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Zimmermann Telegram

The Zimmermann Telegram (or Zimmermann Note or Zimmerman Cable) was a secret diplomatic communication issued from the German Foreign Office in January 1917 that proposed a military alliance between the German Empire and Mexico if the United States entered World War I against Germany. With Germany's aid, Mexico would recover Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico. The telegram was intercepted by British intelligence.

The Zimmermann Telegram as it was sent from Washington, DC, to Ambassador Heinrich von Eckardt, the German ambassador to Mexico.
Mexico in 1916 (in dark green); territory promised to Mexico in the Zimmermann telegram (in light green); and the pre-1836 original Mexican territory (red line)

Revelation of the contents enraged Americans, especially after German State Secretary for Foreign Affairs Arthur Zimmermann publicly admitted on March 3 that the telegram was genuine. It helped to generate support for the American declaration of war on Germany in April 1917.[1]

The decryption was described as the most significant intelligence triumph for Britain during World War I,[2] and it marked one of the earliest occasions on which a piece of signal intelligence influenced world events.[3]

Content Edit

 
Arthur Zimmermann

The message came in the form of a coded telegram dispatched by Arthur Zimmermann, the Staatssekretär (a top-level civil servant, second only to their respective minister) in the Foreign Office of the German Empire on January 17, 1917. The message was sent to the German ambassador to Mexico, Heinrich von Eckardt.[4] Zimmermann sent the telegram in anticipation of the resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare by Germany on February 1, which the German government presumed would almost certainly lead to war with the United States. The telegram instructed Eckardt that if the United States appeared certain to enter the war, he was to approach the Mexican government with a proposal for military alliance with funding from Germany. The decoded telegram was as follows:[5]

Original (German):

Wir beabsichtigen, am ersten Februar uneingeschränkten U-Boot-Krieg zu beginnen. Es wird versucht werden, Amerika trotzdem neutral zu halten. Für den Fall, dass dies nicht gelingen sollte, schlagen wir Mexiko auf folgender Grundlage Bündnis vor. Gemeinsame Kriegführung. Gemeinsamer Friedensschluss. Reichlich finanzielle Unterstützung und Einverständnis unsererseits, dass Mexiko in Texas, Neu Mexiko, Arizona früher verlorenes Gebiet zurückerobert. Regelung im einzelnen Euer Hochwohlgeborenen überlassen. Euer Hochwohlgeborenen wollen Vorstehendes Präsidenten streng geheim eröffnen, sobald Kriegsausbruch mit Vereinigten Staaten feststeht, und Anregung hinzufügen, Japan von sich aus zu sofortigem Beitritt einzuladen und gleichzeitig zwischen uns und Japan zu vermitteln. Bitte Präsidenten darauf hinweisen, dass rücksichtslose Anwendung unserer U-Boote jetzt Aussicht bietet, England in wenigen Monaten zum Frieden zu zwingen. Empfang bestätigen. Zimmermann[6]

Translated:

We intend to begin on the first of February unrestricted submarine warfare. We shall endeavor in spite of this to keep the United States of America neutral. In the event of this not succeeding, we make Mexico a proposal of alliance on the following basis: make war together, make peace together, generous financial support and an understanding on our part that Mexico is to reconquer the lost territory in Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. The settlement in detail is left to you. You will inform the President of the above most secretly as soon as the outbreak of war with the United States of America is certain, and add the suggestion that he should, on his own initiative, invite Japan to immediate adherence and at the same time mediate between Japan and ourselves. Please call the President's attention to the fact that the ruthless employment of our submarines now offers the prospect of compelling England in a few months to make peace.
Signed, Zimmermann

History Edit

Previous German efforts to promote war Edit

Germany had long sought to incite a war between Mexico and the United States, which would have tied down American forces and slowed the export of American arms to the Allies.[7] The Germans had aided in arming Mexico, as shown by the 1914 Ypiranga incident.[8] German Naval Intelligence officer Franz von Rintelen had attempted to incite a war between Mexico and the United States in 1915, giving Victoriano Huerta $12 million for that purpose.[9] The German saboteur Lothar Witzke, who was based in Mexico City, claimed to be responsible for the March 1917 munitions explosion at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard in the San Francisco Bay Area,[10] and was possibly responsible for the July 1916 Black Tom explosion in New Jersey.

The failure of United States troops to capture Pancho Villa in 1916 and the movement of President Carranza in favor of Germany emboldened the Germans to send the Zimmermann note.[11]

The German provocations were partially successful. President Woodrow Wilson ordered the military invasion of Veracruz in 1914 in the context of the Ypiranga incident and against the advice of the British government.[12] War was prevented thanks to the Niagara Falls peace conference organized by the ABC nations, but the occupation was a decisive factor in Mexican neutrality in World War I.[13] Mexico refused to participate in the embargo against Germany and granted full guarantees to the German companies for keeping their operations open, specifically in Mexico City.[14]

German motivations Edit

 
The Mexican Telegraph Company building in Galveston through which the Zimmerman Telegram was relayed[15]

The Zimmerman Telegram was part of an effort carried out by the Germans to postpone the transportation of supplies and other war materials from the United States to the Allies, which were at war against Germany.[16] The main purpose of the telegram was to make the Mexican government declare war on the United States in hopes of tying down American forces and slowing the export of American arms.[17] The German High Command believed that it could defeat the British and French on the Western Front and strangle Britain with unrestricted submarine warfare before American forces could be trained and shipped to Europe in sufficient numbers to aid the Allies. The Germans were encouraged by their successes on the Eastern Front to believe that they could divert large numbers of troops to the Western Front in support of their goals.

Mexican response Edit

Mexican President Venustiano Carranza assigned a military commission to assess the feasibility of the Mexican takeover of their former territories contemplated by Germany.[18] The generals concluded that such a war was unwinnable for the following reasons:

  • Mexico was in the midst of a civil war, and Carranza's position was far from secure. (Carranza himself was later assassinated in 1920.) Picking a fight with the United States would have prompted the U.S. to support one of his rivals.
  • The United States was far stronger militarily than Mexico was. Even if Mexico's military forces had been completely united and loyal to a single government, no serious scenario existed under which it could have invaded and won a war against the United States. Indeed, much of Mexico's military hardware of 1917 reflected only modest upgrades since the Mexican-American War 70 years before, which the U.S. had won.[citation needed]
  • The German government's promises of "generous financial support" were very unreliable. It had already informed Carranza in June 1916 that it could not provide the necessary gold needed to stock a completely independent Mexican national bank.[19] Even if Mexico received financial support, it would still need to purchase arms, ammunition, and other needed war supplies from the ABC nations (Argentina, Brazil, and Chile), which would strain relations with them, as explained below.
  • Even if by some chance Mexico had the military means to win a conflict against the United States and to reclaim the territories in question, it would have had severe difficulty conquering and pacifying a large English-speaking population which had long enjoyed self-government and was better supplied with arms than were most other civilian populations.[20]
  • Other foreign relations were at stake. The ABC nations had organized the Niagara Falls peace conference in 1914 to avoid a full-scale war between the United States and Mexico over the United States occupation of Veracruz. Mexico entering a war against the United States would strain relations with those nations.

The Carranza government was recognized de jure by the United States on August 31, 1917, as a direct consequence of the Zimmermann Telegram to ensure Mexican neutrality during World War I.[21][22] After the military invasion of Veracruz in 1914, Mexico did not participate in any military excursion with the United States in World War I.[13] That ensured that Mexican neutrality was the best outcome that the United States could hope for even if it allowed German companies to keep their operations in Mexico open.[14]

British interception Edit

 
A portion of the Telegram as decrypted by British Naval Intelligence codebreakers. Since the word Arizona was not in the German codebook, it had to be split into phonetic syllables.

Zimmermann's office sent the telegram to the German embassy in the United States for retransmission to Eckardt in Mexico. It has traditionally been understood that the telegram was sent over three routes. It went by radio, and passed via telegraph cable inside messages sent by diplomats of two neutral countries (the United States and Sweden).

Direct telegraph transmission of the telegram was impossible because the British had cut the German international cables at the outbreak of war. However, Germany could communicate wirelessly through the Telefunken plant, operating under Atlantic Communication Company in West Sayville, New York, where the telegram was relayed to the Mexican Consulate. Ironically, the station was under the control of the US Navy, which operated it for Atlantic Communication Company, the American subsidiary of the German entity.

Also, the United States allowed limited use of its diplomatic cables with Germany to communicate with its ambassador in Washington. This privilege was supposed to be used for messages connected with Wilson's peace proposals. The Swedish diplomatic message holding the Zimmerman Telegram went from Stockholm to Buenos Aires over British submarine telegraph cables, and then moved from Buenos Aires to Mexico over the cable network of a United States company.

All traffic passing through British hands came to British intelligence, particularly to the codebreakers and analysts in Room 40 at the Admiralty.[23]

After the Germans' telegraph cables had been cut, the German Foreign Office appealed to the United States for use of their diplomatic telegraphic messages for peace messages. President Wilson agreed in the belief both that such co-operation would sustain continued good relations with Germany and that more efficient German–American diplomacy could assist Wilson's goal of a negotiated end to the war. The Germans handed in messages to the American embassy in Berlin, which were relayed to the embassy in Denmark and then to the United States by American telegraph operators. The United States placed conditions on German usage, most notably that all messages had to be in cleartext (uncoded). However, Wilson later reversed the order and relaxed the wireless rules to allow coded messages to be sent.[24] The Germans assumed that this route was secure and so used it extensively.[23]

However, that put German diplomats in a precarious situation since they relied on the United States to transmit Zimmermann's note to its final destination, but the message's unencrypted contents would be deeply alarming to the Americans. The Germans persuaded US Ambassador James W. Gerard to accept it in coded form, and it was transmitted on January 16, 1917.[23]

In Room 40, Nigel de Grey had partially decoded the telegram by the next day.[25] By 1917, the diplomatic code 13040 had been in use for many years. Since there had been ample time for Room 40 to reconstruct the code cryptanalytically, it was readable to a fair degree. Room 40 had obtained German cryptographic documents, including the diplomatic code 3512 (captured during the Mesopotamian campaign), which was a later updated code that was similar to but not really related to code 13040, and naval code SKM (Signalbuch der Kaiserlichen Marine), ⁠which was useless for decoding the Zimmermann Telegram but valuable to decode naval traffic, which had been retrieved from the wrecked cruiser SMS Magdeburg by the Russians, who passed it to the British.[26]

Disclosure of the telegram would sway American public opinion against Germany if the British could convince the Americans that the text was genuine, but the Room 40 chief William Reginald Hall was reluctant to let it out because the disclosure would expose the German codes broken in Room 40 and British eavesdropping on United States diplomatic traffic. Hall waited three weeks during which de Grey and cryptographer William Montgomery completed the decryption. On February 1, Germany announced resumption of "unrestricted" submarine warfare, an act that led the United States to break off diplomatic relations with Germany on February 3.[23]

 
The Telegram, completely decrypted and translated

Hall passed the telegram to the British Foreign Office on February 5 but still warned against releasing it. Meanwhile, the British discussed possible cover stories to explain to the Americans how they obtained the coded text of the telegram and to explain how they obtained the cleartext of the telegram without letting anyone know that the codes had been broken. Furthermore, the British needed to find a way to convince the Americans the message was not a forgery.[2]

For the first story, the British obtained the coded text of the telegram from the Mexican commercial telegraph office. The British knew that since the German embassy in Washington would relay the message by commercial telegraph, the Mexican telegraph office would have the coded text. "Mr. H", a British agent in Mexico, bribed an employee of the commercial telegraph company for a copy of the message. Sir Thomas Hohler, the British ambassador in Mexico, later claimed to have been "Mr. H" or at least to have been involved with the interception in his autobiography.[27][citation needed] The coded text could then be shown to the Americans without embarrassment.

Moreover, the retransmission was encoded with the older code 13040 and so by mid-February, the British had the complete text and the ability to release the telegram without revealing the extent to which the latest German codes had been broken. (At worst, the Germans might have realized that the 13040 code had been compromised, but that was a risk worth taking against the possibility of United States entry into the war.) Finally, since copies of the 13040 code text would also have been deposited in the records of the American commercial telegraph company, the British had the ability to prove the authenticity of the message to the American government.[3]

As a cover story, the British could publicly claim that their agents had stolen the telegram's decoded text in Mexico. Privately, the British needed to give the Americans the 13040 code so that the American government could verify the authenticity of the message independently with their own commercial telegraphic records, but the Americans agreed to back the official cover story. The German Foreign Office refused to consider that their codes could have been broken but sent Eckardt on a witch hunt for a traitor in the embassy in Mexico. Eckardt indignantly rejected those accusations, and the Foreign Office eventually declared the embassy exonerated.[23]

Use Edit

On February 19, Hall showed the telegram to Edward Bell, the secretary of the American Embassy in Britain. Bell was at first incredulous and thought that it was a forgery. Once Bell was convinced the message was genuine, he became enraged. On February 20, Hall informally sent a copy to US Ambassador Walter Hines Page. On February 23, Page met with British Foreign Minister Arthur Balfour and was given the codetext, the message in German, and the English translation. The British had obtained a further copy in Mexico City, and Balfour could obscure the real source with the half-truth that it had been "bought in Mexico".[28] Page then reported the story to Wilson on February 24, 1917, including details to be verified from telegraph-company files in the United States. Wilson felt "much indignation" toward the Germans and wanted to publish the Zimmermann Telegraph immediately after he had received it from the British, but he delayed until March 1, 1917.[29]

U.S. response Edit

 
1917 political cartoon about the Zimmermann Telegram

Many Americans then held anti-Mexican as well as anti-German views. Mexicans had a considerable amount of anti-American sentiment in return, some of which was caused by the American occupation of Veracruz.[30] General John J. Pershing had long been chasing the revolutionary Pancho Villa for raiding into American territory and carried out several cross-border expeditions. News of the telegram further inflamed tensions between the United States and Mexico.

 
"Exploding in his Hands"

However, many Americans, particularly those with German or Irish ancestry, wished to avoid the conflict in Europe. Since the public had been told falsely that the telegram had been stolen in a decoded form in Mexico, the message was at first widely believed to be an elaborate forgery created by British intelligence. That belief, which was not restricted to pacifist and pro-German lobbies, was promoted by German and Mexican diplomats alongside some antiwar American newspapers, especially those of the Hearst press empire.

On February 1, 1917, Germany began unrestricted submarine warfare against all ships in the Atlantic bearing the American flag, both passenger and merchant ships. Two ships were sunk in February, and most American shipping companies held their ships in port. Besides the highly-provocative war proposal to Mexico, the telegram also mentioned "ruthless employment of our submarines". Public opinion demanded action. Wilson had refused to assign US Navy crews and guns to the merchant ships, but once the Zimmermann note was public, Wilson called for arming the merchant ships although antiwar members of the US Senate blocked his proposal.[31]

The Wilson administration nevertheless remained with a dilemma. Evidence the United States had been provided confidentially by the British informed Wilson that the message was genuine, but he could not make the evidence public without compromising the British codebreaking operation. This problem however, was resolved when any doubts as to the authenticity of the telegram were removed by Zimmermann himself. At a press conference on March 3, 1917, he told an American journalist, "I cannot deny it. It is true." Then, on March 29, 1917, Zimmermann gave a speech in the Reichstag in which he admitted that the telegram was genuine.[32] Zimmermann hoped that Americans would understand that the idea was that Germany would not fund Mexico's war with the United States unless the Americans joined World War I.

On April 6, 1917, Congress voted to declare war on Germany. Wilson had asked Congress for "a war to end all wars" that would "make the world safe for democracy".[33]

Wilson considered another military invasion of Veracruz and Tampico in 1917–1918,[34][35] to pacify the Isthmus of Tehuantepec and Tampico oil fields and to ensure their continued production during the civil war,[35][36] but this time, Mexican President Venustiano Carranza, recently installed, threatened to destroy the oil fields if the US Marines landed there.[37][38]

Japanese response Edit

The Japanese government, another nation mentioned in the Zimmerman Telegram, was already involved in World War I, on the side of the Allies against Germany. The government later released a statement that Japan was not interested in changing sides and in attacking America.[39]

Autograph discovery Edit

In October 2005, it was reported that an original typescript of the decoded Zimmermann Telegram had recently been discovered by an unnamed historian who was researching and preparing a history of the United Kingdom's Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ). The document is believed to be the actual telegram shown to the American ambassador in London in 1917. Marked in Admiral Hall's handwriting at the top of the document are the words: "This is the one handed to Dr Page and exposed by the President." Since many of the secret documents in this incident had been destroyed, it had previously been assumed that the original typed "decrypt" was gone forever. However, after the discovery of this document, the GCHQ official historian said: "I believe that this is indeed the same document that Balfour handed to Page."[40]

In 2006 there were six "closed" files on the Zimmermann Telegram which had not been declassified held by The National Archives at Kew (formerly the PRO).[41]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ *Andrew, Christopher (1996). For The President's Eyes Only. Harper Collins. p. 42. ISBN 0-00-638071-9.
  2. ^ a b "Why was the Zimmerman Telegram so important?". BBC. January 17, 2017. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  3. ^ a b "The telegram that brought America into the First World War". BBC History Magazine. January 17, 2017. Retrieved January 17, 2017 – via History Extra.
  4. ^ "Washington Exposes Plot" (PDF). The Associated Press. Washington. February 28, 1917. Retrieved January 11, 2020.
  5. ^ Alexander, Mary; Childress, Marilyn (April 1981). "The Zimmerman Telegram". National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved April 8, 2023. This NARA publication paraphrases a book chapter by the cited authors
  6. ^ "The Zimmermann Telegram" (PDF). National Security Agency. Retrieved September 25, 2023.
  7. ^ Katz, Friedrich (1981). The Secret War in Mexico: Europe, the United States, and the Mexican Revolution. pp. 328–329.
  8. ^ Katz (1981), pp. 232–240.
  9. ^ Katz (1981), pp. 329–332.
  10. ^ Tucker, Spencer & Roberts, Priscilla Mary (2005). World War One. Santa Barbara CA: ABC-CLIO. p. 1606. ISBN 1-85109-420-2.
  11. ^ Katz (1981), pp. 346–347.
  12. ^ Small, Michael (2009). The Forgotten Peace: Mediation at Niagara Falls, 1914. Ottawa, Canada: University of Ottawa. p. 35. ISBN 9780776607122.
  13. ^ a b Stacy, Lee (2002). Mexico and the United States, Volume 3. USA: Marshall Cavendish. p. 869. ISBN 9780761474050.
  14. ^ a b Buchenau, Jürgen (2004). Tools of Progress: A German Merchant Family in Mexico City, 1865–Present. USA: University of New Mexico Press. p. 82. ISBN 9780826330888.
  15. ^ "The Mexican Telegraph Company_The Zimmermann Telegram - Galveston County ~ Number: 18753". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 2017.
  16. ^ Tuchman, Barbara W. (1958). The Zimmerman Telegram. Random House Publishing. pp. 63, 73–74. ISBN 0-345-32425-0.
  17. ^ Katz (1981), pp. 328–329.
  18. ^ Katz (1981), p. 364.
  19. ^ Beezley, William; Meyer, Michael (2010). The Oxford History of Mexico. UK: Oxford University Press. p. 476. ISBN 9780199779932.
  20. ^ Katz (1981), p. 364.
  21. ^ Paterson, Thomas; Clifford, J. Garry; Brigham, Robert; Donoghue, Michael; Hagan, Kenneth (2010). American Foreign Relations, Volume 1: To 1920. USA: Cengage Learning. p. 265. ISBN 9781305172104.
  22. ^ Paterson, Thomas; Clifford, John Garry; Hagan, Kenneth J. (1999). American Foreign Relations: A History Since 1895. USA: Houghton Mifflin College Division. p. 51. ISBN 9780395938874.
  23. ^ a b c d e West, Nigel (1990). The Sigint Secrets: The Signals Intelligence War, 1990 to Today-Including the Persecution of Gordon Welchman. New York: Quill. pp. 83, 87–92. ISBN 0-688-09515-1.
  24. ^ The New York Times, September 4, 1914
  25. ^ Gannon, Paul (2011). Inside Room 40: The Codebreakers of World War I. London: Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7110-3408-2.
  26. ^ Polmar, Norman & Noot, Jurrien (1991). Submarines of the Russian and Soviet Navies 1718–1990. Annapolis: US Naval Institute Press.
  27. ^ "Intelligence Insight No. 004 podcast at 44:14 minutes". bletchleypark.org.uk. The Bletchley Park Trust. Retrieved January 5, 2021.
  28. ^ Stevenson, D. (David), 1954- (2017). 1917 : war, peace, and revolution (First ed.). Oxford. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-19-870238-2. OCLC 982092927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  29. ^ Stevenson, D. (David), 1954- (2017). 1917 : war, peace, and revolution (First ed.). Oxford. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-19-870238-2. OCLC 982092927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  30. ^ Link, Arthur S. (1965). Wilson: Campaigns for Progressivism and Peace: 1916–1917.
  31. ^ Leopold, Richard W (1962). The Growth of American Foreign Policy: A History. Random House. pp. 330–31.
  32. ^ Meyer, Michael C. (1966). "The Mexican-German Conspiracy of 1915". The Americas. 23 (1): 76–89. doi:10.2307/980141. JSTOR 980141. S2CID 146819735.
  33. ^ Link, Arthur S. (1972). Woodrow Wilson and the Progressive Era, 1910–1917. New York: Harper & Row. pp. 252–282.
  34. ^ Gruening, Ernest (1968). Mexico and Its Heritage. U.S.: Greenwood Press. p. 596. ISBN 9780837104577.
  35. ^ a b Halevy, Drew Philip (2000). Threats of Intervention: U. S.-Mexican Relations, 1917–1923. U.S.: iUniverse. p. 41. ISBN 9781469701783.
  36. ^ Meyer, Lorenzo (1977). Mexico and the United States in the Oil Controversy, 1917–1942. U.S.: University of Texas Press. p. 45. ISBN 9780292750326.
  37. ^ Haber, Stephen; Maurer, Noel; Razo, Armando (2003). The Politics of Property Rights: Political Instability, Credible Commitments, and Economic Growth in Mexico, 1876–1929. UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 201. ISBN 9780521820677.
  38. ^ Meyer, Lorenzo (1977), p. 44
  39. ^ Lee, Roger. "Zimmerman Telegram: What Was The Zimmerman Telegram, and How Did It Affect World War One?". The History Guy. Retrieved July 27, 2018.
  40. ^ Fenton, Ben (October 17, 2005). "Telegram that brought US into Great War is Found Found". The Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on September 15, 2012.
  41. ^ Gannon, Paul (2006). Colossus: Bletchley Park's Greatest Secret. London: Atlantic Books. pp. 495, 17, 18. ISBN 1-84354-330-3.

Sources Edit

  • Beesly, Patrick (1982). Room 40: British Naval Intelligence, 1914–1918. New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich. ISBN 0-15-178634-8.
  • Boghardt, Thomas (November 2003). (PDF). Working Paper Series. Washington DC: The BMW Center for German and European Studies, Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University. 6-04. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 2, 2006.; 35pp
  • Boghardt, Thomas (2012). The Zimmermann Telegram: Intelligence, Diplomacy, and America's Entry into World War I. Naval Institute Press. p. 319. ISBN 978-1612511481.
  • Capozzola, Christopher (2008). Uncle Sam Wants You: World War I and the Making of the Modern American Citizen. Oxford: Oxford Scholarship Online. ISBN 9781803990064.
  • Gannon, Paul (July 7, 2022). Before Bletchley Park: The Codebreakers of the First World War. London: Paul Gannon Books. ISBN 9781803990064.
  • Hopkirk, Peter (1994). On Secret Service East of Constantinople. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-280230-5.
  • Massie, Robert K. (2007). Castles of Steel. London: Vintage Books. ISBN 978-0-09-952378-9.
  • Pommerin, Reiner (1996). "Reichstagsrede Zimmermanns (Auszug), 30. März 1917". 'Quellen zu den deutsch-amerikanischen Beziehungen. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Vol. 1. pp. 213–16.
  • Singh, Simon (September 8, 1999). . The Independent. Independent Print Limited. Archived from the original on August 14, 2014. Retrieved August 14, 2014. Alt URL

Further reading Edit

  • Bernstorff, Count Johann Heinrich (1920). My Three Years in America. New York: Scribner. pp. 310–11.
  • Bridges, Lamar W. (1969). "Zimmermann telegram: reaction of Southern, Southwestern newspapers". Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly. 46 (1): 81–86. doi:10.1177/107769906904600112. S2CID 144936173.
  • Dugdale, Blanche (1937). Arthur James Balfour. New York: Putnam. Vol. II, pp. 127–129.
  • Hendrick, Burton J. (2003) [1925]. The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 0-7661-7106-X.
  • Kahn, David (1996) [1967]. The Codebreakers. New York: Macmillan.
  • Tuchman, Barbara W. The Zimmermann Telegram (1958) online best-seller for the lay reader by the noted historian
  • Winkler, Jonathan Reed (2008). Nexus: Strategic Communications and American Security in World War I. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-02839-5.

External links Edit

  • Failed Diplomacy: the Zimmermann Telegram
  • Our Documents – Zimmermann Telegram (1917)
  • Moving out of German Embassy after breaking relations, 1917
  • Zimmermann Telegram: The Original Document
  • Before Bletchley Park (WWI) Paul Gannon Books 2023.
  • GermanNavalWarfare.info, Some Original Documents from the British Admiralty, Room 40, regarding the Zimmermann-/Mexico Telegram: Photocopies from The National Archives, Kew, Richmond, UK.

zimmermann, telegram, zimmermann, note, zimmerman, cable, secret, diplomatic, communication, issued, from, german, foreign, office, january, 1917, that, proposed, military, alliance, between, german, empire, mexico, united, states, entered, world, against, ger. The Zimmermann Telegram or Zimmermann Note or Zimmerman Cable was a secret diplomatic communication issued from the German Foreign Office in January 1917 that proposed a military alliance between the German Empire and Mexico if the United States entered World War I against Germany With Germany s aid Mexico would recover Texas Arizona and New Mexico The telegram was intercepted by British intelligence The Zimmermann Telegram as it was sent from Washington DC to Ambassador Heinrich von Eckardt the German ambassador to Mexico Mexico in 1916 in dark green territory promised to Mexico in the Zimmermann telegram in light green and the pre 1836 original Mexican territory red line Revelation of the contents enraged Americans especially after German State Secretary for Foreign Affairs Arthur Zimmermann publicly admitted on March 3 that the telegram was genuine It helped to generate support for the American declaration of war on Germany in April 1917 1 The decryption was described as the most significant intelligence triumph for Britain during World War I 2 and it marked one of the earliest occasions on which a piece of signal intelligence influenced world events 3 Contents 1 Content 2 History 2 1 Previous German efforts to promote war 2 2 German motivations 3 Mexican response 4 British interception 4 1 Use 5 U S response 6 Japanese response 7 Autograph discovery 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksContent Edit nbsp Arthur ZimmermannThe message came in the form of a coded telegram dispatched by Arthur Zimmermann the Staatssekretar a top level civil servant second only to their respective minister in the Foreign Office of the German Empire on January 17 1917 The message was sent to the German ambassador to Mexico Heinrich von Eckardt 4 Zimmermann sent the telegram in anticipation of the resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare by Germany on February 1 which the German government presumed would almost certainly lead to war with the United States The telegram instructed Eckardt that if the United States appeared certain to enter the war he was to approach the Mexican government with a proposal for military alliance with funding from Germany The decoded telegram was as follows 5 Original German Wir beabsichtigen am ersten Februar uneingeschrankten U Boot Krieg zu beginnen Es wird versucht werden Amerika trotzdem neutral zu halten Fur den Fall dass dies nicht gelingen sollte schlagen wir Mexiko auf folgender Grundlage Bundnis vor Gemeinsame Kriegfuhrung Gemeinsamer Friedensschluss Reichlich finanzielle Unterstutzung und Einverstandnis unsererseits dass Mexiko in Texas Neu Mexiko Arizona fruher verlorenes Gebiet zuruckerobert Regelung im einzelnen Euer Hochwohlgeborenen uberlassen Euer Hochwohlgeborenen wollen Vorstehendes Prasidenten streng geheim eroffnen sobald Kriegsausbruch mit Vereinigten Staaten feststeht und Anregung hinzufugen Japan von sich aus zu sofortigem Beitritt einzuladen und gleichzeitig zwischen uns und Japan zu vermitteln Bitte Prasidenten darauf hinweisen dass rucksichtslose Anwendung unserer U Boote jetzt Aussicht bietet England in wenigen Monaten zum Frieden zu zwingen Empfang bestatigen Zimmermann 6 Translated We intend to begin on the first of February unrestricted submarine warfare We shall endeavor in spite of this to keep the United States of America neutral In the event of this not succeeding we make Mexico a proposal of alliance on the following basis make war together make peace together generous financial support and an understanding on our part that Mexico is to reconquer the lost territory in Texas New Mexico and Arizona The settlement in detail is left to you You will inform the President of the above most secretly as soon as the outbreak of war with the United States of America is certain and add the suggestion that he should on his own initiative invite Japan to immediate adherence and at the same time mediate between Japan and ourselves Please call the President s attention to the fact that the ruthless employment of our submarines now offers the prospect of compelling England in a few months to make peace Signed ZimmermannHistory EditPrevious German efforts to promote war Edit Germany had long sought to incite a war between Mexico and the United States which would have tied down American forces and slowed the export of American arms to the Allies 7 The Germans had aided in arming Mexico as shown by the 1914 Ypiranga incident 8 German Naval Intelligence officer Franz von Rintelen had attempted to incite a war between Mexico and the United States in 1915 giving Victoriano Huerta 12 million for that purpose 9 The German saboteur Lothar Witzke who was based in Mexico City claimed to be responsible for the March 1917 munitions explosion at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard in the San Francisco Bay Area 10 and was possibly responsible for the July 1916 Black Tom explosion in New Jersey The failure of United States troops to capture Pancho Villa in 1916 and the movement of President Carranza in favor of Germany emboldened the Germans to send the Zimmermann note 11 The German provocations were partially successful President Woodrow Wilson ordered the military invasion of Veracruz in 1914 in the context of the Ypiranga incident and against the advice of the British government 12 War was prevented thanks to the Niagara Falls peace conference organized by the ABC nations but the occupation was a decisive factor in Mexican neutrality in World War I 13 Mexico refused to participate in the embargo against Germany and granted full guarantees to the German companies for keeping their operations open specifically in Mexico City 14 German motivations Edit nbsp The Mexican Telegraph Company building in Galveston through which the Zimmerman Telegram was relayed 15 The Zimmerman Telegram was part of an effort carried out by the Germans to postpone the transportation of supplies and other war materials from the United States to the Allies which were at war against Germany 16 The main purpose of the telegram was to make the Mexican government declare war on the United States in hopes of tying down American forces and slowing the export of American arms 17 The German High Command believed that it could defeat the British and French on the Western Front and strangle Britain with unrestricted submarine warfare before American forces could be trained and shipped to Europe in sufficient numbers to aid the Allies The Germans were encouraged by their successes on the Eastern Front to believe that they could divert large numbers of troops to the Western Front in support of their goals Mexican response EditMexican President Venustiano Carranza assigned a military commission to assess the feasibility of the Mexican takeover of their former territories contemplated by Germany 18 The generals concluded that such a war was unwinnable for the following reasons Mexico was in the midst of a civil war and Carranza s position was far from secure Carranza himself was later assassinated in 1920 Picking a fight with the United States would have prompted the U S to support one of his rivals The United States was far stronger militarily than Mexico was Even if Mexico s military forces had been completely united and loyal to a single government no serious scenario existed under which it could have invaded and won a war against the United States Indeed much of Mexico s military hardware of 1917 reflected only modest upgrades since the Mexican American War 70 years before which the U S had won citation needed The German government s promises of generous financial support were very unreliable It had already informed Carranza in June 1916 that it could not provide the necessary gold needed to stock a completely independent Mexican national bank 19 Even if Mexico received financial support it would still need to purchase arms ammunition and other needed war supplies from the ABC nations Argentina Brazil and Chile which would strain relations with them as explained below Even if by some chance Mexico had the military means to win a conflict against the United States and to reclaim the territories in question it would have had severe difficulty conquering and pacifying a large English speaking population which had long enjoyed self government and was better supplied with arms than were most other civilian populations 20 Other foreign relations were at stake The ABC nations had organized the Niagara Falls peace conference in 1914 to avoid a full scale war between the United States and Mexico over the United States occupation of Veracruz Mexico entering a war against the United States would strain relations with those nations The Carranza government was recognized de jure by the United States on August 31 1917 as a direct consequence of the Zimmermann Telegram to ensure Mexican neutrality during World War I 21 22 After the military invasion of Veracruz in 1914 Mexico did not participate in any military excursion with the United States in World War I 13 That ensured that Mexican neutrality was the best outcome that the United States could hope for even if it allowed German companies to keep their operations in Mexico open 14 British interception Edit nbsp A portion of the Telegram as decrypted by British Naval Intelligence codebreakers Since the word Arizona was not in the German codebook it had to be split into phonetic syllables Zimmermann s office sent the telegram to the German embassy in the United States for retransmission to Eckardt in Mexico It has traditionally been understood that the telegram was sent over three routes It went by radio and passed via telegraph cable inside messages sent by diplomats of two neutral countries the United States and Sweden Direct telegraph transmission of the telegram was impossible because the British had cut the German international cables at the outbreak of war However Germany could communicate wirelessly through the Telefunken plant operating under Atlantic Communication Company in West Sayville New York where the telegram was relayed to the Mexican Consulate Ironically the station was under the control of the US Navy which operated it for Atlantic Communication Company the American subsidiary of the German entity Also the United States allowed limited use of its diplomatic cables with Germany to communicate with its ambassador in Washington This privilege was supposed to be used for messages connected with Wilson s peace proposals The Swedish diplomatic message holding the Zimmerman Telegram went from Stockholm to Buenos Aires over British submarine telegraph cables and then moved from Buenos Aires to Mexico over the cable network of a United States company All traffic passing through British hands came to British intelligence particularly to the codebreakers and analysts in Room 40 at the Admiralty 23 After the Germans telegraph cables had been cut the German Foreign Office appealed to the United States for use of their diplomatic telegraphic messages for peace messages President Wilson agreed in the belief both that such co operation would sustain continued good relations with Germany and that more efficient German American diplomacy could assist Wilson s goal of a negotiated end to the war The Germans handed in messages to the American embassy in Berlin which were relayed to the embassy in Denmark and then to the United States by American telegraph operators The United States placed conditions on German usage most notably that all messages had to be in cleartext uncoded However Wilson later reversed the order and relaxed the wireless rules to allow coded messages to be sent 24 The Germans assumed that this route was secure and so used it extensively 23 However that put German diplomats in a precarious situation since they relied on the United States to transmit Zimmermann s note to its final destination but the message s unencrypted contents would be deeply alarming to the Americans The Germans persuaded US Ambassador James W Gerard to accept it in coded form and it was transmitted on January 16 1917 23 In Room 40 Nigel de Grey had partially decoded the telegram by the next day 25 By 1917 the diplomatic code 13040 had been in use for many years Since there had been ample time for Room 40 to reconstruct the code cryptanalytically it was readable to a fair degree Room 40 had obtained German cryptographic documents including the diplomatic code 3512 captured during the Mesopotamian campaign which was a later updated code that was similar to but not really related to code 13040 and naval code SKM Signalbuch der Kaiserlichen Marine which was useless for decoding the Zimmermann Telegram but valuable to decode naval traffic which had been retrieved from the wrecked cruiser SMS Magdeburg by the Russians who passed it to the British 26 Disclosure of the telegram would sway American public opinion against Germany if the British could convince the Americans that the text was genuine but the Room 40 chief William Reginald Hall was reluctant to let it out because the disclosure would expose the German codes broken in Room 40 and British eavesdropping on United States diplomatic traffic Hall waited three weeks during which de Grey and cryptographer William Montgomery completed the decryption On February 1 Germany announced resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare an act that led the United States to break off diplomatic relations with Germany on February 3 23 nbsp The Telegram completely decrypted and translatedHall passed the telegram to the British Foreign Office on February 5 but still warned against releasing it Meanwhile the British discussed possible cover stories to explain to the Americans how they obtained the coded text of the telegram and to explain how they obtained the cleartext of the telegram without letting anyone know that the codes had been broken Furthermore the British needed to find a way to convince the Americans the message was not a forgery 2 For the first story the British obtained the coded text of the telegram from the Mexican commercial telegraph office The British knew that since the German embassy in Washington would relay the message by commercial telegraph the Mexican telegraph office would have the coded text Mr H a British agent in Mexico bribed an employee of the commercial telegraph company for a copy of the message Sir Thomas Hohler the British ambassador in Mexico later claimed to have been Mr H or at least to have been involved with the interception in his autobiography 27 citation needed The coded text could then be shown to the Americans without embarrassment Moreover the retransmission was encoded with the older code 13040 and so by mid February the British had the complete text and the ability to release the telegram without revealing the extent to which the latest German codes had been broken At worst the Germans might have realized that the 13040 code had been compromised but that was a risk worth taking against the possibility of United States entry into the war Finally since copies of the 13040 code text would also have been deposited in the records of the American commercial telegraph company the British had the ability to prove the authenticity of the message to the American government 3 As a cover story the British could publicly claim that their agents had stolen the telegram s decoded text in Mexico Privately the British needed to give the Americans the 13040 code so that the American government could verify the authenticity of the message independently with their own commercial telegraphic records but the Americans agreed to back the official cover story The German Foreign Office refused to consider that their codes could have been broken but sent Eckardt on a witch hunt for a traitor in the embassy in Mexico Eckardt indignantly rejected those accusations and the Foreign Office eventually declared the embassy exonerated 23 Use Edit On February 19 Hall showed the telegram to Edward Bell the secretary of the American Embassy in Britain Bell was at first incredulous and thought that it was a forgery Once Bell was convinced the message was genuine he became enraged On February 20 Hall informally sent a copy to US Ambassador Walter Hines Page On February 23 Page met with British Foreign Minister Arthur Balfour and was given the codetext the message in German and the English translation The British had obtained a further copy in Mexico City and Balfour could obscure the real source with the half truth that it had been bought in Mexico 28 Page then reported the story to Wilson on February 24 1917 including details to be verified from telegraph company files in the United States Wilson felt much indignation toward the Germans and wanted to publish the Zimmermann Telegraph immediately after he had received it from the British but he delayed until March 1 1917 29 U S response Edit nbsp 1917 political cartoon about the Zimmermann TelegramMany Americans then held anti Mexican as well as anti German views Mexicans had a considerable amount of anti American sentiment in return some of which was caused by the American occupation of Veracruz 30 General John J Pershing had long been chasing the revolutionary Pancho Villa for raiding into American territory and carried out several cross border expeditions News of the telegram further inflamed tensions between the United States and Mexico nbsp Exploding in his Hands However many Americans particularly those with German or Irish ancestry wished to avoid the conflict in Europe Since the public had been told falsely that the telegram had been stolen in a decoded form in Mexico the message was at first widely believed to be an elaborate forgery created by British intelligence That belief which was not restricted to pacifist and pro German lobbies was promoted by German and Mexican diplomats alongside some antiwar American newspapers especially those of the Hearst press empire On February 1 1917 Germany began unrestricted submarine warfare against all ships in the Atlantic bearing the American flag both passenger and merchant ships Two ships were sunk in February and most American shipping companies held their ships in port Besides the highly provocative war proposal to Mexico the telegram also mentioned ruthless employment of our submarines Public opinion demanded action Wilson had refused to assign US Navy crews and guns to the merchant ships but once the Zimmermann note was public Wilson called for arming the merchant ships although antiwar members of the US Senate blocked his proposal 31 The Wilson administration nevertheless remained with a dilemma Evidence the United States had been provided confidentially by the British informed Wilson that the message was genuine but he could not make the evidence public without compromising the British codebreaking operation This problem however was resolved when any doubts as to the authenticity of the telegram were removed by Zimmermann himself At a press conference on March 3 1917 he told an American journalist I cannot deny it It is true Then on March 29 1917 Zimmermann gave a speech in the Reichstag in which he admitted that the telegram was genuine 32 Zimmermann hoped that Americans would understand that the idea was that Germany would not fund Mexico s war with the United States unless the Americans joined World War I On April 6 1917 Congress voted to declare war on Germany Wilson had asked Congress for a war to end all wars that would make the world safe for democracy 33 Wilson considered another military invasion of Veracruz and Tampico in 1917 1918 34 35 to pacify the Isthmus of Tehuantepec and Tampico oil fields and to ensure their continued production during the civil war 35 36 but this time Mexican President Venustiano Carranza recently installed threatened to destroy the oil fields if the US Marines landed there 37 38 Japanese response EditThe Japanese government another nation mentioned in the Zimmerman Telegram was already involved in World War I on the side of the Allies against Germany The government later released a statement that Japan was not interested in changing sides and in attacking America 39 Autograph discovery EditIn October 2005 it was reported that an original typescript of the decoded Zimmermann Telegram had recently been discovered by an unnamed historian who was researching and preparing a history of the United Kingdom s Government Communications Headquarters GCHQ The document is believed to be the actual telegram shown to the American ambassador in London in 1917 Marked in Admiral Hall s handwriting at the top of the document are the words This is the one handed to Dr Page and exposed by the President Since many of the secret documents in this incident had been destroyed it had previously been assumed that the original typed decrypt was gone forever However after the discovery of this document the GCHQ official historian said I believe that this is indeed the same document that Balfour handed to Page 40 In 2006 there were six closed files on the Zimmermann Telegram which had not been declassified held by The National Archives at Kew formerly the PRO 41 See also Edit nbsp World War I portalImperial German plans for the invasion of the United States Zinoviev letterReferences Edit Andrew Christopher 1996 For The President s Eyes Only Harper Collins p 42 ISBN 0 00 638071 9 a b Why was the Zimmerman Telegram so important BBC January 17 2017 Retrieved January 17 2017 a b The telegram that brought America into the First World War BBC History Magazine January 17 2017 Retrieved January 17 2017 via History Extra Washington Exposes Plot PDF The Associated Press Washington February 28 1917 Retrieved January 11 2020 Alexander Mary Childress Marilyn April 1981 The Zimmerman Telegram National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved April 8 2023 This NARA publication paraphrases a book chapter by the cited authors The Zimmermann Telegram PDF National Security Agency Retrieved September 25 2023 Katz Friedrich 1981 The Secret War in Mexico Europe the United States and the Mexican Revolution pp 328 329 Katz 1981 pp 232 240 Katz 1981 pp 329 332 Tucker Spencer amp Roberts Priscilla Mary 2005 World War One Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO p 1606 ISBN 1 85109 420 2 Katz 1981 pp 346 347 Small Michael 2009 The Forgotten Peace Mediation at Niagara Falls 1914 Ottawa Canada University of Ottawa p 35 ISBN 9780776607122 a b Stacy Lee 2002 Mexico and the United States Volume 3 USA Marshall Cavendish p 869 ISBN 9780761474050 a b Buchenau Jurgen 2004 Tools of Progress A German Merchant Family in Mexico City 1865 Present USA University of New Mexico Press p 82 ISBN 9780826330888 The Mexican Telegraph Company The Zimmermann Telegram Galveston County Number 18753 Texas Historic Sites Atlas Texas Historical Commission 2017 Tuchman Barbara W 1958 The Zimmerman Telegram Random House Publishing pp 63 73 74 ISBN 0 345 32425 0 Katz 1981 pp 328 329 Katz 1981 p 364 Beezley William Meyer Michael 2010 The Oxford History of Mexico UK Oxford University Press p 476 ISBN 9780199779932 Katz 1981 p 364 Paterson Thomas Clifford J Garry Brigham Robert Donoghue Michael Hagan Kenneth 2010 American Foreign Relations Volume 1 To 1920 USA Cengage Learning p 265 ISBN 9781305172104 Paterson Thomas Clifford John Garry Hagan Kenneth J 1999 American Foreign Relations A History Since 1895 USA Houghton Mifflin College Division p 51 ISBN 9780395938874 a b c d e West Nigel 1990 The Sigint Secrets The Signals Intelligence War 1990 to Today Including the Persecution of Gordon Welchman New York Quill pp 83 87 92 ISBN 0 688 09515 1 The New York Times September 4 1914 Gannon Paul 2011 Inside Room 40 The Codebreakers of World War I London Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 0 7110 3408 2 Polmar Norman amp Noot Jurrien 1991 Submarines of the Russian and Soviet Navies 1718 1990 Annapolis US Naval Institute Press Intelligence Insight No 004 podcast at 44 14 minutes bletchleypark org uk The Bletchley Park Trust Retrieved January 5 2021 Stevenson D David 1954 2017 1917 war peace and revolution First ed Oxford p 59 ISBN 978 0 19 870238 2 OCLC 982092927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Stevenson D David 1954 2017 1917 war peace and revolution First ed Oxford p 59 ISBN 978 0 19 870238 2 OCLC 982092927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Link Arthur S 1965 Wilson Campaigns for Progressivism and Peace 1916 1917 Leopold Richard W 1962 The Growth of American Foreign Policy A History Random House pp 330 31 Meyer Michael C 1966 The Mexican German Conspiracy of 1915 The Americas 23 1 76 89 doi 10 2307 980141 JSTOR 980141 S2CID 146819735 Link Arthur S 1972 Woodrow Wilson and the Progressive Era 1910 1917 New York Harper amp Row pp 252 282 Gruening Ernest 1968 Mexico and Its Heritage U S Greenwood Press p 596 ISBN 9780837104577 a b Halevy Drew Philip 2000 Threats of Intervention U S Mexican Relations 1917 1923 U S iUniverse p 41 ISBN 9781469701783 Meyer Lorenzo 1977 Mexico and the United States in the Oil Controversy 1917 1942 U S University of Texas Press p 45 ISBN 9780292750326 Haber Stephen Maurer Noel Razo Armando 2003 The Politics of Property Rights Political Instability Credible Commitments and Economic Growth in Mexico 1876 1929 UK Cambridge University Press p 201 ISBN 9780521820677 Meyer Lorenzo 1977 p 44 Lee Roger Zimmerman Telegram What Was The Zimmerman Telegram and How Did It Affect World War One The History Guy Retrieved July 27 2018 Fenton Ben October 17 2005 Telegram that brought US into Great War is Found Found The Telegraph London Archived from the original on September 15 2012 Gannon Paul 2006 Colossus Bletchley Park s Greatest Secret London Atlantic Books pp 495 17 18 ISBN 1 84354 330 3 Sources EditBeesly Patrick 1982 Room 40 British Naval Intelligence 1914 1918 New York Harcourt Brace Jovanovich ISBN 0 15 178634 8 Boghardt Thomas November 2003 The Zimmermann Telegram Diplomacy Intelligence and The American Entry into World War I PDF Working Paper Series Washington DC The BMW Center for German and European Studies Edmund A Walsh School of Foreign Service Georgetown University 6 04 Archived from the original PDF on September 2 2006 35pp Boghardt Thomas 2012 The Zimmermann Telegram Intelligence Diplomacy and America s Entry into World War I Naval Institute Press p 319 ISBN 978 1612511481 Capozzola Christopher 2008 Uncle Sam Wants You World War I and the Making of the Modern American Citizen Oxford Oxford Scholarship Online ISBN 9781803990064 Gannon Paul July 7 2022 Before Bletchley Park The Codebreakers of the First World War London Paul Gannon Books ISBN 9781803990064 Hopkirk Peter 1994 On Secret Service East of Constantinople Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 280230 5 Massie Robert K 2007 Castles of Steel London Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 09 952378 9 Pommerin Reiner 1996 Reichstagsrede Zimmermanns Auszug 30 Marz 1917 Quellen zu den deutsch amerikanischen Beziehungen Darmstadt Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Vol 1 pp 213 16 Singh Simon September 8 1999 The Zimmermann Telegraph The Independent Independent Print Limited Archived from the original on August 14 2014 Retrieved August 14 2014 Alt URLFurther reading EditBernstorff Count Johann Heinrich 1920 My Three Years in America New York Scribner pp 310 11 Bridges Lamar W 1969 Zimmermann telegram reaction of Southern Southwestern newspapers Journalism amp Mass Communication Quarterly 46 1 81 86 doi 10 1177 107769906904600112 S2CID 144936173 Dugdale Blanche 1937 Arthur James Balfour New York Putnam Vol II pp 127 129 Hendrick Burton J 2003 1925 The Life and Letters of Walter H Page Kessinger Publishing ISBN 0 7661 7106 X Kahn David 1996 1967 The Codebreakers New York Macmillan Tuchman Barbara W The Zimmermann Telegram 1958 online best seller for the lay reader by the noted historian Winkler Jonathan Reed 2008 Nexus Strategic Communications and American Security in World War I Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 02839 5 External links Edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Zimmermann Telegram nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zimmermann Telegram Failed Diplomacy the Zimmermann Telegram Our Documents Zimmermann Telegram 1917 Moving out of German Embassy after breaking relations 1917 Zimmermann Telegram The Original Document Before Bletchley Park WWI Paul Gannon Books 2023 GermanNavalWarfare info Some Original Documents from the British Admiralty Room 40 regarding the Zimmermann Mexico Telegram Photocopies from The National Archives Kew Richmond UK Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zimmermann Telegram amp oldid 1178049721, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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