STÁTNÍ TAJEMNÍK U ŘÍŠSKÉHO PROTEKTORA V ČECHÁCH A NA MORAVĚ, PRAHA, inv. 2186, sig. 109-9/10 Page 75 · 75 of 117
STATE SECRETARY FOR THE RUSSIAN PROTECTOR IN THINGS AND IN MORAVA, PRAGUE, inv. 2186, sig. 109-9/10
English Translation
2 Since, after four years of activity, he had no success at 99% of his nationalities in his homeland, and the countries of Bohemia and Moravia and their inhabitants, despite the war, were increasingly pacified, calm and order in the Protectorate, and were satisfied with the Czechs working undisturbed, being able to earn well and not to fight, there was no sabotage and political demonstrations that Beneš desired, which he would have needed in order to remain interesting with the Allies and valuable in Besug for the revival of a country in the heart of the Empire. The political credit and value of the Czech Emigrant Association in London at that time had fallen to zero for the narrow-minded and seriously jeopardized all future plans of t Czech emigration. In this sit- tion Beneš London had to provide proof of his influence in the Protectorate. Ee had to do something. He took the means of political murder. Since the Pschechen in der Hei-mat did not think of killing the Deputy Reich Protector Reinhard Heydrich su, since he had brought significant advantages to the Czech population, especially in the social and economic fields, Desperatos from Beneš's private guard had to see the murder as a parachute agent. Today we know from the statements of several parachute agents we have drafted that the two murderers Kubiğ and Gabčik were received personally before their departure after the protectorate of Beneš and that the necessary enthusiasm for the assassination attempt was talked into you. The punctures found in original parachute agents, which I gave on the occasion of the reception of the autonomous government on 26 May the year before, to the techechic ministers, continue to prove their guilt for the murder. After several parachute agents had come to know the true mood of the Czech people in their homeland and their attitude towards revolt, murder and sabotage, as well as the opposition of the broad masses of the Tachech people against Beneš, they warned their Czech clients