----- Original Message ----- 
From: Steve Wagner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, March 19, 2000 6:01 PM
Subject: [STOPNATO] Poor Paranoid's Almanac: The CIA & American culture


STOP NATO: NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.HOME-PAGE.ORG

This is from The Oakland Tribune,
front page, Sat., March 18, 2000:

BOOK SAYS CIA ALTERED ART
TO SPREAD POSTWAR CULTURE,
by Laurence Zuckerman,
New York Times

 Many people remember reading George Orwell's "Animal
Farm" in high school or college, with its chilling
finale in which the farm animals looked back and
forth at the tyrannical pigs and the human farmers but
found it "impossible to say which was which."

 That ending was altered in the 1955 animated film
version, which removed the humans, leaving only the
nasty pigs. Another example of Hollywood butchering
great literature? Yes, but in this case the film's
secret producer was the Central Intelligence Agency.

 The CIA, it seems, was worried that the public
might be too influenced by Orwell's
pox-on-both-their-houses critique of the capitalist
humans and communist
pigs. So after his death in 1950, agents were
dispatched (by none other than E. Howard Hunt, later
of Watergate fame) to buy the film rights to "Animal
Farm" from his widow to make its message more overtly
anti-communist.

 Rewriting the end of "Animal Farm" is just one
example of the often absurd lengths to which the CIA
went, as recounted in a new book, "The Cultural Cold
War: The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters" (The
New Press) by Frances Stonor Saunders, a British
journalist. Published in Britain last summer, the
book will appear in the United States next month.

 Much of what Saunders writes about, including the
CIA's covert sponsorship of the Paris-based Congress
for Cultural Freedom and the British opinion magazine
Encounter, was exposed in the late 1960s, generating
a wave of indignation.

 But by combing through archives and unpublished
manuscripts and interviewing several of the principal
actors, Saunders has uncovered many new details and
gives the most comprehensive account yet of the
period between 1947 and 1967.

 This picture of the CIA's secret war of ideas has
cameo appearances by scores of intellectural
celebrities such as the critic Lionel Trilling, the
poets Ted Hughes and Derek Walcott and the novelists
James Michener and Mary McCarthy, all of whom directly
or indirectly benefited from the CIA's largess. There
also are bundles of cash that were funneled through
CIA fronts and several hilarious schemes that sound
more like a "Spy vs. Spy" cartoon than a historical
account.

 Traveling first class all the way, the CIA and its
counterparts in other Western European nations
sponsored art exhibitions, intellectual conferences,
concerts and magazines to press their larger
anti-Soviet agenda. Saunders provides ample evidence,
for example, that the editors at Encounter and other
agency-sponsored magazines were directed not to
publish articles directly critical of Washington's
foreign policy. She also shows how the CIA bankrolled
some of the earliest exhibits of Abstract
Expressionist painting outside of the United States
to counter the Socialist Realism being advanced by
Moscow.

 In one memorable episode, the British Foreign Office
subsidized the distribution of 50,000 copies of
"Darkness at Noon," Arthur Koestler's anti-communist
classic. But at the same time, the French Communist
Party ordered its operatives to buy up every copy of
the book. Koestler received a windfall in royalties
courtesy of his communist adversaries.

 As it turns out, "Animal Farm" was not the CIA's
only dabbling in Hollywood. Saunders reports that one
operative who was a producer and talent agent slipped
affluent-looking African-Americans into several films
as extras to try to counter Soviet criticism of the
American race problem.

 The agency also changed the ending of the movie
version of "1984," disregarding Orwell's specific
instructions that the story not be altered. In the
book, the protagonist, Winston Smith, is entirely
defeated by the nightmarish totalitarian regime. At
the end, Orwell writes, Winston realized that "He
loved Big Brother." In the movie, Winston and his
lover, Julia, are gunned down after Winston defiantly
shouts: "Down with Big Brother!"

---------------------------------
(c) 2000, The Oakland Tribune,
http://www.oaklandtribune-ang.com
--------------------------------- 
   



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