Treasonable Doubt
The Harry Dexter White Spy Case
R. Bruce Craig
May 2004
496 pages, 25 photographs, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1311-3 $34.95 (t)
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Whittaker Chambers and Elizabeth Bentley shocked America in 1948
with their allegations that Communist spies had penetrated the American
government. The resulting perjury trial of Alger Hiss is already
legendary, but Chambers and Bentley also named Harry Dexter White,
a high-ranking Treasury official. (Hiss himself thought that White
had been the real target of the House Un-American Activities Committee.)
When White died only a week after his bold defense before Congress,
much speculation remained about the cause of his death and the truth
of the charges made against him. Armed with a wealth of new information,
Bruce Craig examines this controversial case and explores the ambiguities
that have haunted it for more than half a century.
The highest ranking figure in the Roosevelt and Truman administrations
to be accused of espionage, White played a central role in the founding
of the United Nations twin financial institutions, the World
Bank and International Monetary Fund. For years after his death,
White was a target of red-baiting by FBI director J. Edgar Hoover
and Eisenhowers attorney general Herbert Brownell. Two Republican-controlled
Senate committees even held White accountable for formulating the
pro-Russian Morgenthau Plan for post-war Germany and
for orchestrating the loss of mainland China to the Communists.
Craig draws heavily on previously untapped or underused sources,
including Whites personal papers, Treasury Department records,
FBI files, and the once secret Venona files of decrypted Soviet
espionage cables. Interviews with nearly two dozen key figures in
the case, including Alger Hiss and former KGB officer V. G. Pavlov,
also help bring Whites story to life. Sifting through this
mountain of evidence, Craig retraces Whites rise to power
within the Treasury Department and confirms that White was involved
in a species of espionage--but also shows that the same
evidence contradicts Bentleys charges of policy subversion.
What emerges is an evenhanded portrait of neither a monster nor
a martyr but rather a committed New Dealer and internationalist
whose hopes for world peace transcended national loyaltiesa
man who saw some benefit in cooperating with the Soviets but had
no affection for dictatorship. Although it still remains unclear
whether White leaked classified information vital to national security,
Craig clearly shows that none of the most serious allegations against
him can be substantiated.
Click here to learn more about Harry
Dexter White.
“Craig turns the complicated facts of White’s life into a terrific story, partly a spy yarn with philosophical overtones à la Graham Greene or Joseph Conrad, partly a convincing evocation of the mentality Craig calls ‘Rooseveltian internationalism.’ . . .The book is a work of prodigioius and meticulous scholarship. On the basis of this achievement, Craig deserves to be ranked among the finest historians of the domestic Cold War.”--American Historical Review (review by Richard Gid Powers)
Craig has issued a thoughtful and carefully-argued verdict
on a legendary and controversial case that influenced the course
of American history. Treasonable Doubt is a fascinating
book, illuminating the shadowy world of the complex Harry Dexter
White case as it examines legal, political, and moral issues that
still affect us today.--Michael Beschloss, PBS commentator
and author of The Conquerors: Roosevelt, Truman, and the Destruction
of Hitlers Germany, 19411945
Of all the New Deal officials caught up in the famous cold
war spy cases, none was more significant, or elusive, than the
brilliant economist Harry Dexter White. Craigs well-told
account of White and the controversy surrounding him is by far
the most thorough ever written, incorporating a wealth of new
evidence long-buried in archives at home and abroad.--Sam
Tanenhaus, author of Whittaker Chambers: A Biography
Craigs lucid, fair-minded, and painstaking study
of White as a dedicated New Deal internationalist who engaged
in a species of espionage in order to maintain good
relations with the Soviet Union rings true. Thanks to his thoughtful
analysis, we can at last understand why such a gifted public servant
could become a spy. --Ellen Schrecker, author of
Many Are the Crimes: McCarthyism in America
Craigs provocative and meticulously researched book
could provide a model for understanding other spies of the era
and is sure to enliven the debate about Cold War espionage.--Kathryn
S. Olmsted, author of Red Spy Queen: A Biography of Elizabeth
Bentley
Exhaustively prepared, wholly fair and balanced in its analysis,
and wholly right in its conclusions.--Michael Straight,
author of Trial by Television: The ArmyMcCarthy Hearings
“A masterful historical investigation that examines the evidence in the White case, lays out an historical analysis that neither condemns White nor exonerates him, and encourages readers to tolerate the ambiguities that emerge in the historical record. Highly recommended.”--Choice
R. BRUCE CRAIG is executive director of the National Coalition
for History in Washington, D.C. He was plaintiff in a landmark federal
court decision that affirmed that grand jury records may be unsealed
for historical research. He also played a major role in declassifying
the records of the House Un-American Activities Committee.
Click here to learn more about the
author and his research for this book.
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