would be unthinkable." Years after the war, Nazi armaments chief Albert Speer told a congressional investigator that Germany could not have attempted its September 1939 blitzkrieg of Poland without the performance-boosting additive. Sloan's Stance In the months leading up to the invasion of Poland, GM president Sloan defended his close collaboration with Hitler. In an April 1939 letter to an objecting stockholder, he stated that in the inter- ests of making a profit, GM shouldn't risk alienating its German hosts by intruding in Nazi affairs. "In other words, to put the proposition rather bluntly:' Sloan wrote, "such matters should not be considered the business of the management of General Motors." As the plans for the war progressed, urgent orders poured in for Blitz truck spare parts to be delivered to Reich bases near the Polish border. Days later in August, nearly 3,000 Opel employees, from factory workers to senior manag- ers, were drafted into the Wehrmacht (German Army). Around the same time, GM began evacuating most of the American employees and their families to the Netherlands. Soon, virtually all Opel civilian passenger car sales were eliminated in favor of military orders. At 6 a.m. on Sept. 1, 1939, Germany launched its blitzkrieg against Poland,_ with troops arriving in Blitz trucks man- ufactured by GM's Opel. The night before, Sloan reportedly told stockholders that GM was "too big" to be impeded by "petty international squabbles:' accord- • ing to a congressional investigation. Still, GM was masquerading as if it did not control its Opel operations. By the summer of 1940, however, a senior GM executive wrote a more honest On The Home Front To undermine FDR's New Deal, GM's Sloan aided anti-Semitic, racist activists. Edwin Black Jewish Telegraphic Agency bile GM's German division, Opel, was making millions supplying its Blitz trucks to the Third Reich, its corporate chief in America was working to undermine the Roosevelt administration. Alfred P. Sloan Jr. despised the emerging American way of life being crafted by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. He hated Roosevelt's New Deal — with its Social Security program, government regulation and support for labor unions. In a 1934 letter to Roosevelt's Industrial Advisory Board, Sloan corn- plained bitterly that the New Deal was attempting to change the rules of busi- ness so "government and not industry [shall] constitute the final authority." Sloan become one of the central behind-the-scenes founders of the American Liberty League, a racist, anti-Semitic, pro-big business group bent on rallying Southern votes against Roosevelt to defeat him in the 1936 elec- tion. The American Liberty League arose out of a series of private gatherings organized in July 1934 by Sloan, DuPont Co. board director Irenee du Pont and other businessmen. The businessmen sought to create a well-financed, seemingly grass-roots coalition that du Pont declared should "include all property owners, the American Legion and even the Ku Klux Klan." Sloan served on the group's national advisory board and was one of a num- Alfred P. Sloan ber of wealthy busi- Jr., 1875-1966 nessmen who each qui- etly donated $10,000 to its activities. The American Liberty League, which raised more money in 1935 than the National Democratic Party, in turn, funded an array of even more fanatical, racist and anti-Jewish groups. One was the Southern Committee to Uphold the Constitution. With help from the du Pont family fortune, the Southern Committee circulated pho- tographs of Eleanor Roosevelt with African-Americans. Sloan sent a $1,000 Nazi soldiers work from a partially camou- flaged Opel Blitz. assessment for internal circulation only. He explained that while "the manage- ment of Adam Opel A.G. is in the hands of German nationals:' in point of fact, GM is still "actively represented by two American executives on the Board of Directors." Despite the facade, throughout the war, GM in the United States controlled all voting stock and could veto or permit all operations. Like any nation at war, however, the Reich alone determined what weapons would be made by its mili- tarized factories. That said, it was GM's decision to remain operating in Germany. As anticipated, Opel's Brandenburg check directly to, the Southern Committee after those pictures were distributed, according to con- gressional testi- mony. The American Liberty League Sloan honored on also financed the Sept. 24, 1945 Sentinels of the Republic, which, in turn, orchestrated incendiary, anti-Semitic letter-writing campaigns and otherwise provoked a backlash against Roosevelt and what was sometimes derisively labeled his "Jew Deal." True, the Sentinels of the Republic bore all the earmarks of a rabble-rous- ing extremist group. But behind it were some of the nation's most affluent and well-heeled, supplying the operating cash and direc- tion. Among them: Sun Oil President Howard Pew; investment banker Alexander Lincoln, who served as the group's president; and the president of Pittsburgh Plate Glass, John Pitcairn. Sloan himself wrote a $1,000 check directly to the Sentinels of the Republic. Only after an April 1936 congressio- nal investigation was Sloan's financial involvement in the Sentinels outed. The GM chief continued to fund and fundraise for another anti-Roosevelt- agitation group, the National Association of Manufacturers. Founded in 1895 as a pro-business organization and still prominent more than 100 years later, NAM sowed anti-union and anti-New Deal discord among Americans in the 1930s through clandestinely owned and operated opinion-molding arms. Roosevelt openly acknowledged that Sloan, GM, the du Ponts and other cor- porate giants hated him for his reforms and his efforts to relieve Depression-era inequities. In his final 1936 campaign speech, the president threw down the gauntlet, shouting to an overflow Madison Square Garden crowd, "They are unanimous in their hate for me — and I welcome their hatred." Roosevelt added that he wanted his Hitler's Carmaker on page 18 "[Corporate giants] are unanimous in their hate for me --- and I welcome their hatred." - President Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1936 first four years to be remembered as an administration where "the forces of self- ishness and of lust for power met their match." Despite the lush opposition funding by Sloan and other affluent anti-New Deal nemeses, Roosevelt was re-elected by a landslide. 1 1 December 7 • 2006 17