THE BRITISH WERE COMING!
"Oh, that deceit should steal such subtle shapes
And with a virtuous vizard hide foul guile."
~ William Shakespeare

Desperate Deception:
British Covert Operations in the United States, 1939-44
by Thomas E. Mahl
Washington: Brassey's; 256 pp., $26.95
In the midst of his battle to save our old Republic and keep the United
States out of World War II, John T. Flynn wondered about the true identity of
his enemies. As a leader of the anti-interventionist America First Committee
and its outstanding strategist and spokesman in New York City, he had plenty
of them. In New York, America First was besieged by a campaign of organized
disruption, including infiltration, provocations, pickets, and violence.
Flynn sensed a pattern in these attacks, a unifying intelligence, and after
the war came to believe that these assaults were not "sporadic or casual" but
instead "originated in some central or unified group." Flynn tried in vain to
get Congress to investigate, but the postwar rout of the congressional
isolationists forced him to launch his own inquiry. The result, as he put it
in 1944, was the discovery of "an organization whose name was never mentioned
but which . . . sat more or less at the center of this web of propaganda,
intrigue and calumniation."




Now the evidence is in, and it turns out that Flynn was right. At the center
of the web was the British Security Coordination (BSC), the American arm of
British intelligence, and it was charged with coordinating a British fifth
column in this country.

The story of British intelligence operations in America during the crucial
prewar years is a saga of psychological warfare, black propaganda, and
Byzantine intrigue at the highest levels of the U.S. government – a gripping
tale more fantastic than any fictional thriller. While William Stevenson's
1976 book, A Man Called Intrepid: The Secret War, gave us a glimpse of the
truth, not until Desperate Deception has anyone revealed the extent to which
the US was dragooned into World War II by agents of a foreign power. In
piecing together the story of how British spooks, working in tandem with FDR
and other American Anglophiles, sought to "involve the United States in World
War II and destroy isolationism," Thomas Mahl encountered two major problems:
first, the refusal of the US and British governments to release the relevant
documents, which are still "classified" in the name of "national security";
and second, "the fact that until recently, the study of the intelligence
history of World War II has lacked respectability." As Mahl puts it, "The
conventional charge is that it smacks too much of conspiracy." The author
throws his hands up in despair: "How does the historian avoid the charge that
he is indulging in conspiracy history when he explores the activities of a
thousand people, occupying two floors of Rockefeller Center, in their efforts
to involve the United States in a major war?"

Covert intelligence operations are by their nature conspiratorial, and, in
any event, there is no need to answer this spurious charge. Mahl's carefully
documented chronicle of British interference in American elections,
orchestrated smear campaigns against anti-interventionists, and the planting
of "agents of influence" in the beds of American politicians is not just an
"intelligence history" of how the United States got into World War II: It is
the true history of that calamity.

The story of the BSC is wrapped up in the person of its chief, William
Stephenson, known today by his New York cable address, "Intrepid." In 1940,
Stephenson, a millionaire businessman with a wide variety of business and
political connections, was sent to the United States to head up the BSC,
where he took over the 38th floor of the International Building in
Rockefeller Center, which the Rockefellers had generously donated. The
British Press Service and the pro-war "Fight for Freedom" group were in the
same building, also rent-free.

One BSC recruit, Bickham Sweet Escott, describes his interview: "For security
reasons," he was told, "I can't tell you what sort of job it would be. All I
can say is that if you join us, you mustn't be afraid of forgery, and you
mustn't be afraid of murder." Ernest Cuneo, the lawyer and Roosevelt
administration insider who served as liaison between BSC, the White House,
and various US government agencies, relates in a recently declassified memo
how the BSC operated:

It ran espionage agents, tampered with the mails, tapped telephones, smuggled
propaganda into the country, disrupted public gatherings, covertly subsidized
newspapers, radios, and organizations, perpetrated forgeries, . . . violated
the aliens registration act, shanghaied sailors numerous times, and possibly
murdered one or more persons in this country.

Cuneo's papers reveal several of the most active interventionist
organizations as "formed and acquired" by Stephenson's underground apparatus,
including the Fight for Freedom Committee, which advocated an immediate
declaration of war against Germany and Japan, and the "Friends of Democracy,"
an anti-isolationist spy and "research" organization that specialized in the
art of the smear. The most prominent British front was the Committee to
Defend America by Aiding the Allies, chaired by William Allen White. These
fronts were instruments of the Anglophile propaganda campaign in favor of a
peacetime draft, the Destroyer deal, and Lend-Lease. They were especially key
in blocking the isolationists in the Republican Party, making certain that in
the 1940 presidential elections the American people would have a "choice"
between two interventionists.

Mahl presents irrefutable evidence that Cuneo (codename: "Crusader") wrote
many of Walter Winchell's columns and had close ties to Drew Pearson. The BSC
also had its tentacles in Hollywood and among the literary set; a key
document names Dorothy Thompson, journalist Edmond Taylor, movie mogul
Alexander Korda, co-founder and president of the Viking Press Harold
Guinzburg, playwright and presidential speechwriter Robert Sherwood, and
mystery writer Rex Stout as dedicated agents.

Documents cited by Mahl reveal the names of top British agents in journalism,
including George Backer, publisher of the New York Post; Helen Ogden Reid,
the de facto publisher of the New York Herald Tribune; Paul Patterson,
publisher of the Baltimore Sun; A.H. Sulzberger, president of the New York
Times; Walter Lippmann; Ralph Ingersoll, editor of the leftist tabloid PM;
and Ingersoll's boss, Chicago Sun publisher Marshall Field. The Overseas News
Agency, which reached millions of readers, was a wholly owned subsidiary of
the Brits. Besides using its journalistic assets to browbeat the American
people into war, the BSC sought to undermine and, if possible, destroy those
remaining sources of news that could be neither bought nor bullied. Public
enemy number one, in their view, was Colonel Robert R. McCormick, whose
Chicago Tribune was the flagship newspaper and voice of the Old Right. The
BSC's Sandy Griffith set Albert Parry of Chicago's Fight for Freedom chapter
on a "We Don't Read the Tribune" campaign that culminated in a rally and
bonfire of freshly printed newspapers.

While the public stance of the British and their fifth column was "aid short
of war," the BSC agitated for a peacetime draft. A key aspect of their
campaign was the manufacturing of phony public opinion polls purporting to
show overwhelming popular support for conscription. Mahl unmasks the
pollsters, showing that surveys conducted by Gallup, Roper, and Market
Analysts "were all done under the influence of dedicated interventionists and
British intelligence agents." An even nastier intrusion into the American
political process was the BSC operation against Representative Hamilton Fish
(R-NY), the feisty isolationist from FDR's home district. Mahl documents the
involvement in the election campaign of BSC agents who masterminded newspaper
ads linking Fish to Hitler, Ribbentrop, and Fritz Kuhn of the German-American
Bund. In a memo after the 1940 election, agent Griffith maps out a strategy
of hectoring, harassment, and October surprises. "There were other harsh
suggestions made by agent Griffith," writes Mahl, "and most of them happened
to Fish over the next four years as his political career lurched from one
disaster to another."

Of all the operations conducted by British intelligence in this country, none
had a more long-range effect than the turning of Senator Arthur Vandenberg.
The Michigan Republican was a staunch isolationist in the late 1930's, when
he co-sponsored the resolution establishing the famous Nye Committee hearings
on the political influence of the munitions industry. Many historians have
remarked on the abruptness of his reversal in the mid-40's, when he suddenly
signed on to the whole panoply of post-war globalist nostrums, including the
U.N. and NATO. How does one explain the defection of the man who was
considered the leader of the Senate Republicans and a possible GOP
presidential candidate in 1940? Internationalists have naturally attributed
it to Vandenberg's growing "maturity." Mahl puts the Senator's conversion in
a new light: "British intelligence operations on Senator Arthur Vandenberg
were based on a very simple human assumption – those who are sleeping with a
senator are most likely to have his ear."

Mahl documents Vandenberg's romantic attachments to three women with strong
ties to British intelligence. In 1940, all Washington knew he was having an
affair with Mitzi Sims, wife of British attaché Harold Sims, a monied British
aristocrat who ran the code room at the embassy. The glamorous Mitzi, an
international jet-setter before the advent of jets, was just the sort of
cosmopolitan vamp to enamor the vainglorious Vandenberg, who once said: "I
had no youth. I went to work when I was nine, and I never got a chance to
enjoy myself until I came to the Senate."

The Senator had such a good time that, at one point, his wife returned to
their Grand Rapids home because the randy Vandenberg had practically moved
Mitzi into their Washington flat. Harold Sims proved far more tolerant of his
mate's infidelity. While Washington tittered over the scandal, the Senator
continued his close friendship with the Simses until May 1940, when Harold
Sims died of a stroke. Vandenberg took charge of the funeral arrangements,
and shortly afterward Mitzi departed for Montreal. Mitzi made a dramatic
reappearance, however, just as the crucial vote on the Lend-Lease Act was
coming before the Senate. Another femme fatale appeared on the scene at this
time. Betty Thorpe, the elegant spouse of a worldly British diplomat, was
sent to Washington from Buenos Aires to catch the senator's eye. Mrs. Thorpe
was no ordinary housewife but the famous British Mata Hari known by her nom
d'espionage, "Cynthia." In her biography of Cynthia, Cast No Shadow, Mary
Lovell relates that both Vandenberg and Senator Connally were targeted for
seduction; while Connally told Cynthia, "You're wasting your time, my dear,"
Vandenberg was easier prey.

Yet another of Vandenberg's BSC romances was with Eveline Paterson, a
charming, statuesque blonde and a professional publicist for the cause of
Great Britain: Chicago Tribune Washington bureau chief Walter Trohan, the
FBI, and Drew Pearson all had her correctly pegged as a British intelligence
operative. As an "agent of influence," Eveline's success can be measured by
the senator's 1946 vote for loans to Britain and legislation forgiving
British war debts. Mrs. Paterson's scrapbook contains a number of Vandenberg
items, among them an article from the April 30, 1945, issue of Time, which
featured the senator's picture on the cover. The article praised him in his
new role as chief of the Republican internationalists. The Office of Naval
Intelligence also kept a file on Vandenberg's dalliances with foreign agents.
In his memoirs, Walter Trohan relates how, at the 1948 Republican convention,
where Vandenberg was a major contender for the nomination, Joseph Pew, head
of the Sun Oil Company and a heavyweight contributor to party coffers,
somehow got his hands on a copy of the ONI file. Pew threatened to take to
the floor and read aloud the sordid details of Vandenberg's betrayal.

Too bad Pew was dissuaded from doing so. If only he had revealed the
lascivious details of Vandenberg's treason: Such a bombshell might have blown
the cover of the fifth columnists in our midst, and exposed the truth about
the internationalist Republicans. If Pew had taken to the microphone, Wendell
Willkie might have remained in the obscurity from which he was plucked.

How an unknown lawyer for J.P. Morgan & Co., without having held any previous
political office, and without even being a registered Republican, could come
to be the GOP presidential nominee is a mystery pondered long and often by
conservative commentators over the years. In her classic book A Choice, Not
an Echo, Phyllis Schlafly attributes Willkie's nomination to the decision of
the "secret kingmakers" and mentions the influential role played by Lord
Lothian, the British ambassador, and Thomas W. Lamont, the chief enforcer of
Morgan interests. With the New York Herald Tribune as his house organ, and
Wall Street putting heavy pressure on the delegates, the dark horse Willkie
stampeded the isolationist conservatives before they knew what hit them. Mahl
shows that the "secret kingmakers" were nothing so vague as the "Eastern
Establishment," and he amasses considerable evidence that British
intelligence was directly involved. Apart from re-electing FDR, the BSC was
working to ensure congressional approval of conscription and of a deal giving
the British a part of the American fleet. These were the "secret kingmakers,"
or, as Schlafly calls them, the "hidden persuaders," who reached into the bag
of dirty tricks – possibly including murder, as Mahl tantalizingly speculates
– all too familiar to students of intelligence history.

It is not an unusual view that identifies the Roosevelt administration, an
Anglophilic elite, and the Rockefeller-Morgan financial interests as the
three groups whose agitation eventually dragged a reluctant nation into World
War II. Mahl's great contribution is to identify the BSC as the puppet-master
behind American interventionism. What the author of this invaluable volume
calls "intelligence history" has not been considered "respectable" precisely
because it penetrates the propagandistic pieties promulgated by the court
historians and exposes the ruthlessness and utter immorality of ruling
elites. This is not "intelligence history," but real history without
illusions, if not without regrets.

This article originally appeared in Chronicles Magazine.

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