No. 369  UCDA P150/2658

Letter from David Gray to Eamon de Valera (Dublin)
'The American Note'
(No. 410)

DUBLIN, 21 February 1944

Excellency,1
Your Excellency will recall that in your speech at Cork, delivered on the 14th December, 1941,2 you expressed sentiments of special friendship for the American people on the occasion of their entry into the present war and closed by saying 'The policy of the State remains unchanged. We can only be a friendly neutral.' As you will also recall, extracts of this speech were transmitted to the President by your Minister at Washington. The President, while conveying his appreciation for this expression of friendship, stated his confidence that the Irish Government and the Irish people whose freedom is at stake no less than ours3 would know how to meet their responsibilities in this situation.

It has become increasingly apparent that, despite the declared desire of the Irish Government that its neutrality should not operate in favor of either of the belligerents, it has in fact operated and continues to operate in favor of the Axis Powers and against the United Nations on whom your security4 and the maintenance of your national economy depend.5 One of the gravest and most inequitable results of this situation is the opportunity for highly organized espionage6 which the geographical position of Ireland affords the Axis and denies the United Nations. Situated as you are in close proximity to Britain divided only by an intangible boundary from Northern Ireland where are situated important American bases with continuous traffic to and from both countries, Axis agents enjoy almost unrestricted opportunity for bringing military information of vital importance from Great Britain and Northern Ireland into Ireland and from there transmitting it by various routes and methods to Germany.7 No opportunity corresponding to this is open to the United Nations for the Axis has no military dispositions which may be observed from Ireland. We do not question the good faith of the Irish Government in its efforts to suppress Axis espionage. Whether or to what extent it has succeeded in preventing acts of espionage against American shipping and American forces in Great Britain and Northern Ireland is, of course, impossible to determine with certainty.8 Nevertheless, it is a fact that German and Japanese diplomatic and consular representatives still continue to reside in Dublin9 and enjoy the special privileges and immunities customarily accorded to such officials.10 That Axis representatives in neutral countries use these special privileges and immunities as a cloak for espionage activities against the United Nations has been demonstrated over and over again. It would be naïve to assume that Axis agencies have not exploited conditions to the full in Ireland as they have in other countries.11 It is our understanding that the German Legation in Dublin, until recently at least, has had in its possession a radio sending set. This is evidence of the intention of the German Government to use this means of communication.12 Supporting evidence is furnished by the two parachutists equipped with radio sending sets recently dropped on your territory by German planes.13

As you know from common report, United Nation military operations are in preparation in both Britain and Northern Ireland. It is vital that information from which may be deduced their nature and direction should not reach the enemy.14 Not only the success of the operations but the lives of thousands of United Nation soldiers are at stake. We request therefore that the Irish Government take appropriate steps for the recall of German and Japanese representatives in Ireland. We should be lacking in candor if we did not state our hope that this action will take the form of severance of all diplomatic relations between Ireland and these two countries. You will, of course, readily understand the compelling reasons why we ask as an absolute minimum the removal of these Axis representatives whose presence in Ireland must inevitably be regarded as constituting a danger to the lives of American soldiers and to the success of Allied military operations.

It is hardly necessary to point out that time is of extreme importance and that we trust Your Excellency will favor us with your reply at your early convenience.

Accept, Excellency, the renewed assurances of my highest consideration.

[signed] DAVID GRAY

1 Marginal note in de Valera's handwriting: 'Handed in by the American Minister David Gray at 3.30pm, Feb. 21st 1944.'

2 See Maurice Moynihan (ed.), Speeches and Statements by Eamon de Valera 1917-1973 (Dublin,1980), pp 461-2.

3 Marginal note in de Valera's handwriting: 'we must judge that'.

4 Marginal note in de Valera's handwriting: 'What ab[ou]t. their own invas.[ion] of our Security'.

5 Marginal note in de Valera's handwriting: 'No'.

6 Marginal note in de Valera's handwriting: 'No evidence of this[;] at any rate w[oul]d be an excuse for every warring state against a neutral neighbour '.

7 Marginal note in de Valera's handwriting: 'what are they?'.

8 Marginal note in de Valera's handwriting: 'No, but without evidence they can't condemn'.

9 Marginal note in de Valera's handwriting: 'in accordance with practice of N.[eutral] states'.

10 Marginal note in de Valera's handwriting: 'Result of our neutral rights'.

11 Marginal note in de Valera's handwriting: 'Much more likely with Br.[itish].

12 Marginal note in de Valera's handwriting: 'Has been under close observation. When last used?'.

13 See Nos 368 and 359.

14 Marginal note in de Valera's handwriting: 'Much more likely other methods'.


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