Thomas Wardell Braden (February 22, 1917 – April 3, 2009)[1] was an American journalist, best remembered as the author of Eight is Enough, which spawned a popular television program, and was co-host of the CNN show Crossfire.[2] Braden was born in Greene, Iowa and died in Denver, Colorado.[1]
After graduating from Dartmouth College in 1940, Braden enlisted in the British Army, while the US was still neutral in World War II and saw combat in Africa. When the United States entered the war, he was recruited by the US Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the World War II predecessor to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and parachuted behind enemy lines into Nazi-occupied France. At the end of the war, with the encouragement of OSS Director William "Wild Bill" Donovan, who thought of Braden as a protegé, he and his OSS paratrooper compatriot Stewart Alsop wrote a journalistic book about the OSS, just as it was being dissolved by Harry Truman, two years before the creation of the CIA. [3]
After the war, Braden taught English for a time at Dartmouth (where he met Robert Frost), then moved to Washington DC, becoming part of a group of well-connected journalists, which included Alsop, known as the "Georgetown Set".
In 1950, at the start of the Korean War, Braden joined the CIA and in 1950 became head of the International Organizations Division (IOD) of CIA's Office of Policy Coordination, the "covert action" arm of Agency secret operations, working closely with Allen Dulles and Frank Wisner. Believing that the cultural milieu of post-war Europe at the time was favorable toward left-wing views, and understanding that The Establishment of Western Allies was rigidly conservative and nationalistic as well as determined to maintain their colonial dominions, it was estimated that American supremacy would be best served by supporting the Democratic left. Thus, the program was begun by which more moderate and especially anti-Soviet leftists would be supported thereby helping to purge the social democratic left of Soviet sympathizers.
Consequently, Bradens efforts were guided toward promoting anti-Soviet left-wing elements in groups like AFL-CIO. Eventually, despite heavy resistance from British and French allies, the CIA made the leap toward recruiting anti-Soviet communists followers of Trotskyism, especially in the international labor unions. Thus, from 1951 to 1954, the CIA provided $1,000,000 a year, through Braden, to Irving Brown, a moderate Labor leader, and eventually recruited as a CIA officer, Jay Lovestone, a noted communist follower of Trotskyism, helping him financially to run his network with ($1,600,000 in 1954).[4]
These various programs eventually coalesced into a larger coordinated campaign to influence international organizations especially through media relations. In this regard, while head of the IOD, Braden played an important role in formally establishing this campaign as Operation Mockingbird. Many years later he revealed his role in these events:
Ironically, it was another CIA proprietary organization [who says Ramparts was CIA?] which broke the story of this program, leading many to believe the exposure itself was orchestrated to cover the establishment of a different media campaign. This organization was Ramparts, whose 1967 article exposed CIA involvement in groups like the National Student Association, Braden defended the agency's covert work in the student and labor movements with "I'm glad the CIA is 'immoral'" in The Saturday Evening Post.[6][7](Though intended to be a defense of the Agency, his revelations in that indelicately-titled article raised the hackles of many of his old friends in the CIA).
Braden left the CIA in November, 1954, and became owner of the Oceanside, California newspaper, The Blade-Tribune, which he bought with a loan from his friend Nelson Rockefeller. Active in California Democratic politics, he served as President of the California State Board of Education during the 1960s, and had a running battle with conservative Republican State Superintendent of Public Instruction Max Rafferty.[8]
Braden himself ran for office only once, mounting an unsuccessful Primary challenge in 1966 (with the campaign theme "Guts") to incumbent Democratic Lt. Governor Glenn Anderson.
After the assassination in Los Angeles of his friend Robert F. Kennedy during the 1968 presidential campaign, Braden returned to Washington and became a popular newspaper columnist in partnership with Kennedy's Press Secretary Frank Mankiewicz. He also became a prominent political commentator on radio and television.
Although the Nixon White House initially included him on a list of friendly journalists,[9] his work eventually landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents.
In 1975 Braden published the autobiographical book, Eight is Enough, which inspired an ABC television series of the same name with Dick Van Patten in the role of Tom Bradford, the name of Braden's character in the series.[10] The book focused on his life as the father of eight children and also touched on his political connections as a columnist and ex-CIA operative and as husband to a sometime State Department employee and companion of the Kennedy family, Joan Vermillion Braden. The television series, however, bore little relationship to the book other than naming the original characters after the Braden family and giving the lead character a job in journalism.
After replacing Mankiewicz as the "voice from the left" on the syndicated radio show Confrontation, from 1978 to 1984 Braden co-hosted the Buchanan-Braden Program, a three-hour radio show with former Nixon aide Pat Buchanan. He and Buchanan also hosted the CNN program Crossfire at the show's inception in 1982, with Braden interviewing guests and debating Buchanan and Robert Novak. Braden left Crossfire in 1989.
He was predeceased by his wife of 50 years, Joan Ridley Braden, who died in 1999. One of their sons, Thomas W. Braden III, a reporter on the Aspen (Colo.) Daily News and a specialist in the use of computers in investigative journalism, died in 1994 in a traffic accident near Gunnison, Colorado at the age of 33. Survivors include seven children, David Braden of Taipei, Taiwan, Mary Braden Poole of Arlington, Virginia., Nicholas Braden of Washington D.C, Susan Braden of Takoma Park, Maryland., and Joannie Braden, Nancy Braden Basta and Elizabeth Braden, all of Denver, Colorado; and 12 grandchildren.
Witty and charming, Joan Braden was a popular Washington hostess who also held a number of low-profile political and government positions. During John F. Kennedy's 1960 presidential campaign, she reportedly ghosted a weekly newspaper column, Campaign Wife, for Jacqueline Kennedy, who could not understand the respect of her husband and brother-in-law, Robert F. Kennedy, for Braden's opinions. [11] Later, Joan Braden worked as Coordinator of Consumer Affairs in the State Department, a position created for her in 1976 while her friend Henry Kissinger was Secretary of State. [12] Among her other close friends were former Ambassador Averell Harriman and CIA Director Richard Helms.
The Bradens had an open marriage, and Joan reportedly had notable dalliances with their mutual friends, Republican Governor of New York Nelson Rockefeller, and former Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. In her 1989 autobiographic memoir, she also implied an intimate relationship with Robert Kennedy. [13]