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Ericson III, Edward E. Feeding the German Eagle: Soviet Economic Aid to Nazi Germany, 1933-1941. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1999
ISBN 0-275-96337-3
Edward Ericson's new work reveals much about the nature of the Russo-German
economic collaboration not generally known even among those who study the
Second World War. The book opens with an overview of the "traditional
interdependence" between the two nations and discusses the trade agreements
of the early inter-war years. These agreements resulted in brisk and
mutually beneficial commerce between Germany and the Soviet Union for
several years, but the rise of Hitler coincided with the decline of
economic relations.
At the same time that Germany was moving further away from Russia with the signing of the German-Polish Non-Aggression Pact of January 26, 1934, and was losing its claims to Soviet resources as the USSR paid off its debt, its demands for Soviet raw materials were increasing. Clearly, the economic balance of power between the two countries was changing. Hitler seems to have sensed his increasing need for Soviet political and economic support when he lamented in the spring of 1934, "Perhaps I shall not be able to avoid an alliance with Russia." Indeed, between 1936 and early 1939, Ericson chronicles no fewer than six failed attempts to re-establish an economic agreement between the nations with the Soviets trading grain and raw materials for German machinery and weapons. By March 1939, the last in the series of negotiations ended when Hitler refused to pursue them any further.
Hitler still showed himself unwilling to force a reluctant military and industry to divert armament production to Soviet export as long as the West seemed ready to appease him with more easy victories like those in Austria and Czechoslovakia. Until this strategy had reached a dead end, Hitler apparently would rather use the USSR as a bogeyman to scare the West than pay the high Soviet economic and political price for their raw materials. Wiehl [head of the German Commercial Policy Division], therefore, told Schulenburg on March 8 to put the negotiations on hold indefinitely, and on March 11 ordered him to bring them "to a standstill in a suitable way...[and to] continue [them] in a dilatory fashion." Later in 1939, as war drew closer, both sides began to review the value of renewed trade arrangements. Ericson presents much data from contemporary German military and economic reports showing the Reich's perilous position in a long list of critical resources required for waging modern war. Similarly, the Soviets grew increasingly desirous of German machine tools and finished goods. A major turning point was the joint Anglo-French guarantee of Poland.
Not only had the political situation been radically transformed, but so too had the economic situation. While Hitler probably thought the British support for Poland a bluff all the way up until September and Stalin appears to have had real doubts about British resolve as well, both men had to take into account the possibility that war in Poland and even war in Europe could occur in the near future. As a result, both Germany and the Soviet Union intensified their military building plans, often to the point of hysteria. Hitler, for example, called for a navy the size of Great Britain's and an air force so large that it would have taken 85 percent of the world's annual gasoline production just to fuel it! Stalin, for his part, pushed for a fifteen battleship, fifteen heavy cruiser navy to rival that of the United States. For Hitler, the time had come to swallow his political reservations in favor of securing his economic needs. Stalin, on the other hand, held a position of strength. Knowing how much Hitler needed an agreement, he was able to hold out for the maximum price and the best terms. In addition, the Kremlin was still courted by the West which sought to encircle and isolate Germany before war broke out. Stalin skillfully played one suitor against the other. On 20 August 1939 the economic agreement was finally signed.
Contemporaries and historians have had mixed opinions about the significance of this new economic partnership. One school of interpretations has asserted that the German war economy would have collapsed quickly without Soviet aid. Now, however, "the threat of the blockade...had been overcome" by the August treaties. Preventive-war theorists have gone even further with this theory. Stalin now had almost complete control of the German war economy and could effectively blackmail and manipulate Hitler: "By skillfully apportioning Soviet aid Stalin had it in his power to save Germany from defeat, but also to prevent them from achieving victory and so make the war drag on till both parties were exhausted, while the Soviet Union carried on rearming in safe neutrality in order to have the last word."
In any event, as Ericson explains, the surest result of the hard-won
economic agreement was the diplomatic agreement which soon followed. In
less than two weeks Ribbentrop flew to Moscow and signed the Non-Aggression
pact which effectively gave Germany a free hand to begin the war. Upon
hearing that Stalin was ready to go along with the deal, Hitler banged
on the table and exclaimed "I have them! I have them!"
The forty-five-member Soviet delegation arrived in Berlin on October 26, all newly outfitted in the same mid-quality dark brown coats, bright yellow shoes, drab hats, and empty suitcases. The suitcases were to bring back all those wonderful German consumer goods that the Soviet utopia had somehow failed to produce. One fellow had apparently started his shopping immediately upon arrival and now stood out from the other delegates because he was wearing a sailor's cap. Almost all the members of the mission could speak German relatively well, though few would admit to their language abilities at first. The Germans, in turn, tried to gauge their opponents' level of understanding by providing only partial translations and observing who whispered the full version to his comrades....
Despite the economic framework already in place, it was clear that much
detailed negotiating was needed before significant amounts of goods could
actually be exchanged.
Though largely a compromise that stretched both sides to the limits of what their respective systems could comfortably handle, this treaty probably favored the Soviet Unionnot surprising given Stalin's close supervision of the negotiating process. Germany received enough raw materials to keep it in the war, but in limited amounts and at such a cost that they probably (and under Stalin's watchful eye, definitely) would not provide a decisive edge against the Allies in the short term. The war, therefore, was likely to drag on into 1941 and beyond, making Germany even more dependent on Soviet resources and allowing Stalin to twist the screws even tighter in future negotiations. In the meantime, the Soviet Union would receive the technology and equipment necessary to rearm.
But, as Ericson points out, Stalin's careful scheming was predicated on a
lengthy stalemate in the West while the USSR rearmed and prepared for the
decisive phase of the war.
On the other hand, trade and negotiations on certain key items remained problematic. Soviet oil and items shipped via the USSR still only trickled into the Reich, even though adequate transportation was no longer a major problem. Tea sent from Vladivostok on December 16 arrived in Germany only on April 16, and some November shipments from Iran had yet to reach the Reich nine months later. In addition, the Soviets had almost scuttled talks on manganese with their high price demands. Delivery of German synthetic-material plants also looked increasingly questionable as the Soviets continued to require extensive guarantees and technical access that the German firms found impossible to provide...
The entire political and economic equation suddenly lost equilibrium,
however, due to the rapid and unexpected German victory in France. No
longer in a position of strength which enabled him to afford hard bargaining for
long-term gains while the capitalist nations bled each other in a
protracted conflict, Stalin suddenly needed to encourage Germany to
continue the war with England while the Soviet Union concentrated on
short-term security measures. Although this would seem to have eroded
Stalin's bargaining position, the voracious German appetite for raw
materials, and the lack of alternative suppliers, ensured that the Kremlin
still held some trump cards.
Far from solving Germany's raw-material problems, as many historians have assumed, the booty from the new conquests provided only temporary relief and actually made the long-term situation much worse. The Reich was now cut off from much of its remaining overseas trade, a large part of which had come in via neutrals such as Italy and the Netherlands. As a result, German overseas exports plummeted from 222,100 tons in March to 7,600 tons in May. Meanwhile, the conquered territories only added to the growing demand. Based on 1938 figures, Greater Germany and its sphere of influence lacked, among other items, 500,000 tons of manganese, 3.3 million tons of raw phosphate, 200,000 tons of rubber, and 9.5 million tons of oil! Conservation and synthetics could make up only some of the difference. The logical choice to take up the rest of this slack was the USSR, but it remained unwilling and increasingly unable (what with its own military buildup) to provide the enormous amounts required by the Germans. For Hitler, this lead inevitably to a decision for a showdown with Bolshevism. According to Goering, "...the Fuehrer desired punctual delivery to the Russians only till spring 1941. Later on we would have no further interest in completely satisfying Russian demands." Despite Moscow's security concerns, however, Stalin was not about to roll over.
The Soviets had also tightened the screws in other parts of their trade relationship. They halted shipments from Manchuria, for example, claiming that the plague had broken out in that region, an assertion no other country seemed able to verify. They also threatened to cancel German shale-oil contracts with Estonia because of the Reich's growing deficit with that state.
While both sides continued shipping trainloads of freight for which
specific contracts had already been signed, Moscow and Berlin squabbled and
haggled for further deliveries. Large quantities of raw materials and
manufactured goods changed hands, but neither side was willing or able to
provide everything its partner desired. Still, talks dragged on, new
contracts were hammered out, and trade rolled on.
Nonetheless, a deal had been reached. On January 10 a series of documents were signed in Moscow, completing the arrangements on the new borders, property compensation in the occupied territories, trade balances for Year One, trade with the Baltics and Bessarabia, control of the Lithuania Strip, transit costs, and delivery schedules for Year Two. As the Soviets had wanted, the new treaty structure regulated almost all of the remaining economic questions and laid the foundation for a long-term relationship that would greatly benefit the Soviet Union. Unfortunately for Stalin, Hitler had no intentions of developing such a long-lasting partnership.
Some historians have concluded from this agreement that Stalin was appeasing
Hitler to avoid being attacked, but Ericson makes it clear this was not
the case.
Increasingly desperate
for raw materials from Russia or trans-shipped from the Far East on Russian
rails, Berlin did everything possible to keep the raw materials coming,
including shipping goods to Moscow ahead of schedule even as Soviet
deliveries fell behind. Meanwhile, plans for the German invasion
moved forward despite predictions by the Wehrmacht's economic experts that
the conquest of the Soviet Union would actually prove to be a net economic
loss for the Reich "unless a series of impossible preconditions were met:
the Soviet economy had to be captured intact, the people had to be won over
to the German cause, the [rail] link to the Far East had to be rapidly
reestablished, and the Caucasus oil fields had to be captured in the first
blow."
Over and over again on the eastern front, the same ironic scene was played out. German soldiers fed by Ukrainian grain, transported by Caucasus oil, and outfitted with boots made from rubber shipped via the Trans-Siberian railroad fired their Donetz-manganese-hardened steel weapons at their former allies. The Red Army hit back with artillery pieces and planes designed according to German specifications and produced by Ruhr Valley machines that burned coat from the Saar.
How did the Russo-German agreements balance at the time of the invasion?
According to Ericson, the Soviets gained some utility from the machine
tools and other equipment they received; while much of this material was
overrun by the advancing German armies, a portion was evacuated and played
a role in re-equipping the Red Army. The German cruiser Luetzow, one of the
main points of the economic negotiations, counted for little in Soviet
hands during the campaign. At the political level, Stalin's complicity in
aligning himself with Hitler gave Germany the freedom to conquer much of
Europe and put itself in a position to attack the Soviet Union.
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Reviewed 7 January 2000
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