NĚMECKÉ STÁTNÍ MINISTERSTVO PRO ČECHY A MORAVU, PRAHA (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 711, sig. 110-4/562 Page 5 · 5 of 102
GERMAN STATE MINISTRY FOR CHECH AND MORAV, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 711, sig. 110-4562
English Translation
- 3 - 3 he said that Sádecký did not deal with General Rychtrmoe and the Secretary General Mohapl. Nevertheless, one had to take care of Sá Decký for existential reasons. It would be best if he were accepted into social assistance, where he had to work under a more stringent regime. However, he (Beenert) doubted that Sárdecký would agree with Karel Chalupa. On the NG, Bienert said that among the employees there was a total distress because they were afraid of Rychtrmoc and Mcl ipl. The new regime was described as a "field weaver" regime (kaparalský režim). Some officials had tried to get to him (Beenert), but he had not received it because NG was a departmental matter of the Ministry of People's Enlightenment. He (Beenert) observes the negotiations of Benezh in Moscow. He suspects that Benezh's position in Moscow is miserable because he has to retreat in many questions and clear positions in favour of the communists. As he (Benert) Benezh knows, he believes that Benesh will try to involve the Communists in some way. But they know him from the past, so that he will not succeed, the problem Benech will only become sharper when he arrives in Kaschau. One must then expect that Benesch will call his government the only competent one in this area. He forgets, however, that what concerns the political and state-law side in Bohemia and Moravia is the only legal government in Prague, whose legal president Dr. Há c h a would be. Further consideration must be given to the fact that Slovakia, according to the will of the Slovak nation, would be an independent state, which had its properly elected president and his government in Bratislava. So Benesch would not be in the territory of a state that might have been occupied by the Germans, but in a completely independent territory that would have nothing in common with the former ČsR. The Benesh government was only an improvisation in the occupied territory without the consent of the population,' and it was already clear today that the population of the territories occupied by the Bolsheviks was against him (Benesh). He (Beenert) felt that if Benesch became aware, it would be better not to deal with him, so that he would not be shown by himself ways of propaganda attacks.