An Idea Older Than the New World
The idea that Americans have a special mission to the world is older than the United States itself. It was brought to America by the Puritans and summarized in a few lines of John Winthrop’s sermon: “For we must consider that we shall be as a city upon a hill. The eyes of all people are upon us.” If they should fail to become that “city upon a hill,” warned he, it was not the people of the world who would be harmed by the lack of a beacon, but they themselves, as God’s blessing would be withdrawn.
Although Winthrop's sermon was written for a specific group of people faced with a specific challenge, his "city-upon-a-hill" invocation has survived and thrived, and become the symbol of US domestic and international ambitions: to become a model for other nations by championing values that Americans deem, at a particular time, to be good. The dreadfully mistaken assumption that underlies this American policy is that the United States is inherently more moral and farther-seeing than other countries, that it can not only topple governments but guide the course of history.
Four Men in a Boat
Every summer morning two little boys took fishing trips through the lakes and rivers of upstate New York with their grandfather and uncle. Those weren't ordinary trips, for their grandpa was former Secretary of State John Watson Foster (whose singular accomplishment was the overthrow of Queen Liliuokalani of Hawai'i) and their uncle was Robert Lansing, future Secretary of State, (one of the few men who would later know the sunk Lusitania was not a defenseless passenger liner, but was engaged in a secret mission to supply weapons to Britain in violation of the U.S. Neutrality Act). In addition to stalking fish, the two men discussed Washington intrigue and global politics, while the boys, Foster and Allen Dulles, listened attentively. Soon, the little brothers began participating in this discussions, and gradually two of the three convictions that would dictate all their actions were bred into them. The first was the idea of America's exceptional mission in the world; the second was the presumption that protecting the right of large American corporations to operate freely in the world is good for everyone. Their father, Reverend Allen Macy Dulles, a preacher and theologian, impressed on them the last conviction – that Christian missionaries understand eternal truths and have an obligation to convert the unenlightened.
Two Brothers
The two boys grew into two very different, at least at first glance, men. Although their grandfather had taken them to Washington since they were kids and they had dined and conversed with prominent political figures, John Foster had remained sullen and socially awkward (his favorite pastime was memorizing long psalms from the Bible). His younger brother Allen "Allie" Dulles, on the other hand, had become even more easygoing. Both of them attended Princeton from which their father had graduated and which was considered a country-club seminary at the time, but their experiences there were radically different too. Foster stayed his taciturn, withdrawn self; Allie became a philanderer, who spent his time with girlfriends or partying with his many friends, news that sent Reverend Allen Macy Dulles into conniption fits.
After college, Foster used his connections to "Grandfather Foster" to be accepted as a clerk to Sullivan & Cromwell, the country’s most eminent corporate law firm. By the time he joined, it had become a unique repository of power and influence. Enormous fortunes were amassed in the States during the last decades of the 19th century, and many wealthy men used Sullivan & Cromwell as their link to Washington and the world. The firm "thrived at the point where Washington politics intersected with global business." Foster worked at this intersection for nearly forty years, rising from a clerk to a partner. Aside from his upbringing, nothing shaped his character as much as this job. It reinforced his conviction that the unrestricted operation of large American corporations in the world is beneficial for everyone.
Meanwhile, Allen joined the foreign service, thus making his first step to the "netherworld" where he would spent most of his life.
Prior to WWI, few in Washington had paid attention to collecting intelligence about other countries, either because they believed the USA didn't need it or because, as Secretary of War Henry Stimson put it, “gentlemen do not read each other’s mail.” One of the few American officials who had promoted intelligence gathering was John Watson Foster, who in 1892–93 had begun dispatching agents to Europe "to give early notice of any new or important publications or inventions or improvements in arms.” When Lansing became secretary of state a generation later, he also had agents who conducted “investigations of a highly confidential character.” Ironically, so it was that two of Allie’s beloved relatives, “Grandfather Foster” and “Uncle Bert,” laid the foundation of the American intelligence network he would later direct.
After an unremarkable post in Vienna, in the spring of 1917, Allen was transferred to Bern. Neutral Switzerland had become a "magnet" for exiles, agents, and revolutionaries from across Europe and beyond. Not yet twenty-five, he became a genuine spymaster, spending his days and nights with plotters from all over the world. His results were impressive: a stream of detailed reports about German troop movements, planned attacks, and even the location of a secret factory where Zeppelin bombers were being manufactured. Allie was loving it: in one letter home he reported that his life as a secret agent was full of “unmentionable happenings” and “incidents of more than usual interest.” One of those "happenings" was missing a call from Lenin (who never called again because the next day he boarded his train to St. Petersburg to change history) because of a date with two "spectacularly buxom Swiss twin sisters", an incident that foreshadowed the carelessness with which he would later direct the CIA.
Oh So Secret
During the late 1930s, Allen became involved in a secret organization known as “the room", where three dozen bankers, businessmen, and corporate lawyers met to exchange the most sensitive information about events unfolding around the world. Nearly all had either backgrounds in intelligence or unusually deep contacts in foreign capitals, and importantly, all of them were fabulously rich. These patricians not only advised the FDR administration on covert operations abroad, but arranged corporate cover for agents undertaking them.
One of "the room"'s members was William Donovan, a war hero who had become a Wall Street lawyer and dabbled in intelligence. Donovan was concerned that the United States was about to enter a global conflict without an intelligence service. Having just returned from a private mission to London for FDR, he knew that the war would continue and ultimately the USA would get involved. Therefore, he was assembling a team of clandestine officers to work "for an agency that did not yet exist". Allen Dulles, one of America’s few experienced spies, was an obvious recruit. He had joined Foster in Sullivan & Cromwell after the end of the Great War and had proceeded to obtain information for the firm through "unusual and diversified means". Donovan's offer was exactly what Allie needed; diplomacy had made him world-wise, corporate law had made him rich, but a return to the shadows would make him what he desired to be – decisive but secret.
FDR needed little persuasion, especially after the raid on Pearl Harbor, and the OSS (Office of Strategic Services, or as the OSS agents' wives joked, Oh So Secret) was born. Allen was thrilled to finally see a US intelligence agency "which brought . . . under one roof the work of intelligence collection and counterespionage, with the support of underground resistance activities, sabotage . . ." For him, the OSS wasn't simply a means to gather intelligence for United Joint Chiefs of Staff; for him, the OSS was a powerful force designed to strike swiftly from the shadows. This sentiment would transform the OSS into the deadly CIA of the Cold-War period.
Two Jaws of a Serpent
Truman's administration was not a happy time for the brothers. Foster, who had acquired significant experience in foreign service by working with foreign clients and by advising "Uncle Bert", had hoped to assume the post of Secretary of State to Thomas E. Dewey, but shockingly, the Republican candidate lost the election of 1948 to the "farmer from Missouri".
Allen, meanwhile, spent hours writing nostalgic letters to his former OSS comrades, trying to answer the question "What does a wartime spymaster do when the fighting ends and his government has no more use for him?" Mary Bancroft, a spy with whom he had an enduring affair, described his new behavior as that of "an exuberant young person when his parents suddenly show up". While in the years immediately after the war Truman became convinced of the need for a secret intelligence service, he was reluctant to give any intelligence agency the right to carry out covert operations. "Wild Bill" Donovan and Allen wanted to change this. Yet, although they managed to push a bill on the creation of the CIA through Congress, Truman still showed no inclination to use it as Allie and his friends wished it to be used. Appointing Admiral Hillenkoetter, a quiet, steady officer as the first CIA director instead of Allen, he reasoned that the CIA was not created "to be a ‘Cloak and Dagger Outfit’", but merely to keep the President informed "about what was going on in the world". This attitude went against Allen's grandiose plans. The CIA was ready, they were ready. All they lacked was a friend in the Oval Office.
The tide turned as soon as Eisenhower succeeded Truman in the White House and appointed Foster as his Secretary of State.
While the brothers hadn't seen much of each other during the "Thirty Years War" (as Anthony Eden had called the two world wars and the period of tumultuous peace between them), now they had united again, spending hours and hours talking, as their sister Eleanor wrote. What Foster and Allie discovered is that despite their different public and private lives, their ideologies were in unison. Foster possessed a rigorously organized mind, but he was not a deep thinker. His ideology was the defense of the two principles that he believed best served global commerce: free enterprise and American-centered internationalism. Allen's ideology was identical to his brother's. He, however, was less moved by religious and ethical imperatives, and felt a compulsive need to act, to strike and then strike again. "Nations were to him like women: a succession of challenges to be mastered." He could not suffer the idea of allowing history to take its course; he wished to shape it.
Eisenhower was the right man for this duo. He "combined the mind-set of a warrior with a sober understanding of the devastation that full-scale warfare brings". That led him to covert action. Truman had drown the line at the CIA plotting against foreign leaders. That line evaporated when he left office – Eisenhower wished to wage a new kind of war. With the two brothers behind his back, he led the USA into a secret global conflict that raged throughout his presidency. Foster plotted it. Allen, appointed by Ike to the post of Director of the CIA, waged it. "They attacked like a serpent: two jaws not organically connected but working in perfect harmony."
Six "Monsters" & Two "Doves"
During the 40s-50s, Americans were told that Soviet leaders were actively plotting to overrun the world; that they would use any means to ensure victory, which would mean the end of civilization and meaningful life; and that therefore they must be resisted by every means, no matter how distasteful. John Foster Dulles and Allen Dulles personified this worldview. Everything in their background – from missionary Christianity to decades of work defending the interests of America’s biggest multinational corporations – prepared them for this role.
In his famous Independence Day speech to the House of Representatives, John Quincy Adams proclaimed that the United States “goes not abroad in search of monsters to destroy.” The Dulles brothers, however, did. Six fervent idealists in Asia, Africa, and Latin America became the "monsters" they went abroad to destroy. Some of the countries they targeted never recovered. Nor did the world.
The first "monster" Foster and Allen set out to destroy was Mohammad Mossadegh, the democratic prime minister of Iran, who fervently opposed colonialism by nationalizing his country's oil industry. His dramatic step boded ill for one of Allen’s most important clients, the J. Henry Schroder Banking Corporation, which served as financial agent for the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and on whose board he sat. More importantly, Mossadegh’s opposition to Western privilege made him the sort of leader the brothers instinctively mistrusted, a populist rabble-rouser who rejected the way the world is run. He also represented the new "enemy" Foster had just identified in the world – neutralism.
In the CIA coup against Mossadegh, three hundred people were killed. The brothers had successfully prevented not what they were convinced was an imminent Communist victory, but the first truly democratic Iranian government. The shah, "America's best Iranian friend" reclaimed the Peacock Throne, ruled with increasing repression for a quarter century, and then was overthrown by fanatically anti-Western clerics. This was the tragic long-term result of the CIA coup.
Allen brought his CIA into its "golden age" by showing that he could topple governments with minimum cost and almost complete discretion. Foster understood the power this implied. For General Dwight Eisenhower, the Supreme Commander of Allied Forces, three hundred deaths (especially not American) were a cheap cost. He also realized the power of the CIA and helped transform it into what Allie called "the State Department for unfriendly countries."
Mossadegh's case is crucial because it served as a precedent. Regarding the five remaining "monsters", Foster and Allen perseveringly clung to the same beliefs: World Communism was a monolithic movement directed from the Kremlin; it now sought to conquer Asia; every country that doesn't succumb to America's will automatically was a Soviet pawn. Any threat to big corporations, such as the Guatemalan uprising against the oppressive United Fruit, was perceived as a Communist overtake. Secretary of State Dulles presided over a country mired into an anti-Communist deafness and blindness.
One of the most dangerous things a superpower can do in world affairs is to castrate its analytic capacity and shut itself off from the truth because of blind prejudice. But who had mired the Americans of the 40s and 50s into this shortsightedness? According to Kinzer, Foster and Allen reflected the spirit of the American people, but I disagree, for I doubt the Americans had themselves come to embrace such pernicious ideologies. The leader of the Korean independence movement, Syngman Rhee, carefully distinguished between the true American values and those upheld by US political leaders. Such difference undoubtedly existed during the Cold War, although someone had indeed managed to impress upon Americans that the USSR was the most formidable threat. That someone was Allen Dulles.
Law prohibited the CIA from operating within the States, but Allie interpreted it loosely. He shaped coverage of world events in the American press through calls to editors and publishers. His most imaginative media operation was taking control of the cartoon version of Orwell's anti-totalitarian Animal Farm. The book’s ending, in which animals realize that both ruling groups in the barnyard are equally corrupt, contradicted much of what the States was saying about the Cold War. Allen arranged for the cartoon to end quite differently – only the pigs are corrupt and ultimately patriotic rebels overthrow them. Orwell’s widow was indignant, but the film reached a wide audience.
Therefore, I concluded that it was not the American nation that gave birth to Foster and Allen, but rather it was the Dulles brothers, who – supported by Ike – instilled their radical ideology in the minds of Americans. They were the most fervid promoters of the fear they sew among US citizens. They did as much as anyone to shape America’s confrontation with the Soviet Union. Soon after they became secretary of state and director of the CIA, they failed their first "test": after Stalin's death, his successors made overtures to the West, but Foster and Allen categorically rejected them. They sharpened and lengthened the Cold War by pronouncing each Soviet call for “peaceful coexistence” a ruse designed to lull America into a false sense of security.
Their next great failure was their inability to understand the Third World. They were too quick to see Moscow’s hand behind cries for social reform in Latin America, Asia, and Africa, which were to them little more than a vast Cold War battleground. They never engaged with the aspirations of the peoples emerging from colonialism and looking for their place in a turbulent world. Instead they waged destructive campaigns against foreign “monsters” who never truly threatened the USA.
A third fatal failure was their shortsightedness. Foster and Allen never imagined their intervention in foreign countries would have such ruinous long-term effects – that Vietnam would be plunged into a war costing more than one million lives, or that Congo would descend into a horrific civil war. No wonder Allie was a James Bond fan; his and Bond's cases were dangerously alike: in each novel, a spymaster sends an intrepid agent to a faraway land, and the agent secretly crushes a great threat to civilization. Most importantly, neither Bond nor his superiors ever worry about the long-term consequences of their acts, and there never are any.
The brothers also never reexamined their assumptions. They wrested the facts to suit themselves, instead of adjusting their convictions to reality. They were drawn to order and predictability, always searching for patterns in an ever-changing world.
Another question this book answered is Why so many people around the world, many of my compatriots among them, dislike the USA?
When he addressed the world, John Foster Dulles used "a stern preacher’s tone" – dark, bellicose and threatening, rarely uplifting or inspirational. His inability to empathize with masses of people in a changing world conveyed a snarling image that contributed to generations of anti-Americanism. While Foster did not live to see his reputation decline, Allen did. His last and best-known operation, the Bay of Pigs invasion intended to topple Fidel Castro's government, was an epic disaster that humiliated him and his country before the world.
I will not say that the story of Allen and Foster is the story of America. However, I will insist that their story is the story of the modern US government. Ike wan't the only one who gave the Dulles full scope. Vice President Nixon, the Congress that never asked the CIA anything beyond what Allen deemed necessary to share, Senator Arthur Vandenberg were all supporters of their actions. The brothers tell American leaders much about themselves, and not all of it is pleasant. Maybe this is the reason why the brothers' memory had faded into obscurity. Yet, understanding what they did, and why they did it, is a step toward understanding why the United States acts as it does in the world. Rather than swept under the rug, their story should be known to all, so that Americans will be able to correct the mistakes of their leaders and to restore the values that had made the United States "the envy of the world".