-Caveat Lector-

 From New York Times
Nov. 28, 1999


Cold War Without End
With the opening of long-secret files and a spate of new books, the battle
over moles and spies and Redbaiting rages on -- even without Communism. For
those naming names and crying smear, the political is all bitterly personal.
By JACOB WEISBERG Photographs by JEFF RIEDEL




Herb Romerstein at home in suburban Washington with his collection of
Communist memorabilia.

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Wandering around Herb Romerstein's house, but not knowing Herb Romerstein,
you might think you had happened upon the lair of America's last surviving
Stalinist. On the walls hang tattered posters for Popular Front rallies and
Communist candidates. Knickknack cases display K.G.B. medals and yellowing
photos of Bolshevik heroes. In the basement is the "Felix Dzerzhinsky
Memorial Library," named for the founder of Lenin's secret police. Crammed
into every corner are books, transcripts, pamphlets and files that
constitute a vast archive on American Communism. Completing the picture, a
snow-white spitz guards the trove.

Romerstein, a dapper little man with a bushy mustache and silver hair
brushed into a Stalin pompadour, was indeed a Stalinist -- 50 years ago,
when he began his collection as a teenager in the Brownsville section of
Brooklyn. But by the time he graduated from high school he was an
ex-Communist, and then, while serving in the Korean War, he became an
anti-Communist. And after returning home, he went to work as a professional
Red hunter. He was first employed by one of those panels that now evokes a
lost world -- the New York State Legislature's investigation into Communist
summer camps and charities. In the 1960's, as the hunt for Communists waned,
he became the chief investigator on the Republican side for the House
Committee on Internal Security, which had been the House Committee on
Un-American Activities (HUAC). Several years after the committee closed up
shop, he joined the Reagan administration, where he headed the Office to
Counter Soviet Disinformation, part of the United States Information Agency.


Since retiring from the government 10 years ago, Romerstein has continued to
function as a scourge of American Communism. For the past several years he
has been working on a study of Soviet espionage in the United States, which
began as a collaboration with the conservative journalist Eric Breindel, who
died last year. The book, which is under contract to Basic Books, is based
largely on Romerstein's well-informed and highly aggressive reading of the
"Venona" documents, Soviet cable traffic from the 1940's that began being
decrypted by the National Security Agency (N.S.A.) more than 50 years ago
but was only released beginning in 1995.

Romerstein intends his book to be an expose of Americans who spied for
Moscow as well as a vindication of the much-maligned HUAC. Among the dead
people he is expected to claim were Soviet spies are Harry Hopkins,
President Franklin D. Roosevelt's closest aide, whom Romerstein identifies
as the mysterious "Agent 19"; J. Robert Oppenheimer, the chief scientist on
the Manhattan Project; and I.F. Stone, the revered liberal journalist.

If it is ever completed, Romerstein's book will be an especially intense
volley in the cold war that remains alive and bitter in American cultural
and intellectual circles 10 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall. The
collapse of the Soviet Empire might have been expected to lend a sense of
perspective and even forgiveness to the subjects of Communism, McCarthyism
and espionage. Instead, the vanished stakes seem only to have inflamed an
argument in which terms like smear and treason, fellow traveler and
Redbaiter and Stalinist and McCarthyite have often been less a matter of
politics or patriotism than of personal identity. Wrapped up in the American
intelligentsia's ongoing cold war are unresolved feelings of personal
betrayal and the Oedipal conflicts of red-diaper babies. There are, too,
broader family matters of ethnicity and belonging: it is impossible not to
notice that nearly everyone doing the arguing is Jewish, as are most of the
people they're arguing about.

Communism as a way of organizing a nation-state is finished. But for some,
it remains -- or at least fighting about it remains -- the only way to
organize a life.

he I.F. Stone case provides a point of entry into the caustic accusations,
denials and counteraccusations that are the chief weapons in this cold war.
Charges against Stone, who died in 1989, first surfaced seven years ago,
when Oleg Kalugin, a retired K.G.B. general, implicated Stone as having been
a Soviet agent. The allegation was received skeptically, and Kalugin
subsequently denied it, saying that Stone was merely a friendly "contact" of
the K.G.B.'s. But Romerstein -- drawing on the Venona documents -- argues
that Stone had a relationship during the Second World War with a K.G.B.
agent named Vladimir Pravdin who served as a TASS correspondent in
Washington. In 1944, according to Romerstein, Pravdin cabled his superiors
in Moscow that Stone, whose code name was "Blin" -- the Russian word for
pancake -- would continue to talk to him only if he were paid. Stone and
Pravdin continued to meet, which proves to Romerstein's satisfaction that
Stone must have been paid.

Stone, who had no access to classified information, can't have been an
important agent, if he was indeed a Soviet agent of any kind. But he is a
crucial figure to Romerstein precisely because he remains an icon to those
Romerstein sees as the legatees of the Popular Front. To show that a hero of
left-wing journalists, prized for his incorruptibility and "independence,"
was in fact a paid Soviet informant is to strike close to the heart of the
enemy. This explains why The Washington Times, the right-wing newspaper, and
Robert Novak, the conservative columnist, have publicized Romerstein's
charges with such enthusiasm.
McCarthy, Arthur Herman says, 'is part and parcel of what modern
conservatism is all about.' McCarthy 'fed the rebirth of American
conservatism' by creating a bond between ordinary Americans and the
Republican Party.





The response from the left has been equally tendentious. An article in The
Nation dredged up muck about Romerstein's own past, including the fact that
he informed on his high-school teachers and classmates who were Communists
and worked for the notorious blacklisting publication "Counter-Attack."
Among those most enraged by Romerstein's accusations about I.F. Stone is
Stone's son, Jeremy, who is the president of the Federation of American
Scientists. The younger Stone has accused Romerstein of smearing a
defenseless target with tainted and distorted evidence. And indeed, more
meticulous scholars, including some conservative ones, agree that the
evidence against I.F. Stone is weak.

Soon, however, the espionage vortex sucked in Jeremy Stone as well. In his
book "Every Man Should Try," published last spring by Public Affairs, Stone
describes his interest in discovering the identity of a mole inside the
Manhattan Project. He says that the impetus for this inquiry was the
accusation made by another former K.G.B. official, Pavel Sudoplatov, against
J. Robert Oppenheimer. In researching that charge, Stone came across an
article published in an English-language Russian newspaper about a spy
code-named Perseus. Stone thought he recognized Perseus's political views
and his particular locutions, despite the fact that the quotations in the
newspaper had been translated into Russian and back into English. After
struggling over what to do, Stone decided to visit the object of his
suspicions, whom he describes in his book as Scientist X. Stone discussed
the spy issue with Scientist X without ever confronting him directly.
According to Stone, Scientist X seemed to come close to confessing the
charge but worried whether he might still be in legal jeopardy. When Stone's
memoir was read by fellow scientists, they recognized Scientist X as Philip
Morrison, a professor at M.I.T. who had worked on the Manhattan Project --
and who had been a mentor to Stone and a sponsor of his career. This
unmasking brought a fervent denial from Morrison, who pointed to
discrepancies between himself and Perseus. Stone, under fire within his
organization, publicly accepted Morrison's denial in a terse manner. (Stone,
desperately upset by the whole episode and its treatment in the press,
declined to comment for this article.)

Anyone who aspires to get to the bottom of these matters gets lost in
evidentiary thickets pretty quickly. "Perseus" may or may not be congruent
with "Pers" (the Russian word for Persian), a code name for a spy connected
to the Manhattan Project that appears in various Venona documents.
Romerstein says he thinks Jeremy Stone may have been misled in his
investigation by a composite description concocted by the Soviets to protect
the identity of undiscovered atom spies. More cautious students of Venona
say Pers remains unidentified. In all likelihood, the issue will never be
truly settled.


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Jacob Weisberg, chief political correspondent for the online magazine Slate,
is a contributing writer for The Times Magazine. His article about President
Clinton's legacy appeared in January.

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 But stepping back from these details, the situation stands as a compelling
political and personal drama. Here we have a liberal public activist (Jeremy
Stone) who fervently denies the charge of espionage leveled against his late
father (I.F. Stone). The younger Stone sets out to exonerate another
respected figure (Oppenheimer), an effort that leads him to accuse a mentor
and father figure (Morrison) on the basis of surmise and evidence that his
father's accuser (Romerstein) says is insufficient. These people, it seems
clear, are immersed in something more than a scholarly debate. It's a fight
about which Freud may have more to tell us than Marx.

Indeed, the deeper you delve into such battles, the greater the feeling
grows that these are not primarily arguments about historical fact at all.
Espionage charges, initiated by subterranean and frequently unreliable
sources, are a way of arguing about the past as if it were still present, a
continuation of ideological politics by other means among people who are,
charitably put, obsessive. Listening in, you get the sense that these
arguments are less a posthumous sorting out of the cold war than a
sublimated continuation of it. The prevailing perspective remains that of
the battlefield, occupied by shellshocked soldiers who can't process the
news that the war is over. It is, in a way, a metaphysical problem that
afflicts the ex-, pro-, anti- and anti-anti-Communists: What happens when
the political struggle that defined your existence ceases to exist?

When the Berlin wall fell, the rationale for government secrecy about events
long past crumbled with it. Revelations soon began flooding out of archives
on both sides. Of all of these, Venona emerged as the greatest surprise. The
story of Venona might have been written by John le Carre.

In the 1930's and 40's, Soviet outposts around the world sent radio and
telegraph messages encrypted in what was supposed to be an unbreakable
cipher. Cryptography is a discipline that makes quantum physics seem
accessible, but to oversimplify, each message was sent in a unique code, so
that even if one were somehow broken, it wouldn't unlock any others. But
beginning in 1942, the Soviets, under the strain of the war effort, began to
duplicate and reuse their "key" pages. This rendered their transmissions
vulnerable to analysts working for the Army Signal Intelligence Service,
which eventually evolved into the N.S.A. In 1946, the Soviet code was broken
with the help of a badly burned cipher book that was captured from a Soviet
consulate by Finnish troops in 1941, passed to the Nazis and captured again
by the United States military near the end of the Second World War.
Fragments from this book, plus the analysis of the key-page codes, allowed
the reconstruction of messages from 1942 through 1946, when the Soviets
stopped reusing the compromised key pages.



Arthur Herman at the George Mason University history department.

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 The 2,900 messages that were eventually decrypted in whole or in part
constitute only a portion of the overall traffic intercepted. When the
N.S.A. publicly acknowledged the operation and began releasing Venona
documents four years ago, it became clear that they had been vastly useful,
exposing Julius Rosenberg and many other spies in the United States
government. The first comprehensive analysis of this material is in "Venona:
Decoding Soviet Espionage in America," a book by two historians, John Earl
Haynes and Harvey Klehr, published earlier this year by Yale University
Press.

Klehr, a professor at Emory University, and Haynes, who works in the
manuscript division at the Library of Congress, had collaborated on three
previous books about American Communism. Though more measured than many who
study and write about the history of American Communism, both were attracted
to the topic largely by their own political histories. Klehr sympathized
with the New Left as a graduate student in the early 1970's. Haynes was a
liberal involved in Democratic politics in Minnesota. Though neither had
been a Communist, they both wanted to try to understand why radical
movements were so unsuccessful in America. In studying the left, they found
themselves increasingly drawn to the right.

In their first joint book, "The American Communist Movement: Storming Heaven
Itself," published in 1992, Haynes and Klehr stated that "to see the
American Communist Party chiefly as an instrument of espionage or a sort of
fifth column misjudges its main purpose." On the basis of the Venona
material, they have changed their minds about the party. In their new book,
they contend that Soviet espionage in the United States was far more
extensive than previously known -- that the Soviets had 349 American
citizens and residents working for them in the United States in the 1940's,
less than half of whom have ever been identified. Haynes and Klehr also
maintain that the American Communist Party was deeply immersed in Soviet
spying. "The C.P.U.S.A.," they write, "was indeed a fifth column working
inside and against the United States in the cold war."

Haynes and Klehr assert that Venona proves once and for all that most of
those accused of being spies in the 1940's and 50's were indeed spies. This
includes not only the Rosenbergs and Alger Hiss, but also Harry Dexter
White, a top Roosevelt administration Treasury Department official. However,
Haynes and Klehr believe that the Venona files fail to support a number of
Romerstein's charges. Oppenheimer, they maintain, was a secret Communist
Party member, but they doubt he relayed atomic secrets. I.F. Stone may have
met with the K.G.B., but there's no proof he was recruited. Hopkins, they
conclude, was not Agent 19. (Another recent book on Venona published in the
United Kingdom by the British military historian Nigel West identifies Agent
19 as the Czech leader Eduard Benes).


Somehow, settling factual disputes about who was and wasn't a spy has failed
to create any new consensus. Instead, it has brought the fight about
Communism in America back to life.



 These issues can perhaps only be settled with evidence from the other side.
But here the flow of revelations has been uneven. The Soviet archive that
holds the pre-1943 records of the Comintern, the Soviet propaganda
apparatus, was opened in 1992. These millions of documents have only begun
to be digested by scholars. Access to the even more interesting K.G.B.
archives has been spotty, with information sold or touted by insolvent
Russian officials.

Still, the goods being sold are sometimes genuine. In 1992, Alberto Vitale,
then the chairman of Random House, reportedly made a million-dollar
contribution to the Association of Retired Intelligence Officers, the K.G.B.
alumni association, in exchange for access to some of the agency's archives.
To write a book based on them, Vitale hired Allen Weinstein, the author of
"Perjury: The Hiss-Chambers Case," which was first published in 1978 and
made a convincing case that Alger Hiss was guilty. Weinstein was not allowed
to view Soviet documents himself; he could only review translations made by
his "co-author," a former K.G.B. agent named Alexander Vassiliev. In
Weinstein and Vassiliev's book "The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in
America -- the Stalin Era," which was published in January by Random House,
Americans who spied for the Soviets are not merely unmasked as traitors but
revealed as human characters who were often conflicted about their actions.
One of the most sympathetic figures in the book is Laurence Duggan, a
high-level State Department spy who was kept on as an agent largely through
psychological coercion. After Whittaker Chambers named him as an agent in
1948, Duggan either jumped or fell from the 16th-story window of his New
York office.

Alger Hiss is not a major figure in either Haynes and Klehr's Venona book or
"The Haunted Wood" because he worked not for the K.G.B. but, according to
Weinstein's account and others that followed, for the GRU, Soviet military
intelligence, whose archives for the period haven't been opened even for a
glimpse. But Hiss does make one appearance in the documents released from
the K.G.B. In 1936, he horrified his Soviet handlers by attempting a bit of
unauthorized recruiting at the State Department. According to one memo
written by an alarmed Soviet spy, Hiss approached Noel Field, a fellow State
Department official, and let it be known "that he was a Communist, that he
was connected with an organization working for the Soviet Union and that he
knew [Field] also had connections" and asked that Field give him classified
documents. This freelance recruiting was a serious violation of espionage
tradecraft.

On the basis of evidence culled from the Venona files, conservatives have
been busy declaring victory over the domestic left, and some on the left
have conceded at least partial defeat. Walter and Miriam Schneir, authors of
a book arguing for the innocence of the Rosenbergs, now acknowledge that
Julius was guilty. Another significant defection is that of Maurice
Isserman, a professor of history at Hamilton College and probably the best
regarded of the left-wing scholars of Communism. Referring to Hiss in a
review of "The Haunted Wood," Isserman wrote, "Let's face it, the debate
just ended."

Yet somehow, settling factual disputes about who was and wasn't a spy has
failed to create any new consensus. Instead, it has brought the fight about
Communism in America back to life.

n the 1970's and 80's, "revisionist" historians like Isserman, many of them
the New Left children of Old Left parents, dominated the field of Communist
studies. These scholars, molded by the 1960's and the Vietnam War, tried to
debunk the prevailing notions that the C.P.U.S.A. was a tool of Moscow and
that the cold war was a righteous effort by democratic America to resist the
spread of Soviet totalitarianism. The thrust of most of the new work on the
topic might be called counterrevisionist. These scholars and polemicists are
eager to re-establish the view that American Communists were traitors and
that the cold war was a moral triumph for the West.

Arthur Herman, a historian at George Mason University, may be taking this
counterrevisionism as far as anyone: In his new book, to be published this
week by the Free Press, he sets out to rehabilitate Senator Joseph McCarthy.
Herman writes in "Joseph McCarthy: Re-examining the Life and Legacy of
America's Most Hated Senator" that McCarthy "proved more right than wrong in
terms of the larger picture" of Communists in the State Department. Herman
acknowledges that McCarthy would exaggerate and sometimes lie when cornered,
but concludes that he was not the ogre he was made out to be.



Victor Navasky at The Nation.

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 Why does Herman want to vindicate Joe McCarthy? I asked him this question
over a drink in Washington not long ago. He at first denied seeing any
political purpose to his work, explaining that his interest in McCarthy came
from growing up in Wisconsin. But politics soon emerged. McCarthy, Herman
told me, "is part and parcel of what modern conservatism is all about."
McCarthy, he says, "fed the rebirth of American conservatism" by creating a
bond between ordinary Americans and the Republican Party.

In approaching McCarthy in this way, Herman is to some degree echoing
"McCarthy and His Enemies," the book written 45 years ago by William F.
Buckley and L. Brent Bozell. But Buckley himself is no longer entirely
comfortable with this position. In his latest novel, "The Redhunter,"
Buckley offers a fictionalized view of McCarthy that tries to humanize him
without going so far as trying to rehabilitate him. When I visited Buckley
at his Upper East Side town house and put Herman's formulation about
McCarthy being essential to conservatism to him, Buckley shook his head in
mock incomprehension and said he was baffled by it.

On the one hand, Buckley contends that McCarthy was the "main vehicle" of
anti-Communism and thus implicitly worthy of support. This is his 1954 posit
ion, influenced by a strong Catholic identification with McCarthy's crusade.
Yet Buckley now also endorses the contradictory stance of Whittaker
Chambers, who thought McCarthy was too indiscriminate to do the cause of
anti-Communism any good and thus deserving of repudiation. As Harry
Bontecou, the character who stands in for Buckley in "The Redhunter," puts
it, "It was one of Joe McCarthy's ironic legacies that it became almost
impossible in future years to say that anyone was a Communist, because you'd
be hauled up for committing McCarthyism."

What unites Herman and Buckley is the belief that "McCarthyism" is a
millstone that shouldn't hang around the neck of the American right any
longer. They believe the new evidence should help them get rid of it, even
if they're not sure how it does so. A second group of anti-Communist
writers, who share a background as children of the Popular Front and New
Left radicals in the 1960's, is more interested in using the new evidence to
demolish the historical legacy of contemporary liberals. The leading scholar
in this camp is the political historian Ronald Radosh.

Radosh is a bulky, jolly man with a childlike demeanor and a seemingly
endless capacity to be wounded by ex-friends on the left. At 62, he is
writing his memoirs, tentatively titled "Commies: A Journey Through the Old
Left, the New Left and the Leftover Left." Radosh allowed me to read the
first few chapters, in which he looks back at the radical milieu of the
1940's and early 50's in which he grew up -- the Jewish-Communist subculture
of Washington Heights, in Upper Manhattan. In the summer, Radosh was bundled
off to Camp Woodland in the Catskills, where the sons of Julius and Ethel
Rosenberg also went. At the local public school, Jewish kids like Radosh
baited their Irish-Catholic teachers by bringing Paul Robeson records to
show-and-tell. These children were used politically by their parents, and
many are still furious about it. Radosh recalls his own anger at his parents
for forcing him to return a school prize sponsored by the Daughters of the
American Revolution.

Radosh writes with a mixture of nostalgic affection and embarrassed
hostility -- an ambivalence that has characterized his relationship with
radical culture for years. In 1974, he infuriated fellow members of the New
Left by reporting on Fidel Castro's persecution of homosexuals. In 1983,
Radosh and Joyce Milton published "The Rosenberg File," a book that closed
the case for all but a few Camp Woodland alumni and readers of The Nation, a
magazine with which Radosh remains preoccupied. It's not clear what he
expected, but the way his old friends and allies responded to the Rosenberg
book -- treating him as a turncoat and a dishonest scholar -- wounded Radosh
so deeply that he is not even gloating about belated concessions from the
likes of the Schneirs.

"The whole way they fought the case for years was that these people were
framed up," Radosh told me. "They have not acknowledged intellectually what
it means that they were wrong."

Radosh riles the remnants of the left far more than any conservative scholar
because of his insistence that he comes as a friend, demolishing cherished
myths in sorrow rather than anger. But because he fails to identify himself
as a conservative, he remains suspect on the far right. Romerstein describes
Radosh as someone who is still trying to please the left.

Radosh dismisses the characterization. "You can't please lefties," he says.
"I gave up trying years ago." He is a relic, in a way, of the anti-Stalinist
splinter groups of the 1930's and 40's, the Lovestoneites and the
Schachtmanites. This past summer, Radosh gave a book party for his friends
Haynes and Klehr. The folk singer Joe Glazer played anti-Stalinist songs
from the 1950's, like "Oh, My Darling Party Line." Radosh himself sang
"Talking Soviet Union Blues," a parody of the old Pete Seeger number
"Talking Union Blues."

In addition to working on his memoirs, Radosh is collaborating on a book
about the Spanish Civil War based on research he has done in Soviet military
archives. It will attempt to dispel the heroic view of the war that Radosh,
whose uncle was killed as a volunteer for the party-run Abraham Lincoln
Battalion, grew up with. His argument is that, as he and his co-author, Mary
Habeck, put it in a recent paper, "should Franco have lost, Stalin would
clearly have imposed . . . a Soviet-style 'people's democracy' such as that
which emerged in Central and Eastern Europe after World War II." In other
words, defenders of the Spanish Republic weren't defending democracy against
fascism, as they may have thought and have long asserted, but doing Stalin's
work, however inadvertently.



William F. Buckley at The National Review.
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 In the 1950's, the British historian Herbert Butterfield wrote a little
book criticizing what he called the Whig fallacy in history -- viewing the
past as the march of progress toward the present. Radosh exemplifies a kind
of Whig Fallacy in reverse -- viewing the present through the lens of one's
own painful past. Having grown up in an environment in which Communism was
powerful, and powerfully appealing, he is unable to relinquish the idea.
What Radosh fails to understand is the way in which Communism, long
irrelevant in American politics, has became not just powerless but absurd.

Radosh is a mild and temperate critic in comparison with an old friend of
his from the New Left, and a fellow red-diaper baby, David Horowitz. In his
own memoir, "Radical Son," which was published two years ago, Horowitz
describes how his parents met in the Communist Party in the 1930's; his
father, Phil Horowitz, was suspended as a public-school teacher on the Lower
East Side when he refused to sign a loyalty oath in 1952. In his book,
Horowitz writes poignantly that he understood adopting his parents' politics
was a condition of winning their love. Like Radosh, he did adopt them, but
rebelled against them at the same time by becoming a 60's-style
revolutionary critical of the Soviet Union.

Horowitz, who was active in the left in Berkeley, became co-editor of the
radical magazine Ramparts in 1969. In the 1970's, he became a deeply
involved supporter of the Black Panthers, even harboring a Panther fugitive
in his house. When the Panthers needed a bookkeeper, Horowitz recommended a
secretary from Ramparts. After she was found bludgeoned to death, presumably
at the hands of the Panthers, he broke with radicalism and became
increasingly conservative.

Having despised liberals from the left, Horowitz came to hate them just as
violently from the right. He casts himself as a latter-day Whittaker
Chambers, bearing witness against the left. Like Chambers, he is attached to
the notion -- farther-fetched in the 90's than in the 40's -- that he
abandoned the winning side for the losing one.

What's strangest about Horowitz is the way he views the 1930's through a
prism of the 1960's reflected in the 1990's. In his view, un-American
activities became Vietnam-era anti-Americanism and then evolved into
left-wing political correctness, which he believes to be synonymous with
Democratic Party liberalism. This explains Horowitz's penchant for depicting
Clinton Democrats in terms borrowed from the era of high Stalinism. They are
enthralled with a "utopian fantasy," practice a "crypto-religion" and wish
to install a "reign of terror." In the online magazine Salon, where he has a
column, Horowitz wrote recently, "It is as though the Rosenbergs had been in
the White House, except that the Rosenbergs were little people and naive."

This sort of analogy isn't just a hallmark of Horowitz's political
thinking -- it's a common trope of many on the right who can't or won't let
the cold war go. The Chinese spy scandal, in which missile technology
appears to have been stolen by a Communist power on the watch of a
Democratic administration, is simply a reprise of the Rosenberg scandal.
Clinton is a modern-day Truman, the liberal who McCarthy and his supporters
believed allowed the Communists to run rampant. Jesse Helms and others have
demonized Strobe Talbott, the deputy secretary of State and Russia expert,
suggesting that he was converted to the other side during his student
travels in the Soviet Union. As Joshua Micah Marshall pointed out in a
recent article in the The American Prospect, the liberal journal, the right
portrays Talbott as a figure exactly parallel to Owen Lattimore -- the China
hand absurdly named as the Soviets' "top spy" in the United States by Joe
McCarthy.

It is not surprising, perhaps, that conservatives should be so reluctant to
let go of anti-Communism, a cause that gave them unity and purpose for four
decades and that sorted out a complicated world for them. But it does seem
strange that instead of celebrating their victory in the cold war, many
behave as if it hasn't yet ended and their side hasn't yet won.
Conservatives wanted Communism to go. What some didn't realize, apparently,
was that when it did, it would take with it not only anti-Communism but also
an entire intellectual and emotional dwelling place constructed around it.

For those most deeply invested in this universe, clinging to anti-Communism
is as much a personal as it is a political phenomenon. What comes through
vividly in Horowitz's memoirs is a fierce Oedipal struggle entwined with
radicalism. Horowitz wanted to antagonize his Communist father; in later
years, when he was ailing, Horowitz would bait him by raising the name of
Alexander Solzhenitsyn. But Horowitz also wanted to please him and win the
unconditional love he never felt as a boy.

This sense of acting out of personal injury permeates everything Horowitz
writes today. He is enmeshed in a kind of co-dependent relationship with the
left. He wants to hurt them, and wants to be hurt back. As John Podhoretz
wrote reviewing "Radical Son," Horowitz "has yet to find emotional distance
from his onetime brethren on the left. They have the capacity to wound him
as surely as if he were their brother still. Horowitz cannot help but desire
their approbation, just as he sought his father's until the day of Phil
Horowitz's death."

But the fight is also about family in the larger sense of the family of
American Jews. The reason Communism was attractive to many Jews seems clear:
they thought they found in Marxist universalism both a response to
persecution and a way out of the physical and psychic ghetto. For other Jews
in the 1940's and 50's, anti-Communism was a ticket to acceptance and
assimilation, a way to demonstrate their loyalty and patriotism. A great
many of those arguing about Communism today seem implicitly to be battling
about the political choices made by Jews at mid-century. At some level,
anti-Communist historians are still proving their loyalty to country by
denouncing those who betrayed it. Many historians on the left, on the other
hand, want to show that Jewish Communists were good Americans after all.

Victor Navasky no longer does the day-to-day editing of The Nation, but as
publisher, he remains its presiding spirit. In his expansive office on
Irving Place, in Lower Manhattan, he takes calls from figures representing
the radical causes of many decades. He interrupts an interview to reassure
Gloria Steinem about a speech and trade gossip with Tony Hiss, son of Alger,
in a low, mumbling voice. He's a very furry character. With a beard that
seems to envelop his entire body, he resembles an Ed Koren cartoon brought
to life.

While he never had any sympathy for the Soviet Union, Navasky had even less
use for its foes. The heyday for this view was the 70's, when the
revisionist historians dominated academia and Navasky led a campaign to
discredit Allen Weinstein's "Perjury," claiming that its evidence against
Hiss was distorted. Today Navasky carries an air of a defeat that he can't
quite acknowledge. At first, Navasky questioned the authenticity of the
Venona documents. Now he focuses on what he believes is their misuse.
Pointing out what he calls internal contradictions in the documents, Navasky
says that "to try to leap to conclusions based on them to me suggests
another agenda." That agenda, in his view, is "a re-revisionist history of
McCarthy, HUAC and Co. that says, See, they were right all along."



John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr at the National Cryptologic Museum,
Maryland.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

 On the Rosenbergs, Navasky says he now accepts, "in a very tentative way,
if I were forced to choose," that "Julius was guilty of something and that
Ethel probably knew about it. And that the punishment was hideously
disproportionate to the crime." And instead of forcefully arguing that Hiss
wasn't guilty as he once did, Navasky now acknowledges that Hiss wasn't
telling the truth when he testified that he didn't know Whittaker
Chambers -- though his "impression would be that Hiss was innocent of
whatever it is people mean by espionage."

He continued: "My larger belief is that 'espionage' is one of those words
that is in a kind of strange way out of context in most of its uses as a
description of what went on in the 1930's. There were a lot of exchanges of
information among people of good will, some of whom were Marxists, some of
whom were Communists, some of whom were critics of government policy. Most
of those exchanges were innocent and were within the law. Some were innocent
and in technical violation of law. And there may have been and undoubtedly
were an infinitesimal number of bona fide espionage agents."

Ellen Schrecker, a leading left scholar of McCarthyism, goes a bit further.
I visited Schrecker, who teaches at Yeshiva University, at her Upper West
Side apartment, where she lives with her husband, the radical historian
Marvin Gettleman. Faced with new evidence that espionage was far more
widespread than previously thought, Schrecker acknowledges that many of the
accused were in fact spies. But, she contends, spying wasn't necessarily a
categorical evil. American Communists, she says, spied not because they were
traitors but because they "did not subscribe to traditional forms of
patriotism."

Comments like this have caused Schrecker to be incorrectly described as a
red-diaper baby. She was actually, she says, "a nice Jewish girl from the
suburbs" who grew up outside Philadelphia, the daughter of "good A.D.A.
liberals." She says she was alienated from the pro-Communist left for
cultural reasons: "I hated folk music."

Just as Buckley can't decide whether to rescue McCarthy or excommunicate
him, Schrecker is of two minds about how the left should think about
American Communists. In her book "Many Are the Crimes: McCarthyism in
America," published last year by Little, Brown, she expresses ambivalence.
On the one hand, she calls it a "tragedy" that the left was so dominated by
a Soviet-led party in the 30's and 40's. On the other hand, she sees much
value in what American Communists did, like advocating labor unions and
fighting against segregation when the Democratic Party still tolerated it.
"They weren't the kinds of robots that the traditional view of Communists
would have us assume that they were," she says.

If Communism was heterogeneous and creative, anti-Communism was, in
Schrecker's view, purely malignant. She argues that there was no good kind
of anti-Communism -- including that espoused in the 1950's by varieties of
socialists and by liberals. All contributed, she writes, to an unwarranted
effort to quash dissent. Left-wing anti-Stalinists like the intellectuals
associated with the journal Partisan Review helped "legitimize"
anti-Communism, she maintains. "It was the very diversity of the
anti-Communist network that made it so powerful," she writes.

Where Arthur Herman argues that the word "McCarthyism" shouldn't be used
because it no longer has any real meaning, Schrecker and others want to keep
it alive as a cudgel for the left to employ against the right. To Schrecker
and her political allies, McCarthyism, not Communism, was the great
political evil of America's postwar period. Where the right argues that
there is an innate strain of dishonesty and disloyalty on the left, the left
contends that the smear tactics of Joe McCarthy will always be a hallmark of
the right. To them, Kenneth Starr is simply a modern-day McCarthy.



Ellen Schrecker at her New York apartment building.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

 Schrecker and her allies acknowledge that they are losing ground in the
historical argument. Their explanation for this is basically a Marxist one:
only historians on the right can find financing for their research.
Schrecker says the National Endowment for the Humanities won't touch her,
and Navasky claims there is no financing from think tanks for scholars who
want to challenge the views of writers like Radosh, Haynes and Klehr.

When I brought this up with Radosh, he exploded: "Give me a break! Look at
the MacArthur awards!"

I was having dinner with Radosh and Haynes in Washington, and the accusation
of victory infuriated both of them. The anti-Communist historians view
themselves as the real victims of discrimination, indeed of a kind of
left-wing McCarthyism within the academy. Radosh has never had a job at a
top university despite having published the most important book on the
Rosenbergs. A couple of years ago, the president of George Washington
University tried to hire him. After the history faculty refused to accept
money from the conservative John M. Olin Foundation to pay Radosh's salary,
he worked out an affiliation with another think tank connected to the
university. Tenure eludes him.

Haynes, too, sees the academic work on American Communism as heavily skewed
to the left. Haynes has also made his career outside of mainstream academia,
where he says you simply can't address the subject of Soviet espionage in a
scholarly way. Over dinner, he elaborated the point. "There's been a
tendency to freeze consideration," he said. "For example, let's take a look
at Elizabeth Bentley." Bentley, a spy who turned herself in to the F.B.I. in
1945, was probably the government's most valuable defector from the American
Communist Party.

"This was a major incident," Haynes continues. "Do you know how many
doctoral dissertations there are on Bentley? None. Because it's one of
those, We shouldn't look at this -- this is dangerous. You're not going to
be able to get a job if you write a dissertation about Elizabeth Bentley. If
this was a field in which things were normal, there would be half a dozen
Elizabeth Bentleys stretched over the last 20 or 30 years. But this is a
field where young historians soon get the message: don't look at that area;
it's dangerous."

Interestingly, both sides in the ongoing cold war are attached to a view of
themselves as underdogs. At the moment, the left's claim that it is losing
the history war appears more persuasive, thanks to the loss of Isserman, who
was probably the best historian of Communism its side had. Four years ago,
Isserman could still argue in The Nation that spying was, as Harry Truman
once said, a red herring. "That espionage has suddenly emerged as the key
issue in the debate over American Communism," Isserman wrote, "probably has
as much to do with marketing strategy as with any reasoned historical
analysis."



Ronald Radosh at his home in Maryland.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

 But when I spoke with him recently, he said: "My opinions on the question
have changed dramatically. Twenty years ago I would have said that there
weren't a significant number of American Communists who spied. It's no
longer possible to hold that view." Indeed, the belief that Hiss and the
Rosenbergs weren't spies is fast becoming the left's creation science. It's
getting harder and harder to find someone not related to them who will argue
they weren't guilty.

If the revisionist view of Communism is losing scholarly support, Haynes and
Radosh do have a point when they assert that it is still strong in the
popular culture. Conservatives have made few inroads against the notion that
McCarthyism did far more harm to America than Communism. The perspective
that most often reaches the public, in programs like a recent A&E drama
about Lillian Hellman and Dashiell Hammett, is still a species of Schrecker
and Navasky's view -- that while Communists may have been wrong in their
views, McCarthyism was the greater evil.

This debate recurred earlier this year during the furor over whether Elia
Kazan ought to have received an honorary Oscar for "lifetime achievement."
Kazan, the film director, was called before HUAC in 1952 and asked for names
of Communists he knew in Hollywood. After initially declining to answer the
question, Kazan turned over the names of a dozen fellow alumni of a
Communist cell within the Group Theater from the 1930's. It was a classic
ritual of humiliation: the committee already knew the names.

Others who named names did so under protest, or later flagellated themselves
for doing so. Kazan's unforgivable sin, from the point of view of the left,
was to embrace his inquisitors in an ad he took out in The New York Times
after testifying before HUAC. "I believe that any American who is in
possession of such facts has the obligation to make them known, either to
the public or to the appropriate government agency," he wrote. Kazan made
his case more eloquently in the 1954 film "On the Waterfront," in which
Marlon Brando plays a longshoreman faced with a choice about whether to rat
on the murderous and corrupt leadership of his union. In the film, the
decision to testify is portrayed as an act of courage, not cowardice.

Many at the time, and again this year, thought Kazan's behavior disqualified
him for any kind of honored status in the entertainment industry. Richard
Dreyfuss wrote in The Los Angeles Times, "I cannot agree to those cheers if
it means supporting his reprehensible act of naming names." At the awards
ceremony, Kazan received a standing ovation, but many members of the
audience, including the actors Nick Nolte and Ed Harris, sat silently. In
other words, the predominant view in the movie business was that it was the
89-year-old Kazan, not the surviving supporters of Stalin, who still owed
some kind of apology. In the opinion of contemporary Hollywood, Communists
in the 1930's and 40's were naive romantics, not traitors. McCarthyism, on
the other hand, damaged both their industry and the nation.

This view doesn't take in the complexity of the Kazan case. The celebrities
who declined to clap for Kazan did so on the mistaken assumption that he had
expressed no regrets about what he did. In fact, Kazan had described his own
actions as "disgusting" and evinced great anguish about the terrible choice
that was imposed upon him. He also grasped, at a deeper level than either
his allies or critics, the ethnic drama at the root of his behavior. For an
ambitious immigrant from Anatolia, Turkey, trying to make it in America,
denouncing Communism was a way of proving his loyalty to an adopted country.

Kazan's intense reflection over the episode makes a powerful case for
forgiveness. Yet in a more general sense, the Hollywood attitude is
defensible. Communism, however genocidal abroad, was not murderous or
meaningful in America. The Hollywood 10 never put any left-wing propaganda
into the movies. Communism never abridged the freedom of Americans in
America. McCarthyism did.

For much of this century, Communism was an Archimedean point for fellow
travelers and cold warriors alike. If you knew where you stood, you could
leverage an understanding of the world. Views of Communism provided a
social, intellectual and emotional home. They helped people choose friends
and lovers, to know whom to admire and whom to despise. These allegiances,
alliances and families molded in response to Communism have survived the
demise of their premise.

The problem is that when Communism is used as template and metaphor for the
present, it easily becomes a bar to understanding. You can no longer
interpret international politics, as many conservatives do, with ideological
communism as the chief reference point. Communist China, which has no
coherent ideology and no corps of foreign supporters, is not anything like
the Soviet Union of the 1940's. Chinese missile spies are not like the
Rosenbergs.


[The anti-Communist historians view themselves as the real victims of
discrimination. Radosh has never had a job at a top university, despite
having published the most important book on the Rosenbergs. ]



 Paradoxically, the one group that basically got Communism right back then
is the one group that has for the most part sat out this posthumous cold
war. I am speaking of the tradition of liberal anti-Communists. Liberal
anti-Communism begins in the 1930's with Sidney Hook and John Dewey and the
Commission of Inquiry into the Moscow Purge Trials. Hook subsequently
founded the Committee for Cultural Freedom, an organization that resisted
both Communism and the demagogic and bigoted anti-Communism of HUAC.

It was liberal foreign-policy thinkers like Paul Nitze and George Kennan who
devised the Truman Doctrine and containment, successful strategies for
resisting the spread of Communism at the outset of the cold war. And it was
liberal intellectuals like Arthur Schlesinger Jr. and Reinhold Niebuhr who
developed the most useful understanding of the Communist threat. In his
classic 1949 statement "The Vital Center," Schlesinger argued that while
Communism was certainly a danger to America, it wasn't much of a threat in
America. The way to answer it, he wrote, was not by banning and prosecuting
Communism, but through the Constitutional methods of "debate, identification
and exposure."

It's not just the positions of liberal anti-Communists that hold up, but
also their analysis of American Communism as a phenomenon. The first real
historians of the movement were Irving Howe, Daniel Bell, Murray Kempton and
Theodore Draper, all of whom wrote about American Communism in the 1950's.
They shared the view that foreign Communism was a menace and American
Communism a flop. As Kempton wrote in his 1955 book, "Part of Our Time,"
probably the most eloquent volume on the subject, American Communists were
"creatures of a lonely impulse, because there have never been many convinced
Marxists in America."

There were some things liberal anti-Communists of the 1950's didn't know,
namely the extent of Soviet penetration of the United States government
during the war years. Yet the new evidence confirms their larger picture.
Elizabeth Bentley, who began working as a courier for a Soviet spy network
in 1939, uprooted the Soviet Union's espionage network in America when she
walked in the front door of the F.B.I. in 1945. Venona confirmed Bentley's
charges and revealed many other agents. With additional help from Whittaker
Chambers and a code clerk who defected from Moscow's embassy in Canada, the
Soviet networks were ruined within a few years. The Truman administration,
accused of sheltering spies, in fact rooted them out of the government. At
the very point McCarthy said spies were everywhere, Russians in America were
complaining to their superiors, "At present we don't have any agents."

Too few of those dealing with American Communism today have either a real
sense of perspective or an ability to make this history vivid in the way
someone like Kempton could. One exception is Sam Tanenhaus, whose biography
of Whittaker Chambers is one of the few recent books on American Communism
capable of engaging the attention of those not already besotted with it.
Rather than obsess about those who fail to accept the obvious conclusion
that Hiss was guilty, Tanenhaus ignores them. Instead, he concentrates on
bringing to life a historical and human drama.

To approach the story of American Communism in a less judgmental fashion
doesn't mean that there weren't heroes and villains in the story, and many
gradations in between. It merely acknowledges the reality that so many seem
not to want to accept: that the cold war is history now. Those who would
explain what happened must first separate themselves from it.

November 28, 1999
Copyright 1999 The New York Times Company

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