It is not certain what impact the message had on the decision makings for the declaration of war. Anyway, the alleged incident was mentioned in the German declaration of war on France on August 3, 1914, which was presented at 6 pm. The message had already been passed on to Italy and England on August 2 without further verification, although at that time it was probably clear it was a hoax because the Prussian envoy in Munich had telegraphed to the
Chancellor on the evening of August 2 that the report was not confirmed. (alleged arrival of the telegram was only in the afternoon of August 3). The German Ambassador to Belgium used the allegations to claim to the Belgian
Ministry of Foreign Affairs that France would not respect the Belgian neutrality guaranteed by the
Treaty of London, and that it must therefore agree to Germany's ultimatum to allow troops to enter and temporarily occupy the country to repel a French invasion. Since Germany had already
invaded Luxembourg and since Germany's ultimatum in itself was a violation of
international law, the Belgian government rejected the claim, and the
German invasion of Belgium commenced. Chancellor
Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg refers to the alleged attack on August 4: "Gentlemen, we are now in self-defense; and necessity knows no law." "Nuremberg" was, however, not explicitly mentioned in his
Reichstag speech. Bethmann Hollweg spoke only of "French air raids on southern Germany". Emperor
Wilhelm II remarked in relation to the alleged incident on 2 August 1914: "...now the French have started the war and violate international law with their bomb dropping aircraft." Rumors of aircraft attacks on railways in
Wesel and
Karlsruhe followed, eventually all proved to be hoaxes. An official clarification was never issued. After the end of
World War I the "Aircraft of Nuremberg" became part of the acrimonious
war guilt debate. To make confusion complete an article in
The New York Times from 1916 reports of a telegraphic message of 1 August on a bombing of
Neuenburg am Rhein. Newspaper reports subsequently turned "Neuenburg" into "Nuremberg". ==See also==