Posted on 06/22/2003 4:58:08 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
The transcripts just released show that Ike refused to let the Army testify about spying at Ft. Monmouth. Do you know why?
Hope someone annotates the new transcripts. The Senate historian who worked on their release is a RAT and spun it with the same old commie rhetoric. There is a lot of interesting information in the documents.
btw...anyone wants excerpts from the transcripts, I saved some of the good parts. Send a private message if you want them. The formating isn't the best but they are readable.
I don't think they all made it there. Yalta, in the Crimea, hosted a big conference. The Vorontsovskiy palace just south of Yalta was the British lodging, and tour guides there will point out the chair that Winnie supposedly burned with a cigar while dozing.
While there Winnie also sought out a battlefield near Sevastopol, where ninety or so years earlier the British made a fruitless yet colorful charge made famous by Tennyson. Ever mindfull of history, even while he was in the process of creating it, Churchill laid a wreath at the monument there.
FDR? Despite assuring Churchill that "I can handle Stalin", spent most of his time in Yalta asleep. Another argument for term limits.
Bring Back the House Committee on Un-American Activities
What does the left have to fear from being asked a few questions?
My copy was handed down to me by my father, who was himself a rabid anti-communist as many folks who both witnessed and suffered the ravages of the Russian revolution first hand tended to be! My dad was Russian born and a distant relative of the Czar.
This book documented that McCarthy often ran around DC with a bottle of Scotch in his battered old briefcase. Now, just because somebody has a drinking problem, I don't feel their life's work can be automatically invalidated.
Anticommunists such as your father had trouble keeping their positions in government or the Army. From Volume 3 of the McCarthy executive sessions made public this year:
TESTIMONY OF IGOR BOGOLEPOVMr. Bogolepov . . .I went to the Red Army; then came back to the foreign office in the League of Nations desk; then I participated in the Civil War in Spain as interpreter between the Soviet generals and the Republican general staff. I was arrested in Spain by the secret police and shipped back to the Soviet Union for trial. Then I was released in 1938 and restored in the Foreign Service Office in the Soviet Union.
I have participated in many international talks which took place between the Soviet Union and Western nations, including the Soviet-Nazi Pact and President Roosevelt's emissary, Harry Hopkins, in the summer of 1941.
During the war I was in the Baltic countries and on the Leningrad Front and come over to the German lines. I deserted from the Soviet army being in rank of colonel of general staff.
I tried for sometime to convince the Germans to take less stupid political line towards the Russian people and Russian soldiers. Because of my stubbornness and perhaps too hot a defense of the Russian national interests as opposed to Communists and Nazis they put me in Gestapo jail for a while to cool me down.
After release I went to a German farm in Bavaria and was there until the American army came in 1945.
Under American occupation I was obliged first to hide myself, for a couple of years, due to the western policies of extradition to the Soviet police of all Russian people, especially like me who were on the Soviet wanted persons list.
In 1947 I came out and explained to the U.S. Army intelligence officers in Germany who I was actually and my political standpoint and I started my work in the United States Army.
First I worked as instructor in the European Command Intelligence School in Oberammergau and next year I was transferred to the General Staff School in Regensburg, Germany, as an instructor on the matters of the Soviet policies, party organization and similar matters. In 1952 I was brought by the army to this country to testify before the Senate Internal Security Committee against Owen Lattimore. (Note:Lattimore was a Soviet agent)
After my testimony I was dismissed from the army, unfortunately, and I am living now in this country waiting for my bill to be decided.
The Chairman. A bill introduced by Senator Karl Mundt granting Mr. Bogolepov full citizenship.
Mr. Bogolepov. I had forgotten to mention that at the end of the thirties I was able to join the Communist party of the Soviet Union. I did it, as many other Russian anti-Communists do, in order to get in a higher position and to influence in that way the overthrow of the Communist regime in my country. That is all.
Mr. Cohn. Were you dismissed from service with the army after you testified before the McCarran committee?
Mr. Bogolepov. I think in connection with this. If you need more information about it, when I came here the assistant chief of G-2, General Bolling was much eager to get me for his service. He introduced me in the Pentagon to another general and they discussed my further employment as a lecturer in various U.S. military colleges. Two days after the talks were stopped and I got my discharge papers from the army.
The Chairman. What are you working at now?
Mr. Bogolepov. I am not very much happy with work, for evidently my reputation of a radical Russian anti-Communist is speaking against me. Neither State Department or Pentagon wanted to have anything with me. I am working merely on an informal basis. I have here some former students of mine. I examine for them various aspects of psychological warfare; also I am writing for newspapers from time to time, etc., etc.
The Chairman. In the statement I made in the record originally, I understood you objected to testifying because you are now working for the army. I gather you don't; that you lost your job.
Mr. Bogolepov. That is right. The Chairman. Mr. Secretary, may I ask if you could check that.
Secretary Stevens. You bet your life.
The Chairman. We would not like Mr. Bogolepov's name used publicly.
Mr. Bogolepov, the secretary of the army will check into your discharge after you testified before the McCarran committee. It seems on the face to be completely unreasonable that you worked for the army until you were subpoenaed before a United States Senate committee and then were promptly fired. The secretary will check into that.
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