THE CIA: WHAT WAS SO WRONG ?

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00149R000100500022-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 26, 1999
Sequence Number: 
22
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 22, 1967
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00149R000100500022-5.pdf128.58 KB
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t raden also slipped $50,000 in $50' ills to United Auto Workers president . alter Reuther for international opera- ions run by his brother Victor-a partic- laxly vociferous critic of Lovestone's. 1 e ng-rumored ties with the CIA. "Victor cuther ought to be ashamed of him-'. ]f" for attacking Lovestone, said raden, since both men were only per.! rming a patriotic service. And, Braden ent on, Reuther performed his with' ss than perfect wisdom," banking the 0,000 in some West German -unions t at had cash enough and were alread y; ti-Communist. As long rumored, the CIA had fun- led money through the European-; sod Congress for Cultural Freedom-/ 8anitiTove tt'!C CIA:' ' What Was So Wrong? MAY 2 1967 FOIAb3b unions were sabotaging U.S. aid ship. i ments to Europe and threatening to top- ' ple friendly governments. The U.S., by contrast, was .s icamish about fighting o? somas Braden it was roughl b n , e! ack. covertly-;a d too paralyzed by Me- like sitting through a James Bond movie; Carthyisnn to navigate: Overt subsidies for with everyone else in th di e au ence root- ing for SMEI'SII. He had suffered in si_ lence through mounting attacks on the Central Intelligence Agency for secretly bankrolling a wide assortment of private American groups abroad-a scheme Bra- den himself hatched during a 1950-54 hitch with the CIA. "I asked myself what was so wrong with what we did," he said last w I. S B d 1,1: 1 d I ce So Braden sold his pl:u1 to CIA chief AI- ]en Dulles: secret subsidies to private organizations-even if they did not "sup port every aspect of official American Policy." His argument: "When an adver- t. 'ary attacks with his weapons disguised as good works, to choose innocence is to hoose defeat." .o ra en pu sic its Some entries in the Braden casebook: case for the defense-and succeeded The CIA funneled money into some mainly in reopening the whole messy' nti-Communist union or unizi:jg scandale all over again. rises run by onetir g e Braden, 49, a sometime spyailaster, ed- ne (1927-Z.9 9) U.S. ncator, museum executive, newspaper ommunist Party boss Jay LovestoneV publisher (of The Oceanside [Calif.] hen an International Ladies Garment llladc ;rib (of and liberal Oceanside orkers Union staffer, now the AFL- '? politician, mapped his strategy carefully. 10's Director of International Affairs. I of wanted maximum impact, so he raden said lie still has a pseudonymous ,000 he once signed over eceipt for $15,000 his piece ("I'm Glad the CIA Is' 'Immoral"') in The Saturday Evening as "Warren G. Haskins") to one "Nor- Post, and lac tried to limit himself to, is A. Grambo, a cover name for Love. cases already mentioned in the press. tone lieutenant Irving Brown. Brown, His choice of a mass magazine height- i ys Braden, had tp have the money "to oiled the splash, all right-but his in- i ay off his strong-arm squads in Medi- sider's standing seemed to confirm links rranean ports, so that American sup- lies could be unloaded against the op- ' ` 1/ t support then nglo-American Intel- A..horlnied rreen Y `? ....._v but embellished iF_ y saying the CIA had placed o Braden: raden: One for our aide " , that had only been rumored between the' ecame an editor of Encounter." CIA and a variety of clients ranging fiom The over-all 1nruL; B as essential to t, ?? h mot, r , ..............._ , r in the U.S. t u t the people. he implicated, anti-Con. Brade 's point was that the CIA and its; m nists all, acted tie>netheless scandal- beneficiaries were simply doing their; 1z d. Encounter's fopr past and present patriotic duty, "defending the U.SJ e tors-each suspect under Braden's against a new and cxhnordinthe sue an nynnous reference to an "agent" edi- ans weapon the iinarily s1 to each denied having known for sure' Columnist front." . In cold 1 . the early nati ue was -: ab ut the CIA link until recently, and years, by his accounting, the Russians; of rank (poet e) Stephen ape t were socking $250 million a year into a`'cin 1e FrankICeimod quit as a gesture miscellany of cultural, labor, student,* ,to disown _ it. , (Braden .later explained u,UL cue ecntor III 'ills account hau UCe,l , an "unwitting' agent who was editorially independent but served U.S. ends sim- ply by doing what came naturally.) Lovestone and Brown, too, insisted they never took CIA money, and their boss, AFL-CIO president George Meany, blasted Braden's story as "a damn lie . . Not one penny of CIA money has ever, come in to the AFL or the AFL-CIO to my knowledge over the last twenty vears." Only Walter Reuther, of all the' Principals involved, admitted knowingly taking CIA money-;and then only once, in an "emergency situation," to his sub- ?equent regret. Reuther added his own OstSCript-that Braden had tried recruit- ng brother Victor as a CIA agent and hat Victor had "emphatically rejected" he bid. Braden denied that. 'New Flap': And so the attorney for he defense became an exhibit for the rosecution. The CIA was unhappy, (Be- ore publication, said Braden, "they ailed me to express their sorrow.") So ere the newspapers. (The, CIA-labor 'ilk-up, said The New York Times, merely underscores the mischief inTier- tit in clandestine ties between unions nd an espionage agency, no matter 1mw irtuous the purposes of the relation- lip.) And so, in the end, was Toni radon. "I wanted to get across the nes- ge of what we set out to do," he said. succeeded better than I intended. 17' ally didn't expect to create " Sanitized - Approved For Release : CIA-RDP75-00149R000100500022'-5.