"Yes, he is. One moment, please, Herr Admiral," von Wachtstein said, and handed the phone to Goltz. "Admiral Canaris."
"Yes. Herr Admiral?" Goltz said, listened a moment, and then said, "I ask the Herr Admiral's indulgence to finish my cup of the Herr Generalleutnant's excellent coffee." There was a pause, and then, chuckling, "I'll tell him that, Herr Admiral. Thank you."
He handed the telephone back to von Wachtstein.
"Admiral Canaris said that if you have excellent coffee, you have the only excellent coffe
e in Wolfsschanze, and it is clearly your duty as an old comrade to tell him where you found it."
"Actually, Peter got that for me in North Africa. He ferried a Heinkel over, and brought that back with him."
"Maybe he wasn't asleep in church after all," Goltz said. "May I suggest you get your son's rank badges as soon as you can, and if you're going to send a letter, write it as soon as possible. Within the hour."
"You're very kind, Josef."
"Not at all. After all, since you served me the last of your African coffee, it is the least I can do."
"Please give my regards to the Admiral," Generalleutnant von Wachtstein said.
[FOUR]
Admiral Canaris was preoccupied. He did not acknowledge Goltz's salute, and although he looked up when Goltz entered, Goltz felt that his mind was far away.
But then, suddenly, he felt Canaris's eyes examining him coldly.
"This won't take long, Standartenf?hrer," Canaris said. "But I have a few things to say to you before you leave for Argentina."
"I will be grateful for any direction the Herr Admiral may wish to give me."
Canaris ignored that too.
"One. I agreed to the elimination of Oberst Frade with great reluctance. But in the end, I decided the risk that he would assume the presidency was unac-ceptable. It was entirely possible, in my judgment, that he might well have had sufficient influence to obtain a declaration of war against us-especially in the period immediately following the seizure of power by the Grupo de Oficiales Unidos. The implications of that should be obvious. Not only does Germany need Argentine food and wool, but as Argentina goes, so will go Uruguay, Paraguay, Chile, and probably Peru."
"I understand, Herr Admiral."
"His elimination, Standartenf?hrer, was not without price. I know the Ar-gentine Officer Corps. While the great majority of Argentine Army officers are sympathetic to the National Socialist cause, they will deeply resent the elimi-nation of Oberst Frade. Not only was he a popular figure, but the Argentines are a nationalist people. They understandably resent an action like that occurring on their soil. Meanwhile, it is to be hoped that in time the necessity of our act will be understood, and later accepted. The goodwill of the Argentine Officer Corps is an asset we cannot afford to squander; and I admonish you, Standartenf?hrer, to do everything possible to avoid further antagonizing them."
"I understand, Herr Admiral."
"For that reason alone, I did not sign your mission order until after the elimination had taken place. I did not want you suspected of any responsibility for it. That, in my judgment, would have been the case had you been in Buenos Aires at the time the elimination was carried out."
"I understand, Herr Admiral."
"Two. Regarding the Reine de la Mer incident. The Portuguese government has protested-has von Ribbentrop gone into this with you?"
The Portuguese vessel Reine de la Mer (really a replacement, replenish-ment vessel for German U-boats) was sunk in Argentine waters-by Ameri-cans, everyone believed but could not directly prove.
"I received a Foreign Ministry briefing, Herr Admiral."
Canaris looked at him for a long moment.
"Well?"
"I was informed that the Portuguese government has in the strongest possi-ble terms protested the sinking to the United States government. I was further informed that the Americans deny any knowledge of this."
"The Portuguese have also protested strongly to the Argentine govern-ment," Admiral Canaris added. "More important, the Spanish Foreign Ministry called in the American ambassador to express their 'grave concerns' about the Reine de la Mer, and made it clear that there would be 'grave consequences' if anything like that happened in the future to a vessel flying the Spanish flag."
"So I was informed, Herr Admiral," Goltz said. "The Spanish said they would regard such an attack as 'an unpardonable act of war.'"