Ike's Spies (55 page)

Read Ike's Spies Online

Authors: Stephen E. Ambrose

BOOK: Ike's Spies
10.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

30.
Smith,
OSS
, p. 369.

31.
Ibid., pp. 370–71.

32.
Bissell interview.

33.
Church Committee, book IV, pp. 31–32.

34.
Ibid., pp. 33–36.

35.
Victor Marchetti and John Marks,
The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence
, pp. 46–47.

36.
Ibid., p. 47.

37.
Tom Braden, “What's Wrong with the CIA?”
Saturday Review
, April 5, 1975, as quoted in Church Committee, book I, p. 547.

38.
Rositzke,
CIA's Secret Operations
, p. 151.

39.
Church Committee, book IV, p. 40.

40.
For a balanced and insightful essay on the role of intelligence in the modern world, the best this author has read, see M. R. D. Foot, “Intelligence Services,”
The Economist
(London), March 15, 1980.

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

1.
This section is based on interviews with Eisenhower and on Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Mandate for Change
, pp. 223–25.

2.
Brownell interview.

3.
Eisenhower,
Mandate
, p. 225, reprints these letters; the originals, to John Eisenhower, June 16, 1953, and to Miller, June 10, 1953, are in the Eisenhower Library in Abilene.

4.
Quoted in Herbert Parmet,
Eisenhower and the American Crusades
, p. 386.

5.
Lewis Strauss,
Men and Decisions
, p. 356.

6.
Parmet,
Eisenhower
, p. 387.

7.
Strauss,
Men and Decisions
, p. 268; Eisenhower,
Mandate
, p. 311.

8.
Eisenhower,
Mandate
, p. 311, reprints this diary entry.

9.
Parmet,
Eisenhower
, p. 344; Strauss,
Men and Decisions
, pp. 281–91.

10.
Eisenhower to Strauss, June 16, 1954, Eisenhower Library, Abilene; Eisenhower,
Mandate
, p. 313.

11.
Eisenhower,
Mandate
, p. 312.

12.
Wainwright interview.

13.
Quoted in Book IV,
Final Report of the Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities
, U. S. Senate, Senate Report No. 94–755, 94th Congress, 2d Session, pages 52–53.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

1.
Kermit Roosevelt,
Countercoup: The Struggle for the Control of Iran
, pp. 155–57. Shortly after its publication, McGraw-Hill withdrew from circulation, until a later unspecified date, this memoir of the CIA's project to overthrow Mossadegh. Accounts of the withdrawal in
The Wall Street Journal
(November 6, 1979) and the New York
Times
(November 10, 1979) quote McGraw-Hill's publicity director, Donald Rubin, as explaining that the recall was due to “defective production and errata” and “…  problems of accuracy at the time of shipping.” Both articles emphasized that Roosevelt's volume had cleared the mandatory CIA review, and, although there is no direct evidence that the British Petroleum Company influenced McGraw-Hill's decision, these news reports assumed that BP had objected strongly to the former CIA operative's allegation that the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company—BP's predecessor company—had initially proposed the coup. Since this chapter in the CIA's history cannot be related accurately without Roosevelt's information, his work
Countercoup
is being cited here.

2.
The most articulate critic of Reza Khan's decision to assume the throne was Mohammed Mossadegh, then a member of the Iranian Parliament. Marvin Zonis,
The Political Elite of Iran
, p. 19.

3.
See ibid., p. 21, and Mohammed Reza Shah Pahlavi,
Mission For My Country
. pp. 49–65.

4.
Pahlavi,
Mission For My Country
, p. 80.

5.
Stephen E. Ambrose, Rise
to Globalism: American Foreign Policy Since 1938
, p. 131.

6.
Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Mandate for Change
, p. 160.

7.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, p. 59.

8.
George Lenczowski,
Russia and the West in Iran, 1918–1948
, pp. 272, 313–14.

9.
Ibid., p. 312.

10.
Sharam Chubin and Sepehr Zabih,
The Foreign Relations of Iran
, p. 42.

11.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, p. 87.

12.
Dean Acheson,
Present at the Creation
, p. 503.

13.
Pahlavi,
Mission For My Country
, pp. 90–91.

14.
Leonard Mosley,
Power Play
, p. 204, as quoted in Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, p. 87. See also, Richard Cottam,
Nationalism in Iran
.

15.
Acheson,
Present at the Creation
, pp. 504, 510.

16.
Pahlavi,
Mission For My Country
, pp. 94–95.

17.
Eisenhower,
Mandate
, pp. 160–61.

18.
Henderson interview.

19.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, p. 107.

20.
New York
Times
, February 25, 1953; Nashville
Banner
, May 21, 1954.

21.
Pahlavi,
Mission For My Country
, p. 97; Eisenhower,
Mandate
, p. 161.

22.
Henderson interview.

23.
Eisenhower,
Mandate
, p. 162.

24.
Pahlavi,
Mission For My Country
, p. 98; Henderson interview.

25.
Eisenhower interview.

26.
Henderson interview.

27.
Eisenhower,
Mandate
, p. 163.

28.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, p. 8.

29.
Ibid., p. 8.

30.
Robert Anderson interview.

31.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, p. 116.

32.
Ibid., pp. 11–19.

33.
Ibid., p. 94.

34.
Henderson interview.

35.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, p. 122.

36.
Eric Sevareid, “CBS Reports: The Hot and Cold Wars of Allen Dulles,” CBS-TV, April 26, 1962.

37.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, pp. 148–49.

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

1.
New York
Times
, August 11, 1953.

2.
Kermit Roosevelt,
Countercoup: The Struggle for the Control of Iran
, p. 170.

3.
Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Mandate for Change
, p. 164.

4.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, pp. 171–72.

5.
Mohammed Reza Shah Pahlavi,
Mission For My Country
, p. 100.

6.
This reconstruction is based on the New York
Times
reports and Pahlavi,
Mission For My Country
, p. 101, and Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, pp. 175–79.

7.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, p. 179.

8.
Ibid., pp. 182–85.

9.
Henderson interview.

10.
New York
Times
, August 19, 1953.

11.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, p. 166.

12.
Ibid., pp. 186–87; Henderson interview.

13.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, p. 188.

14.
Ibid., pp. 190–91.

15.
Ibid., pp. 192–93.

16.
Pahlavi,
Mission For My Country
, p. 103.

17.
New York
Times
, August 20, 1953.

18.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, p. 18.

19.
New York
Times
, August 21, 1953.

20.
Ibid.

21.
Ibid.

22.
Roosevelt,
Countercoup
, p. 199.

23.
Ibid., p. 209.

24.
Eisenhower,
Mandate
, p. 164.

25.
Henderson interview.

26.
Eisenhower,
Mandate
, p. 166.

27.
Harwood interview.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

1.
Andrew Tully,
The CIA: The Inside Story
, pp. 62–64; Hunt interview; James Hagerty diary, May 20, 1954, Eisenhower Library, Abilene, Kansas; Richard and Gladys Harkness, “The Mysterious Doings of the CIA,”
Saturday Evening Post
, October 30, 1954.

2.
New York
Times
, May 19, 1954; Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Mandate for Change
, p. 424.

3.
Keith Monroe, “Guatemala, What the Reds Left Behind,”
Harper's Magazine
, vol. 211 (July 1955), pp. 60–65.

4.
Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Mandate for Change
, p. 424.

5.
Quoted in ibid., pp. 422–23.

6.
Hunt interview.

7.
Walter Payne, “The Guatemalan Revolution, 1944–1954,”
Pacific Historian
, vol. 17, no. 1 (1973), p. 3.

8.
Thomas P. McCann,
An American Company: The Tragedy of United Fruit
, p. 45; Thomas and Marjorie Melville,
Guatemala; The Politics of Land Ownership;
Stacy May and G. Plaza,
The United Fruit Company in Latin America
.

9.
Payne, “Guatemalan Revolution,” p. 11.

10.
Ibid., pp. 14–15; Louis McDermott, “Guatemala, 1954: Intervention or Aggression?”
Rocky Mountain Social Science Journal
, vol. 9, no. 1 (1972), p. 79.

11.
FBI reports to the State Department are quite extensive and had remained closed to the public until we requested they be declassified under the Freedom of Information Act. The documents can be found in the correspondence between Hoover and Frederick B. Lyons in the NA814,00B file.

12.
Tapley Bennett, State Department memorandum, “Some Aspects of Communist Penetration in Guatemala,” March 23, 1950, in Carrollton Press, Inc.,
The Declassified Documents Quarterly
, vol. I, no. 3 (January 1975), p. 179B.

13.
U. S. House of Representatives, Committee on Foreign Affairs, 92d Congress, 2d Session (October 10, 1972),
Inter-American Affairs
, p. 131.

14.
McDermott, “Guatemala,” p. 14.

15.
Hunt interview.

16.
Payne, “Guatemalan Revolution,” p. 18.

17.
Max Gordon, “History of U. S. Subversion: Guatemala, 1954,”
Science and Society
, vol. XXXV, no. 2 (1971), p. 142.

18.
Eisenhower,
Mandate
, p. 421.

19.
Richard Patterson, draft of speech to Rotary Club, March 24, 1950, Patterson Papers, box five, Truman Library, Independence, Missouri.

20.
Hunt interview.

21.
U. S. House of Representatives, Subcommittee on Latin America of the Select Committee on Communist Aggression, Ninth Interim Report,
Communist Aggression in Latin America
, p. 124.

22.
U. S. Department of State,
American Foreign Policy, 1950–1955, Basic Documents
, vol. I, p. 1,310.

23.
Bissell interview.

24.
Much of this information is from the appropriate volumes of
Who's Who in America
. See also, Frederick J. Cook, “The CIA,”
The Nation
, vol. 192 (June 24, 1961), pp. 537–41.

25.
Eisenhower to Alfred Gruenther, November 30, 1954, Dwight D. Eisenhower, “November, 1954”; Eisenhower to William Robinson, August 4, 1954, Dwight D. Eisenhower, “August, 1954.”

26.
Bissell interview; Hunt interview.

27.
Hunt interview; Spruille Braden interview; Miguel Ydígoras Fuentes,
My War With Communism
, p. 50.

28.
Bissell interview.

29.
Goodpaster interview.

30.
Hunt and Bissell interviews.

31.
Hunt interview.

32.
Hunt interview.

33.
Hispanic American Report
, vol. VII (July 1954), pp. 11–12; New York
Times
, June 16, 1954.

34.
New York
Times
, May 23, June 19, 1954; Bissell interview.

35.
Bissell interview.

36.
USIA, “Report on Actions Taken by the U. S. Information Agency in the Guatemalan Situation,” Secret, August 2, 1954, NA714.00/8-254.

37.
U. S. Department of State,
Tenth Inter-American Conference
, pp. 8–9; “After the Vote,”
Time
, vol. 68 (March 29, 1954), p. 32.

38.
David A. Phillips,
Night Watch: Twenty Years of Peculiar Service
, pp. 40–46; Hunt interview.

39.
New York
Times
, June 15, 1954.

40.
Ibid., June 19, 1954.

41.
Quoted in Stephen Schlesinger, “How Dulles Worked the Coup d'Etat,”
The Nation
, vol. 227, no. 14 (October 28, 1978), p. 441.

42.
Goodpaster interview.

43.
Fedro Guillen,
Guatemala, Prologo y Epilogo de una Revolución
, pp. 62–64; Phillips,
Night Watch
, pp. 43–44.

44.
Eisenhower,
Mandate
, pp. 425–26.

45.
Quoted in ibid., p. 427.

46.
Hunt interview.

47.
Hunt interview.

48.
John Gerassi, “Introduction,”
Venceremos: The Speeches and Writings of Che Guevara
, pp. 45–47.

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

1.
Stephen E. Ambrose,
Rise to Globalism: American Foreign Policy Since 1938
, p. 252.

Other books

Dishing the Dirt by M. C. Beaton
The Rats by James Herbert
Black Out by Lisa Unger
Chango's Fire by Ernesto Quinonez
The Second Book of General Ignorance by John Lloyd, John Mitchinson
Sing for Me by Karen Halvorsen Schreck
The Fahrenheit Twins by Michel Faber