Joseph E. Persico

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“Dear Caesar”: PSF Box 72.

  “this infernal counterespionage… .”: Adolf Berle Papers, Box 211, FDRL.

  This time the FBI: Theoharis, p. 200.

  “a carefully measured appearance… .”: Brian Loring Villa, “The Atomic Bomb and the Normandy Invasion,” Perspectives in American History 2 (1977–78), p. 465.

  The objective of German diplomacy: Bradley F. Smith, The Shadow Warriors, pp. 22–23; Robert Edwin Herzstein, Roosevelt & Hitler, p. 333.

  “today relies far more… .”: Herzstein, p. 337.

  Boetticher had been in Washington: David Brinkley, Washington Goes to War, pp. 33–34.

  Boetticher’s deliberate revelation: Alfred M. Beck, “The Ambivalent Attaché: Friedrich von Boetticher in America, 1933–1941” (Ph.D. diss., Georgetown University, 1977), pp. 276–80.

  “a careful record be had …”: Ladislas Farago, The Game of the Foxes, p. 356.

  “The Germans desire to make peace… .”: ibid.

  “Naturally, any information… .”: ibid.

  Yet, he did manage: ibid., pp. 369–71.

  “no wish to be a candidate again… .”: Goodwin, p. 125.

  After Nazi storm troopers smashed: Thompson, p. 199.

  “American mothers, wage-earners …”: Farago, pp. 381–89.

  Ostensibly, the ad: ibid.

  “Willkie’s nomination is unfortunate… .”: ibid., p. 381.

  “after lengthy negotiations… .”: ibid., pp. 378–79; NYT, July 23, 1997.

  These tracts: Farago, p. 385.

  “[A]ny old-time politician… .”: Goodwin, p. 186.

  “The first number… .”: ibid.

  “If we’re attacked… .”: Thompson, p. 275.

  “Now this Mitsunaga fella… .”: Doyle, pp. 33–34.

  “With all their technical imperfections… .”: ibid., p. 11.

  “The supreme law… .”: NYT, July 23, 1997.

  chapter iv: spymaster in the oval office

  He enjoyed Roosevelt’s trust: Jeffrey M. Dorwart, “The Roosevelt-Astor Espionage Ring,” New York History, vol. 62, no. 3 (July 1981), p. 318.

  “British intelligence in this area… .”: PSF Box 12.

  “his government was preparing… .”: PSF Box 82.

  “It seems to me… .”: PSF Box 92.

  He turned Astor down: Christopher Andrew, For the President’s Eyes Only, p. 93.

  Confidential correspondence: Curt Gentry, J. Edgar Hoover, p. 265.

  “In regard to the opening… .”: PSF Box 92.

  “We will be making a great mistake… .”: Andrew, p. 98.

  “Knowing your affection… .”: Mrs. Johnson to FDR, PSF Box 92.

  The President told Missy LeHand: PSF Box 92.

  “The story about the theft… .”: Astor to FDR, PSF Box 92.

  Could the President instruct Stark …?: PSF Box 52.

  “I simply wanted you to know… .”: PSF Box 40; Thomas F. Troy, The Coordinator of Information and British Intelligence, p. 174.

  “Astor must have a job… .”: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 177.

  His successor was: Andrew, p. 93.

  He settled in Britain: Norman Polmar and Thomas B. Allen, Spy Book, pp. 535–36.

  His mission was to protect: Bradley F. Smith, The Shadow Warriors, p. 22.

  “very tough, very rich… .”: Toronto Globe and Mail, Jan. 16, 1999.

  “broken-down boarding house”: Andrew, p. 94.

  The truth is rather: Nigel West, A Thread of Deceit, p. 131.

  Late in 1940: Dorwart, Conflict of Duty, p. 123.

  During the years of peace: Phillip Knightley, The Second Oldest Profession, p. 212.

  In this position: Troy, Wild Bill and Intrepid, pp. 102–103; Dorwart, Conflict of Duty, p. 123.

  “As Area Controller… .”: PPF Box 40.

  His authority had been: Troy, Donovan and the CIA, p. 49.

  “number one man”: PSF Box 92.

  “Dear Mr. President, One might suppose… .”: ibid.

  “I have reported… .”: ibid.

  “You’re going to be elected… .”: John Franklin Carter Oral History, p. 2, FDRL.

  “brilliant, cynical, occasionally cockeyed… .”: Ernest B. Furgurson, “Back Channels,” Washingtonian, vol. 31 (June 1996).

  “pretty well loused up… .”: Carter Oral History, p. 8.

  The President was aware: Nathan Miller, Spying for America, p. 236.

  “Techniques for gathering information… .”: ibid.

  Its members worked: Furgurson.

  And FDR grasped: Dorwart, Conflict of Duty, p. 168.

  “The overall condition was attached… .”: The Year of Crisis, John Franklin Carter Papers, April 14, 1945.

  State was then to finance: Adolf Berle Papers, Box 57, FDRL.

  “Jay Franklin (J.F. Carter) came in… .”: ibid.

  Besides collecting intelligence: PSF Box 97.

  It would no doubt: ibid.

  Carter’s operatives: Berle Papers, Box 57.

  Thus he wore: Robert Thompson, A Time for War, p. 202.

  “If you will stop shipping… .”: John Morton Blum, Years of Urgency, 1938–1941: From the Morgenthau Diaries, pp. 349–50.

  “breath … taken away… .”: ibid.

  “[T]his thing might give us… .”: ibid., p. 350.

  “By all means, they are great guys.”: ibid.

  “… [H]e [FDR] has mentioned it… .”: ibid., p. 366.

  “burn out the industrial heart… .”: Thompson, p. 287.

  “Well, his asking for 500 planes… .”: ibid.

  “Is he still willing to fight?”: Blum, Years of Urgency, p. 367.

  “This would give us a chance… .”: ibid., p. 366.

  “The four of you… .”: ibid., p. 367.

  “As war administrator… .”: William Doyle, Inside the Oval Office, p. 9; James MacGregor Burns, Roosevelt: The Lion and the Fox, pp. 83–84.

  The U.S. Army Air Corps: Thompson, p. 289.

  “to try to get… .”: Blum, Years of Urgency, p. 368.

  FDR unhesitatingly approved: Sykes Main Page, “The Flying Tigers,” pp. 1–3 (Internet).

  Magruder came back: Roger J. Sandilands, The Life and Political Economy of Lauchlin Currie, pp. 114–15.

  chapter v: the defeatist and the defiant

  When that effort failed: Robert Thompson, A Time for War, p. 264.

  “[F]rankly, if your proposal… .”: Thomas F. Troy, Wild Bill and Intrepid, p. 25.

  “fiendish memory”: Frank Friedl interview with Admiral William Leahy, May 24, 1948, FDRL.

  His rejection: Nathan Miller, Spying for America, p. 240.

  “I fear that to put… .”: Troy, Wild Bill, p. 25.

  “That you took the time… .”: PPF Box 6558.

  He named another Republican: Troy, The Coordinator of Information and British Intelligence, p. 16.

  On July 9: Troy, Wild Bill, pp. 46–47.

  Over a quarter-million: H. Montgomery Hyde, Room 3603, p. 72.

  But on a single day: Bradley F. Smith, The Shadow Warriors, p. 21.

  There was no point: ibid., p. 33.

  “a wave of pessimism… .”: Christopher Andrew, For the President’s Eyes Only, p. 95.

  “We would appreciate… .”: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 57.

  “the height of nonsense”: Smith, The Shadow Warriors, p. 34.

  “We are already making… .”: Troy, Wild Bill, p. 49.

  “Please take this up… .”: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 58; Troy, Wild Bill, p. 49.

  Donovan was a man: Smith, The Shadow Warriors, p. 34.

  “Stay where you are… .”: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 43.

  When he learned: Anthony Cave Brown, The Last Hero, p. 148; Troy, Wild Bill, p. 41.

  On the morning of July 15: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 155.

  On reaching London: Thompson, p. 262.

  “FRENCH SIGN PEACE TREATY… .”: Smith, The Shadow Warriors, p. 14.

  The American-
born Lady Astor: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 64.

  “There is at the present moment… .”: ibid., p. 65.

  “I am happy to tell you that Winston… .”: ibid., p. 67.

  Donovan’s most prophetic: ibid., p. 68.

  “hard as granite… .”: Phillip Knightley, The Second Oldest Profession, p. 112.

  Menzies had been alerted: F. W. Winterbotham, The Ultra Secret, p. 30.

  That he received more than a cursory: Thompson, p. 263; Brown, The Last Hero, p. 150.

  The Royal Air Force: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 72.

  “was to discover… .”: Thompson, p. 263.

  “so he can tell me… .”: Troy, Wild Bill, p. 57.

  He painted a picture: ibid.

  Donovan continued to tell the President: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 150.

  He had a recommendation: Thompson, p. 263; Andrew, p. 95.

  Through their own sources: Hyde, p. 40.

  “President has sanctioned… .”: ibid.

  Churchill had begged: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 150.

  Donovan began lobbying: Smith, The Shadow Warriors, pp. 37–38; Doris Kearns Goodwin, No Ordinary Time, p. 142.

  “He couldn’t keep his mouth shut… .”: Irwin F. Gellman, Secret Affairs, pp. 102, 172.

  Two years and nine months: Richard J. Whalen, The Founding Father, pp. 327–32.

  “I wouldn’t say no… .”: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 85.

  “I intend to go… .”: ibid.

  There the President cheerily: Fulton Oursler Jr., “Secret Treason,” American Heritage, December 1991, p. 61.

  Murray, the Outlaw: Grace Tully, F.D.R., My Boss, p. 128; Suckley, Binder 4, p. RB11.

  Oursler had scored: Oursler, pp. 55–58.

  The high point: Philip Ziegler, King Edward VIII: The Official Biography, pp. 391–92.

  His presence in England: Michael Bloch, Operation Willi: The Plot to Kidnap the Duke of Windsor, p. 4.

  “The position of the Duke… .”: Warren F. Kimball, Churchill & Roosevelt: The Complete Correspondence, pp. 52, 53.

  “out of Hitler’s grasp”: Bloch, p. 4.

  Prior to leaving: Paul R. Sweet, “The Windsor File,” Historian, Winter 1997, pp. 263–80.

  Churchill, his patience stretched: Bloch, p. 4.

  He once confided: James MacGregor Burns, Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom, p. 603.

  He considered it: Goodwin, pp. 73, 191, 192.

  “Windsor is completely insignificant looking… .”: Suckley, Binder 8, p. 166.

  “Mr. President,” Oursler said: Oursler, p. 61.

  “[I]t would be a tragic thing… .”: ibid., p. 58.

  “Do you suppose that …?”: ibid.

  “Would you enter into …?”: ibid., p. 60.

  “Fulton,” he said: ibid., p. 61.

  “He could barely listen… .”: ibid., p. 62.

  “Why don’t you just be …?”: ibid.

  “You know your father was… .”: ibid.

  “Everyday from the offices… .”: ibid.

  “Now I have nothing to prove… .”: ibid., p. 64.

  “You cannot kill eighty million… .”: Ziegler, p. 460.

  Nearly a year later: Tully, p. 325; Day-by-Day, Oct. 28, 1941.

  “Britain has virtually lost the war… .”: Sweet, p. 280.

  chapter vi: “there is no u.s. secret intelligence service”

  “asked me if I would go… .”: Thomas F. Troy, The Coordinator of Information and British Intelligence, p. 119.

  Supporting this explanation: ibid., p. 127.

  In pursuit of his assignment: Bradley F. Smith, The Shadow Warriors, p. 41.

  “[Colonel Stewart Menzies] tells me that Mr. Stephenson… .”: Anthony Cave Brown, The Last Hero, p. 152.

  On the night before: ibid.

  “taken fully into our confidence”: Christopher Andrew, For the President’s Eyes Only, p. 96.

  “great influence with the President”: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 153.

  As he settled in: Andrew, p. 97; Brown, The Last Hero, p. 155.

  “It was Donovan who was… .”: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 127.

  “I must thank you… .”: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 155.

  Hopkins, the onetime social worker: Robert E. Sherwood, Roosevelt and Hopkins, p. 203.

  Still, Donovan managed to report: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 183.

  “Disputes were settled… .”: Andrew, p. 97.

  FDR had confused the code names: ibid.

  “the toughest division… .”: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 160.

  “the British government gathers… .”: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 191.

  “some one appointed by the President… .”: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 161.

  “take over the home duties …”: ibid.

  “sole charge of intelligence… .”: ibid.

  During the cabinet meeting: Troy, Wild Bill and Intrepid, p. 115.

  Miles’s riposte was swift: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 159.

  “In great confidence… .”: Andrew, p. 97.

  Along with Little Bill Stephenson: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 163.

  In late May: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 215.

  “Even the more senior U.S. Navy… .”: Andrew, pp. 98–99.

  “These three departments… .”: ibid., p. 99.

  “There is no U.S. Secret Intelligence Service… .”: ibid.

  Godrey agreed with those Americans.: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 160.

  “On this tenth day… .”: Doris Kearns Goodwin, No Ordinary Time, p. 68.

  “I wondered about the Italian vote… .”: ibid.

  “With this speech… .”: ibid., p. 69.

  Its productive capacity: ibid., p. 23.

  “Dear Mr. President (Cousin Franklin)… .”: PSF Box 38.

  “The moment approaches… .”: Goodwin, pp. 192–93.

  “I began to get the idea… .”: ibid., p. 193.

  “could not keep… .”: Smith, The Shadow Warriors, p. 58.

  “a very long day at the White House”: Henry L. Stimson and McGeorge Bundy, On Active Service in Peace and War, p. 368.

  Roosevelt feared that: ibid., p. 369; Irwin F. Gellman, Secret Affairs, p. 253.

  “He is trying to see… .”: Stimson and Bundy, p. 369.

  Soon after the meeting: Gellman, p. 251.

  “When we were squidging… .”: Small Collections, Lunny/Leahy, FDRL.

  “principally a defensive measure”: Stimson and Bundy, p. 368.

  “But you are not going… .”: ibid., p. 369.

  “He seems to be trying… .”: ibid.

  “Now this is a patrol… .”: Gellman, p. 254.

  Indeed, when a month after: ibid., p. 255.

  “Should he order …?”: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 162.

  The Roosevelt voice: Sherwood, pp. 297–98; Eric Larrabee, Commander in Chief, p. 56.

  “[W]hat started as a European war… .”: Larrabee, pp. 56–57.

  “seven hours distance… .”: ibid., p. 56.

  The President shared: David Stafford, Churchill and Secret Service, p. 228.

  “The blunt truth is this… .”: Samuel I. Rosenman, Working with Roosevelt, p. 285.

  “Our patrols are helping… .”: Sherwood, p. 298.

  That stage was over.: ibid., p. 296.

  “an unlimited national emergency… .”: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 162.

  “The President was able… .”: Rosenman, p. 355.

  “They’re ninety-five per cent… .”: Sherwood, p. 298.

  To the admiral, whose association: Gellman, p. 255.

  Nevertheless, FDR continued: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 162.

  Thereafter, the admiral was invited: ibid., p. 163.

  “Memorandum of Establishment …”: Andrew, p. 99; Troy, The Coordinator, p. 215.

  “Strategy, without information… .”: William J. Donovan to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, “Memorandum of Establishment of Service of Strategic Information,” June 10, 1941, pp. 1–6,
FDRL.

  “[T]here is another element… .”: ibid., p. 5.

  Donovan was later to claim: Smith, The Shadow Warriors, p. 66; Troy, Wild Bill, p. 122.

  “I am getting to be… .”: Troy, Wild Bill, p. 123.

  In 1932, Donovan had been: Curt Gentry, J. Edgar Hoover, p. 266.

  “would almost certainly pull my leg… .”: Andrew, p. 99.

  “Oh yes, those West Indies… .”: ibid.

  “mustered up the semblance of a laugh”: ibid.

  “Hall had a wonderful intelligence service… .”: ibid., p. 100.

  “one intelligence security boss… .”: ibid.

  “This would be a full time job… .”: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 209.

  “I want to have him give… .”: ibid., p. 217.

  After leaving the White House: ibid., p. 220.

  “JBJr. Please set this up… .”: Troy, Wild Bill, p. 130.

  They compromised finally: POF Box 4485.

  However, they said, he could use: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 221.

  “undertake activities helpful… .”: POF Box 4485.

  “It is sufficient to say… .”: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 219.

  Donovan, unconvincingly, wanted: Troy, Wild Bill, p. 121.

  “assembling and correlating… .”: POF Box 4485.

  Guesses by journalists: Brown, The Last Hero, pp. 165–66.

  “power to visualize… .”: Nathan Miller, Spying for America, p. 243.

  The two men differed: Smith, The Shadow Warriors, p. 32.

  “Donovan saw President today… .”: Troy, The Coordinator, p. 220.

  “[A] most secret fact… .”: Andrew, p. 101; Troy, Wild Bill, p. 133; Brown, p. 166.

  He had been born to first-generation: Corey Ford, Donovan of OSS, pp. 13–14.

  “He had read the inscription… .”: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 19.

  At the end of his third year: Ford, pp. 18–19.

  He did not cut much: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 21.

  “The Awakening of Japan”: Ford, p. 19; Brown, The Last Hero, pp. 19–20.

  Franklin Roosevelt had indeed: Ford, p. 20.

  The unit, christened: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 26.

  He was a leader: Ford, p. 23; Brown, The Last Hero, pp. 28–29.

  Less than a month later: Ford, p. 23; Brown, The Last Hero, pp. 37–78.

  The 69th Regiment: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 52.

  He was awarded: ibid., pp. 54–56.

  “Wild Bill is… .”: ibid., p. 56.

  “Look at me… .”: Ford, pp. 11–12.

  On October 19: Brown, The Last Hero, p. 62.

  “They can’t get me… .”: ibid., p. 63.

 

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