly revisionist argument", perhaps we should also do something to avoid misleading the reader. If book reviews expressly stress the author's "hard revisionist" viewpoint or include things like "scarce in original research but rich in interpretation based on flawed assumptions" we may also need to put the authors views in an appropriate context. Linking "Book is recommended by multiple authors" to a Google search for the book is not especially helpful. I have no idea what you mean by "also what part of the article describes The_Agora as lacking academic quality?" Let's see what others think.--Boson (talk) 21:08, 11 October 2016 (UTC)
And the historian also agrees that Dietrich does a good job pointing out the radical nature of the plan which was signed by the Allies leaders. and I repeat, revisionism itself should not be a reason not to accept an argument. I don't generally like revisionism, but the concept is controversial and Wiki as a neutral source cannot just claim that such historians are inherently negative. I don't want to mislead the readers or anything. If you want I will include the whole quote, or you can do it yourself. I don't understand what you don't understand. I used google search so that people would not claim I choose assessments selectively. Yes, neutral third party is welcome. Deamonpen (talk) 00:54, 12 October 2016 (UTC)
Sorry for the late reply, I'm busy lately.
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The issue of Germany's "unconditional surrender" was announced by FDR at the January 1943 Casablanca Conference. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casablanca_Conference DEddy (talk) 21:27, 9 April 2019 (UTC)
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