The
Schneirs on the
Venona Papers |
From
The Nation, August 21, 1995
Cables
Coming in From the Cold
By
WALTER SCHNEIR and MIRIAM SCHNEIR
Nearly
four years ago, soon after the initial public release by the
National Security Agency (NSA) of its long-secret Venona archive--decoded
Soviet intelligence messages transmitted by telegraphic cable
to and from Moscow during World War II - we predicted
in these pages that "historians of the Cold War will be examining
these documents...for a long time." We should have added,
"and arguing about their implications." Today that argument,
which is essentially over the history of the McCarthy era,
is well underway in various media.
Thus The New York Times reported last fall in a major
"Week in Review" piece titled "Witching Hour: Rethinking
McCarthyism, if Not McCarthy," that the release of the Venona
archive "has unleashed a flood of scholarship" and engendered
a growing controversy among Cold War historians of the left
and right. Several days afterward, a lead editorial in that
newspaper, "Revisionist McCarthyism," cautioned, "Beware the
rehabilitation of Joseph McCarthy. Armed with audacity and
new archival information, a number of American scholars would
like to rewrite the historical verdict on Senator McCarthy
and McCarthyism." Time magazine, on the other hand,
weighed in recently, asking, "Was McCarthy on the right track?",
a piece in which it observed that Venona "demonstrates beyond
argument that the Soviet penetration into American life, government,
science and industry...was deep, thorough and hostile." And
William F. Buckley has seized the moment for a novel, "The
Redhunter," based on the life of his longtime hero, McCarthy.
The latest contender is John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr's
"Venona," a wide-ranging survey of the Venona project
and Soviet espionage in the United States during the 30s and
40s. Haynes and Klehr, who concluded in several previous books
that the American Communist Party lacked any redeeming features,
here set themselves a far broader objective: to demonstrate
that the information derived from Venona "may change the way
we think about 20th-century American history." The evident
enthusiasm with which Haynes and Klehr approach this endeavor
may account for their frequent exaggerations and excursions
into the never-never land of pop history. Thus they speculate
that by enabling the Soviet Union to produce an atomic bomb
sooner than was otherwise possible, the spies may have caused
the Korean War and "the killing and maiming of hundreds of
thousands of soldiers and civilians."
The authors also claim that by early 1947 the Venona decrypts
were an important influence on the Truman Administration,
leading the President that year to institute the loyalty program
and create the Central Intelligence Agency. But they offer
no shred of proof for this sweeping assertion, and newly available
evidence, cited in "Secrecy" by Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
strongly suggests that Truman was kept in the dark about the
Venona project. Again without citing any source, they describe
dramatically how U.S. fliers during the Korean War were imperiled
by superior Soviet MIG-15 jet fighters built with know-how
provided to the KGB by William Perl, a U.S. aeronautical engineer.
However, the MIG-15 did not utilize espionage technology,
according to US Air Force historian Dr. Richard Hallion, though
it did benefit from an important foreign contribution: a Rolls-Royce
Nene high-performance jet engine sold to the Soviets by the
British.
None of this alters the fact that Venona is an important and
fascinating archive well worth studying. Taken as a whole,
the archive reveals much. No reasonable person who examines
all the relevant documents can doubt, for example, that in
World War II Washington some employees of government agencies
were passing information that went to the Russians, that the
American Communist Party provided recruits for Soviet intelligence
work or that Venona yielded clues that put investigators on
the trail of Klaus Fuchs, Harry Gold, David Greenglass, Julius
Rosenberg and others. It is when the decrypted messages are
studied individually that problems arise. The question is
not one of authenticity; the authors argue convincingly that
the documents are not forgeries. The difficulties, rather,
are related to accuracy. Is Venona a reliable source? The
answer, in a nutshell, is yes and no.
Haynes and Klehr would disagree. Although they pay lip service
to the idea that the Venona documents might have weaknesses
as historical sources, they fail to enumerate any, and starting
from the first chapter, they vouch for the archive's complete
trustworthiness. They confidently describe the messages as
"hard evidence" and "incontestable," and assert that because
of their "inherent reliability" they "provide a touchstone
for judging the credibility of other sources." Given this
ringing endorsement, one is naturally curious why such "hard
evidence" was never used in court or, until recently, made
available to the press and public. The answer given by the
authors is a tired old story: that the NSA did not want the
Russians to know the extent of its success. Like all cover
stories, of course, this one hides an uncomfortable truth,
as revealed in a recently released 1956 FBI report. Its emergence
was a fluke. Senator Moynihan recounts in "Secrecy"
that after he complained to FBI Director Louis Freeh about
the bureau's stonewalling on Congressional requests for Venona
material, Freeh ordered his "personal staff to sweep the basement"
and soon turned over a batch of FBI reports on Venona, including
the 1956 one. Declassified without fanfare earlier this year
(because of the FBI's mistaken belief that it had been "referenced"
in Moynihan's book), the formerly top-secret report has gone
unnoticed, this being, we believe, its first public airing.
On February 1, 1956, Alan H. Belmont, the FBI's number-three
man, distributed to the inner circle of the Bureau's leadership
the only known government analysis ever prepared on the reliability
of the Venona decrypts. Belmont's purpose was to consider
the possibility of using the decoded Venona material as prosecutorial
evidence in court.
At the time, the FBI was no newcomer to the Venona project.
For eight years the Bureau had been working hand in glove
with the NSA and its predecessor organization, the Army Security
Agency, as a full partner in the complex decoding process.
Belmont compared the Venona messages to teletypes sent from
FBI field offices to headquarters and said that more detailed
reports from the KGB "were undoubtedly being sent...in the
diplomatic pouch." The first messages to be partially decoded
were full of gaps and unintelligible. The Army then turned
to the FBI, believing that "the Bureau by studying the messages
and conducting investigations would be able to develop information
which would assist the Army cryptographers in reading additional
unrecovered portions of the messages."
Although Belmont offered a number of reasons for not using
Venona messages as judicial evidence - including a wish
to keep the Soviets from learning "the degree of success the
U.S. had in breaking their codes" - the principal reasons
were twofold: The decrypted material might not meet the standards
for evidence set by US law, and, even if it did, it suffered
from certain deficiencies that might limit its usefulness
as proof.
In the first place, we do not know if the deciphered messages
would be admitted into evidence.... The defense attorney would
immediately move that the messages be excluded, based on the
hearsay evidence rule. He would probably claim that...the
contents of the messages were purely hearsay as it related
to the defendants.
Belmont made it clear that apart from the legal hurdle of
the hearsay evidence rule, the successful use of the messages
in a court of law to prove guilt would be difficult. The evidence
had inherent weaknesses:
The messages [deleted] furnishes the Bureau are, for the most
part, very fragmentary and full of gaps. Some parts of the
messages can never be recovered again because during the actual
intercept the complete message was not obtained. Other portions
can be recovered only through the skill of the cryptographers
and with the Bureau's assistance. Frequently, through an examination
of the messages and from a review of Bureau files, the Bureau
can offer suspects for individuals involved.
Belmont was frank with his colleagues:
It must be realized that the [deleted] cryptographers make
certain assumptions as to meanings when deciphering these
messages and thereafter the proper translations of Russian
idioms can become a problem. It is for such reasons that
[deleted] has indicated that almost anything included in
a translation of one of these deciphered messages may in
the future be radically revised.
Another
very important factor to be considered when discussing the
accuracy of these deciphered messages is the extensive use
of cover names noted in this traffic. Once an individual
was considered for recruitment as an agent by the Soviets,
sufficient background data on him was sent to headquarters
in Moscow. Thereafter, he was given a cover name and his
true name was not mentioned again. This makes positive identifications
most difficult since we seldom receive the initial message
which states that agent "so and so" (true name) will henceforth
be known as "____" (cover name). Also, cover names were
changed rather frequently and the cover name "Henry" might
apply to two different individuals, depending upon the date
it was used....
Belmont was forthrightly skeptical in the assessment to his
colleagues: "All of the above factors make difficult a correct
reading of the messages and point up the tentative nature
of many identifications."
Belmont offered a dramatic example of "the tentative nature
of many identifications." Among the first messages given the
FBI "was one concerning an individual with the cover name
'Antenna.' The message was dated 5/5/44 and it set forth information
indicating that 'Antenna' was 25 years of age, a 'fellow countryman'
(member of CP, USA), lived in 'Tyre' (New York), took a course
at Cooper Union in 1940, [and] worked in the Signal Corp.
at Ft. Monmouth." From another message referring to "Antenna"
the FBI had also learned that his wife's name was Ethel. Belmont
continued: "We made a tentative identification of 'Antenna'
as Joseph Weichbrod since the background of Weichbrod corresponded
with the information known about 'Antenna.' Weichbrod was
about the right age, had a Communist background, lived in
NYC, attended Cooper Union in 1939, worked at the Signal Corps,
Ft. Monmouth, and his wife's name was Ethel. He was a good
suspect for 'Antenna' until sometime later when we definitely
established through investigation that 'Antenna' was Julius
Rosenberg."
The Venona documents were reworked over and over again between
about 1946 and 1980, when the decoding project finally shut
down. Although Belmont did not mention it, the "5/5/44" document
underwent still another radical permutation. In its final
version, the sender asks permission to recruit one Alfred
Sarant, "a lead of 'Antenna.'" The message now contains considerable
added information: Sarant is Greek, a U.S. citizen, was discharged
from Ft. Monmouth for past union activity, has been working
for two years at Western Electric and lives apart from his
family.
Belmont, whose recommendation that the Venona messages not
be used as evidence at trials was concurred in by his colleagues,
summed up cogently:
Assuming that the messages could be introduced in evidence,
we then have a question of identity. The fragmentary nature
of the messages themselves, the assumptions made by the cryptographers
in breaking the messages, and the questionable interpretations
and translations involved, plus the extensive use of cover
names for persons and places, make the problem of positive
identification extremely difficult.... Reliance would have
to be placed on the expert testimony of the cryptographers
and it appears that the case would be entirely circumstantial.
In addition to the problems exposed by Belmont, a number of
other characteristics of the Venona decrypts diminish their
reliability. The KGB agents who composed the Venona messages
were seldom the same people who had participated in the meetings
being reported. In fact, there were sometimes three or four
degrees of separation between an original source and the KGB
report writer. Moreover, Russian espionage operatives who
on occasion collected data directly from U.S. sources often
spoke imperfect English; their superiors, with more or less
skill, had to render American idioms into Russian; and American
cryptanalysts later translated decoded fragments of the messages
back into English. Yet Haynes and Klehr present some cables
as though they were virtual time machines enabling us to overhear
long-past conversations precisely as they occurred. Thus,
analyzing a 1944 message that recounts a meeting between journalist
I.F. Stone and a KGB agent doubling as a correspondent for
TASS, the Soviet news agency, the authors seem to regard it
as a verbatim narrative of what actually transpired. They
solemnly interpret each word and conclude that Stone was "flirting
with the KGB." But the Venona messages are not like the old
TV show You Are There, in which history was re-enacted
before our eyes. They are history seen through a glass, darkly.
A reader faced with Venona's incomplete, disjointed messages
can easily arrive at a badly skewed impression. For example,
State Department employee Laurence Duggan is mentioned with
cover names in nine Venona cables. Haynes and Klehr infer
from these, not unreasonably, that Duggan was cooperating
fully with Soviet espionage in the 40s. However, Allen Weinstein,
who had access to fuller and more detailed messages from KGB
files in Moscow, titled a chapter in his recent book "The
Haunted Wood" (written with Alexander Vassiliev), "The
Reluctant Laurence Duggan." Weinstein describes how during
the late 30s Duggan repeatedly and fervently expressed doubts
about the Moscow purge trials to his Soviet contacts and requested
a pause in their meetings. Evaluating Duggan's usefulness
to the Soviets in the 30s, Weinstein says: "In the end, occasional
tidbits of State Department information was the most the Soviet
operative gained from his rare meetings with Duggan during
this period."
Similarly, U.S. Treasury official Frank Coe is depicted in
the Haynes-Klehr book as an active and committed member of
"the Silvermaster group," an information-gathering network
of government workers in Washington coordinated by a fellow
federal employee, Nathan Gregory Silvermaster. The authors'
conclusion is consistent with the contents of a Venona message
from late 1944, which reported that extensive information
had been received from Coe on British-U.S. Lend-Lease negotiations.
But once again, excerpts from the Moscow files published in
Weinstein's book put a different light on the situation. Weinstein
writes that Coe believed the data he was supplying went to
the U.S. Communist Party, not the KGB. Coe complained frequently
to his handlers that his undercover work was hindering his
career, and by the fall of 1945 Silvermaster was grumbling
to the Russians that Coe was "hiding from him." Several reviewers
of "The Haunted Wood" have criticized Weinstein
for not having disclosed as yet certain vital details about
the Moscow archive [see Ellen Schrecker, "The Spies Who Loved
Us?" The Nation, May 24, 1995]. It is hoped that he
will do so soon. But assuming for now that he has presented
his material fairly and accurately, the book's sampling of
documents from Moscow KGB files is obviously of unique importance.
Haynes and Klehr assert that Venona confirms evidence from
numerous other sources, especially the testimony of KGB-affiliated
defectors, like Whittaker Chambers and Elizabeth Bentley,
and the contents of FBI files. The authors conclude: "Venona
fits, and fits very well, with this other evidence." Their
claim is true only in part, for they tend to paint with a
broad brush, ignoring fine points and lumping everything together
with no thought given to ambiguity or nuance. Thus, when parts
of Bentley's story are shown to be consistent with Venona,
they are prepared to declare without any qualification that
"Elizabeth Bentley had told the truth." They overlook the
fact that the decoders of Venona used names and incidents
from the FBI files to help make identifications and fill gaps
- the very names and incidents that were often supplied
in the first place by Chambers and Bentley. Are we dealing
here with circular reasoning, a dog chasing its own tail?
And if so, to what extent? Perhaps detailed, specific information
about the history of the decoding of individual Venona documents
- including the FBI's input - would provide answers.
But the NSA, despite promises to release such data, has not
done so.
As one reads Haynes and Klehr's "Venona," one gradually
perceives that the book has two motifs. The first is a straightforward
account of the NSA's decoding program; the second could aptly
be titled "a conspiracy so immense." In developing the second
theme, the authors are given to overstatement: In the very
first lines of their book they assert that the Venona archive
consists of "nearly three thousand" cables sent "between Soviet
spies in the United States and their superiors in Moscow."
The actual figure is about half that number. They pile on
decades of espionage stories, many of them connected to Venona
peripherally or not at all, in support of a stunningly simplistic
historical theory about the origins of the Cold War witch
hunt: When about 200 cover names decoded by Venona could not
be identified, a "security nightmare" was created that required
a hunt "by hundreds of security officers for many years and
subjected thousands of individuals to investigation."
Finally, the enormity of Soviet espionage is graphically underscored
in several appendixes. The largest, Appendix A, titled "Source
Venona: Americans and U.S. Residents Who Had Covert Relationships
with Soviet Intelligence Agencies," is said to contain the
true names or cover names of 349 people mentioned in Venona
messages. Serving as judge and lord high executioner, Haynes
and Klehr assemble a mixed bag for their Appendix A, ranging
from those who made substantial contributions to Soviet espionage
to many scores of men and women whose alleged connections
with KGB spying were so vague, trivial or irrelevant as to
indicate that the list is heavily padded. For example, Norman
Chandler Bursler, a Justice Department employee, was named
by Bentley as a member of the Silvermaster group. The only
Venona message that mentions him says he provided Silvermaster
with information about an Austrian financier in the United
States, and it refers to Bursler by his true name, with no
cover name. Nevertheless, Haynes and Klehr consign Bursler
to their A list. The authors' avidity for names is also demonstrated
by their inclusion of the screenwriter Walter Bernstein here.
Bernstein is mentioned by his real name in a single Venona
message from 1944, which states that he has "promised to write
a report on his trip." The trip was a daring journalistic
foray into German-occupied Yugoslavia to interview Tito for
Yank magazine. Though Bernstein has declared that he
never wrote any report for Soviet intelligence, he, too, is
listed as someone who had a "covert relationship" with the
KGB.
Appendix B, titled "Americans and U.S. Residents Who Had Covert
Relationships with Soviet Intelligence Agencies but Were Not
Identified in the Venona Cables," has 139 names. Among the
cases decided by judges Haynes and Klehr are those of three
government employees accused by Bentley: William Remington,
Sol Leshinsky and William Henry Taylor. Remington denied any
guilt but was convicted of perjury and murdered in prison.
As for Leshinsky, Bentley said he never handed over any documents
to her. Taylor, who never met Bentley, protested his complete
innocence and fought desperately to clear his name; his last
years were an ordeal of unending interrogations by FBI agents,
Congressional committees, federal grand juries and loyalty
boards. Haynes and Klehr sentence all three of the men to
their B list.
Oh, yes, after a C list of foreigners, there is also a D list
of "Americans and U.S. Residents Targeted as Potential Sources
by Soviet Intelligence Agencies." We confess to a personal
interest: A dear friend of ours, an author now deceased, is
on the D list. While writing speeches for New Deal leaders
he was eyed covetously by KGB recruiters, without his knowledge.
He would have hated being on this list, with its reek of innuendo.
But at least, named alongside Joseph Barnes, I.F. Stone and
J. Robert Oppenheimer, he is in good company.
Cold War McCarthyism fed on names; its inquisitors were census-takers
of subversion. In place of the presumption of innocence, its
legal principles were guilt by association and group culpability.
Its public discourse was coarsened by the blurring of subtle
differences. Its explanations for vast and complex events
were naive, fantastic and unsubstantiated. Haynes and Klehr
would seem to be among those scholars who The New York
Times said "would like to rewrite the historical verdict
on...McCarthyism." In their book they aver, without spelling
out what they mean, that our understanding of McCarthyism
has been "seriously distorted" because we did not know about
the Venona messages. Certainly the Venona archive does provide
a narrow window for studying the activities of those American
communists who worked for Soviet intelligence. But it is ironic
and unseemly that "Venona," a book that purports
to cast new light on McCarthyism, should itself partake of
some of the worst characteristics of that sorry period.
Walter
Schneir is writing a political memoir that details
investigations of the Rosenberg case in Prague and Moscow.
Miriam Schneir's most recent book is "Feminism
in Our Time: The Essential Writings, World War II to the Present"
(Vintage).
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