Next would come the turn of those French colonies, the cession of which to Great Germany was foreshadowed by Tannenberg, op. cit., p. 313.
| Square Kilometres. | Native Population. | |
|---|---|---|
| Morocco | 416,000 | 3,000,000 |
| French Congo | 1,439,000 | 9,800,000 |
| Madagascar | 585,000 | 3,232,000 |
| Mayotta and the Comoros Islands | 2,000 | 97,000 |
| Reunion | 2,000 | 173,000 |
| Obok and dependencies (East Africa) | 120,000 | 208,000 |
| Indo-China | 803,000 | 16,990,000 |
| French Islands of Oceania | 24,000 | 88,000 |
| Making a total of | 3,391,000 | 33,588,000 |
The combination of Panislamism and the so-called Chinophile movement would prepare for the German seizures in Asia. As we have seen (p. 99), the Berlin plan consists first in arming China powerfully enough under the orders of German officers, to expel the Japanese from Kiao-Chau and from the province of Shantung. Germany would thus inflict a first and striking vengeance on the Empire of the Rising Sun. But that would not be all. The policy which Berlin foreshadows with regard to China is identical with the one which it is now pursuing in Turkey. If Germany armed China, it would be under conditions such that the Celestial Empire would have to submit to the strict influence of Pangermany. Tannenberg (op. cit., p. 321) tells us that the outcome of these tactics would be the establishment of a vast zone of special German influence on the whole lower course of the Yangtse-Kiang and the Hoangho, that is to say, over that vast portion of China which forms the hinterland of Kiao-Chau, making a total of about 750,000 square kilometres and 50 millions of inhabitants.
Tannenberg finally gives an exact enumeration of the various German protectorates which would be established in the southern part of South America, where dwell many German colonists, whose aggressive tendencies are already plain enough. “Germany,” says Tannenberg literally, “takes under her protection the republics of Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay, the southern third of Bolivia, so far as it belongs to the basin of the Rio de la Plata, together with that part of southern Brazil, in which German culture is dominant” (op. cit., p. 321).
| Square Kilometres. | Population. | |
|---|---|---|
| Argentina | 2,950,000 | 7,091,000 |
| Chili | 757,000 | 3,415,000 |
| Uruguay | 187,000 | 1,225,000 |
| Paraguay | 253,000 | 800,000 |
| ⅓ Bolivia | 500,000 | 666,000 |
| ⅕ Brazil | 1,700,000 | 5,000,000 |
| Making a total of | 6,347,000 | 18,197,000 |
“German South America,” concludes Tannenberg, “will provide for us in the temperate zone a colonial region where our emigrants will be able to settle as farmers. Chili and Argentina will preserve their language and their autonomy. But we shall require that in the schools German shall be taught as a second language. Southern Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay are countries of German culture. German will there be the national tongue” (op. cit., p. 337).
Even during the war, Germany has laid the train for some of these explosions. The Chicago Tribune has learned that the Committee of Foreign Affairs for the Senate of the United States possesses the proofs of German intrigues carried on in the American hemisphere in defiance of the Monroe doctrine (Le Temps, 16th February, 1916). These official Pangerman machinations, proved up to the hilt and entirely in harmony with Tannenberg’s American plan of campaign, demonstrate the identity of his colonial views with those of the government of Berlin.
To sum up, the result of the Pangerman programme for countries outside of Europe would be to assure to Germany, under the form of colonies, protectorates, or zones of special influence:
| Square Kilometres. | Population. | |
|---|---|---|
| In Asia | 4,753,000 | 83,490,000 |
| In Africa | 8,906,000 | 46,850,000 |
| In Oceania | 2,314,000 | 38,841,000 |
| In America | 6,347,000 | 18,197,000 |
| Making a total of | 22,320,000 | 187,378,000 |
Germany, which occupied or controlled, at the beginning of 1916, in Europe, 3,576,237 square kilometres, including the Empire, and more than 160 millions of inhabitants, would then have a universal domain of influence reaching over 25,896,237 square kilometres and 347 millions of inhabitants. This figure includes at the utmost 90 millions of Germans; therefore, these will exercise their supremacy over 257 millions of non-Germans.