Chapter 32: Munich Conference (2)
The Sudetenland issue reached its peak in September. On September 13th, there was an uprising by Germans in Sudetenland that was suppressed within a day.
There was even martial law, I heard.
While inspecting an army clothing factory, I received this report and thought, 'The inevitable has come.'
The Munich Conference1 will begin in a few days.
And the world will once again learn.
How untrustworthy the international arbiters, Britain and France, truly are.
Perhaps I should try to delay the outbreak of the World War while I'm at it.
After much deliberation, I requested a visit from the Polish Ambassador to Korea, Tadeusz Romer2.
The Polish Ambassador, knowing I was the de facto ruler of this country, did not refuse my request.
