23 Nov.. 45
The preparations are then set out, and they include, as I have
indicated a few minutes ago, as the last one in the list, the
preparations for economic mobilization.
There are many others, of course. The preliminary mustering of
horse-drawn and motor vehicles, preparation for evacuation measures,
and so forth. We say--passing now from that document-- we say the
rapid success of the German re-armament is attributable to the
greatest extent to the work of the Defendant Schacht. In the fall of
1934, the Nazi conspirators announced the so-called "New
Plan," aiming at the control of imports and exports in order to
obtain the raw materials which were needed for armaments and the
foreign currency which was required to sustain the armament program.
This new plan was the creation of the Defendant Schacht, and under
the plan, the Defendant Schacht controlled imports by extending the
system of supervisory boards for import control, which was previously
limited to the main groups of raw materials, to all goods imported
into Germany, whether raw materials, semimanufactured goods, or
finished products. The requirement of licenses for imports enabled
the Nazi conspirators to restrict imports to those commodities which
served their war aims.
Subsequently, in February of 1935, the "Deviser" Law
was passed which can be found by reference in
theReichsgesetzblatt of 1935, Part I, Page 105; and under it,
all transactions involving foreign exchange were subject to the
approval of Devisenstellen (the Foreign Exchange Control Offices). By
thus controlling the disposition of foreign exchange, the
conspirators were able to manipulate foreign trade so as to serve
their needs and desires.
Thus every aspect of the German economy was being
geared to war under the guidance particularly of the Defendant
Schacht. In a study of the economic mobilization for war as of 30
September 1934, it was stated that steps had already been taken to
build up stock piles, to construct new facilities for the production
of scarce goods, and to redeploy industry, to secure areas and to
control fiscal and trade policies. References were made to the fact
that the task of stock piling had been hampered by the requirement of
secrecy and camouflage. Reserves of automobile fuels and stocks of
coal were being accumulated and the production of synthetic oil was
accelerated. Civilian supply was purposely organized so that most
plants would be working for the German Armed Forces. Studies were
made of the possibility of barter trade with supposedly neutral
countries in case of war.
The matter of financing the armament program presented a
difficult problem for the conspirators. In 1934 and 1935 the German
economy could by no possibility have raised funds for their exten-