763.72/2623

The Secretary of State to President Wilson

My Dear Mr. President: I submit a draft of a letter to the German Ambassador which follows, I believe, your views as to the attitude we should take in regard to the memorandum which he delivered on March 8th,20 and which was given to the press on the same day.

I should like to send this letter as soon as possible.21

Faithfully yours,

Robert Lansing
[Enclosure]

Draft Note to the German Ambassador (Bernstorff)

My Dear Mr. Ambassador: On account of absence from Washington I have delayed commenting on the Memorandum explanatory of “the U-Boat question”, which you handed me on March 8th. Meanwhile the memo has received the careful consideration of the President and myself and he directs me to call your attention particularly to the wording of the last paragraph which escaped my attention during our conversation on the 8th, when it was agreed that it should be made public. Upon consideration however the Govt. is constrained to the belief that it was the intention of the Imperial Government to appeal to the American people and to submit the case before the bar of public opinion, rather than to this Government. This belief is confirmed by your earnest desire to furnish the Memorandum to the press for publication immediately upon its delivery.

This unusual, if not unprecedented, procedure, which gives the impression of having been adopted for the purpose of securing popular support in the United States for the German position without regard to the attitude of this Government, cannot be passed over without comment, especially as it was employed in relation to a [Page 537] subject, which, at the time, was being considered by the Congress of the United States.

As the subject of the Memorandum was a matter of diplomatic discussion between the two Governments, the Government of the United States must express its disapproval of the course of the Imperial Government in appealing directly to the American people in support of its position on a pending question between the two Governments. Not only does this Government disapprove this action but it resents the delivery to it by your Excellency as the diplomatic representative of Germany of a document which on its face is intended to influence public opinion in the United States and possibly to arouse directly or indirectly opposition in the Congress to the policy of the President in dealing with the question of submarine warfare.

I am reluctant to believe that your Govt. fully considered the consequences before permitting you to become the medium of transmitting this appeal to the people of the United States though in form addressed to this Government. Without exceeding the bounds of diplomatic propriety this Government cannot permit a diplomatic representative to address the people of this country through the press or otherwise on a controversy pending between the Government of the United States and the Government which he represents.

I would be wanting in duty to my Government and in justice to yours, if I did not thus candidly state the unfavorable impression which has been made by the Memorandum of March 8th and by the way in which it was laid before the American public.

  1. Foreign Relations, 1916, supp., p. 198.
  2. Apparently the proposed letter was not sent.