; ,-T5 "T-t F0W&31?!Sl The Commoner - .. JSMMo- 2 w.oro superseded by now ideas and had to bo thrown Into the scrap heap. "Thoy said to us, this is a moving picture, it is something that nobody can paint and givo you an idea of. It is not a static thing. A PITIFUL HANDFUL "Therefore it became necessary for us to have eyes Micro in instant and immediate communica tion with us, and wo sent over to Franco Gen. Pershing, and wo sent with him not merely a division of troops to that X shall refer in a momont but wo sent with him perhaps Is can say riafoly the major part of the trained, oxpert personnel of the army. You know tho sizo of the ofllcial corps of tho rogiilar army in this country when tho war broke out. It was a piti ful handful df trained men, and yet It was neces sary to divide them up and send over to Franco officers of tho highest quality to that they would bo at tho front and see in tho workshops and in tho factories and in tho war offices and in tho armies, whoro. consultations would, take placo immediately back of tho front, so that they could soo tho thing with their own eyes and send us back tho dolails by cable every day of tho changing character of this war. , "Gon. Pershing's staff of experts and officers over thoro runs Into tho thousands, and they are busy ovory minute; and every day that tho sun rises I got cablegrams from Gen. Pershing, from ton to sixteen and twenty pages long, filled with measurements and formulas and changes of a' millimeter in sizo; groat, long specifications of changes in details of things which wero agreed upon last weok and changed this week, and nood to bo changed again next week. So that what wo aro doing at this end is attempting by using tho eyes of tho army thoro to keep up "to what they want us to do. , "Already you will find in your further exam ination into somo of the bureau work of tho de partment, some of the divisions, when they como down, you will find that schedules which wero agreed upon, woapons which wero selected and which wo had started to manufacture, have been so far discarded that peoplo haye forgotten tho names of them, almost, and now things substi tuted in their placo, and those forgotten and now things in their places. "So that if one gets tho idea that this is the Bort of war wo used to have, or if ho gets the idea that this is a static thing, it is an entirely erroneous idea. And when you remember that wo had to dlvldo this little handful of officers . that wo had and send so largo a part of them to Franco, and then think of those who remained at homo, you will reallzo, I am sure, that those who remained hero had tho double duty, insuffi cient for either aspoct of it in numbers and they still have this double duty they had to go forward with manufactures, work out Industry and industrial relations, they had to seo about suppllos of raw materials and manufacture fin ished products, and make from day to day alter ations and changos that had to bo .made and they had to bo ingenious with suggestions, to see whether they could deviso on this side some thing which had not boon thought of over there They had to be hospitable to suggestions which came from the other Bide, they had to confer with tho foreign officers who were here and wero constantly being changed, so that men fresh from tho front could bo hero to.advlse with us, and in addition to that every one of them had to bo a university professor, goint out into tho life of the communityand selecting men who hacKmechanical experience and knowledge and training, but not military mechanical experience and knowledge and twining, and adding to his original equipment this" scientific training, that finishing touch which ma Jo him availab e for use as a military scientist. "& ior HOW DEPARTMENT GREW. "As a consoquenco this little group which stayed hero have built the great special dpart monts of tho army. The ordnance department nftnil"!1 tUlnk' Wlth ninty-three or SinetySx officers, has now, as I recall the figures L thing ike 3,000 officers. They have had to be" trained, they have had to be speclaHzed, and that has had to go on contemporaneously with this tremendous response to tho changing condi tions on the other side. b conai- war1? n!?STl Ume' WhQn We started lto this war I think it was commonly thought throuch out the country that our contribution at tho m, set might well be financial and du8tria The" S that' Ume' th i01 w7 && at that time the appropriate industries and many converted industries were largely devoted to manufacture of war materials for our allies. "As I suggested this morning, when we went into that market wo found it largely occupied, so that our problem was not going to a shoe fac tory and saying make shoes for us. Bjit it was going to a factory which never made shoes, because all the shoe fac tories wero busy making shoes for people from whom we could not take them, and saying: 'Learn how to make shoes in order that you may make them for us.' COULD NOT DISTURB MANUFACTURE FOR TILE ALLIES IN THIS COUNTRY "Now, of course, that is not true of shoes, but it is true of machine guns, it ie true of other arms, It Is true of ammunition, it is true of forg ing capacity, which was the greatest defect in the country, and all of this timo we had not merely not to disturb the programme of Allies manufacture in this country, but we had not to cut off the supplies of raw material to our allies, and we had not to disturb the industry of this country to such an extent that products up on which they depended for the success of their military operations would be interfered with, both agricultural and commercial and Industrial products. "At tho outset the idea was that we would be a financial and industrial assistance to our allies during the year 1918, and I think I probably can read from the Metropolitan Magazine for August a suggestion which will show what the current expectation of the country was. The editor of the Metropolitan Magazine was pro testing against what he believed to be the in tention of the government at that time." Here ' Senator Weeks interrupted to ask if that was the magazine of which Theodore Roosevelt is associate editor. Secretary Baker replied that Mr. Roosevelt was a contributing editor, and continued: "This magazine came out in August, 1917, and this editorial says: " 'Since it is our war, we want to put every thing Into it so as to finish it in the shortest possible time so 'that the world may !be re stored. To our mind the whole plan of the war department has been flavored with a desire to hold off until the Allies finish the war for us.' "You see the editor was dealing with what he supposed to be the intention of the war depart ment at that time, that wewere 'holding off so far as actual military operations were concerned ' and letting the Allies do the fighting. ' "What he says we should have done, and I ask your particular attention to it, is this: " 'We should have strained every energy to have got from 60,000-to 100,000 men to France this year.' PROGRAMME EXCEEDED "That is, the year 1917. I tell no secret, but It is perfectly well known to everybody in this group that we have far exceeded what in Au gust, 1917, was i regarded- as a programme-so deal that the editor of this magazine refers to it as a thing which we ought to have strained every, nerve in a vain but hopeless effort to ac complish." In response to a question by Chairman Cham berlain the secretary said the United States did not haye more than the jninimum number of men in France in August, 1917., . He continued: , . , "And then the editor goes on: 'And bv next year, 1918, we could have 500,000 men tb send S SipT part of 50M0 ' ich - meX iKlmoren hail that in France, and instead of h'Svin? 2 half a million men whom we could sW to France if we could find any way toVdo it in 1918 we will have more than one-half million men in France early in 1918, and we have avatole if the transportation facilities are availab e to us and the prospect is not unpromisinc nnl onehaU million who in 191? can tVpto Senator Weeks astfed whether the secretarv knew who wrote the editorial, and Mr Baker n d h th0,ugllt tt was attributed to Mr Wieidn the editor-in-chief. vviggm, "Why," asked Chairman Chamberlain h you not felt it proper to let ttoriffi "wL e confidence with reference .to th?S thin nlJ you are telling now?"' things that "Senator, I confess I have hesitated and I still hesitate," replied the secretary, "i have here a statement ironr Field, Marshal. Von Hh denburg, in whicbhe Is quoted' a's saying in a German newspaper,- In contemptuous fashion of us, that we have advertised our' preparations -for this war in an unworthy manner."' " "Do you think, for a moment, Secretary Baker," said the chairman, "that1' there' has been any time within the last year tht-the German secret service has not been fully advisdd as to everything we have done?' ' '- "Yes, senator, I know. If I may .rely upon confidential information which we get from con fidential sources, the German government is still mystified as to the number of men we have in France, or have had there at any time." The chairman said he doubted' this. After some' discussion as to the policyof governments in announcing military secrets, 'Mr. Baker said It was not the policy of the American' or other governments to do so and added: "I am saying this now, bec-upe yo.u have asked me why I have held back these fact's until now. I am saying to you that you couldnot get from Great Britain at this minute) I do not know whether I could get from Great Britain at this minute, the number of soldiersreat Britain has in France or at home. I could g'e't an approxi mation, I could get whatever information might be deemed helpful to, the' .'immediate mil itary object to be. accomplished) biit I could not get from Great Britain or France either one, the actual number of troops th'ex have at the front. -' ,, . "It may be that that preqoju.tipji is unneces sary, and yet that is the precaution which mil itary men have observed, ancl I ha"ye no further point to make in the matter of the number of troops there than to show) as. X w;as showing when I read that extract, that" our original in tention was to make our military effort in 1918, and in August, of 1917 a zealous advocate of im: mediate military activity laj&qqwii the max imum obtainable programme 'a. ;thing which has since been multifold exceeded' '' WHY TROOPS WEREt SENT. "Why did we decide to send-'some- troops to France in l'917? It is no secret: Wfieri Marshal Joffre came to this country from Prance,, when the British mission came from France, they told us of a situation which we had not up to that time fully appreciated. There had been in Franco recently conducted before that an unsuccessful major offensive. The French people had suf fered, suffered in a way that not only our lan guage is not adapted to describe, but our imag ination can not conceive. The war is in their country. This wolf has not only been at their doors, but he has been gnawing: for two years and a half at their vitals, and when this unsuc cessful offensive in France had gone" on there was a spirit not of surrender, but of fate, about the French people, about the mighty military engine which they had seen prepared to over come them for forty years was at them, and their attitude was that no ..atter whether every Frenchman died in his tracks, as they were will ing to do, on not,, that it was- an irresistible thing, and so they said to us, 'Frankly, it will cheer us; it will cheer our people If you send over some of your troops.' , j "We did send. some troops. LUCE BRITISH, OUR REGULAR ARMY WOULD HAVE BEEN DESTROYED "At that place we had a choice. "We-could have sent over, as. did Great Britain, our regular army, and in a very short preparation have put it into action; and suffered exactly what Great Britain suffered with her 'contemptible little army,' as It was called by their adversaries. Our army would have given as gtfbd an account of Itself as the British army did, but it would have been destroyed, like the British army, and there would have been no nucleus on which to build this new army that was to come over a little later and t was deemed wiser to send oyer a regular division, .but not to send over our whole . regular army at that. time. A2tT yrh!t haPDened was that that regular Pq!,(,onttWfln over and the people of France inrL ,? !ems .of their garments as tfiey marched up the streets of Paris; the old veter- S?SSind?d in this war' gless' or armless, wPmf tl nS, n crutches. Perhaps, as they 2dmtlne ,necJf. ? Amer-can idiers. Not a sbl l'vp?inn Ahat ?IvIsion unaccompanied i by a Veteran. America had gone?. to .France, and .? v j-4----