-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.biblebelievers.org.au/house.htm#THE COLONEL HOUSE REPORT(1919)

THE COLONEL HOUSE REPORT(1919)
[The following comes from Geo. W. Armstrong's THE ZIONISTS (1950). I have
looked in the Congressional Record and can confirm the contention that it
was submitted by Congressman Thorkelson but did not make it into the bound
volume. Also, I have found several discussions in the Record where at least
one Texas House member objected because it was not favorable to Col. House.
Therefore, it is either: 1) a hoax, 2) a created summary of what might have
been written by a British agent or 3) is a genuine expose of the true
British plan. For me it forms an insightful basis for additional research.
The names mentioned include: Nicholas Murray Butler (1862-1947) (President,
Columbia University, 1902-1945, President, CEIP, 1925-1945, etc.), Raymond
Blaine Fosdick (1883-1972) (BB/CFR21) (President of the General Education
Board, 1936-1948, Undersecretary-General, League of Nations, 1919-1920,
etc.), Samuel Gompers, Franklin Lane and W. B. Wilson. The date is
interesting since it is within a couple of weeks of the Majestic Hotel
meeting in Paris where the British and American delegates met to fashion
what became the RIIA and the CFR. From the content itself Lord Northcliffe
seems not to have been the author. I have not yet found the promised later
book].

The British Secret Service Report No. 1919, called the "Col. E. M.  House
letter," contains an official and authentic report of the first world war,
the agency that brought it about and the purpose of it. This report in its
entirety is highly interesting but the discussion here will be limited to
"Imperial Unity," J P. Morgan & Company, British Duplicity, and the League
of Nations.

This report, or letter, was presented to the House of Representatives by
Congressman Thorkelson of Montana, and is published in the Congressional
Record of October 13, 1919, p. 598-604 inclusive. Its authenticity was
discussed by members of the House and an effort was made to strike it from
the Record, which failed. See Congressional Record, October 11, 1939, p.714
et seq.; also of September 9, 1940, p.17835; and September 11, 1940,
p.18311.

The letter or report is not published in the bound volumes of the
Congressional Record of October 11, 1939, or the appendix of that date.
Evidently some interested person prevented its publication, despite the
refusal of the House of Representatives to strike it from the Record. The
text as here set forth can be easily verified by reference to an original
unbound copy of the Congressional Record of October 11 1939. It will be
published in full in the next edition of this booklet.

It was called the "Col. E. M. House letter," but it is not a letter. It is
an official report made by an important officer of  the British Secret
Service, on stationery of the British Consulate. It reveals its official
character and its verity upon its face.

No minor official would dare write such a letter to the British Prime
Minister, or dare discuss the important subjects contained in it; except in
the line of duty. Moreover, it was written by a man who KNEW and whose duty
it was to know. It was not written by Col. E. M. House. This name was merely
an adopted name; a nom de plume. It is the custom of secret agents to
disguise themselves under a number or an assumed name. The letter is known
as the British Secret Service Report No.1919. Sec Congressional Record,
October 13. 1939, p.714.

It discloses that it was probably written by Lord Northcliffe, who was at
that time the head of the British Propaganda Department in enemy countries.
He sustained toward Lloyd George the same intimate relationship that once
existed between Woodrow Wilson and Colonel House, and this fact may explain
the name he assumed.

This document should be considered in connection with the drive by the Fair
Dealers, the press, the radio. and the  uplifters, for the Atlantic Pact,
"Union Now," "Federal Union, Inc.," etc., for it will enable us to determine
the true meaning of it all.

The immensely wealthy private bank of N. M. Rothschild & Son, and the
Zionists, controlled the British Empire then as well as now. Then they
controlled the Bank of England, the press, the railroads. and the industries
with minor exceptions. Lord Northcliffe was the publisher of the Daily Mail
and other papers.

The report follows:

Imperial Unity

British Consulate
New York City
June 10, 1919

"The Right Honorable David Lloyd George,

Sir:

I was highly honored by your personal letter of May 24 last (written same
week as Paris meeting), and wish to thank you for the cordial expression of
approval of my work which it contained. You were very good enough to require
from me a frank and confidential account of the campaign conducted under my
direction in this country,  together with such suggestions as might further
help to lead it speedily to a successful conclusion. As the campaign had
been under way for a considerable time before you were called to direct the
destinies of England, I shall review it from its commencement, and,
emboldened by your sanction, I shall freely make whatever suggestions seem
to me good.

>From the moment of my arrival here, it was evident to me that such an
Anglo-American alliance as would ultimately result in the peaceful return of
the American Colonies to the dominion of the Crown could be brought about
only with the consent of the dominant group of the controlling clans.

For those who can afford the universities, we are, as I have already
mentioned, plentifully supplying British-born or trained professors,
lecturers, and presidents. A  Canadian-born admiral now heads the United
States Naval College. We are arranging for a greater interchange of
professors between the two countries. The student interchange could be much
improved. The Rhodes scholarships are inadequate in number. I would suggest
that the Carnegie trustees be approached to extend to American students the
benefits of the scheme by which Scottish students are subsidised at Scottish
universities. If necessary, a grant from the treasury should be obtained for
this excellent work, which however, should remain for the present -- at
least outwardly -- private enterprise...

Through the Red Cross, the Scout movement, the YMC, the church, and other
humane, religious, and quasi-religious organizations, we have created an
atmosphere of international effort which strengthens the idea of unity of
the English-speaking world. In the co-ordination of this work, Mr. Raymond
Fosdick, formerly of the Rockefeller Foundation, has been especially
conspicuous. I would also like to mention President Nicholas Murray Butler
of Columbia University, who has eloquently advocated this form of
internationalism and carefully emphasize its distinction from the false
internationalism which is infecting the proletariat.

The Overseas Club in this country now contains nearly hundred thousand
pledged members with a Journal of their own. Our thanks are due to Lord St.
George's, St. David's, St. Andrew's, and Pilgrim Clubs, together with the
Daughters of the Empire. the Prince of Wales Fund, and the other association
and guilds connected with our multitudinous war charities enable us to
pervade all sections and classes of the country, and provide us with a force
of empire builders whose loyalty an services are both invaluable to us and
highly appreciated by the native colonists.

The censorship, together with our monopoly of cables and our passport
control of  passengers, enables us to hold all American newspapers as
isolated from the non-American world as if they had been in another planet
instead of in another hemisphere The realization of this by the Associated
Press and the other universal news gatherers -- except Hearst -- was most
helpful in bringing only our point of view to the papers they served.

British-born editors and reporters now create imperial sentiment in most
American newspapers. As their identity and origins are not usually known,
they can talk and write for us as Americans to Americans.

Below that level, imperial unity cannot be securely established upon the
debris of the Constitution here. We will not passively permit this unity to
be now menaced when it is all but perfect. Has not America, while still
maintaining an outward show of independence, yielded to our wishes in the
Panama Canal tolls and Canadian fisheries' disputes, as was fitting and
filial? Was not America happy to fight our war in Europe? Was not America,
like Canada, willing not only to pay her own war expenses but also to loan
us money for ours? Was not America, like Canada, content to seek nothing in
return for her war duty, so long as the motherland was completely
indemnified in Egypt and the rest of Africa, in Persia, Mesopotamia, Syria,
and elsewhere? Was not America as proud to be honored by knighthood and
lesser titulary distinctions, as Canada was, or, rather, more proud?

Has not President Wilson cancelled the big Navy program and dutifully
conceded to us the command of the seas, confident that we shall defend
America against all future foes that may threaten our supremacy, just as we
defended America and Canada against Germany? In matters lingual, legal and
financial, fiscal, commercial, social evangelical, administrative, martial,
naval, educational -- are not in all these matters the established relations
of America to England, in kind -- if not precisely in degree -- identical
with the relations of the other colonies and dominions to the Crown? Indeed,
I might justifiably sustain the thesis that so-distant American Republic is
now more happily and more closely bound to the Empire than are, for example,
the ungrateful and insolent colonies which lately were the Boer Republics.

As long as President Wilson, with our Canadian-horn Secretary of the
Interior, Mr. Franklin Lane, with our Scotch-born Secretary of Labor, Mr. W.
B. Wilson, and with our London-born Mr. Samuel Gompers, -- now controls the
administration, imperial unity will daily grow more intimate and more
perfect. But I regret to inform you that our committee on American Elections
has reported (Appendix 38) that no matter how lavishly we finance the next
election, the Wilson administration will pass, and with it, perchance, that
absolute administrative control over  the Legislature, which has meant so
much to us. Willful, wanton, and wicked men will unite in the next election
with labor and those industrialists who profit-patriotism ratio has been
allowed to fall below the threshold of loyalty to imperial unity. These
combined forces of disorder will seek to elect a legislature which "ill
attempt to make the administration responsible to it, instead to us and our
auxiliaries, and will strive to rend the bonds which bind this colony to the
motherland, for the sole, selfish, and seditious purpose of erecting a
separate, national, economic nit independent of us-and even perhaps,
competing with us. We must, therefore, hasten to remove from this
legislature, with the aid of our supporters here, such of its powers as
could be used against imperial unity.

J. P. MORGAN & CO. ARE BRITISH AGENTS
In the financial world the Anglo-American alliance is a well-established
fact. And as the consortium for China, and the security company for Mexico
show, our brokers and their aids have become the unchallenged financiers of
the world. We have been particularly fortunate in our fiscal agents here,
Messrs Pierpont Morgan & Company. The commissions they charged, both as our
brokers and purchasing agents no doubt were high enough to warrant their
summary treatment at the hands of Mr. Balfour during his visit here. But
they advantageously placed our many bond issues and every American holder of
these bonds having now a stake in the Empire is a defender of its integrity
and a potential supporter of its extension over here. Their services in
putting this country into the war have not been altruistic, but they were
nonetheless effective. They  contributed liberally to our Americanization
campaign. They ousted Miss Boardman, and through Messrs. Taft and H. P.
Davidson they nationalized and directed the American Red Cross, and then
internationalized it under the direction of Mr. H. P. Davison Through Mr.
Thomas Lamont they purchased Harpers Magazine and the New York Evening Post.
Through advertisers they control, they have exerted widespread influence on
newspaper policy. Messrs. Lamont and Davidson gave you valuable aid at the
peace conference. They loaned $200,000,000 to Japan that our ally might
build a fleet to compete with America on the Pacific carrying routes. Their
attempts to retain for us control of the international mercantile marine are
well known to you. And I would he amiss if I did not remind you that they
relieved the government of considerable embarrassment by pensioning worthily
the widow of our late Ambassador Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, at a time when the
antagonism of Lord Northcliffe made it impossible for us officially to do
so. As the greater part of their capital is invested within the Empire. the
Government of His Majesty will doubtless have opportunity to appreciate the
value of the services of Messrs. Pierpont Morgan & Company.

BRITISH DUPLICITY
Through our fiscal agents here and our aids who act for other Allied
countries, as Sir Clifford Sifton acts for Rumania, we have become the
world's purchasers. Moreover, the war has made us the custodian of the
greater part of the world's raw materials. With moneys lent to us by the
American Government for war purposes, we have. acting through quasi-American
companies by the aid of Mr. Connor Guthrie, obtained control of the large
oil fields in California and in Costa Rica. And through the nationalization
of His Majesty's Government of the Cowdray, Pearson, and Royal Dutch Shell
interests in Mexico, we having become masters of the Mexican, Canadian,
Rumanian, Armenian. Persian, and lessor oil fields, now largely control the
oil fields of the world and thereby the world's transportation and industry.
We have not yet succeeded in controlling the pipe lines owned by the
Standard Oil Company, and its subsidiaries, for those companies have long
been established. But, although uncontrolled companies may continue to get
their oil to the seaboard, the proposed system of preferential treatment at
our universal oiling stations for ships supplied at the port of departures
with British oil (Appendix 37) will prevent the use of any oil but ours on
the high seas.

This control would enable us to exert such pressure as would make American
industrial interests amenable to His Majesty's pleasure. But it would be
unwise to make  disciplinary use of our fuel power before we secure
remission of our $4,000,000,000 debt. Otherwise, the American industrial
interests might retaliate by forcing the United States Government to exact
from us the agreed interest, to maintain tariff barriers against our
merchandise, and to withdraw support from the rate of exchange. Which make
our labor and resources for years pay tribute to this country an unnatural,
unfilial, and unthinkable proceeding. We are conducting a vigorous campaign
for the cancellation of this war debt, on the grounds (a) that we fought
America's fight for her for 2 years, while she was prospering in cowardice
and (b) that at least the material burdens should be distributed justly, if
the world is to be made safe for democracy. .  Synchronously with this
agitation for the remission of our debt, we are agitating for further loans
of American money to rebuild our markets in Europe. There is no possibility
of these two agitations endangering their mutual success, for we have
repeatedly proved beyond question that the American mind cannot
synchronously fix and correlate facts, with two cognate items on the
statements to be judged each on its merits. Hence, we are able in a cloud of
candor to state the merit of the loan -- viz, that unless the money be lent
to us we cannot pay the interest on it. in these agitations we are receiving
valuable, if not wholly disinterested, aid from our financial auxiliaries
and fiscal agents (J. P. Morgan & Co.)

In Mexico our friends made a tentative adventure with the gallant Blanquet,
but it miscarried, perhaps owing to a slight misunderstanding between the
bond interests and the industrial interests. However, we are quietly
continuing our work in Mexico until the United States Government shall be
put in a position to lake it over. An American war with Mexico would cost us
nothing; it would satisfy certain American industrial interests; it would
guarantee out title to the Mexican oil fields; it would humble, by
impoverishing, this purse-proud people; it would give us an opportunity to
show the American that he isolated in the world needs our protection against
our ally, Japan; and while America was busy warring we would enjoy a clear
field in the European, African, and Asiatic trade, together with the
monopoly of the markets of a South America hostile to the Monroe
Doctrinaries of democracy. For these reasons our press is fully reporting
Mexican outrages, but a strange apathy seems to have fallen on the people,
an apathy from which only border raids or special atrocities will arouse
them...

LEAGUE OF NATIONS
In other words, we must quickly act to transfer its dangerous sovereignty
from this colony to the custody of the Crown. We must, in short, now bring
America with in the Empire. God helping us, we can do no other. The first
visible step in this  direction has been taken; President Wilson has
accepted and sponsored the plan for a League of Nations which we prepared
for him. We have wrapped this plan in the peace treaty so that the world
must accept from us the League or a continuance of the war. The League is in
substance the Empire with America admitted on the same basis as our other
colonies.

The effectiveness of the League will depend upon the power with which it can
be endowed, and that will hinge upon the skill with which the cardinal
functions of the American legislature are transferred to the executive
Council of the League. Any abrupt change may startle the ignorant American
masses and rouse them to action against it. And us. Our best policy,
therefore, would be to appoint President Wilson first president of the
League. When the fourteen points seemed to our Government twice seven daily
sins, I analyzed with care his diverse and numerous notes and discourses and
divided them into their two parts: One, the Wilson creed, "I believe in open
covenants and in the freedom of the seas," etc.; and two, the Wilson
commandments, "Might shall not prevail over right, the strong shall not
oppress the weak," etc. From the "too proud to fight" and "he kept us out of
war" episodes, I ventured to deduce (September 29, 1918, Appendix 36) that
he would at the appropriate moment oblige us by transferring the "not" from
his commandments to his creed without as much as a "may I not," and in such
a way that his people will be none the wiser.

The plain people of this country are inveterate and incurable hero
worshipers. They are, however, sincere in sentiment; and for a hero to
become established in the public shrine, he must first succeed in getting
his name associated with the phrases and slogans that seem to reflect the
undefined aspirations of the average inhabitant. When this has been
accomplished the allegiance is at once transferred from the sentiment to the
sentimentalist, from the ideal to the maker of the longed-for phrase. No one
understands this peculiarity of the native behavior better than Mr. Wilson,
which accounts largely for his exceptional usefulness to us. He knows that
Americans will not scrutinise any performance too closely, provided their
faith in the performer has been adequately established. Mr. Wilson has since
made the transfer amid American acclamation. In the same way he will now be
able to satisfy them that far from surrendering their independence to the
League they are actually extending their sovereignty by  it. He alone can
satisfy them on this. He alone can father an anti-Bolshevik act which
judicially interpreted -- will enable appropriate punitive measures to be
applied to any American who may be unwise enough to assert that America must
again declare her independence. And he alone, therefore, is qualified to act
for us as first president of the League.

I confess I am a little uneasy lest in the exigencies of diplomatic combat,
Mr. Wilson may not have found the joy he anticipated from matching his wits
against the best brains of Europe. He is easily slighted and remarkably
vindictive. It is the highest degree desirable that any traces of resentment
his mind may be harboring against us should be radically removed before he
returns. I would, therefore, suggest that the work of adulation planned in
Appendix 32 should be instructed to consult the inventories I have prepared
(appendixes 45-83), which show that he is now surfeited with diamond
stomachers, brooches, and bracelets, Gobelin tapestries, mosaics, and vases,
gold caskets, and plates.

The program we arranged for his visit to England (appendix 33) including a
royal reception at Buckingham Palace, with which the President was well
pleased. The fruitful visit of the President to the King should be returned
as early as possible. I would suggest that as soon as the President is
settled once more in the White House, the visit should be returned by His
Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales, who would be an admirable
representative of His Royal Sire, and would satisfy President Wilson's sense
of fitness. It is perhaps unfortunate that there is not a Presidential
daughter of the Prince's age, for such a union would have greatly advanced
our purpose not only with the American people, but also with a President who
feels that lese majeste should be punishable with 20 years' imprisonment,
and who acts as if he considered his son-in-law, Mr. McAdoo, as his heir
apparent.

PRESIDENT WILSON'S PECULIARITIES
Too great attention cannot be given at this time to the Presidential
peculiarities, for his devotion to our purpose will depend upon our ability
to pander to them. I would suggest that the new ambassador to Washington
should be chosen only after the most careful thought. He should not be too
clever, lest Mr. Wilson shun him. He should be able to evince hilarity at
the most venerable jest, no matter how often he may have to suffer it. This
qualification is vitally important whether Mr. Wilson's "humor" is merely
assumed to perpetuate the "human" tradition established for Presidents by
Lincoln, or whether it is studied descent from Jovelike isolation to
Jovelike jest. The ambassador should be a Wilson worshiper. I enclose
(appendix 34) resumes of the methods of worship practiced by various members
of his inner circle. The appointee would do well to familiarize himself with
them, and my services are at his disposal should be desire more extended
information on the method of worship he selects. He should of course be a
commoner, that we may not lose democratic favor--preferably a professor--and
sufficiently subsidized to be able to entertain regally. If a list were
submitted to Mr. Wilson he might be prepared to indicate all of whom he did
not approve, and the one against whom he expressed no prejudices should be
appointed. The pressing need of our embassy at Washington is not so much an
ambassador as a gentleman in waiting to the President.

I would suggest that his powers as President of the League Of Nations be
left undefined for the present. He may be trusted to assume what power he
can and to use it in the interests of the Crown.

A grant of a privy purse of $100,000,000 would prove most acceptable to him
and would be useful for private espionage, private wars, Siberian railroads,
etc. His appointment should be for life, and you might definitely promise
him that any instructions he may care to convey concerning his successor
will receive the most careful attention of His Majesty's Government.

Nevertheless, it would be well quickly to reinforce him in the presidency of
the League of Nations by staging the first session of the League in
Washington. This will convince these simple people that they are the League
and its power resides in them. Their pride in this power should be exalted.
Perhaps you, yourself, might condescend to visit this country. Or, if that
be impracticable, you might send such noble statesmen, and stately noblemen,
as will suffice to make of the first League session a spectacle of
unsurpassed brilliance. Indeed, it would be well to commence at an early
date a series of spectacles by which the mob may be diverted from any
attempt to think too much of matters beyond their province. The success of
the Joffre, Vivianti,  Balfour, and other missions in amusing the people
while the country was quietly put into the war shows that similar missions
would likewise amuse the people-while the country was quietly put into the
League. I would suggest that missions of thanksgiving to America be
organized, and that His Majesty the King of the Belgians, Cardinal Mercier,
Field Marshal Foch, Venizelos, and an eminent Italian or two be sent
seriatim.

PROPAGANDA
While awaiting these diversions for the vulgar, we are incessantly
instructing them in the wonders of the League. Its praises are thundered by
our press, decreed by our college presidents, and professed by our
professors. Our authors, writers. and lecturers are analyzing its selected
virtues for whomsoever will read or listen. As will be seen from appendix
39, circulars issued by the League of Nations committee, we have enlisted
8,000 pulpiteers or propagandists for the League. We have organized
international and national synods, consistories, committees,  conferences,
convocations, conventions, councils, congresses, and assemblies, as well as
their State, municipal, and district equivalents, to herald the birth of the
League as the dawn of universal peace. A special Sunday will be observed as
League Sunday in all churches. In this connection, may I remark that the
appointment of Mr. Raymond Fosdick to the Secretariat of the League, has
pleased not only the Rockefeller interests but also the less disingenuous
uplifters, for it stamps the League as an endowed organization for
promiscuous uplifting, under the triple crown of religion, respectability,
and finance. Agriculturalists,  bankers, brokers, chartered accounts,
chemists, and all other functional groups capable of exerting organized
professional, business, financial, or social pressure are meeting to endorse
the League in the name of peace, progress, and prosperity.

The World's Peace Foundation has issued for us a series of League of Nations
pamphlets, which, with our other literature, tax the mails to the limit of
their capacity. Our film concerns  are preparing an epoch-making picture
entitled "The League of Nations." In brief, our entire system of thought
control is working ceaselessly, tirelessly, ruthlessly, to insure the
adoption of the League. And it will be adopted, for business wants peace,
the righteous cannot resist a covenant, and the politicians. after
shadow-boxing for patronage purposes. will yield valiantly lest the fate of
the wanton and wilful pursue them.

By these means we hope smoothly to overcome all effective opposition on the
on the part of our colony America to entering  the League -- that is, the
Empire. As soon as the League is functioning properly, His Majesty in
response to loyal and repeated solicitation, might graciously be pleased to
consent to restore to to this people their ancient right to petition at the
foot of the throne; to confer the ancient rank and style of governor general
upon our Ambassador, that this colony may enjoy a status inferior to no
other colony's; to establish the primacy of the metropolitan see, with the
Right Reverend Dr. Manning as first primate; to appoint Mr. Elihu Root lord
chief justice of the colony, and to nominate Messrs. W. H. Taft, Nicholas
Murray Butler, J. P. Morgan, Elizabeth Marbury, Adolph Ochs, and Thomas
Lamont to the colonial privity council; as a special mark of royal and
imperial condescension, to rename the Federal Capital of the Colony
Georgetown, and lest section jealousy be thereby excited, to grant royal
charters to the cities of Boston and Chicago entitling them thereafter to
style themselves, respectively, Kingston and Guelf -- concisely to bestow in
time and in measure such tokens of the bounty of the Crown as the fealty of
the colonists merit.

BRITISH-AMERICAN UNION URGED
Since that memorable day, September 19, 1877, on which the late Cecil Rhodes
devised by will a fund "to and for the establishment, promotion, and
development of a secret society-the true aim of which and object of which
shall be the extension of  British rule throughout the world, and especially
the ultimate recovery of the United States of America as an integral part of
the British Empire"-the energy and intelligence of England has not been
spent in vain. It would perhaps be presumptuous of me to refer here to the
admirable services rendered not only by LORD NORTHCLlFFE (the probable
author of the report) and the corps of 12,000 trained workers whom he
introduced here during the year as purchasing agents under the direction of
Sir Campbell Stuart, but also the right Honorable Arthur J. Balfour, and by
Lord Reading. But my report would be incomplete without a reference to Mr.
Andrew Carnegie, of Skibo Castle, Suthelandshire, and New York City. He
unobtrusively assumed the mantle of the late Mr. Cecil Rhodes. Through the
Carnegie Foundation, he obtained such control over the professorate of this
country that even President Wilson was a suppliant for a Carnegie pension
before this people and allied gratitude placed him beyond prospective want.

The Carnegie League to Enforce Peace and its affiliate League of Small
Nations are even now leading the van in our fight. In the North American
Review, June 1893, Mr. Carnegie wrote: "Let men say what they will, I say
that as surely as the sun in the heavens once shone upon Britain and America
united, so surely is it one morning to rise, to shine upon, to greet  again,
the reunited state--the British-American union."

The object of Cecil Rhodes is almost attained. The day prophesied by Mr.
Carnegie is near at hand, the day when the American Colonies will be in all
things one with the motherland, one and indivisible. Only the last great
battle remains to be. fought--the battle to compel her acceptance of the
terms of the League of Nations."


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