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  • State Department Under Truman, On Zionism And Israel

    STATE DEPARTMENT UNDER TRUMAN, ON ZIONISM AND ISRAEL
    By Edwin Wright

    Al-Jazeerah.info, GA
    Oct 2 2006

    Harry S. Truman Library
    Al-Jazeerah, October 2, 2006

    Oral History Interview with Edwin M. Wright Edwin M. Wright General
    staff G-2 Middle East specialist, Washington, 1945-46; Bureau Near
    East-South Asian-African Affairs Department of State, since 1946,
    country specialist 1946-47, advisor U.N. affairs, 1947-50, advisor
    on intelligence 1950-55. Wooster, Ohio July 26, 1974 by Richard
    D. McKinzie

    Oral History Interview with Edwin M. Wright

    Wooster, Ohio July 26, 1974 by Richard D. McKinzie

    PREAMBLE

    Mr. Wright has asked that this letter be included as a preamble to
    his interview.

    445 Bloomington Ave. Wooster, Ohio 44691 April 3, 1977

    Mr. James R. Fuchs Harry S. Truman Library Independence, MO 64050

    Dear Mr. Fuchs:

    Your letter of March 23, 1977 and the draft transcription of the
    interview that I gave to Professor McKinzie arrived last week.

    I have gone over the latter and made a few corrections of a minor
    nature and am returning it under separate cover.

    I took the liberty of adding a number of footnotes. The material
    I gave Professor McKinzie was of a very controversial nature--one
    almost taboo in U.S. circles, inasmuch as I accused the Zionists of
    using political pressures and even deceit in order to get the U.S.

    involved in a policy of supporting a Zionist theocratic, ethnically
    exclusive and ambitious Jewish State. I, and my associates in the
    State Department, felt this was contrary to U.S. interests and we
    were overruled by President Truman. At the time I gave the interview,
    I had to relate many personal incidents for which, at the time, there
    was no evidence. In the past 30 months, a great deal of relevant
    material has been published which corroborates my story. Especially
    useful has been the publication of Foreign Relations of the United
    States 1948 Vol. V on the Near East, Part 2 by the Department of
    State which gives the original documents from which I quoted from
    memory. So I have added footnotes where verification is now available.

    In addition, Zionists and Christian Fundamentalists have frequently
    used the Hebrew Bible as an authority for justifying a Jewish State.

    As late as summer 1976, Candidate Jimmie Carter stated,

    "I am pro-Israeli, not because of political expediency, but because
    I believe Israel is the fulfilment of Biblical prophecy."

    So the Bible--and belief that it is God's Holy Word and infallible,
    became a useful tool in Zionist propaganda. I take the point of view
    that the Bible is a mixture of Hebrew legends and myths and cannot
    be used as an element in U.S. foreign policy. Two recent books by
    well-known and competent scholars support my view. They are,

    John Van Seter, Abraham in Legend and History. Yale 1975..

    Frank M. Cross, Caananite Myth and Hebrew Epic. Harvard 1973.

    The Zionists were very successful in using religion for political
    purposes. This is prohibited by the First Amendment of the U.S.

    Constitution which states the Government should recognize no "religous
    establishment." In the case of Zionism and Israel, the U.S.

    has recognized and supported a religious establishment--viz: the
    State of Israel which in turn discriminates against all non-Jewish
    religions. Two texts are available

    Sabri Jiryis, The Arabs in Israel. Beirut 1968.

    Israel Shahak, The Non-Jew in the Jewish State. Jerusalem 1975.

    Dr. Shahak, Professor of chemistry in Hebrew University introduces
    his topic, "This collection of documents is intended to show that it
    (Israel) is, at least in one of its most important characteristics,
    a State about which the greatest amount of misinformation, double
    talk and straight lies, is being published abroad" (Preface, first
    paragraph).

    U.S. citizens, quite ignorant of Biblical critical studies and equally
    ignorant of Zionist dogmas and claims, were easy victims to clever
    Zionist manipulation of their gullibility. When I mailed to Professor
    McKinzie a typewritten statement to explain some of the documents I
    gave him, a group of my friends urged me to expand the material and
    publish it as an independent document. So I completely rewrote the
    material and published it as The Great Zionist Cover-Up.

    It is a much fuller statement of how the Zionists operate. I enclose
    a copy with the transcript. It also includes many references to books
    where a fuller treatment of the material may be obtained.

    Finally, my opposition to Zionism was on purely pragmatic grounds. I
    was convinced the Arabs would fight a Zionist Exclusive Expansionist
    Jewish State--because they saw it in operation during the period of the
    British mandate. So did I. I felt it was folly for the United States
    to support a State composed of such neurotic groups as I witnessed in
    Palestine (1942-46). The Orthodox Rabbis wanted to turn the clock back
    to 1200 B.C. Theocracy--and were really fanatic. They have produced
    such irrational and Expansionist groups as the Gush Emunim group,
    who openly defy the Israeli government and cannot be disciplined
    because they are so "Holy." A description of this "Much Holier than
    Thou" movement is found in The New Outlook (Tel Aviv) monthly for
    November 1976, "Chauvinistic Politics and Political Religion: Danger
    in Hebron." It was the Zealots who in the time of Christ so provoked
    the Roman authorities that they brought on Roman retaliation and the
    destruction of the Jewish State in 70 A.D. The Gush Emunim have learned
    nothing from history and will repeat history. The Israeli government
    is impotent in the face of the defiance of this Zealot group. Other
    Israelis are equally blind to realities and so dogmatic and fragmented
    that no party can ever get a majority. The in-fighting between these
    parties is causing rapid decay in Israeli domestic political life. The
    only force which unites them is fear of the Arabs. Remove that, and
    Israeli political unity will disintegrate. George Ball in Foreign
    Affairs, April 1977 has the opening article, "How to Save Israel from
    Herself." He calls the Israeli government "impotent" and "immobile"
    (pp. 456-57) and on p. 467 refers to Israel's "paranoia." Because
    the USA is waking up (for the wrong reason--need of Arab oil) to the
    potential disasters facing us in the Arab-Israeli conflict, the USA
    is preparing to undo--what it did in 1947-48. Norman Podhoretz, the
    Zionist Editor of Commentary has a recent article, "The Abandonment
    of Israel." He now accuses the USA of perfidy because he sees US
    support for Israel ebbing.

    "America's policy toward Israel suggests the Vietnamization of
    Israel--it is felt that America, in order to avoid confrontation
    with the Soviet Union and to protect its oil supplies, will gradually
    withdraw from a total support of Israel and if necessary, negotiate
    over the survival of Israel."

    Zionists, since Truman's decision in 1947-48, have lived in a Fool's
    Paradise. They assumed their control of the US government, press
    and public was permanent and based an "moral" values--therefore,
    the US at all times would give Israel total support. Zionists seem
    to live in a dream world of their own creation and think the rest
    of the world should accept their dream. They seem quite incapable
    of facing reality. George Ball is making an effort to break through
    to some of the realities involved in our foolish adventure into
    theocratic politics. It will generate a bitter and possibly violent
    emotional reaction on the part of US Zionists who will accuse the
    USA generally of "anti-Semitism." (p. 454) I have been accused of
    this since 1944--now it is probable that President Jimmie Carter will
    share the title. Returning Israel to its pre-1967 boundaries, as he has
    stated, is--to the Zionist--a death sentence. Their 30 year dream of
    "Eretz Gadohl 1' Am Gadhol"--(a great land for a great people) will
    be shattered. I doubt if Israel can long survive such a blow. Jews
    will no longer emigrate to such a small non-viable state. Israelis
    will leave in increasing numbers. In 1947-48 when President Truman
    declared for a Jewish State, there was an outburst of Jewish Messianic
    hysteria (Bernard Pashol and Henry Levy, The Hills Shout for Joy:
    The day Israel was born (New York 1973). As Cyrus was declared "The
    Messiah of the Lord" in Isaiah 44 :28, so Truman was a "Messiah"
    to serve Eternal Divine Israel in 1948. Jews of a Zionist persuasion
    cannot separate the Transcendental from the Mundane. In antiquity,
    within a half a century, the Jews turned against Persia and in the
    Book of Esther (Hadarsal) King Artaxerxes is painted as a drunken
    and lecherous fool. He ruled from 485 B.C.-465 B.C. I fear President
    Carter may prove to be the Zionist model for the Treacherous Fool who
    "abandoned" Israel. Zionists seem to deal in superlatives--no relative
    values. They cannot see that President Truman was a US politician,
    needing Jewish votes and money to win an election. To the Zionists
    Truman was a Messianic Savior chosen by Destiny. Nor can they see
    President Carter is beset by global problems and it is necessary to
    curb Israel's excesses and mistreatment of the Palestinians lest it
    bring on a global disorder.

    George Ball's article is the rarest and best statement made in 29
    years. I'm not sure the Esther model is the one to hope for. Esther
    got her Gentile King drunk, then wheedled his signet ring and sent out
    an order to the Jews--so they slew 75,000 innocent Persians (Esther
    9:16). The Book of Esther is not history. It is parody. The Ahasuerus
    of Esther is probably the Seleucid King Antiochus IV Epiphanes (165
    B.C.) and Mordechai is probably a symbol for Judas Maccabeus. Esther
    represents the beautiful dream of a Messianic Jewish State. There is
    a lesson nevertheless in this immoral and violent story. A political
    marriage of any political power with Messianic Zionism is certain to
    produce disaster.

    I would appreciate it, if you make this letter a part of my "Oral"
    transcript by attaching it as a "Preamble." The Ecstasy of Zionism by
    capturing President Truman in 1947-48 is turning into the Agony of
    President Carter in 1977. George Ball has started the Ball rolling;
    how far dare we let it (Israel's paranoia) determine American policy?

    (p. 467) Time is vindicating the point of view of those State
    Department specialists whom Truman said he could not trust because
    they were "anti-Semitic." His barb hurt and has left scars.

    Thank you for your patience and trouble.

    Sincerely,

    Edwin M. Wright

    ORAL HISTORY INTERVIEW

    MCKINZIE: Mr. Wright, perhaps you could start by telling how you got
    into Government work and your personal background before you went
    into the Government.

    WRIGHT: My background is a rather unusual one because my father
    went out to the Middle East in 1878 and I was born in Iran. As such
    I have dual citizenship. I've never used my Iranian citizenship,
    it's conferred upon me by birth. I grew up in Iran and learned to
    speak Armenian and Turkish. I was born in Tabriz, which is in the
    northwestern part and a Turkish speaking area.

    When I came back to America I went to Wooster College and graduated
    in 1918. Then I took three years of theological work. My father was a
    missionary and I thought I would need some theological background for
    work in the field. I went to McCormick Theological Seminary in Chicago
    and then back to Iran. I spent 16 years in educational work there,
    being the principal of several high schools in Tabriz, in Rasht,
    and in Hamadans (1921-1937).

    I came back here after the Iranian Government had nationalized all
    the schools and there was no purpose in staying in Iran. I decided to
    take a course in ancient history at Columbia University. I thought I
    would get my doctorate in ancient history and for the next four years,
    1937 through 1941, I was working on a doctorate.

    This has a great deal to do with my working in the Government,
    because I had lived in the Middle East. I was interested in it,
    especially the religious background. I have studied Islam a great
    deal, I have studied Arabic, and I wanted to get the whole Jewish
    point of view. I took three courses under Dr. Salo Baron, who is
    perhaps the outstanding Jewish scholar in America. He is the author
    of a seven-volume history of the Jews.

    What I wanted to do was get this religious background. I'm convinced
    that religion underlies much of our language, though we don't
    recognize it.

    In other words, the themes and dogmas of religion underlie the way
    we see the world. If you would understand especially the Middle East,
    which never had a renaissance, you simply have to know this religious
    background. I majored in the religions, culture, and history of the
    Middle East.

    When the war came on, the OSS put out a general request to find people
    who knew the Middle East. As I recall, there were only six people in
    America at that time (of American parentage), who could read or write
    Persian. I was one of them. Practically all of us got dragged into
    the Government. We had no political background in the Middle East and
    practically no interest in politics there. There was no great dirth of
    what you might call specialists or experts in the Middle East. There
    were a few from archaeology, a few missionaries' children, and a few
    from business. Many of us were dragged into the research branch of
    the OSS (Office of Strategic Services), to prepare materials for the
    U.S. Government in case the United States became involved in that area.

    Eventually, Mr. [Winston] Churchill called up President [Franklin]
    Roosevelt and said that they did not have the facilities to handle
    supplies for Russia across Iran. [For details: George Lenczowski,
    Russia and the West in Iran, 1918-1948, Cornell U. Press,
    pp. 273-275.] Immediately the OSS asked me to prepare a study on the
    railways and transportation systems of Iran. I wrote a very complete
    one because I found in the Library of Congress all the sources,
    in Persian, of the railway maps and whatnot that had been sent in
    earlier. I was able therefore to prepare a full study on the Iranian
    railway system. This got into the Department of Defense and Mr.

    Roosevelt said, "Well, we'll take over the Iranian railways and
    operate it under the Persian taskforce."

    They found my name on this study and immediately offered me a captaincy
    in Intelligence. They assigned me to go to the Middle East and work
    in the Intelligence side of the operations (E-2).

    I was sent, in 1942, to Iran. I might mention the Russians protested
    my being there, because they knew I spoke all the languages. They
    reported that I was an American spy and a dangerous character,
    and that I would be shot immediately because I was so hated by the
    Russians--a bluff which had its effect.

    The result was that the Defense Department moved me out of Iran and
    sent me to Cairo. I spent the rest of the war in Cairo in Intelligence
    and handled the Iranian situation from Cairo. This is the way we had
    to do it, but I made frequent trips there.

    Also there opened up a position in Palestine. We had had a man there
    but he was transferred and Palestine had no Intelligence officer. For
    a year I worked in Tel Litvinski, which is just outside Tel Aviv,
    the U.S. Army headquarters.

    This period is very important for what I have to say about serving
    under President Truman, because while I was there I realized that
    there was going to be a war between Jews and Arabs; that was just
    certain. This was because of the concepts of the two societies. One
    has to get into the attitude of mind and the philosophy of these two
    societies to understand this problem.

    I made a special study of Zionism, and I talked with as many people
    as I could find who were the leaders of the Zionist community. I
    interviewed Golda Meir at that time; she was then labor secretary. I
    had conversations with Reuven Zaslani, who later was called Shiloah
    (all these people changed their names later on); Dov Joseph, who
    became the mayor of Jerusalem during the war; and Teddy Kolleck. I
    made a special effort to meet them, talk with them, and find out what
    Zionism is; what it stands for. I also found that there was a school in
    Tel Aviv, known as the Gymnasia Herzliya. It was the training school
    in which most of the modern leaders of Israel had gone; Moshe Dyan
    and others. I talked with a number of the teachers and professors
    there. I felt that this was a school dedicated to inculcating and
    indoctrinating [Theodor] Herzl's ideas into the minds of the young
    Jews in Palestine. [See: Moshe Menuhin, The Decadence of Judaism in our
    Times, Exposition Banner Book, 1965. He was a graduate of this school.]

    At that time many of Herzl's writings were not yet translated into
    English. In fact, they were not translated until 1952, so no one
    had really any easy access to this material unless he knew German or
    Hebrew. I don't know either one of these very well. I studied some
    Germany and some Hebrew, but I talked with the people who were the
    professors there and also got to know Edwin Samuel, the son of Lord
    Samuel who was the first High Commissioner of Palestine.

    With Edwin Samuel, I made trips all through the kubbutzim. We spent
    several days at Ein Geb, Mishmar Ha-Emek, and at various other of
    the kubbutzim. During this period I became convinced that Americans
    didn't know what Zionism was at all.

    The material was not in English. There was very little of it known
    to America, and I came to the conclusion that it was a very dangerous
    type of philosophy of living.

    What I found out was that Herzl had taught that all the Jews of the
    world should go to Israel. This was the idea that dominated the Yishuv
    (the Yishuv means the Jewish community of Palestine) and even Ben
    Gurion, who was at that time Secretary of the Jewish Agency.

    The Jewish Agency was a shadow government. It already was a government
    of Israel; simply waiting for the veil to be pulled and it would
    emerge. It had all the functions of government. I found their ideas
    were that all Jews should leave the Gentile world. This is in Herzl:
    "Gentiles hate Jews, they are going to destroy the Jewish world." It's
    a paranoic view of things. The only way Judaism can be saved is for the
    Jews to leave the Gentile world completely; to go to a Jewish state,
    as Herzl put it in his book. There they would rule themselves and be
    able to get away from the hatred of the Gentile world. The Gentiles
    are out to destroy Judaism. [See: Theodore Herzl, The Jewish State,
    N.Y., 1943.Diaries in II Volumes]

    I did not believe this. I think it's a false concept of society,
    and especially false of American society. Nevertheless, this is the
    foundation of Zionist thinking.

    The second step was that this Jewish state must be in Palestine. This
    is the sacred home of the people; its literature was developed there,
    and their attitude was that Judaism cannot survive in any other
    place except Palestine itself. That's where it grew and germinated,
    and it's got to get back there in order to save itself. Otherwise,
    Jews are going to assimilate in other countries. Herzl himself made
    the statement that, when the Jewish state is set up, if a Jew does
    not go to live in it he is anti-Semitic because he chooses to live
    with Gentiles rather than live with Jews which are his real community.

    I got all these ideas through talking with people who were Zionists.

    The third step in Zionism was that they must have large enough a
    state in order to keep the whole Jewish population there. At that
    time there were about fourteen million Jews, and now that meant
    owning a very large territory. It is not brought out in Zionist
    propaganda in America, but what they claim is all the territory
    from the Suez Canal clear north to the mountains of Cappadocia, in
    southern Turkey. [Statement by Herzl. Also see Numbers 34; Genesis
    15:18, Joshua 13, II Samuel 8:5-6.} It includes all of Lebanon,
    much of Syria, Jordan, and Sinai. This is the territory they call
    "Eretz Israel," the land of Israel, which is mentioned in the Bible.

    Furthermore, in the Bible you will find the boundaries of "Eretz
    Israel" as given by God. There are several places these are found,
    Numbers, the 34th Chapter and so forth.

    One of the men whom I discussed this with was Rabbi Meyer Berlin,
    the Chief Rabbi in the Mizrachi group. These are the ultra-orthodox
    group, who accept the Old Testament literally. Everything that it
    says is exactly just as it's described.

    I might mention my concept of the Bible is that it is largely
    mythology; Jewish legend; distorted history. [See: John Van Seter,
    Abraham in Legend and History, Yale, 1975. Frank M. Cross, Caananite
    Myth and Hebrew Epic, Harvard, 1973.] There are a lot of poems and
    other sorts of things like this. There are a number of moral teachings
    in it, but they are the minimum part of it. Large parts of it are
    just ritualistic and have no meaning in the modern world at all,
    but if you want to understand Jewish legend, that's the book to go to.

    When I talked to these people I saw that they took it literally.

    Furthermore, in one of my conversations with Mr. Ben Gurion he made
    the remark that, "the Bible is our charter." I began to realize that
    Zionism is a thinly veiled theocracy. The Bible was in their minds
    when they were talking, but they used modern nationalistic language
    in order to hide the fact that this was theocratic in nature. They
    realized that a theocratic society would not appeal to America.

    I might mention here that I have found Zionism very deceitful. There
    is a double meaning in all the words Zionists use, and [Chaim]
    Weizmann himself said one time, "Let the British or anyone else talk
    about Zionism and they can use our terminology, but we know what
    the meaning of it is. It has one meaning to us, one meaning to the
    Gentiles." They've always had this double-entendre in everything that
    they have done. Whenever they use words you have to try to find out
    what is the context in which they are using these words.

    This threw me back to studying the Bible again to see what they are
    talking about; what is "Eretz Israel," which includes this tremendous
    territory? Furthermore, in the covenants which God gave to the Jewish
    people, he said, "You are to be a pure and holy people and not to
    be contaminated by contact with Gentiles. Therefore, you should
    cast out all the inhabitants that are there and make it a Jewish
    state." [See Deuteronomy 7:1=6. Joshua 6:17; 8:21; 10:33. I Samuel
    15:18, etc.] I found the same thing in Herzl: You must remove the
    Arabs and Palestinians in order to have an exclusivistic Jewish people.

    I found Herzl's writings were really all ideas taken from the Old
    Testament, but dressed up in modern language, and that Zionism meant
    the incorporation of the whole Jewish community in Palestine. A
    large territory that was to be exclusively theirs, and the Arabs
    would be expelled.

    I, at that time didn't have access to all the writings of Herzl,
    because they were in a language I couldn't use for research, but I
    got a lot through discussing this with various Jewish leaders. These
    are what I saw as their plans for the future. [I also met some
    anti-Zionists such as Rabbi Judah Magnus who was President of Hebrew
    University.]

    When I was there I also made a point of discussing the Middle East
    with as many authorities as I could. There were a number of Americans
    who were in the American University of Cairo; I found the professors
    at Beirut extremely helpful; and Alfred Carleton, the president of
    Aleppo College. I made a point of contacting as many Americans who
    lived in the area, who knew Arabic, and Arabic history. I myself knew
    a great deal of it because I had lived in Iran much of my life, and
    I also had a professor at El-Azhar University, which is the great
    theological school of the Muslim community in Cairo. I hired him
    to teach me Arabic so I could study the Quran and the background of
    Islamic history as well.

    In other words, I went to the sources. I found that the area had
    not yet emancipated itself from the theocratic point of view of the
    world. Such ideas as we had in the West had never penetrated the Middle
    East. They are just beginning to penetrate now; technology and the
    objective and secular point of view. These people are introspective,
    they live in a world of imagination and mythology which they interpret
    as reality. This is true of Golda Meir, Ben Gurion and all the rest of
    them. They live in a world of half myth and half reality. The result
    has been tremendous blunders that they have made in international
    relations.

    One of the men whom I met when I was there was Loy Henderson. He was
    at that time our minister in Bagdad. I reported to him, and got to
    know him fairly well. I also knew George Wadsworth, our minister in
    Lebanon. I got to know some of these men very well and found them very
    well-versed in Middle Eastern history and the mood of the societies
    at that particular time.

    I reported all of this to the Department of Defense and copies of my
    reports were sent to the Department of State. When I was demobilized
    and brought back from the Middle East in November of 1945, the
    Department of Defense immediately put me on what they called the
    "specialist corps." There were about 20 officers who were specialists
    in different parts of the world; who had studied Chinese or Hindu
    or something else. I was put on that specialist corps to cover the
    Middle East. For the next six months I briefed General [George C.]
    Marshall about twice a week on the Middle East. Of course, this was
    a period when the Middle East was beginning to become important.

    I should here make another statement: In 1944 Secretary Ickes made a
    statement that "the United States cannot oil the war much longer. We
    are running out of resources; we've got to open up oil resources in
    other parts of the world in order to fuel the war." The result was
    that in '43 the Department of Interior released very high-priority
    materials to go to Aramco in Saudi Arabia and technical personnel to
    develop those oil fields.

    The Pacific fleet was partially operating on oil from Iran, but Iran
    was not able to rapidly develop its sources and Aramco was given the
    green light: "Build, get anything you need to, and the United States
    Government will support you."

    When these orders went out to allow Aramco to develop, the Defense
    Department sent off what we call a signal. It said, "Immediately
    prepare for us a special report on oil. We want to know what the oil
    situation in the Middle East is."

    Now, I'm not an oil man; I'm not an economist. I'm a historian
    and a researcher, but the Army sends you to all kinds of odd jobs,
    especially if you're in Intelligence.

    I was called in by General [Barney M.] Giles who said, "We want you
    to prepare this report."

    Fortunately I had met in my contacts, many of the oil men, and I
    went to representatives of Caltex. I said, "Could I travel around
    with some of your men in the field and get the necessary technical
    language and some material?"

    They were very anxious to cooperate with us. The result was I made
    several trips into Arab territories along with the drillers and
    the field men. I talked with them trying to get the whole geological
    structure of the oil of the Middle East. I became, by osmosis, somewhat
    of an oil expert. I think of myself as sort of a person who explains
    things to other people in ordinary English. This is what I try to do,
    and I take no pride in the fact that I'm an oil specialist, I can take
    facts and put them in English, and that's been my value. What I did
    was prepare for the Defense Department a study on the oil resources
    of the Middle East.

    As I look back on this, thirty years later on, it was an infantile
    effort. Oil was just being discovered and very little was known
    about it at that time, and what has happened since then has been
    phenomenal. My report anyhow was sent in and copies of it went to the
    State Department. It was one of the first official documents on this.

    Up until this time we had a petroleum advisor in the State Department,
    but he did not produce this type of popular work; that anyone can
    read and get the picture.

    What I found out was that the average well in the Persian Gulf area
    produces from 500 to 1000 times as much as the average well in the
    United States, and costs only six to ten cents a barrel to produce.

    These facts at that time were completely unknown, and they still are
    unknown to the average person in America. Americans are as ignorant of
    where their oil comes from as if it rained from heaven. So when there
    is an Arab oil embargo nobody knows who to blame for a shortage of
    oil. The confusion in America in 1973 over where our oil comes from
    is an indication of the stupidity and the ignorance of the American
    people on the facts of life. I learned these facts of life back in
    this period, because I had to study it and report on it.

    When I came back to Washington, the Defense Department had me
    prepare a special discussion with maps and visual aids. At one of
    these discussions they invited in the State Department people. The
    Defense Department felt they had something of value. They invited in
    [Dean] Acheson, Loy Henderson, Spruille Braden, and a whole group of
    the creme de la creme in the State Department, including Harold Minor.

    I gave this talk on oil and Loy Henderson was there. He had heard me
    also in Bagdad, and afterwards he came up to me and said, "What are
    you going to do when you are discharged from the Army?"

    I said, "I don't know. I think I'll go into teaching, because that's
    the field that I'm especially interested in."

    He said, "Well, don't you think about teaching; we want you to come
    into the State Department."

    As a result he sent Harold Minor, his assistant on Middle Eastern
    affairs, and they got me to apply for a position in the State
    Department. That's how I got in.

    When I reported in February of 1946, he said to me, "I don't want
    you to get tied down with any one kind of job. You're not so highly
    specialized, but I'm going to make you a special assistant and you
    will just simply handle everything that I assign to you."

    In other words, there was no job description for me. It was because I
    knew the languages, the history, and the background so he wanted to use
    me just as a generalist; a sharpshooter on anything that happened. As
    such, I was his special assistant and I sat in the office right outside
    Loy Henderson's office. I found him a remarkable person. He was honest,
    I could talk frankly to him. Although we had different backgrounds,
    but we had a lot in common. Immediately the Iranian issue came to
    the fore, the question of Azerbaijan. [See Lenczowski, pp. 284-303]
    He said, "You work with the Iranian desk on this."

    I did a great deal of the work on briefing and writing of memos and
    going up to the United Nations at the time that this Azerbaijan issue
    came up. I might mention, in connection with leaks, that an official
    Government policy is to leak non-sensitive stuff. Mr. Henderson told
    me, "You know, the public doesn't know anything about this. You give as
    much information as you can, without compromising the State Department,
    to the various agencies around here."

    I got to know Stuart Alsop, I gave him a lot of information. I got
    to know other men who were working in other areas and I was able,
    through the press, to put out a lot of information on Iran. It was
    not confidential stuff, but I became known as the source of material
    for the Azerbaijan and Iranian issue. They found out that I was sort
    of an instant authority, that they could ask questions and I could
    give them information very quickly. So I got into contact with the
    press. It gave me an outlet and helped the American public to see
    some of the issues that were going on.

    I don't consider this a violation of any oaths because I was not
    giving secret material. They wanted background material on the issues,
    and I was able to help them. It was not leaking secret material,
    it was simply using the information that we had in the personnel of
    the Department.

    One day Ted Winetal of Newsweek came in to see me and asked me some
    questions about Iran. I told him, "Well, you know, there's a lot I
    can't tell you."

    He looked at my safe containing all my material there and said,
    "You've got more material in that safe than we could collect for ten
    thousand dollars in two years."

    I said, "Well, that's true, but it's just not material I can give out."

    Many people in the State Department do have this material available.

    The problem is how do you get it out to the public, because you can
    do it from an illegal way, or you can try to help out the press. I
    was very fortunate in my relationships with these newspapermen;
    not one of them ever betrayed me. They did not quote my name and
    they didn't give away secret material, but we were able to use the
    information the State Department had to get across to the public what
    I looked upon as an educational program. It's essential because we did
    not have very many people in the Middle East and the American public
    knew very little about it. Suddenly the United States was projected
    into Middle Eastern affairs.

    In April 1945, I happened to be going from Bagdad to Teheran on a
    British army truck, on a morning in April when they turned on the
    radio and they announced the death of President Roosevelt. They said
    President Truman had taken over, and I knew nothing about this man.

    What is his background? He was almost an unknown to the average
    American and we wondered, "Is he going to be able to handle the type
    of problems that are coming in the postwar period?"

    Up until the war we had not been interested in much of the world.

    During the war our attention was largely on Europe and Japan, and
    people had forgotten the Middle East or never had even heard of it. I
    wondered, "How is he going to handle the kind of problems that are
    going to arise in this area in the postwar period?"

    Well, I was very pleased with Mr. Truman in almost everything that he
    did. I thought he was extremely creative in connection with Europe
    and NATO, but this was because America had a great fund of European
    specialists, and many of us had European backgrounds. We had endless
    numbers of schools where we had European studies. Our European policy
    was very constructive, very creative, and very useful. It turned us
    away from isolationism into a sort of integration with the rest of
    the world.

    Unfortunately, when it came to Asia we had no specialists, and
    there arose in America; domestic issues which attacked those who were
    specialists. Domestic issues are not based on intelligence, but on self
    interest of a smaller group, and I think in this connection I think
    I should mention specifically two. One was what we called the China
    Lobby, a very odd and indiscriminate group of people who never were
    really organized, but had a tremendous influence upon government. They
    eventually were captured by Senator [Joseph R.] McCarthy.

    The other were the Zionists, who were more organized. They had been
    working for a long time to capture the U.S. Government; to use it
    for purposes of developing a Jewish state. In other words, we had
    two lobby groups in America who knew little about the area at all,
    who had certain ideological concepts of society and America. When the
    people from the fields reported what was unpopular to these groups,
    they were fired.

    It's too well-known what happened to the people that McCarthy
    attacked. The best specialists we had on China were all fired or
    declared Communists. We purged them, and that led us into the debacle
    of supporting Chiang Kai-shek.

    The same thing happened in the Middle East. The Zionists well knew
    that these specialists in the State Department were people opposed
    to Zionism; that we were dangerous people from the point of view of
    Zionism. They were already attacking me when I was in Cairo. They
    found out that I was reporting things they didn't like, and they had
    people also in Washington who picked up my reports.

    The result was I was put on a dangerous list. When they found me as
    assistant to Loy Henderson, who was advising against their Zionist
    state, they felt that this was a conspiracy of certain groups of
    people that must be purged from Government.

    Whatever contribution I had to make on President Truman's attitude had
    to do with his decision on this question of Zionism. Up until 1946 no
    head of State had ever used the phrase "Jewish state." The British had
    used the phrase "Jewish national home." The result was that the concept
    of a Jewish state had not been accepted by any outside power. It was
    the drive of the Zionists to get the United States to recognize such
    a thing as a Jewish state, but nobody in America knew what a Jewish
    state was. I'm convinced that Mr. Truman never knew what it involved,
    yet he used the phrase "Jewish state."

    No one has ever been able to define what a Jew is; what is the
    adjective "Jewish?" I'm convinced there is no agreed definition; it
    cannot be defined. Israel has in 26 years tried to define the term
    "Jew," and it's run across endless contradictions. Every time that
    a court in Israel defines the term Jew, half of the Jews protest
    against it and say, "That's not what we mean by Judaism." In other
    words, Judaism or Jew means so much to so many people that there is
    no possible definition of it. The Zionists have a specific meaning
    of Judaism that is racist; it has to do with a theory of birth. You
    are born a Jew, you have to have a Jewish mother, and every Jew
    has a DNA particle that is identified as Jewish. This is a sort
    of a chain to connections back to Abraham. This is pure mythology,
    [See John Van Seder, op. cit.] and yet this is the idea on which the
    State of Israel is being built.

    Furthermore, Mr. Truman knew nothing about their concept of Zionism.

    In his book he refers to the fact that the extreme Zionists, as
    he said, threatened him. Those are not the extreme Zionists at all,
    these were the regular Zionists. He didn't know the difference between
    a leftist and a rightist Zionist. All he knew was that the Zionists
    put tremendous pressure upon him in order to accept the concept of
    a Jewish state in Palestine.

    There's a little booklet here that has to be read in connection with
    my statements. It's called Pentagon Papers, 1947, and I'll give you
    a copy of it and it should be used by anybody who uses this text. It
    was put out by Elmer Berger and myself last fall, before the October
    war of 1973. [I enclose a copy of my latest pamphlet The Great Zionist
    Cover-up which gives further details.]

    In Mr. Truman's book you will find that he describes the pressures
    that were brought to bear upon him at this particular time. He said
    it was like nothing that he ever saw again in the Presidency. He
    makes the strange remark, "I could not trust my advisers in the State
    Department because they were anti-Semitic."

    It's perfectly obvious he was smearing Mr. Henderson, who was the
    adviser and the director at that time of the Near Eastern areas. The
    Zionists went to various people like Drew Pearson and Walter Winchell
    and said, "Smear this fellow. Destroy his character and get him out
    of Government."

    The result was Mr. Henderson became the target of Zionist attacks.

    All kinds of false stories were told about him in these columns
    by Walter Winchell and others. I was at that time Mr. Henderson's
    assistant and I answered many of the letters, because he didn't have
    time to do it himself. I was his sort of alter ego in handling much
    of this correspondence, and I saw the kind of letters that he got.

    They were vituperative. Walter Winchell accused him of crucifying
    the Jews the way that the Jews had been crucified earlier, and so
    forth, and so on.[See: George Ball "How to Save Isreal From Herself,"
    Foreign Affairs, April, 1977 pp.454. He points out how Zionists attack
    anyone who criticises Isreal "ad hominen"--by character assasination,
    calling them "anti-semitic."]

    Mr. Henderson in a letter to me only recently makes the statement that,
    "These people tried so hard to destroy me some 25 years ago. I see
    now they are also trying to destroy you."

    Anyone who comes out and says, "The concept of a Zionist Jewish state
    is going to bring on trouble," is immediately attacked. The orders are,
    "Get him out of Government," just the way Mr. Nixon tried to get some
    people out of Government. Some of these people are protected because
    they happen to be doing a good job.

    What Mr. Truman did was not project his people, but smear them. In
    his own book he declared that his advisers in the State Department
    were anti-Semitic and he couldn't trust them.

    On the other hand, he got his advice from people like Eddie Jacobson,
    who was his haberdasher partner; Rabbi Steven Wise; Robert Nathan;
    and other people who were all Zionists; crypto-Zionists very often
    [Clark Clifford, Political Affairs officer in the White House
    staff must be included. A New York lawyer and politician, he was
    in close contact with the Zionists and represented their views to
    the President. See Foreign Relations of the United States, 1948,
    (hereafter cited F.R.U.S.) Vol. V, pp. 973-976. For Clifford's view,
    p. 755. Recognizing that the State Department was skeptical of the
    "peaceful" outcome of establishing an exclusivist Zionist state on Arab
    territory, the Zionists and the Jewish Agency (later the Government
    of Israel) established outlets for propaganda and pressure on the
    U.S. public. The American-Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC)
    was placed in Washington to influence Congress, public officials and
    the press. It was well funded and published in the Near East Report and
    was recognized as "the Israeli Lobby." A psuedo--"American Christian
    Committee for Palestine" was funded by the Israeli Government and
    U.S. Zionists. It published a news sheet, organized tours to Israel and
    worked especially on clergy and churches. For the press, the Jewish
    Telegraph Agency pretended to be a U.S. installation. The Fulbright
    investigation of 1962 exposed the latter two--the American,Christian
    Committee and the Jewish Telegraphic Agency on Israeli Government
    organizations. As a result of the exposure the American Christian
    Committee lost all its utility and disbanded. The press card of Milton
    Friedman of the JTA to the Department of State was cancelled. These
    many Israeli Government propaganda organizations did all they could to
    discredit those men in the State Department, whom they identified as
    "pro-Arab." For further details: Alan R. Taylor Prelude to Israel
    (Philosophical Library, 1959), especially the Chapter VIII, "The
    Zionist Search for American Support," pp. 77-113.] They kept whispering
    in his ear, "Don't trust the State Department." The result was he did
    not trust the State Department, the people who knew what was going on.

    David Niles was another one. He was the protocol officer in the White
    House, and saw to it that the State Department influence was negated
    while the Zionist view was presented. You get this from Mr. Truman's
    book, but also there are many stories that are not known.

    One of them was that when the election was coming up in 1946 in New
    York, the group of New York Jews called upon Mr. Truman. [Alan Taylor,
    op. cit. p.93] Emmanuel Cellar was the head of this committee. Rabbi
    Steven Wise and several others were in it. They called upon Mr. Truman
    and said, "We have just been talking with Mr.

    [Tom] Thomas Dewey. He is willing to come out and declare for a Jewish
    state, and we are going to turn our money and urge the Jews to vote
    for him unless you beat him to it." Then Emmanuel Cellar pounded upon
    Mr. Truman's desk and said, "And if you don't come out for a Jewish
    state we'll run you out of town."

    This, I'm sure, is the threat that Mr. Truman refers to in his book,
    saying, "The extreme Zionists threatened me." They were Emmanuel
    Cellar, Rabbi Steven Wise, etc. These are not the extreme Zionists,
    these are just the run of the mill Zionists. What Mr. Truman did was
    to cave in to these threats that they would support Mr. Dewey. In
    that way he got the Jewish money and the Jewish vote. His decision
    was not made from the point of view of what was going to result in
    the Middle East, but what was going on in the United States.

    Foreign policy cannot be operated intelligently if it's to be
    the football of domestic lobbies, and this was Mr. Truman's great
    mistake. In this issue he gave way to a domestic lobby. What did
    Emmanuel Cellar know about the Middle East? The answer is nothing.

    What did these other men, David Niles or Eddie Jacobson know about
    the Middle East? Zero. The result was he listened to a group of
    propagandists who gave him the wrong ideas and he came across with
    this fatal decision that we would support a Jewish state in the area.

    >>From that time on, the fat was in the fire. A chief of State had
    come out supporting the idea of a Jewish state. Now the Zionists were
    simply able to take over and operate without reference to America
    anymore. They began smuggling out arms and money. Mr. Ben Gurion
    had been in the U.S.A. at the Biltmore Convention in May 1942 and
    had gotten organizations to support the development of a war in the
    Middle East. They knew war was coming.

    In one of my reports I found out that Mr. Ben Gurion had made
    a statement at Tel Hai, which is one of the group meetings in
    Palestine. "As soon as the war in Europe is over, the war in the
    Middle East will begin." The Zionists had no question but that they
    were going to fight and drive out the Arabs. This has been written
    in many of their documents, and Mr. Truman didn't know this. [John
    Davis The Evasive Peace, Chapter 5, "The Palestine Refugee Problem,"
    Cleveland, 1976.]

    They told him, "Zionism is but a humanitarian move. It's liberal,
    it's progressive, it's going to bring prosperity in the Middle East."

    Mr. Truman made that one statement; that the reason he supported the
    idea of a Jewish state was because it was bringing prosperity to the
    Middle East.

    It was obvious he was deceived, but I think he was easily deceived
    because it brought money into the campaign and he needed it badly for
    his whistlestops. In fact, I'm convinced that the American Government
    is largely corrupt because of the way that our campaigns are run.

    This has been brought out, of course, very clearly in the last few
    months in connection with Watergate, but it's not new. The business
    of buying Government opinion and Government judgment is very old in
    America and it's one of the things that is going to destroy democracy
    unless it is somehow or another corrected.

    In this particular case, Mr. Truman not only supported the Zionists
    but he also did a very dirty trick. He smeared his specialists and
    made it difficult for them to operate any longer in Government.

    Mr. Henderson was, therefore, told, "You've got to leave the State
    Department or the Zionists are going to keep after us."

    The State Department suggested he be sent as an ambassador to Turkey.

    The Zionists had a clearance process going and they said, "No, that's
    too near the Middle East, we want to get him completely away from
    the Middle East." The result was that they sent him as ambassador to
    India to get him out of the area completely.

    What Mr. Truman then did was to turn over the Middle Eastern
    policymaking and the fate of State Department personnel to the
    Zionists; who were not in Government at all. He turned it away from
    his trained diplomats and over to irresponsible and fanatic people
    who simply purged the State Department. [F.R.U.S., 1948, Vol. V,
    The Near East. President Truman referred to "the fanaticism of our
    New York Jews," p. 593. There are dozens of references to domestic
    pressures, pp. 640, 656, 609, etc.]

    I happen to know this from personal experience because I became the
    brunt, the target of Zionist attacks. They found out, with Mr.

    Henderson being sent away, that the Department was still anti-Zionist,
    and they tried to find out who was there in the woodwork bringing
    out this anti-Zionism. They found me in there, and they turned the
    character assassin loose on me. His name was Milton Friedman. He
    was at that time under a camouflage; he operated in the Jewish
    Telegraph Agency. They sicked him onto me and he wrote a whole
    series of articles about how I was getting paid for my point of view,
    that I was a dangerous character, and that the Government ought to
    investigate me for anti-Semitism. They did investigate me.

    This came out in connection with the McCarthy scandal: not only were
    there Communists supposedly in the State Department but there were
    also anti-Semites. You can see how domestic passions and domestic
    irresponsibility simply shreds the usefulness of the Department of
    State. That's what occurred both in China and in the Middle East. It
    was so destroyed that nobody dared say anything publicly for fear it
    would be reported.

    One day I was sitting next to Mr. Henderson, he had his notes out and
    was dictating to me some letters when the telephone rang. It was Mr.

    Niles of the White House, and Mr. Niles told him (I got the story
    later on) that the night before some member of the State Department
    had been at a dinner party and had criticized President Truman's
    statement on a Jewish state. Mr. Niles said, "We are not going to
    tolerate any criticism of the President on this issue, and you let
    your staff know that if this happens again they must be disciplined."

    Mr. Henderson called a meeting of the staff and told them of the
    message of Mr. Niles. He said, "None of you people are to speak in
    public about this issue, because if you do we'll have to send you
    off to some Siberia if any of you, publicly express your private
    opinions, even to private groups, and it gets to the White House,
    you will be purged."

    There were a number of these people that were purged. I can mention
    them, Stuart Rockwell, Robert Munn. They tried to purge me in
    every way.

    I can't understand why I survived, and this is one of the strange
    things in my history, for they had me on their list as an anti-Semitic
    force operating in the State Department. The American Zionist, which is
    the paper of the American Zionist organization, came out with a full
    page attacking me, claiming that I was the source of anti-Semitism. I
    was called in frequently and told I must not speak on this subject
    because it was so controversial and I was too indiscrete.

    One day George McGhee, who later on was Assistant Secretary of State,
    called me in. Jacob Blanstein, president of AMOCO had just come in
    to see him, and somehow or another had picked up the story I was
    anti-Semitic. He told George McGhee, "Why do you keep this fellow
    here?"

    There were influences to get rid of anyone who was called "pro-Arab."

    They were not pro-Arab, I must insist upon this, they were acting in
    accordance with America's larger interests in the Middle East. The
    Zionists gave them the title "pro-Arab" and that was enough to destroy
    them. You had to be pro-Zionist or keep quiet in order to stay in
    the State Department, and the net result was a whole generation of
    officers who are simply "Uncle Toms." They don't dare to speak or
    publish things. They are afraid that they will be sent off to Africa,
    or who knows to some other part of the world, and will stay there
    the rest of their lives.

    One of these men was Henry Byroade. Henry Byroade made a talk in
    Philadelphia in April 1954. Before he made this talk he had two men
    work with him on it. One was Parker T. "Pete" Hart, who was the head
    of the NE, the Near Eastern Section, and the other was myself. We
    went over to his house and worked out his talk. In it he made this
    statement: "I have some advice for both Arabs and for Jews. Israel
    should think of itself as a state living in the Middle East and
    that it must live with its Arab neighbors. The Arabs must cease to
    think of themselves as wanting to destroy Israel and should come to
    terms with Israel itself." [Fred J. Khouri The Arab-Israeli Dilemma,
    Syracuse Press, 1968, p. 300 adds that even the Israeli Government
    protested this statement]

    The next morning Henry Byroade got a call from Nathan Goldman, who
    was in California. [Nathan Goldman was president of the World Jewish
    Congress and many years president of the World Zionist Organization.

    He acted as though he were president of a World Jewish State and had
    a bitter fight with Ben Gurion after 1948.] He used his first name
    and said, "Hank, did you make that speech in Philadelphia that was
    reported in the papers today?"

    Byroade said, "Yes, I made that speech."

    He said, "We will see to it that you'll never hold another good
    position."

    That was the control, from California, that Nathan Goldman held over
    the State Department. All they had to do was go to the President or
    to Congress, and the demand would come for this fellow to be sent
    off and put in some obscure area, where he no longer would influence
    the situation. This has been going on for 26 years in the Department
    of State as the result of Mr. Truman's first decision to purge Loy
    Henderson.

    It destroyed the efficacy of the Department of State in that particular
    area. The Zionists consider that they have control of the Department
    of State, can dictate who is going to be in it and who is going to
    say what policy should be. It's sort of silent terrorism that they
    have applied and kept up ever since.

    There is an article in the New York Times by Joseph Kraft, called
    "Those Arabists in the State Department." He points out how this terror
    muzzled the "Arabists" so that it has destroyed the capability of the
    State Department to advise the President. Not only has it destroyed
    their capability, but the Presidents from that time on would become
    "mercenaries for Zionism." They find so much money coming in from
    Zionist groups that they don't dare go against Zionism. As a result
    you'll find that there's practically no criticism whatsoever of
    Israel from the Presidency or the Congress; all kinds of criticisms
    of the Arabs. Here's another little story that I can tell, for many
    of these anecdotes are illustrative of what happened. Vice President
    [Alben] Barkley used to go out and make speeches for the Zionists,
    and while the President cannot take money from other sources, the
    Vice President can, evidently. The Zionists got him on the circuit
    and paid him a thousand dollars a lecture.

    A thousand dollars then was a lot more than now, and they had him
    simply go all over the country stumping for Zionism. The favorite
    phrase he used was, "Israel is an oasis of democracy in a desert of
    tyranny." The Arab states came to the State Department and protested.

    They said, "Here's the Vice President insulting us, and we wish to
    protest this."

    One of the officers in the State Department wrote a memo, for Mr.

    McGhee's signature, to Mr. Truman. "The Arab states are protesting
    the Vice President constantly insulting them at a time that we are
    supposed to be friends of theirs. We feel that the members of the
    Cabinet and the Vice President should be a little more discrete in
    what they say in public."

    This memo went to Mr. Truman; I understand he read it to his Cabinet.

    It didn't influence Barkley one bit, he went right ahead talking about
    an "oasis of democracy in a desert of tyranny," but the officer who
    drafted that was removed. He was sent off to the Defense Department
    and I don't want to give you his name, because he's now an ambassador
    in one of the states in that area. I don't want to embarrass him. This
    is what happened. Even if you suggested what is good policy you got
    punished for it, and the result was that nobody dared even write memos
    or sign their initials to anything. If the Zionists got hold of it,
    this person was purged and sent off to some obscure area for a number
    of years.

    As you can see, that's why the United States has made blunder after
    blunder in the Middle Eastern area. It has been controlled by Zionist
    groups, through money to Congressmen and Senators who get large fees.

    For instance, Mr. Hubert Humphrey gets as much money from the Zionists
    and the Jews as he does from the U.S. Government. Mr.

    [Edwin] Muskie received 80 thousand dollars two years ago for speaking
    for Jewish groups and gets only 42 thousand dollars a year as a
    salary. These men just said whatever they were told to say because
    it satisfies their personal finances and also satisfies the votes
    in their area. This has corrupted American policy completely towards
    the Middle East and it has led to four wars.

    When I briefed the Defense Department and the State Department on oil,
    my presentation was a very infantile study because I only had a few
    weeks to do it. Yet the raw materials were there, and I point out in
    process of time that the United States would need Arab oil. It was
    essential, therefore, if we were to have good relationship with the
    Arab world and get their oil, that we do not support a state that is
    attacking the Arabs all the time.

    The Zionist attitude is, "Keep on expanding, get more and more
    territory." I could quote endless numbers of passages here from Moshe
    Dayan and Yigal Allon. Moshe Dayan actually two years ago made the
    remark: "This next generation of Israelies must occupy everything up
    to central Syria. " [His statement: The first generation of Israelis
    founded the State. The second generation expanded it in 1967.]

    This idea that they must occupy all that area, drive the Arabs out,
    Dayan first learned in the Gymnasia Herzliya where he went to school.

    It's Herzl's ideas, Weizmann's ideas, Ben Gurion's ideas. They kept
    repeating, "Drive the Arabs out, get more territory," and the United
    States pays for it. We have kept paying Israel more and more money
    each year. The more expansive it's become, the more it mistreats
    the Arabs. The result has been an alienation of America from the
    Arab world.

    This was predicted by Mr. Henderson. He said, "If we support a Jewish
    state, a Zionist state, a racist state in a territory that's dominantly
    Arab, it will alienate us from the Arab world. It will make possible
    the development of Russian interests, who will support the Arabs
    against us. Eventually we will need Arab oil and it may be refused."

    All of this is in the documents of 1947, [F.R.U.S., 1947 The Near East
    and Africa, Vol. V, pp. 1281-82.] but the Zionists took a completely
    different attitude: "Mr. Henderson's anti-Semitic; pay no attention
    to him." The result was that we embarked upon the development of a
    Jewish, Zionist, expanding colonial empire, and have supported it with
    billions of dollars. This is what brought on the war of October 1973,
    in which we found that the Russians were threatening to send troops
    into Egypt to support the Arabs, the Arabs who are our bewildered
    friends. Kuwait and Saudi Arabia cut off oil to the U.S.A. and
    Mr. Henderson's prophesies all came true.

    The man who foresaw what was going on was punished and the people
    who deceived the Presidency and the Congress have been rewarded for
    26 years.

    This is the sad history of the mistake that was made by Mr. Truman to
    open the door to Zionist control of the U.S. Government in the Middle
    East. It has continued until recently, but Mr. [Henry] Kissinger is
    making an effort to reverse the trend. [Edward R. F. Sheehan, "Step
    by Step in the Middle East," Foreign Policy, Number 22, Spring, 1976.]

    In 1956 Governor [Nelson] Rockefeller asked Mr. Kissinger to prepare
    a book, which he was going to use in connection with his campaigns.

    The book would anticipate the world as it would be for the next ten
    years. In other words, an anticipation of America's problems from
    1960 to 1970. The Rockefeller brothers' funds financed the thing. Mr.

    Kissinger was then a professor at Harvard and he went to some of his
    friends and said, "I'd like to have working papers on all parts of
    the world."

    The result was he got a whole lot of these working papers. He and a
    small committee published the book called Prospects for America. It
    came out in 1958. When he wanted a study of the Middle East he realized
    this was a highly controversial area, and he went to two men whom
    he knew very well, Joe Johnson, of the Carnegie Peace Foundation,
    and William Yandell Elliot, his professor at Yale.

    I happened to know both of these men very well. Joe Johnson had been
    sent out on a mission to the Middle East. I had briefed him and I
    had worked with him. I knew William Yandell Elliot because he was a
    civilian advisor to the State Department on International Affairs. I
    was often called in to that committee to give them information on
    the Middle East. Both of these men recommended me to write this study
    and I produced a study for Mr. Kissinger.

    In that study written in 1958, I pointed out all the things I had
    been saying here, that Zionism intended to have a large state, drive
    the Arabs out, dominate the Middle East, have the United States pay
    the bill.

    I felt this was destructive of the American interests. Mr. Acheson
    knew the same thing because in his book Present at the Creation, he
    makes the statement, "The only thing on which I disagreed with the
    President was his policy towards the Arab-Israeli issue. I found here
    was an emotional, fanatical group; you cannot discuss these issues
    with them. I couldn't discuss it with Justice [Louis] Brandeis or
    with Felix Frankfurter because our friendship would not have been
    able to tolerate the differences of opinion we had on it. My advice
    to the President was that to support such a state would undermine
    America's larger interests in the area."

    This is exactly what Mr. Henderson and his staff had been saying,
    and it came true finally in October 1973. Our larger interests were
    threatened, Russia was going to send troops in there. The Arabs,
    who were our friends, embargoed oil and suddenly Mr. Kissinger had
    to go and try to save the day.

    The result is that after 26 years, we've got a reverse of what Mr.

    Truman did. We've go to get the Zionists out of control of the Middle
    Eastern area, to restore some confidence with the Arab world.

    Otherwise, the United States is a paper tiger; it cannot operate
    without Arab oil and cooperation of the Arab people.

    Now, Mr. [Richard Milhouse] Nixon, having finally learned something
    about the Middle East, is trying to reverse it and restore confidence
    of the Arab world. It's going to mean an attack by the Zionists
    against both Mr. Nixon and Mr. Kissinger, and that's already begun.

    "Get these fellows out as well, through the impeachment process or
    something else." [For Kissinger's problems with the Zionists: Edward
    Sheehan op. cit., pp. 56-58. On p. 39,;"Kissinger encountered some of
    the Golan settlers outside his hotel, screaming, 'Jew boy go home.'"]
    They want a President who is amenable to Zionist pressures and
    dictations. [See George Ball, op. cit. Foreign Affairs (April 1977)
    p. 454.]

    They've hunted for 26 years and I think they're going to be terribly
    shocked when they find out they no longer have that control. The
    situation that existed in 1947 is not going to be repeated in 1974.

    In '47 America was naive, the Zionists had an organization and were
    able to use the treatment of Jews in Germany as a great emotional
    appeal. They persuaded the public that there were no people in
    Palestine. It was empty country and they were just coming home; all
    this type of specious argument simply went over because the Americans
    didn't know the situation. It no longer exists. It's not enough that
    the Jews were being persecuted in Europe, but it's the Arabs who are
    now being persecuted in Israel and the neighboring territories. The
    whole picture is being changed, therefore. America now knows it cannot
    operate without Middle Eastern oil, at least for the next 10 years. We
    simply would have a collapse in America unless we get Middle Eastern
    oil. [Dankwart A. Rustow, "U.S.-Saudi Relations and the Oil Crisis
    of the 1980s," Foreign Affairs, April, 1977.]

    MCKINZIE: Mr. Wright, did you talk about the oil problem with the
    Secretary of Defense? He said that if there were another war the
    United States could not fight the war longer than three years without
    Arab oil.

    WRIGHT: No, but I instructed General Marshall on that. I produced
    this study and I gave it to him verbally as well as with maps. I have
    a copy of the report that I gave at that time. I don't know whether
    I influenced General Marshall or not, but I also gave the same talk
    to General Eisenhower when he became Chief of Staff (I never met the
    Secretary of Defense, that was one step beyond me). That's one reason
    why General Eisenhower, in 1956, ordered the Israelies back out of
    Arab territories when they conquered the Sinai. That's what Lyndon B.

    Johnson should have done in 1967. Instead of that we supported Israel
    to develop that Arab territory and put Jewish communities in there; to
    drive the Arabs out. We made inevitable the war of 1973. The mistakes
    that were made by Truman lasted for 26 years and have brought us to
    near disaster in the Middle East. [Foreign Policy, op.

    cit., p. 37. "Kissinger has described the Golan settlements as the
    worst mistake the Jews have made in 2500 years.'"]

    I might here briefly diverge to show the types of tactics that the
    Zionists used; not only to change the opinion of Mr. Truman, but the
    pressure brought to bear upon people in the State Department. This
    set a certain tone that anyone in the State Department who was out
    of line with what the Zionists wanted was to be attacked, defamed
    and gotten out of the Government.

    I happened to give a talk to the Presbyterian Church in Washington
    when I returned from the Middle East in 1956. There were many questions
    asked about what was going on; about Zionism and so forth.

    The Suez crisis had just taken place. This was November 14, and that
    took place the last week of October. It was a very sensitive moment,
    and people were trying to find out what happened in the Middle East.

    I was unusually frank in telling them what I thought was the source
    of the trouble: Israel, Britain, and France had conspired to attack
    Egypt and take over the Suez Canal. President Eisenhower shortly
    after this said that they should get out of that area, and ordered
    them out immediately or he would no longer give them any support. I
    tried to explain what this war was and why it had come about. I made
    the statement that so much that is found in modern Zionism is really
    a rewording of Old Testament themes, about the "Land belonging to the
    Jews," "God's covenant," and the fact that they must have a purely
    Jewish society and get rid of the foreigners. All of these were themes
    in modern Zionism.

    On the 14th of November a letter came to me from the Union of
    Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, from 305 Broadway, New
    York. It was signed by Dr. Sampson R. Weiss, who was the executive
    vice-president. This speech of mine had been reported in the
    Indianapolis Jewish News, and I began to get threats in the mail.

    "You shouldn't be in Government; you ought to be fired; you're
    anti-Semitic."

    Now, this particular letter says, "In the National Jewish Post of
    Friday, November 9, there appeared, on the front page, an article
    concerning an address delivered by you at the National Presbyterian
    Church. In this article you are quoted as saying, 'Zionists ideology
    comes out of Deuteronomy.'" Well, it does. I think it can be very
    well proven to be a rehashing of Old Testament themes, and I had made
    that statement. "The article goes on to state that you accuse Jews
    of dual loyalty."

    What I did was to quote Nahum Goldmann, president of the World Zionist
    Organization, who said that Jews should have dual loyalty.

    That was not my idea, but it was the idea of the president of the
    World Zionist Organization. [The Supreme Court in the Rusk vs Afroyim
    case gave Afroyim the right to dual citizenship.]

    "You depicted the Jewish religion as a faith which does not allow
    people to think." What I pointed out was that Orthodox Judaism is an
    indoctrination system; you must believe that God dictated all of these
    things to Moses and that they were infallible and, therefore, anyone
    who tends to be questioning this is likely to find himself outside
    the Orthodox group. What I did was to parallel it with what happened
    in Christianity at the time of Luther when he began to doubt many of
    the church doctrines. I said, "All these great religions undergo this
    process of self-criticism when a new phase or a new attitude of mind
    comes in. Judaism is now in that process." I did not separate it out as
    different than others, but simply as the changing from a traditional
    type of approach to a more modern one. Many of these things were what
    I quoted from others, but they were written in such a way that they
    attribute to me all of these bad characteristics. What I was trying
    to do was explain the nature of change taking place in society.

    Rabbi Weiss goes on, "Understandably, we are very much astonished
    at the tenor and contents of the remarks alleged to you, which are
    in such glaring contradiction to the facts." They are not glaring
    contradictions, they are quotations of facts from which I can get the
    sources. "The Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America,
    servicing about 3,000 Jewish congregations and over 3,000,000
    citizens, is hereby inquiring whether or not the above statements
    are a correct report of your remarks at the National Presbyterian
    Church of Washington." I'm sure Rabbi Weiss never showed this to any
    of his 3 thousand congregations or 3 million people; he just sat down,
    wrote it, and said, "I represent 3 million people."

    This type of propaganda is what the Zionists use. Any Zionist can sit
    down and say, "We Jews believe," but he never consults with anyone;
    simply sends it in. When it gets to the White House or the State
    Department they say, "Here are 3 million people being stirred up by
    what Mr. Wright has said."

    Immediately I got a letter from the Personnel Department. "What did
    you say these things for? Why aren't you more discrete about it?"

    This is a type of pressure under which you live. Every public statement
    you make, however much you quote the original source, is distorted
    as though these ideas are your own. Then you're attacked for them.

    For instance, this character named Milton Friedman of the Jewish
    Telegraph Agency charged me as being pro-Arab and wrote an article
    about it in the California Jewish Voice of May 7, 1954. I don't know
    whether he was even in the audience, but he picked up some statements
    and immediately demanded that there should be an investigation to
    find out whether I was fit to be a Government servant. The moment
    that this appeared, a whole lot of letters also began to come in.

    Here, for instance, is one addressed to the Republican National
    Committee. They wrote to the Committee asking who I was and what view
    I was representing in making the various statements that I made. They
    approached not only the Government, the Secretary of State, but they
    went to the Republican National Committee and the White House. It's
    just like a shotgun blast; they cover every area where they can bring
    pressure to muzzle you and to keep you from expressing your ideas.

    The Republican National Committee has to get a letter in reply to
    these letters that come in. They don't know who I am or anything
    about me, but they immediately write to the State Department and the
    State Department calls me on the mat. "What did you say this for? You
    mustn't say these things."

    In this particular connection I'm going to read another letter. I was
    indiscrete, I don't doubt it, but I also was convinced I was accurate,
    because I quote my sources. This is what I've learned as a historian:
    you must quote your sources, so that other people can look them up and
    see whether you are quoting accurately. This is what I've always done,
    but in this particular case there was a letter writing campaign and
    committees coming to the State Department; saying I should be removed
    from office because I was anti-Semitic.

    So, I received a letter from the Deputy Under Secretary of State for
    Administration. This happened to be my former boss Loy Henderson whom
    I greatly admire, one of the greatest men I've ever worked for. Loy
    was under pressure and he had to answer these letters in such a way
    that he didn't hurt my feelings but still could answer the letters
    satisfactorily.

    He was then caught in the crossfire between myself and the Zionists.

    What he wanted to do was write me a letter to sort of warn me and at
    the same time send a reply back to the Zionists who were writing to
    these various committees. This is the letter, and it reads as follows:
    "Dear Ed:" (We've always gone on a first name basis because I respected
    and I worked very closely with him for a long time.) "I would very
    much appreciate your comments on the attached letter from Rabbi Israel
    Klavan to Mr. Maxwell Rabb at the White House." (In this case they
    went to the White House against me.) "It is inconceivable that the
    remarks attributed to you in the enclosure to the Rabbi's letter are
    accurate." (He knows that I don't just talk out of free will, but that
    I do quote my sources. This is sort of a clue to me, saying, "Please
    excuse me for writing this, but I've got to do it.")"I'm requesting
    your comments in order to make an appropriate reply to Mr. Rabb."

    "In any event, because of the extremely delicate international
    situation and as public comments on current sensitive events should
    only be made by the appropriate officers in the Department, I would
    like to ask that in the future you not discuss in public meetings
    substantive matters relating to the international situation or other
    substantive political matters. Exception would, of course, be made
    in cases where speeches are written and cleared by the relevant
    geographic bureau in advance."

    This sort of played both sides. It tells me "Please be cautious and
    don't get into trouble, we know that you're accurate, but it is a
    sensitive situation and we have to explain it whenever these letter
    writing campaigns begin." This is the type of problems you deal with;
    irresponsible journalists like Milton Friedman can write anything
    they want. Immediately a thousand letters come into the Department.

    You're called on the mat; "What did you say this for?" You have to
    explain it in written letters because it's got to go back to the
    sources of the letters. At one time I was called in by the Assistant
    Secretary, who said, "You know, you're causing us more problems
    than the Arabs-Israelies themselves, because you keep raising these
    questions all the time. We have to spend our time answering letters
    about you rather than handling the problem of the Middle East."

    You can see why they were hot and bothered. They are trying to solve
    terribly difficult problems and somehow or another I seem to throw the
    issues out into the open. It made them spend time trying to answer
    attacks upon me because they found me useful and wanted me to stay
    in the Department.

    It's the type of issue that very few people understand. The Zionists
    are organized in 17 (now 31) different committees and groups in
    America. They are all inter-related by what's called the Association
    of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations. These are the presidents
    of the 31 Zionist organizations. All they have to do is to send in a
    letter to any one of them and these 31 will reproduce it in mimeograph
    and send it out to all their organizations. As a result of one letter
    you'll get hundreds of replies coming in attacking me.

    This is the type of constant fear that a Government official lives
    under because of the mimeograph machine and the xerox machine. These
    organizations can immediately make it sound like a thunder clap. Some
    unimportant little thing is picked up and individuals are put on the
    grill; almost punished for being accurate. It's obvious from this
    thing that they knew that I was accurate and that I was reporting
    things correctly.

    MCKINZIE: Would you call a letter like the one from Mr. Henderson
    equivalent to a muzzle?

    WRIGHT: Yes, because it says, "Don't discuss it unless cleared by the
    appropriate officer." In this case the appropriate officer was the
    Israeli desk officer who was just running scared. He wasn't going to
    let anything through to get him into trouble. What they do is really
    make us sort of what I call "intellectual eunuchs." You don't dare
    think or sign your name or your initial to anything that's going to
    get you into trouble. You'll never get a promotion. That's the kind
    of pressure under which these officers operate.

    I could multiply this a hundred fold. I have a file here of just case
    after case of things like this. Each one takes a long explanation
    of what you said, how the Zionist organization got its wolves out
    after you, and then how the State Department either sacrifices you
    like Truman did Mr. Loy Henderson, or muzzle you like they did me.

    Once I left State Department I became very vocal on this because I
    realized then there was no more running back to the State Department.

    I was no longer impeding their work by coming out openly. I published
    a whole series of pamphlets on the Arab-Israeli issue using the
    information I developed in the field and during my period in the
    State Department. Thus, the unmuzzling took place only by leaving
    the Government.

    MCKINZIE: We'll add these documents to the transcript. [See Appendix]

    WRIGHT: Very good, yes.

    During the war I had traveled very freely around the Middle East
    because that was my job, and I talked with people of all kinds. Just
    as I tried to find out what the Zionists were thinking, I also talked
    with Arab leaders. The interesting thing about talking with Arabs
    was that when the United Nations were organized in San Francisco the
    largest alumni group from any school in the world represented at San
    Francisco was the American University in Beirut, representing them.

    If you look at the personnel of that first meeting of the United
    Nations you'll find the University of Beirut supplied more people
    than Columbia, Oxford, Cambridge, or any other school.

    The impact of the University of Beirut upon the Arab world had
    made the Arabs extremely favorable towards the United States. They
    believed the United States were just interested; would not try to
    play a deceitful type of a game and take advantage of them. They had
    a picture of Americans as honest, good natured people who were out
    to help the world. It was a false picture but it was nevertheless
    the picture they had.

    In the case of three states in the Middle East, Mr. Truman had to make
    very quick decisions as to what to do. This was Greece, Turkey and
    Iran. In all these cases the Soviet Union was trying to penetrate. In
    Greece they had this movement of Zakhariadis and what not, a military
    movement up in the north being supplied through Bulgaria. In Turkey
    they tried to pick up some small individuals and groups who were
    leftists, revolutionaries, in order to overthrow the government of
    [General Ismet] Inonu. In Iran they had well organized movements like
    the Tudeh party and others to try to overthrow the Iranian government
    and bring the area under Soviet control. What they wanted to do is
    extend that circle of satellite states, which they could control.

    Because of the fact that I had lived in the Middle East most of my
    life, Mr. Henderson called me in and said, "I want you to make a
    special study on the way the Soviets operate. You can be a sort of a
    detector of the kinds of phrases they use, the types of propaganda
    they use, and follow this through." I became an Intelligence agent
    for the State Department on Soviet plans and tactics in the Middle
    East. It was under this situation that it became apparent that we
    needed to help Greece, Turkey and Iran. They were on the borders of
    Russia and they were the only places at that time where the Russians
    came in direct contact with free countries. Otherwise they established
    these satellite states, like Bulgaria, Rumania and East Germany.

    Here then the free world came into direct contact with the Soviet
    Union. It was suggested that Mr. Truman should come out with an
    aid program for these countries and he came out very courageously
    on an aid program for Greece, Turkey and Iran. This was a departure
    in American history, and it was a courageous one. We didn't know too
    much about these countries as a whole, but we did have a feeling that
    this is such a vital part of the world that we have got to help these
    governments survive the attempt of the Soviet Union to undermine them.

    As such I worked on all of these problems; I was a generalist rather
    than attached to any one desk. When finally Mr. Acheson asked Mr.

    Truman to support it, he went before the public and made a speech
    on why we should support Greece, Turkey and Iran. (Iran was outside
    of the immediate Greek-Turkish bill; it was a separate bill. As a
    result, it was first called the aid program to Greece and Turkey,
    and Iran wrote a separate treaty. Later on they were all united.)

    For this reason the State Department organized what was called
    the Greek-Turkish-Iranian desk (GTI). Their problems are all of
    the problems of Russian sabotage and efforts to take over. GTI,
    as we called it, became then a functioning section, and there never
    had been such a grouping before. Greece was always a part of Europe
    previous to this, but now it became a part of the Middle East. Mr.

    Truman's decisions on this were not only bold but extremely
    courageous. We went all out to support Iran.

    There's one statement that Mr. Truman makes in his Memoirs that I
    can find no proof for whatsoever. It will be recalled that at the U.N.

    the Soviet Union refused to answer any questions and Mr. Gromyko
    left the meeting. {Lenczowski, op. cit. pp. 292-300 describes the
    Azerbaijan crisis.} Meanwhile, they kept their troops in Northern
    Iran. I happened to be working on the Iranian desk on this issue
    and handled the communications coming and going. We eventually sent
    a special statement up to be read by Senator [Warren] Austin on the
    American position. Our statement was approved by Mr. Brynes and Mr.

    Truman. It was pretty strong on the whole. It said that we had planned
    to reconstruct the world on the basis of cooperation with Russia and
    if the Soviet Union was going to undermine this joint effort it would
    be a dangerous precedent and would have very sad results in the future.

    That was the theme of the note. There were no threats in it; it simply
    said, "We are planning on Soviet-American cooperation and if we do
    not cooperate there is going to be a lot of trouble in this region."

    Mr. Truman, in his Memoirs, says that he sent Stalin an ultimatum.

    When these memoirs appeared I was called into the historical division,
    because I had been working on this problem at the time, and they said,
    "What is this ultimatum that Mr. Truman refers to?"

    I spent several days going through the White House documents, but
    never found any reference to such an ultimatum. [Franklin was then in
    charge of the State Department archives and I wrote a memo for the
    files.] If Mr. Truman did write a letter to Stalin, what he did was
    just simply write it in longhand in his office and take it down and
    mail it in the local post box on Pennsylvania Avenue. Nobody ever saw
    this note or produced any proof of it. I do not believe such a letter
    was ever written. I think Mr. Truman, looking back upon it later on,
    embellished and exaggerated it somewhat. He says he told Stalin that
    unless he pulled out of Northern Iran or Azerbaijan that we would
    send the American fleet into the Persian Gulf.

    That was quite an impossibility. At that particular moment the
    American fleet was in complete disarray. We were bringing troops
    home from everywhere, and we didn't have enough ships to even get to
    the Persian Gulf at that time. All of our ships were busy carrying
    soldiers back from Europe and Japan and there would have been no
    possibility of getting the fleet in there. Furthermore, we had no
    business in the Persian Gulf, which was British territory. They had
    handled treaty relationships with Iran for a hundred years, and if we
    had done anything we would have done it through British action. The
    British were the actors in the Middle East until we came out for
    a Jewish state. [F.R.U.S., 1948 , Vol. V, contains many references
    to the legal position of the U.K. in the Middle East. Truman found
    himself caught between the U.K. position and supporting the Zionists
    who wanted to end the British legal position. pp. 593, 906, etc. are
    examples.] Our whole attitude was to let the British handle the Middle
    Eastern effort; we'll be trying to support their position there.

    In the documents of the State Department that Mr. Henderson sent out
    to Acheson and further up, he makes the remark that if we attack the
    British in Palestine it will make their position in the Middle East
    untenable. We should not attack the British Government in Palestine,
    because then the British would have to get out of the Middle East, and
    that would leave it on our doorstep. This advice is in the document
    that Mr. Henderson sent, "Do not attack the British on this thing,
    we are expecting them to keep the security of that area, and if we
    undermine their security, they will pull out." Mr. Truman paid no
    attention to these warnings and yet they are in the documents.

    Mr. Henderson was working closely with the British Embassy and we
    knew what the attitude was: the British would not stay if we were
    attacking them. But Mr. Truman continued to attack the British and
    the British pulled out. It opened up Pandora's box and there have
    been four wars since.

    MCKINZIE: Did the United States expect Iran to be a kind of model
    in the Middle East? There is some reference that Franklin Roosevelt
    expected Iran to be a test case to determine whether or not the Soviet
    Union would live up to the pledges made in the Atlantic Charter.

    WRIGHT: There is some truth in that. In October, 1942, the Soviet
    Union and Britain moved into Iran. They immediately took over the
    railway system to supply Russia, and then we urged upon them to
    come up with some sort of a treaty in order that the occupation of
    Iran wouldn't be purely military. After some months of negotiation
    they came up with a treaty between Iran, the Soviet Union and Great
    Britain. They stated that they were only there as guests, and that
    within 90 days of the conclusion of the war in Europe, they would
    withdraw their forces from Iran.

    When we operated in Iran, we did not operate as an independent
    state but as mercenaries of the British. This is not understood. We
    had no treaty with Iran to go in there, and therefore, we had no
    right to have a single uniformed man in Iran. We went in under the
    British treaty and had to handle these affairs through the British
    ambassador. [Lenczowski op. cit., pp. 173-175.]

    Actually this was a theory; the practice was quite different. Our
    Ambassador, Mr. [Louis Goethe, Jr.] Dreyfus, knew the Shah, the
    public officials, and we acted in one way as though we were there by
    rights. Legally we were only British agents.

    We withdrew immediately from Iran when the war was over in Europe and
    Japan. The British withdrew also, but the Russians stayed on. The
    date was March of 1946, and that's what brought up the case in the
    United Nations. Our attitude was that this was a test of Soviet
    sincerity. They had signed a treaty that they would leave within 90
    days, and then they didn't leave. Here I can tell another story.

    Jimmy Byrnes was Secretary of State at this time. Loy Henderson
    had very close contact with Jimmy Byrnes and we got some dispatches
    from Mr. Dreyfus and a young officer by the name of Robert Rostow,
    describing the way the Russian troops were acting in Iran.

    [Lenczowski, op. cit., p. 298 credits the information to Major Carl
    Garver at Karej. Actually U.S. Consul Robert Rostow and Major Gagarine
    in Tabriz very courageously got close enough to some Soviet tanks
    to get the identification marks. The Russian military then arrested
    the U.S. Consul and held him several hours in detention the following
    day.] They were acting as if they owned the place. It was coming March;
    they were out planting gardens and everything was evident that they
    were going to stay there for quite a long time.

    Mr. Henderson told me to collect the documents on what was going on in
    Iran. One afternoon he called up Mr. Byrnes (this must have been about
    March 12th or so of 1946), and said, "You know, we have a whole series
    of dispatches from Iran. The Russian troops, instead of staying within
    Azerbaijan, are fanning out and going to other parts of Iran. I would
    like to come and show you this map and these documents if I could."

    Mr. Byrnes said, "I'm awfully busy, but at 6 o'clock I'm free. I have
    no more appointments."

    Mr. Henderson and I stayed until 6 o'clock, then went up to the
    office. Mr. Henderson said to Secretary Brynes, "This is our specialist
    on Iran. He's got all the documents and can explain everything to
    you. You ask him any questions you want."

    Mr. Henderson, having introduced me, left. I put the map down on
    the desk in front of Mr. Brynes and said, "From the dispatches we're
    getting, and here they are, tab A, B, C, D; the Russians are moving
    in the direction of Qazvin, down towards Kurdistan, and expanding
    outside of the area where they were when the British were there. As
    soon as the British leave, the Russians are moving in. "If you notice
    this particular spearhead, it's approaching the oil fields of Kirkuk.

    I think they will move into Iraq and try to take over those oil
    fields; negate them from the British who were operating there. This
    other move is going down towards the south and is headed towards
    the Persian Gulf oil field. The third one is headed directly for
    Teheran." I had a map that I had drawn myself with arrows pointing
    out where these troops were.

    Mr. Byrnes said, "What do you think their intentions are?"

    I said, "There can be no doubt. They want to get control of those oil
    areas as quickly as possible; to deny them to the Western World. They
    went to capture the capital of Iran and control this as a satellite
    state."

    Mr. Byrnes stood up and clapped one hand into the other. He said,
    "All right. I'll call Loy and tell him to give it to them with both
    barrels."

    Mr. Byrnes took the attitude that we should now come out strongly
    against the Russians and tell them we know what their intentions are.

    This note that Mr. Truman refers to as an ultimatum was really not
    an ultimatum; it was calling to the attention of the Soviet Union,
    "We know what you're doing, and if you continue this is going to
    create real problems for the Middle East."

    It was, therefore, more of a warning and simply letting them know,
    "You're not fooling us." That was the purpose of this note which I
    think was written about March the 10th or 11th. It has been published
    in the documents of the State Department.

    Now later on when Mr. Truman's book came out, the historical division
    asked me to write up what I have said here. It's all written up and
    in the archives in the historical division, but of course, these are
    open only to specific scholars, they are not open to the public. I
    do not believe that that ultimatum was ever sent. I think it was much
    more as I tried to tell it here, it was a warning to the Soviet Union,
    "You're not fooling us, this is a test case of how far we can trust
    you in the future." Unfortunately, the answer was we couldn't trust
    them very far. And of course, that suspicion still lasts today.

    How far can we trust the Soviet Union. It's a debate right now in
    Washington.

    MCKINZIE: President Truman frequently said that poverty and want were
    the greatest factors in generating communism. The U.S. response was
    to think in terms of eliminating those two causes. Did that philosophy
    work well in the Middle East?

    WRIGHT: This theory, that poverty and want create communism, I do
    not subscribe to. The Communists use poverty and want as a tool of
    overthrowing government and getting into it, but communism develops
    among people who are not poor. Marx was not a poor man; he belonged to
    the middle class. Communism is the result of an intellectual effort
    to interpret the rules of Newton's laws of motion and thermodynamics
    to society. Marx himself said, "I shall do for society what Newton
    did for the laws of thermodynamics." It was an effort to take a
    mechanical point of view of history and interpret it in terms of pure
    mechanics. Man is simply not mechanical. He is such a mixture of so
    many drives and so many problems that he is far beyond a mechanical
    person. Communism's always an appeal to middle class people who are
    trying to get into government and find themselves frustrated by some
    upper elite. Very often it's the rich who are the Communists in the
    society, people with a sense of guilt because they are living on the
    edge of wealth when a lot of people are suffering.

    It's basically humanitarian, but it's also a desire to get into
    government, like the Bolshevik party of Russia. When they get in,
    they slightly eliminate the excess between wealth and poverty, but the
    cause of communism is not basically wealth and poverty. In fact, many
    societies that are anti-Communist are the poorest in the world, like
    India (and it may go Communist I don't know). This is not essentially
    the cause of revolution. If people are so poor that they can't think,
    that they are just trampled down, they won't become Communists because
    they become totally fatalists.

    Another form of an emergence of this is Fascism. Poverty, then, can
    be used for several purposes, either fatalism, fascism, or communism.

    I don't think that this theory is necessarily the only theory to
    explain communism.

    In a world like the Middle East in the postwar period, some of us
    recognized that there were revolutionary forces. They were strongest
    in Iran, they were strong in Greece, but these again were intellectual
    movements or labor movements of people who were better off than the
    peasants. Communism never spreads in a peasant society.

    The Communists may make it look as if the peasants participated,
    but they liquidated the upper peasant class in Russia in order to
    bring them all within the control of a Politburo. My own feeling
    is that while this is an explanation, it's not the only explanation
    of communism.

    MCKINZIE: Did poverty produce fatalism among the masses of people in
    the Middle East?

    WRIGHT: It did for a thousand years. The people of the Middle East are
    terribly fatalistic: they call this takdir, "this is what God wills,"
    Inshallah "God does it." This theory that God does everything for you
    is pure fatalism and it's caused by a hopeless feeling of poverty that
    you cannot overcome. So much of what we call faith is really just a
    hopeless fatalism. There's no use struggling; let's just simply get
    along and survive as best we can. That was the mood in the Middle East.

    The Arab world on the whole still remains strongly anti-Communist.

    Egypt we used to call Communist a short time ago, because that's the
    title the Zionists put on it. They never were Communist or interested
    in communism. They didn't like the Russians. [Anwar] Sadat did
    everything he could to get rid of the Russians and finally he got
    rid of them in July of 1972. He sent his special emmisary to see Mr.

    Nixon and say, "We want to get rid of the Russians. We want to work
    with the Americans."

    Mr. Nixon's answer was, "I'll send 48 more new phantom jets to
    Israel." This is what made the war inevitable. [There are increasing
    numbers of Israelis who are now (in 1977) very critical of Golda
    Meir, Moshe Dayan, etc. for failing to offer peace to the Arabs and
    withdrawal from Arab territory in 1967 when Israel was victorious.

    The Israeli hawks however won the day and began placing Jewish
    settlements on Arab territory--now declared illegal by the U. S.

    State Department.] The Arabs wanted to work with us, they were
    anti-Communist. We kept rebuffing them and insulting them all the
    time until finally they said, "Well, we're going to earn American
    respect by a war."

    They went to war in October and they earned American and Israeli
    respect because of the fact that they proved themselves more capable
    than we thought. [In December , 1973, Foreign Minister Yigal Allon
    was asked why Israel was taken by surprise on October 6, 1973. He
    replied, "It was because of our excessive self-esteem and our
    contemptuous scorn for the Arabs."] But it is not basically poverty
    that brings on a Communistic government, it may bring on all forms of
    dictatorship. These will have socialistic tendencies in an effort to
    try to close the gap between the rich and the poor. These societies,
    unfortunately, have a terrible gap between the rich and the poor,
    but what's going on in many of these societies today is a closing of
    that gap through education and various other things.

    We did play a small role in getting things started in the Middle East,
    but we soon dropped any help to the Arabs. This was because of the
    Zionist influence. The illustration is the Aswan Dam. Mr. Dulles
    offered this to Egypt and then he got a flood of letters from two
    groups of people: the Zionists and the Southern cotton farmers. "No
    help to Egypt." The Zionists wanted no help to Egypt because they
    wanted to monopolize all help to Israel. The cotton farmers didn't
    want help to Egypt because they've got a better cotton there than
    we have in the South; therefore, keep Egypt poor. This served the
    purpose of the cotton farmers, the Zionists, so that we withdrew
    from that plan. Revolution didn't come to Egypt in spite of all of
    its poverty, and today they're so anxious to work with the Americans
    that it's pathetic.

    MCKINZIE: There was in the postwar period the idea of peace through
    integrating world economies. Nations were going to be economically
    integrated and as a result there was going to e a kind of peace,
    because each nation would be dependent one upon the other. Was the
    Middle East supposed to be a part of this?

    WRIGHT: Yes, we went through this period. It attained a higher degree
    of activity under [John F.] Kennedy when the Alliance of Progress
    was developed. That was a legal phase of it in connection with Latin
    America. Of course, in Europe this was the Marshall plan, NATO and
    so forth, the O.E.E.C. In the Middle East there were also efforts
    on the part of Mr. Dulles to get what he called the "Northern Tier"
    operating; Greece, Turkey, and Iran, and Pakistan. Let's get them
    communicating and develop their railways and infrastructure.

    So there was organized a Central Treaty Organization. This is still
    functioning. It's never been very important, but psychologically it's
    important and I think politically it's important. It has helped these
    states to communicate with one another, to have constant meetings
    on what their common problems are. I don't think it's had any very
    large economic effect, but it has created intercommunications which
    have never existed before.

    We were hoping that this would spread into still larger fields, but
    we did exactly the opposite in Israel. What we did was take an Arab
    state and break it up into a little Zionist militant state that was
    going to try to occupy Arab territory and had nothing to do with the
    Arabs. We put all of our eggs in the Israeli basket.

    In other words, if we had any such plans, we very thoroughly sabotaged
    them ourselves by splitting up what was a growing entity.

    The Arab League and all of these things were efforts to get the Arabs
    together. But putting Israel in the middle and blocking communications
    between one Arab world and another, and then creating a picture of
    an expanding Israel, we simply destroyed any influence we had in the
    Arab world and any possibility of economic cooperation.

    This is now coming about. Saudi Arabia is now going to finance the
    large Euphrates Dam and has helped to pay off the Russian military
    debt to Egypt. These states now with their wealth are thinking in
    terms of using that wealth for regional developments. They are paying
    also a good deal of money to help Jordan and the refugees in Lebanon.

    It's coming slowly but very painfully, but there is going to be more
    cooperation in the future. They are establishing now large banks,
    in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, to loan money for various purposes
    and investment. With the accumulation of capital in that region,
    it's going to come from a different source than we thought. It's the
    tremendous vast quantities of capital that are going to pour into the
    Persian Gulf states, that's going to force a certain amount of world
    cooperation. There's nowhere that these people can spend that money
    in their own country. [Foreign Affairs, April, 1977, has an article
    by Dankworth Rustow on "The U.S.A. and Saudi Arabia: Oil Crises of
    the 1980s" that gives recent data on this subject.]

    MCKINZIE: What about plans for regional development, such as the
    Jordan River project, that were talked about in early postwar
    years, but really never quite got off the ground. Edwin Locke, as
    special ambassador, argued very strongly for developmental programs;
    industrial, and particularly water.

    WRIGHT: Yes, this got through to President Eisenhower. Locke suggested
    at one time developing atomic energy for desalinization.

    His theory was to install these large plants, one at the Gulf of
    Aqaba. This would help end the rivalry between Jordan and Israel,
    because that's one of the driest parts of the world. The story I tell
    about it is that there are only two lizzards per ten square miles in
    that area, because unless there were two there wouldn't be any. It
    is one of the driest parts of the world, but fertile land that just
    waits for water.

    This idea was that we put in a large energy plant at the head of
    the Gulf, and get the Israelies and the Arabs to develop agricultural
    supplies in there. This would help take care of some of the Palestinian
    refugees. The other plan would be large scale planting on the Suez
    Canal itself.

    On the Egyptian side of the Suez Canal, that is the southern bank,
    there is water because there is what's called the sweet water canal.

    Across on the north bank you enter a howling desert, such as you've
    never seen anywhere else. Not a blade of grass grows in a hundred
    square miles. This area he thought could be put into irrigation also
    by atomic energy.

    We drew up papers on this and wrote studies after Edwin Locke came up
    with the idea. They all fell flat because we could get no cooperation
    between these states at that time. Nothing ever happened at all.

    There was a slight effort on the Jordan River Valley. Joe Johnson
    was sent out, and came back with a scheme on how to develop it, and
    we sent out and came back with a scheme on how to develop it, and we
    sent out Lilienthal. I believe it was a U.N. team. We supported it
    and were anxious to put money into such a scheme. This all fell foul
    because the Israelies had plans to occupy all that region. They did
    not want vested interest to divert some of the water to Jordan. They
    wanted to lift that water out of the Jordan Valley and bring it down
    into the Plains of Esdraelon, and then the Plains of Sharon. The
    United States Government did not favor this, because we seemed to
    have a policy that water should be used in its natural bed.

    None of these plans came to anything, but we did put in one small
    section. The Yarmuk River runs right into the Jordan, just below
    the Sea of Galilee. The Yarmuk does not have very much water, and I
    think people who think of these schemes like the Jordan River have an
    exaggerated idea of what the Jordan is. In this particular connection
    I have often wondered, did Jesus baptize by just dipping some water
    and putting it on people's heads, or did he immerse them?

    I thought he might have immersed them until I saw the Jordan River.

    You can't immerse a person being immersed in the Jordan River, it's
    too shallow. It only comes up to your ankles practically. There's a
    very small flow of water, it's a real limited source. People have these
    exaggerated ideas that the Jordan River is some great Mississippi.

    What we did then was to tap the Yarmuk above where it flows to Israel
    as a boundary between Israel and Jordan, and develop a scheme in
    Jordan which I think absorbed eventually about 80 thousand people,
    called the East Ghor Canal scheme. It was supposed to grow vegetables
    and things like that because you can grow three crops a year in that
    hot climate. It would thereby supply the fresh vegetable market of
    Amman and even Israel and other places. Unfortunately, in the fighting
    that took place, some of the Palestinian guerrillas lived in that
    area. Israel took the attitude, "We've got to make it a scorched
    earth. Anywhere that there is a guerrilla, we're going to destroy
    the civilian population so it cannot support the guerrillas.

    This is their attitude towards Lebanon and Syria. "If one guerrilla
    gets in there, we'll destroy the whole village and then they cannot
    support the guerrillas."

    So, the Israelies shelled the area, destroyed the canal and everything
    else that we had financed. Today it's again desert. We put, I suppose,
    30 or 40 million dollars in that scheme, but this reaction between
    guerrillas, using it as a hideout area and Israelies using it as a
    scorched earth area has completely destroyed that scheme.

    MCKINZIE: Where can a historian go to get hard evidence that Israel
    opposed the development of any of its Arab neighbors?

    WRIGHT: Of course, this will not come out from Government sources,
    because the Zionists don't want this to be known. All you have
    to do is to simply see the facts: why do we offer the Aswan Dam
    and then withdraw it? It's because of the pressure I mentioned in
    connection with the Zionists and the others. Here you have to go
    into motivation. You'll find that almost every effort we made to
    work with the Arabs was opposed by the same Congressman who votes
    for everything for Israel. This is more than coincidence. They block
    what the Zionists tell them to block and vote for what the Zionists
    tell them to vote for. [George Ball, Foreign Affairs, op. cit.,
    p.471 gives two illustrations of Israeli control over 71 and later
    76 Senators. These Senators act as though Israel was "The Master's
    Voice" to be obeyed.] You cannot get any definite proof, and you'd
    have to have bugs in the rooms of every Congressman to find out who
    they talked to before they voted one way or another. Why is it they
    opposed help to Egypt and favor it for Israel? This is the type of
    thing that you simply have to see; the straws in the wind. There are
    so many straws in the wind that the Israelies did not want the Arabs
    to develop, because of the fact that they were afraid. A developed
    Arab society is a dangerous Arab society. Let the Arabs be strong
    and then they're going to put pressure upon Israel and Israel knows it.

    Israel has no resources of any importance whatsoever, either minerals,
    oil or water. It cannot even feed its own population. They must keep
    the Arabs divided and weak. "Keep the Arabs divided up and fighting one
    another, and Israel will survive. Let them get together and you've got
    trouble. [One of the main purposes of Kissinger's "Shuttle Diplomacy"
    in 1974-75 was to split Egypt away from Syria. It worked and caused
    much ill will between Syria and Egypt.] They got together in 1973
    and there was trouble.

    MCKINZIE: One of the other questions that inevitably comes up and is
    not very well understood, is the movement of 100,000 refugees from
    Germany to Palestine in 1945 and 1946.

    WRIGHT: When Mr. [Ernest] Bevin suggested that the U.K. cannot handle
    the Middle East problem there was appointed a special committee made
    up of twelve people. Six were British and six were Americans.

    One or two of these Americans were already Zionists. Bartley Crum was
    one. This committee of twelve went out there and the Arabs simply said,
    "We won't talk to them. We are not going to talk to anybody who is
    going to divide up our land. We have a right to it and we don't see
    why we should discuss the division of the land." The Committee did
    not interview any Arabs therefore, which is a sort of a negative
    Arab approach: "This is a subject beyond discussion, especially by
    Europeans, British and Americans. They have nothing to do with our
    future, we are going to make our own future."

    Nevertheless, this commission went out. It talked to no Arabs, but
    they did meet a group of Arabs in Beirut on their way back, and also
    talked to some Arabs in New York. They finally came up with this
    strange plan. [Fred J. Khouri, "The Arab-Israeli Dilemma," pp.

    34-36.]

    Here again I played a small part. As their report came in I was
    assigned to collect it and put it together, get it into printable form
    and published. It came out as a document, "The Anglo-American Committee
    Inquiry." They came up with a plan that had six different points
    in it. What they pointed out was this must be a package; you cannot
    select one and ignore the others, because they are tied together. No
    one of these points was valid unless the other five went along with it.

    Amongst these six recommendations, the first one was that a
    Palestinian state should be established in which neither Jew would
    dominate Arab, or Arab dominate Jew. This is point one and the most
    important one. About the third or fourth was that 100 thousand visas
    should be given for the refugees, who were in Germany at the time,
    to go to Palestine. Then there were some others.

    At the moment this came in I collected the original documents on this
    and I took them to the Assistant Secretary of State and we had the m
    typed up and printed. My job was a mechanical one, get the information
    all together and get it ready for printing.

    The next thing we heard was that Mr. Truman came out with a statement
    that he was not in favor of the plan, but he was in favor of the
    100 thousand. He did exactly what they said not to do. "Do not tear
    it apart and accept one and refuse the other, because one is only
    valid if they are all valid." He simply repudiated his own people and
    came up with a personal decision. I'm sure that what he did was to
    immediately turn over copies of the plan to the Zionists. They said,
    "Well, we don't want it." I can't prove that except that it was his
    own commission and he immediately violated the very initial preamble
    of it."

    This was, as I recall, just before another election in New York..

    Elections in New York or whatnot are terrible things from the point
    of view of foreign policy, because you can't do certain things and
    must do certain things to satisfy New York elections. It's tragic
    that this is the way the American Government operates, but it is.

    Very often we never even knew what went on in the White House. That
    comes out time after time in this little pamphlet, The Pentagon
    Papers, 1947. In one of Mr. Henderson's memos to the Secretary he
    said, "We don't know who's influencing these decisions. We send you
    information and the next day we read something that's set up in New
    York by a Representative we never heard of before. Who is making
    these decisions?" [F.R.U.S. , 1947, Vol. V, pp. 1121-1122; 1215;
    1239; 1281-82, etc.]

    In other words, the State Department didn't even know who was
    making the decisions. Mr. Truman himself has the most remarkable
    of all statements in there, a memo that's quoted, in which he says,
    "Something's going on and I don't know what it is. Somebody called
    up the President of Haiti and he said that it was I. [F.R.U.S., 1947
    , Vol. V, p. 1309.] He said, 'We want you to vote for the Zionist
    program.' As a result the President of Haiti changed his vote to
    satisfy what he thought was me. I don't know who this fellow was that
    called him up."

    In other words, somebody impersonated President Truman and threatened
    the President of Haiti. There were people who used President Truman's
    voice and name and he didn't know who they were. The State Department
    never found out who they were, but this is the way decisions are
    made in Washington. I think I know who that fellow was. It was Robert
    Nathan, because I met Robert Nathan frequently at the U.N. I had met
    him out in the Middle East, and he was the one who was running to
    the telephone booth and calling up the President of Liberia, calling
    up Costa Rica, telling them, "Unless you will vote for our program,
    we will see to it that the American interhighway system is not built
    through your country." These people assumed that Nathan and Co. were
    acting for America and nobody had consulted them at all. This kind
    of thing went on at the U.N. and in Washington and if you want the
    documentary proof of it, it's in Mr. Truman's statement.

    Before I read this statement of Mr. Truman's I'll have to explain
    what the situation was. There was tremendous pressure upon the
    governments of other countries to vote for the partition program,
    which the Zionists had accepted. I was at the U.N. and was Mr.

    Henderson's assistant and was there when he read some of these memos.

    I was reporting back to the State Department what was happening at
    the U.N.

    There were a number of Jewish Zionists at the U.N., like Robert
    Nathan, Bernard Baruch, and various other people, who were calling
    up the chiefs of other states and saying, "Unless you vote for this
    partition program, the United States will not build a road in your
    country; will not help you in aid or will not do something else."

    They were pretending they had the authority of the President of the
    United States to determine policy, when they were just one individual
    operating on their own. They had no authority, no official position,
    but they were using the importance of the United States as a threat
    against these countries.

    Mr. Romulo, who was the Ambassador from the Philippines, had initially
    stood against this program; did not want the Zionist state.

    They have a lot of Moslems in the Philippines and they were afraid
    that this would create trouble.

    Romulo left Washington and flew to the Philippines. When he got
    there, the Philippine President called him in saying, "You know,
    I have information from Washington that if we vote the way you have
    stated, we're not going to get any American aid. We're going to change
    our vote."

    Our ambassador also reported that the President had said that he had
    gotten this threat and was changing his vote.

    Upon this we immediately notified Mr. Truman and sent these documents
    right to him. "This is what is happening. These various Jewish
    representatives are simply using the authority of the United States,
    without any responsibility, in order to threaten people to vote for
    that program."

    On December the 11th, Mr. Truman wrote this letter to Secretary of
    State Acheson:

    I read with a lot of interest your memorandum on the 10th in regards
    to the Philippine situation. [That's the one I've just described.] It
    seems to me that if our delegation to the United Nations is to be
    interfered with by members of the United States Senate and by pressure
    groups in this country, we will be helping the United Nations down
    the road to failure. The conversation between the President of the
    Philippines and our Ambassador is most interesting.

    I have a report from Haiti in which it is stated that our consul in
    Haiti approached the President of that country and suggested to him
    that for his own good, he should order the vote of his country changed,
    claiming that he had instructions from me to make such a statement
    to the President of Haiti. As you very well know, I refused to make
    statements to any country on the subject of his vote in the United
    Nations. It is perfectly apparent that pressure groups will succeed
    in putting the United Nations out of business if this sort of thing
    is continued and I am very anxious that it be stopped. Harry S.

    Truman

    That's an official document. Somebody represented himself as the
    President of the United States to some foreign countries. This was
    the kind of threat that the Zionists used to change votes at that last
    session when finally it was voted by a small majority of two or three.

    These are documents you can quote and find in the Foreign Relations
    of the United States, 1947, Vol. V.

    So, that's how foreign policy is made on the Middle East.

    MCKINZIE: Could you discuss the events between the time when the
    British announced their withdrawal and the Government of Israel
    declared its independence?

    WRIGHT: Yes. One of the most perhaps amusing, and yet, also
    frustrating, problems was the fact that the State Department lost all
    contact with the White House over this question of Israel. Mr. Truman
    discussed this with the Jewish Agency, rather than with the State
    Department.

    At this time, George Marshall was Secretary of State and he was up
    at the U.N. a good deal of the time. When the British had finally
    announced they were going to pull out by May the 15th (which was May
    14th our time, because of the difference in time), the question arose
    about recognition of the state.

    The State Department wrote a memo which drew upon traditions of how
    to recognize a country. It's very rare that a country of which no
    boundaries are known is recognized. There are also other questions:
    When you recognize a state do you recognize its claims to people
    outside the state? The Zionists have always claimed that the Jewish
    nation is wherever a Jew is, anywhere in the world. Every Jew,
    therefore, is part of this Jewish nation. Golda Meir repeated this
    when they asked her what the boundaries of Israel are. She said,
    "Wherever there's a Jew, there is Israel. It's not a line on a map."

    Does a government recognize that kind of a concept? The answer is no.

    We always have to recognize a state on the basis of control of
    territory, and a specified territory. The State Department sent in,
    through its legal representatives, a memo, pointing out that there were
    no real grounds at that time for recognizing a Jewish state. We didn't
    know what the term "Jewish" meant, we didn't know its boundaries,
    there was fighting going on. They recommended that there be a little
    time (which is often what the State Department does) to let the dust
    settle. Then would recognize it.

    The Zionists didn't want anything like that and so they sent Eliahu
    Elath, who at that time was the representative of the Jewish Agency
    in Washington. He is now president of the Hebrew University and one
    of the men with whom I traveled a great deal when I was in the Middle
    East. He is a graduate of the American University of Beirut and a
    very capable Arabist.

    What happened was that Clark Clifford went to Mr. Truman, evidently
    upon the request of Weizmann, who was also hanging around Washington.

    Washington was loaded with Zionists at that time, they were all hanging
    around there talking to their Congressmen, getting Eddie Jacobson on
    the job and others. They were pulling all the strings.

    It's very difficult for the person outside to know just what did go
    on, because this has not yet been published. We'll have to find, if
    David Niles ever publishes any documents, as to what part he played
    in it. I don't know that his book has come out yet.

    Anyhow, through David Niles, they had a meeting of Clark Clifford,
    political adviser to the President; Elath, at that time still called
    himself Epstein; and the President. On the morning of the 13th of
    May, Epstein argued, "Please recognize Israel immediately, because we
    need that recognition for legitimacy." They had quite a discussion,
    but Mr. Marshall was never called in or asked about this at all.

    [F.R.U.S. 1948, Vol. V, pp. 974-77, Secretary of State's memo of May
    12, 1948 describes the acrimonious debate between Clark Clifford and
    Secretary Marshall.]

    On the morning of May the 14th the U. N. was in session and was
    discussing a return to the trusteeship. Mr. [Henry H.] Jessup, who was
    representing the United States mission there, was up making a speech
    about returning that area to British trusteeships, because of the
    fact that war was about to break out. While he was giving his talk,
    somebody got up and said, "Well, doesn't Mr. Jessup know what's going
    on? The United States has already recognized Israel." [This story
    is now verified by F.R.U.S., 1948, Vol. V, p. 993, Editor's Note:
    The U. S. mission to the U. N. considered resigning en masse because
    of the Truman had doublecrossed them and destroyed their credibility.]

    We have to reconstruct the story by circumstantial evidence. They had
    decided on the day before to recognize Israel and not let the State
    Department know it. If the State Department had known it they could
    have probably gotten to the White House and tried to persuade them
    not to recognize Israel that quickly. It was known that the State
    Department did not favor that kind of quick recognition, so what they
    did was not tell the State Department. On the morning of the 14th
    Secretary Marshall was telephoned and told at 10 o'clock that the
    President was going to announce the recognition of Israel, but not to
    let his commission or anyone else know about it. He was so angered that
    he didn't even go to the U.N. meeting and he was in his hotel room at
    the time. Our representative was still following out the rules of the
    13th and discussing the possibility of a trusteeship when some other
    delegate got up and said, "Doesn't the American know what's going on?"

    Mr. Jessup called in a secretary and said, "Well, I'll try to find
    out." She ran out to the ticker room and there she found a whole
    group of people tearing the ticker tapes off, but she got one copy
    which stated that President Truman at 6:10 p.m. o'clock had recognized
    Israel. She tore these off and took them back to Mr.

    Jessup. Mr. Jessup read them and he said, "Well, under these
    circumstances I have nothing more to say."

    That's how diplomacy was handled in the Middle East. The Jewish Agency
    knew what was going on, but the State Department and the U. N.

    didn't until after the announcement came out. The reason was that Mr.

    Truman wanted sole credit for the recognition of Israel. He did not
    want it to go to anyone else, because he was anxious for the Jewish
    vote and Jewish money.

    At least that's the best way I can interpret a strange type of
    diplomacy such as this, for Secretary Marshall was a very responsible
    person and not even he was told what was going on. Jerusalem knew
    about it, Ben Gurion did, but the Secretary of State didn't. This
    often is what happens in the State Department. We find out things by
    going to Jerusalem, conversations that take place, people that run
    back and forth.

    It's not a very pretty picture of how to operate an intelligent
    or a responsible organization, and it's made the State Department
    neither intelligent nor efficient. [George Ball, Foreign Affairs,
    April, 1977, p. 467 asks, "How far dare we let it (Israel's paranoia)
    determine U. S. policy?"]

    MCKINZIE: Were there other instances in which the White House, to
    your knowledge, took direct action?

    WRIGHT: Yes, I would say they took direct action all the time. You'll
    have to get this in Mr. Acheson's book, Present at the Creation. He
    tells the story of the type of problems that followed, and it's
    just an endless series of hopeless problems. We were committed to
    certain things and we didn't know what we were committed to. As these
    situations unfolded, and the Secretary of State made no decisions,
    I can assure you of this: They were all made in the White House. Mr.

    David Niles knew what was going on, Emmanuel Cellar knew what was
    going on, but the State Department often just had these announcements
    coming out and they'd find out afterwards what'd been decided.

    MCKINZIE: What did this do to morale?

    WRIGHT: It made it plummet, of course. It's remained low in the
    Middle Eastern section, it's always been low in the Arab-Israeli
    issue. [Reference F.R.U.S. , 1948, Vol. V, p. 993 where the whole U.

    S./U. N. mission considered resignation en masse. Other Middle
    East officers asked to be transferred to some other area where they
    might prove more useful.] It has not been on the Greek-Turkish or
    other issues, like India; these have all been areas where we felt
    we were doing something. I felt I was really getting somewhere on
    those issues because I did see the Secretary of State. I was able to
    talk to him. I was able to show the documents. On the Arab-Israeli
    issue I was absolutely cut out. "Keep out of this issue;" I was told,
    "this is being made in the White House." The result was this absolute
    gap between the White House and the State Department.

    MCKINZIE: Did you do studies, after 1949 when NATO was created,
    about military assistance and that kind of thing?

    WRIGHT: I often sat in on committees. We operated by committees there,
    and whenever a request came in the Treasury and the Defense would
    have a committee that tried to coordinate points of view. I was very
    often what they called a resource official in those committees.

    There I had my say; I could say what I wanted to.

    When it came to the technicalities I had very little to contribute. I
    don't know enough about military hardware or strategy. When it came
    to trying to explain the political situation, what the ramifications
    of such a particular act were, I played quite a part on everything
    having to do with the Middle East except the Arab-Israeli issue. On
    that issue I never had anything to say. They didn't want me to
    say anything, because I was convinced Zionist myopia was going to
    "undermine America's larger interest," the very phrase that Mr.

    Acheson used.

    MCKINZIE: At what point was it apparent to you that you weren't
    supposed to say anything?

    WRIGHT: The day that Mr. Henderson told us what Mr. Niles'
    instructions were: "Discipline these fellows if they disagree with
    the President." From then on we knew that we played no part in what
    was going on.

    I met the Israeli desk officer, Will Porter, a few days later in the
    hallway and I said, "Well, what's doing?"

    He said, "If I showed you this telegram, you'd never go back to the
    Middle East again." He said, "From now on no American's life is going
    to be safe out there." It was a statement we had just gotten from
    the White House on something about support for Israel, and he knew
    immediately this is going to undermine our relationship with the Arab
    world. He said that we'll never want to go back there again.

    Well, I've been back there many a time since then and I found a
    very interesting thing. I was always very highly welcomed in the
    Arab world, although I was in the State Department. They had known
    me beforehand, they always separate me as an individual from me as
    a representative of the State Department. The Arabs never attacked
    me or anything. They'd say, "Well, we know you are a friend of ours,
    but why does the Government do this?"

    It was almost impossible to explain to them why the Government
    behaves this way. They'd say, "Don't you have any influence in the
    State Department?"

    I'd say, "No. I'm in it, but I have no influence whatsoever. I'm just
    a spear carrier."

    This same kind of a thing appears in a recent document that has just
    come out. Senator [William] Fulbright's committee sent a member of
    the staff, in November and December of 1973, to talk with all the
    various people in the Middle East. It is a very interesting document,
    "The Middle East Between War and Peace, November-December 1973: a
    staff report prepared for the use of the Subcommittee on Near Eastern
    Affairs of the Committee of Foreign Relations, United States Senate."

    It was published March the 5th, 1974.

    The man who went out there was a young staff officer who specialized in
    Middle Eastern affairs. He's a very capable person and he was in Egypt,
    Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Lebanon. Here we get a firsthand report of
    the reaction between an American official and the Arabs and he says,
    "Constantly they kept asking me, 'Why does the United States behave
    this way?' I couldn't explain it to them."

    Nobody can explain it, because you've got to know how they buy
    congressional and senatorial votes through speeches; how they control
    the five electoral states, New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, etc. You
    have to understand the weighting of the Jewish vote in America and
    the contribution to the party systems. By the time we explained that
    to Arabs they'd say, "But aren't you corrupt?"

    The answer is, "Yes, we're corrupt."

    Try to explain to Arabs why it is that we have this strange phenomenon
    in American life. We ignore our basic interests in the area and
    support something for which we get no returns whatsoever.

    What do we get out of supporting Israel? Nothing but problems, bills,
    debts, and embarrassment. Natural friends from the point of view of
    strategy, anti-communism, and oil, are all allied to the Arab world.

    They keep saying, "Why don't you understand this?" And you have to say,
    "You don't understand the American system."

    This staff reporter constantly says, "I couldn't explain to them why we
    behave the way we do, because by the time you explain it they have lost
    their respect for American institutions and American Government." This
    is just a fact, and I have lost my respect for it as it deals in the
    Middle East. In other areas I don't know that we have such control
    as we have in that Arab-Israeli issue, but anyone who goes out there
    and talks to the Arabs will be asked, "Well, you're a decent fellow;
    you're intelligent. Why is it that you insult us all the time and
    support these people occupying our territory?"

    [This indicates a great deal of cynicism on my part but the Senate
    Ethics Code of April 1, 1977 indicates how cynical the U.S. public
    has become because of the many ways Congressmen get funds--and sell
    their votes. See Milton Goldin, "Why they Give--American Jews and
    Their Charities" which illustrates the power of wealthy Jews.]

    MCKINZIE: At the time that Auschwitz and Buchenwald and all those
    places were being revealed to people, there was a massive sentiment
    in favor of moving Jewish refugees out of Germany to some place. Did
    you have any ideas for a viable alternative to the creation of Israel?

    WRIGHT: Yes, this was in 1945. I briefed Chief of Staff Eisenhower
    one day on the situation in the Middle East and pointed out all of
    these things.

    He interrupted me in the middle of the talk. (Eisenhower was, by the
    way a very vocal person. Marshall sat there looking like a great big
    bear and never said anything. You could talk for an hour and you hadn't
    the least idea whether it was registering or not. Eisenhower is very
    different. He'd interrupt you, he would tell stories, very much the
    social character.) I was telling this story about how they were using
    this problem of the hundred thousand refugees in order to get them into
    Palestine. This was being used as an effort to help build up a Jewish
    community to sufficient size in order to justify a Jewish state. He
    suddenly interrupted me. He said, "You know, I walked through all
    those camps in Germany. I looked upon those bodies and those people
    heaped up there and skeletons. I do not believe that these people who
    went through that experience could ever become human beings again." In
    other words, they'd been so nervously upset they would be neurotic. He
    said, "I'm not in favor of bringing them to the United States because
    this whole generation of Jews from Europe will have to undergo a long
    process of getting away from the fears of what's happened there."

    This is just his remark and he threw his heart in this talk. I said
    to President Eisenhower, "You know, if we move these 100 thousand
    we will create this kind of problem in the Middle East. Instead we
    should bring them here; it is our culture that created this problem.

    It was the Europeans who destroyed the Jewish community; hated them
    and punished them. It's up to us to try to rectify ourselves."

    So at that time the Stratton bill was up. It was to bring, I think,
    200 thousand of these Jewish refugees to America. I was in favor of
    that. "Let's bring them to America. Here's where they'll find a home
    and a much more normal life. While there's some anti-Jewishness in
    America it's very light, it's nothing important. Jews have risen to
    high positions in America, and if there's anywhere in the world that
    they have a chance, it's here. If they go to a Jewish state, this
    concept of paranoia, 'the world hates us, we've got to establish a
    state, completely independent and exclusively ours,' it will transfer
    the problem from Europe to the Middle East." That was my argument.

    So often when I was discussing this with people in the State Department
    or other places I've said, "We ought to support the Stratton bill."

    The strange thing was, it was the Zionists who torpedoed the Stratton
    bill. They did not want Jews to come to America. Their purpose was to
    build up a Jewish state, and if these Jews came to America they would
    not have enough people in Palestine to do so. What they did was to
    torpedo it and to see that it never even got a hearing. The Stratton
    bill was, I think the healthiest thing to do for the Jews and for
    ourselves. We would have paid the price of European cruelty. As it
    was we shipped these people off to Israel where they've developed
    what was called the Masada complex, "The world's against us. We've
    got to destroy the Arabs, expand our kingdom and defend ourselves
    even to the last Jew." Golda Meir has it and all the rest of them
    have it. The concept of persecution was moved from Europe down to
    the Middle East where they saw the Arabs as their enemies. It was
    really the Arabs who have always helped the Jews throughout history,
    they never persecuted the Jews the way the Christians have done. What
    the U.S. did was to save ourselves by shifting this problem over to
    the Middle East. We did not solve the problem at all.

    I might mention right now that many of those same Jews want to come
    to America. One of the fascinating things emerged only recently; of
    these Jews going from Russia to Israel, 13 percent have already left
    Israel to come to other parts of the world. In other words, Israel is
    a staging area to get out of Russia. Then they want to go somewhere
    else, like Latin-America or the United States. [New York Times
    magazine, January 16, 1977. Article by Feron "Israelies in New York"
    states 335,000 Israelies have migrated to the U.S. and Canada. Jews
    leaving Russia do not want to go to Israel. In 1976 out of 12,000
    Jews who left Russia, only 5,000 went to Israel. The U.S.A. finally
    issued 7,000 special visas to clear them out of "refugee" camps in
    Europe.] This is like Pavel Litvinov. He applied to go to Israel,
    but the moment he got to Austria he used his influence on American
    Jews to come here to teach.

    Some of them never even go to Israel, some go to Israel and immediately
    leave. Israel is not turning out to be their haven; the United States
    is. This is what we should have done back in 1945-46.

    We should have paid the price of our own guilt and our own cruelty
    rather than ask the Arabs to handle this problem.

    MCKINZIE: I am interested in the reluctance of the American Jewish
    community to support the Stratton bill in the desire not to have a
    large influx of Jews, particularly Eastern European Jews.

    WRIGHT: Well, there were no other Jews wanted to come here. The Jews in
    the Arab world had no idea about what America was. The European Jew,
    who had relatives here and knew about America, looked upon it as a
    land of hope. I'm sure right now if we said, "We'll take 3 million
    Jews from Israel," they'd line up in front of our consulates.

    A recent survey in Israel about two months ago was made, one of these
    Harris poll types of things. It pointed out that over 10 percent of all
    of the Israelies who were interviewed, out of a thousand five hundred,
    indicated a desire to come to America. Twenty and a half percent of
    those between the ages of 19 and 29 wanted to come to America.

    In other words, this is where they want to get rid of the problems of
    the world in which they are living. They are becoming too burdensome
    to bear. This is what we wanted to avoid in the Middle East, and what
    President Truman created. [For the disintegration of Israeli morale
    since 1973, read Terrence Smith in Saturday Review, February 5, 1977
    "Report from a troubled people." Also George Ball, op. cit., pp.

    464-65. Time is running out for Israel. Beleaguered Israel is no
    longer the bright promise it was a few years ago."]

    MCKINZIE: To what extent were any State Department actions in the
    Middle East influenced by American business interests; either during
    the war, or in the Truman years?

    WRIGHT: You're thinking in terms of so-called imperialism?

    MCKINZIE: I'm thinking in terms of economic opportunity and the
    imperatives of having raw materials and markets.

    WRIGHT: There are really two points of view here. One is that a
    nation creates its own morality by serving itself. I mean the ultimate
    morality is the survival and the enrichment of the nation.

    Whether you like it or not, this is a rule that's been existing for
    300 years in Europe and we have taken it over. What is moral is what
    is good for your nation, and whether it's good for some other nation
    makes no difference at all. I've often protested American policies
    in the outside world because they are good for America, but they are
    bad for someone else. This question of morality is a very tough one
    to answer, because the national interest is in getting as much wealth
    as possible or using it for a higher standard of living. It's not a
    bad goal, but the trouble is that we are doing this at the expense of
    others. We are now using up the world's iron resources, the world's
    cooper resources, and the world's oil resources. Thirty-five percent
    of all the oil produced in the world is used in America. This is
    fantastic. It is of national interest to keep up this kind of wasteful
    use of oil? The average American would say yes.

    This influence is dominating American policy and has been for a long
    time, because oil is the symbol of automobiles. Automobiles are a
    symbol of a standard of living. All of these interactions of oil and
    automobiles will be threatened if we do not have access to Middle
    East oil.

    So, when it comes to national interests, you get into a terrible
    hassle. What are national interests, and are they moral or not? I think
    they're immoral myself, because they are selfish. They look at only
    a small part of the world's population and ignore the rest. I'm not
    sure but what we axe heading into one of the worst periods in human
    history. We will be the richest people and will have exploited the
    wealth of most other people. It's going to create a hatred of America
    as time goes on. I look forward to when oil ends in the Middle East,
    what will be left? The answer is not very much. During this period
    we are simply exploiting the world's resources for a higher standard
    of living; while the world is going to face, within the next 10 or
    15 years, starvation. What's going to happen?

    Whether they'll turn Communist or not I don't know, but I'm sure
    there's going to be a tremendous amount of anti-Americanism. We are
    sitting on the top of a period of wealth and privilege, and it's
    coming at the expense of other people.

    This is my attitude: it's a world view, rather than just a national
    view. I think that as a nation we ought to be aware of what we
    are doing to other people. "If it's good for us, to hell with
    everybody else," is the general attitude. "Let's get the iron and
    everything we need, and use it here in America. The devil will take
    the hindermost." The devil is going to take the hindermost unless we
    learn some discipline.

    To me this question of national interest has always been a very
    troublesome one. Often I've been asked to write papers. What is our
    national interest in Greece? What is it in Turkey? What in Iran? What
    in the Arab-Israeli issue? We used to have what we used to call
    position papers, and I was the custodian of the position papers as
    Mr. Henderson's assistant. I had a little file with all of these.

    "What is our interest here, there?" As I read through these things
    they were always, "What can we get out of it?" A very selfish point
    of view; we ought to be friendly with these people because we can
    get something from them.

    I always felt that there's an end to this somewhere. National interest
    cannot be interpreted in terms of material goods alone.

    Unfortunately, this is the American story. If we want land, we'll
    just take it from the Indians. They don't use it well, so send them
    off to reservations. Then if we find oil or coal on them, take the
    reservations. Our whole attitude is that the Indian is an un-people;
    they don't belong in the world. Yet, at the same time, we're somewhat
    troubled in spirit when we read about Wounded Knee. Why do we treat
    the Indians that way? The devil is within us, he's not somebody
    outside with horns. He is us.

    I see myself caught in a dilemma. National interests do mean the
    welfare of the United States, but do they not also mean conserving
    other people's resources and helping them conserve them? This
    would mean developing technical interests and developments in other
    countries, but not bringing that stuff here. This is not going to
    happen simply because of American tradition and what we call national
    interests.

    I've always seen national interests as destructive, ultimately. They
    help temporarily. They hold a people together, give them a cohesiveness
    and a harmonious feeling of belonging to one another. In the long run
    I think it's going to destroy the possibility of a world order. Then
    we'll have to pay a high price for what I think is a highly immoral,
    limited concept of national interest.

    Perhaps this is because I was born abroad and lived in other
    countries. I've had to answer these questions, "Why do you behave
    the way you do?" I've spent more than half of my life in the Middle
    East and I've had to face these all the time. I've become a little
    bit apologetic about the way Americans behave and what we think of
    as our national interests.

    MCKINZIE: Other than Aramco was there a powerful American business
    community in the Middle East during this period?

    WRIGHT: There was no powerful influence. There are many small ones,
    a few banks and missionary enterprises, but these were not political.

    Their whole attitude was, "We're out here to do whatever our
    function is." I was a missionary and always took the attitude,
    "I'm not representing the United States here. I am a U.S. citizen,
    but I'm out here representing an educational experience." I always
    saw myself in connection with helping to collect information and
    passing it on to other people.

    This had nothing to do with oil or anything else, the result being
    that educational and religious people did not think in political
    terms. We thought in terms of a function of society and played no part
    in politics. I did to a degree; a few of us broke away and got into
    Government. I never intended to go into Government, this is the last
    thing that I'd have ever said if somebody said, "What do you want to
    do?" It is my background that dragged me into it. I really feel it was
    useful in many ways, perhaps I use my experience better in Government
    than in an educational institution. But national interests are awfully
    dangerous if they're thought of purely in narrow terms. This is one of
    the tragedies of Israel; it sees its national interest as only having
    to do with Jews, and ignores completely the problem of the Arab. Now
    they've got to face the problem. They are living in the midst of an
    Arab world, and it's going to be one of the great shocks. They've got
    to change from their picture of themselves as a separate chosen people
    to being a people living in a society they consider enemies. There's
    no solution for Israel other than to integrate itself into the Arab
    world. [It was folly to establish a theoretic, ethnically exclusive,
    ambitious Zionist Jewish state in the heart of the Arab world. To
    impose its will upon the Arabs, Israel has to resort to the sword. All
    the assumptions of Herzl's Zionism turned out to be false. Most Jews
    do not want to live in a theoretic Jewish state. Israeli Jews have
    proven incapable of granting non-Jews equality. Israel survives only
    because of large transfers of arms and money from the U.S.A.--a very
    un-healthy situation for all involved. March 29, 1977 Edwin M.

    Wright]

    MCKINZIE: Mr. Wright, thank you very much.

    [Top of the Page | Notices and Restrictions | Interview Transcript |
    List of Subjects Discussed]

    List of Subjects Discussed

    Acheson, Dean Alliance for Progress Allon, Yigal Alsop, Stewart
    American Christian Committee for Palestine American-Israeli Public
    Affairs Committee American University, Cairo, Egypt American Zionist
    Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry on Palestine Arab-Israeli War
    (1956) Arab-Israeli War (1973) Arab League Arab states Arab-U.S.

    relations Aramco Oil Company Artaxerxes, King Association of Presidents
    of Major Jewish organizations Aswan Dam Azerbaijan crisis, Iran

    Ball, George W. Barkley, Alben W. Baron, Salo Baruch, Bernard M. Ben
    Gurion, David Berlin, Meyer Bevin, Ernest Bible (Hebrew) Biltmore
    convention Blaustein, Jacob Brandeis, Louis Byrnes, James F. Byroade,
    Henry

    Cairo, Egypt Carleton, Alfred Carter, Jimmy Celler, Emmanuel Central
    Treaty Organization China China Lobby Churchill, Winston Clifford,
    Clark M. Columbia University Communism, popular appeal of Congress,
    U.S., Zionist influence on Costa Rica Crum, Bartley

    Dewey, Thomas E. Dreyfus, Louis G. Dulles, John F. Dyan, Moshe

    East Ghor Canal Project Egypt Eisenhower, Dwight D. Elath (Epstein)
    Eliahu E1-Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt Elliot, William Y. "Eretz
    Israel" Esther, Book of

    First Amendment, U.S. Constitution Foreign Relations Committee Report
    on the Middle East (1974), U.S. Senate Foreign policy, Middle East:
    American economic interest in, morality of Zionist influence on
    Frankfurter, Felix Friedman, Milton

    Galilee, Sea of Giles, Barney M. Goldman, Nathan Great Britain Greece
    Guerrillas, Palestinian Gulf of Aqaba Gush, Emunim

    Haiti Hart, Parker T. Henderson, Loy W. Herzl, Theodor Humphrey,
    Hubert H.

    Ickes, Harold L. Indians, American, treatment of Iran Iraq Islamic
    theocracy Israel: Arab states, opposition to economic development of
    Arab states, relationship with destruction of in 70 A.D. East Ghor
    Canal, destroyed by erosion of U.S. support for establishment of,
    U.S. support internal dissension Palestinian guerrillas, war against
    recognition of by U.S. statehood, early concept of theocratic state,
    as a discrimatory U.S. support for, mistaken policy of

    Jacobson, Edward Jessup, Henry H. Jewish Agency for Palestine Jewish
    Telegraph Agency Jews, definition of Johnson, Joseph Johnson, Lyndon
    B. Jordan Jordan River Joseph, Dov

    Kennedy, John F. Khouri, Fred J. Kissinger, Henry Klavan, Israel
    Kolleck, Teddy Kraft, Joseph

    Lebanon Liberia Litvinov, Pavel Locke, Edwin A., Jr. Loretz, Norman P.

    McCarthy, Joseph R. McCormick Theological Seminary McGhee, George C.

    Magnus, Judah Marshall, George C. Marx, Karl "Masada Complex," Maxwell,
    Rabbi Meir, Golda Minor, Harold Muskie, Edmund S.

    Nathan, Robert National Jewish Post New York Gubnatorial election of
    1946 Niles, David K. Nixon, Richard M.

    Office of Strategic Services (OSS) Oil, Middle East Orthodox Jews
    in Israel

    Palestine: general situation of Jewish emigration to Partition of
    trusteeship for, proposed Persia, ancient Persian Gulf Philippines
    Porter, William

    Refugees, Jewish Refugees, Palestinian Regional development, Middle
    East Republican National Committee Rockefeller, Nelson Romulo, Carlos
    P. Roosevelt, Franklin D. Rostow, Robert Roxas, Manuel

    Sadat, Anwar Samuel, Edwin Saudi Arabia Shahak, Israel Shiloah, R.

    Zaslani Soviet Union "Specialist Corps," U.S. State Department Stalin,
    Joseph V. State Department, U.S., anti-Zionist purge of Stratton bill
    Suez Canalq Suez Crisis (1956) Syria

    Tabriz, Iran Tel Aviv, Palestine Truman Doctrine Truman, Harry
    S.: aid to Greece-Turkey Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry on
    Palestine, opposes recommendations of Azerbaijan crisis in Iran,
    ultimatum to Soviet Union on British mandate of Palestine, critical
    of impersonation of by Zionist agents Israel, decision to recognize
    State of Israel, announces recogniton of "Jewish State," first use
    of term as President, critique of State Department advisors, accuses
    of anti-Semitism Zionists, threatened by Turkey

    Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America United Nations UN
    San Francisco Conference

    Wadsworth, George Weiss, Sampson R. Weizman, Chaim White House staff,
    dictation of foreign policy by Winchell, Walter Winetal, Theodore
    Wise, Stephen S. Wooster College World Jewish Congress World Zionist
    Organization World's natural resources, U.S. exploitation of

    Yarmuk River

    Zionism

    Opened August 1977 Harry S. Truman Library Independence, Missouri

    http://www.trumanlibrary.org/oralhist/wr ight.htm

    http://www.aljazeerah.info/Opinion%20edi torials/2006%20Opinion%20Editorials/October/2%20o/ State%20Department%20under%20Truman,%20on%20Zionis m%20and%20Israel%20By%20Edwin%20Wright.htm
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