No. 195.
Mr. Sargent to Mr. Frelinghuysen.

[Extract.]
No. 145.]

Sir: I have the honor to report that No. 27 of Commercial Relations, January, 1883, contains a dispatch of mine, on page 1, upon the subject of the prohibition by Germany of our pork products, wherein the representations on the subject by various trade associations and the opposition press are stated, and the reasons why the prohibition is likely to be made, and what remedy the United States may have, and should use, to prevent such experiments against their interests, are stated.

As was necessary in such a dispatch, the truths, as they appeared to me, were clearly stated, that you might be perfectly familiar with the issue with which our Government had to deal so far as a close observation here, and a zealous wish to do my duty, could enable you to become.

In the dispatch was also a personal allusion, useful to give an idea of the state of feeling here in various circles. Such a dispatch, informing the State Department of necessary facts, was, according to my view, entirely proper. The St. James Gazette recently said, referring to the probability that the English home office was well informed in regard to an annexation:

With what object do we keep up diplomatic establishments in every European capital, if the first hint of a design on the part of some rival power to seize an important territory is to come from a little group of colonial politicians?

So it might be asked, “With what object do the United States keep up diplomatic establishments in Europe if they must depend upon chance and tardy sources for information as to measures affecting their interests?” To send such information in such colorless form that if it were published the Government to which the minister is accredited could not find a shade of criticism or matter of exception, and yet the Department get from it a true picture of occurrences having inimical tenden cies, and of which it should be expressly warned, would seem impossible.

* * * * * * *

I inclose with translation an article from the Norddeutsche Allge-meine Zeitung, * * * in which it is falsely alleged that the dispatch [Page 378] in question was a newspaper article published by me in a newspaper of New York over my signature, and distorting ingeniously the contents of the dispatch. It ascribes to me the words and arguments which I expressly said were copied from German papers; declares that I said the German Government is not at all a Government of public opinion, but is sure to do the exact opposite of what public opinion demands; whereas I said, “If this were strictly a Government of public opinion in the American sense, these general public appeals would prevail.” It alleges that I said (three months before the ordinance was passed at all) that it was passed by a trick over the heads of the Reichstag, &c. By a comparison with the original you will see the malignity and falsehood of this travesty.

If I had so far forgotten my duty as to publish an article on a political subject in an American newspaper over my signature, I should feel only repaid even by such gross caricature of what it contained. The paper in question knew that I was innocent of any publication whatever, for a month before it had published the substance of it correctly, and said it was a dispatch to my Government, and berated the opposition papers for furnishing such arguments against the measures of their own Government. To give plausibility to this attack it was necessary to ignore that, and to sufficiently fire the hearts of its readers it was necessary to grossly misrepresent the contents of the document.

The undoubted purpose of this publication was to work on the patriotic pride of the Germans, by leading them to resent foreign complaint of the action of their Government, and make partisans for the maintenance of prohibition. The scheme was well planned, and undoubtedly works in the way foreseen.

* * * * * * *

I have, &c.,

A. A. SARGENT.
[Inclosure in No. 145.—Extract from the Norddeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, April 24, 1883.—Translation.]

In the New Yorker Handels-Zeitung of March 10 last we find a publication which bears the signature of the minister of the United States at Berlin, and treats of the prohibition in Germany of American pork. The first half of this article endeavors to describe the “opposition” to the exclusion of American hog products manifested in; Berlin and other cities, and refers in particular to articles of the National Zeitung, and the—in the mean time deceased—Tribune. A political criticism of the present form of government in Germany is connected with the description of that opposition movement, the German Government being described as one not “in the slightest degree a Government of public opinion,” but one which most probably always did the reverse of that demanded by the voice of public opinion as well as by the press on the basis “of logical deductions from indisputable facts.”

The decree of prohibition is criticised as an illegal measure adopted over the head of the Reichstag, and characterized by a leader of the opposition in the Reichstag to be the author of the article as being an “unworthy trick.”

It is possible that a German deputy has used such an expression to the representative of a foreign power. We know more than one whom we consider capable of such an act. On the other hand, it surprises us to find the signature of a minister accredited to His Majesty the Emperor under such declarations.

In the article it is further stated: “The Tribune, an influential organ of the party of progress, has convincingly shown the sanitary harmiessness of American pork products. It was solely in the interests of the larger land owners and meat producers of Germany that the prohibition which took 15,000 marks annually from the poor to give them to the rich was issued.” At this point the style of the publication attains a pathos, to which we fear our quotation will not do justice; it is stated word for word:

“But woe to the poor who pay to him (the rich) the 15,000 marks; woe to the hungry who imagine that it is a duty of the Government not to allow the price of food to-become too high.”

[Page 379]

The National Zeitnng had also furnished a similar argument that could not be refuted in favor of American interests; that journal had in particular asserted that last year’s good harvest had afforded such rich profits to German land owners that their interests did not require this exclusion of American pork from German markets. Here too, therefore, the unveiled insinuation is uttered that the Imperial Government had adopted those measures solely for the purpose of favoring a single class, while the existence of weighty sanitary police motives for the prohibition is not conceded or mentioned with a single word.

In the last part of the publication the damage to American interests to result from the decree of prohibition is referred to, and reprisals are threatened, leaving out of consideration the fact that North America for whole decades has shut itself off from the products of European industry by the highest protective and prohibitive duties, without our ever having thought of demanding of America consideration for injured German and disregard of American interests.

The publication closes with the declaration that America “cannot submit to the exclusion of her products under false pretenses.”

The article, therefore, anticipates the employment of international pressure to force the American trichinae upon the German consumer, after the latter has borne the burden of inconsiderable taxation in order to be protected against the domestic trichinae. This view is not without analogy to that which was at the bottom of the Chinese opium war. What Would the public and the press say in England if a German publication, similar to that contained in the columns of the New Yorker Handels-Zeitung, had attacked the prohibition of the importation of German cattle into England with such arguments, and if under such publication the name of the German ambassador accredited to the Queen of England had stood? Assuredly such international warfare would not have found in the English press organs to advocate the interests of a foreign land at the expense of domestic policy.