'"TfWl, a The Commoaer VOL. 16, NO. 5 10 I A i ' i :jS ' ( The Submarine Issue Text of Official Notes Passed Between United States and Germany TEXT OF NOTE TO BERLIN A Washington dispatch, dated April 19, says: Following is the full text of President Wilson's noto to Germany: "You aro instructed to deliver to the secre tary of foreign affairs a communication reading as follows: "I did not fall to transmit immediately, by telegraph, to my government your Excellency's noto of tho 10th instant in regard to certain at tacks by Gorman submarines, and particularly in regard to tho disastrous explosion which on March 24 last wrecked tho French steamship Sussox in tho English channel. I have now tho honor to deliver, under instructions from my government, tho following reply to your Excel lency: "Information now in tho possession of the government of tho United States fully establish es the facts in tho caso of the Sussex, and tho inferences which my government has drawn from that information it regards as confirmed by tho circumstances sot forth in your Excel lency's note of tho 10th Instant. On the 24th of March, 1910, at about 2:50 o'clock in the af tornoon, tho unarmed steamer Sussox, with 325 or more pasengors on board, among whom were a number of Amorlcan citizens, was torpedoed whilo crossing from Folkestono to Dieppe. The Sussex had never been armed; was a vessel known to bo habitually used only for tho con veyance of passengers across tho English chan nel, and was not following tho route taken by troop ships or supply ships. About 80 of her passengers, noncombatants of all ages and sexes, Including citizens of the United States, were killed or injured. THE SUSSEX TORPEDOED I3Y A GERMAN SUBMARINE "A careful, detailed and scruplously impar tial investigation by naval and military officers of the United States has. conclusively established tho fact that the Sussox was torpedoed without warning or summons to surrender and that the torpedo by which she waB struck was of German manufacture. "In tho view of tho government of the United States, these facts from the first made tho conclusion that the torpedo was fired by a German submarino unavoidable. It now con siders that conclusion substantiated by the statements of your Excellency's note. A full statement of the facts upon which tho govern ment o the United States has based its conclu sion is inclosed. f "Tho government of tho United States, after having given caroful consideration of tho note of the Imperial government of tho 10th of April I?hv fi i f1?10 that th0 Session made upon L B.ta-teniont8 and proposals contained in JUL11! tua Uo Imperial government has ? lappP0fj the gravity of the situation which has resulted, not alone from tho attack on the Sussox, but from tho whole method and character of submarine warfare as disclosed by the unrestrained practice of the commanders of German undorsea craft during the last 12 months and more in the indiscriminate destruc- States might find it possible to hope that the officer who was responsible for that act had w ii fully violated his orders or had been cr iminaliv negligent in taking none of the precaiiHo w prescribed and that tho ends of Eft, lAey satisfied by imposing upon him an adeq f " IKS' TPletl with a rmal disavowal Sf" tho wn,PaynlCnt 0f a suitable indemX by tho Imperial government. But, though th nr tack upon the Sussex was manifestiv w Lfl n , duetine it. it nll1)lllly (loes 2? t?m0- 9ELIBERATE SPIRIT OF DESTRUCTION On tho contrfirv tim . United States is force 1 bv rW tho oimiA fw n ." u uy recent events to con- one of the most extreme and most distressing Instances, of the deliberate method and spirit of indiscriminate destruction pf merchant vessels of all sorts, nationalities and destinations, which have become more and more unmistakable as the activity of German undersea vessels of war has in recent months been quickened and ex tended. "The Imperial government will recall that when, in February, 1915, it announced its in tentions of treating the waters surrounding Great Britain and Ireland as embraced within the seat of war, and of destroying all merchant ships owned by its enemies that might be found within that zone of danger, and warned all ves sels, neutral as well as belligerent, to keep out of the waters thus prescribed, or to enter them at their peril, the government of tho United States earnestly protested. It took the position that such a policy could not be pursued without constant gross and palpable violations of the ac cepted laws of nations, particularly if submarine craft were to be employed as its instruments, in asmuch as the rules prescribed by that law, rules founded on the principles of humanity and established for the protection of the lives of noncombatants at sea, could not in the nature of the case be observed by such vessels. "It based its protest on the ground that per sons of neutral nationality and vessels of neu tral ownership would be exposed to extreme and intolerable risks and that no right to close any part of the high seas could lawfully be asserted by the Imperial government in the circumstances then existing. The law of nations in these mat tors, upon which the government of the United States based that protest, is not of recent origin or founded upon merely arbitrary principles set up by convention. It is based, on the contrary, upon manifest principles of humanity, and has long been established, with the approval and by the express assent of all civilized nations. PROMISE OF PRECAUTIONS NOT FUL FILLED "The Imperial government, notwithstanding, persisted in carrying out the policy announced, express'ng the hope that the dangers involved, at any rate to neutral vessels, would be reduced to a minimum by the instructions which it had issued to the commanders of its submarines, and assuring the government of the United States that it would take every possible precaution, both to resnect the rights of neutrals and to safeguard the lives of non-combatants "In pursuance of this policy of submarine warfare against the commerce of its adversaries thus announced and thus entered upon, despite SfifS J?nf Pr?feSt f the evernment of the United States, the commanders of the Imperial government's undersea vessels have carried on practices of ruthless destruction, which have made it more and more evident, as the months toJndTlJf7, "? e Imperial government has found it impracticable to put any such re- taS ?oSputn them U had hPe and pro" hasAlven ?tnAi!a in the Imperial government nas given its solemn assurances to thp v ment of the United States that at leaa?SoLSr ships would not be thus dealt with and vPn has repeatedly permitted its undersea command ?t0udisre.gard th08e assurances with entire impunity. As recently as Fphnmrv w i notice that it would 'regard all arSed merchTn? of nVeutSrea? S" " to surrender before hJE.TES1 and ""noned sometimes their passengers and ml irpedfed; vouchsafed , ??.:5 and .crews nave been warning has been given, no escape even to the ship's boats allowed to those on board. Great liners like the Lusitania and Arabic and mere passenger boats like the Sussex have been at tacked without a moment's warning, often be fore they have oven become, awaro that they were in the presence of an armed ship of the enemy, and the lives of non-combatants, pas sengers and crew have been destroyed wholesale, and in a manner which tho government of the United States can not but regard as wanton and without the slightest color of justification. No limit of any kind has, in fact, been set to the indiscriminate pursuit and destruction of mer chantmen of all kinds and nationalities within the waters which the Imperial government has chosen to designate -as lying within the seat of war. The roll of Americans who have lost their lives upon ships thus attacked and destroyed has grown, month by month, until the ominous toll hao mounted into tho hundreds. PATIENCE OF THE UNITED STATES AT AN END "The government of tho United States has been very patient. At every stage of this distressing experience of tragedy after tragedy it has sought to be governed by the most thoughtful considera tion of the extraordinary circumstances of an unprecedented war and to be guided by senti ments of very genuine friendship for the people and government of Germany. It has accepted tho successive explanations and assurances of tho Imperial government as, of course, given in entire sincerity and good faith, and has hoped, even against hope, that it would prove to be possible for the Imperial government 30 to order and control the acts of its naval commanders as to square its policy with the recognized prin ciples of humanity as embodied in the law of nations. It has made every allowance for un precedented conditions, and has been willing to wMt until the facts became unmistakable and were susceptible of only one interpretation. "It now owes it to a just regard for its own right to say to the Imperial government th-it that time has come. It has become painfully evi dent to it that the position which it tpok at the very outset is inevitable, namely, the use of sub marines for the destruction of an enemy's com merce is, of necessity, because of the very char acter of the vessels employed and the very meth ods of attack which their employment, of course, involves, utterly incompatible with the prin ciples of humanity, tho long-established and in- Sr0Vm tlble. rigllts of netrals and the sacred immunities of noncombatants. -rnmni' ! Sti" the purpose of the Imperial gov ?n?S ? prosecute relentless and indiscrim inate warfare against vessels of commerce by the use of .submarines without regard" to what stL?Znmen0i United States must con l?JnL Ted and indisPtable rules of in dletipS of iaW a1d the unlversally recognized TTnif of Q?f hTanity' tne government of the ratfhert ieAS,at laSt frced to the concision tt2- 1? ne. courso ifc can Pursue, immert nt.lv 1 Imperial government should now o?X nrL?eCla ?nd effect an abandonment aLinst nS,imethd,8 0f marine warfare against passenger and freight-carrying vessels ?o cnXta?? f thG Un"ed States ca have the Ge1-mR SeVerdiplomatlc relations with sove?n? n?Pire a togstber. This action the wth X Ln AhG ?nited Statea contemplates train f f ?a,test. 'reluctae, but feels con SSS tSi SSff taty and the TEXT OF GER1a71 TO AMERICAN NOTE FrUayaB1"' Vi& L' German "ioZiV1',0 text ot the n of the SlS' '". reply t0 the American Ttaa?vtg,Sr!lrlM warfaro- delivered on secret ZT' """ German Kovernl' " hellaU of ' perial to Tffis V.-JE1' has th0' oor to present to the note o( Anril 20 rJn following reply German suhmarinarmfeT"1"8 the ndUCt f I'll n yk. opeTnavaT antE 6,"t "S-.t-.". Proper naval tCSS?l I,anded. over to toe Wnltqa States is forced bv ?ece 1 , . tn0 voohsafed the poor seourllv ? hi ",ave ,)e0,1 the evidence concern he th S, V lnTe"eation cludo that it is C3W oneyisS. T"iS ?.co- to the shinTboats hl?f Ln"S?! to nicated by the ZvernmL, !!? " - ---, .. IUOUEO aent t0 the boUom B -- -- uiw was Judging by tho results that 7JB ".S'..?SS: u-nerto yielded, the German goverWntta iiut again and again S 1..