This book promises to illuminate the foreign policy of the
Roosevelt administration during the rise of Hitler's Germany. It is
based on the heretofore unpublished notes of J. F. Montgomery
(1878-1954), U.S. ambassador ("Minister") to Hungary before World
War II. In Budapest, Montgomery quickly made friends with nearly
everyone who mattered in the critical years of Hitler's takeover
and preparation for World War II. His circle included Admiral
Horthy, the Regent of Hungary, subsequent prime ministers, foreign
ministers, members of both houses of parliament, as well as fellow
diplomats from all over Europe. In addition, as an avid player of
golf and bridge, he had an active social life that was
interconnected with a large circle of influential friends in the
United States.
Minister Montgomery dictated the full content of each and every
important political discussion to his secretary shortly after
returning to his chancery in Budapest. He assiduously collected,
recorded, and organized the information that he gained through
these key relationships. His "Conversations" as he called them,
represent an unusual depth of politically valuable information in
this complex and important period of time.
It is also valuable to understand how the U.S. minister
representing Franklin Delano Roosevelt at the Budapest outpost came
to appreciate and to some degree even share the value system of
interwar Hungary.
Publishing the confidential "Conversations" of Minister
Montgomery, along with a selection of his correspondence, will also
shed some unusual light on the perception of Hitler's ascent by the
United States, and how this perception was shaped and channeled by
one key U.S. diplomat.
General
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