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Nye Committee

The Nye Committee, officially known as the Special Committee on Investigation of the Munitions Industry, was a United States Senate committee (April 12, 1934 – February 24, 1936), chaired by U.S. Senator Gerald Nye (R-ND). The committee investigated the financial and banking interests that underlay the United States' involvement in World War I and the operations and profits of the industrial and commercial firms supplying munitions to the Allies and to the United States. It was a significant factor in public and political support for American neutrality in the early stages of World War II.[1][2]

Senator Gerald Nye (R-North Dakota), Head of the Senate Munitions Investigating Committee

Background edit

During the 1920s and 1930s, dozens of books and articles appeared about the high cost of war, and some argued that financiers and arms manufacturers had maneuvered the United States into entering World War I.[3][4][5] One of the best-known was Smedley D. Butler, a retired Marine Corps general who had become a spokesman for left-wing anti-war elements.[6] Historian Charles Callan Tansill's America Goes To War (1938) exploited the Nye Committee's voluminous report of testimony and evidence to develop and confirm the heavy influence exercised by Wall Street finance (notably J.P. Morgan) and the armaments industry (notably Du Pont) in the process that led to American intervention.[7]

The push for the appointment of Senator Gerald Nye (R-ND) to the chairmanship of this committee came from Senator George Norris (R-NE). According to peace activist Dorothy Detzer, Norris said, "Nye's young, he has inexhaustible energy, and he has courage. Those are all important boons. He may be rash in his judgments at times, but it's the rashness of enthusiasm."[8] Norris proposed Nye as "...the only one out of the 96 whom he deemed to have the competence, independence and stature for the task."[9]

Organization edit

The committee was established on April 12, 1934. There were seven members: Nye, the committee chair; and Senators Homer T. Bone (D-WA), James P. Pope (D-ID), Bennett Champ Clark (D-MO), Walter F. George (D-GA), W. Warren Barbour (R-NJ), and Arthur H. Vandenberg (R-MI).

Stephen Rauschenbusch, son of Christian Social Gospel activist Walter Rauschenbusch, was appointed lead counsel for the Committee; his assisting counsel included Robert Wolforth, Josephine Burns and Alger Hiss.[10] John T. Flynn "played a major role in the course of the investigation" as a member of the committee's Advisory Council of experts.[11] Burns and Rauschenbusch, who met on the committee, married soon after and co-authored a book that recounts salient testimony gathered by the investigation, War Madness (Washington, D.C., National Home Library Association, 1937). Alger Hiss served as a legal assistant (counsel) to the committee from July 1934 to August 1935.[12] Most famously, Hiss "badgered" DuPont officials and questioned and cross-examined Bernard Baruch on March 29, 1935.[13][14][15] About their testimony, Dorothy Detzer (Appointment On The Hill, p. 169) reports: "The four solemn Du Pont brothers," averred that "the corporation's profits of 400% during the First World War seemed only the good fruit of sound business."

Process edit

The Nye Committee conducted 93 hearings and questioned more than 200 witnesses. The first hearings were in September 1934 and the final hearings in February 1936. The hearings covered four topics:

  • The munitions industry
  • Bidding on Government contracts in the shipbuilding industry
  • War profits
  • The background leading up to U.S. entry into World War I.

The committee documented the huge profits that arms factories had made during the war. It found that bankers had pressured Wilson to intervene in the war in order to protect their loans abroad. Also, the arms industry was at fault for price-fixing and held excessive influence on American foreign policy leading up to and during World War I.[6]

According to the United States Senate website:

"The investigation came to an abrupt end early in 1936. The Senate cut off committee funding after Chairman Nye blundered into an attack on the late Democratic President Woodrow Wilson. Nye suggested that Wilson had withheld essential information from Congress as it considered a declaration of war. Democratic leaders, including Appropriations Committee Chairman Carter Glass of Virginia, unleashed a furious response against Nye for 'dirtdaubing the sepulcher of Woodrow Wilson.' Standing before cheering colleagues in a packed Senate Chamber, Glass slammed his fist onto his desk until blood dripped from his knuckles." [16]

In her memoir, Appointment On The Hill (p. 169), Dorothy Detzer, an intimate eye-witness to the Committee's processes, summarizes: "The long exhaustive investigation ... produced a sordid report of intrigues and bribery; of collusion and excessive profits; of war scares artificially fostered and [disarmament] conferences deliberately wrecked." The "recommendations, accompanying the committee's reports to the Senate, were presented in a series of interlocking legislative measures ... The Neutrality Bill, providing for an embargo on arms and loans to nations at war, was the only legislation even partially enacted into law. But even it was crippled by its 'half-measure' provisions. (p. 171).

Results edit

Nye created headlines by drawing connections between the wartime profits of the banking and munitions industries to America's involvement in the World War. Many Americans felt betrayed and questioned that the war had been an epic battle between the forces of good (democracy) and evil (autocracy), as it had been depicted in pro-war propaganda. This investigation of these "merchants of death" helped to bolster sentiments favoring neutrality, non-interventionism, disarmament, and taking the profits out of weapons procurements.[16]

The committee reported that between 1915 and January 1917, the United States lent Germany $27 million. In the same period, it lent to Britain and its allies $2.3 billion. These loans were made during wartime: July 28, 1914 – November 11, 1918.

Because of these facts Senator Nye, many war critics, and members of the American public concluded that the US entered the war for reasons of profit, not policy — because it was in the interest of American finance banks and investors for the Allies not to lose so that they would be able to pay interest and principal on their loans.[6] The committee's findings did not achieve the aim of nationalization of the arms industry, but gave momentum to the non-interventionist movement, sparked the passage of the Neutrality Acts of the 1930s in 1935, 1936, 1937, and 1939,[16][17] and encouraged Charles Lindbergh and other anti-Semites, who believed that the lenders were mostly Jewish and that Jews were one of the principal groups advocating for U.S. intervention in Europe.

In its final report, the Nye Committee also identified the Chaco War between Bolivia and Paraguay as a key example of complicity between debt financiers, arms makers, and militaries.[18] The Committee described the dynamic:

When a limited amount of materiel, such as machine guns, was available, Bolivia could be forced into ordering them on the threat that unless she acted quickly, Paraguay would get them. Killing the back-country Indians of South America with airplanes, bombs, and machine guns, boiled down to an order to get busy because "these opera bouffe revolutions are usually short-lived, and we must make the most of the opportunity."

— Report of the Special Committee on Investigation of the Munitions Industry (The Nye Report), U.S. Congress, Senate, 74th Congress, 2nd sess., February 24, 1936, pp. 3–13.,

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Herman, Arthur (2012). Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II, pp. 6, 12, 79, New York: Random House. ISBN 978-1400069644.
  2. ^ Stuart D. Brandes (2015). Warhogs: A History of War Profits in America, pp. 210–225. [ISBN missing]
  3. ^ Advocate of Peace Through Justice, Volume 85. American Peace Society. 1923. p. 156. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
  4. ^ King, William C. (1922). King's Complete History of the World War ...: 1914–1918. History Associates. pp. 732–734. ISBN 978-0598443120. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
  5. ^ Bogart, Ernest Ludlow (1920). Direct and Indirect Costs of the Great World War. Oxford University Press. pp. 301–330. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
  6. ^ a b c Butler, Smedley (1935). War is a racket : the antiwar classic by America's most decorated General, two other anti-interventionist tracts, and photographs from the Horror of it (Reprint 2003 ed.). Feral House. ISBN 978-0922915866.
  7. ^ Brandes, Warhogs: A History of War Profits in America (2015) pp. 221–222. [ISBN missing]
  8. ^ Cole 1962, p. 68.
  9. ^ Tuchman, Barbara W. (1984), The March of Folly, New York: Random House, p. 382.[ISBN missing]
  10. ^ Dorothy Detzer, Appointment On The Hill (New York, Henry Holt, 1948), pp. 166–168; Detzer misspelled the name as "Raushenbush."
  11. ^ Wayne S. Cole, Senator Gerald P. Nye and American Foreign Relations (Minneapolis, University of Minnesota, 1962 p. 72.
  12. ^ Weinstein, Allen (1978). Perjury: The Hiss-Chambers Case. New York. ISBN 978-0817912260. Retrieved 23 November 2016.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^ "Munitions industry. Preliminary report on wartime taxation and price control". US Government Printing Office (US GPO). 20 August 1935. pp. 23, 28, 60, 113–115, 127. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  14. ^ Smith, John Chabot (1976). Alger Hiss, the true story. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. pp. 83–84. ISBN 978-0030137761. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  15. ^ Herman, Arthur (2002). Joseph McCarthy: Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America's Most Hated Senator. New York: Simon & Schuster. pp. 220–221. ISBN 978-0684836256. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  16. ^ a b c "Historical minute essay: Merchants of Death". United States: Senate. Retrieved 17 January 2011.
  17. ^ John Edward Wiltz, "The Nye Committee Revisited." The Historian 23.2 (1961): 211–233.
  18. ^ Gustafson, Bret Darin (2020). Bolivia in the age of gas. Durham: Duke University Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-1478012528. OCLC 1159629686.

Further reading edit

  • (full text), MTHolyoke [as archived at Wayback Machine]
  • Nye Committee hearings (Munitions industry, naval shipbuilding: Preliminary report of the Special Committee on Investigation of the Munitions Industry):
    • 1934 September 5–6
    • 1934 September 10–12
    • 1934 December 6–7, 10
    • 1934 December 17–18
    • 1935 June
    • 1935 June 15–19
    • 1935 July 25-August 20
  • Brandes, Stuart D (1997), Warhogs: A History of War Profits in America.
  • Cole, Wayne S (1962), Senator Gerald P. Nye and American Foreign Relations.
  • Coulter, Matthew Ware. The Senate Munitions Inquiry of the 1930s: Beyond the Merchants of Death (Praeger, 1997).
  • Detzer, Dorothy. Appointment on the Hill (New York, Henry Holt, 1948) online.
  • Wiltz, John Edward (Spring 1961), "The Nye Committee Revisited", Historian, 23 (2): 211–33, doi:10.1111/j.1540-6563.1961.tb01684.x.
  • Rosenblatt, Maurice, A Register of His Papers, Library of Congress.
  • Molander, Earl A. (April 1976), "Historical Antecedents of Military-Industrial Criticism", Military Affairs, 40 (2): 59–63, doi:10.2307/1987146, JSTOR 1987146.
  • Cooper, John Milton (May 1976), "The Command of Gold Reversed: American Loans to Britain, 1915-1917", The Pacific Historical Review, 45 (2): 209–30, doi:10.2307/3638495, JSTOR 3638495.
  • Neutrality acts, US: Department of state, 30 January 2008.

committee, officially, known, special, committee, investigation, munitions, industry, united, states, senate, committee, april, 1934, february, 1936, chaired, senator, gerald, committee, investigated, financial, banking, interests, that, underlay, united, stat. The Nye Committee officially known as the Special Committee on Investigation of the Munitions Industry was a United States Senate committee April 12 1934 February 24 1936 chaired by U S Senator Gerald Nye R ND The committee investigated the financial and banking interests that underlay the United States involvement in World War I and the operations and profits of the industrial and commercial firms supplying munitions to the Allies and to the United States It was a significant factor in public and political support for American neutrality in the early stages of World War II 1 2 Senator Gerald Nye R North Dakota Head of the Senate Munitions Investigating Committee Contents 1 Background 2 Organization 3 Process 4 Results 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingBackground editDuring the 1920s and 1930s dozens of books and articles appeared about the high cost of war and some argued that financiers and arms manufacturers had maneuvered the United States into entering World War I 3 4 5 One of the best known was Smedley D Butler a retired Marine Corps general who had become a spokesman for left wing anti war elements 6 Historian Charles Callan Tansill s America Goes To War 1938 exploited the Nye Committee s voluminous report of testimony and evidence to develop and confirm the heavy influence exercised by Wall Street finance notably J P Morgan and the armaments industry notably Du Pont in the process that led to American intervention 7 The push for the appointment of Senator Gerald Nye R ND to the chairmanship of this committee came from Senator George Norris R NE According to peace activist Dorothy Detzer Norris said Nye s young he has inexhaustible energy and he has courage Those are all important boons He may be rash in his judgments at times but it s the rashness of enthusiasm 8 Norris proposed Nye as the only one out of the 96 whom he deemed to have the competence independence and stature for the task 9 Organization editThe committee was established on April 12 1934 There were seven members Nye the committee chair and Senators Homer T Bone D WA James P Pope D ID Bennett Champ Clark D MO Walter F George D GA W Warren Barbour R NJ and Arthur H Vandenberg R MI Stephen Rauschenbusch son of Christian Social Gospel activist Walter Rauschenbusch was appointed lead counsel for the Committee his assisting counsel included Robert Wolforth Josephine Burns and Alger Hiss 10 John T Flynn played a major role in the course of the investigation as a member of the committee s Advisory Council of experts 11 Burns and Rauschenbusch who met on the committee married soon after and co authored a book that recounts salient testimony gathered by the investigation War Madness Washington D C National Home Library Association 1937 Alger Hiss served as a legal assistant counsel to the committee from July 1934 to August 1935 12 Most famously Hiss badgered DuPont officials and questioned and cross examined Bernard Baruch on March 29 1935 13 14 15 About their testimony Dorothy Detzer Appointment On The Hill p 169 reports The four solemn Du Pont brothers averred that the corporation s profits of 400 during the First World War seemed only the good fruit of sound business Process editThe Nye Committee conducted 93 hearings and questioned more than 200 witnesses The first hearings were in September 1934 and the final hearings in February 1936 The hearings covered four topics The munitions industry Bidding on Government contracts in the shipbuilding industry War profits The background leading up to U S entry into World War I The committee documented the huge profits that arms factories had made during the war It found that bankers had pressured Wilson to intervene in the war in order to protect their loans abroad Also the arms industry was at fault for price fixing and held excessive influence on American foreign policy leading up to and during World War I 6 According to the United States Senate website The investigation came to an abrupt end early in 1936 The Senate cut off committee funding after Chairman Nye blundered into an attack on the late Democratic President Woodrow Wilson Nye suggested that Wilson had withheld essential information from Congress as it considered a declaration of war Democratic leaders including Appropriations Committee Chairman Carter Glass of Virginia unleashed a furious response against Nye for dirtdaubing the sepulcher of Woodrow Wilson Standing before cheering colleagues in a packed Senate Chamber Glass slammed his fist onto his desk until blood dripped from his knuckles 16 In her memoir Appointment On The Hill p 169 Dorothy Detzer an intimate eye witness to the Committee s processes summarizes The long exhaustive investigation produced a sordid report of intrigues and bribery of collusion and excessive profits of war scares artificially fostered and disarmament conferences deliberately wrecked The recommendations accompanying the committee s reports to the Senate were presented in a series of interlocking legislative measures The Neutrality Bill providing for an embargo on arms and loans to nations at war was the only legislation even partially enacted into law But even it was crippled by its half measure provisions p 171 Results editNye created headlines by drawing connections between the wartime profits of the banking and munitions industries to America s involvement in the World War Many Americans felt betrayed and questioned that the war had been an epic battle between the forces of good democracy and evil autocracy as it had been depicted in pro war propaganda This investigation of these merchants of death helped to bolster sentiments favoring neutrality non interventionism disarmament and taking the profits out of weapons procurements 16 The committee reported that between 1915 and January 1917 the United States lent Germany 27 million In the same period it lent to Britain and its allies 2 3 billion These loans were made during wartime July 28 1914 November 11 1918 Because of these facts Senator Nye many war critics and members of the American public concluded that the US entered the war for reasons of profit not policy because it was in the interest of American finance banks and investors for the Allies not to lose so that they would be able to pay interest and principal on their loans 6 The committee s findings did not achieve the aim of nationalization of the arms industry but gave momentum to the non interventionist movement sparked the passage of the Neutrality Acts of the 1930s in 1935 1936 1937 and 1939 16 17 and encouraged Charles Lindbergh and other anti Semites who believed that the lenders were mostly Jewish and that Jews were one of the principal groups advocating for U S intervention in Europe In its final report the Nye Committee also identified the Chaco War between Bolivia and Paraguay as a key example of complicity between debt financiers arms makers and militaries 18 The Committee described the dynamic When a limited amount of materiel such as machine guns was available Bolivia could be forced into ordering them on the threat that unless she acted quickly Paraguay would get them Killing the back country Indians of South America with airplanes bombs and machine guns boiled down to an order to get busy because these opera bouffe revolutions are usually short lived and we must make the most of the opportunity Report of the Special Committee on Investigation of the Munitions Industry The Nye Report U S Congress Senate 74th Congress 2nd sess February 24 1936 pp 3 13 https web archive org web 20220522154755 https www mtholyoke edu acad intrel nye htmSee also editMerchants of death Military industrial complexReferences edit Herman Arthur 2012 Freedom s Forge How American Business Produced Victory in World War II pp 6 12 79 New York Random House ISBN 978 1400069644 Stuart D Brandes 2015 Warhogs A History of War Profits in America pp 210 225 ISBN missing Advocate of Peace Through Justice Volume 85 American Peace Society 1923 p 156 Retrieved 20 November 2018 King William C 1922 King s Complete History of the World War 1914 1918 History Associates pp 732 734 ISBN 978 0598443120 Retrieved 20 November 2018 Bogart Ernest Ludlow 1920 Direct and Indirect Costs of the Great World War Oxford University Press pp 301 330 Retrieved 20 November 2018 a b c Butler Smedley 1935 War is a racket the antiwar classic by America s most decorated General two other anti interventionist tracts and photographs from the Horror of it Reprint 2003 ed Feral House ISBN 978 0922915866 Brandes Warhogs A History of War Profits in America 2015 pp 221 222 ISBN missing Cole 1962 p 68 Tuchman Barbara W 1984 The March of Folly New York Random House p 382 ISBN missing Dorothy Detzer Appointment On The Hill New York Henry Holt 1948 pp 166 168 Detzer misspelled the name as Raushenbush Wayne S Cole Senator Gerald P Nye and American Foreign Relations Minneapolis University of Minnesota 1962 p 72 Weinstein Allen 1978 Perjury The Hiss Chambers Case New York ISBN 978 0817912260 Retrieved 23 November 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Munitions industry Preliminary report on wartime taxation and price control US Government Printing Office US GPO 20 August 1935 pp 23 28 60 113 115 127 Retrieved 23 November 2016 Smith John Chabot 1976 Alger Hiss the true story New York Holt Rinehart and Winston pp 83 84 ISBN 978 0030137761 Retrieved 23 November 2016 Herman Arthur 2002 Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator New York Simon amp Schuster pp 220 221 ISBN 978 0684836256 Retrieved 23 November 2016 a b c Historical minute essay Merchants of Death United States Senate Retrieved 17 January 2011 John Edward Wiltz The Nye Committee Revisited The Historian 23 2 1961 211 233 Gustafson Bret Darin 2020 Bolivia in the age of gas Durham Duke University Press p 45 ISBN 978 1478012528 OCLC 1159629686 Further reading editThe Nye Report full text MTHolyoke as archived at Wayback Machine Nye Committee hearings Munitions industry naval shipbuilding Preliminary report of the Special Committee on Investigation of the Munitions Industry 1934 September 5 6 1934 September 10 12 1934 December 6 7 10 1934 December 17 18 1935 June 1935 June 15 19 1935 July 25 August 20 Brandes Stuart D 1997 Warhogs A History of War Profits in America Cole Wayne S 1962 Senator Gerald P Nye and American Foreign Relations Coulter Matthew Ware The Senate Munitions Inquiry of the 1930s Beyond the Merchants of Death Praeger 1997 Detzer Dorothy Appointment on the Hill New York Henry Holt 1948 online Wiltz John Edward Spring 1961 The Nye Committee Revisited Historian 23 2 211 33 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6563 1961 tb01684 x Rosenblatt Maurice A Register of His Papers Library of Congress Molander Earl A April 1976 Historical Antecedents of Military Industrial Criticism Military Affairs 40 2 59 63 doi 10 2307 1987146 JSTOR 1987146 Cooper John Milton May 1976 The Command of Gold Reversed American Loans to Britain 1915 1917 The Pacific Historical Review 45 2 209 30 doi 10 2307 3638495 JSTOR 3638495 Neutrality acts US Department of state 30 January 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nye Committee amp oldid 1219637727, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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