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Information from Soviet Ambassador; Bombing of London; British Observation System

Editor's Note: The following content is a transcription of a period document or a collection of period statistics. It may be incomplete, inaccurate, or biased. The reader may not wish to take the content as factual.

27 Aug 1940

ww2dbase
USSRReference: 3/PPDT/T60

1. INFORMATION FROM SOVIET AMBASSADOR
2. BOMBING OF LONDON
3. PRESS REPORT ON OBSERVATION SYSTEM
(1940)


From: LONDON
To: MOSCOW
No.: 94727th Aug. 40


To DIRECTOR.

1. The MASTER of the METRO [KhOZYaIN METRO][i] has told me that last week the British again secretly received SAUSAGE-DEALER [KOLBASNIKI][ii] peace conditions:

   A. Poland [2 groups garbled] DANZIG corridor
   B. Autonomy of Csechoslovakia.

The SAUSAGE-DEALERS are to get the Colonies.

Apparently CHURCHILL gave a definite refusal. His Parliamentary Secretary told the MASTER of the METRO that it was hoped that SAShA [iii] would enter the war in December. This would mean the acquisition of SAShA's fleet, arms and money and would have a tremendous effect on morale. It was unimportant that SAShA's army would not be ready in 1941. It was important to obtain arms for their two million strong army which was short of tanks, guns and machine-guns. Of the [1 group unidentified] rifles received from SAShA, by the way, 50 percent have proved unfit to use. The 14-ton cruiser tank is the main one in production, but difficulties are being met in manufacturing the necessary armour for it. The aircraft industry is working very successfully; apparently output is approaching 2,200 aircraft a month, 75 percent of them being fighters. The MASTER thinks that the basic [B% aim] of the British is to sit it out until the spring and then prepare for operations against Italy, whilst keeping up the blockade and the war in the air against the SAUSAGE-DEALERS.

2. Last night the SAUSAGE-DEALERS bombed LONDON, two or three aircraft being in the air at a time. For six hours not more than 12 aircraft in all flew over LONDON. Despite the [B% activity] of over 80 searchlights and the A. A. guns not one of them was shot down. Not a single British fighter was observed during the night.

3. The press reports that the first line of observation and communications is a warships stationed far out to sea. The second line is a flotilla of fishing vessels, the largest out at sea and the small ones inshore. These are connected wit hthe shore and among themsevles by radio. The third line is observation [C% posts] on land.

No. 242BARCh


Comments: [i] MASTER of the METRO: the Soviet Ambassador.
 [ii] SAUSAGE-DEALERS: the Germans.
 [iii] SAShA: the United States.
 [iv] BARCh: Possibly Simon Davidovich KREMER, whose official post was Secretary to the Soviet Military Attaché in LONDON. He was appointed in 1937 and is thought to have left sometime in 1946. The covername BARCh occurs as a LONDON addressee and signatory between 3rd March 1940 and 10th October 1940, after which it is superseded by the covername BRION.
ww2dbase

Source(s):
United States National Security Agency

Added By:
C. Peter Chen





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