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Updated: May 7, 2025
Moreover, it is by no means clear why the German Press should laud M. Greindl as a gentleman of German origin. If this be true it would probably explain everything which deserves explanation in the said documents, and would probably account for the intimate, confidential treatment which M. Greindl received at the hands of German officials.
I give illustrations from Berlin, Paris, and London. On May 30, 1908, Baron Greindl, Belgian Ambassador at Berlin, writes as follows: On May 24, 1907, the Comte de Lalaing, Belgian Ambassador at London, writes:
The story appears to have emanated from Baron Greindl, who was the Belgian Minister at Berlin in 1911. He had been completely misinformed, no doubt in that capital, and there is no truth whatever in what he had been told about what he called the "perfidious and naïf revelations" of the British Military Attaché at Brussels.
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