Via Airmail

RADIO & CABLE ADDRESS

RADER"

PHONE NO. 20196

CODES USED:

BENTLEY'S

ACME

A.B C. 5TH & 6TH EDITIONS

PRIVATE

(CHUANG CHU FENG)

C. F. F.

CHUANG

GENERAL MERCHANT

6TH FLOOR. NATIONAL, BANK BUILDING

HONG KONG

Room No.601

COPY

ESTD, 1912

BRANCH OFFICES:

SHANGHAI

BANGKOK

SWATOW

AMOY

CANTON

Confedential

June 4, 1948

49

昌華公

銀行七模六〇一:2房接上 香港德輔道中八號入國六

上式

To

Clement Attlee, Esquire,

His Majesty's Prime Minister,

10, Downing Street,

London, S.W. England

Honorable Sir,

May it please Your Honor to permit me to report in writing regarding my plans and recommedmations for accomplish- ment of the two important victories of World Wars 1 & 11 as follows that instantly while World War 1 broke out on August 4, 1914, it was I who counselled Italy to part her alliance from Germany for declaration of independence and subsequently to join the Allies in war.

As it was then a common knowledge that while the Allies made no progress in their warfares, and their offers for peace were all rejected by Germany, the war situation was so gloomy and that it was I who found it necessary to have America, China and Japan to join the war in order to carry out my plan to secure the final victory. It was, however, a very difficult task for me at the beginning, and eventually I succeeded in convincing all these nations to join up for the common aim and object of achieving my guaranteed victory.

Nevertheless, in June, 1918, many Americans, and especially Mr. R. S. Routh, complained to me seriously on their losses in the war and insisted that the Americans should withdraw all their troops from the European Theatre before Christmas, 1918, because according to the reports to hand that it would be entirely useless to pursue the conflict with such heavy casualties amounting to about 200,000 soldiers wounded and killed in every week, as also determined by their Government, and unless my plan could effectively enable them to carry their campaign to the final success as encouraged by me.

Thereupon I recommended that the Allies should fight their way into Germany in penetration of Italo-German lines which were not so strongly fortified as compared with those long and wide, well-guarded and powerful trenches in the Western Fronts, and also to maneuvre the Allies troops marching in zigzag columns and tactics like cyclones in order to prevent German surrounding in their country as it was at first feared by the Allies.

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