. JUY1,n 94 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Russian Bulk Vs. Blitz THE WEEK IN REVIEW F OR E IG N - - Conflicting Reports A T H OME - - - Following a first week of propa- gandic uncertainty, a second char- acterized by German panzer thrusts, the third week of the Russo-German war appears to have resolved itself into a stalemate battle of Nazi blitz- krieg against a tightened Stalin line. General Keitel's well-oiled military machine had little trouble in smash- ing through Russian outer-defenses. First, the Nazi machine had the ele- menit of surprise in its favor. Against massive, but slow-moving Russian defend'ers, that was an important factor. Secondly, unytil the end of this week, the Nazi drive had nod yet encount- ered the mnain line of Russian die- fenses. The blitz arm had merely traversed the territory annexed by the Soviets since last year. Will Test Stalin Line Now faced with the prospect of rushing the Stalin line, a mnodernized version of Maginot construction, Hit- ler's legions were not covering ground as readily as anticipated Next week will test the strength of taline. - In the Polish fi'ont, the main Nazi column, spurred by the successful en- circlement of the Russians at Minsk', met stubborn resistance along the Berezina River. Soviet commurn- ques boasted of successful counter- attacks. Nazi sources were silent, re- ported only "steady advances on all fronts, gave no specific references as to location or degree of success. Germans Reportect Repulsed In a drive toward Polotsk and Vi- tebsk, intended to disrupt Soviet com-- munications, German columns were reported repulsed wiith heavy losses. On the ,Prut river front, Russian communiques reported the Oermans and Rumanians driven back across the river. Nazi emphasis on the cen- tral front appeared to indicate that the Rumanian satellite had been left pretty well to itself. Communiques Are Vagule Indications of the trend of the battle were given by the nature of the German communiques. Refer- ences to sectors of fightinig were al- ways vague, the few accounts of Nazi successes released gave no facts relative to towns or areas taken. The German version emphasized the de- struction of Russian troops, rather than the occupation of territory. Most grandoise claim of the week came "from Moscow late last week, when the Friday Soviet communique claimed 6,000 dead, wounded and pris- oners in an "unidentified sector." The troops, according to Russian sources, had broken through the defense line and had been trapped and virtu- ally" annihilated. Moscow jubilantly claimed 3,500 Nazi dead and wound- ed, 2,400 prisoners, twenty-eight field guns, eight anti-aircraft guns and other war booty. A Mathematical Anomaly Despite a steadying effect noted in the nature of the war communi- ques, the propaganda war last week was still a mathematical anomaly. Early German accounts estimated the Soviet air might as totalling 4,000 planes. By the ,end of the third week of fighting, Nazi claims of planes shot down totalled well over 7,500.' Typi- cal Nazi communiques: "The Soviet Air Force lost 281 planes yesterday compared to our 11 losses." Casualty claims became more like bidding at an auction than a serious attempt to approximate ,accuracy. Germans last week opened the bid- ding with a tally of 600,000 Russians killed and captured. Moscow followed with 700,000 Germans, then Berlin raised; to 800,000, and the Soviet countered with a claim of 900,000. Fifth Column And Sabotage Pas$ masters in the art of fifth column sabotage, the Germans are now pitted against the world's most highly-touted organized band of sab- ateurs: the die-hard, party line conm- munists. Their actions was not long in regis- tering. Nazi supply trains were mys- teriously derailed, bridges suddenly collapsed, and food and munition stores were set ablaze. At week's end, sporadic guerilla warfare had already broken out in scattered sectors behind the. Ger- man limes. On the other side of the ledger, Russia's long drawn line of defenses was none too strong. In too many sectors the Stalin Line's impregna- bility relies on natural swamp and river barrier: none too strong a chal- lenge to German army engineers. Armistice In Syria T he Axsorphaned ewar inSyria when General Henri Dentz, French high commissioner -of Syria, gave cognizance to the overwhelming odds, called for an armistice to end the bloody British-Free French ad- vance. . In answer to his plea, Britain sent inevitable. Anzac forces were al- ready well inside the suburbs of Bei- rut, held full control over that city's only major radio station, had pierced her main defences at Damour. Vichy therefore authorized Dentz to conclude an armistice on the spot with British and De Gaullists. After aconflictisrite of "lcease to anende Fiday nighat atery De asked British commanders for an armistice conference. French delegates left Beirut early Saturday to meet British conferees. The armistice ended a six-week war which Britain had started to prevent Berlin-controlled Vichy from,/setting up pro-Axis bases in the French mandate. Peru Vs. Ecuador Peru and Ecuador's pint-sized bor- der warfare appeared near settle- ment by week's end, after Argentine, Brazil and the United States had sent stern notes to the warring pow- ers. Source of the recurrent border clashes is a 118-year-old boundary dispute involving a triangular area bounded roughly by the Maranon and Napo rivers and the Continental Divide. A welter of barren mountain- sides and dense jungle, the disputed area yields a little rubber, a few des- iccated human heads and apparently a wealt ofpresige. Spain and the U.S. had tried to settle the dispute, but so far have been able only to set up a status quo line somewhere through the jungle. Later last week Peruvian and Ecua- dorean ministers lent ear to armis- tice proposals from Sumner Welles, agreed to withdraw all troops 15 miles behind the status quo line sep- arating the two halves of the dis- puted area. Many believed that the border clash had bee incited by pro-fascist ele- ments in the two countries. Such a war would put the effectiveness of Pan-American solidarity to a hard test. If the combined efforts of the U.S., Brazil and Argentine can affect a peaceful and permanent settlement,. all will be well. If, however, as has happened many times in the past 118 years, either or both parties refuse arbitration, Pan -Americanism will be virtually reduced to a glib convention slogan. Japan And The AXIS First indlications on how Axis part- ner Japan woud react came last week in a report from Canada. Ichiro Kawasaki, recently appoint- ed Japanese consul to Vancouver, an- nounced: "We're not going to pull Germany's chestnuts out of the fire. We are not committed too deeply to the Axis, and are not vassels of Germany." This could hardly be taken as an official statement, and may well be retracted by the Tokio government, but it is one of the first indications to come out of Nippon. RAF Ra ids On Gemn .With most of Goering's air might concentrated on the Russian front, the RAF had ample opportunity to strike at vulnerable German bases. Hundreds of night bombers roared over the Channel~j dropped their loads on targets in Northern France and Germany, hit hard at the Ger- man naval base at Wilhelmshaven-. Later in the week, the RAP leveled hard blows at Leuna, center of Ger- many's sprawling I. G. Farben, the world's foremost manufacturer of synthetic goods. Secondary target for the British were several naval bases in Italy, in- cluding Naples, Palermo and Syra- Not out of a clear sky as he might have wished, but just as Senator Wheeler last week predicted, Presi- dent Roosevelt delivered a message to Congress Monday revealing the establishment of an armed outpost in Iceland, 700 miles from England. United States troops took over the defense of Iceland upon the invita-- tion of Iceland's Prime Minister Her- mann Jonasson when British forces established there were needed else- where. The act was applauded throughout England. First reaction to the fait accompli was one of wary approval on the part of the non-interventionists in Con- gress: approval inasmuch as these ranks could see good reasons for the move but wished to be assured it* was not one of a series of steps which would ultimately end, in U.S. active participation. During the week, however the President was the target of numer- ous assaults because of his act, com- ing notably from Senators Connally and Taft following meetings of the Senate Naval Affairs Committee, which called on Navy Secretary Knox for a full report of the Navy's doings. Knox, for his part, denied reports that the Navy has already been fight- ing a shooting war, making this state- ment during a closed session with the Committee, and said furthermore that no orders had been given the fleet to shoot under any circumstances, nor has the Atlantic patrol been escort- ing shipmepts of supplies. Sento Wheer wa mn f the weekapredicting etheasceland 0move, being shaken down by England's Churchil for revealimg it,asreplying democracy and demanding the in- vetigation of 1naval affairs leading to th nox grilling. The ArmyDesre General Marshall, Army Chief of Staff, through Senator Robert R. Reynolds of North Carolina, sent to the Senate Thursday three resolu- tions containing what the Army wantfs ruled concerning its men now under arms and those to be inducted. The gist of the resolutions was to lengthen the service time of all men until six months after the end of the period of unlimited national emer- gency and to authorize the sending of draftee troops outside the limits of the Western Hemisphere. Also to Congress last week went I a request from the President for a supplemental appropriation of $4,_- 770,065,588 for the Wa Depatmet, and in the offing was reported an additional request for some seven bil- lions for lease-lend purposes and ship construction. Secretary of the Treasury Morgen- thau worried over the added tax prob- lem brought on by the new requests, but decided that no change in plans would be necessary this calendar year. On The Labor Front President Roosevelt was reported Tuesday as disapproving of the use of the armed forces to break strikes in defense industries. On Thursday the House of Representatives struck from the May bill a clause authdrizng such action plus other restrictions on labor in defense industries. When the House hagI finished its work the five page May bill had been cut down to one paragraph lowering the draft age to 28 and requiring publicity by diraft boards of reasons for defer- ments. The emaciated bill was then passed. A strike of 150,000 soft coal miners was avoided early in the week when operators of bituminous mines in the Southern Appalachian area signed a new two year agreement with the United Mine Workers of the CIO. Major gains were elimination of Lieut. Gen. Ben Lear really started something down Memphis way last week when he catised a battalioa of the Thirty-fifth Division to undergo a long foot march as punishment for whistling at girls in shorts on a golf course and asking Lear himself, un- recognized in mufti, if he didn't need a caddy. Representatives Kilday and Dirk- sen objected to the mass punish- ment on the floor of the House, with Kilday threatening a Congressional investigation, saying that l)e. had wired Lear something to that effect. Lear, located again on a golf course, denied receiving any such telegram. Meanwhile; Acnre oficers all over the country 'supported Lear, saying that the disciplinary measure was justified. Newspapers supported the other side, and he controversy raged on. While all this was going on, soldiers of the battalion nursed sore feet and sunburns and laughed it off, claim- ing they were no sof ties and could take it as well as the next man. In Lansing last Tuesday the Leg- islature met to confirm some ap- pointments and look over a number of bills vetoed by Governor Van Wag- oner, with Wednesday set as the date for adjournment. Wednesday found the House overriding veto after veto and the Senate refusing to cooperate. Republicans in the House, balked in their veto nullification efforts, voted to lay aside the resolution for a Wednesday adjournment and forced cuse. North-South wage differentials and extension of the union shop to Har- lan County. Ky., the Southern group's last stand. - Karl Kessler HELSINKI afer Finnis war vital RIVES MANSTAL~lN LINE ACUIFRERB TRYI iiin defense of Leningrad. -D VE General Area) IN AT TED BYARSA KRNSAD~'LENINGRAD ~ LIMIT OF GERMAN KR N DV N E N 9 8I - AR H S AN L - - ~~ NARVA~ - i. CHEREPO VETS* - -~ - ~~STARAYA RUSSA AOAL -- BOLO7 T - e--cow Thes, and excellent _________-__-__-__river and~ canal facilitios - Eextend TPAL traspotaton Sytm ---A - T- - EZ - Sea to Gulf of Finland. - - Reported 75 miles deep T mAU- - EZENE n some areas. --- VELIKIE LUKIZAOS A..-. fi-? *- 7- PrOTS MOZHAISK- e -*-- jITEBS 6 EDPUOHO -".*.L-T-K- -5 ..--"--V-A-MA - - - DURV .KONIGSBERG - ALUGA '-.. ^ -.VILNA y"LEPEL .*~~~ SMOLENSK PR .... U -- -- B-ORISOV* 'e tute j natural defense- * * - - - -* - --*-- O ILER O S A VLdivisions in France. "- -"- " y --- MINS "'. -R - - - WHITE~ SBIALYSTOK INmTAL NAZI PUSH ES BUSRYANSK. -. -",.- -made rapid progress in - 2)RELJ I tebrrio taen9 -. .,B NOWICZE BOB1RUISkJ "IK4 - N * ----Resistance stiffened atBO R IK'' y '% . 4* ...".-.-.-.old Russian boundary. A o - .P:: .L/ %r4 N_ .~ H IS T ORI1C B E RE ZlN A .a ~GOME NVOZYBKOV - ------- RIVER, where Napoleon suf- ~~ DMITRIEV - -U333U inn -*- REST LITOVSK UK RA. E KURS. - L-- Lea r Goes Gol fing For the German armies pounding at Russian defenses in the central area of the 1,100-mile Russian front, all roads lead to Moscow. The Soviet capital, sixth largest city in the world and the nerve center of a nation of 180,000,000 people, obviously is the goal of the Nazi divisions which have figured in the fighting around Minsk, on the Ber9'. ,urnu Rnivtav 21na1 pipumhpr% m the d'antrnf frnrut cept where they have been built for purely military purposes, good high- ways are rare. Few good bridges exist, but the Germans know how to build their own. * * * * The July climate of the land which the Germans have chosen to -.-.11- - --- *-__ _*SS- - - -