Stalin’s
Secret Agents: The Subversion of Roosevelt’s Government
by David Martin
DCDave.com
Recently
by David Martin: Watergate
Lies Multiplied
Late in 2012
two notable books were published that deal with the outcome of World
War II and the Cold War. Each was written by a pair of authors.
One is long; the other is relatively short. If you only read the
long one, and prior to having read it you knew little more about
the subject than the average, college-educated American, you might
find it persuasive. If you also read the short one, though, you
will realize that virtually everything that the long one has to
say about the fruits of World War II and the Cold War is wrong.
The two books
we are talking about are Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznicks massive
Untold
History of the United States and the very effective antidote
to it, Stalins
Secret Agents: The Subversion of Roosevelts Government
by M. Stanton Evans and Herbert Romerstein. The impression we
would get from Untold History is that the Soviet Union, whose
non-aggression pact with Nazi Germany allowed the two countries
to fire the opening shots of World War II by attacking and carving
up Poland, was a passive victim of the war and of the Cold War aftermath.
Having suffered far more than their Western allies in the war, Stalin
and the Soviet Union he controlled with an iron fist, according
to Stone and Kuznick, wanted nothing more than to rebuild and to
defend themselves from renewed threats from the West.
We should remind
ourselves, though, that wars are not natural phenomena like hurricanes
and earthquakes. They are political events, fought for political
objectives. And Joseph Stalin was not just the ruler of the Soviet
Union. He was the leader of the extremely virulent and aggressive
worldwide Communist movement. By any objective measure, the big
winners in World War II were the Soviet Union and the Communist
movement. The Soviet Union became larger, swallowing up the Baltic
countries and taking part of the territory of Poland. Not just Poland,
the preservation of whose independence was the supposed casus
belli of WW II for the West, but a number of previously independent
Eastern European countries, including half of Germany, fell under
the boot of Soviet-controlled Communist tyranny. Furthermore, the
stage was set by the war for the Communist takeover of China and
the northern part of Korea.
What we learn
from Evans and Romerstein is that the Soviet war and post-war gains
at the Wests expense were hardly an accident. They had ample
assistance from a Roosevelt administration that was thoroughly laced
with Stalins agents. The agents were sufficiently numerous
and highly placed that almost any theft of secrets they might have
accomplished was small potatoes compared to their influence upon
policy. A central message of the book never explicitly stated
is that there was an international conspiracy to, in effect,
overthrow Western civilization. (The authors would never point it
out, but readers of the book will notice that a high percentage
of the people involved were Jewish. Readers of this review will
notice, as well, that some of the key brave people sounding the
alarm over this subversion were also Jewish.) Not only was the U.S.
government penetrated at the highest level, but this organized Communist
network also apparently controlled key positions in the U.S. opinion-molding
business.
Nowhere was
the subversive influence more important than at the pivotal Yalta Conference. It
was there that Roosevelt made the major concessions that put the
Red imprint on post-war Europe and opened the door for them in East
Asia. One of the reasons we were so conciliatory to Stalin was supposedly
that we needed the Soviet quid pro quo of their entry into the war
against Japan 90 days after the defeat of Germany. But, according
to Evans and Romerstein, Soviet agents of influence within the Roosevelt
government played a key role in keeping intelligence estimates away
from FDR that the Japanese were already so badly beaten that the
Soviet assistance would not be needed. Perhaps no agent was more
important than the notorious Alger Hiss. Here we pick up the Evans-Romerstein
narrative early in Chapter 3 entitled See Alger Hiss about
this. Bear in mind that FDRs new secretary of state,
Edward Stettinius Jr., was newly appointed and had very little experience
in foreign affairs. He was, in short, in over his head:
At a White
House briefing a month before the conference opened, Stettinius
wrote, FDR said he wasnt overly concerned about having any
particular staffers with him at Yalta, but qualified this with
two exceptions. The President, said Stettinius, did
not want to have anyone accompany him in an advisory capacity,
but he felt that Messrs. Bowman and Alger Hiss ought to go (Authors
footnote: Dr. Isaiah Bowman of Johns Hopkins University, who had
been involved in the Versailles conference after World War I and
was a Stettinius adviser. He did not go to Yalta, though Alger
Hiss would do so.) No clue was provided by Stettinius or apparently
by FDR himself, as to the reason for these choices.
Alger Hiss,
it will be recalled, was a secret Communist serving in the wartime
State Department, identified as a Soviet agent by ex-Communist
Whittaker Chambers, a former espionage courier for Moscows
intelligence bosses. This identification led to a bitter quarrel
that divided the nation into conflicting factions and would do
so for years to follow. The dispute resulted in the 1950 conviction
of Hiss for perjury when he denied the Chambers charges under
oath, denials that ran contrary to the evidence then and to an
ever-increasing mass of data later.
Though Hiss
is now well-known to history, in January 1945 he was merely one
State Department staffer among many, and of fairly junior status
a mid-level employee who wasnt even head of a division
(third ranking in the branch where he was working). It thus seems
odd that Roosevelt would single him out as someone who should
go to Yalta the more curious as its reasonably clear
that FDR had never dealt with Hiss directly (a point confirmed
by Hiss in his own memoirs).
At all events,
Hiss did go to Yalta, one of a small group of State Department
staffers there, and would play a major role in the proceedings.
Such a role would have been in keeping with the Presidents
expressed desire to have him at the conference. Its not,
however, in keeping with numerous books and essays that deal with
Yalta or Cold War studies discussing Hiss and his duel with Chambers.
In standard
treatments of the era, the role of Hiss at Yalta tends to get
downplayed, if not ignored entirely. Usually, when his presence
is mentioned, hes depicted as a modest clerk/technician
working in the background, whose only substantive interest was
in the founding of the United Nations (which occurred some three
months later). Otherwise, his activity at the summit is glossed
over as being of no great importance.
This writer
can vouch for the standard treatment of Hiss at Yalta from his reading
on the subject. The name Alger Hiss does not even appear
on the Yalta Conference Wikipedia page, a lacuna that
some reader of this essay and hopefully of Stalins Secret
Agents, at least of Chapter 3, will be able to correct. At the
very least, Hiss, as a Soviet agent, was in place to pass along
to the opposition what the U.S. negotiating position would be. Furthermore,
with our foreign policy first team not even present at Yalta, in
express accordance with Roosevelts wishes, the way was clear
for the influence that Hiss wielded, which the authors go on to
describe in their chapter.
The Yalta story
was played out over and over in the late Roosevelt and early Truman
years. Yugoslavia was betrayed by agents who furnished misinformation
about the nature of the anti-Communist
resistance to the Nazis. Chiang Kai-shek was betrayed in China
in a similar manner. Similar misinformation was given about the
Katyn Forest massacre of
virtually the entire Polish officer corps by Stalins forces,
all to the post-war benefit of the Communists. Perhaps the most
disgraceful episode of the post-war period, Operation Keelhaul,
the return of millions of former residents of the Soviet Union to
face almost certain death, was another of the fruits of this betrayal.
An even greater potential atrocity, the Morgenthau Plan for the
destruction of the German economy, was only narrowly averted by
the resistance raised by Trumans anti-Communist cabinet members
like Secretary of State James Byrnes, Secretary of War Henry Stimson,
Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal, and others. It was the brain
child of Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthaus (an FDR
crony) top assistant, Harry Dexter White. White, like Hiss, had
been identified as a Communist agent to FDR aide Adolf Berle in
1939. Henry Wallace, FDRs vice-president before Truman, who
ran for president on the Progressive Party ticket in 1948 and darling
of Stone and Kuznick, promised in the campaign that White would
be his treasury secretary if he were elected president.
Also named
by Chambers as a Soviet agent along with White and Hiss, was White
House aide, Lauchlin Currie, the patron of Owen Lattimore, who would
play a key role in the loss of China to the Communists. Not named
by Chambers was the most powerful of FDRs aides promoting
Soviet interests in the Roosevelt administration, his assistant
president, Harry Hopkins. Hopkins
name, however, would turn up later among the Venona intercepts as
a likely Soviet agent, as would the name of his powerful protégé
on the staffs of both Roosevelt and Truman, David Niles.
Among the key
sources for the revelations of Evans and Romerstein are the aforementioned
early revelations of Chambers as recounted in his 1952 book, Witness,
Chambers Congressional testimony in 1948, the testimony
of another Communist defector, Elizabeth Bentley, in the same year,
and the files of the FBI and KGB files made accessible since the
fall of the Soviet Union.
How Could
Roosevelt Subvert His Own Government?
For all the
extremely valuable information in Stalins Secret Agents
it falls crucially short in the most fundamental information that
it fails to impart. We see the vital missed opportunity early in
Chapter 6, The First Red Decade:
In 1939,
shocked by the Hitler-Stalin pact and otherwise disenchanted,
Chambers decided to break openly with Moscow and tell the authorities
what he knew about the infiltration. In September 1939, accompanied
by anti-Communist writer-editor Isaac Don Levine, he had a lengthy
talk with Assistant Secretary of State Adolf Berle, then doubling
as a specialist on security matters for the White House.
Chambers
would later repeat his story to the FBI, at legislative hearings,
and to federal courtrooms, as well as in a bestselling memoir,
becoming in the process the most famous and in some ways most
important witness in American Cold War history. However, its
evident from the record that much of what he had to say was revealed
in this initial talk with Berle. And what he would reveal, both
then and later, was an astonishing picture of subversion, reaching
into numerous government agencies and rising to significant levels.
Specifically,
Chambers would name a sizable group of suspects then holding federal
jobs, most notably Alger Hiss, and provide examples of activity
by official U.S. staffers working on behalf of Moscow. Judging
by Berles notes and a parallel set recorded by Levine
it was a shocking tale that should have set alarm bells
ringing and led quickly to corrective action. But so far as anyone
was ever able to tell, no bells were rung or action taken. It
appears, indeed, that virtually nothing would be done about the
Chambers data for years thereafter.
Berle himself
would later downplay the Chambers information, saying the people
named were merely members of a study group and thus
not a security danger. But this version was belied by Berles
own notes about his talk with Chambers. The heading he gave these
wasnt Marxist study group, but Underground
Espionage Agents. As Chambers would comment in his memoir,
he was obviously describing not a Marxist study group, but
a Communist conspiracy. And the people named would fully
live up to that description. (pp. 78-79)
Talk about
an astonishing picture! Consider, please, the kicker in the foregoing
passage and its passive voice: But so far as anyone was ever
able to tell, no bells were rung or action taken.
Who didnt
ring the bells or take the action? Certainly it was not Berle:
When I called
on Berle a couple of weeks later, he indicated to me that the
President had given him the cold shoulder after hearing his account
of the Chambers disclosures. Although I learned later, from two
different sources who had social relations with Berle, that Roosevelt,
in effect, had told him to "go jump in a lake" upon
the suggestion of a probe into the Chambers charges, I do not
recall hearing that exact phrase from Berle. To the best of my
recollection, the President dismissed the matter rather brusquely
with an expletive remark on this order: "Oh, forget it, Adolf."
The writer
is none other than Isaac Don Levine, the man who set up the Chambers-Berle
meeting and took part in it. Its on pages 197-198 of his extraordinary
1975 book, Eyewitness
to History: Memoirs and Reflections of a Foreign Correspondent for
Half a Century.
One would do
better reading Wikipedia
than reading Evans and Romerstein on this question:
Berle found
Chambers' information tentative, unclear, and uncorroborated.
He took the information to the White House, but the President
dismissed it, to which Berle made little if any objection. Berle
kept his notes, however (later, evidence during Hiss' perjury
trials).
From Levine
we gather that that characterization of Berles initial reaction
is completely wrong no matter what Berle said later in protection
of his party and his former boss, but at least it tells us that
Berle informed the president. Even Ann
Coulter, of all people, is better on this point than these co-authors:
Berle urgently
reported to President Roosevelt what Chambers had said, including
the warning about Hiss. The president laughed and told Berle to
go f--- himself. No action was ever taken against Hiss. To the
contrary, Roosevelt promoted Hiss to the position of trusted aide
who would go on to advise him at Yalta. Chambers's shocking and
detailed reckoning of Soviet agents in high government positions
eventually made its way to William C. Bullitt, former ambassador
to Russia and confidant of the president. Alarmed, Bullitt brought
the news to Roosevelt's attention. He, too, was laughed off.
What Evans-Romerstein
and Coulter have in common is the short shrift they give to Levine.
Coulter air brushes Levine out of the picture completely, never
naming the friend who set up the meeting with Berle,
that it was he who told Bullitt, and not even mentioning that there
was a third party present at the Chambers-Berle meeting. Of course,
she has no reference to Levines book, but neither do Evans
and Romerstein.
Now consider
what the latter have told us about FDR handpicking the man to go
with him to Yalta when, as they relate it, there is no indication
of how he would even know who Alger Hiss was
except that he
had been informed very authoritatively that the man was a spy for
the Soviet Union. Holy treason, Batman!
It is very,
very hard to come to any other conclusion than that these two men,
who could well be described as Americas leading surviving
Red hunters, are covering up for Franklin D. Roosevelt. That impression
is greatly reinforced by Evans in a presentation on the book that
he made to The Heritage Foundation, which one can listen to here.
He is asked specifically about Roosevelts complicity in permitting
his government to be laced by Communist agents, and Evans attributes
it all to FDRs naiveté. Perhaps someone should have also asked
him about the failure of the FBI in all this, the people who have
the national responsibility for counter-espionage. But the FBI ultimately
works for the president. He had the power to make them stand down,
and there is every indication that that is just what he did.
Further indication
that the authors are covering up for Roosevelt is their failure
to mention at all the Soviet defector Walter Krivitsky. Krivitsky,
as former chief of Soviet intelligence in Europe, very likely knew
a good deal more about Soviet infiltration of the U.S. government
than Chambers did. But instead of being embraced and welcomed by
the Roosevelt administration, he was harassed by them. In February
of 1941 he was found dead of a gunshot wound to the head in a Washington,
DC, hotel room. The District police ruled the death a suicide after
only a cursory investigation. Who would have had the power to, in
effect, make the DC police stand down on this one?
The authors
do talk about the very well connected Soviet spy, Michael Straight,
who as publisher of The New Republic hired Henry Wallace
as editor, but they have no reference to the extremely revealing
biography Last
of the Cold War Spies: The Life of Michael Straight,
by Australian journalist Roland Perry. Perhaps that is because
Perry, like Levine in his similarly ignored book, has a lot to say
about Walter Krivitsky. Perry even suggests that Straight, a family
friend of the Roosevelts working for the State Department
at the time and feeling threatened, was involved in Krivitskys
assassination. (See the review by Wes Vernon.)
Another
Look at Harry Hopkins
Had the authors
not neglected to tell us that Berle had fully briefed FDR in 1939
on the Soviet infiltration of his government, we would read the
entire book in a different light, but particularly their Chapter
9, Friends in High Places. That chapter talks about
Harry Hopkins, Lauchlin Currie, and David Niles, all members of
the White House staff. Roosevelt had been informed by Berle that
Currie was a Soviet agent. Neither Hopkins nor Niles had been named
by Chambers (Niles was not yet in the White House), but Hopkins
was so aggressively pro-Soviet and pro-Stalin that one has to wonder
how FDR could not have known what would later be indicated by the
Venona intercepts and by Soviet defectors. To their credit, in Chapter
9 the authors reveal virtually all the evidence that I have in Harry Hopkins Hosted Soviet Spy
Cell that Hopkins was a Soviet agent. Unfortunately, they
dont include what is fresh and new in that article, that is,
the fact that he hosted that spy cell while he was working at Roosevelts
right hand. Its a shame, because it would have strengthened
their argument considerably.
Hopkins, like
Alger Hiss, was also a very important figure in the sell-out to
Stalin and world Communism at Yalta. The following passage is particularly
revealing:
Hopkinss
pro-Soviet leanings would be on further display in the Yalta records,
where his handwritten comments are available for viewing. Though
seriously ill at the time of the meeting, he continued to ply
his influence with FDR, who himself was mortally sick and susceptible
to suggestion in ways that we can only guess at. After FDR had
made innumerable concessions to Stalin, there occurred a deadlock
on the issue of reparations. At this point, Hopkins
passed a note to Roosevelt that summed up the American attitude
at Yalta. Mr. President, this said, the Russians
have given in so much at this conference I dont think we
should let them down. Let the British disagree if they want
and continue their disagreement at Moscow [in subsequent
diplomatic meetings] (Emphasis added by Evans and Romerstein).
One may search
the Yalta records at length and have trouble finding an issue
of substance on which the Soviets had given in to
FDR the entire thrust of the conference, as Roosevelt loyalist
[Robert]
Sherwood acknowledged, being in the reverse direction.
It was certainly
very late in the day by that point, but FDR for a long time had
every reason to know what he was getting from his principal aide
Hopkins.
The Tell-Tale
Media Role
Chapter 11
is promisingly titled The Media Megaphone. Unfortunately,
we get only a pecking around the periphery of the sell-out to the
Soviet Union during the Roosevelt era. We learn that I.F. Stone
with his I.F. Stones Weekly was a Soviet agent and
that two of the staffers for one of Oliver Stones heroes,
columnist Drew Pearson,
were Communist agents, those being the disreputable David
Karr and Andrew Older. Karr was also a speech writer for Henry
Wallace. We also learn a little bit about Communist propagandists
like Edgar Snow, who was even able to get published in the generally
conservative pages of the Saturday Evening Post. His
most famous journalistic effort, and basis for his reputation, was
his 1938 book, Red
Star Over China, which was for the most part an unabashed
commercial on behalf of the Communist Mao Tse-tung. They also
tell us about Michael Straight and his New Republic and remind
us of the selling job for Stalin that the infamous Walter Duranty had done
in the pages of The New York Times.
When Evans
and Romerstein talk about Duranty, though, they are even easier
on those to whom he reported than they are on the man to whom Hopkins,
Currie, and Niles reported:
Duranty arrived
in Russia in August 1921, at the same time as [Armand]
Hammer, and over the next decade would establish himself as
the dean of Western journalists in the country. After a brief
early period of hostility, he would experience a complete conversion
and become an avid promoter of the Soviet system. Why he did so
is uncertain. It doesnt appear he was an ideological Communist,
as he reportedly had no ideology at all beyond a kind of Nietzschean
will-to-power view that didnt mind dictators and apparently
hardened him to scenes of suffering. This would have been useful
emotional armor in the Soviet Union in the 1930s, when the suffering
was intense and would get more so. (p. 73)
What motivated
Duranty? Perhaps Dr. James Mace can clear things up for us a little:
In the 1980s
during the course of my own research on the Ukrainian Holodomor
[famine] I came across a most interesting document in the U.S.
National Archives, a memorandum from one A.W. Kliefoth of the
U.S. Embassy in Berlin dated June 4, 1931. Duranty dropped in
to renew his passport. Mr. Kliefoth thought it might be of possible
interest to the State Department that this journalist, in whose
reporting so much credence was placed, had told him that, "
'in agreement with The New York Times and the Soviet authorities,'
his official dispatches always reflect the official opinion of
the Soviet government and not his own."
Note that
the American consular official thought it particularly important
for his superiors that the phrase, in agreement with The New
York Times and the Soviet authorities, was a direct quotation.
This was precisely the sort of journalistic integrity that was
awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1932. "A Tale
of Two Journalists: Walter Duranty, Gareth Jones, and the Pulitzer
Prize," Ukraine List 203, July 15, 2003.
What a novel
idea? Walter Duranty, like Harry Hopkins, Lauchlin Currie, and David
Niles, was doing just what his boss expected him to do, or what
their mutual bosses expected them to do. Were they so inclined,
the authors could have done a much better job of informing their
readers had they availed themselves of this writers The
New York Times and Joseph Stalin. They could also
have benefitted from reference to Freda Utleys The
China Story and Joseph Keeleys The
China Lobby Man: The Story of Alfred Kohlberg. Evans and
Romerstein talk about the influence of the Communist infiltrated
Institute of Pacific Relations. But had they referenced these books,
they would have permitted us to see the powerful role that The
New York Times and the New York Herald Tribune played
in spreading pro-Communist IPR propaganda:
Both Freda
Utley and Joseph Keeley, the author of the Kohlberg biography,
stress the near monopoly the IPR and their pro-Communist friends
had over the book publishing and reviewing industry in the United
States as it related to China in the critical period of the 1940s.
This is Utley, page 144:
In America,
during the 1940s, the union of the friends of the Chinese
Communists enjoyed what amounted to a closed shop in the book-reviewing
field. Theirs were almost the only views expressed in such important
publications as the New York Times and New York Herald
Tribune Sunday book supplements and the Saturday Review
of Literature publications which make or break books.
(The Sunday Book Review supplement of the New York
Times seems in recent months to have discarded many of its
old reviewers in favor of others without Communist sympathies.)
If one looks through their back numbers, one finds that it was
rare that any book on China was not given to a small group of
reviewers. Week after week, and year after year, most books
on China, and on the Far East, were reviewed by Owen Lattimore,
John K. Fairbank, Edgar Snow, Nathaniel Peffer, Theodore White,
Annallee Jacoby, Richard Lauterbach, and others with the same
point of view.
Appendix
H of the Keeley book on Kohlberg is a listing of the books on
China reviewed by The New York Times Book Review and the
New York Herald Tribune over the 1945-1950 period. Altogether,
31 such books were reviewed by The Times and 36 by the
Herald Tribune. Lattimore was the leading reviewer, racking
up 12 altogether. Eleven of those were in the Herald Tribune,
but the most influential one in the whole list might have
been his glowing 1947 review in The Times on
The Unfinished Revolution in China by Israel
Epstein. Epstein later defected to Communist China and became
its leading propagandist and a high level official in the government.
All four of Lattimores books over the period were reviewed
by both publications. One may assume that the reviews were favorable;
two of them were by Snow and an equal number by Fairbank. Overlooked
by Utley in her list of reviews were five in the Herald Tribune
by Lattimores wife, Eleanor. The
Institute of Pacific Relations and the Betrayal of China
At this point
something I have noted before, the observations
of the son-in-law of President Roosevelt, Colonel Curtis Dall, as
relayed by Henry Makow, might shed some
useful light:
Dall maintained
a family loyalty but could not avoid several disheartening conclusions
in his book [FDR:
My Exploited Father-in-Law, 1970]. He portrays the legendary
president not as a leader but as a quarterback with
little actual power. The coaching staff consisted
of a coterie of handlers (advisers like Louis Howe,
Bernard Baruch and Harry Hopkins) who represented the international
banking cartel. For Dall, FDR ultimately was a traitor manipulated
by World Money and motivated by conceit and personal
ambition.
In that picture,
big media with The New York Times in the forefront during
the Roosevelt-Truman years, may be likened to members of the coaching
staff. But all of them hearken to the voice of the team owner or
owners, the international banking cartel. They had financed the
Bolsheviks and they were still promoting their interests until the
propaganda bubble began to burst, starting with the testimony of
Elizabeth Bentley.
Taking Stock
Evans and Romersteins
little book has been very well received. Of the eight customers
who have reviewed it so far on Amazon.com, six have given it the
maximum of five stars. The other two gave it four. But one of the
five-star reviewers, Jerry Cooper of Napa, California, captures
the prevailing situation well with his lead-off:
Unfortunately,
this book will likely only be read by those [who are] already
somewhat knowledgeable as to its shocking contents. I doubt if
it will end up on many university recommended reading lists. As
a result, many students of history will be woefully lacking in
their understanding of World War II and the Cold War Era. This
book is one of a handful of those must-reads exposing a scandal
of epic proportions. Without this missing piece of the puzzle
post-WWII history is inexplicable.
Mr. Cooper
and his co-readers of the book are no doubt all wringing their hands
in frustration. At the same time, the big pro-Communist propaganda
work by Stone and Kuznick, which came out only two weeks before
Stalins Secret Agents, has had 135 customer reviews,
with almost as high an average favorable rating. As we note in Oliver Stone and the Japanese
Surrender, the book has had a little bit of help. We had
thought that for the team owners Zionism was all the
rage, as it has been for about as long as anyone can remember, but
looking at the strange enthusiasm being shown for Untold History,
one might well conclude that Communism is coming back into style
with them (if it ever really went out). And we really do mean strange
enthusiasm. Just this week we discovered two more opinion
molding organs to get on board the Stone-Kuznick fashion parade,
The
American Conservative, one of whose founding editors
is Patrick J. Buchanan, and the putatively conservative Washington
Times. To the establishment Left among the books
promoters, we can now add the establishment Right. I really wonder
what M. Stanton Evans and Herbert Romerstein would have to say about
that.
February
4, 2013
David
Martin [send him mail]
writes at DCDave.com.
Copyright
© 2013 David Martin
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