Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Proliferation: How One Person’s Actions Affects Millions

Technology — understood not merely as the latest iPhone or AI app, but rather in a more general way — has led to a situation in which one individual’s actions can affect, for good or for ill, the lives of millions. Such is the case of Alger Hiss.

Alger Hiss is one of the most destructive people of the twentieth century.

Born in the United States, in Maryland in 1904, Hiss came from a comfortable middle-class family. He was popular in high school, and succeeded academically, completing his undergraduate studies at Johns Hopkins University, and his graduate work at Harvard. Alger Hiss developed significant social connections, which turned into professional and political connections, during his time at Harvard.

In 1936, Hiss obtained a job within the State Department. Around the same time, he also became a spy for the Soviet Socialists. Although a paid employee of the USSR, Hiss did his espionage more as a passion than as a way to earn money: his desire was to destroy the United States as a constitutional democratic republic.

Alger Hiss was an agent for the organization which would become the KGB.

Eventually working his way up to the level of presidential advisor, Alger Hiss would have face-to-face meetings with President Roosevelt. As a Soviet agent, his task was twofold: first, to steal secrets from the United States government and send them to Moscow; second, to give misleading advice to President Roosevelt so that he would make decisions which favored the USSR and not the United States.

One of Joseph Stalin’s paid employees was giving advice to the president of the United States.

One of the Soviet agents to whom Alger Hiss reported eventually defected. Whittaker Chambers, a high-level insider in the Soviet Socialist espionage network, confessed to the U.S. authorities what he was doing. Chambers was not comfortable when he discovered the consequences of supplying the USSR with military intelligence.

As a result of Soviet spying in the United States, the Soviet Socialists obtained the technology to build their own atomic bombs. Emboldened by this technology, they increased their resolve to oppress the nations of eastern Europe. Millions of people in Poland, Czechoslovakia, Rumania, and other nations died or lived in servitude because of the Soviet hegemony.

Further, the Soviet Socialists launched and maintained their military proxies in the Korean War and the Vietnam War. The Soviet espionage network inside the United States gave them the technology to start such efforts, and the intelligence to maintain them.

The roots of the Soviet spy network go back a decade earlier: In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Alger Hiss was assuring President Roosevelt that he could trust the promises of Joseph Stalin. Stalin pledged to allow free and fair elections in the nations of eastern Europe. Stalin broke these promises and ordered the Soviet Socialist army to invade these nations at the end of WW2. Alger Hiss was simultaneously sending U.S. military secrets to the Soviet intelligence headquarters in Moscow.

Historian Christina Shelton writes:

During the late 1940s, a high-level State Department official, Alger Hiss, was accused of spying for the Soviet Union by a senior editor of Time magazine, Whittaker Chambers, who previously had been a Soviet agent and Hiss’s “handler.” For two years, the political drama of congressional hearings and Hiss trials made headline news throughout the country. The case was particularly contentious, given Hiss’s prominence, the political climate of an incipient anti-Communist movement during the Truman administration, and, most importantly, because of the ideological rupture that unfolded. Battle lines were drawn between the right and the left that remain to this day. Hiss eventually was convicted of perjury related to espionage. The evidence that was crucial to the government’s case included stolen State Department classified documents, microfilms with classified material, and handwritten notes — all of which came to be known collectively as the “Pumpkin Papers” — that Hiss had turned over to Chambers for passage to Soviet military intelligence. Chambers had secreted them prior to his defection for his own future protection and then presented them shortly before the perjury trials began.

Some of the evidence which ultimately led to Hiss’s conviction was a set of documents which had been hidden inside a hollowed-out pumpkin: so they were called the “Pumpkin Papers.”

Hiss had given these documents to Whittaker Chambers when they were both working for the Soviet Socialists. When Chambers decided to stop supporting the USSR, he kept these documents and hid them. Later, when Chambers had to defend himself against Hiss’s attacks, Chambers produced the documents and showed them to U.S. intelligence officials.

When the evidence showed beyond doubt that Hiss had stolen U.S. information and attempted to send it to the USSR, it was clear that Hiss was guilty. Hiss had not only betrayed the United States, but he had willingly supported the Soviet Socialist efforts which caused millions of deaths in Korea, in Vietnam, and in eastern Europe.