Was Franklin Roosevelt a Communist?
To comment on this article go to BÕManÕs Revolt.
John Beaty in his 1951 book, The Iron Curtain Over
America, asks the following rhetorical question (p.
187):
In solemn
truth, do not seven persons share most of the responsibility for establishing
the Communist grip on the world?
Are not the seven: (1) Marx, the founder of violent Communism; (2)
Engels, the promoter of Marx; (3, 4, 5) Trotsky, Lenin, and Stalin; (6)
Franklin D. Roosevelt, who rescued the tottering Communist empire by
recognition (1933), by the resultant financial support, by his refusal to
proceed against Communists in the United States, and by the provisions of the
Yalta Conference; and (7) Harry S. Truman, who agreed at Potsdam to the
destruction of Germany and thereafter followed the Franklin Roosevelt policy of
refusing to act against Communists in the United States—the one strong
nation which remains as a possible obstacle to the Communist world power.
Upon first
thought one might be inclined to drop Truman from the list on account of the
institution of the Truman Doctrine in 1947 and the stand he
took against the Communists in Korea in 1950, but if one puts the loss of
China, North Korea, and ultimately the former French Indo-China to the
Communists on his account, which is amply
justified, Truman deserves his place. He is the odd man out only in that no
one could ever charge that his policies resulted from anything resembling a
pro-Communist ideology on his part.
Rather, they were a product of the team that he inherited from FDR and
the generally pro-Soviet mood of the country that had been fostered by a decade
or so of propaganda by the dominant U.S.
opinion molders.
Truman can also be excused for simply being in over his head when he
assumed the presidency.
Roosevelt is a
different matter entirely. One
neednÕt go past the pages of my own web site to gather enough evidence to
support the assertion that FDR himself must have been a Communist. Consider what FDR told Rep. Martin
Dies in 1940:
I do not regard
the Communists as any present or future threat to our country,
in fact I look upon Russia as our strongest ally in the years to come. As
I told you when you began your investigation, you should confine yourself to
Nazis and Fascists. While I do not believe in Communism, Russia is far
better off and the world is safer with Russia under Communism than under the
Czars. Stalin is a great leader, and although I deplore some of his
methods, it is the only way he can safeguard his government.
His
protestation of a lack of belief in Communism is completely belied by his words
here and in many, many ways by his actions. Dies notes that those pro-Soviet,
pro-Stalin views match what he told Cardinal Spellman in 1943:
His
aide memoire is completely in accord with the opinions Roosevelt expressed to
me over the years. Specifically,
the President had said that Russia was our natural ally; that the Russian
people were much better off than they had been under the czars; and that he
thought that the Russians would get about forty percent of the world, and the
capitalist regimes would retain sixty percent.
Unfortunately,
RooseveltÕs policies seemed to have been designed to make sure that the
prediction in that last paragraph would come true. The Yalta Conference near the end of the
war was just the capper on a global war strategy that from beginning to end
could hardly have been better crafted to further the interests of Joseph Stalin
and world Communism. Having been
attacked by the Japanese, the American public along with many of the countryÕs
military leaders wanted a greater emphasis upon the Pacific theater and defeat
of the Japanese and less upon the war with the Germans, but Stalin wanted it
otherwise and thatÕs what he got from Roosevelt. In the battle against the Germans, our
British allies favored an attack in the Eastern Mediterranean and up through
the Balkans, but, again, Stalin wanted a different strategy from us. He feared that we would occupy Eastern
Europe and dictate the peace in that area before his troops could arrive. Stalin, therefore, pushed for us to
attack across the English Channel at the earliest possible date to take German
pressure off the Soviet Union while keeping non-Communist allied forces as far
away from his sphere of interest as possible. Only fierce British resistance probably
prevented the allies from making a premature attack across the channel, but we
finally did carry out StalinÕs wishes.
From the
beginning we lavished supplies and equipment upon the Soviet Union far beyond
the requirements of military necessity.
Worst of all was RooseveltÕs unilateral declaration at the Casablanca Conference early in 1943
that we would only accept unconditional surrender to conclude the war. Our rigid adherence to that policy
virtually to the very end* undercut the strong anti-Nazi elements within
Germany, assuring that there would not be a separate peace between the
non-Communist adversaries that would in some degree deprive the Soviet Union of
the spoils of victory, and that the Japanese would continue to fight until the
Soviet Union could enter the Pacific war and promote Communism in the
East. This unconditional surrender
policy resulted in the Roosevelt administration spurning a number of serious peace
overtures from the anti-Nazi, anti-Communist military
leadership of Germany in 1943.
Later, we were to do the same
thing with respect to the Japanese emperor.
Defenders of
RooseveltÕs complete capitulation to Stalin at Yalta argue that we were simply
accepting facts on the ground achieved through Soviet military success, and
there is some truth to it, but only because of previous concessions to Stalin
at Tehran and through our overall pro-Soviet military strategy. The absolute worst things Roosevelt did
at Yalta were to agree to the return of refugees from Russia to their Soviet
oppressors known as Operation
Keelhaul and the offering of inducements to Stalin to
enter the war against the Japanese.
George N. Crocker in RooseveltÕs Road to Russia best captures the folly of that last position:
[In Honolulu]
on July 27 and 28, 1944, [FDR] had discussed the war in the Pacific for many
hours with General Douglas MacArthur, who had flown up from Australia, and Admiral
Chester W. Nimitz, commander of the naval forces in the Pacific. MacArthur and Nimitz, in the presence of
Admiral William D. Leahy, had told him that ÒJapan
could be forced to accept our terms of surrender by the use of sea and air
power without an invasion of the Japanese homeland.Ó Since then, what was left of the
Japanese fleet had been crushed in the Battle of Leyte Gulf in October, the
Philippines had been retaken, B-29Õs were bombing Japan from Guam, Tinian, and
Saipan, and Japanese peace feelers had been put out.
When Roosevelt
went to Yalta, he kept MacArthur and Nimitz far away. He asked them nothing, told them
nothing. In view of what he did at
Yalta, this would seem an incomprehensible neglect on his part to avail himself
of the counsel of the two men most qualified to give it. The only explanation that makes any
sense is that he already knew what their advice would be, that it was not
compatible with his plans, and that he did not welcome having their
opinions—overwhelmingly authoritative as they would
be—presented. At this stage,
elementary statesmanship, for the security of American interests in the Far
East, required that the Soviet Union be, at almost any cost, dissuaded,
discouraged, and forestalled from entering the war with Japan. Roosevelt went to Yalta and secretly did
just the opposite. (pp. 242-243).
Rather than
depending upon the foreign policy expertise of Secretary of State Cordell Hull
at his various strategy powwows with Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin, he
depended almost exclusively upon the former social worker right-hand man Harry
Hopkins. Hull was not even allowed
to attend the meetings. The main
qualification that Hopkins had, other than the Òpeople skillsÓ that author
David Roll is almost rhapsodic about in The Hopkins Touch is that he was an even
stronger partisan of Stalin and Communism than Roosevelt was. For a brief summary of HopkinsÕ
pro-Communist activities see my recent article, ÒHarry
Hopkins and FDRÕs Commissars.Ó
Roosevelt did
take his Secretary of State to Yalta, but this time that was the rubber-stamp
front man Edward Stettinius. Stettinius played a much less
significant role at Yalta than did his putative underling at the State
Department, the Soviet spy Alger Hiss.
Only from reading the recent book StalinÕs Secret Agents by M. Stanton Evans and Herbert Romerstein
did this writer learn that FDR had asked for the somewhat obscure Hiss by name
to be on his Yalta team. This is
very nearly the most damning piece of evidence of all suggesting that FDR
himself must have been a Communist.
After all, he had been informed by his
security chief Adolf Berle back in 1939 upon very good inside information from Whittaker Chambers
that Hiss was a Soviet espionage agent.
His Òrefusal to proceed against Communists in the United States,Ó as
John Beaty puts it, was even worse than that. He refused to proceed against Communist
spies at the highest levels of his own government, Soviet agents that possibly
included even Harry Hopkins himself.
The Contrary Evidence
It is a less
trivial defense than one might think, but one might say that Roosevelt wasnÕt
learned or smart enough to be devoted to any particular ideology, whether it be Communism or anything else. He was nobodyÕs intellectual. He was hardly known to have read a serious book of non-fiction about
anything unless it had a nautical theme, and the American Communism of the Red Decade was largely a disease of the
intellectuals. Roosevelt was not an
ÒideasÓ person, he was a people person, much more strongly influenced by the
exigencies of the moment or by whatever strong personality was able to get
close to him and bend his ear than by any sort of ideological inclination or
independent thought or study.
Here is how
Crocker fashions his negative answer to our title question in RooseveltÕs Road to Russia:
Through his
sources of information in the United States, some of whom were in high places,
Stalin knew that Franklin D. Roosevelt could be relied upon to see at least
this phase [the Soviet reaping of the war spoils] of the program through. He was not mistaken.
Does this mean
the American people had elected a crypto-Communist as President? Or that this President, by shunting the
third war, the secret one, out of sight, consciously intended harm to his
country? It does not. No such inference is intended. To make it is to misapprehend the
Roosevelt mentality.
Here we touch a
delicate point. Roosevelt was no
more a Communist than he was a Jeffersonian. Conversely, he was no more a
Jeffersonian than he was a Communist.
Ideologies were not the stuff of the cerebrations that took place in
that handsome head. Here was no
furrow-browed zealot for a system, no Karl Marx, no Adam Smith. In the presence of an argument between a
socialist and a capitalist, he would be likely to steal the show with a
charmingly put evasion. To Harold
IckesÕ wistful plaint that it was Òimpossible to come to grips with him,Ó James
F. Byrnes has added that ÒFranklin Roosevelt was not
the same to any two men.Ó The man
who, as we shall see, clandestinely obtained the recommendations of Earl
Browder, the head of the Communist party, in the crucial months of the war,
wore a different collar than the man who discussed affairs with Byrnes.
Most
confounding of the notion that FDR could have been a devoted Communist, to my
mind, was his admiration for and use of the career Republican politician, General
Patrick J. Hurley.
Hurley was a thoroughgoing American patriot and as such was a strong
anti-Communist, an anti-Zionist, and an anti-imperialist as well. To get some appreciation of HurleyÕs
sentiments see ÒFDRÕs Top Envoy Slaps Down Top ZionistÓ and ÒThe Old Zionist
Smear Machine.Ó
Those articles are about HurleyÕs work as FDRÕs special envoy to the
Middle East in 1943. In that
position, HurleyÕs anti-Zionism was hardly in conflict with RooseveltÕs own
predisposition to oppose the ZionistsÕ ambitions in Palestine. But in August of 1944 Roosevelt put
Hurley in a position where he could strike a very strong blow against
Communism, at least Mao Tse-tungÕs version of
it. He sent Hurley as a special
envoy to Chiang Kai-shek and in November he made him Ambassador to China. Hurley, in a very important move, sacked
the Chiang-hating General ÒVinegarÓ Joe Stillwell and had him replaced by the
anti-Communist General Albert Wedemeyer.
RooseveltÕs
confidence in Hurley is several times attested by General Elliott Roosevelt in As He Saw It. In Tehran the morning after the
banquet at the Russian Embassy the President said:
I want you to do something for me,
Elliott. Go find Pat Hurley, and tell him to get to work drawing up a
draft memorandum guaranteeing IranÕs independenceÉI wish I had more men like
Pat, on whom I could depend. The men in the State Department, those career
diplomatsÉhalf the time I canÕt tell whether I should believe them or not (pp.
192-193).
At the second Cairo Conference the President
told his son:
That Pat HurleyÉHe did a good job. If
anybody can straighten out the mess of internal Chinese politics, heÕs the
manÉMen like Pat Hurley are invaluable. Why? Because
theyÕre loyal. I can give him assignments that IÕd never give
a man in the State Department because I can depend on himÉAny number of times
the men in the State Department have tried to conceal messages to me, delay
them, hold them up somehow, just because some of those career diplomats arenÕt
in accord with what they know I think (pp. 204-205)
Reading that passage from pp. 86-87 of BeatyÕs The Iron Curtain Over America one canÕt help
but lament that FDR chose Harry Hopkins instead of Hurley to do his foreign
policy heavy lifting during the war. As it happened, the one good thing
that Roosevelt did to oppose the Communists was reversed by his successor
Truman as Hurley was undercut by his Communist-sympathizing underlings and
forced out. Furthermore, Roosevelt may not have had much of a choice in
the matter when it came to the selection of Hopkins.
FDR Not His Own Man?
The impression one gets from Curtis DallÕs F.D.R.: My Exploited Father-in-Law is
that far from just being RooseveltÕs flunky, Hopkins was close to being a
co-President. He had the same sort of ambition and the same sort of
cunning that FDR did, and beginning his career in New York City as a social
worker he developed the same network among New YorkÕs power brokers that
Roosevelt did.
Dall, a New York stockbroker newly married to RooseveltÕs daughter Anna had
an inside look at the maneuvering around his father-in-law before and after his
election as President in 1932. The man who carried the most immediate
weight with Roosevelt was his Dutchess County
neighbor, New York City real estate mogul and Democratic Party kingmaker Henry Morgenthau, Sr., whom the the Roosevelt clan all called
ÒUncle Henry.Ó Uncle Henry, according to Dall, was
able to prevail upon FDR to make his feckless son, Henry, Jr., his Secretary of
the Treasury because FDR was beholding to the father for having had a big
investment loss restored by Henry, Sr., some years before. DallÕs account of the appointment is tantalizing:
In due course, Henry was placed by FDR in a
suitable Òspot,Ó one for which he had no significant financial experienceÉThe
Secretary of the Treasury. However, in the minds of some important
bankers here and abroad, HenryÕs inexperience in that connection was his most
important qualification for that post. It made him receptive to much needed Òadvice.Ó The ÒadviceÓ extended in his
direction, of course, was readily forthcoming.
Harry Dexter White, HenryÕs close associate and busy right-hand man in the Treasury, was
soon Òdug upÓ for him. Who arranged that move? Certainly it was not
provided by FDR. Was it Mr. [Bernard] Baruch or HenryÕs father or some
foreign banking group? Harry Dexter White became a profitable delivery
boy for them but not for us. Certainly his disastrous financial
manipulations aimed primarily to enrich the money powers were soon to become
far more discernible to alert Americans than his reported New England
internment, following his sudden heart attack, curiously acquired on the morrow
of his overdue exposure before a Congressional investigation. (p. 85)
Find the hand pulling WhiteÕs (ne. Weit) strings and you will have found those pulling
RooseveltÕs. Isaac Don Levine very distinctly remembers that White was among those named by Whittaker Chambers as members of the
Soviet espionage ring in their meeting with Adolf Berle
in 1939. Chambers doesnÕt recall that but in his book, Witness, he says that White cooperated with his spy
ring even though White was not a Communist Party member. If White was
really working for the international bankers who were instrumental in bringing
the Bolsheviks to power in Russia, one might say that by not being in the
employ of Joe Stalin White was just cutting out the middleman.
White was later to become the principal
author of the infamous Morgenthau Plan that called for the destruction of GermanyÕs manufacturing, vengefully
reducing it to an economic wasteland ripe for Communist takeover.
Recently it has been plausibly argued in two books that White was a moving
force behind the provocative U.S. posture that led to the Pearl Harbor
attack. See The Battle for Bretton Woods:
John Maynard Keynes, Harry Dexter White, and the Making of a New World Order and Operation Snow: How a Soviet
Mole in FDRÕs White House Triggered Pearl Harbor.
Another person who, early on, exhibited a lot
of influence on FDR was Felix Frankfurter. Again, DallÕs
account is intriguing:
Naturally, at any gathering, I had to guess
those who were Òimportant,Ó those who were Òrelatively unimportant,Ó and,
finally, those who were quite Òunimportant!!!Ó
---
Seated around the dinner table at Hyde Park
one Sunday noon in December of 1932 was the usual large gathering of
interesting people.
One of them happened to be Professor Felix
Frankfurter, who had arrived from Harvard University for a conference with FDR.
As I recall, he was placed on the right side
of Mama; therefore, I knew he was regarded as Òimportant.Ó She usually was flanked by the two most important personages
then present. The President-elect and his mother took on the next echelon
of importance during the meal.
---
Something puzzled me, however, concerning
which I had recurring thoughts—why would a college professor at Harvard
come all the way from Cambridge, Massachusetts, to Hyde Park to see FDR at this
time? Could it be in connection with some new educational program at
Harvard? Was it a social visit, or did Frankfurter want something for
himself? Most callers did want something? What was it? (pp. 65-66)
The implied question in the passage is, ÒFrom
what did this law professor derive his importance to Roosevelt at this time?Ó
That leads to the question as to what powerful people were behind him and from
what was their power derived. Whoever they were, they certainly
accomplished a great deal through him. Let us fast-forward to the end of
the 1940s as recounted by John Beaty:
In fact, Mr. Justice
Frankfurter is frequently referred to by those who know their way around
Washington as the ÒPresidentÓ of the United States. In a recent Ògag,Ó the question ÒDo you want to see a new picture of the
President of the United States?Ó is followed up by showing a likeness of
Frankfurter.
Mr. Justice Frankfurter is influential not
only in counsel but in furthering the appointment of favored individuals to
strategic positions. The so-called ÒFrankfurter boysÓ include Mr. [Dean] Acheson, with whom the
justice takes daily walks, weather permitting (New York Times, January
19, 1949); Alger Hiss, Lee Pressman, David Niles, ** long a senior assistant to President Truman; Benjamin V. Cohen, long Counselor of the Department of State; David Lilienthal, long Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission; John J. McCloy, Joe Rauh, Nathan Margold; Donald Hiss, brother of Alger, and Ònow a member of the Acheson law firmÓ; Milton Katz; and former
Secretary of War Robert Patterson, Òa hundred per cent Frankfurter employeeÓ (all names and quotes in
this paragraph are from Drew PearsonÕs syndicated column, February 1, 1950).
(p. 58)
Considering his own ethnic background, one
should hardly be surprised at the heavy Jewish representation in the list, but
that four of the eleven men on the list, Pressman, Niles, and the Hiss brothers
should be likely Communist subversives is really quite striking.
Furthermore, Acheson and Frankfurter publicly declared that Alger Hiss was
innocent well past the time when it was evident that he was not.
On the night of his first encounter with
Frankfurter, Dall was asked by Eleanor Roosevelt to
keep Frankfurter company on their train ride back into
New York City. After a period of some awkward silence it occurred to Dall to break it by mentioning a mutual acquaintance.
Dall had gone both to high school and to Princeton
University with James ÒChinkÓ Landis, who was at that time a colleague of
Frankfurters at the Harvard Law School and had co-written articles with
him. Dall broached the subject and hereÕs how
the exchange went:
By now Frankfurter was eyeing me rather
intently. Then he said, ÒWhat do you think of James today?Ó
ÒWell, Professor,Ó I replied, ÒI havenÕt seen
ÔChinkÕ for a number of years. However, knowing his ability, I would say
that he would do very well indeed in whatever undertaking he set out to
accomplish. Some of his views, however, that is, some of his political
views, I would say, are a bit too far to the left. I sometimes hear
indirectly about him through my brother-in-law, Jimmy, andÉÓ
I stopped talking, at that point, rather
amazed.
The ProfessorÕs face flushed with surprise
and anger at my casual observation. He made no attempt at
concealment. He glared at me and naturally our conversation ceased
abruptly. Silence ensued.
I was quite taken aback at the unexpected
turn of events and wondered what I could have said to cause such an unfavorable
and violent reaction in the mind of the well-known Harvard ÒLegal Light.Ó
As the silence deepened, I became quite
annoyed, in turn, at what appeared to me to be a rather unwarranted display of
temperament on his part. (pp. 68-69)
Dall later discovered that Frankfurter was a close friend of the prominent
political theorist, Harold Laski. Some Harvard law students who had been given a letter of
introduction to Laski by Frankfurter took the liberty to ask him if he was a
Communist. Laski responded without hesitation that he was. When
asked if his friend Frankfurter was one as well, Laski paused for a bit and
then asked, ÒDid you ask me if Felix was a Communist?Ó
ÒYes we did,Ó was the response.
Laski then replied, ÒWell, no, I wouldnÕt say
that Felix is a Communist, but we are close friends. We talk to each
other at least once every week, over the trans-Atlantic telephone.Ó
Who Were the Communists?
Rather to ask if Roosevelt was a Communist,
the better question to ask is if the people with the real power who were behind
him were Communists. The preponderance of evidence suggests that they
were, or at least that they pursued the interests of the Soviet Union above the
interests of the United States. One of main reasons for that was the lingering good will felt among the Jewish leadership
in the United States toward the Soviet Communists because they had thrown out
the hated Czars. The Jewish hatred of the Czars in the late 19th
century and through much of the 20th century rivaled the residual
hatred of the Nazis today. One canÕt help but think that Roosevelt was
just parroting what he had picked up from his handlers when he repeatedly
compared Stalin favorably to the Czars. He was hardly a student of
Russian history, after all.
The power and influence of RooseveltÕs Jewish
handlers were at their height during the war years with the pro-Soviet Henry
Wallace as RooseveltÕs heir apparent as Vice-President and the pro-Soviet Harry
Hopkins at his side planning war policy. The insurrection among
Democratic Party leaders that forced FDR to replace Wallace with Truman
represented a vital beginning of the easing of the pro-Communist grip.
The forced renunciation of the insanely vengeful Morgenthau Plan through
outraged public opinion was another great step in the right direction.
Those who might
argue that the power behind Roosevelt could not have been primarily Jewish or
he would not have been anti-Zionist fail to reckon with the fact that some of
the strongest opponents of Zionism at that time were Jewish. These
included perhaps his closest handler of all, Henry Morgenthau, Sr., as well the
powerful New York Times publisher, Arthur Hays Sulzberger. Much of the Jewish energy that now mainly goes into building up
Israel, in RooseveltÕs day, unfortunately, went into the promotion of the
Soviet Union.
* The United States dropped the
Òunconditional surrenderÓ demand for Japan and allowed them to keep the Emperor
only upon the urging of Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal. This
happened after the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings and the Japanese had
responded in a conciliatory fashion, except that they refused to yield on the
question of the Emperor. See how I set the popular film director straight
on this question in ÒOliver Stone on the Japanese
Surrender.Ó
** Niles is also my prime candidate as the
coordinator of the assassination of Secretary of Defense James
Forrestal. See ÒWho Killed James Forrestal?Ó
David Martin
March 28, 2014