Chapter XI
THE
ALLIANCE OF BANKERS AND REVOLUTION
The name Rockefeller does not connote a revolutionary, and my life situation has fostered a careful and cautious attitude that verges on conservatism. I am not given to errant causes...
John D. Rockefeller III, The Second American Revolution (New
York: Harper & Row. 1973)
Evidence already published by George Katkov, Stefan
Possony, and Michael Futrell has established that the return to Russia of Lenin
and his party of exiled Bolsheviks, followed a few weeks later by a party of
Mensheviks, was financed and organized by the German government.1 The necessary funds were transferred in
part through the Nya Banken in Stockholm, owned by Olof Aschberg, and the dual
German objectives were: (a) removal of Russia from the war, and (b) control of
the postwar Russian market.2
We have now gone beyond this evidence to establish a
continuing working relationship between Bolshevik banker Olof Aschberg and the
Morgan-controlled Guaranty Trust Company in New York before, during, and after
the Russian Revolution. In tsarist times Aschberg was the Morgan agent in
Russia and negotiator for Russian loans in the United States; during 1917
Aschberg was financial intermediary for the revolutionaries; and after the
revolution Aschberg became head of Ruskombank, the first Soviet international bank,
while Max May, a vice president of the Morgan-controlled Guaranty Trust, became
director and chief of the Ruskom-bank foreign department. We have presented
documentary evidence of a continuing working relationship between the Guaranty
Trust Company and the Bolsheviks. The directors of Guaranty Trust in 1917 are
listed in Appendix 1.
Moreover, there is evidence of transfers of funds
from Wall Street bankers to international revolutionary activities. For
example, there is the statement (substantiated by a cablegram) by William Boyce
Thompson — a director of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, a large
stockholder in the Rockefeller-controlled Chase Bank, and a financial associate
of the Guggenheims and the Morgans — that he (Thompson) contributed $1 million
to the Bolshevik Revolution for propaganda purposes. Another example is John
Reed, the American member of the Third International executive committee who
was financed and supported by Eugene Boissevain, a private New York banker, and
who was employed by Harry Payne Whitney's Metropolitan
magazine. Whitney was at that time a director of Guaranty Trust. We also
established that Ludwig Martens, the first Soviet "ambassador" to the
United States, was (according to British Intelligence chief Sir Basil Thompson)
backed by funds from Guaranty Trust Company. In tracing Trotsky's funding in
the U.S. we arrived at German sources, yet to be identified, in New York. And
though we do not know the precise German sources of Trotsky's funds, we do know that Von Pavenstedt, the chief
German espionage paymaster in the U.S., was also senior partner of Amsinck
& Co. Amsinck was owned by the ever-present American International
Corporation — also controlled by the J.P. Morgan firm.
Further, Wall Street firms including Guaranty Trust
were involved with Carranza's and Villa's wartime revolutionary activities in
Mexico. We also identified documentary evidence concerning. a Wall Street
syndicate's financing of the 1912 Sun Yat-sen revolution in China, a revolution
that is today hailed by the Chinese Communists as the precursor of Mao's
revolution in China. Charles B. Hill, New York attorney negotiating with Sun
Yat-sen in behalf of this syndicate, was a director of three Westinghouse
subsidiaries, and we have found that Charles R. Crane of Westinghouse in Russia
was involved in the Russian Revolution.
Quite apart from finance, we identified other, and
possibly more significant, evidence of Wall Street involvement in the Bolshevik
cause. The American Red Cross Mission to Russia was a private venture of
William B. Thompson, who publicly proffered partisan support to the Bolsheviks.
British War Cabinet papers now available record that British policy was
diverted towards the Lenin-Trotsky regime by the personal intervention of
Thompson with Lloyd George in December 1917. We have reproduced statements by
director Thompson and deputy chairman William Lawrence Saunders, both of the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York, strongly favoring the Bolshevists. John Reed
not only was financed from Wall Street, but had consistent support for his
activities, even to the extent of intervention with the State Department from
William Franklin Sands, executive secretary of American International
Corporation. In the sedition case of Robert Minor there are strong indications
and some circumstantial evidence that Colonel Edward House intervened to have
Minor released. The significance of the Minor case is that William B.
Thompson's program for Bolshevik revolution in Germany was the very program
Minor was implementing when arrested in Germany.
Some international agents, for example Alexander
Gumberg, worked for Wall Street and the
Bolsheviks. In 1917 Gumberg was the representative of a U.S. firm in Petrograd,
worked for Thompson's American Red Cross Mission, became chief Bolshevik agent
in Scandinavia until he was deported from Norway, then became confidential
assistant to Reeve Schley of Chase Bank in New York and later to Floyd Odium of
Atlas Corporation.
This activity in behalf of the Bolsheviks originated
in large part from a single address: 120 Broadway, New York City. The evidence
for this observation is outlined but no conclusive reason is given for the
unusual concentration of activity at a single address, except to state that it
appears to be the foreign counterpart of Carroll Quigley's claim that J.P.
Morgan infiltrated the domestic left. Morgan also infiltrated the international
left.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York was at 120
Broadway. The vehicle for this pro-Bolshevik activity was American International
Corporation — at 120 Broadway. AIC views on the Bolshevik regime were requested
by Secretary of State Robert Lansing only a few weeks after the revolution
began, and Sands, executive secretary of AIC, could barely restrain his
enthusiasm for the Bolshevik cause. Ludwig Martens, the Soviet's first
ambassador, had been vice president of Weinberg & Posner, which was also
located at 120-Broadway. Guaranty Trust Company was next door at 140 Broadway
but Guaranty Securities Co. was at 120 Broadway. In 1917 Hunt, Hill & Betts
was at 120 Broadway, and Charles B. Hill of this firm was the negotiator in the
Sun Yat-sen dealings. John MacGregor Grant Co., which was financed by Olof
Aschberg in Sweden and Guaranty Trust in the United States, and which was on the
Military Intelligence black list, was at 120 Broadway. The Guggenheims and the
executive heart of General Electric (also interested in American International)
were at 120 Broadway. We find it therefore hardly surprising that the Bankers
Club was also at 120 Broadway, on the top floor (the thirty-fourth).
It is significant that support for the Bolsheviks did
not cease with consolidation of the revolution; therefore, this support cannot
be wholly explained in terms of the war with Germany. The American-Russian syndicate
formed in 1918 to obtain concessions in Russia was backed by the White,
Guggenheim, and Sinclair interests. Directors of companies controlled by these
three financiers included Thomas W. Lamont (Guaranty Trust), William Boyce
Thompson (Federal Reserve Bank), and John Reed's employer Harry Payne Whitney
(Guaranty Trust). This strongly suggests that the syndicate was formed to cash
in on earlier support for the Bolshevik cause in the revolutionary period. And
then we found that Guaranty Trust financially backed the Soviet Bureau in New
York in 1919.
The first really concrete signal that previous
political and financial support was paying off came in 1923 when the Soviets
formed their first international bank, Ruskombank. Morgan associate Olof
Aschberg became nominal head of this Soviet bank; Max May, a vice president of
Guaranty Trust, became a director of Ruskom-bank, and the Ruskombank promptly
appointed Guaranty Trust Company its U.S. agent.
What motive explains this coalition of capitalists
and Bolsheviks?
Russia was then — and is today — the largest untapped
market in the world. Moreover, Russia, then and now, constituted the greatest
potential competitive threat to American industrial and financial supremacy. (A
glance at a world map is sufficient to spotlight the geographical difference
between the vast land mass of Russia and the smaller United States.) Wall
Street must have cold shivers when it visualizes Russia as a second super
American industrial giant.
But why allow Russia to become a competitor and a
challenge to U.S. supremacy? In the late nineteenth century,
Morgan/Rockefeller, and Guggenheim had demonstrated their monopolistic
proclivities. In Railroads and Regulation
1877-1916 Gabriel Kolko has demonstrated how the railroad owners, not the
farmers, wanted state control of railroads in order to preserve their monopoly
and abolish competition. So the simplest explanation of our evidence is that a
syndicate of Wall Street financiers enlarged their monopoly ambitions and
broadened horizons on a global scale. The
gigantic Russian market was to be converted into a captive market and a
technical colony to be exploited by a few high-powered American financiers and
the corporations under their control. What the Interstate Commerce
Commission and the Federal Trade Commission under the thumb of American
industry could achieve for that industry at home, a planned socialist
government could achieve for it abroad — given suitable support and inducements
from Wall Street and Washington, D.C.
Finally, lest this explanation seem too radical,
remember that it was Trotsky who appointed tsarist generals to consolidate the
Red Army; that it was Trotsky who appealed for American officers to control
revolutionary Russia and intervene in behalf of the Soviets; that it was
Trotsky who squashed first the libertarian element in the Russian Revolution
and then the workers and peasants; and that recorded history totally ignores the 700,000-man Green
Army composed of ex-Bolsheviks, angered at betrayal of the revolution, who
fought the Whites and the Reds. In
other words, we are suggesting that the Bolshevik Revolution was an alliance of
statists: statist revolutionaries and statist financiers aligned against the
genuine revolutionary libertarian elements in Russia.3
'The question now in the readers' minds must be, were
these bankers also secret Bolsheviks? No, of course not. The financiers were
without ideology. It would be a gross misinterpretation to assume that
assistance for the Bolshevists was ideologically motivated, in any narrow
sense. The financiers were power-motivated
and therefore assisted any political
vehicle that would give them an entree to power: Trotsky, Lenin, the tsar,
Kolchak, Denikin — all received aid, more or less. All, that is, but those who
wanted a truly free individualist society.
Neither was aid restricted to statist Bolsheviks and
statist counter-Bolsheviks. John P. Diggins, in Mussolini and Fascism: The View from America,4 has noted in regard to Thomas Lamont of
Guaranty Trust that
Of all American business leaders, the one who most
vigorously patronized the cause of Fascism was Thomas W. Lamont. Head of the
powerful J.P. Morgan banking network, Lamont served as something of a business
consultant for the government of Fascist Italy.
Lamont secured a $100 million loan for Mussolini in
1926 at a particularly crucial time for the Italian dictator. We might remember
too that the director of Guaranty Trust was the father of Corliss Lamont, a
domestic Communist. This evenhanded approach to the twin totalitarian systems,
communism and fascism, was not confined to the Lamont family. For example, Otto
Kahn, director of American International Corporation and of Kuhn, Leob &
Co., felt sure that "American capital invested in Italy will find safety,
encouragement, opportunity and reward."5 This is the same Otto Kahn who lectured
the socialist League of Industrial Democracy in 1924 that its objectives were his objectives.6 They differed only — according to Otto
Kahn — over the means of achieving these objectives.
Ivy Lee, Rockefeller's public relations man, made
similar pronouncements, and was responsible for selling the Soviet regime to
the gullible American public in the late 1920s. We also have observed that
Basil Miles, in charge of the Russian desk at the State Department and a former
associate of William Franklin Sands, was decidedly helpful to the businessmen
promoting Bolshevik causes; but in 1923 the same Miles authored a profascist
article, "Italy's Black Shirts and Business."7 "Success of the Fascists is an
expression of Italy's youth," wrote Miles while glorifying the fascist movement
and applauding its esteem for American business.
The Marburg Plan, financed by Andrew Carnegie's ample
heritage, was produced in the early years of the twentieth century. It suggests
premeditation for this kind of superficial schizophrenia, which in fact masks
an integrated program of power acquisition: "What then if Carnegie and his
unlimited wealth, the international financiers and the Socialists could be
organized in a movement to compel the formation of a league to enforce peace."8
The governments of the world, according to the
Marburg Plan, were to be socialized while the ultimate power would remain in
the hands of the international financiers "to control its councils and
enforce peace [and so] provide a specific for all the political ills of
mankind."9
This idea was knit with other elements with similar
objectives. Lord Milner in England provides the transatlantic example of
banking interests recognizing the virtues and possibilities of Marxism. Milner
was a banker, influential in British wartime policy, and pro-Marxist.10 In New York the socialist "X" club was founded in 1903.
It counted among its members not only the Communist Lincoln Steffens, the
socialist William English Walling, and the Communist banker Morris Hillquit,
but also John Dewey, James T. Shotwell, Charles Edward Russell, and Rufus Weeks
(vice president of New York Life Insurance Company). The annual meeting of the
Economic Club in the Astor Hotel, New York, witnessed socialist speakers. In
1908, when A. Barton Hepburn, president of Chase National Bank, was president
of the Economic Club, the main speaker was the aforementioned Morris Hillquit,
who "had abundant opportunity to preach socialism to a gathering which
represented wealth and financial interests."11
From these unlikely seeds grew the modern
internationalist movement, which included not only the financiers Carnegie,
Paul Warburg, Otto Kahn, Bernard Baruch, and Herbert Hoover, but also the
Carnegie Foundation and its progeny International
Conciliation. The trustees of Carnegie were, as we have seen, prominent on
the board of American International Corporation. In 1910 Carnegie donated $10
million to found the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and among
those on the board of trustees were Elihu Root (Root Mission to Russia, 1917),
Cleveland H. Dodge (a financial backer of President Wilson), George W. Perkins
(Morgan partner), G. J. Balch (AIC and Amsinck), R. F. Herrick (AIC), H. W.
Pritchett (AIC), and other Wall Street luminaries. Woodrow Wilson came under
the powerful influence of — and indeed was financially indebted to — this group
of internationalists. As Jennings C. Wise has written, "Historians must
never forget that Woodrow Wilson... made it possible for Leon Trotsky to enter
Russia with an American passport."12
But Leon Trotsky also declared himself an
internationalist. We have remarked with some interest his high-level
internationalist connections, or at least friends, in Canada. Trotsky then was
not pro-Russian, or pro-Allied, or pro-German, as many have tried to make him
out to be. Trotsky was for world
revolution, for world dictatorship;
he was, in one word, an internationalist.13 Bolshevists and bankers have then this
significant common ground — internationalism. Revolution and international
finance are not at all inconsistent if the result of revolution is to establish
more centralized authority. International finance prefers to deal with central
governments. The last thing the banking community wants is laissez-faire
economy and decentralized power because these would disperse power.
This, therefore, is an explanation that fits the
evidence. This handful of bankers and promoters was not Bolshevik, or
Communist, or socialist, or Democrat, or even American. Above all else these
men wanted markets, preferably captive international markets — and a monopoly
of the captive world market as the ultimate goal. They wanted markets that
could be exploited monopolistically without fear of competition from Russians,
Germans, or anyone else — including American businessmen outside the charmed
circle. This closed group was apolitical and amoral. In 1917, it had a
single-minded objective — a captive market in Russia, all presented under, and
intellectually protected by, the shelter of a league to enforce the peace.
Wall Street did indeed achieve its goal. American
firms controlled by this syndicate were later to go on and build the Soviet
Union, and today are well on their way to bringing the Soviet
military-industrial complex into the age of the computer.
Today the objective is still alive and well. John D.
Rockefeller expounds it in his book The
Second American Revolution — which sports a five-pointed star on the title
page.14 The book contains a naked plea for humanism,
that is, a plea that our first priority is to work for others. In other words,
a plea for collectivism. Humanism is collectivism. It is notable that the
Rockefellers, who have promoted this humanistic idea for a century, have not
turned their OWN property over to others.. Presumably it is implicit in their
recommendation that we all work for the Rockefellers. Rockefeller's book
promotes collectivism under the guises of "cautious conservatism" and
"the public good." It is in effect a plea for the continuation of the
earlier Morgan-Rockefeller support of collectivist enterprises and mass
subversion of individual rights.
In brief, the public good has been, and is today,
used as a device and an excuse for self-aggrandizement by an elitist circle
that pleads for world peace and human decency. But so long as the reader looks
at world history in terms of an inexorable Marxian conflict between capitalism
and communism, the objectives of such an alliance between international finance
and international revolution remain elusive. So will the ludicrousness of
promotion of the public good by plunderers. If these alliances still elude the
reader, then he should ponder the obvious fact that these same international
interests and promoters are always willing to determine what other people should do, but are signally
unwilling to be first in line to give up their own wealth and power. Their
mouths are open, their pockets are closed.
This technique, used by the monopolists to gouge
society, was set forth in the early twentieth century by Frederick C. Howe in The Confessions of a Monopolist.15 First,
says Howe, politics is a necessary part of business. To control industries it
is necessary to control Congress and the regulators and thus make society go to
work for you, the monopolist. So, according to Howe, the two principles of a
successful monopolist are, "First, let Society work for you; and second,
make a business of politics."16 These, wrote Howe, are the basic
"rules of big business."
Is there any evidence that this magnificently
sweeping objective was also known to Congress and the academic world? Certainly
the possibility was known and known publicly. For example, witness the
testimony of Albert Rhys Williams, an astute commentator on the revolution,
before the Senate Overman Committee:
. . . it is probably true that under the soviet
government industrial life will perhaps be much slower in development than
under the usual capitalistic system. But why should a great industrial country
like America desire the creation and consequent competition of another great
industrial rival? Are not the interests of America in this regard in line with
the slow tempo of development which soviet Russia projects for herself?
Senator Wolcott: Then your argument is that it would
be to the interest of America to have Russia repressed?
MR. WILLIAMS: Not repressed ....
SENATOR WOLCOTT: You say. Why should America desire
Russia to become an industrial competitor with her?
MR. WILLIAMS: This is speaking from a capitalistic
standpoint. The whole interest of America is not, I think, to have another
great industrial rival, like Germany, England, France, and Italy, thrown on the
market in competition. I think another government over there besides the Soviet
government would perhaps increase the tempo or rate of development of Russia,
and we would have another rival. Of course, this is arguing from a capitalistic
standpoint.
SENATOR WOLCOTT: So you are presenting an argument
here which you think might appeal to the American people, your point being
this, that if we recognize the Soviet government of Russia as it is constituted
we will be recognizing a government that can not compete with us in industry
for a great many years?
MR. WILLIAMS: That is a fact.
SENATOR WOLCOTT: That is an argument that under the
Soviet government Russia is in no position, for a great many years at least, to
approach America industrially?
MR. WILLIAMS: Absolutely.17
And in that forthright statement by Albert Rhys
Williams is the basic clue to the revisionist interpretation of Russian history
over the past half century.
Wall Street, or rather the Morgan-Rockefeller complex
represented at 120 Broadway and 14 Wall Street, had something very close to
Williams' argument in mind. Wall Street went to bat in Washington for the
Bolsheviks. It succeeded. The Soviet totalitarian regime survived. In the 1930s
foreign firms, mostly of the Morgan-Rockefeller group, built the five-year
plans. They have continued to build Russia, economically and militarily.18 On the other hand, Wall Street
presumably did not foresee the Korean War and the Vietnam War — in which
100,000 Americans and countless allies lost their lives to Soviet armaments
built with this same imported U.S. technology. What seemed a farsighted, and
undoubtedly profitable, policy for a Wall Street syndicate, became a nightmare
for millions outside the elitist power circle and the ruling class.
Footnotes:
1Michael Futrell, Northern
Underground (London: Faber and Faber, 1963); Stefan Possony, Lenin: The Compulsive Revolutionary
(London: George Allen & Unwin, 1966); and George Katkov, "German
Foreign Office Documents on Financial Support to the Bolsheviks in 1917," International Affairs 32 (Royal
Institute of International Affairs, 1956).
2Ibid., especially Katkov.
3See also Voline (V.M. Eichenbaum), Nineteen-Seventeen: The Russian Revolution
Betrayed (New York: Libertarian Book Club, n.d.).
4Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Prss, 1972.
5Ibid., p.
149.
6See p. 49.
7Nation's Business, February 1923, pp. 22-23.
8Jennings C. Wise, Woodrow
Wilson: Disciple of Revolution (New York: Paisley Press, 1938), p.45
9Ibid., p.46
10See p. 89.
11Morris Hillquit, Loose
Leaves from a Busy Life (New York: Macmillan, 1934), p. 81.
12Wise, op. cit., p. 647
13Leon Trotsky, The
Bolsheviki and World Peace (New York: Boni & Liveright, 1918).
14In May 1973 Chase Manhattan Bank (chairman, David
Rockefeller) opened it Moscow office at 1 Karl Marx Square, Moscow. The New
York office is at 1 Chase Manhattan Plaza.
15Chicago: Public Publishin, n.d.
16Ibid.
17U.S., Senate, Bolshevik
Propaganda, hearings before a subcommittee of the Committee on the
Judiciary, 65th Cong., pp. 679-80. See also herein p. 107 for the role of
Williams in Radek's Press Bureau.
18See Antony C. Sutton, Western Technology and Soviet Economic Development, 3 vols.
(Stanford, Calif.: Hoover Institution, 1968, 1971, 1973); see also National Suicide: Military Aid to the Soviet
Union (New York: Arlington House, 1973).
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