List of Americans in the Venona papers
The following are a list of names ostensibly deciphered from codenames contained in the Venona project. To what extent any given individual named in the Venona papers was actually involved with Soviet intelligence is a topic of dispute. The following list of individuals is extracted in large part from the work of John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr and reflects their point of view.[1]
Notes and disclaimers on the list
Names marked with a double asterisk (**) do not appear in the Venona documents. Inclusion has been inferred to correlate with codenames or similarly spelled names found in the documents.
Similarly, identities that have been inferred by researchers (i.e., the name appears in the Venona documents, but positive identification of the individual bearing that name does not), are also marked with a double asterisk (**).
List
- John Abt**[2]
- Solomon Adler**[2]
- Rudy Baker**[2][3]
- Joel Barr[2]
- Alice Barrows[2]
- Theodore Bayer, President, Russky Golos Publishing[2]
- Cedric Belfrage[2]
- Elizabeth Bentley[2]
- Joseph Milton Bernstein[2]
- Earl Browder,[2] American communist and General Secretary of the Communist Party USA from 1934 to 1945.
- Paul Burns**[2][4]
- Sylvia Callen**[2]
- Virginius Frank Coe[2]
- Lona Cohen**[2]
- Morris Cohen**,[2] Communist Party USA & Portland Spy Ring member who was courier for Manhattan Project physicist Theodore Hall.
- Judith Coplon[2]
- Lauchlin Currie,[2] White House economic adviser to President Franklin Roosevelt and director of World Bank mission to Colombia.
- Byron T. Darling**[2]
- Eugene Dennis[2]
- Samuel Dickstein**[2]
- Martha Dodd**,[2] daughter of William Dodd, who served as the United States ambassador to Germany between 1933 and 1937.
- William E. Dodd Jr.[2]
- Laurence Duggan,[2] Head of the South American desk at the United States Department of State during World War II.
- Eufrosina Dvoichenko-Markov[2]
- Nathan Einhorn[2]
- Jack Bradley Fahy[2]
- Linn Markley Farish, senior liaison officer with Josip Broz Tito's Yugoslav Partisan forces[2]
- Edward J. Fitzgerald[2]
- Charles Flato[2]
- Isaac Folkoff[2]
- Jane Foster[2]
- Zalmond David Franklin[2]
- Isabel Gallardo[2][5]
- Boleslaw K. Gerbert[2][6]
- Rebecca Getzoff[2]
- Harold Glasser,[2] U.S. Treasury Dept. economist, United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) spokesman.
- Bela Gold[2]
- Harry Gold,[2] sentenced to 30 years for his role in the Rosenbergs' ring
- Sonia Steinman Gold[2]
- Jacob Golos,[2] "main pillar" of NKVD spy network, particularly the Sound/Myrna group, he died in the arms of Elizabeth Bentley
- George Gorchoff[2]
- Gerald Graze**,[2][7]
- David Greenglass,[2] machinist at Los Alamos sentenced to 15 years for his role in Rosenberg ring; he was the brother of executed Ethel Rosenberg
- Ruth Greenglass[2]
- Theodore Alvin Hall,[2] Manhattan Project physicist who gave plutonium purification secrets to Soviet intelligence.
- Maurice Halperin,[2] American writer, professor, diplomat, and Soviet spy (NKVD code name "Hare").
- Kitty Harris,[2]
- Clarence Hiskey**,[2]
- Alger Hiss,[2] Lawyer involved in the establishment of the United Nations, both as a U.S. State Department and UN official.
- Donald Hiss**[2]
- Harry Hopkins,[2] One of FDR's closest advisers & New Deal architect, esp. Works Progress Administration (WPA),
- Louis Horwitz[2]
- Bella Joseph**[2]
- Emma Harriet Joseph[2]
- Gertrude Kahn[2]
- Joseph Katz[2]
- Helen Grace Scott Keenan[2]
- Mary Jane Keeney[2]
- Philip Keeney[2]
- Alexander Koral**[2]
- Helen Koral[2]
- Samuel Krafsur[2]
- Charles Kramer[2]
- Christina Krotkova,[2]
- Sergej Nikolaevich Kurnakov[2]
- Stephen Laird[2]
- Oscar Lange[2]
- Richard Lauterbach, employee at Time magazine[2]
- Duncan C. Lee[2]
- Michael S. Leshing[2]
- Helen Lowry[2]
- William Mackey[2]
- Harry Samuel Magdoff[2][8]
- William Malisoff, owner and manager of United Laboratories[2]
- Hede Massing**[2]
- Robert Owen Menaker[2]
- Floyd Cleveland Miller[2]
- James Walter Miller[2]
- Robert Miller**[2]
- Robert G. Minor,[2] Office of Strategic Services, Belgrade
- Leonard Emil Mins[2]
- Nichola Napoli[2]
- Franz Neumann**[2]
- David K. Niles
- Eugénie Olkhine[2][9]
- Frank Oppenheimer**[2]
- Julius Robert Oppenheimer,[2] Scientific director of the Manhattan Project and chief advisor to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission.
- Nicholas V. Orloff[2]
- Edna Margaret Patterson[2]
- William Perl[2]
- Victor Perlo[2]
- Aleksandr N. Petroff, Curtiss-Wright Aircraft
- Vladimir Aleksandrovich Posner, United States War Department[2]
- Lee Pressman[2]
- Mary Wolfe Price[2]
- Bernard Redmont**[2]
- Peter Rhodes[2]
- Stephan Sandi Rich[2]
- Kenneth Richardson, World Wide Electronics[2]
- Samuel Jacob Rodman, United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration[2]
- Allen Rosenberg[2]
- Julius Rosenberg,[2] United States Army Signal Corps Laboratories, executed for role in the Rosenberg ring
- Ethel Rosenberg,[2] executed for role in Rosenberg ring based on testimony of her brother, David Greenglass
- Amadeo Sabatini[2]
- Alfred Epaminodas Sarant[2]
- Marian Miloslavovich Schultz[2]
- Milton Schwartz[2]
- John Scott[2]
- Ricardo Setaro[2][10]
- Charles Bradford Sheppard, Hazeltine Electronics[2]
- Abraham George Silverman[2]
- Nathan Gregory Silvermaster,[2] U.S. War Production Board (WPB) economist and head of a major ring of spies in the U.S. government.
- Cary Hiles[2]
- Helen Silvermaster,[2] Leader of the American League for Peace & Democracy and the National Federation for Constitutional Liberties.
- Morton Sobell[2][11]
- Jack Soble[2]
- Robert Soble[2]
- Johannes Steele[2]
- I. F. Stone,[2] Investigative journalist whose newsletter, I. F. Stone's Weekly, was ranked 16th out of 100 by his fellow journalists.
- Augustina Stridsberg[2]
- Anna Louise Strong[2]
- Helen Tenney**[2]
- Mikhail Tkach, editor of the Ukrainian Daily News[2]
- William Ludwig Ullmann[2]
- Irving Charles Velson[2]
- Margietta Voge[2]
- William Weisband**[2]
- Donald Wheeler[2]
- Maria Wicher[2]
- Harry Dexter White,[2] Senior U.S. Treasury department official, primary designer of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
- Ruth Beverly Wilson[2]
- Ignacy Witczak**[2][12]
- Ilya Elliott Wolston[2]
- Flora Don Wovschin[2]
- Jones Orin York[2]
- Daniel Abraham Zaret, Spanish War veteran[2]
- Mark Zborovski[2]
See also
References
- ^ "Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America, Appendix A". John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999. ISBN 0-300-08462-5
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed ee Haynes, John Earl (February), Cover Name, Cryptonym, CPUSA Party Name, Pseudonym, and Real Name Index: A Research Historian's Working Reference, http://www.johnearlhaynes.org/page66.html#_ftn3, retrieved 2007-04-29
- ^ Haynes notes on the appearance of codename Son/Syn in the Verona documents, "unidentified in NSA/FBI notes but clearly Rudy Baker in SECRET WORLD"
- ^ Haynes' notes state: "Burns, Paul, NSA/FBI shows as Berne and Bernay, but clearly is ti[sic] Burns."
- ^ Haynes notes: "a Chilean, married to American Lorren Hay, a captain in Marines"
- ^ Polish citizen, U.S. resident 1912-47 (Haynes, 2007)
- ^ "Graze, Gerald = Arena. one single reference to Graze as Arena in corrected proof but removed in final: and reference to Graze as Dan in uncorrected proof but removed in the corrected. [source Weinstein Vassiliev Haunted Wood]" (Haynes, 2007)
- ^ Haynes notes: "source in Perlo group, identified as having cover name Tan in uncorrected proof, but Tan's identify redacted in final, but Magdoff still identified as a source: source Weinstein Haunted Wood)"
- ^ Haynes notes: "redacted in 239 1945" (Haynes, 2007)
- ^ Haynes, 2007, notes that the positive identification of Setaro with codenames "Zhan" and "Gonets" was redacted in the Venona documents
- ^ Haynes notes: "Sobell, Morton = Rele = Relay = Sebr = Serb but identification unclear ??"
- ^ Haynes notes: "Witczak, Ignacy = V (in Los Angeles, Witczak was [sic] false papers taken from real Witczak a Polish Jew migrant to Canada who died in Spain. [source Stephenson Intrepid's Last]"
External links
- National Security Agency Archives Cryptographic Museum, Custodian of Documents for the Army Signals Intelligence Agency
- Selected Venona Messages
- Venona FBI FOIA Files
- FBI Memo "Explanation and History of Venona Project Informantion" (1 February 1956)
- MI5 Releases to the National Archives
- Stalin-Era Research and Archives Project
- Russian State Archive (RGASPI)
- John Earl Haynes, Harvey Klehr, Venona; Decoding Soviet Espionage in America, Yale University Press, 1999. ISBN 0-300-08462-5. Despite the title, this is less about Venona itself than about Communist Party USA espionage and support of espionage. It is based on research in the CPUSA archives made available to the authors in Moscow. See Yale University Press Web site information on the book.
- John Earl Haynes, "Cover Name, Cryptonym, CPUSA Party Name, Pseudonym, and Real Name Index. A Research Historian's Working Reference" (revised February 2007), on the author's web site.