Posted on 04/24/2006 9:48:36 PM PDT by goldstategop
Overanalysis is a wonderful thing. One consideration always left out of these discussions is the Jews live largely in urban areas. From that perspective, they vote very much like their fellow urbanites.
Waves of immigrants who came to the USA from 1880-1920: the poles the italians the irish the jews. Most of them voted for FDR by large majorities in 1932, 1936 & 1940. Today only the jews still vote democratic by hefty majorities. Why? The reason for this dates explicitly to the McCarthy period from 1950-54. The reason this is clear is because Hollywood still strenuously maintains the communist lie about that era. This lie is maintained by movies in the last years called "A Beautiful Mind," and "Good Night and Good Luck".
There are various reasons given as to why Stalin initiated the Doctor's Plot in the early 1950's before he died. The KGB hated Israel. Many Americans who were enthusiastic supporters of the UN were Jewish.
Edvard Radzinsky in his book "Stalin" argues that while at one time Stalin hoped Jewish financial capital would help rebuild the Soviet Union after the WWII, Stalin hated the prospect of suborning himself to the Baruch Plan and he flat out rejected IAEA nuclear controls--presented in 1946. The Russians were working on their own abomb based on stolen US designs.
Whatever the reason, Stalin fomented the Doctor's plot hysteria and broke off diplomatic relations with Israel. He was within days of preparing to exile the Soviet Jews to the Gulag (as was done previously with various other ethnic minorities such as the Crimean Tatars, Chechens, etc.), and initiate another great purge along the lines of 1938.
The important thing to recall is that the Doctor's Plot happened at the same time as the McCarthy anti communist business from 1950-54
Stalin already had the concentration camps set up. And some of the preliminary accusations had gone out for the Doctor's Plot when he died in 1953.
At the same time the Rosenburgs were tried and executed for treason in the USA in 1953--and this less than a decade after the Holocaust. This naturally caused fear and suspicion in the US Jewish community. This fear and suspicion was played upon by knowledgeable communists and leftists--large numbers of whom were jewish. These folk not only knew about what Stalin had done in the 1930's and was about to do with the doctor's plot--before he died-- but also saw the Rosenburg trials as show trials american style ... that is, a prelude to an american pogrom.
What Stalin had planned to do-- in a brilliant piece of jujitsu --leftists and communists imputed to Americans on the right. But it was done soto voce. Basically a blood libel was perpetrated on Americans without their knowing it. Worse, protestant america had become tribal enemies tooth and claw of the US jewish establishment without protestant america even knowing it. Never again! -- Was the battle cry. But there weren't any protestant tribal enemies of Jews in the USA. If there protestant tribal enemies tooth and claw in the USA -- Meyer Kahane would have provoked them them to a fight. Instead, he married an american woman & helped expedite Stalin's last wish--to rid Russia of Jews. When Kahane died it was at the hands of a Moslem in 1990.
While the American public outside NY/LA were generally given the view that the McCarthy era was an age when innocent men were unjustly tried by suspicious anti semites like McCarthy & Nixon--the NY/LA Jewish establishment was given a different story. They were given to understand that the democrats/liberals had prevented the US from visiting a holocaust on them. And that therefor American Jews owed their loyalty to the liberal democrats because the liberal democrats were the protectors of the Jews.
And this Meme went on untouched for decades after McCarthy.
This dual track story line didn't crack until the early 1990's when the kgb/nkvd/gru opened up their files on the WWII-McCarthy Period. In 1995 the US's NSA agency opened up their Venona files. Both Russian and American spy agency files showed that McCarthy was right. The US government --as well as the Manhattan Project--had been at one time soaked with Russian Spies. The Rosenburgs were guilty. While McCarthy was wrong in all the details he got the general outline of the story right. Why did he get the outline right and the details wrong. The reason is McCarthy's relationship to Hoover was the same as Hoover's relationship to the NSA.The NSA told the FBI about the Venona intercepts but insisted that the FBI could not use NSA intercepts as evidence in court. The FBI had to develop their own leads. As a result most of the spies escaped prosecution. The FBI did not get their man.
In 1950 J Edgar Hoover began weekly meetings with Joseph McCarthy. Those meetings ended in 1954. The beginning and end of those meetings coincided with the beginning and end of McCarthy star turn in the national spot light. McCarthy got most of the details of the spy story wrong but he got the general outline of the story right. His predicament was the same as that of the FBI. To this day the FBI denies that Hoover told McCarthy anything about the Venona Cables and maybe Hoover said nothing explicit to McCarthy for which Hoover could be liable in court.
Needless to say, an American style shoah was never in the cards.
The reason that hollywood hated Ronald Reagan so much was that he was an anti communist in hollywood during the McCarthy period. During this period to be staunchly anti communist in Hollywood or NYC was to be at least vaguely anti semetic because in the 30's to the 50's communism was considered to be almost a secular form of Judaism in the Jewish communities of NY/LA.
Reagan was among the first wave of FDR democrats to switch parties. Reagan was blacklisted from Hollywood. He couldn't get work there after McCarthy. However, his experiences in Hollywood served him well when he went into public service. He always understood the jujitsu of media talk of the age. Something that cannot be said of Nixon.
When I hear American based Moslems talking about McCarthyism being visited on them. I have to laugh. They don't know that they have pronounced themselves guilty in the eyes of many Americans.
As for the democrats, part of the reason for the loss of their inner coherence has been that part their foundational raison d'être steming from the McCarthy era was revealed to be based on a lie. So now the core of the democratic party is the sodomites. Those folks are not just confusing. They are confused.
David Horowitz interviewed by Rush Limbaugh this past week talked about how his parents were communists and he was a communist in college. He said when he was in college his views were always treated respectfully by his professors. But he said recently a young christian college student told him that his homosexual college professor had singled him out in class and asked him "Why do you christians hate queers." Asked why he continued to do what he did in the face of all the abuse he gets, David Horowitz said like Rush he took public political positions because he had to. But also he said he did it as a matter of atonement.
He gets it.
Return to Responses, Reflections and Occasional Papers
Senator Joseph McCarthys Lists and Venona
by John Earl Haynes
January 2006
Journalists and historians have often referred to Senator Joseph McCarthys list as if it were a precisely defined entity. It was not, however. Certainly one would put his numbered list of eighty-one cases, given in a Senate speech of February 20, 1950, as the prime candidate for being McCarthys list. But McCarthy himself quickly added several dozen more names to this list in communications to a subcommittee of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (commonly referred to in the press as the Tydings Committee from its chairman, Senator Millard Tydings). The Tydings subcommittee in its State Department Employee Loyalty Investigation inquired into Senator McCarthys charges.
Most but not all of Senator McCarthys numbered cases were drawn from the Lee List or 108 list of unresolved DOS security cases compiled by the investigators for the House Appropriates Committee in 1947. Robert E. Lee was the committees lead investigator and supervised preparation of the list. The Tydings subcommittee also obtained this list. The Lee list, also using numbers rather than names, was published in the proceeding of the subcommittee.[1]
Senator McCarthy furnished the Tydings Committee the real names attached to his numbered cases, and the Tydings Committee received the real names attached to the Lee list as well.[2] Over the years that followed all of the names became public one way or another.
Additionally, in a series of speeches McCarthy named others as secret Communists, spies, security risks, or participants in the Communist conspiracy. Below these various lists are recapitulated. Only those he named from 1950 through 1952 (prior to become chairman of the Senate Governmental Operations Committee) will be considered here. (All lists will be alphabetical.)
McCarthys List (1)
McCarthys 20 February Numbered List[3]
Real Name: McCarthy list #; Lee list #; Venona status; Non-Venona Evidence of Espionage
*****************************************************************************
Arndt, Ernest Theodore: McCarthy list # 14; Lee List # 10; Not identified in Venona
Barnett, Mrs. Robert Warren: McCarthy list # 49; Lee List # 59; Not identified in Venona
Barnett, Robert Warren: McCarthy list # 48; Lee List # 59; Not identified in Venona
Berman, Harold: McCarthy list # 70; Lee List # 85; Not identified in Venona
Brunauer, Esther Caukin: McCarthy list # 47; Lee List # 55; Not identified in Venona
Cameron, Gertrude: McCarthy list # 55; Lee List # 65; Not identified in Venona
Carlisle, Lois: McCarthy list # 58; Lee List # 68; Not identified in Venona
Carter, William D.: McCarthy list # 44; Lee List # 50; Not identified in Venona
Chipchin, Nelson: McCarthy list # 23; No on Lee List: Benign identification in Venona[4]
Clucas, Lowell M., Jr.: McCarthy list # 26; Not on Lee List; Not identified in Venona
Delgado, Mucio: McCarthy list # 21; Lee List # 28; Not identified in Venona
Demerjian, Alice: McCarthy list # 61; Lee List # 72; Not identified in Venona
Dubois, Cora: McCarthy list # 60; Lee List # 70; Not identified in Venona
Ferry, Frances: McCarthy list # 11; Lee List # 8; Not identified in Venona
Fierst, Herbert: McCarthy list # 1; Lee List # 51; Not identified in Venona
Fishback, Sam: McCarthy list # 43; Lee List # 49; Not identified in Venona
Ford, James T.: McCarthy list # 76; Lee List # 96; Not identified in Venona
Gordon, Stella: McCarthy list # 40; Lee List # 45; Not identified in Venona
Graze, Gerald: McCarthy list # 29; Lee List # 25; Not identified in Venona;[5] Identified as a Soviet Espionage Source in the Gorsky Memo[6]
Graze, Stanley: McCarthy list # 8; Lee List # 8; Not identified in Venona; Identified as a Soviet Espionage Source in the Gorsky Memo[7]
Grondahl, Tegnel Conrad: McCarthy list # 25; Not on Lee List; Not identified in Venona
Gross, Aaron Jack: McCarthy list # 68; Lee List # 83; Not identified in Venona
Harrison, Marcia Ruth: McCarthy list # 7; Lee List # 4; Not identified in Venona
Horwin, Leonard: McCarthy list # 73; Lee List # 91; Not identified in Venona
Hunt, Victor: McCarthy list # 65; Lee List # 79; Not identified in Venona
Ilyefalvi-Vites, Gizella: McCarthy list # 4; Lee List # 3; Not identified in Venona
Jankowski, Joseph T.: McCarthy list # 74; Lee List # 92; Not identified in Venona
Jessup, Philip: McCarthy list # 15; Not on Lee List; Not identified in Venona
Josephson, Joseph: McCarthy list # 30; Lee List # 28; Not identified in Venona
Kamarck, Andrew W.: McCarthy list # 78; Lee List # 100; Not identified in Venona
Katusich, Ivan: McCarthy list # 27; Not on Lee List; Not identified in Venona
Kaufman, Arthur Milton: McCarthy list # 38; Lee List # 43; Not identified in Venona
Kopelewish, Esther Less aka Mrs. Less: McCarthy list # 24; Not on Lee List; Not identified in Venona
Lansberg, Hans: McCarthy list # 28; Lee List # 21; Not identified in Venona
Lemon, Edythe J.: McCarthy list # 18; Lee List # 16; Not identified in Venona
Lewis, Mrs. Preston Keesling: McCarthy list # 75; Lee List # 93; Not identified in Venona
Lifantieff-Lee, Paul A.: McCarthy list # 56; Lee List # 66; Not identified in Venona
Lindsey, John Richard: McCarthy list # 67; Lee List # 81; Not identified in Venona
Lloyd, David Demarest: McCarthy list # 9; Lee List # 99; Not identified in Venona
Lorwin, Val R.: McCarthy list # 54; Lee List # 64; Not identified in Venona
Maguite, Sylvia: McCarthy list # 69; Lee List # 84; Not identified in Venona
Mann, Gottfried Thomas: McCarthy list # 42; Lee List # 47; Not identified in Venona
Margolies, Daniel F.: McCarthy list # 41; Lee List # 46; Not identified in Venona
Margolin, Arnold D.: McCarthy list # 72; Lee List # 90;[8] Not identified in Venona
Meigs, Peveril: McCarthy list # 3; Lee List # 2; Not identified in Venona
Miller, Robert T.: McCarthy list # 16; Lee List # 12; Not identified in Venona;[9] First Identified as a Soviet Espionage Source by Elizabeth Bentley in her 1945 FBI statement.[10]
Montague, Ella M.: McCarthy list # 34; Lee List # 32; Not identified in Venona
Neal, Fred Warner: McCarthy list # 57; Lee List # 67; Not identified in Venona
Ness, Norman T.: McCarthy list # 45; Lee List # 53; Not identified in Venona
Neumann, Franz Leopold: McCarthy list # 59; Lee List # 69; Not identified in Venona[11] Identified as a Soviet Espionage Source in Weinstein and Vassilievs The Haunted Wood.[12]
Osnatch, Olga F.: McCarthy list # 37; Lee List # 42; Not identified in Venona
Parsons, Ruby A.: McCarthy list # 81; Lee List # 78; Not identified in Venona
Perkins, Isham W.: McCarthy list # 62; Lee List # 73; Not identified in Venona
Peter, Hollis W.: McCarthy list # 64; Lee List # 76; Not identified in Venona
Polyzoides, T. Achilles: McCarthy list # 79; Lee List # 105; Not identified in Venona
Posner, Marjorie S.: McCarthy list # 10; Lee List # 7; Not identified in Venona
Posniak, Edward G.: McCarthy list # 77; Not on Lee List; Not identified in Venona
Post, Richard: McCarthy list # 53; Lee List # 63; Not identified in Venona
Raine, Philip: McCarthy list # 52; Lee List # 62; Not identified in Venona
Randolph, David (aka Rosenberg): McCarthy list # 66; Lee List # 80; Not identified in Venona
Rapoport, Alexander: McCarthy list # 22; Not on Lee List; Not identified in Venona
Remington, William: McCarthy list # 19; Not on Lee List; Not identified in Venona. First Identified as a Soviet Source by Elizabeth Bentley in her 1945 FBI statement.[13]
Robinson, Jay: McCarthy list # 5; Lee List # 5; Not identified in Venona
Rommel, Rowena: McCarthy list # 51; Lee List # 61; Not identified in Venona
Ross, Lewis: McCarthy list # 31; Lee List # 29; Not identified in Venona
Ross, Robert: McCarthy list # 32; Lee List # 30; Not identified in Venona
Schimmel, Sylvia: McCarthy list # 50; Lee List # 60; Not identified in Venona
Shell, Melville: McCarthy list # 35; Lee List # 34; Not identified in Venona
Siegel, Herman: McCarthy list # 33; Lee List # 31; Not identified in Venona
Smith, S. Stevenson: McCarthy list # 20; Lee List # 20; Not identified in Venona
Smith (Schmidt), Frederick W.: McCarthy list # 36; Lee List # 40; Not identified in Venona
Stoinaoff, Stoian: McCarthy list # 71; Lee List # 87; Not identified in Venona
Stone, William T.: McCarthy list # 46; Lee List # 54; Not identified in Venona
Taylor, Jeanne E.: McCarthy list # 17; Lee List # 14; Not identified in Venona
Tuchscher, Frances M.: McCarthy list # 6; Lee List # 6; Not identified in Venona
Vincent, John Carter: McCarthy list # 2; Lee List # 52; Not identified in Venona
Volin, Maz A.: McCarthy list # 39; Lee List # 44; Not identified in Venona
Washburn, John T.: McCarthy list # 80; Lee List # 106; Not identified in Venona
Washburne, Carleton: McCarthy list # 13; Lee List # 9; Not identified in Venona
Wilcox, Stanley: McCarthy list # 63; Lee List # 75; Not identified in Venona
Yuhas, Helen: McCarthy list # 12; Lee List # 107; Not identified in Venona
*****************************************************************************
McCarthys List (2)
Remaining Lee List Names
In as much as Senator McCarthy cited the Lee list as one the DOS was negligent in not pursuing, the Lee list names not already listed above are listed below.
Real Name: Lee list #; Venona status; Non-Venona Evidence of Espionage
*****************************************************************************
Alexander, Dorothy Helen: Lee List # 38; Not identified in Venona
Blaisdell, Donald C.: Lee List # 103; Not identified in Venona
Borton, Hugh: Lee List # 57; Not identified in Venona
Burlingame, Robert Sparks: Lee List # 108; Not identified in Venona
DeMoretz, Shirley T.: Lee List # 27; Not identified in Venona
Elinson, Marcelle D.: Lee List # 104; Not identified in Venona
Eminowicz, Halina D.: Lee List # 48; Not identified in Venona
Fine, Sherwood Monroe: Lee List # 23; Not identified in Venona
Fishburn, John Tipton: Lee List # 106; Not identified in Venona
Forno, Joseph T.: Lee List # 96; Not identified in Venona
Fournier, Norman L.: Lee List # 98; Not identified in Venona
Hankin, Robert: Lee List # 94; Not identified in Venona
Hughes, Henry Stuart: Lee List # 77; Not identified in Venona
Jackson, Malcolm Aage: Lee List # 15; Not identified in Venona
Kamarck, Andrew W.: Lee List # 100; Not identified in Venona
Lazarus, Theodore: Lee List # 26; Not identified in Venona
Lovell, Leander Bell: Lee List # 22; Not identified in Venona
Lunning, Just: Lee List # 11; Not identified in Venona
Magruder, John H., III: Lee List # 17; Not identified in Venona
Mallon, Dwight S.: Lee List # 89; Not identified in Venona
Martin, Shirley Mae: Lee List # 33; Not identified in Venona
Martingale, Rose Marie: Lee List # 37; Not identified in Venona
McDavid, Raven I., Jr.: Lee List # 19; Not identified in Venona
Moore, Leith Celestia: Lee List # 18; Not identified in Venona
Parker, Glen T.: Lee List # 95; Not identified in Venona
Pesto, Paula Pavedo: Lee List # 82; Not identified in Venona
Rennie, Leonard C.: Lee List # 13; Not identified in Venona
Rose, Ernest William: Lee List # 41; Not identified in Venona
Rosenthal, Albert H.: Lee List # 97; Not identified in Venona
Rothwell, George J.: Lee List # 7; Not identified in Venona
Royce, Edith M.: Lee List # 35; Not identified in Venona
Rudlin, Walter Arthur: Lee List # 56; Ambiguously identified in Venona[14]
Salmon, Thomas R.: Lee List # 39; Not identified in Venona
Shevlin, Lorraine Arnold: Lee List # 86; Not identified in Venona
Smothers, Frank Albert: Lee List # 102; Not identified in Venona
Thomson, Charles A.: Lee List # 58; Not identified in Venona
Thursz, Jonathan: Lee List # 74; Not identified in Venona
Toory, Dr. Frank P.: Lee List # 88; Not identified in Venona
Tuckerman, Gustavus: Lee List # 101; Not identified in Venona
Wilfert, Howard F.: Lee List # 36; Not identified in Venona
Wood, James E.: Lee List # 24; Not identified in Venona
***************************************************************************
McCarthys List (3)
Other Names Given to the Tydings Subcommittee
In addition to the above McCarthy numbered cases and Lee list, McCarthy also identified by name the following persons to the Tydings subcommittee of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.[15]
Real Name: Venona status; Non-Venona Evidence of Espionage
*****************************************************************
Askwith, Edna Jerry: Not identified in Venona
Erdos, Arpad: Not identified in Venona
Grajdanzeve, Andrew aka Grade, Andrew: Not identified in Venona
Harris, Reed: Not identified in Venona Not identified in Venona
Henkin, Louis: Not identified in Venona
Hulten, Charles M.: Not identified in Venona
Ingram, George Mason: Not identified in Venona
Ludden, Raymond Paul: Not identified in Venona
Meeker, Leonard C.: Not identified in Venona
Nelson, Clarence J.: Not identified in Venona
Newbegin, Robert: Not identified in Venona
Ramon, Josephine: Not identified in Venona
Rowe, James W.: Not identified in Venona
Sanders, William: Not identified in Venona
Tate, Jack B.: Not identified in Venona
Zablodgwskei, David: Not identified in Venona
**********************************************************************************
McCarthys List (4)
Buckley & Bozell List of Other McCarthy Names
Senator McCarthy in 1950, 1951 and 1952 identified other persons in speeches in the Senate and else where. For the date and place of Senator McCarthys naming of these persons, see appendix D of William F. Buckley and L. Brent Bozell, McCarthy and His Enemies: The Record and Its Meaning (Chicago: H. Regnery Co., 1954).
Real Name: Venona status; Non-Venona Evidence of Espionage
*****************************************************************
Brunauer, Stephen: Not identified in Venona
Clubb, Oliver Edmund: Not identified in Venona
Currie, Lauchlin: Identified in Venona as a Soviet Espionage Source;[16] First Identified as a Soviet Source by Elizabeth Bentley in her 1945 FBI statement.[17]
Davies, John Paton: Not identified in Venona
Duran, Gustavo: Not identified in Venona
Geiger, Theodore: Not identified in Venona
Glasser, Harold: Identified in Venon as a Soviet Espionage Source;[18] First Identified as a Soviet Source by Elizabeth Bentley in her 1945 FBI statement.[19]
Hanson, Haldore: Not identified in Venona
Keeney, Mary Jane: Identified in Venona as a Soviet Espionage Source[20]
Kenyon, Dorothy: Not identified in Venona
Kerserling, Mary: Not identified in Venona
Keyserling, Leon: Not identified in Venona
Lattimore, Owen: Not identified in Venona
Nash, Philleo: Not identified in Venona
Schuman, Frederick: Not identified in Venona
Service, John Stewart: Not identified in Venona. Identified by FBI bugging in 1945 as having deliberately leaked DOS information to the pro-Communist journal Amerasia.[21]
Shapley, Harlow: Not identified in Venona
*******************************************************************************
McCarthys List (5)
June 14, 1951 conspiracy of infamy so black Speech
Senator McCarthy in a speech before the Senate on June 14, 1951, described, a conspiracy on a scale so immense as to dwarf any previous such venture in the history of man. A conspiracy of infamy so black that, when it is finally exposed, its principals shall be forever deserving of the maledictions of all honest men.[22] The chief targets of the speech were Dean Acheson, President Trumans secretary of state, and George Marshall, Army chief of staff under President Roosevelt and secretary of state and secretary of defense under Truman. General Marshall was also the focus of Senator McCarthys book Americas Retreat from Victory: The Story of George Catlett Marshall:[23]
Real Name: Venona status; Non-Venona Evidence of Espionage
*****************************************************************
Acheson, Dean: Benign identification in Venona[24]
Marshall, George C.: Benign identification in Venona[25]
******************************************************************************
McCarthys List (6)
Other McCarthy Speeches
Below are two additional names McCarthy identified in statement to the Senate on December 19, 1950.[26]
Real Name: Venona status; Non-Venona Evidence of Espionage
*****************************************************************
Karr, David: Identified in Venona as assisting Soviet Espionage[27]
Pearson, Drew: Benign Identification in Venona.[28]
*******************************************************************
McCarthys List (7)
Lists 1-6 Combined
For convenience of reference, a combined list of all names above.
Real Name: Venona status; Non-Venona Evidence of Espionage
*****************************************************************************
Acheson, Dean: Benign identification in Venona[29]
Alexander, Dorothy Helen: Not identified in Venona
Arndt, Ernest Theodore: Not identified in Venona
Askwith, Edna Jerry: Not identified in Venona
Barnett, Mrs. Robert Warren: Not identified in Venona
Barnett, Robert Warren: Not identified in Venona
Berman, Harold: Not identified in Venona
Blaisdell, Donald C.: Not identified in Venona
Borton, Hugh: Not identified in Venona
Brunauer, Esther Caukin: Not identified in Venona
Brunauer, Stephen: Not identified in Venona
Burlingame, Robert Sparks: Not identified in Venona
Cameron, Gertrude: Not identified in Venona
Carlisle, Lois: Not identified in Venona
Carter, William D.: Not identified in Venona
Chipchin, Nelson: Benign identification in Venona[30]
Clubb, Oliver Edmund: Not identified in Venona
Clucas, Lowell M., Jr.: Not identified in Venona
Currie, Lauchlin: Identified in Venona as a Soviet Espionage Source;[31] First Identified as a Soviet Source by Elizabeth Bentley in her 1945 FBI statement.[32]
Davies, John Paton: Not identified in Venona
Delgado, Mucio: Not identified in Venona
Demerjian, Alice: Not identified in Venona
DeMoretz, Shirley T.: Not identified in Venona
Dubois, Cora: Not identified in Venona
Duran, Gustavo: Not identified in Venona
Elinson, Marcelle D.: Not identified in Venona
Eminowicz, Halina D.: Not identified in Venona
Erdos, Arpad: Not identified in Venona
Ferry, Frances: Not identified in Venona
Fierst, Herbert: Not identified in Venona
Fine, Sherwood Monroe: Not identified in Venona
Fishback, Sam: Not identified in Venona
Fishburn, John Tipton: Not identified in Venona
Ford, James T.: Not identified in Venona
Forno, Joseph T.: Not identified in Venona
Fournier, Norman L.: Not identified in Venona
Geiger, Theodore: Not identified in Venona
Glasser, Harold: Identified in Venon as a Soviet Espionage Source;[33] First Identified as a Soviet Source by Elizabeth Bentley in her 1945 FBI statement.[34]
Gordon, Stella: Not identified in Venona
Grajdanzeve, Andrew aka Grade, Andrew: Not identified in Venona
Graze, Gerald: Not identified in Venona;[35] Identified as a Soviet Espionage Source in the Gorsky Memo[36]
Graze, Stanley: Not identified in Venona; Identified as a Soviet Espionage Source in the Gorsky Memoo[37]
Grondahl, Tegnel Conrad: Not identified in Venona
Gross, Aaron Jack: Not identified in Venona
Hankin, Robert: Not identified in Venona
Hanson, Haldore: Not identified in Venona
Harris, Reed: Not identified in Venona Not identified in Venona
Harrison, Marcia Ruth: Not identified in Venona
Henkin, Louis: Not identified in Venona
Horwin, Leonard: Not identified in Venona
Hughes, Henry Stuart: Not identified in Venona
Hulten, Charles M.: Not identified in Venona
Hunt, Victor: Not identified in Venona
Ilyefalvi-Vites, Gizella: Not identified in Venona
Ingram, George Mason: Not identified in Venona
Jackson, Malcolm Aage: Not identified in Venona
Jankowski, Joseph T.: Not identified in Venona
Jessup, Philip: Not identified in Venona
Josephson, Joseph: Not identified in Venona
Kamarck, Andrew W.: Not identified in Venona
Kamarck, Andrew W.: Not identified in Venona
Karr, David: Identified in Venona as a Soviet Espionage Source[38]
Katusich, Ivan: Not identified in Venona
Kaufman, Arthur Milton: Not identified in Venona
Keeney, Mary Jane: Identified in Venona as a Soviet Espionage Source[39]
Kenyon, Dorothy: Not identified in Venona
Kerserling, Mary: Not identified in Venona
Keyserling, Leon: Not identified in Venona
Kopelewish, Esther Less aka Mrs. Less: Not identified in Venona
Lansberg, Hans: Not identified in Venona
Lattimore, Owen: Not identified in Venona
Lazarus, Theodore: Not identified in Venona
Lemon, Edythe J.: Not identified in Venona
Lewis, Mrs. Preston Keesling: Not identified in Venona
Lifantieff-Lee, Paul A.: Not identified in Venona
Lindsey, John Richard: Not identified in Venona
Lloyd, David Demarest: Not identified in Venona
Lorwin, Val R.: Not identified in Venona
Lovell, Leander Bell: Not identified in Venona
Ludden, Raymond Paul: Not identified in Venona
Lunning, Just: Not identified in Venona
Magruder, John H., III: Not identified in Venona
Maguite, Sylvia: Not identified in Venona
Mallon, Dwight S.: Not identified in Venona
Mann, Gottfried Thomas: Not identified in Venona
Margolies, Daniel F.: Not identified in Venona
Margolin, Arnold D.: [40] Not identified in Venona
Marshall, George C.: Benign identification in Venona[41]
Martin, Shirley Mae: Not identified in Venona
Martingale, Rose Marie: Not identified in Venona
McDavid, Raven I., Jr.: Not identified in Venona
Meeker, Leonard C.: Not identified in Venona
Meigs, Peveril: Not identified in Venona
Miller, Robert T.: Not identified in Venona;[42] First Identified as a Soviet Espionage Source by Elizabeth Bentley in her 1945 FBI statement.[43]
Montague, Ella M.: Not identified in Venona
Moore, Leith Celestia: Not identified in Venona
Nash, Philleo: Not identified in Venona
Neal, Fred Warner: Not identified in Venona
Nelson, Clarence J.: Not identified in Venona
Ness, Norman T.: Not identified in Venona
Neumann, Franz Leopold: Not identified in Venona[44] Identified as a Soviet Espionage Source in Weinstein and Vassilievs The Haunted Wood.[45]
Newbegin, Robert: Not identified in Venona
Osnatch, Olga F.: Not identified in Venona
Parker, Glen T.: Not identified in Venona
Parsons, Ruby A.: Not identified in Venona
Perkins, Isham W.: Not identified in Venona
Pearson, Drew: Benign Identification in Venona.[46]
Pesto, Paula Pavedo: Not identified in Venona
Peter, Hollis W.: Not identified in Venona
Polyzoides, T. Achilles: Not identified in Venona
Posner, Marjorie: Not identified in Venona
Posniak, Edward G.: Not identified in Venona
Post, Richard: Not identified in Venona
Raine, Philip: Not identified in Venona
Ramon, Josephine: Not identified in Venona
Randolph, David (aka Rosenberg): Not identified in Venona
Rapoport, Alexander: Not identified in Venona
Remington, William: Not identified in Venona. First Identified as a Soviet Espionage Source by Elizabeth Bentley in her 1945 FBI statement.[47]
Rennie, Leonard C.: Not identified in Venona
Robinson, Jay: Not identified in Venona
Rommel, Rowena: Not identified in Venona
Rose, Ernest William: Not identified in Venona
Rosenthal, Albert H.: Not identified in Venona
Ross, Lewis: Not identified in Venona
Ross, Robert: Not identified in Venona
Rothwell, George J.: Not identified in Venona
Rowe, James W.: Not identified in Venona
Royce, Edith M.: Not identified in Venona
Rudlin, Walter Arthur: Ambiguously identified in Venona[48]
Salmon, Thomas R.: Not identified in Venona
Sanders, William: Not identified in Venona
Schimmel, Sylvia: Not identified in Venona
Schuman, Frederick: Not identified in Venona
Service, John Stewart: Not identified in Venona. Identified by FBI bugging in 1945 as having deliberately leaked DOS information to the pro-Communist journal Amerasia.[49]
Shapley, Harlow: Not identified in Venona
Shell, Melville: Not identified in Venona
Shevlin, Lorraine Arnold: Not identified in Venona
Siegel, Herman: Not identified in Venona
Smith, S. Stevenson: Not identified in Venona
Smith (Schmidt), Frederick W.: Not identified in Venona
Smothers, Frank Albert: Not identified in Venona
Stoinaoff, Stoian: Not identified in Venona
Stone, William T.: Not identified in Venona
Tate, Jack B.: Not identified in Venona
Taylor, Jeanne E.: Not identified in Venona
Thomson, Charles A.: Not identified in Venona
Thursz, Jonathan: Not identified in Venona
Toory, Dr. Frank P.: Not identified in Venona
Tuchscher, Frances M.: Not identified in Venona
Tuckerman, Gustavus: Not identified in Venona
Vincent, John Carter: Not identified in Venona
Volin, Maz A.: Not identified in Venona
Washburn, John T.: Not identified in Venona
Washburne, Carleton: Not identified in Venona
Wilcox, Stanley: Not identified in Venona
Wilfert, Howard F.: Not identified in Venona
Wood, James E.: Not identified in Venona
Yuhas, Helen: Not identified in Venona
Zablodgwskei, David: Not identified in Venona
***************************************************************************
Security Risks
Of the 159 persons listed above, there is substantial evidence that nine assisted Soviet espionage against the United States: Lauchlin Currie, Harold Glasser, Gerald Graze, Standley Graze, Many Jane Keeney, David Karr, Robert T. Miller, Franz Neumann, and William Remington.
Some of the others were security risks. To say that someone was a security risk is not to say that that person is a proven or even most likely a Soviet espionage source. It is only to say that in matters of national security better safe than sorry is a principle. Risks should be minimized by excluding those persons from employment in positions where they would have access to sensitive information.
Risk factors vary from the purely personal to the ideological. Entirely patriotic and loyal persons may have risk factors that make them a security risk. Someone with a history of financial irresponsibility (chronic gambling, bankruptcy) may be tempted by financial gain to betray secret without regard to their patriotism. Someone with close relatives living in a hostile foreign nation may be vulnerable to blackmail due to coercive threats against those family members.
And, of course, someone with ideological sympathy for a hostile foreign power may be tempted to betray by appeals to that ideology. Obviously, in the Cold War between the Communist bloc and the West, persons with Communist or pro-Communist ideological sympathies were security risks due to the possibility of ideological recruitment by Communist intelligence officers. Indeed, the great majority of American, several hundred, now known to have assisted Soviet espionage in the United States in the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s were motivated by ideology and many were secret members of the CPUSA.[50]
Many, but certainly not all, of those in the above lists had in their background some ideological security risk factors. A few were established as having been members of the Communist Party, USA (CPUSA) or the Young Communist League. Many had belonged to a number of special purpose organizations, some closely, some not so closely, aligned with the CPUSA, were know to former co-workers as pro-Soviet, or had other signs of Communist sympathies. In some cases those affiliations were recent or ongoing. Frederick Schuman, for example, had a long and enduring history of intense Communist sympathies. With others, however, their affiliation with the Communist left were youthful and a decade or more in the past, and the person may have abandoned those views. Stephen Brunauer, for example, had been in the Young Communist League in the late 1920s but appears to have abandoned the movement by the early 1940s and in 1946 the U.S. government sent him to Hungary (he was Hungarian born) to assist in the escape of Hungarian scientists from Communist Hungary. There were also cases were some association legitimately raised security risk concerns but on inspection, the association appears to have been coincidental. For example McCarthy number case # 1 (Lee list # 51) Herbert Fierst, socialized with and was associated at work with several persons known to be linked to Soviet intelligence. But on examination, Fiersts association appeared to have been no more than that: social and related to his official duties. Among other points, he was a firm supporter of Zionism, an ideological attribute not merely distrusted but hated by Soviet intelligence.[51]
It would take an extensive review of each person separately to come to a firm view on each case, and in a number of cases the passage of time might make reaching a firm conclusion impossible. My own view is that a number of those on the lists above, perhaps a majority, likely were security risks, but others, a minority but a significant one, likely were not, and some, Drew Pearson, Dean Acheson, and George Marshall for example, certainly were not.
Return to Responses, Reflections and Occasional Papers
[1]. U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, State Department Employee Loyalty Investigations (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1950).
[2]. McCarthy to Tydings, 18 March 1950 with attached list.
[3]. Remarks of Senator Joseph McCarthy, Congressional Record, 20 February 1950.
[4]. A Soviet spy in the U.S. Army, Ilya Elliott Wolston, was a student in the Russian section of the U.S. Army intelligence school and provided the KGB with a list of his fellow students and instructors. Nelson Chipchin was one of those. There is nothing adverse about Chipchin in the reference to him in the two messages in which his name appears. Venona 777-781 KGB New York to Moscow, 26 May 1943; Venona 893 KGB New York to Moscow, 10 June 1943. On Wolston work for the KGB, see John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr, Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America (New Haven: Yale University Press [Nota Bene], 2000), 27576.
[5]. Gerald Graze was not identified in Venona under his own name. Venona does contain a cryptonym, Arena, that FBI/NSA identified as that of Mary Price. Based on the 1948 Gorsky memo, likely this was in error and Arena was Gerald Graze. Anatoly Gorsky, Failures in the U.S.A. (19381948), memo, December 1948: <http://www.johnearlhaynes.org/page48.html> in Alexander Vassilievs Notes from the KGB Archive. Gerald Graze is the brother of Stanley Graze.
[6]. Gorsky, Failures in the U.S.A. (19381948).
[7]. Gorsky, Failures in the U.S.A. (19381948).
[8]. Arnold Margolin is cited by both Lee and McCarthy as an anti-Communist denied DOS employment.
[9]. Robert T. Miller is not identified in Venona under that name. However, Venona has a crytonym, Mirage, that is unidentified. The Gorsky memo identifies Mirage as Robert Miller. Gorsky, Failures in the U.S.A. (19381948). Miller is discussed in Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 207, 22829.
[10]. Elizabeth Bentley, Elizabeth Bentley FBI Deposition of 30 November 1945, FBI file 6514503.
[11]. Franz Neumann was not identified by FBI/NSA in Venona. However, Venona has an unidentified cryptonym, Ruff. Ruff is identified as Neumann in Gorsky, Failures in the U.S.A. (19381948); and Allen Weinstein and Alexander Vassiliev, The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in America--the Stalin Era (New York: Random House, 1999). Neumann is discussed in Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 19495, 220.
[12]. Weinstein and Vassiliev, The Haunted Wood.
[13]. Bentley, Bentley Deposition. Remington in 1951 was convicted of perjury related to Bentleys charges and was murdered in prison. Also identified as a Soviet source in Gorsky, Failures in the U.S.A. (19381948).
[14]. Venona 1668 KGB New York to Moscow, 29 November 1944 is part three of a longer message, but the earlier parts were not deciphered at all and only part of this message was decoded. Walter Rudlin is referred to as the source of information about the relationship of the office he headed, the Economic Intelligence Section of the Foreign Economic Administration, with the DOS. However, from the contents of the cited remarks and the partial nature of the message it is not possible to determine if Rudlin is a direct KGB source or if an unidentified Soviet spy was simply passing along information the unidentified KGB source heard from Rudlin in a benign legitimate context. Rudlins name is given in the clear without a cryptonym. While the KGB sometimes used real names for sources in Venona, more often cryptonyms were used.
[15]. List of 25 Additional Names Given to Senate Foreign Relations Committee, document provided by M. Stanton Evans.
[16]. On Curries assistance to the KGB, see Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 14549.
[17]. Elizabeth Bentley, Elizabeth Bentley FBI Deposition, 30 November 19045, FBI File 6514603 (1945).
[18]. Glassers assistance to the KGB is discussed in Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 12528.
[19]. Bentley, Bentley 1945 Deposition.
[20]. Many Jane Keeney and her husband Philip O. Keeney are identified as agents first of the GRU (Soviet Military Intelligence) and latter for the KGB. See Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 17880.
[21]. On Services role see: Harvey Klehr and Ronald Radosh, The Amerasia Spy Case: Prelude to McCarthyism (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1996). Service was engaged in certainly unethical and probably illegal leaking of sensitive American diplomatic information to Amerasia in order to promote his preferred policy positions and undercut the policies of superiors in the Department of State and the White House who were pursuing policies he opposed. There is no indication that he believed he was in contact with Soviet intelligence or that Amerasia was a conduit for Soviet intelligence.
[22]. Joseph McCarthy speech, U.S. Senate, 14 June 14, 1951, Congressional Record, vol. 97, part 5, 6602.
[23]. Joseph Raymond McCarthy, Americas Retreat from Victory: The Story of George Catlett Marshall (New York: Devin-Adair, 1951).
[24]. As a senior State Department official, Assistant Secretary of Sate in 1945, Acheson was mentioned in several Venona messages, but all were reports about him, not by him, and none indicated any relationship with Soviet intelligence.
[25]. As Army Chief of Staff, General Marshall was mentioned a number of times in Venona messages, but all were reports about him, not by him, and none indicated any relationship with Soviet intelligence.
[26]. Remarks of Senator Joseph McCarthy, 19 December 1950, Congressional Record.
[27]. Karr is discussed in Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 24447.
[28]. Pearson is identified in Venona as David Karrs employer and simply as a prominent American journalist. There is no indication of any Pearson cooperation with Soviet intelligence. See Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 24445.
[29]. As a senior State Department official, Assistant Secretary of Sate in 1945, Acheson was mentioned in several Venona messages, but all were reports about him, not by him, and none indicated any relationship with Soviet intelligence.
[30]. A Soviet spy in the U.S. Army, Ilya Elliott Wolston, was a student in the Russian section of the U.S. Army intelligence school and provided the KGB with a list of his fellow students and instructors. Nelson Chipchin was one of those. There is nothing adverse about Chipchin in the reference to him in the two messages in which his name appears. Venona 777-781 KGB New York to Moscow, 26 May 1943; Venona 893 KGB New York to Moscow, 10 June 1943. On Wolston work for the KGB, see Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 27576.
[31]. On Curries assistance to the KGB, see Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 14549.
[32]. Bentley, Bentley 1945 Deposition.
[33]. Glassers assistance to the KGB is discussed in Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 12528.
[34]. Bentley, Bentley 1945 Deposition.
[35]. Gerald Graze was not identified in Venona under his own name. Venona does contain a cryptonym, Arena, that FBI/NSA identified as that of Mary Price. Based on the 1948 Gorsky memo, likely this was in error and Arena was Gerald Graze. Gorsky, Failures in the U.S.A. (19381948). Gerald Graze is the brother of Stanley Graze.
[36]. Gorsky, Failures in the U.S.A. (19381948).
[37]. Gorsky, Failures in the U.S.A. (19381948).
[38]. Karr is discussed in Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 24447.
[39]. Many Jane Keeney and her husband Philip O. Keeney are identified as agents first of the GRU (Soviet Military Intelligence) and latter for the KGB. See Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 17880.
[40]. Arnold Margolin is cited by both Lee and McCarthy as an anti-Communist who was denied DOS employment.
[41]. As Army Chief of Staff, General Marshall was mentioned a number of times in Venona messages, but all were reports about him, not by him, and none indicated any relationship with Soviet intelligence.
[42]. Robert T. Miller is not identified in Venona under that name. However, Venona has a crytonym, Mirage, that is unidentified. The Gorsky memo identifies Mirage as Robert Miller. Gorsky, Failures in the U.S.A. (19381948). Miller is discussed in Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 207, 22829.
[43]. Bentley, Bentley Deposition.
[44]. Franz Neumann was not identified by FBI/NSA in Venona. However, Venona has an unidentified cryptonym, Ruff. Ruff is identified as Neumann in Gorsky, Failures in the U.S.A. (19381948); and Weinstein and Vassiliev, The Haunted Wood. Neumann is discussed in Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 19495, 220.
[45]. Weinstein and Vassiliev, The Haunted Wood.
[46]. Pearson is identified in Venona as David Karrs employer and simply as a prominent American journalist. There is no indication of any Pearson cooperation with Soviet intelligence. See Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 24445.
[47]. Bentley, Bentley 1945 Deposition. Remington in 1951 was convicted of perjury related to Bentleys charges and was murdered in prison. Also identified as a Soviet source in Gorsky, Failures in the U.S.A. (19381948).
[48]. Venona 1668 KGB New York to Moscow, 29 November 1944 is part three of a longer message, but the earlier messages were not deciphered at all and only part of this message was decoded. Walter Rudlin is referred to as the source of information about relationship of the office he headed, the Economic Intelligence Section of the Foreign Economic Administration, with the DOS. However, from the contents of the cited remarks and the partial nature of the message it is not possible to determine if Rudlin is a direct KGB source or if an unidentified Soviet spy is simply passing along information the unidentified KGB source heard from Rudlin in a benign legitimate context. Rudlins name is given in the clear without a cryptonym. While the KGB sometimes used real names for sources in Venona, more often cryptonyms were used.
[49]. On Services role see: Klehr and Radosh, Amerasia Spy Case. Service was engaged in unethical and possibly illegal leaking of information to Amerasia in order to promote his preferred policy positions and undercut the position of superiors in the Department of State and the White House who were pursuing policies he opposed. There is no indication that he believed he was in contact with Soviet intelligence or that Amerasia was a conduit for Soviet intelligence.
[50]. The Communist affiliations of most of those identified as assisting Soviet espionage in Venona are discussed in Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000].
[51]. The expressive KGB cryptonym for Zionists was Rats.
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Karl Marx's father converted to Lutheranism before Karl was born. Karl was baptized in 1824, and his mother was baptized in 1825.
Pity, that Now, the Fox now lives in the henhouse..
The hens are gone or are being ostracized..
Only heroic action will save this country..
Bush senior with his read my lips no new taxes emaciated the republican party and the damage done still follows us in the son W as he has grossly over spent and vetoed nothing and the voters are going to punish all of that at the ballot box. If I were to fantasize a ticket it would be condolezze rice and joseph Lieberman -- And I would say landslide. Rice would preach the conservatism of reagan and Liberman would be a stauch defender of US foreign policy against terrorism and immigration policy The dems would be hard pressed the ticket would carry great weight with blacks and jews and convervatives.
Just a passing thought.
Let me give you my personal take on why many Jews are liberals,and in the Sixties,wandered into the radical left camp.
My all white suburban high school was mostly Italian and Irish Catholic with a hefty mix of Protestants and a Jewish demographic of around 20%
Well,the Jewish kids as a group were the ones who shined most scholastically and won many of the academic awards at the school.They were less likely to be the popular trendy stylemakers and were the most"free thinking"in that they were the ones most likely to support the embyronic civil rights and"peace"movements of the middle sixties.
As a group,they were the ones most likely to be persecuted by the less successful ethnic groups at the school.It was not uncommon to hear the epiteth "kike"and "Jewboy".They were the outsiders for the most part and I really think their mistreatment in high school fueled their college radicalism.
Many joined SDS and other Marxist groups as sort of a way to exact revenge.Many hooked up with black militants who they saw as alienated"outsiders"like themselves.They saw that their Goy tormenters from high school were usually quite afraid of"the niggers"and by allying with the black enrages they often obtained a shield from these"reactionary"types.
Many Jewish girls joined Women's Lib for the same reason.Very few were the glamour girl and cheerleader types in high school and, as most of us remember, it was these"foxes"that got all the male attention.Who wanted an overweight Jewish chick who could quote Sartre and Camus?So they were ripe for the whole women's movement whose main point was to "smash male chauvinism"and decry the"objectification"of women.
It all makes sense from a certain vantage point.The desire for revenge and vindication is part of human nature.Of course,most of these Jewish radicals are now upper middle class professionals and live the same lives as their upwardly mobile parents whom they rebelled against.Most are still liberals but probably chastened somewhat by the current anti-Israeli anti-Semitism of the Left and the unraveling of the black-Jewish alliance of the civil rights era.
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