RED GUARD ACCUSES ANNA STRONG

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP88-01350R000200830001-2
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 20, 2004
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 16, 1968
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP88-01350R000200830001-2.pdf84.55 KB
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0 Approved For Release 2005/08/2CIASRD0SS13~'2 16 JUN 1968 Red Guard Accuses An By Mark Gayn the Foreign Languages Press. vide advice on the economy of Toronto star Mao has immortalized her by reproducing the ;ist of the A senior member of the "Old the West, and especially the HONG KONG Anna `interview in an essay called, (Guard, Epstein was given the United States. ted Louise Strong, whose admira "All Reactionaries Are Paper Mauls task utterancesof translating tion for Mao Tse-tung ha,.; Tigers." Mao s utterances. made her name and face The argument that the capi. J After reports of Mrs. EP- in- gov known to millions in China, is talist world only looks strong, stcin s arrest, the British for in political trouble in Peking. but is in fact a paper monster, ernment asked Peking for in- Arrivals from. the Chinese has become one of the cardi- formation. It is still waiting. capital report the appearance' nal concepts of Maoism. As it Those still untouched by the of Red Guard posters accusing took hold, so did Miss Strong's purged include a notable quar- -the 83-year-old Communist au name attached to it. The essay tet. The most eminent of them thor of being an "imperialist' has been reproduced in Mao's is George IIatem, of Buffalo, agent," who has betrayed collected works, of which mil- N.Y. Known as Dr. Ma Hai- Chairman Mao and his Cul- lions of volumes have been tell, he drifted to the Com- tural Revolution. sold. monist northwest in the mid Normally, Miss Strong could ... '30s, and for a while served as rely on her 23 years of friend- This spring, though, has Mao's physician. Today he is ship with Mao to protect her been hard on Miss Strong and engaged in fighting leprosy in from all evil winds. To attack --I other members of the Wes? the south. this white-haired, angelic-look- tern "Old Guard." Another is Rewi Alley, who ing woman would appear to he .' Tiiose detained include Miss began. his China career with unthinkable. However, the se- Strong's occasional collabora-,.the co-operative movement be. were and sudden purge of the tor, Sidney Rittenberg. An l for ieeand1Hatem have both been last 90 days has decimated the American, ? Rittenberg has small, tight band of American 'been working for the Corn- used Peking to court visit- and British Communists who, munists for more than 20 Two !ingwoit o like her, had liven their all to !years. others still Peking China and Mao. are Frank Goo and Sol Adler, In recent years he has been once well known in Washing- Miss Strong may have had with Radio Peking. When that ton. Today, from their offices some warning of the trouble. became a battleground be- in Academia Sinica, they pro- Back in March, while in South tween two rival bands of.left1 China, she mailed the contents lists, he sided with the more of her magazine, "Letter from extreme one. His militancy China," to Peking for publica- 1 earned him a place on the tion. When she returned to the "'rev olutionary" triumvirate capital three weeks later, the ' running Radio Peking. But material was still lying about when the tables were turned unattended. on the extreme leftists, Ritten- Miss Strong has been living berg was ousted, denounced as in Peking in a comfortable, an "American spy," and de- old-fashioned house in what is moted to a lesser job. known as "The Peace Com- Also in trouble are Drook- pound," where other foreign .'1yn-born Israel Epstein and his fo'lowers of Mao reside. Her :;nglish wife, Lady Elsie Fair- house has a wide veranda, . fax-Cholmondoley. Both had where she rested in a chaise been working for Peking's longue on hot summer eve- publishing octopus known as nings. She took her vacations :;i either at the Tsunghua hot - springs in the South or at the, sea resort of Weihaiwei. It could thus have been a comfortable retirement. Miss Strong, never lost ci- ther her zest for work or her enthusiasm for the Chinese Revolution, with which she fell in love for the first time in the mid-'20s. In 1927, when Chiang Kui- snck broke with the Commu-. Q nists, Miss Strong escaped from China with Michael Boro- , din and other Soviet advisers. Her present fame, however,! rests on an interview she had' with Mao in 1948 in a cave in! the Communist 'a Ve4for Release 2005/08/23 CIA-RDP88-0135OR000200830001-2 Yenan.