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Today's
Stories
September
26, 2007
Bill
Quigley
HUD's Wrecking Ball
China
Hand
Is China the True Target of Financial Sanctions Against Iran?
September
25, 2007
Nicole
Colson
On the March Against Racism
Uri
Avnery
Foam on the Water
Brendan
Cooney
Ahmadinejad on Broadway: Free Speech? Arrest Him!
Harry
Browne
Bruce Springsteen Comes Home ... to Hell
Marjorie
Cohn
The Drift Toward War with Iran
David
Macaray
The UAW-GM Strike: the Long Knives are Already Out
Ralph
Nader
Hypocrisy and Inverted Priorities in Congress
Dan
Bacher
Schwarzenegger, the Climate Change Hypocrite
Anthony
Papa
Perverted Justice & America's Drug Laws
Christopher
Ketcham
All Politicos Now Classed as Sexual Deviants
Website
of the Day
John Waters on Free Speech
September
24, 2007
George
Ciccariello-Maher
Racist Violence from Jena to Oakland
Saree Makdisi
The
War on Gaza's Children
David
Keen
Action-as-Propaganda: Learning About the Iraq War from Hannah
Arendt
Sherwood
Ross
Just How Powerful is the Israel Lobby? Only Cheney Knows for
Sure
Ron
Jacobs
Greenspan's Open Secret
Donna
Saggia
The Cult of the Military and the Decline of Democratic Values
Mike
Ferner
Free Speech Takes a Capitol Beating
Malini
Johar Schueller
Norman Hsu is a Model Minority
Monique
Dols
and Dylan Stillwood
Ahmadinejad and Columbia
Website
of the Day
The Promotion
September 22 / 23, 2007
Alexander
Cockburn
On Naomi Klein's "The Shock
Doctrine"
Jennifer
Loewenstein
Beneath the Hideous Veneer of
Security
Linn
Washington, Jr.
The Injustice in Jena: Prosecutorial Misconduct More Dangerous
Than Racism
Jeffrey
St. Clair
Going Down in Dinosaur: Oil, Dams and Whitewater (Part One)
Alan
Farago
Genuflecting to China
Brian
Cloughley
Of Hate, Hubris and Atrocities
Robert
Fantina
The Deadly Pattern of US Imperialism
Roxanne
Dunbar-Ortiz
Land Tenure and Resistance in New
Mexico
Jason
Hribal
Fear of an Animal Planet
David
Rosen
Slugger Sex: Athletes, Violence and Male Sexuality
Mike
Whitney
The Era of Global Financial Instability
John
V. Walsh
Who Will Lead a Filibuster of the Iraq War Spending Bill?
Dave
Lindorff
Why Aren't We Banning Blackwater Here?
David
Michael Green
Hiding Behind a Camouflage Skirt
Fred
Gardner
Claudia Jensen (Look Back in Anger)
Cassandra
Jones
Support Our Mercenaries
Roger
van Zwanenberg
Pluto Press Under Attack by Israel Lobby
Poets'
Basement
Buknatski, Davies and Ford
Website
of the Weekend
"For the Bible Tells Me So"
September
21, 2007
Karim
Makdisi
Letter from Lebanon
M.
Shahid Alam
A History of Violence
Alan
Farago
Who Will Buy My House?
Joshua
Frank
The Demise of the Congressional Black Caucus
Dave
Zirin
Notre Dame and the Economy of Sports
Kenneth
Couesbouc
A Short History of Lending and Borrowing
Dr.
Steffie Woolhandler and Dr. David Himmelstein
Mass Health Care Failure
Ben
Terrall
The Streets of San Francisco: Where Impeachment is Taken Seriously--By
Everyone But Pelosi
Steve
Fournier
Ex-Dems, Sign Up Here
Frederico
Fuentes, et al
Voices in Defense of Bolivia
Website
of the Day
Sabra and Shatila, Remembered
September
20, 2007
Kathleen
Christison
Whatever Happened to Palestine?
Zoltan
Grossman
An Endless Occupation?
Paul
Craig Roberts
As the Empire Slips: Greenspan and the Economy of Greed
Stan
Cox
and Wes Jackson
Carbon-Free and Still Wrecking the Planet
Russell
Mokhiber
AARP to Kucinich: Drop Dead
Charles
Modiano
Jim Crow's Children: the Jena 6, Shaquanda Cotton and Blog Power
Raymond
J. Lawrence
Bush's Worrisome Use of Religion
Brendan
Cooney
Body-Snatched Nation
Website
of the Day
Mind Control for Breakfast
September
19, 2007
Paul
Craig Roberts
Why Did Senator John Kerry Stand
Idly By?
Paul
Krassner
The Power of Laughter
Sgt.
Martin Smith
The New Private Warriors: Blackwater in Iraq
Seth
Sandronsky
Living in a Dilapidated Market: To Rent or Own?
Claud
Cockburn
Looking back at the Great Crash
Victoria
Buch
Israel's Agenda for Ethnic Cleansing
and Transfer
Robert
Weissman
Oil Warriors: From Greenspan to Kissinger
Mike
Ferner
Can We Talk?
Dan
Bacher
Schwarzenegger's $9 Billion Boondoggle for Big Water
Website
of the Day
Housing Cost Calculator
September
18, 2007
Mike
Whitney
U.S. Banks Brace for Storm Surge
as Dollar and Credit System Reel
Alan
Farago
Interviewing Alan Greenspan: How 60
Minutes Blew It
John
Ross
America's Great Wall:
Where Will the Workers Go
When They Finish It?
Ron
Jacobs
Nooses Hung From Jena, La. to College
Park, Md.
Alex
Doherty
Britain's 9/11 "Truth Movement":
Who's Responsible?
September
17, 2007
Marjorie
Cohn
Erwin Chemerinsky and the Post-9/11
Attack on Academic Freedom
Paul
Craig Roberts
Conservatism Isn't What It Used to
Be
Ricardo
Alarcón
The Return of C. Wright Mills Amid
the Dawn of a New Era
Marc
Levy
Fake Vets Chasing Fame
Eva
Liddell
In 1969 We Already Knew What 2007
Would Look Like
Website
of the Day
Propaganda:
Your Job in Germany. Directed by Frank Capra, and written by
Theodor Geisel
Sept.
15-16, 2007
Alexander
Cockburn
The General Came to Washington
Vicente
Navarro
How the U.S. Schemed Against Spain's
Transition from Dictatorship to Democracy
Mike
Whitney
Plummeting Dollar, Credit Crunch
Herman
Mindshaftgap
Has There Ever Been a Surge?
If so, Has it a Future?
Ellen
Cantarow
Girls! Music! Palestine!
Jordan
Flaherty
K-Ville: Fox's New Paean to the
N.O.P.D.
Zachary
Hurwitz
Julio Cusurichi on Amazonian Development
September
14, 2007
Debbie
Nathan
New York Times reporter was a member
of an illegal underage porn site, claims he was only "posing
as online predator"
Franklin
Lamb
Sabra-Shatilla, 25 Years Later
Patrick
Cockburn
Greet Bush and Die: The Killing of
Abu Risha
Farzana
Versey
The World's Richest Muslim Tycoon
Alan
Farago
This is Florida, Epicenter of the
Housing Bust and of Public Corruption
Hank
Edson
Bill's New Book is Giving Me a Headache
September
13, 2007
Patrick
Cockburn
Petraeus Confided Presidential Ambitions
to Iraqi Official
Scott
Vest, former Air Force Captain at Minot
The Barksdale Nukes
Andy
Worthington
Guantánamo: "Ghost"
Prisoners Speak At Last
Michael
Baney
Mr. Fixit of Quake-Stricken Peru Has
Death Squad Past
Dr.
Susan Block
Is U.S. Run by Secret Homintern?
September
12, 2007
Paul
Craig Roberts
American Economy: RIP
Stan
Goff
The Petraeus Report
William
Blum
When Soldiers Mutiny...Only Those Fighting
the War Can End It.
Manuel
Garcia
Forgetting 9/11
Debbie
Nathan
Why One Sex Survey Didn't Make the
Big Time
September
11, 2007
Patrick
Cockburn
The Fakery of General Petraeus
Iain
Boal
Specters of Malthus: Scarcity, Poverty,
Apocalypse
Michael
Dickinson
Osama on 9/11
Guerry
Hoddersen
Free Speech is Not Given, but Taken
Bill
Hatch
Irish Politics in Old Time California
Gary
Leupp
The Legacy of Luciano Pavarotti
Website
of the Day
Elisa Salasin's
"My September 11th"
September
10, 2007
Uri
Avnery
A Big Victory Against the Wall
Patrick
Cockburn
Petraeus's Closet
Saul
Landau and Farrah Hassen
Screwing Up In Iraq
David
Michael Green
Why Fred Thompson is Uniquely Qualified
to be the GOP's Nominee
Pius
Adesanmi
A Solidarity Letter to a Victim
of Michael Vick
Betty
Schneider
How to Deal With Sex Offenders
September
8 / 9, 2007
Alexander
Cockburn
Will the US Really Bomb Iran?
Saul
Landau
The Irrational Drama of a Declining Empire
Ismael
Hossein-Zadeh
Hurricane Katrina and Bush's Wars
Ray
McGovern
Petraeus, the Westmoreland of Iraq
Matthew
Abraham
Finkelstein's Legacy at DePaul
Alan
Farago
The Governor and the Growth Machine
Christopher
Brauchli
Grand Old Party Animals
Rannie
Amiri
Battle of the Camps
Fred
Gardner
Will Snoops Get Stopped?
James
L. Secor
B-52 Flexing Nuclear Muscles: H-Bombs Over Barksdale
Missy
Comley Beattie
Choices: Shall We Stay or Shall We Go Now?
Ben
Tripp
Still in the Clover
Francis
Boyle
The University of Illinois' Little Red Sambo Show
Joe
Allen and Paul D'Amato
Jason Bourne vs. James Bond
Website
of the Weekend
Drilling Wyoming: the View from Above
September 7, 2007
Robert
Fantina
Those Iraq Reports: Bush vs. Reality
John
Ross
Coca-Cola's Raid on a Sacred Mountain
James
Brooks
The Occupation Within
Russell
Mokhiber
Robert Reich and the Elimination of Corporate Criminal Liability
Joshua
Frank
The Green Implosion Continues: Cyberlynching John Murphy
John
Walsh
On the Green Party
Mark
Brenner
New York Taxi Workers Strike Over Tracking Devices
Mike
Ferner
"I Will Salute No More Forever"
Website
of the Day
Help Save Osny Zachary's Life
September
6, 2007
Kathleen
and Bill Christison
Bush, Iran and Israel's Hidden
Hand
Allan
J. Lichtman
When General Petraeus Speaks, Don't Listen ...
Norman
Solomon
The Secret Addiction of Thomas Friedman
Yifat
Susskind
Hurricane Felix's First Responders: Courage and Tragedy on the
Miskito Coast
Catherine
Fenton
Why I Am Going to the Protest
Laura
Santina
Can the War Machine be Contained?
Farzana
Versey
Fission Kashmir
Yves
Engler
Haiti: Where a Wage of $2 a Day is Too Much for the Lords of
Industry to Pay
Kelly
Overton
Bang Bang; Shoot Shoot: Is Hunting Racist?
Michael
Simmons
One Jew's Views: The Strange Genius of Drew Friedman and Kominsky
Crumb
Website
of the Day
Dams and Genocide in Guatemala
September
5, 2007
Stan
Goff
The End Begins
Michael
Dickinson
Working for Mother Teresa: Memoirs of a Rebellious Volunteer
Matthew
Abraham
Standing Firm with Norman Finkelstein and DePaul's Heroic Students:
a Defining Moment
Patrick
Cockburn
The Basra Debacle
Dave
Lindorff
Beware the Wounded Beast
Paul
Craig Roberts
Who Are the Fanatics?
Clifton
Ross
Ecuador and the Struggle for Latin American Unity
Elizabeth
Schulte
Katrina's Forgotten Refugees
Joseph
Grosso
Labor Day in New York City
Ben
Terrall
Where's Nancy? On Trying to Protest Pelosi in San Francisco
Website
of the Day
A Guide to Narco Dollars
September
4, 2007
Jean
Bricmont
Why Bush Can Get Away with Attacking
Iran
Patrick
Cockburn
Cut and Run in Iraq
Ron
Jacobs
The Haditha Massacre: Spinning a War Crime
Tom
Kerr
Buried Alive on San Quentin's Death Row
Gary
Leupp
The Case of Jose Maria Sison
Sonja
Karkar
The Weeping Olive Trees of Palestine
Heather
Gray
The Best and Worst of America: 9/11, Joseph Lowery and the Lethal
Silence of Billy Graham
Fidel
Castro
The Super-Revolutionaries
Jackie
Corr
Home Depot Comes to Butte--Begging Bowl in Hand
Sunsara
Taylor
Katrina and the Progress of the System
Website
of the Day
Colombia Journal
September
3, 2007
Patrick
Cockburn
Brits Flee from Basra
Eamon
McCann
Qana, Derry: The Dead Lie in Familiar Shapes
Joshua
Frank
The End of the Green Party?
Chris
Floyd
Post-Mortem America: Bush's Year of Triumph
Marjorie
Cohn
A Look at Bush's Iran War Plans
Walter
Brasch
The News Drones: How Fake Photos Helped Lead the US to War in
Iraq
Matt
Reichel
Redefining the American Dream
Website
of the Day
Don't Get Fooled Again
September
1 / 2, 2007
Alexander
Cockburn
Entrapment Snares Larry Craig
Andy
Worthington
Britain's Guantánamo
Saul
Landau
The Tragic Ordeal of the Cuban Five
David
Keen
An Occident Waiting to Happen: Intellectuals and the War on Terror
Patrick
Cockburn
The Collapse of Iraq's Health Care
Services
Diana
Johnstone
Back in Uncle Sam's Pocket
George
Longstreth, MD
& Karen Longstreth, RN
The Sorrows of Occupation: Life in the West Bank
Linda
M. Woolf
A Sad Day for Psychologists--a Sadder Day for Human Rights
Ralph
Nader
Wrapping the World with Advertising
Fred
Gardner
The Trial of Mollie Fry, MD
Ben
Tripp
Enquiry in America Today
David
Michael Green
American Indigestion: Why Bush Governs from the Gut
Missy
Comley Beattie
Looking for Love in All the Wrong Places: What the GOP Hasn't
Learned About Tolerance
Michael
Dickinson
Who's Cheating: Remembering Princess Diana
Paul
Krassner
Assholes of the Week: From Larry Craig to Wesley Clark
Ron
Jacobs
A Sports Nation of Millions
Poets'
Basement
Buknatski, Davies and Mickey Z
|
September
25, 2007
Alger Hiss, Whittaker
Chambers and the Slapdash "Scholarship" of Sam Tanenhaus
Still
Smearing Alger Hiss
By JEFF KISSELOFF
The 1997 publication of "Whittaker
Chambers, a Biography," a ten-year project that became a
finalist for both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize,
brought its author, Sam Tanenhaus, to immediate public attention,
and, something unusual for a book, was for many months a featured
daily recommendation on Don Imus's drive-time talk radio show,
"Imus in the Morning." In the decade since, Tanenhaus,
while holding down several increasingly prominent positions in
the American book industry--he became Editor of The New York
Times Sunday Book Review in 2004 - has also been widely (although
not universally) praised by historians and reviewers as a careful
scholar. The late John Kenneth Galbraith, for instance, called
Tanenhaus's admiring portrait of the ex-Communist Chambers (and
his concurrent and demeaning portrayal of Alger Hiss, the man
Chambers accused of espionage for the Russians) "truly the
last word," and "wonderfully researched, cool and detached
in the writing."
Tanenhaus, who more recently
has been working on a biography of William F. Buckley, Jr., occasionally
returns to his original subject, most recently in "The End
of the Journey: From Whittaker Chambers to George W. Bush,"
a 6,000-word essay that appeared earlier this summer in the July
2, 2007 issue of The New Republic--several months, as
it happens, after the generally well-received publication of
an English edition of "Whittaker Chambers: A Biography."
The new New Republic
essay seems at best casually researched, and is repeatedly at
variance with known facts. A thorough analysis of his essay's
many references to Hiss and Chambers has taken a full week of
checking and cross-checking, but the remarks that appear below
are not meant to be an exhaustive appraisal of the essay as a
whole, since Hiss, especially, appears in only about half of
its pages. In fact, Tanenhaus appears to be using the essay as
a platform to reevaluate his feelings about the Bush administration.
In an op-ed piece in The Wall Street Journal on December
27, 2002, he wrote, "The political performance of George
W. Bush since Sept. 11, 2001 has left many marveling at the discipline
and efficiency of the president and his admirers." In The
New Republic, however, Tanenhaus takes pains to distance
himself from the President and the war in Iraq. This is of course
well within his rights, but to support his apparently new world
view, Tanenhaus creates an essentially fictitious characterization
of both Alger Hiss (whom he calls "flat," "uninteresting"
and disappointing) and Whittaker Chambers (whom he says possesses
an "almost mesmeric force").
The fictions, slurs, distortions,
and inaccuracies about Hiss, some of them simply sloppy, are
presented in a casually omniscient, reassuring voice. These misrepresentations
often come attached to phrases such as "it was well known
that" or "as everyone knows" or "we now know
with certainty that." Ironically, they follow an introduction
in which Tanenhaus expresses admiration for George Orwell, the
British journalist whose "Nineteen-Eighty Four" is
a denunciation of the misuse of language to achieve political
ends.
Tanenhaus cites "Nineteen
Eighty-Four" as the "truest prophet" of the Cold
War, even while downplaying the central warning of the work:
the dangers of totalitarianism, and the extent that those entrenched
in command will go to retain power. Orwell clearly had Stalinist
Russia in mind when he began composing the book in 1943, but
it also appears that he was reading the news from America in
1948 when he was putting the final touches on his dystopian vision.
In that sense, there's a connection between Orwell and the Hiss
Case, which was first making headlines just as the last pages
of "Nineteen Eighty-four" were rolling off Orwell's
typewriter.
Tanenhaus's admiration for the novel permeates his essay, but
it is an undigested or dissociated admiration, since when it
comes to Hiss and Chambers the essay very skillfully makes use
of its own kind of "newspeak" to present opinions as
facts. Tanenhaus--let's be clear about this--did not invent "Hiss
case newspeak." The Alger Hiss Story Web site has frequently
been called upon to dissect a range of essays and books that
build their arguments against Hiss on fantasy and falsehood.
So here is our comparison of the statements in "From Whittaker
Chambers to George Bush" to the facts.
Section
I--Tanenhaus's Presentation of Hiss
* Tanenhaus gets off on the
wrong foot by writing in the summer of 1948, Hiss was accused
of being a Soviet agent in hearings before HUAC. In those hearings,
Chambers specifically - and under oath - denied that Hiss had
been an agent. He did not change his testimony until November
17, during pre-trial depositions for a libel suit that Hiss had
brought against him. It was on that day that Chambers offered
into evidence typed copies of State Department documents that
he claimed were given to him by Hiss for transmission to the
Soviet Union. This implicit reframing of the Chambers-Hiss confrontation
at the outset of writing allows Tanenhaus to ignore all the contradictions
and ambiguities in Chambers' behavior.
*Tanenhaus writes that Hiss
stood trial twice for lying about being an agent. Technically,
this is wrong, and another smoothing away of ambiguity. Hiss
was charged with lying before a grand jury when he denied seeing
Chambers after January 1, 1937 and when he testified that he
never handed any secret documents to Chambers. He was not indicted
for being a Soviet agent, although, of course, that was the larger
issue raised at trial.
*Tanenhaus, who later in the
article accuses Pulitzer Prize winning author Kai Bird of not
knowing his history, is wrong when he claims that the Hiss affair
initiated the witch hunts of the 1950s. The public accusations
against Hiss were preceded by a number of earlier cases, including
the Hollywood 10, the first Smith Act prosecutions, the Carl
Marzani case and the accusations by Elizabeth Bentley and Igor
Gouzenko that subsequently resulted in trials.
*Tanenhaus calls the execution of the Rosenbergs "appalling,"
but his assertion that they "chose" their fate is equally
abhorrent. The Rosenbergs were given a choice: confess to a crime
they didn't commit or die. It wasn't much of a choice.
*Tanenhaus says that the Hiss perjury trials were "models
of restraint," but as the Freedom of Information Act proved,
the FBI and the prosecution ran rampant over Hiss's civil rights
by by suborning perjury, concealing evidence that would have
helped the defense, wiretapping Hiss's conversations and opening
his mail, illegally obtaining privileged information and more.
* Tanenhaus writes that Hiss's sentence was "surpassingly
mild." Actually, Hiss was given the maximum. Nor was he
assigned, as Tanenhaus claims, to a minimum security prison.
He was sent to Lewisburg Penitentiary, a maxium security federal
facility in Pennsylvania, 150 miles from his family in Manhattan.
Prison authorities wanted to avoid any suggestion of "coddling
a Communist" and deliberately did not send him to the minimum
security prison, 50 miles away in Danbury, Connecticut, which
would have been the norm for a prisoner convicted of perjury
in the Southern District of New York. Danbury, by the way, was
where Republican Congressman J. Parnell Thomas, the former chairman
of HUAC, served out his fraud conviction.
Nor was Hiss released "ahead
of schedule." His release was by statute; under the regulations
of the day, any prisoner earned time off for good behavior.
* Tanenhaus compresses the story of Hiss's government service
into a familiar cliché, calling it a "rapid upward
climb." Hiss joined the New Deal in 1933. Over the next
14 years, he served with distinction in two other cabinet departments
until he landed in his final position with the government as
the head of the Office of Political Affairs, a rise yes, rapid,
not really, and he never reached the highest ranks or became
a well-known public figure.
* Tanenhaus, somewhat contradictorily, calls Hiss a "State
Department mandarin," a term generally applied only to conservative
careerists. Hiss considered himself a volunteer when it came
to government work; he had enlisted to help out in two national
emergencies--the Depression and World War II--and always planned
to return to a higher-paying job in private law practice. The
term "mandarin" as it applies to a bureaucrat means
someone who is "pedantic." Hardly anyone who worked
closely with Hiss would have described him that way.
* Tanenhaus cribs the phrase "shabby gentility" without
credit from Murray Kempton (who frequently denigrated Hiss) to
describe Hiss's home life as a child. But whether he originated
it or not, the description didn't match up with Hiss's own memories
of his childhood. When Hiss was two years old, his father committed
suicide, but he left the family financially secure until the
bulk of Mary Hiss's savings were lost during the Depression (by
which time Hiss had graduated from law school and was raising
a family of his own).
* Maybe the most egregiously misleading statement in the entire
piece occurs when Tanenhaus cites what he says is a direct quote
from Hiss to demonstrate Hiss's alleged contempt for the "bluestockings"
of Baltimore - a telling indication to Tanenhaus that Hiss was
a secret Bolshevik. However, the partial quotation employed by
Tanenhaus, in which Hiss allegedly belittled the "horrible
old women of Baltimore" cannot be found in any of Hiss's
own writings or in the public record and appears only as an uncorrobrated
remark attributed to him by his adversary, Whittaker Chambers
in "Witness." (p. 363). It is a hallmark of careful
scholarship always to include the provenance of every selected
quote--its origin and context. Then readers can evaluate both
the words cited, and the nature and the reliability of the source
from which a quote is taken. But Tanenhaus uses this supposed
quote, and draws damning conclusions from it, without mentioning
its source.
* As if that's not enough, Tanenhaus then does it a second time.
In this instance, he quotes Hiss saying admiringly of Stalin,
that he "plays for keeps." That quote as well can only
be found in "Witness" (page 41 of the original hardcover
edition).
* Tanenhaus says that Hiss's brother Bosley Hiss died from lethal
alcoholism. He died from Bright's Disease, which may or may not
have been a result from his excessive drinking.
* Tanenhaus writes that discipline was "the one outward
clue to the Bolshevik within". Discipline comes from many
sources and serves many purposes. Hiss by his own admission was
a slacker in high school but buckled down in college and law
school. His government superiors prized this same "discipline,"
meaning, presumably, his application and lack of laziness; it
also brought him to the attention of two mentors who were among
the brightest (and most disciplined) minds in America: Felix
Frankfurter and Oliver Wendell Holmes. Neither of these men,
who were the two most influential figures in shaping Hiss's political
ideals and his career, was of course even remotely Bolshevistic
in outlook.
Nor has there ever been one shred of evidence presented at the
trials or elsewhere that indicated Hiss held any kind of radical
beliefs. The closest that anyone could point to was his wife's
registration with the Socialist Party in 1932 at a time when
the Communist Party had few antagonists more hostile than the
Socialist's leader Norman Thomas.
* In the August 1948 hearings before HUAC, Hiss, according to
Tanenhaus, performed poorly in the face of "mounting evidence"
against him. Actually, there was no mounting evidence. Once the
confusion about whether Hiss actually knew Chambers was sorted
out, the evidence against Hiss mostly centered around Chambers'
claim that Hiss had wanted to turn over his old Ford car to a
Communist Party-owned lot in Washington D.C. What the hearings
did show in terms of the evidence on this matter was that Chambers
was wrong: the car was not turned over to a Party-affiliated
business (but but rather to one of the area's oldest and largest
Ford dealerships) and that Hiss's memory about a minor event
some twelve years previously wasn't clear -- especially since
he was denied by HUAC investigators access to the records that
could have cleared up the matter.
* Tanenhaus writes that Hiss refused "to declare himself,
to say who he was and what he really stood for." On August
3 in his opening statement before HUAC and on August 25th, in
another statement regarding his relationship with Chambers and
how he suffered for his acts of kindness, Hiss made it perfectly
clear who he was and what he stood for. Transcripts of those
hearings are publicly available.
On the contrary, it was remarkable (and no doubt foolish) for
Hiss to have been as open as he was with the Committee: a hostile
panel dominated by anti-New Deal Republicans in an election year
when the White House was up for grabs for the first time since
1932.
Tanenhaus adds that Hiss, was "retreating behind his boyish
grin and well-tailored suits, he took refuge in hedged lawyerly
answers, hair-splitting qualifications, and murky evasions."
Again, this is a myth that would be clear to anyone who reads
the record. It was a grim procedure for Hiss in front of the
committee, and there wasn't much opportunity for boyish grinning.
And if Hiss's suits were bettered tailored than Chambers', it's
not clear what that indicates except that his suits were bettered
tailored than Chambers'.
Again resorting to name-calling, Tanenhaus accuses Hiss of posing
as "a Gilbert and Sullivan parody of the civil servant"
(despite his "discipline" and his "mandarin"
standing). Hiss, by all accounts, was a model civil servant.
In fact, his work reviews by his superiors were uniformly excellent
and are all available publicly. Hiss bosses at the State Department,
during the time that Chambers accused him of being an agent,
all testified to Hiss's outstanding character and work.
Adding to his list of perjoratives, Tanenhaus writes that the
"the dismal performance [before HUAC] stood in almost comical
defiance of the truth" but this is again the author's subjective
view of what the truth was. Unlike Chambers', Hiss story remained
essentially the same from the first time he was questioned by
the FBI to his death. In contrast, Chambers' account changed
direction dramatically and often.
Tanenhaus writes that the "truth," apparently was that
it was "well known" that "Hiss belonged to the
most radical faction of the New Deal." Hiss joined the AAA
in March, 1933 when the Administration was quickly filling that
department's rolls from the hundreds of young men and women who
had descended on Washington, D.C. Among the scores of young lawyers
and administrators were conservatives, liberals, radicals. Many
of the brightest young talent were funneled to their New Deal
jobs by Felix Frankfurter, then a professor at Harvard University
Law School. It was, indeed, Frankfurter who urged Hiss to join
up, which he did under Jerome Frank. Frankfurter later testified
as a character witness for Hiss at the first perjury trial. In
1935, when a number of the more radical staff members were purged
from the AAA in a political dispute, Hiss was not among them.
*Tanenhaus writes that Hiss' membership in these cells was "well
known," but other than Chambers, not a single person offered
credible supporting evidence that Alger was a member of these
secret groups. Of the one revealed by Chambers, - the so-called
Ware group - Hiss was not a member, according to Lee Pressman,
an acknowledged former participant. Others interviewed by the
FBI backed Pressman. Even people like Julian Wadleigh, Chambers'
alleged confederate, testified, that Hiss was known as a moderate
even conservative among his peers, a view echoed by several others
who worked with Hiss. This was of course contradicted by Nathaniel
Weyl in 1950, but his testimony is suspect.
*"So common was this knowledge"
(that Hiss had been a Communist) John Foster Dulles advised him
prior to his HUAC appearance he could satisfy the committee if
he just admitted it. This story only appears in Alger Hiss: The
True Story by John Chabot Smith. The source is apparently an
interview with Hiss by Smith, a former reporter, who covered
the trial for the Herald Tribune and who believed Hiss was innocent.
Tanenhaus is partially correcting his own research here. In his
biography of Chambers, he writes that Dulles gave this advice
to Hiss when he was preparing to testify before the grand jury
in early 1948.
Where Tanenhaus errs is in suggesting that Dulles's advice was
derived from some specific knowledge that he had. In fact, it
was merely a suggestion tossed off as an easy way to get out
from under the charges. Hiss, of course, rejected the advice,
because it was untrue.
* Tanenhaus then declares about Hiss: "Far from having been
a communist, he asserted he had not even known any communists",
but this is a conflation of events. During his August 5, testimony,
Hiss mentioned that he did know Ware, Abt, Pressman and Witt,
all of whom were members of the party. But at the second trial,
Hiss refused to state whether they were Communists, saying rather
that he didn't know anyone who specifically told him they were
members of the Party with cards from the Party.
* Tanenhaus says that appearing before HUAC Hiss "seemed
mystified" at the charges against him, although he eventually
"owned" to the fact that he had been previously questioned
by the FBI regarding the allegations. "Owned" implies
that Hiss had somewhow tried to conceal his interview with the
FBI. It was not a secret, and while the FBI on that occasion
asked Hiss about Chambers, they simply, according to their own
transcript of the interview, asked him if he knew the name in
the context of a series of names they ran by him. Hiss said he
didn't, which even Chambers said was truthful, because Hiss never
knew him by his real name when they were friendly.
"Mystified" is a mischaracterization, but readers should
judge by themselves. Hiss was angry and frustrated at having
these charges made public. He had believed he had put them to
rest, and since there was no basis for them in his mind, he didn't
understand why they kept coming forward, since he had no idea
that Chambers was talking about him, or that he himself was under
surveillance by the FBI.
* Tanenhaus writes that Hiss "had abruptly quit the State
Department in 1946 amid public speculation that he had a long
record of 'leftist activity.'" But the record trail is clear.
After the San Francisco Conference in April 1945 (the conference
that created the United Nations; Hiss was its Secretary General),
Hiss told Secretary of State Edward Stettinius that he wanted
to leave the State Department and return to private practice.
Stettiunius asked him to stay on, to help in the establishment
of the United Nations, and Hiss reluctantly agreed. On the way
to a London UN meeting in January, 1946, Dulles sounded Hiss
out about taking the reins of the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace. Hiss was interested, but that March the first rumors about
his involvement in the Party began to circulate. Hiss was questioned
by the FBI and told then Secretary Byrnes that he would be willing
to resign instead of embarrassing the Department. Byrnes wanted
him to stay on. Hiss did until he received a firm offer from
Dulles, and his resignation became official in December 1946.
Drawing a false parallel, Tanenhaus implies that Hiss deserves
little sympathy because he didn't suffer to the same extent as
the former Russian officials who were executed after the Moscow
show trials in the 1930s. Well, yes Hiss didn't face execution,
but his statement: "The suspected American communist, in
contrast, had ample room to maneuver in 1948, particularly
if he was a trained lawyer and accomplished careerist who had
risen swiftly through the government bureaucracy." It is
true that Hiss, under the American legal system, had an opportunity
to defend himself, unlike Stalin's purge trial victims, but "maneuver"
suggests that Hiss was using his (inaccurately described) swift
and calculated rise through government ranks to evade deserved
punishment. To be told that Stalin's terror regime liquidated
its opponents in the 1930s is not a useful way of evaluating
the consequences of what happened to tens of thousands of Americans
in the 1940s and 1950s who were named without proof as Communists
and had their government or business careers destroyed. (A classic
and comprehensive account of the toll these persecutions took
is David Caute's "The Great Fear.")
Tanenhaus writes that Hiss's agility made him an "excellent
spy" but that he overdid it when he pulled "social
rank on HUAC's yahoos and its staff of gumshoes." The
seeds of the latter assertion are probably HUAC investigator
Robert Stripling's account as revealed in his book, "The
Red Plot Against America." According to Stripling, after
an exchange with Richard Nixon in which, Hiss a Harvard Law School
graduate noted that Nixon had attended Whittier, the junior Congressman,
never one to slough off a perceived slight, had it in for Hiss.
How this generalizes into Hiss "ostentatiously" pulling
"social rank" on the other members of "HUAC's
yahoos and its staff of gumshoes" is unclear.
Furthermore, if the Pumpkin Papers and Baltimore documents produced
by Chambers were an indication of the quality of government material
procured by Hiss, he was not the "excellent spy" described.
Those files, most of them publicly available, were useless for
espionage. By turning Hiss into a master spy, Tanenhaus is moving
beyond even Chambers' accusations: Chambers, even while denouncing
Hiss, made him out to be something of a bumbler, alleging that
Hiss's supposed Russian handler, Boris Bykov, complained that
Hiss never produced documents that were of any use.
* Tanenhaus describes Hiss as a "covert enemy of the establishment"
who, he says, "confidently" traded "on establishment
privileges--snobbery, social pride, 'old school' ties, inveterate
name-dropping." Having previously compared Hiss (unfavorably)
to Stalin's purge victims, Tanenhaus in another false parallel
likens him to English Communists, specifically the Cambridge
spies, such as Kim Philby, who he says "like Hiss"
were "audacious and self-serving and whose public embrace
of the 'proletariat' grew, like his, out of a private history
of hidden injuries and abasements."
There are many accusations in this one compact phrase--Hiss was
foolhardy, selfish, pretended to love the downtrodden, and distorted
by psychic wounds. Tanenhaus offers no evidence for this phantom
vision of Hiss; none exists, except in the dark but unsubstantiated
portrait created by his accuser, and now embellished with new
analogies by his accuser's admiring biographer. Rather than deconstructing
these mischaracterizations one by one, it is perhaps more appropriate
simply to repeat that the record shows that, until his life was
disrupted by Chambers' charges, Hiss had spent most of his career
supporting a family on a public servant's salary and postponing
the "establishment privileges" of a cushy corporate
job. When he had received a telegram in 1933 from Felix Frankfurter
that there was a national emergency and the country needed his
talents, he answered the call. "One third of the nation,"
President Roosevelt had already said, "is ill-fed, ill-housed,
ill-clothed." The situation, unprecedented in American history,
threatened the viability of the entire country--not just its
"proletariat."
Section
II - Tanenhaus's Presentation of Chambers
* Turning his attention toward
Chambers' story of his life in the Communist underground, Tanenhaus
writes that Whittaker Chambers, when he brought charges against
Alger Hiss, was one of the few American Communists his countrymen
had laid eyes on. Actually, Chambers was not a Communist when
he made those charges. He was a self-confessed former Communist,
a Senior Editor for Time magazine who had left the Party either
in the 1920s or the 1930s, depending on which version of his
story you want to accept. Using the same broad-brush strokes,
Tanenhaus states without qualification that Chambers departed
in 1938, ignoring the fact that from 1939 until 1948, Chambers
said (and repeatedly swore under oath) that he had left the Party
in 1937. The omission of the qualification is not just a paring
away of inconsequential details for pithier journalistic presentation:
it is an essential part of an assessment of Chambers; it goes
to the heart of his veracity as a witness. Chambers did not change
the date to 1938 until 1948. This is significant because it was
in 1948 that Chambers, for the first time, produced the papers
he said he got from Hiss--papers dated 1938.
Also, a check of newspaper
and newsreel archives from the summer of 1948 reveals that many
American Communists and ex-Communists, from Earl Browder and
William Z. Foster to members of the Hollywood 10 and Elizabeth
Bentley, had all preceded Chambers in the movie theater newsreels,
then a far more widely available news source than television.
* Tanenhaus suggests that the
Hiss defense team's effort to uncover information about the chief
government witness against their client was somehow unscrupulous.
If readers want to understand more clearly about how the defense
conducted itself, the defense papers are fully available at the
Harvard University Law School Library. Having gone through those
papers many times, I can attest to the fact that there isn't
a hint deliberate wrongdoing or coverup among those files.
* Tanenhaus reports that Chambers tried to recruit Diana Trilling
for "secret work" in 1933. This is reported in Trilling's
nutball memoir, The Beginning of The Journey, in which
she also says that Harry Hopkins, Roosevelt's closest advisor,
was a Soviet agent, and that FDR was operating under the control
of the Communist Party when he made "tragic concessions
[at Yalta] which put another sixth of the earth's surface under
the yoke of Soviet communism." Trilling goes on to report
that, when Chambers approached her to be his accomplice, she
did not believe him. It was not until years later, she writes,
that she understood what he was asking her to do.
The request sounds similar to one Chambers made to the journalist
Ella Winter around the same time. Tanenhaus overlooks that visit.
This is unfortunate, because it may unlock the keys to one of
the great mysteries of the Hiss Case--how Chambers got hold of
the State Department papers he used against Hiss.
In 1969, Winter said in an interview that, in the 1930s, Chambers
asked her to steal documents from the State Department, and even
explained to her how to do it. He said all she had to do was
make an appointment with an official, wait for him to excuse
himself to go to the men's room, and then swipe papers from his
desk. Winter also turned Chambers down, but the nature of the
papers Chambers later produced indicates that either he or a
confederate adopted the technique. Whether any such papers were
actually transmitted to the Russians is another question; it
is important to note that no papers that can be attributed directly
to Chambers have ever turned up in Soviet files.
"Certainty", on the other hand, is the term used by
Mr. Tanenhaus to describe what he says is Hiss's guilt, proved,
he claims, by documents released in the past ten years from Soviet
and American archives. His statement is in response to "The
Mystery of Ales," by Kai Bird and Soviet scholar Svetlana
Chervonnaya in the Summer 2007 issue of The American Scholar.
Bird and Chervonnaya contend that additional documents they have
access to call into question a basic tenet of the National Security
Agency--that its wartime Venona decryptions proved that Hiss
was a longtime Soviet spy codenamed ALES.
Tanenhaus views Venona as an ultimate confirmation of Hiss's
guilt, but the FBI, which was familiar with the intercept program
in the 1940s, did not. In fact, the Venona identification of
ALES as Hiss was based on an FBI suggestion that Hiss was "probably"
ALES, not a certainty, and the FBI was still so uncertain of
this identification that three years later it was still conducting
interviews to see if it was true.
* Rather than confront or refute the evidence brought forward
by Bird and Chervonnaya, Tanenhaus characterizes the years of
research behind their lengthy paper as "flimsy," relying
instead on a surrogate--a quickly assembled, conjectural, truncated,
inaccurate summary of Bird and Chervonnaya's findings included
in a premature and hostile response to "The Mystery of Ales"
by John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr (see "Hiss Was Guilty,"
History News Network, April 16, 2007), which was posted on the
Internet two months before the Bird and Chervonnaya paper was
published or even available for review. Tanenhaus calls this
much shorter Haynes and Klehr rejoinder "painstaking."
(Writing a month after Tanenhaus's New Republic essay
appeared, the journalist Ron Rosenbaum turned to the same Haynes
and Klehr "pre-refutation" in an attempt to discredit
Bird and Chervonnaya ("Alger Hiss Rides Again," Slate,
July 16, 2007).)
* Tanenhaus refers to Bird and Chervonnaya's findings as only
a "tiny filament." Yet, as already noted, the never-confirmed
FBI hunch that Hiss was "probably" ALES is in his mind
a "certainty."
Tanenhaus also attacks Bird, a Pulitzer-Prize winning historian,
for not knowing his history in describing the Hiss case as part
of a broader attack on the New Deal. This understanding has been
clear to many observers from the outset. The first book ever
published about the Hiss trials, Alistair Cooke's 1950 eyewitness
account, had the title "A Generation on Trial." Eager
to regain the White House in 1948 after four straight losses,
Republicans seized on the idea that Roosevelt, Truman, and Democrats
in general had been "soft on Communism," as a way of
discrediting Roosevelt and undermining his towering reputation.
* Tanenhaus writes that "the truth about the intellectuals
and Chambers" was that they "admired him even as they
recoiled from him." While this may have been true in some
Social Democratic circles and among some postwar liberal anti-Communist
intellectuals, the number of intellectuals who reviled him is
substantial. That list would include: Malcolm Cowley, Matthew
Josephson, Margaret Halsey, Henry Steele Commager, Felix Frankfurter
and Adlai Stevenson.
* Tanenhaus writes that "with his gravid air of fatalism,
of persecution and guilt, of tormented secrecy and penitential
disclosure," Chambers was superbly cast as a witness. But
there's another reason why he was superbly cast (an interesting
term considering the possibility he may have been literally cast
into the role by the FBI): he had a habit of collecting information
or "life preservers." on people; he had a novelist's
imagination and eye for detail and an appetite for invention.
He was extremely paranoid. and he was desperately holding onto
a secret - his homosexuality - that put him at the mercy of investigators
who were in on it.
* Those qualities may have made him well cast as a martyr,
they didn't make him well cast as a spy, something the Soviets
must have noted. In fact, nearly all of the techniques allegedly
employed by Chambers as an agent, violated the most basic rules
of Soviet espionage, according to experts such as Ladislas Farago
and Alexander Foote.
* Tanenhaus tries to perpetuate another myth that has been spread
by Chambers' supporters for years: that he only "reluctantly"
leveled his charges against Hiss. Chambers, who according to
nearly everyone (even his friends) who knew him in the 1930s
was always on the lookout for money. After his break from the
Communist Party, approached one friend, the magazine writer Herbert
Solow, with a story he wanted to sell about his underground days.
Through the efforts of another writer, Isaac Don Levine, this
led to his conversation with Assistant Secretary of State Adolf.
A. Berle in 1939, in which where he was more than happy to name
names, including those of both Hisses (and if he was only testifying
against Alger because of the libel suit, why did Chambers tell
a wild story about Donald that even the FBI said was untrue.
For more on this, click here.). He talked to the FBI in 1942,
1943, 1945 and 1946. He also broadened his charges against Hiss
in entirely voluntary conversation with the the State Department's
security officer, Ray Murphy, in 1946 and 1947.
* Tanenhaus adds that Chambers perjured himself repeatedly on
Hiss's behalf: This is true only if you believe that he was protecting
Hiss, which he clearly was not. If anything, he was protecting
himself. Being a self-confessed former Communist is one thing
(as Tanenhaus himself tries to point out with Dulles's suggestion
that Hiss "confess" his past to the Committee), but
a self-confessed former spy is another. Chambers himself could
have faced perjury charges, jail and certainly the end of his
career at Time had he told earlier the tale he began to weave
in November 1948.
*Tanenhaus says that Hiss's decision to press a libel suit against
Chambers was a "fatal miscalculation," but this makes
several false assumptions. The first is that Chambers should
be taken at his word when he says he was surprised at what he
found in the contents of the envelope he claimed was secreted
away in dumbwaiter for ten years (he had been asked at pre-trial
depositions to produce evidence showing Hiss had been a Communist;
the papers in the envelope he said went further and were proof
that Hiss had been a spy). But it makes no sense that Chambers,
who even Tanenhaus admits was paranoid and who demonstrated at
both Hiss trials an ability to recall the smallest details from
12 or 13 years before, would have forgotten that he had secreted
away "a life preserver" in the former of these documents
to prevent any harm to himself or his family after he left the
Communist Party.
* Next, Tanenhaus issues a
blanket condemnation of Hiss's supporters for what he says is
their sympathetic attitude toward the Soviet Union and their
blase attitude toward "its repressions." This too is
remarkable for its sweep that is not based on any empirical evidence.
Ironically, Tanenhaus, who says he is appalled at the excesses
of McCarthyism is calling for a disloyalty oath toward the Soviet
Union from Hiss's supporters. In fact, he has: according to a
recent story in a British newspaper, Tanenhaus refused to begin
the interview until the reporter repeated the phrase "Tens
of millions died in the Soviet camps."
In the end though, the prosecution of Alger Hiss had nothing
to do with Stalinist tyranny, since Hiss's political views weren't
on trial nor was he - unlike Chambers - ever on record as being
a supporter of Stalin. For Tanenhaus, it's simply another way
to tar those who believe or believed in Hiss's innocence. Tanenhaus
condemns Henry Wallace for calling for a dialogue with the Soviet
Union - something Hiss believed in as well - not because they
were Stalinists, but because they believed that a Cold War was
a potentially ruinous path for the world's two leading powers
- both economically and potentially militarily.
*Finally, Tanenhaus says that "rather than attack his attackers,
Chambers accepted the burden of moral guilt and recast it in
the rhetoric of high sacrifice." But if Chambers wasn't
attacking Hiss and other dozens of people dead and alive that
he named, what was he doing? Of course he was attacking them
and attempting to ruin them while making it appear as if he was
undergoing some kind of huge self sacrifice. The fact is he held
onto his job, wrote a bestselling book purporting to be about
his life and remained financially secure for the rest of his
life while become idolized by the likes of people like Tanenhaus.
Where was the sacrifice?
And while Tanenhaus prefers to see Chambers as "an American
Cassandra" and the founding father of modern American conservatism,
the problem is that his "we were caught in a tragedy of
history" speech before HUAC was essentially a lie. Ultimately,
casting Chambers that way says more about his supporters than
it does about Chambers. This attempt to create history from what
the historian hopes it was rather than the way it was, was the
subject of a warning by a former journalist who said about his
experiences in the 1930s and '40s:
I saw history being written not in terms of what happened but
of what ought t
o have happened, according to the party; this kind of thing is
frightening to me. If a leader says of such-and-such an event
that it never happened -well, it never happened. If he says that
two and two are five -well, two and two are five."
The author was George Orwell.
Jeff Kisseloff can be reached
at hijeff@kisseloff.com
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