Word: pauley
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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After a quick look at Japanese industry, Reparations Commissioner Edwin W. Pauley concluded that present Japanese capacity could be heavily cut and still remain larger than it was before Japan attacked China in 1931. He recommended a reduction in steel production to 2,500,000 tons and complete elimination of ball-bearing manufacture. He thought some caustic acid plants, solvay soda ash plants, and coal-burning electric generators could be picked up and removed from Japan...
...Pauley statement dovetailed with the Chinese view on reparations; in spite of its immediate need for finished products, China would rather take Japanese machinery and thus reduce the chance of a subsequent Japanese revival as a power in east Asia...
...Edwin W. Pauley, President Truman's representative on the Allied Reparations Commission, called the 10 million-ton steel proposal "ridiculous," spoke darkly of revived German cartels. The crucial question: did the Hoover report represent the official U.S. position...
Oilman Edwin Pauley, U.S. member of the three-power Reparations Commission, either had sold a lot of his ideas to Russia's Ivan Maisky and Britain's Sir Walter Monckton, or had found them in substantial agreement with him from the start. The commission's plan read like a Pauley blueprint...
Reparations. Oilman Edwin W. Pauley, the No. 1 U.S. reparations man, said in Washington that Germany should be stripped of all capacity to make armaments, but not completely de-industrialized. When he and his colleagues join the Big Three reparations commission in Moscow, they will probably find the Russians in general agreement with this view. But they will also find a basic, significant difference in the Russian and U.S.-British approach to the reparations problem. The U.S. and Britain regard reparations largely as a means to.an end-the pacification of Germany. The Russians are interested in reparations for the sake...