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Germany, The Next Republic? by Carl W. (Carl William) Ackerman
page 33 of 237 (13%)
September I entered Kovno, the important Russian fortress, eight days
after the army captured it. I was escorted, together with other
foreign correspondents, from one fort to another and shown what the 42
cm. guns had destroyed. I saw 400 machine guns which were captured and
1,300 pieces of heavy artillery. The night before, at a dinner party,
the officers had argued against the United States because of the
shipment of supplies to Russia. They said that if the United States
had not aided Russia, that country would not have been able to resist
the invaders. I did not know the facts, but I accepted their
statements. When I was shown the machine guns, I examined them and
discovered that every one of the 400 was made at Essen or Magdeburg,
Germany. Of the 1,300 pieces of artillery every cannon was made in
Germany except a few English ship guns. Kovno was fortified by
_German_ artillery, not American.

A few days later I entered Vilna; this time I was moving with the
advance column. At dinner that night with General von Weber, the
commander of the city, the subject of American arms and ammunition was
again brought up. The General said they had captured from the Russians
an American machine gun. He added that they were bringing it in from
Smorgon to show the Americans. When it reached us the stamp, written
in English, showed that it was manufactured by Vickers Limited,
England. Being unable to read English, the officer who reported the
capture thought the gun was made in the United States.

In Roumania last December I followed General von Falkenhayn's armies to
the forts of Bucharest. On Thanksgiving Day I crossed by automobile
the Schurduck Pass. The Roumanians had defended, or attempted to
defend, this road by mounting armoured guns on the crest of one of the
mountain ranges in the Transylvanian Alps. I examined a whole position
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