ON POLITICAL BOOKS Hoover Damned

Branch, Taylor

ON POLITICAL BOOKS Hoover Damned Exposing the ultimate G-man-and finding the ultimate bureaucrat by Taylor Branch Curt Gentry, best known as a writer for is coauthored account of the...

...Crime came to play only a minor role in the bureau’s mission as an intelligence outfit charged with nothing less than defining, detecting, controlling, and weeding out defective Americans...
...Instead he has become the worst he sees in Hoover...
...Focus on Hoover’s battles within the government inevitably leads to the sexiest political material: the bugs, taps, tapes, and other means of political leverage in the legendary radioactive files...
...To escape into the middle class from the mud of the nineteenth century, the Hoovers needed to absorb the self-conscious morality best exemplified by the highchurch Sunday school and the marching Cadet Corps, Hoover’s department...
...Hoover played the gimmick for all it was worth, promotHoover can offer natural, Madisonian reasons for succumbing to tyrannical impulsesy but what is our ing himself as the perionifica- excuse for letting him get image of an omniscient FBI tion of law enforcement on guard against the Gerthrough news releases and away with it...
...As Hoover’s career dragged on, how did such work fare in proportion to the bugs, COINTELPROs, and political background checks of the later years...
...It is no discredit to Gentry that the list of his fellow laborers is destined to grow no matter how this account is received...
...With directions from the defectors, the FBI caught their six confederates, who were promptly executed, while the two defectors themselves were hidden away in prison to protect the FBI’s skewed version of the case: “FBI Captures Eight German Agents...
...government, telling even Roosevelt that the bureau captured first the six fugitives and then the two strays without the benefit of any inside information...
...Going beyond extergangster films that changed the face of Hollywood...
...Norton, $29.95...
...Gentry shows that some people perceived Hoover clearly almost from the beginning...
...The political Hoover is fighting most often inside the government, against kindred spirits such as House Un-American Activities Committee Chairman Martin Dies...
...ON POLITICAL BOOKS Hoover Damned Exposing the ultimate G-man-and finding the ultimate bureaucrat by Taylor Branch Curt Gentry, best known as a writer for is coauthored account of the Charles Manson celebrity/cult murders, devoted 15 years’ labor to take his place among the biographers of Hoover...
...As a self-assured pragmatist, Roosevelt valued Hoover’s gossip and derring-do far more than he worried about their constitutional implications...
...Thirty years later, through the sophisticated sixties until Hoover’s death in 1972, only the rarest of journalists even discussed Hoover in public, and some of those did not see the fundamental questions involved, wishing only to substitute a good tyrant for a bad one...
...natural that Hoover’s genius lay in the technobureaucratic world that makes his life, better than that of FDR or Reagan, distinguish our century from Abraham Lincoln’s...
...More inaccessible than presidents, [Hoover] kept his agents in fear and awe by fung and shifting them at whim...
...Covert coop era t i on Addiction saps discipline and distorts proportion...
...Hoover the dissembler was most often Hoover the bureaucrat rather than the bigot or boob, and Gentry is at his most perceptive in picking up the bureaucratic intrigues behind some of Hoover’s most spectacular campaigns...
...The Powers biography is grounded in per,:onal descriptions of young Hoover the Sunday school teacher, vaulting his way into the starchiest Presbyterian preserves, whereas Gentry introduces a more generic Victorian bureaucrat...
...Gentry cannot address such questions, because the more legitimate aspects of the FBI’s work came to interest him as little as they did Hoover...
...For more than a and even more so the millions of immigrants who did not speak English or go to a proper church...
...The key to most of Hoover’s changes was standardization,” writes Genexpunged from a decent America...
...mans...
...This makes him the supreme oddity...
...He portrays Senator Joe McCarthy as not only a crook and a homosexual but as a molester of young girls on the basis of “headquarters gossip” and two anonymous affidavits...
...The director’s appetite for publicity is the talk of the capital...
...He notes, for instance, that half the victims in the fabled Helen Bentley spy cases were connected to the OSS-thus tarnishing “Wild Bill” Donovan, Hoover’s bitterest enemy and chief obstacle to his dream of controlling all U.S...
...Similarly, at least part of the Alger Hiss case grew out of Hoover’s wars against the State Department for control of loyalty investigations, which still today supply much of the FBI manpower, as well as the choicest political gossip gleaned from questioning the neighbors, lovers, and grade-school teachers of any potential federal employee of note...
...Hoover’s upbringing fit the times: He was born to lead a backlash of the upright...
...Hoover took advantage of Roosevelt’s relaxed attitudes to create his own FBI rules for public relations and intelligence work, as Gentry details in the seminal case of the Nazi saboteurs...
...It is concerned only with their conduct and then only with such conduct as is forbidden by the laws of the United States...
...Protestant America took refuge in the temperance movement, the YMCA, and organizations celebrating Anglo lineage...
...Middle-crass morality In one respect, Gentry’s portrait of Hoover is inferior to an earlier comprehensive biography by Richard Gid Powers (Secrecy and Power: The Life of J. Edgar Hoover...
...Hoover’s political dirt is fascinating, but preoccupation with it sucks writer and reader alike away from larger realities...
...Despite all this burlesque and bombast,” observed a writer in 1933, “there is a serious and sinister side to this secret federal policy system...
...Hoover can offer natural, Madisonian reasons for succumbing to tyrannical impulses, but what is our excuse for letting him get away with it...
...Our reactions to the words “fingerprint” and “security” owe much to him, and even those who loathe Hoover cannot fully escape his influence on their perception of characters ranging from A1 Capone and Martin Luther King to Joe McCarthy and Lee Harvey Oswald...
...By and large, Gentry is too sophisticated to call Hoover a blackmailer, knowing that Hoover needed only to neutralize opponents by coming privately to them as an obedient servant with confidential news of their crimes and embarrassments...
...He presents Tom Clark as a bought man on the indirect testimony of an unctuous lobbyist named WinterBerger...
...But perhaps future scholars will find it perfectly Txr Branch, a contribGing editor of The Washington Monthly, is at work on a sequel to his last book, Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954-63...
...Not surprisingly, the bureau suppressed the confessions of the two defectors, along with their determined initiative, on the theory that to admit anything easy, human, or haphazard about the case would diminish the public Hoover’s most ludicrous whims, but its discipline had earned a permanent reservoir of deserved support before the Depression offered two opportunities to build from that base...
...Efforts to understand Hoover or those tides will be indebted to Gentry’s contribution in these pages...
...Gentry shows Roosevelt to have been unperturbed even by FBI bugs aimed at his own wife...
...In a sense, Hoover’s political character is easily explained: Madison and Hamilton described him perfectly in The Federalist Papers...
...Less democratic...
...When a team of eight Nazis debarked on Long Island from a submarine on June 13, 1942, two of them made their way straight to FBI headquarters to turn themselves in as U.S...
...Even worse, he describes with no sourcing at all how Hoover allegedly stopped one unfavorable magazine profile of himself by sending out “photographs of the publisher’s wife engaged in fellatio with her black chauffeur while parked in Rock Creek Park...
...A pioneer in systems management, he wanted interchangeable agents to work in interchangeable offices through a massively cross-indexed information network, and even into his senile years Hoover was noted for sharp rebukes on points of procedure that might appear trivial to anyone else...
...His book is generally a pleasure to read...
...Other Bentley victims were from the Treasury Department, which Hoover had hated since Charles Lindbergh gave credit to treasury agents (truthfully) instead of the bureau for cracking his kidnapping case...
...The Bureau of Inwhere young Edgar excelled...
...In short, Roosevelt put the FBI back into politics-permanently, this time-which was just what the director preferred...
...Just think about me...
...When Hoover’s files supported a campaign to fire the under secretary of state, Sumner Welles, for homosexual promiscuity, FDR said of his friend, “Well, he’s not doing it on government time, is he...
...He personally orchestrated the massive federal arrests of as many as 3,000 on a single night and put 250 aliens, among them Emma try...
...Still, Gentry does believe that the sleaze blinds as well as corrupts, and in seeking to document his cover jacket quotation from Hoover-“There is something addicting about a secret”Gentry gets addicted himself...
...Never again did Hoover think of himself as bogged down in mundane criminal work...
...We are drifting on them still...
...Hoover’s role was smoothly hidden or glaringly public, somewhat as blood beneath skin can remain invisible or stream vividly to the surface...
...Sinking into the ooze of the underworld, he comes to accept more on rumor and demands to be taken on his word rather than on evidence that can be examined...
...IE.d gar Hoover: The Man and the Secrets...
...With Hoover safely dead, we cannot reach these questions by substituting a cartoon of evil for the legend of the heroic G-man...
...It seems all the more remarkable that one who tapped so consistently into the emotional substructure of national history was not a president or a media giant but a bureaucrat...
...Its contributions to knowledge are many, especially for students of government, which is something of an irony considering Gentry has aimed his work more at popular melodrama...
...The basic structure of American democracy is predicated on the assumption that people in power will seek to become less accountable-that they will become more arbitrary, more resentful of criticism, that they will shy away from courtrooms, where their evidence can be contradicted, and instead retreat into secrecy and other classified forums in which they can claim the unchecked authority of kings...
...Internal deceit was a bureaucratic tool that Hoover used to protect his political prerogatives against rivals who were far too hardened to buy his sentimental posturings...
...Among the events utterly lost in Gentry’s account are the thousands of criminal investigations actually brought to fruition...
...Exuding scorn for the lazy plunder of the patronage budecade of efficient criminal work, Hoover kept his promise to run a constitutional FBI, holding his political proclivities in check...
...The reformed FBI was ponderous and slavish to they were rebuffed-“Yesterday, Napoleon called”-until they finally dumped a suitcase full of spy equipment and $84,000 in cash onto the desk of an assistant director...
...The bionic bureau reaucrats around him,he octworked everybody in making lists of Russian-speaking immigrants, anarchists, pacifists, communists, and other deviants to be Hoover used the trial period in the twenties to mold the FBI into a machine...
...In Washington, led by President Woodrow Wilson, it defended its turf by exclusion, vigorously segregating the civil service and social institutions by race, class, and culture...
...Gentry makes a convincing argument that no FBI action-toward the Japanese internment of World War 11, the execution of the Rosenbergs, the Huston Plan under Nixon, or anything else-can be explained without reference to Hoover’s increasingly complex bureaucratic battle status...
...The director was very close to the main tides of American politics into the superpower era...
...What happened...
...admirers...
...More cowed...
...The two versions meet in the tale that established Hoover’s prominence: the “Red” round-ups of 1919 and 1920...
...No other government outfit, including the Army, achieved such regimentation, the result being that the bureau took after the military in its sense of humor as well as in its finest moments of frenzied, far-flung investigative assault...
...Roosevelt’s protests against his “Gestapo methods,” the president is said to have amiably replied, “Well, Edgar, don’t get excited...
...First, according to Gentry, the gangster era allowed Hoover to promote the FBI as the first line of defense for the American way of life itself-claiming a role far grander than auxiliary crime- or fire-fighters...
...He got his job as the first FBI director by fervently supporting the public announcement of Attorney General Harlan Stone: “There is always the possibility that a secret police may become a menace to free governments and free institutions...
...And yet, when Congress disgraced Palmer for his unconstitutional excesses, Hoover adroitly switched...
...He has already signed with Francis Ford CopPola to turn the book into a cinematic mirror image of The Godfather...
...Hoover will remain arguably the most challenging and significant subject of American political biography of the twentieth century...
...Had we become dumber...
...Throughout the formative Palmer episode, he exhibited nearly all the traits that would mark his long career: his revulsion against foreign “elements” more than acts of crime per se, his tendency to toady upward and tyrannize downward, his patience under stress, and his uncanny fix on the status fears of “middle America” some 50 years before his protege in this regard, Richard Nixon...
...Powers fixes Hoover’s early character in the values of turn-of-the-century Washington, a small town in which blue-collar families like that of Dickerson Hoover-a government platemaker, son of a government printer-looked to the federal bureaucracy as an oasis of prestige and respectability...
...He became a fanatic at a unique intersection of science and culture, demanding uniform precision not only in the banker’s dress of his agents but also in the language, coding, and routing of FBI files...
...intelligence, foreign and domestic...
...The celebrated vendetta against Martin Luther King is explained not by Hoover’s racial views so much as his struggle with Robert Kennedy over the FBI’s political agenda...
...Gentry is correct to call the term Public Enemy Number One, coined by Hoover on June 22, 1934, for the John Dillinger case, a “stroke of public relations genius...
...A second and even more important opening came on August 24, 1936, when FDR bestowed upon the FBI a mandate to investigate Nazi sympathizers, communist fellow travelers, America Firsters, and anybody else who might oppose the administration in the event of war...
...In these passages, Gentry ceases to be a convincing author...
...As a minority struggling to gain ascendancy, the middle class considered itself mortally threatened by the drag of riff-raff belowthe ex-slaves making their way up from the South, vestigation is not concerned with political or other opinions of individuals...
...Hoover gathered index cards on 150,000 undesirables within months of landing a supervisor’s job in Justice’s subversion office in 1919450,000 by 1921...
...In his first job as a Justice Department clerk, J. Edgar Hoover threw himself into this crusade...
...I have to live with her...
...If the statutory work of the FBI continued in good order, in spite of the political corruption, could it have done so without Hoover’s dictatorial control and his Maoist leadership psychology...
...Certainly, no other bureaucrat eclipsed presidents in national popularity nor left behind such a passionately contested legend...
...Not only did the founding G-man span all eras between the Wobblies and Watergate, he also consistently shaped images that go deep into the national identity...
...The disciplined virtues of the middle class became infused with a corrupting, compulsive need to define and seal off the alien others below...
...It had always been up to its neck in personal intrigue and partisan politics...
...Referred to the bureau’s “nut desk,” nal propaganda, however, Hoover also falsified the case within the U.S...
...Another issue lost in the dirt is that of the responsibility of American citizens...
...When Hoover disputed Mrs...
...After the assassination of President Kennedy, Gentry notes, Hoover assigned the investigation of Jack Ruby to the civil rights unit solely because the organized crime unit was headed by a protege of Robert Kennedy-a bureaucratic move that left the Ruby case in the hands of utterly unprepared officials...

Vol. 23 • October 1991 • No. 10


 
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