aug 1, 1948 - I’d Do It Again
When an Associated Press correspondent
broke an embargo to report news of the
German surrender in World War II, he was
pilloried for it. Three years later, he justified
his decision in The Atlantic.
By Edward Kennedy
The Atlantic 1948, Aug (0014)
Description:
EARLY in April, 1945, German resistance was crumbling fast on the Western Front. American troops crossed the Elbe. There was little blocking their way into Berlin, but they were pulled back. In the weeks that followed there was fraternization between the Americans held to one side of the Elbe and German soldiers on the other, who yelled, “Come on over, we’re not fighting you any more.” The halt permitted the Russians to edge into Berlin; that was its purpose.
To our people and troops, the Russians still were our gallant allies. But official relations between Washington and Moscow already were troubled by open Russian distrust and even hostility. In March, Stalin had baselessly accused Roosevelt of attempting to negotiate a virtual separate peace—a deal in which the Germans would fall back before the Western Allies in return for Anglo-American support of easier peace terms.
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