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translated Mary Baker Eddy's Science and Health into German. The younger Helmuth,

son of Dorothy, and Count von Moltke after his father's death in 1938, was openly anti-

Nazi and came to England in 1934 to join the English bar. He visited Lionel Curtis, at his

mother's suggestion, and "was made a member of the family, rooms in Duke of York

Street being put at his disposal, and Kidlington and All Souls thrown open to him at

week-ends; the opportunities of contact which these brought with them were exploited to

the full.... He was often in England until the summer of 1939, and in 1937 visited South

Africa and the grandparents there to whom he was deeply attached." This quotation, from

The Round Table for June 1946, makes perfectly clear to those who can read between the

lines that Moltke became a member of the Milner Group. It might be added that Curtis

also visited the Rose-Innes family in South Africa while Helmuth was there in 1937.

Von Moltke kept in close contact with both Curtis and Lothian even after the war

began in 1939. He was made adviser on international law to the Supreme Command of

the German Armed Forces (OKW) in 1939 and retained this position until his arrest in

1944. The intellectual leader of the German Underground, he was the inspiration and

addressee of Dorothy Thompson's book Listen, Hans. He was the center of a group of

plotters called the"Kreisau Circle," named after his estate in Silesia. After his execution

by the Nazis in January 1945, his connection with the Milner Group was revealed, to

those able to interpret the evidence, in the June 1946 issue of The Round Table. This

article extolled Moltke and reprinted a number of his letters. The same article, with an

additional letter, was published as a pamphlet in Johannesburg in 1947. (15)

Another plotter who appears to be close to the Milner Group was Adam von Trott zu

Solz, a Rhodes Scholar who went to the Far East on a mission for the Rhodes Trust in

1936 and was in frequent contact with the Institute of Pacific Relations in the period

1936-1939. He seems to have attended a meeting of the Pacific Council in New York late

in 1939, coming from Germany, by way of Gibraltar, after the war began. He remained in

contact with the democratic countries until arrested and executed by the Nazis in 1944. It

is not without significance that one of the chief projects which the plotters hoped to

further in post-Hitler German foreign policy was a "federation of Europe in a

commonwealth not unlike the British Empire."(16)

All of this evidence and much more would seem to support the theory of a "Munich

plot"—that is, the theory that the British government had no intention or desire to save

Czechoslovakia in 1938 and was willing or even eager to see it partitioned by Hitler, and

only staged the war scare of September in order to make the British people accept this

abuse of honor and sacrifice of Britain's international position. The efforts which the

British government made after Munich to conceal the facts of that affair would support

this interpretation. The chief question, from our point of view, lies in the degree to which

the Milner Group were involved in this "plot." There can be no doubt that the

Chamberlain group was the chief factor in the scheme. There is also no doubt that various

members of the Milner Group second circle, who were close to the Chamberlain group,

were involved. The position of the inner core of the Milner Group is not conclusively

established, but there is no evidence that they were not involved and a certain amount of

evidence that they were involved.

Among this latter evidence is the fact that the inner core of the Group did not object to

or protest against the partition of Czechoslovakia, although they did use the methods by

which Hitler had obtained his goal as an argument in support of their pet plan for national

service. They prepared the ground for the Munich surrender both in The Times and in The

Round Table. In the June 1938 issue of the latter, we read: "Czechoslovakia is apparently

the danger spot of the next few months. It will require high statesmanship on all sides to

find a peaceful and stable solution of the minorities problem. The critical question for the

next six months is whether the four great Powers represented by the Franco-British

entente and the Rome-Berlin axis can make up their minds that they will not go to war

with one another and that they must settle outstanding problems by agreement together."

In this statement, three implications are of almost equal importance. These are the time

limit of "six months," the exclusion of both Czechoslovakia and Russia from

the"agreement," and the approval of the four-power pact.

In the September 1938 issue of The Round Table, published on the eve of Munich, we

are told: "It is one thing to be able, in the end, to win a war. It is a far better thing to be

able to prevent a war by a readiness for just dealing combined with resolute strength

when injustice is threatened." Here, as always before 1939, The Round Table by "justice"

meant appeasement of Germany.

After the dreadful deed was done, The Round Table had not a word of regret and

hardly a kind word for the great sacrifice of the Czechs or for the magnificent

demonstration of restraint which they had given the world. In fact, the leading article in

the December 1938 issue of The Round Table began with a severe criticism of

Czechoslovakia for failure to reconcile her minorities, for failure to achieve economic

cooperation with her neighbors, and for failure to welcome a Hapsburg restoration. From

that point on, the article was honest. While accepting Munich, it regarded it solely as a

surrender to German power and rejected the arguments that it was done by negotiation,

that it was a question of self-determination or minority rights, or that Munich was any

better or more lenient than the Godesberg demands. The following article in the same

issue, also on Czechoslovakia, is a tissue of untruths except for the statement that there

never was any real Sudeten issue, since the whole thing was a fraudulent creation

engineered from Germany. Otherwise the article declares categorically: (1) that

Czechoslovakia could not have stood up against Hitler more than two or three weeks; (2)

that no opposition of importance to Hitler existed in Germany ("A good deal has been

written about the opposition of the military commanders. But in fact it does not and never

did exist."); (3) "There is no such thing as a conservative opposition in Germany." In the

middle of such statements as these, one ray of sanity shines like a light: in a single

sentence, The Round Table tossed onto the scrap heap its basic argument in support of

appeasement, namely the "injustices of Versailles." The sentence reads: "It is not

Versailles but defeat that is the essential German grievance against the western Powers."

This sentence should have been printed in gold letters in the Foreign Office in London in

1919 and read daily thereafter.

It is worthy of note that this issue of The Round Table discussed the Czech crisis in

two articles of twenty-seven pages and had only one sentence on Russia. This sentence

spoke of the weakness of Russia, where "a new Tiberius had destroyed the morale and

the material efficiency of the Russian Army." However, in a separate article, dealing