Authors: Christopher Simpson
Chapter One
1 | On religious attitudes toward communism, see, for example, |
2 | On “underground resistance movements,” see NSC 10/2, “Office of Special Projects,” June 18, 1948 (top secret), RG 273, NA, Washington, D.C. The designator “NSC 10/2” is used to identify National Security Council decision documents in series in this archival record group. |
3 | The media's role in the transformation of former Nazi collaborators into anti-Communist “freedom fighters” is discussed in Chapters Twelve, Fourteen, and Fifteen. For an example of this process, see Wallace Carroll, “It Takes a Russian to Beat a Russian,” For archival documentation concerning the close relations between senior U.S. media figures and the U.S. intelligence community during the cold war, see JCS 1735/41, “Guidance on Psychological Warfare Matters,” February 20, 1950; also letter of Major General Charles Bolte to Brigadier General Robert A. McClure, July 7, 1949, discussing personnel for psychological warfare program and McClure's reply of July 20, 1949, with enclosure and subsequent correspondence, all secret, found in U.S. Army P&O Hot Files 091.412TS through 334WSEGTS, Box 10, Entry 154, RG 319, NA, declassified following author's request. General McClure, commander of all U.S. Army psychological warfare activities during World War II and much of the cold war, referred to For a more accessible source on many of the personalities of cold war psychological warfare operations, see Sig Mickelson, |
4 | Telegram traffic includes: Berlin to Washington dispatch marked “Personal for Kennan,” 862.00/9â2548, September 25, 1948 (top secret); Heidelberg to Washington dispatch marked “For Kennan,” 862.00/9â2748, September 27, 1948 (top secret); Washington to Heidelberg, 862.00/9â2848, September 28, 1948 (top secret); Heidelberg to Washington, 862.00/9â3048, September 30, 1948 (top secret), all of which are found in RG 59, NA, Washington, D.C. |
5 | Hunt, op. cit. The intelligence coordinating center referred to in the text is the Pentagon's Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency (JIOA), which is discussed in Chapter Three; for correspondence concerning suppression of records on Nazi past of scientists, see JIOA Deputy Director Walter Rozamus letter to Intelligence Division, U.S. Army General Staff, November 18, 1947. For Wev quote: JIOA Director Bosquet Wev to General S. J. Chamberlin, director of intelligence for War Department General Staff (G-2), July 2, 1947 (secret), both cited in Hunt, op. cit. |
6 | E. H. Cookridge (Edward Spiro), |
7 | Author's interview with Victor Marchetti, June 7, 1984. |
8 | For discussion of cold war plans for use of Soviet bloc émigrés in guerrilla operations, including George Kennan's role, see Joint Strategic Plans Committee (JSPC), “Proposal for the Establishment of a Guerrilla Warfare School and a Guerrilla Warfare Corps” (JSPC 862/3), August 2, 1948 (top secret), P&O 352 TS (Section 1, Case 1), RG 319, NA; Kennan correspondence with General Alfred Gruenther, April 27, 1948 (secret) in P&O 091.714 TS (Section 1, Case 1), RG 319, NA; and JSPC “Joint Outline War Plans for Determination of Mobilization Requirements for War Beginning 1 July 1949” (JSPC 891/6), September 17, 1948 (top secret), with discussion of Vlasov and psychological warfare at Appendix “E,” p. 36, in P&O 370.1 TS (Case 7, Part IA, Sub No. 13), RG 319, NA. On controversy over Waffen SS discussed in footnote, see Eugene Davidson, |
9 | The CIA's role in propaganda operations in the United States, including those employing former Nazi collaborators, is examined in detail in Chapters Fourteen, Fifteen, and Seventeen. For government records concerning payments to émigré leaders, see James R. Price, |
10 | The spearhead of this publicity campaign was known as the Crusade for Freedom, although it also included a number of subordinate efforts detailed in Chapter Fifteen. On the CFF, see Mickelson, op. cit., pp. 41 and 53â58; Larry Collins, “The Free Europe Committee: American Weapon of the Cold War,” (1975) Carlton University doctoral thesis, Canadian Thesis on Microfilm Service, call no. TC 20090, p. 256ff.; and Free Europe Committee, Inc., |
11 | For staffing of the Assembly of Captive European Nations (ACEN), see Assembly of Captive European Nations, |
12 | For Walter Lippmann quote, see Senator Charles Mathias, “Ethnic Groups and Foreign Policy,” |
Chapter Two
1 | Control Council Law No. 10 (Berlin, December 20, 1945) is published in Leon Friedman, ed., |
2 | There is an extensive literature on the Nazi war on the eastern front and on the Holocaust in German-occupied territories. For reliable studies used in the preparation of the present text, see Lucy Dawidowiscz, |
On Manstein's order and POW starvation, see Alexander Werth,
Russia at War 1941â1945
(New York: Avon, 1965), p. 646, and Davidson, op. cit., p. 568. Gilbert,
Holocaust
, p. 845, estimates losses of Soviet POWs at about 2,500,000, of whom 1 million were shot and the remainder killed through starvation and exposure. Manstein's postwar career mentioned in footnote is noted in Hilberg, op. cit., pp. 698 and 710. On the “Commissar Decree,” see Alexander Dallin,
German Rule in Russia
, 2d ed. (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1981), pp. 30â31 and, on resettlement, p. 255ff., hereinafter cited as Dallin,
German Rule
. The mass killings at Rasseta and elsewhere are noted in Werth, op. cit., pp. 659â60. The Odessa massacre is described in Gilbert,
Holocaust
, pp. 217â18, and Hilberg, op. cit., pp. 200â01. On “hundreds of Lidices,” see Werth, op. cit., p. 658ff.
3 | For comment on “humane” methods, see Hilberg, op. cit., p. 210. |
4 | The seminal work on political warfare on the eastern frontâthough perhaps the least availableâis Friedrich Buchardt's top secret manuscript “Die Be-handlung des russichen Problems wahrend der Zeit des national-sozialistischen Regimes in Deutschland” (1946?), originally prepared for British intelligence and later made available to American agencies as well. Based also on author's interview with Mrs. Buchardt, May 17, 1984. Dallin, |
5 | On Pfleiderer, see |
6 | For SS role of Six and Augsburg, see captured SS Dossiers No. 107480 (Six) and No. 307925 (Augsburg) in the Berlin Document Center. On Hilger: Alfred Meyer interview, December 30, 1983. See also citations to wartime documentation on Hilger in Chapter Nine. On Köstring: “Final Interrogation Report: Koestring, Gen D Kav, CG of Volunteer Units,” Seventh U.S. Seventh Army Interrogation Center, SAIC/ FIR/42, September 11, 1945 (confidential), Box 721 A, Entry 179, Enemy POW Interrogation file (MIS-Y) 1943â1945, AC of 5, G-2 Intelligence Division, RG 165, NA, Washington, D.C. On Herwarth: Hans Heinrich Herwarth von Bittenfeld, On Gehlen: Cookridge, op. cit., or citations in Chapter Four. On Strik-Strikfelt: Wilfried Strik-Strikfelt, |
7 | Werth, op. cit., p. 646. For account of Vlasov discussed in footnote, see Strik-Strikfelt, op. cit., with quoted portion at pp. 229â30 in the English-language edition; quote concerning execution of Vlasov is on p. 245. For Thorwald quote in footnote, see Jiirgen Thorwald (Heinz Bongartz), |