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Cándido
Aguilar and gave him the proposal a month after the message was sent. Aguilar was sympathetic, but both he and Carranza eventually turned Germany down, mainly due to the premature release. Mexico feared
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into aiding them with the attack. The telegram was left vague and
Eckardt was told to work out the details himself as he presented them to Carranza. He was also asked to call Carranza's attention to the
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newspaper overlapping pro-German sentiment with
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to reverse their stance. These German-centric reports initially led
Eckardt to believe the
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Despite the discovery of the telegram by the United States and
Britain, Eckardt approached
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and the possibility that it may further attempts to compel the
British into peace.
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in 1886, as a member of the German diplomatic service. From 1899 he was posted to
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on
January 16, 1917. The message was first sent to the German ambassador to the
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and
Eckardt's unsuccessful attempts to coax them out of it.
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on its way from
Bernstorff to Eckardt and was decoded by
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publications, which he described as "pedant mediocrity".
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Emigrants from the
Russian Empire to the German Empire
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in 1914, German sentiment towards the new President,
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Eckardt was previously the German ambassador to the
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324:"Die ReichsgrĂĽndung Bedeutete Einen Einschnitt"
320:, WibeMedia.com, retrieved September 9, 2006.
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360:History of the foreign relations of Germany
74:Learn how and when to remove this message
326:(Nyary, Josef), updated July 25, 2005.
265:myth. Further confusion resulted in a
318:"Mexican-German Relations, 1910-1918"
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345:Ambassadors of Germany to Montenegro
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219:Johann von Bernstorff
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