Chapter 7
THE
BOLSHEVIKS RETURN TO NEW YORK
Martens is very much in the limelight. There appears to be no doubt about his connection with the Guarantee [sic] Trust Company, Though it is surprising that so large and influential an
Scotland
Yard Intelligence Report, London, 19191
Following on the initial successes of the revolution, the Soviets wasted little time in attempting through former U.S. residents to establish diplomatic relations with and propaganda outlets in the United States. In June 1918 the American consul in Harbin cabled Washington:
Albert R.
Williams, bearer Department passport 52,913 May 15, 1917 proceeding United
States to establish information bureau for Soviet Government for which he has
written authority. Shall I visa?2
Washington
denied the visa and so Williams was unsuccessful in his attempt to establish an
information bureau here. Williams was followed by Alexander Nyberg (alias
Santeri Nuorteva), a former Finnish immigrant to the United States in January
1912, who became the first operative Soviet representative in the United
States. Nyberg was an activtive propagandist. In fact, in 1919 be was,
according to J. Edgar Hoover (in a letter to the U.S. Committee on Foreign
Affairs), "the forerunner of LCAK Martens anti with Gregory Weinstein the
most active individual of official Bolshevik propaganda in the United
States."3
Nyberg was
none too successful as a diplomatic representative or, ultimately, as a
propagandist. The State Departmment files record an interview with Nyberg by
the counselors' office, dated January 29, 1919. Nyberg was accompanied by H.
Kellogg, described as "an American citizen, graduate of Harvard,"
and, more surprisingly, by a Mr. McFarland, an attorney for the Hearst
organization. The State Department records show that Nyberg made "many
misstatements in regard to the attitude to the Bolshevik Government" and
claimed that Peters, the Lett terrorist police chief in Petrograd, was merely a
"kind-hearted poet." Nyberg requested the department to cable Lenin,
"on the theory that it might be helpful in bringing about the conference
proposed by the Allies at Paris."4 The proposed message, a rambling appeal
to Lenin to gain international acceptance appearing at the Paris Conference,
was not sent.5
Alexander
Nyberg (Nuorteva) was then let go and replaced by the Soviet Bureau, which was
established in early 1919 in the World Tower Building, 110 West 40 Street, New
York City. The bureau was headed by a German citizen, Ludwig C. A. K. Martens,
who is usually billed as the first ambassador of the Soviet Union in the United
States, and who, up to that time, had been vice president of Weinberg &
Posner, an engineering firm located at 120 Broadway, New York City. Why the
"ambassador" and his offices were located in New York rather than in
Washington, D.C. was not explained; it does suggest that trade rather than
diplomacy was its primary objective. In any event, the bureau promptly issued a
call lot Russian trade with the United States. Industry had collapsed and
Russia direly needed machinery, railway goods, clothing, chemicals, drugs —
indeed, everything utilized by a modern civilization. In exchange the Soviets
offered gold and raw materials. The Soviet Bureau then proceeded to arrange
contracts with American firms, ignoring the facts of the embargo and nonrecognition.
At the same time it was providing financial support for the emerging Communist
Party U.S.A.6
On May 7,
1919, the State Department slapped down business intervention in behalf of the
bureau (noted elsewhere),7 and repudiated Ludwig Martens, the Soviet
Bureau, and the Bolshevik government o1 Russia. This official rebuttal did not
deter the eager order-hunters in American industry. When the Soviet Bureau
offices were raided on June 12, 1919, by representatives of the Lusk Committee
of the state of New York, files of letters to and from American businessmen,
representing almost a thousand firms, were unearthed. The British Home Office
Directorate of Intelligence "Special Report No. 5 (Secret)," issued
from Scotland Yard, London, July 14, 1919, and written by Basil H. Thompson,
was based on this seized material; the report noted:
. . .
Every effort was made from the first by Martens and his associates to arouse
the interest of American capitalists and there are grounds tot believing that
the Bureau has received financial support from some Russian export firms, as
well as from the Guarantee [sic] Trust Company, although this firm has denied
the allegation that it is financing Martens' organisation.8
It was
noted by Thompson that the monthly rent of the Soviet Bureau offices was $300
and the office salaries came to about $4,000. Martens' funds to pay these bills
came partly from Soviet couriers — such as John Reed and Michael Gruzenberg —
who brought diamonds from Russia for sale in the U.S., and partly from American
business firms, including the Guaranty Trust Company of New York. The British
reports summarized the files seized by the Lusk investigators from the bureau
offices, and this summary is worth quoting in full:
(1) There
was an intrigue afoot about the time the President first went to France to get
the Administration to use Nuorteva as an intermediary with the Russian Soviet
Government, with a view to bring about its recognition by America. Endeavour
was made to bring Colonel House into it, and there is a long and interesting
letter to Frederick C. Howe, on whose support and sympathy Nuorteva appeared to
rely. There are other records connecting Howe with Martens and Nuorteva.
(2) There
is a file of correspondence with Eugene Debs.
(3) A
letter from Amos Pinchot to William Kent of the U.S. Tariff Commission in an
envelope addressed to Senator Lenroot, introduces Evans Clark "now in the
Bureau of the Russian Soviet Republic." "He wants to talk to you
about the recognition of Kolchak and the raising of the blockade, etc."
(4) A
report to Felix Frankfurter, dated 27th May, 1919 speaks of the virulent
campaign vilifying the Russian Government.
(5) There
is considerable correspondence between a Colonel and Mrs. Raymond Robbins [sic]
and Nuorteva, both in 1918 and 1919. In July 1918 Mrs. Robbins asked Nuorteva
for articles for "Life and Labour," the organ of the National Women's
Trade League. In February and March, 1919, Nuorteva tried, through Robbins, to
get invited to give evidence before the Overman Committee. He also wanted
Robbins to denounce the Sisson documents.
(6) In a
letter from the Jansen Cloth Products Company, New York, to Nuorteva, dated
March 30th, 1918, E. Werner Knudsen says that he understands that Nuorteva
intends to make arrangements for the export of food-stuffs through Finland and
he offers his services. We have a file on Knudsen, who passed information to
and from Germany by way of Mexico with regard to British shipping.9
Ludwig
Martens, the intelligence report continued, was in touch with all the leaders
of "the left" in the United States, including John Reed, Ludwig Lore,
and Harry J. Boland, the Irish rebel. A vigorous campaign against Aleksandr
Kolchak in Siberia had been organized by Martens. The report concludes:
[Martens']
organization is a powerful weapon for supporting the Bolshevik cause in the
United States and... he is in close touch with the promoters of political
unrest throughout the whole American continent.
The Scotland
Yard list of personnel employed by the Soviet Bureau in New York coincides
quite closely with a similar list in the Lusk Committee files in Albany, New
York, which are today open for public inspection.10 There is one essential difference
between the two lists: the British analysis included the name "Julius
Hammer" whereas Hammer was omitted from the Lusk Committee report.11 The British report characterizes Julius
Hammer as follows:
In Julius
Hammer, Martens has a real Bolshevik and ardent Left Wing adherent, who came
not long ago from Russia. He was one of the organizers of the Left Wing
movement in New York, and speaks at meetings on the same platform with such
Left Wing leaders as Reed, Hourwich, Lore and Larkin.
There also
exists other evidence of Hammer's work in behalf of the Soviets. A letter from
National City Bank, New York, to the U.S. Treasury Department stated that
documents received by the bank from Martens were "witnessed by a Dr.
Julius Hammer for the Acting Director of the Financial Department" of the
Soviet Bureau.12
The Hammer
family has had close ties with Russia and the Soviet regime from 1917 to the
present. Armand Hammer is today able to acquire the most lucrative of Soviet
contracts. Jacob, grandfather of Armand Hammer, and Julius were born in Russia.
Armand, Harry, and Victor, sons of Julius, were born in the United States and
are U.S. citizens. Victor was a well-known artist; his son — also named Armand
— and granddaughter are Soviet citizens and reside in the Soviet Union. Armand
Hammer is chairman of Occidental Petroleum Corporation and has a son, Julian,
who is director of advertising and publications for Occidental Petroleum.
Julius
Hammer was a prominent member and financier of the left wing of the Socialist
Party. At its 1919 convention Hammer served with Bertram D. Wolfe and Benjamin
Gitlow on the steering committee that gave birth to the Communist Party of the
U.S.
In 1920
Julius Hammer was given a sentence of three-and-one-half to fifteen years in
Sing Sing for criminal abortion. Lenin suggested — with justification — that
Julius was "imprisoned on the charge of practicing illegal abortions but
in fact because of communism."13 Other U.S. Communist Party members were
sentenced to jail for sedition or deported to the Soviet Union. Soviet
representatives in the United States made strenuous but unsuccessful efforts to
have Julius and his fellow party members released.
Another
prominent member of the Soviet Bureau was the assistant secretary, Kenneth
Durant, a former aide to Colonel House. In 1920 Durant was identified as a
Soviet courier. Appendix 3 reproduces a letter to Kenneth Durant that was
seized by the U.S. Department of Justice in 1920 and that describes Durant's close
relationship with the Soviet hierarchy. It was inserted into the record of a
House committee's hearings in 1920, with the following commentary:
MR.
NEWTON: It is a mailer of interest to this committee to know what was the
nature of that letter, and I have a copy of the letter that I Want inserted in
the record in connection with the witness' testimony. MR. Mason: That letter
has never been shown to the witness. He said that he never saw the letter, and
had asked to see it, and that the department had refused to show it to him. We
would not put any witness on the stand and ask him to testify to a letter
without seeing it.
MR.
NEWTON: The witness testified that he has such a letter, and he testified that
they found it in his coat in the trunk, I believe. That letter was addressed to
a Mr. Kenneth Durant, and that letter had within it another envelope which was
likewise sealed. They were opened by the Government officials and a photostatic
copy made. The letter, I may say, is signed by a man by the name of
"Bill." It refers specifically to soviet moneys on deposit in
Christiania, Norway, a portion of which they waist turned over here to
officials of the soviet government in this country.14
Kenneth
Durant, who acted as Soviet courier in the transfer of funds, was treasurer lot
the Soviet Bureau and press secretary and publisher of Soviet Russia, the
official organ of the Soviet Bureau. Durant came from a well-to-do Philadelphia
family. He spent most of his life in the service of the Soviets, first in
charge of publicity work at the Soviet Bureau then from 1923 to 1944 as manager
of the Soviet Tass bureau in the United States. J. Edgar Hoover described
Durant as "at all times . . . particularly active in the interests of
Martens and of the Soviet government."15
Felix
Frankfurter — later justice of the Supreme Courts — was also prominent in the
Soviet Bureau files. A letter from Frankfurter to Soviet agent Nuorteva is
reproduced in Appendix 3 and suggests that Frankfurter had some influence with
the bureau.
In brief,
the Soviet Bureau could not have been established without influential
assistance from within the United States. Part of this assistance came from
specific influential appointments to the Soviet Bureau staff and part came from
business firms outside the bureau, firms that were reluctant to make their
support publicly known.
On February 1, 1920, the front page of the New York
Times carried a boxed notation stating that Martens was to be arrested and
deported to Russia. At the same time Martens was being sought as a witness to
appear before a subcommittee of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
investigating Soviet activity in the United States. After lying low for a few
days Martens appeared before the committee, claimed diplomatic privilege, and
refused to give up "official" papers in his possession. Then after a
flurry of publicity, Martens "relented," handed over his papers, and
admitted to revolutionary activities in the United States with the ultimate aim
of overthrowing the capitalist system.
Martens boasted to the news media and Congress that
big corporations, the Chicago packers among them, were aiding the Soviets:
Affording to Martens, instead of farthing on
propaganda among the radicals and the proletariat he has addressed most of his
efforts to winning to the side of Russia the big business and manufacturing
interests of this country, the packers, the United States Steel Corporation,
the Standard Oil Company and other big concerns engaged in international trade.
Martens asserted that most of the big business houses of the country were
aiding him in his effort to get the government to recognize the Soviet
government.16
This claim was expanded by A. A. Heller, commercial
attache at the Soviet Bureau:
"Among the people helping us to get recognition
from the State Department are the big Chit ago packers, Armour, Swift, Nelson
Morris and Cudahy ..... Among the other firms are . . . the American Steel
Export Company, the Lehigh Machine Company, the Adrian Knitting Company, the
International Harvester Company, the Aluminum Goods Manufacturing Company, the
Aluminum Company of America, the American Car and Foundry Export Company,
M.C.D. Borden & Sons."17
The New York Times followed up these claims and
reported comments of the firms named. "I have never heard of this man
[Martens] before in my life," declared G. F. Swift, Jr., in charge of the
export department of Swift & Co. "Most certainly I am sure that we have
never had any dealings with him of any kind."18 The Times added that O. H. Swift, the
only other member of the firm that could be contacted, "also denied any
knowledge whatever of Martens or his bureau in New York." The Swift
statement was evasive at best. When the Lusk Committee investigators seized the
Soviet Bureau files, they found correspondence between the bureau and almost
all the firms named by Martens and Heller. The "list of firms that offered
to do business with Russian Soviet Bureau," compiled from these files,
included an entry (page 16), "Swift and Company, Union Stock Yards,
Chicago, Ill." In other words, Swift had been in communication with
Martens despite its denial to the New York Times.
The New York Times contacted United States Steel and
reported, "Judge Elbert H. Gary said last night that there was no
foundation for the statement with the Soviet representative here had had any
dealings with the United States Steel Corporation." This is technically
correct. The United States Steel Corporation is not listed in the Soviet files,
but the list does contain (page 16) an affiliate, "United States Steel
Products Co., 30 Church Street, New York City."
The Lusk Committee list records the following about
other firms mentioned by Martens and Heller: Standard Oil — not listed. Armour
8c Co., meatpackers — listed as "Armour Leather" and "Armour
& Co. Union Stock Yards, Chicago." Morris Go., meatpackers, is listed
on page 13. Cudahy — listed on page 6. American Steel Export Co. — listed on
page 2 as located at the Woolworth Building; it had offered to trade with the
USSR. Lehigh Machine Co. — not listed. Adrian Knitting Co. — listed on page 1.
International Harvester Co. — listed on page 11. Aluminum Goods Manufacturing
Co. — listed on page 1. Aluminum Company of America — not listed. American Car
and Foundry Export — the closest listing is "American Car Co. —
Philadelphia." M.C.D. Borden 8c Sons — listed as located at 90 Worth
Street, on page 4.
Then on Saturday, June 21, 1919, Santeri Nuorteva
(Alexander Nyberg) confirmed in a press interview the role of International
Harvester:
Q: [by New York Times reporter]: What is your
business?
A: Purchasing director tot Soviet Russia.
Q: What did you do to accomplish this?
A: Addressed myself to American manufacturers.
Q: Name them.
A: International Harvester Corporation is among them.
Q: Whom did you see?
A: Mr. Koenig.
Q: Did you go to see him?
A: Yes.
Q: Give more names.
A: I went to see so many, about 500 people and I
can't remember all the names. We have files in the office disclosing them.19
In brief, the claims by Heller and Martens relating
to their widespread contacts among certain U.S. firms20 were substantiated by the office files
of the Soviet Bureau. On the other hand, for their own good reasons, these
firms appeared unwilling to confirm their activities.
In addition to Guaranty Trust and the private banker
Boissevain in New York, some European bankers gave direct help to maintain and
expand the Bolshevik hold on Russia. A 1918 State Department report from our
Stockholm embassy details these financial transfers. The department commended
its author, stating that his "reports on conditions in Russia, the spread
of Bolshevism in Europe, and financial questions . . . have proved most helpful
to the Department. Department is much gratified by your capable handling of the
legation's business."21 According to this report, one of these
"Bolshevik bankers" acting in behalf of the emerging Soviet regime
was Dmitri Rubenstein, of the former Russo-French bank in Petrograd.
Rubenstein, an associate of the notorious Grigori Rasputin, had been jailed in
prerevolutionary Petrograd in connection with the sale of the Second Russian
Life Insurance Company. The American manager and director of the Second Russian
Life Insurance Company was John MacGregor Grant, who was located at 120
Broadway, New York City. Grant was also the New York representative of
Putiloff's Banque Russo-Asiatique. In August 1918 Grant was (for unknown
reasons) listed on the Military Intelligence Bureau "suspect list."22 This may have occurred because Olof
Aschberg in early 1918 reported opening a foreign credit in Petrograd
"with the John MacGregor Grant Co., export concern, which it [Aschberg]
finances in Sweden and which is financed in America by the Guarantee [sic]
Trust Co."23 After the revolution Dmitri Rubenstein
moved to Stockholm and became financial agent for the Bolsheviks. The State
Department noted that while Rubenstein was "not a Bolshevik, he has been
unscrupulous in moneT' making, and it is suspected that he may be making the
contemplated visit to America in Bolshevik interest and for Bolshevik pay.24
Another Stockholm "Bolshevik banker" was
Abram Givatovzo, brother-in-law of Trotsky and Lev Kamenev. The State
Department report asserted that while Givatovzo pretended to be "very
anti-Bolshevik," he had in fact received "large sums" of moneT'
from the Bolsheviks by courier for financing revolutionary operations. Givatovzo
was part of a syndicate that included Denisoff of the former Siberian bank,
Kamenka of the Asoff Don Bank, and Davidoff of the Bank of Foreign Commerce.
This syndicate sold the assets of the former Siberian Bank to the British
government.
Yet another tsarist private banker, Gregory Lessine,
handled Bolshevik business through the firm of Dardel and Hagborg. Other
"Bolshevik bankers" named in the report are stirrer and Jakob
Berline, who previously controlled, through his wife, the Petrograd Nelkens Bank.
Isidor Kon was used by these bankers as an agent.
The most interesting of these Europe-based bankers
operating in behalf of the Bolsheviks was Gregory Benenson, formerly chairman
in Petrograd of the Russian and English Bank — a bank which included on its
board of directors Lord Balfour (secretary of state for foreign affairs in
England) and Sir I. M. H. Amory, as well as S. H. Cripps and H. Guedalla.
Benenson traveled to Petrograd after the revolution, then on to Stockholm. He
came. said one State Department official, "bringing to my knowledge ten
million rubles with him as he offered them to me at a high price for the use of
our Embassy Archangel." Benenson had an arrangement with the Bolsheviks to
exchange sixty million rubles for £1.5 million sterling.
In January 1919 the private bankers in Copenhagen
that were associated with Bolshevik institutions became alarmed by rumors that
the Danish political police had marked the Soviet legation and those persons in
contact with the Bolsheviks for expulsion from Denmark. These bankers and the
legation hastily attempted to remove their funds from Danish banks — in
particular, seven million rubles from the Revisionsbanken.25 Also, confidential documents were hidden
in the offices of the Martin Larsen Insurance Company.
Consequently, we can identify a pattern of assistance
by capitalist bankers for the Soviet Union. Some of these were American
bankers, some were tsarist bankers who were exiled and living in Europe, and
some were European bankers. Their common objective was profit, not ideology.
The questionable aspects of the work of these
"Bolshevik bankers," as they were called, arises from the framework
of contemporary events in Russia. In 1919 French, British, and American troops
were fighting Soviet troops in the Archangel region. In one clash in April
1919, for example, American casualties were one officer, .five men killed, and
nine missing.26 Indeed, at one point in 1919 General
Tasker H. Bliss, the U.S. commander in Archangel, affirmed the British
statement that "Allied troops in the Murmansk and Archangel districts were
in danger of extermination unless they were speedily reinforced."27 Reinforcements were then on the way
under the command of Brigadier General W. P. Richardson.
In brief, while Guaranty Trust and first-rank American
firms were assisting the formation of the Soviet Bureau in New York, American
troops were in conflict with Soviet troops in North Russia. Moreover, these
conflicts were daily reported in the New York Times, presumably read by these
bankers and businessmen. Further, as we shall see in chapter ten, the financial
circles that were supporting the Soviet Bureau in New York also formed in New
York the "United Americans" — a virulently anti-Communist
organization predicting bloody revolution, mass starvation, and panic in the
streets of New York.
Footnotes:
1Copy in U.S. State Dept. Decimal File, 316-22-656.
2Ibid., 861.00/1970.
3U.S., House, Committee on Foreign Affairs, Conditions
in Russia, 66th Cong., 3d sess., 1921, p. 78.
4U.S. State Dept. Decimal File, 316-19-1120.
5Ibid.
6See Benjamin Gitlow, [U.S., House, Un-American
Propaganda Activities (Washington, 1939), vols. 7-8, p. 4539.
7See p. 119.
8Copy in [U.S. State Dept. Decimal File, 316-22-656.
Confirmation of Guaranty Trust involvement tomes in later intelligence reports.
9On Frederick C. Howe see pp. 16, 177, for an early
statement of the manner in which financiers use society and its problems for
their own ends; on Felix Frankfurter, later Supreme Court justice, see Appendix
3 for an early Frankfurter letter to Nuorteva; on Raymond Robins see p. 100.
10The Lusk Committee list of personnel in the Soviet
Bureau is printed in Appendix 3. The list includes Kenneth Durant, aide to
Colonel House; Dudley Field Malone, appointed by President Wilson as collector
of customs for the Port of New York; and Morris Hillquit, the financial
intermediary between New York banker Eugene Boissevain on the one hand, and
John Reed and Soviet agent Michael Gruzenberg on the other.
11Julius Hammer was the father of Armand Hammer, who
today is chairman of the Occidental Petroleum Corp. of Los Angeles.
12See Appendix 3.
13V. I. Lenin, Polnoe Sobranie Sochinenii, 5th ed.
(Moscow, 1958), 53:267.
14U.S., House, Committee. on Foreign Affairs,
Conditions in Russia, 66th Cong., 3d sess., 1921, p. 75. "Bill" was
William Bobroff, Soviet agent.
15Ibid., p. 78.
16New York Times, November 17, 1919.
17Ibid.
18Ibid.
19New York Times, June 21, 1919.
20See p. 119.
21U.S. State Dept. Decimal File, 861.51/411, November
23, 1918.
22Ibid., 316-125-1212.
23U.S., Department of State, Foreign Relations o! the
United States: 1918, Russia, 1:373.
24U.S. State Dept. Decimal File, 861.00/4878, July,'
21, 1919.
25Ibid., 316-21-115/21.
26New York Times, April 5, 1919.
27Ibid.
No comments:
Post a Comment