Joseph E. Persico (72 page)

Read Joseph E. Persico Online

Authors: Roosevelt's Secret War: FDR,World War II Espionage

Tags: #Nonfiction

BOOK: Joseph E. Persico
7.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

In 1918, as Franklin returned: Doris Kearns Goodwin,
No Ordinary Time,
pp. 19–20.

“a woman of lofty liberal principles. . . .”: Jim Bishop,
FDR's Last Year,
p. xi.

By 1941, with her husband invalided: Goodwin, pp. 434–35.

His report made clear: PSF Box 57.

“We failed to see. . . .”: Eric Larrabee,
Commander in Chief,
p. 9.


TORCH
was a project. . . .”: James MacGregor Burns,
Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom,
p. 286.

“I feel very strongly. . . .”: ibid., p. 289.

“. . . [T]he assumption [is]. . . .”: ibid.

Under a secret arrangement: Sheridan Nichols, “The Light That Failed: Intelligence Gathering Activities in North Africa Prior to Operation Torch,”
Maghreb Review
4 (July/December 1979), p. 135.

Donovan was to find out: ibid., p. 136.

The organization was to invent: Nathan Miller,
Spying for America,
p. 270.

“I've never met him. . . .”: Nichols, p. 135.

With the arrival of Colonel Eddy: ibid.

“All their thoughts are centered. . . .”: Francis Russell,
The Secret War,
p. 96.

“complacently neutral. . . .”: Christopher Andrew,
For the President's Eyes Only,
p. 134.

Nearly 100,000 troops: Donald A. Walker, “OSS and Operation Torch,”
Journal of Contemporary History,
vol. 22 (1987), p. 673.

“That place is a sieve! . . .”: Burns,
Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom,
p. 287.

“Don't worry about Cordell. . . .”: Andrew, p. 134.

Murphy left Roosevelt: ibid.

“You know I am not supposed. . . .”: Sherwood, p. 633.

According to anti-Nazi: Walker, p. 668.

The President had taken out: Burns,
Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom,
p. 290.

The President had it on good authority: ibid., p. 293.

The ship count for Torch: Martin Blumenson,
Mark Clark,
pp. 75–76.

Murphy communicated Mast's wishes: ibid., p. 77.

Attending the meeting: ibid., pp. 77–79.

Clark was to try to enlist: ibid., p. 79.

“I am leaving in twenty minutes. . . .”: ibid., pp. 79–80.

He and the men boarding: ibid., pp. 79–81.

By 6 a.m. Clark's party: ibid., p. 81.

Mast then asked for: ibid., p. 82.

Not until the middle: ibid., pp. 84–85.

There, Eisenhower decided: ibid., p. 87.

“The P. had an awful nightmare. . . .”: Suckley, Binder 16, p. 258.

“We have landed in North Africa. . . .”: Burns,
Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom,
p. 292.

As the forces landed: Miller, p. 271.

General Mast managed: Peter Young, ed.,
The World Almanac Book of World War II,
pp. 181–82.

Colonel Eddy's team had amassed: Nichols, p. 136.

The enemy was where: Walker, p. 669.

That enemies could penetrate: Gentry, p. 245.

Hitler had revealed his timetable: PSF Box 2; Orville H. Bullitt, ed.,
For the President, Personal and Secret: Correspondence Between Franklin D. Roosevelt and William C. Bullitt,
pp. 319–21.

He had even braved the disfavor: Richard Rhodes,
The Making of the Atomic Bomb,
p. 525.

Roosevelt was already attacked: Lucy S. Dawidowicz, “Could the United States Have Rescued the European Jews from Hitler?”
This World,
Fall 1985, p. 21.

Bigots parodied his New Deal: Goodwin, p. 102.

In that period, before war broke out: Liva Baker,
Felix Frankfurter,
pp. 200–201.

Instead of going to Roosevelt: letter, Rosenman to Berle, Oct. 19, 1939, FDRL.

The transcript Bullitt had sent: Joseph E. Persico,
Nuremberg,
p. 282.

“The Jew party [was]. . . .”: Goodwin, p. 102.

“I now think he travelled. . . .”: James Roosevelt,
My Parents,
p. 219.

A 1938 Roper poll: Goodwin, p. 102.

The tight immigration laws: William J. vanden Heuvel, “America, FDR and the Holocaust,”
Society,
vol. 34, no. 6 (October 1997), p. 3.

Even unfilled quotas: Dawidowicz, pp. 16, 17.

A bill introduced in the House: Goodwin, p. 101.

The saga of the SS
St. Louis:
ibid., p. 102.

Many who landed: vanden Heuvel, p. 5;
Washington Post,
Aug. 2, 1998; Goodwin, p. 102.

“The whole trouble is in England”: John Morton Blum,
Years of War, 1941–1945: From the Morgenthau Diaries,
p. 208.

“some very wonderful. . . .”: ibid., p. 207.

“I actually would put a barbed wire. . . .”: ibid., p. 208.

All had turned out: Charles Roetter,
The Art of Psychological Warfare: 1914–1945,
p. 46.

“The post-war settlement. . . .”: M 1642, Reel 1, Frames 543, 544.

“From Midland. . . .”: M 1642, Reel 23, Frames 22, 23.

One account described: Ernest B. Furgurson, “Back Channels,”
Washingtonian,
vol. 31 (June 1996).

His agents interrogated: Irwin F. Gellman,
Secret Affairs,
p. 283.

“Yesterday's cleansing action in Slonim. . . .”: David Stafford,
Churchill and Secret Service,
p. 298.

“The number of Jews engaged. . . .”: Francis L. Loewenheim, Harold D. Langley, and Manfred Jonas, eds.,
Roosevelt and Churchill: Their Secret Wartime Correspondence,
p. 308.

The largest number: Goodwin, p. 101.

One, the Portuguese: Joseph E. Persico,
Piercing the Reich,
p. 3.

Throughout the war: Robert H. Ferrell,
The Dying President: Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1944–1945,
p. 150.

chapter xvi: an exchange: an invasion for a bomb

The President pointed out: James MacGregor Burns,
Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom,
p. 235; Jim Bishop,
FDR's Last Year,
pp. 47–48.

“vast and conspicuous factories”: Eric Larrabee,
Commander in Chief,
p. 646.

“when the President said he. . . .”: ibid.

That matter settled:
FRUS,
3d Washington Conference, p. 2.

Besides, the British considered: Larrabee, p. 645.

Two American physicists:
FRUS,
p. 4.

What the British had shared: H. D. Smythe, “The Smythe Report,”
Library Chronicles,
p. III6.

“[I]nterchange on design. . . .”:
FRUS,
p. 5.

Serving with the Army:
American National Biography,
vol. 5, pp. 284–315.

Conant expressed General Groves's position: HH Box 132.

Upon learning that FDR approved:
FRUS,
p. 6.

“The War Department is asking. . . .”: ibid., p. 1.

“There is no question of breach. . . .”: ibid., p. 2.

“. . . entirely destroys. . . .”: ibid., p. 5.

The Americans had chucked: ibid., p. 3.

His government wanted to share: HH Box 132.

“impossible [and] dangerous”: Brian Loring Villa, “The Atomic Bomb and the Normandy Invasion,”
Perspectives in American History
2 (1977–1978), p. 472.

At one point, he told: ibid., p. 499.

“never had any intention. . . .”: ibid., p. 481.

And a conciliatory FDR: ibid., p. 483.

“since our program is not suffering. . . .”:
FRUS,
First Quebec Conference, p. 631.

The secretary of war advised: Villa, p. 478.

“I think you made a firm commitment. . . .”: HH Box 132.

“Dear Van, while I am mindful. . . .”:
FRUS,
Quebec, p. 633.

“magnificent in reconciliation. . . .”: Villa, p. 493.

“to bring the Tube Alloys project. . . .”:
FRUS,
Quebec, Aug. 19, 1943; Villa, p. 495.

“It would be in the best interests. . . .”: HH Box 132.

Among them was a slight: Norman Moss,
Klaus Fuchs,
pp. 36, 45.

“[W]hat you are after is to see. . . .”: Richard Rhodes,
The Making of the Atomic Bomb,
p. 314.

Still, plenty of brainpower remained: Pamela Spence Richards, “Wartime: The OSS and the Periodical Republication Program,” FDRL.

“would throw a man off his horse. . . .”: Thomas Powers,
Heisenberg's War,
p. 151.

“The attached clipping shows. . . .”:
NYT,
April 4, 1943; HH Box 132.

Heisenberg was a loyal German: Thomas Powers, p. 40.

“At every point during the argument. . . .”: ibid., pp. 132, 151.

“Professor Heisenberg had not given. . . .”: Rhodes, p. 405.

Of 1,006 bombs dropped: Thomas Powers, p. 212.

While Bill Donovan was raining: Robin W. Winks,
Cloak and Gown,
p. 176; Nathan Miller,
Spying for America,
p. 245.

Running the scientific smuggling: Richards, p. 262.

Within minutes, a mysterious: ibid., pp. 261–62.

FDR, whose early law practice:
Los Angeles Times,
Sept. 22, 2000

“practically became a member. . . .”: Curt Gentry,
J. Edgar Hoover,
p. 303.

The young man was soon: ibid.

It was from this post: Doris Kearns Goodwin,
No Ordinary Time,
p. 420.

Thus investigators opened his mail: Athan Theoharis, ed.,
From the Secret Files of J. Edgar Hoover,
p. 59.

The general reviewed the CIC record: Gentry, p. 305; Theoharis, p. 63.

“indicated quite clearly that Mrs. Roosevelt. . . .”: Theoharis, p. 61.

“I'm so happy to have been with you. . . .”: Goodwin, p. 420.

“Subject and Mrs. Pratt appeared. . . .”: Gentry, p. 305.

Actually, they had played gin: ibid.

At the prompting of a furious FDR: Goodwin, p. 421.

Marshall ordered the CIC's domestic spying: Theoharis, p. 60.

The CIC was supposed to hunt: ibid., p. 62.

Eleanor went to her husband: Gentry, p. 299.

“This type of investigation. . . .”: ibid.

“[O]h gosh, Hoover has apologized. . . .”: ibid., p. 300.

“anybody who knew anything about this. . . .”: Theoharis, p. 61.

He was to keep the scurrilous: ibid., p. 62.

“bosses want me to speak about”: John Franklin Carter Diary, Feb. 23, 1943.

“Doctors know more about. . . .”: ibid.

He began spouting: PSF Box 98.

Chin lifted, he began dictating: Carter Diary, Feb. 23, 1943.

He believed himself utterly unappreciated: PSF Box 98.

“When the Hitler regime begins. . . .”: ibid.

“The Army could really be turned. . . .”: ibid.

Among his deliveries was the daughter: M 1642, Reel 109, Frame 398.

“Probable Mode of Exit of Adolph Hitler . . .”: PSF Box 98.

“Hitler is familiar enough with ancient history. . . .”: ibid.

He startled his family:
NYT,
Dec. 31, 1974.

On one occasion, the burly envoy: William B. Breuer,
Hoodwinking Hitler,
p. 36.

At one dance hall, he listened impatiently: Ladislas Farago,
The Game of the Foxes,
p. 574.

State Department careerists were less amused: Breuer, p. 36.

The old capital of the Ottoman Empire: Farago, p. 570.

“[W]e had a General. . . .”: Burns,
Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom,
p. 323.

“I heard the words. . . .”: Anthony Cave Brown,
Bodyguard of Lies,
p. 247.

“A gradual break-up in Germany. . . .”: Winston S. Churchill,
The Second World War: Closing the Ring,
pp. 573–74.

“If you were given two choices. . . .”: Brown,
Bodyguard of Lies,
p. 248.

“[S]uddenly the press conference was on. . . .”: Burns,
Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom,
p. 323.

A policy of uncompromising total surrender: John Gunther,
Roosevelt in Retrospect,
pp. 332–33.

“Of course, it's just the thing. . . .”: Richard A. Russell,
Project Hula: Secret Soviet-American Cooperation in the War Against Japan,
p. 29.

Stalin believed that leaving the Germans:
FRUS,
Cairo Conference, p. 513.

Upon checking into Istanbul's luxurious: Farago, p. 572.

He signed the telegram: ibid.

Ten days after Earle checked into: ibid., p. 576.

“unquestionably a Nazi agent. . . .”: MR Box 13.

“Earle is cooperating. . . .”: ibid.

When the Allied troops did invade: Farago, pp. 578–79.

One day FDR received a large envelope: ibid., p. 577.

“there would be no place. . . .”: ibid., p. 576.

chapter xvii: leakage from the top

Yet, he had trouble persuading: Christopher Andrew,
For the President's Eyes Only,
p. 143.

“I have learned that you seldom. . . .”: ibid.

“C in C [Commander in Chief] combined. . . .”: Norman Polmar and Thomas B. Allen,
Spy Book,
p. 606.

While the Battle of Midway: Andrew, p. 138.

“Oshima often impressed this observer. . . .”: Polmar and Allen,
Spy Book,
p. 417.

“I took occasion to ask him. . . .”: RG 457 #89076.

“Why does Germany have to take . . .?”: RG 457 #92031.

“Before long, as things now look. . . .”: RG 457 #93120.

“Well, it is quite true that these bombings. . . .”: RG 457 #94081.

In one summary, the ambassador: RG 457 CBOM 76.

“Local municipal authorities told me. . . .”: RG 457 #94388.

“The main reason is failure to close. . . .”: RG 457 SRH 111.

“. . . [T]he prisoners tell us. . . .”: RG 457 CBOM 76.

On December 15 the Japanese foreign office: ibid.

“. . . [L]ooking at it from the American point of view. . . .”: RG 457 #74938.

In 1943 over four hundred messages: Polmar and Allen,
Spy Book,
p. 417.

Other books

The Gravity Engine by Kylie Chan
Hampton Manor by K. J. Janssen
Ghost Planet by Sharon Lynn Fisher
Shadow of the Sheikh by Nina Bruhns
Crashed by Robin Wasserman
Shadows of Golstar by Terrence Scott
Faithful by Stephen King, Stewart O’Nan