BRIAN LAMB, HOST: Joseph E. Persico,
                  author of "Roosevelt's Secret War: FDR
                  and World War II Espionage," when did
                  you get the idea for this book? 
                 
 Mr. JOSEPH PERSICO, AUTHOR, "ROOSEVELT'S SECRET WAR: FDR AND WORLD WAR II ESPIONAGE":  Brian, I was a kid
                  growing up during the Roosevelt era.
                  He's always been a hero of mine. I
                  wondered how I would be able someday to write a book about
                  Franklin Roosevelt. I couldn't imagine there was anything that
                  hadn't been said. I pulled up on the Internet the catalog of
                  the Library of Congress and I went through it line by line and
                  there were something like 600 books on Franklin D. Roosevelt.
                  And I thought, `It's a--it's all said. But I've written a great
                  deal about intelligence and maybe I could combine the two,'
                  and there was nothing in this list of 600 books in the catalog
                  about FDR and intelligence. My--my reaction was, `Joe, you
                  are either brilliant and you've thought of something that
                  nobody else could think of or you're a fool and you're wasting
                  your time because there's no story.' 
                  
LAMB: So in the end, what--when did you start to see a--a
                  story that had never been told? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, I started going down, Brian, to Hyde Park,
                  to the Roosevelt Archives. And it--I started virtually from
                  ground zero. But as I started plowing through the papers of
                  George Marshall, the papers of Bill Donovan and FDR's papers,
                  I realized there were a lot of unst--untold stories and I was
                  very encouraged to proceed. 
                  
LAMB: Let's pick one of those names, Bill Donovan. Who was
                  he? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Bill Donovan was an authentic hero of World
                  War I, a Congressional Medal of Honor winner, subsequently a
                  vastly successful Wall Street lawyer. Now he becomes, in
                  effect, the first head of a central intelligence agency in the
                  United States. Franklin Roosevelt appoints him in the summer
                  of 1941 as--what eventually becomes the Office of Strategic
                  Services. Kind of a strange choice because Donovan was a
                  staunch Republican, had run for governor of New York on an
                  anti-Roosevelt, anti-New Deal platform. But he was also a
                  man of irrepressible spirit, boundless optimism, full of ideas
                  and, in a sense, he--he reflected the qualities of Franklin
                  Roosevelt. So he was named the head of our first spy service.
                  
LAMB: As you know, they called him Wild Bill Donovan. Tell us
                  a wild story. 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, one--one of the--one of the conclusions I
                  reached about Donovan was that he was a magnificent
                  magnet for attracting talent. His OSS attracted college
                  presidents, semanticists, philosophers, writers, journalists,
                  photographers, actors, cameramen. Arthur Goldberg had been
                  an OSS veteran, subsequently goes on the Supreme Court.
                  Historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. was with the OSS. The French
                  chef Julia Child was with the OSS. But what kind of
                  str--struck me about Donovan is the crack-brained ideas that
                  he could advance, one of which was that his agents would
                  somehow intrude into Hitler's diet substances that would
                  cause the Fuhrer's breasts to swell, his voice to rise and his
                  mustache to fall out. Another idea that he came forward with
                  was to drop leaflets over Japanese troops which show
                  pictures of Japanese women involved in compromising
                  positions with Caucasians, which presumably would--would
                  demoralize them and seeing that their women were not being
                  faithful. The thing that was surprising to me is that these
                  crazy ideas did not turn FDR off at all. He didn't reject them
                  out of hand because he loved the--the surreptitious, the
                  furtive, the clandestine and the covert. 
                  
LAMB: You say in your book at, I think, the height of the OSS,
                  he had something like 1,600 people working for him? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: More like 16,000. 
                  
LAMB: Sixteen thousand people! 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Yes. 
                  
LAMB: Boy, I missed that. 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: And that's starting from ground zero. You know,
                  we had no intelligence service to speak of, even the year
                  before Pearl Harbor. 
                  
LAMB: So kind of relate that to today. The president of the
                  United States has somebody who's a friend of his who creates
                  what kind of a--and what would--what would happen if this
                  kind of thing was developed today? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well... 
                  
LAMB: Can you relate it to what's going on in the world right
                  now? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Yeah. I--I th--I think that the--the real parallel
                  here is the shocking unexpectedness of Pearl Harbor and
                  September 11th. How could this happen? At the--after the
                  fact, the strand of intelligence that leads from A to B to C to
                  Pearl Harbor may stand out glaringly, and after the fact the
                  strand of intelligence that runs from X to Y to Z to the World
                  Trade Center and the Pentagon may seem to stand out
                  glaringly. But before the fact, this intelligence doesn't come in
                  single strands. It comes in great bundles. You know, we were
                  breaking the Japanese code, there were hundreds of
                  messages available to the president. We now have the NSA,
                  which I understand does something like $3 billion of
                  worldwi--wide eavesdropping. So what we have that's
                  comparable is a f--a flood tide of intelligence which seems to
                  overwhelm the circuitry. What we seem to be lacking is--then
                  and now is careful analy--an--analysis to say, `Well, we've
                  got this tide of intelligence. What direction is it falling in?
                  What do these jigsaw pieces tell us if we can put them
                  together?' That was a failing prior to Pearl Harbor and
                  obviously a failing now. 
                  
LAMB: Vincent Astor. What did he do for FDR? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, I mentioned a moment ago that the United
                  States didn't go into the intelligence business in a serious way
                  until 1941. We were probably the only world power that didn't
                  have a professional intelligence service. Roosevelt relied very
                  heavily prior to, let's say, 1940 on a circle of socialite friends
                  as his sources. There were a group of them who styled
                  themselves The Club, and they had taken a shabby apartment
                  on New York's Upper East Side. They had an unlisted phone
                  number. They had a secret mail drop. It--it--it sounded like
                  the spy games of boys being carried out by grown men. The
                  ch--the chief figure in this outfit called The Club was Vincent
                  Astor, one of the wealthiest men in the country. 
                  
LAMB: Which one is he in this photo at top? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Vincent Astor is the one to the right of the bar
                  on the ship where's is standing. 
                  
LAMB: Or to the left of FDR? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: And he's--and he--let's see. It looks to me like
                  he's to--yes. Yes. 
                  
LAMB: And--and who was he? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Vincent Astor was the--the heir of a massive
                  fortune in the United States. He was--he was a socialite, but
                  he was also a man interested in--in causes, owned probably
                  the biggest chunks of real estate in Manhattan. He and his
                  other members of The Club, while they seemed like dilettante
                  amateurs, had this value for FDR: They were very highly
                  placed. For example, Astor was a director of Western Union,
                  and consequently he was privy to the kinds of cables which
                  were going from foreign embassies in the United States back
                  to their homelands, and though it was illegal, he had these
                  cables intercepted and he passed this intelligence along to
                  FDR. Another member of The Club was Winthrop Aldrich, who,
                  at the time, was head of the Chase Manhattan Bank. Aldrich
                  knew about international financial dealings. He could report to
                  FDR all the money that was going into and coming out of the
                  Russian spy front in the United States, the Amtorg Trading
                  company. But this--this was a pretty unsophisticated level of
                  intelligence for a country the size of the United States at that
                  point. 
                  
LAMB: Well, in 1939 and '40, what kind of an
                  intelligence-gathering operation did FDR have? Did he have an
                  official one? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: No, he--that doesn't--he doesn't begin a
                  formal, official central intelligence agency until the summer of
                  1941. What he has before that are the military services, the
                  Office of Naval Intelligence, he has the military intelligence
                  division of the Army, and he has the FBI. And he ha--he
                  tri--he's very unhappy with the lack of coordination--and
                  doesn't that ring a bell today? For example, at one point, to
                  try to get these people moving in the same direction, he--he
                  calls a meeting of--of Hoover as the head of the FBI and the
                  head of military intelligence and naval intelligence. Hoover
                  doesn't dane to come. 
                  
LAMB: Just says, `I'm not coming'? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, he had to be ordered by FDR finally to
                  come. We had the Army and Navy with the lunatic handling
                  of--of the messages that we were decoding, particularly
                  Japanese diplomatic traffic. They had this rivalry in which the
                  Army would decode messages on even days, the--and the
                  Navy would do it on odd days. They had a s--a s--a system
                  where they would share who got to deliver the plum traffic to
                  the president. The Army would do it in certain months and
                  subsequent month would be in the Navy. And it was--it was
                  madness. And finally Roosevelt himself just cut out that
                  nonsense. 
                  
LAMB: Back to Vincent Astor. Was he the one that went on
                  the trip to try to find some intelligence over in Japan? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Yeah. Again, this indicates the rather
                  amateurish intelligence that Roosevelt conducted prior to
                  forming a formal agency in--in the OSS. Astor had a
                  magnificent ocean-going yacht called the Nourmahal. It had a
                  crew of over 40 members. FDR asks Vincent Astor to cruise
                  the Pacific, seemingly on a pleasure junket, and hit places in
                  the Marshall Islands, which were then managed by Japan
                  as--as a mandate, and to report on our preparations there.
                  And this was great fun for Vincent Astor and a great
                  adventure. He subsequently thought this would lead to his
                  becoming FDR's chief of intelligence, but he's up against
                  tougher rivals in Donovan and some others. 
                  
LAMB: John Franklin Carter. You've got a photo of him in your
                  book. Who does--who is he? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: John Franklin Carter--interesting man--was a
                  columnist in Washington. At one point he wangles an
                  appointment with the president in the Oval Office and he, in
                  effect, says to FDR, `You know, I have extraordinary
                  contacts in journalism, among international government
                  figures, among businessmen worldwide. I could easily set up
                  for you a ring and I would report strictly to you.' Roosevelt
                  lapped that up. It was just the kind of thing that appealed to
                  FDR--off the books, circumventing his own bureaucracy,
                  something private, clandestine. A spy thriller kind of thing
                  appealed to him. So he took money out of his own White
                  House budget to set up the John Franklin Carter ring. Has this
                  money transferred into the State Department, where
                  presumably it's there to buy reports about foreign--foreign
                  governments. And then Carter operates throughout the war,
                  directly reporting to FDR and the Oval Office. 
                  
LAMB: How many people did he have working for him? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Very small group, only about 12. But the
                  interesting thing is that we have an OSS that doesn't
                  necessarily know about the John Franklin Carter ring. We have
                  John Franklin Carter who doesn't necessarily know about the
                  Astor ring. 
                  
LAMB: And you say that FDR didn't write very much down. 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: FDR, by his character and temperament, was
                  ideally suited for--for secret warfare. He loved to trade in
                  secrets. He was a master manipulator of people. He misled his
                  own associates when it suited him. He seemed to enjoy
                  subterfuge for its own sake. And he said it best himself. He
                  said, `I'm a juggler. I never let my left hand know what my
                  right hand is doing.' And to answer your point, he left virtually
                  no fingerprints. One of the most frustrating things that
                  h--historians on the--on the trail of Franklin Roosevelt
                  complain about is the lack of written commitment to decisions
                  that he made or explanations as to what he did. 
                  
LAMB: What did you learn about him ba--as a person? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, I always had a--had a sense that--that
                  Roosevelt was a man with a certain amount of guile. My
                  research in writing "Roosevelt's Secret War" convinced me
                  even further of that. As I--as I said a moment ago, he was
                  ideally suited for this kind of thing. He--he was--I think some
                  of the best descriptions of him, which I accept as--as
                  essential to his character, one of which was made by one of
                  his New Deal associates, who said, `The man always conceals
                  the purposes of his mind.' An--another one of his close
                  associates said, `I'--this was Robert Sherwood, who wrote
                  speeches for Roosevelt--he said, `I could never penetrate
                  that heavily forested interior.' Henry Wallace said, `The only
                  certainty in the Roosevelt administration was what was going
                  on inside FDR's head.' M--my initial expectation that he would
                  be a--a man who held the cards close to the vest was
                  confirmed. Somebody said to me, `Well, did this make you
                  think less of him?' It made him more interesting to me, a more
                  textured character. 
                  
LAMB: You say in the book that you're--Colin Powell helped
                  you with information on this book. Did I misinterpret that or
                  was that from your old friendship? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, in this sense, as--as you know, I w--I was
                  Colin Powell's collaborator on his autobiography, "My American
                  Journey." Colin Powell, needless to say, had very, very useful
                  connections throughout the federal bureaucracy, and when I
                  would have queries, I could go to some of his staff
                  who--who--who would get answers for me, for which I'm very
                  grateful. 
                  
LAMB: How long did you work on his book? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: He and I were together for about 20 months.
                  Most of the time I spent down in a little study in his office
                  examining the soles of his sneakers. He's a, you know, very
                  casual guy. And he put--propped his feet up on the desk
                  and--and we would just start talking with a tape recorder on,
                  and essentially, what we arrived at was an extended oral
                  history. Colin Powell has an extraordinarily retentive mind. He's
                  a great storyteller. Every once in a while when we were sated
                  with working on the book, he would regale me with his
                  renditions of Jamaican songs which had kind of a naughty
                  double entendre lyric. It was a s--stimulating experience. 
                  
LAMB: What do you know about him that we don't that gives
                  you a certain view of him during this crisis as secretary of
                  State? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, I'm not sure who--who--who would not be
                  aware of this now, but my--my sense is that we're--we're
                  fortunate in that in--in Colin Powell we have an unusual
                  preparation for the work he's carrying on now. This man, from
                  the military standpoint, was the--the nation's chief military
                  figure as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Frequently
                  overlooked is the fact that he had already been a national
                  security adviser. He was Reagan's man at the NSC. And then
                  he has developed a worldwide reputation for integrity,
                  in--intelligence, candor, so that in building coalitions, this is
                  enormously important. So I think we have an extraordinary
                  combination in Colin Powell, and I would say, in short, the man
                  I see is resolute, but at the same time reasonable.
                  That's--that's a comfort. 
                  
LAMB: But just on a personal level, if somebody came to you
                  and said that, `Joe, I'm gonna go meet Colin Powell. I've got
                  to do business with him,' what would you tip him off to do? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, I--I--I will tell you, Brian, what I--what I
                  told my wife when I first met Colin Powell. I went down to the
                  Pentagon the very day before he retired from 35 years in the
                  military. He's a joint--chairman of the Joint Chiefs. And we
                  were just kind of sizing each other up for the collaboration.
                  And I went home and my wife said, `Well, what is he like?'
                  And I said, `Colin Powell is the most comfortable man in his
                  skin whom I have ever met.' And what I would tell somebody
                  is pretty much expect a direct, casual figure with no guile, no
                  side to him. 
                  
LAMB: So how did you get to all this? Where were--where'd
                  you first get interested in being a writer? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, I wanted to be a writer ever since I was a
                  kid. Finally, I--I backed into writing, I guess. I was, for many
                  years, chief speechwriter for Governor and later Vice
                  President Nelson Rockefeller. Did that for a long time, as I say,
                  and started out--the first five years I loved it. The next three
                  years I tolerated it. The final three years I hated it. It had
                  nothing do with--with--with my boss. It was that I wanted to
                  write my own books. And finally, rather late in life I would say,
                  in my 40s, I started writing my own histories and biographies. 
                  
LAMB: I counted in the front part of the book that this would
                  be your ninth book. Did we miss any? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Not that I'm going to admit to. Yes, these... 
                  
LAMB: You--you wrote in '94 about Nuremberg, in '91 about
                  William Casey... 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Right. 
                  
LAMB: ...in '98 about Edward R. Murrow... 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Yeah. 
                  
LAMB: ...in '90--in '79, "Piercing the Reich: The Penetration of
                  Nazi Germany by American Secret Agents During World War
                  II." How much of that book led to what you're doing here? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, it--it led to a sense of confidence that I
                  could write reasonably well about intelligence. And I--I did
                  that book. An--another book that dealt with intelligence was
                  Casey, William J. Casey, who subsequently becomes the
                  director of central intelligence and who I first had met in--in
                  talking to him about Bill Donovan's OSS. Casey, you know, as
                  the Brits would say, had a pretty good war. Casey was--was
                  posted in--in England during the latter part of World War II,
                  and he was responsible for one of the great triumphs during
                  that period, which was something the British said couldn't be
                  done, and that is we got a number of teams inside Nazi
                  Germany, into--into something like 60 German cities. So this
                  would have been a coup for the OSS and a coup for the
                  Roosevelt administration of the war. 
                  
LAMB: What is MAGIC? 
                  (Graphic on screen) 
                  For More Information Random House 299 Park Avenue New
                  York, NY 10171 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: The US code crackers were working very hard
                  prior to 1940 in breaking the Japanese diplomatic code. They
                  called it code Purple. They finally broke that code, and
                  there--there b--it was broken s--by a team led by a man
                  named Frank Rowlett. Rowlett and--and his people were now
                  able, in effect, to place the president of the United States on
                  the distribution list of the Japanese Foreign Office because
                  we're breaking these messages, they're available in a very
                  sh--in a very short time. They may--it may be a message
                  from the foreign offices in Tokyo to the American--or
                  to--excuse me--to the Japanese Ambassadors in Washington.
                  We're breaking that code and these messages go up to
                  Pre--to President Roosevelt very quickly. And that's what the
                  MAGIC operation was. Very important because our breaking of
                  the Japanese codes were responsible for our 1942 victory in
                  the Pacific at Midway, which is a turning point of that war.
                  And... 
                  
LAMB: Frank Rowlett is what kind of a guy back then and
                  where did he operate from? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Frank Rowlett was operating out of a former
                  girls' school in the northern Virginia suburbs of Washington
                  called Arlington Hall. He operated with a very small group of
                  people. I can't imagine they made a great deal of money.
                  They worked for the Army as cryptographers, but they were
                  very dedicated. And their--their breakthrough was really a
                  significant advance for us. 
                  One of the things that they--they--they enabled us to
                  do--by breaking the Japanese codes, we also were able to
                  find out German intent. How did that come about? Because
                  the Japanese had an ambassador posted to Berlin. His name
                  was Oshima. Oshima was a rabid pro-Nazi. Consequently, he
                  won the confidence of Adolf Hitler. Hitler would bring in
                  Oshima and say, `Mr. Ambassador, I'm going to send you to
                  inspect the Atlantic Wall. I want you to see what I'm erecting
                  to repel an Allied invasion of the continent,' or he would say
                  to Oshima, `I'm going to tell you how many divisions I have
                  deployed in Norway, Denmark, in Belgium,' most importantly
                  in--in France. And then he would say to Oshima, upon
                  these--these rather critical revelations, `and I don't want you
                  to breathe a word of--of this to anybody.' 
                  Well, Oshima did what a good diplomat does. He would report
                  back to Tokyo, virtually verbatim, his conversations with Hitler
                  through that diplomatic code that we're breaking, and these
                  messages then are available to the president, to his secretary
                  of War, to the military chiefs. One of the most significant
                  revelations was when--when Hitler tells Oshima, `I'll tell you
                  where the Allies are going to strike. They're going to strike at
                  the Pas-de-Calais,' the narrowest part of the British
                  Channel--the English Channel. And he reports this back to
                  Tokyo. We intercept it. We now know that Hitler expects the
                  invasion there. Why is that significant? Because that was our
                  deception plan. That's exactly what we wanted him to think,
                  and we know it's working. 
                  
LAMB: You say that--that some 400 messages that FDR could
                  have read from Oshima? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: There--there was something like 400 Oshima
                  intercepts per year. General Marshall... 
                  
LAMB: Per year? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Yes. General Marshall said that he was our best
                  source of information on German intentions. He was
                  our--our--our best agent, an unwitting agent albeit. And for
                  the president, it was not simply peeking at the other fella's
                  hand. It was like holding the other fella's hand. 
                  
LAMB: So the president's in the Oval Office, and every day
                  they could bring in these Oshima messages. And did the
                  Japanese ever find out that the president knew all this stuff? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: It's really extraordinary. In 1942, after the
                  Battle of Midway, the Chicago Tribune front-paged a story
                  which practically blew the secret. The--the--the Tribune
                  headline read, in effect, Navy Knew Japanese War Plan. Well,
                  how else would we have known it? The story's virtually saying
                  we're--we're breaking the Japanese code. Astonishingly, while
                  any cabdriver in Chicago could have drawn that conclusion,
                  the Japanese considered their code unbreakable. They used
                  the same compromised code to the end of the war. 
                  
LAMB: You mentioned the Chicago Tribune. And again, I want
                  to try to relate to the atmosphere we're living in right now.
                  First of all, when you read this book, the first thing that
                  comes to mind is that FDR knew a lot more than the American
                  people ever knew. And I wonder if you think that our
                  president today knows a lot more than we'll ever know about
                  what's going on in the world. 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, I--I would think the president does, I
                  would think the intelligence-gathering agencies do,
                  be--because, you know, it's al--it's almost like a criminal
                  investigation or a manhunt that we're on now. And--and--and
                  by revealing everything you know, you also tip off your
                  adversaries as to what you know. You dry up sources, you
                  compromise people. I think it has to be that way. 
                  
LAMB: You point out that 20 cases of espionage happened
                  here in the United States from outside coming in, and that at
                  one point there were 16 of the 20 they had in--in jail
                  somewhere. But the--what I'm getting at is how much--I'm
                  looking at a story of Willie Copaw--Is that the way you
                  pronounce it? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Yes. Yeah. 
                  
LAMB: How much of the--you know, the enemy coming inside
                  this country did we have back in World War II? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Surprisingly little. The FBI had rounded up
                  almost all agents operating with the United States. However,
                  Hitler was very unhappy with the job being done by his
                  intelligence service, the Abwehr, and pressured Admiral
                  Kanaris, his intelligence chief, do something more dramatic.
                  The result was an operation called Pastorius in which eight
                  Germans who had lived in the United States, two of whom had
                  been US citizens, and--men who had gone back to Germany,
                  were recruited to form this team. They were put ashore in the
                  United States via submarine in the summer of 1942 to carry
                  out espionage. One of them decided to rat on his other
                  comrades, thinking this would make him a hero.
                  This--and--and--and so they were all quickly rounded up.
                  This story is--is fairly well-known. 
                  What is far less known was Roosevelt's attitude towards
                  these saboteurs. He immediately directs his attorney general,
                  Francis Biddle, to organize the trial outside of the civilian
                  courts through a military tribunal. And he said to Biddle, in
                  effect, `These are agents of the enemy. They've come
                  ashore in wartime th--in civilian clothes. I don't think there
                  can be any doubt as to what their fate must be.' So he keeps
                  the--this case out of the civilian courts because the rules of
                  evidence are strict, the opportunities for appeal seem to be
                  endless. A military court which he creates and he names all
                  the members, and then he directs his attorney general, Biddle,
                  to prosecute the case, so that within eight weeks of these
                  saboteurs setting foot in the United States, they have b--all
                  been condemned to death. Two of them subsequently are
                  commuted. But what I found interesting was that this Hudson
                  River patrician, this amiable, genial Franklin Roosevelt, was
                  underneath hard as nails. He expressed his only regret in this
                  case that these men hadn't suffered the more ignominious
                  fate of being hanged rather than being electrocuted. 
                  
LAMB: I mention Willy Copaw. You--you write on page 387,
                  `He had never fit in. He was a bony 6' 2" 26-year-old from a
                  good Greenwich, Connecti--a good Connecticut family but a
                  social outcast and a loner.' What happened there with
                  Copaw? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: He got caught. 
                  
LAMB: What did he do, though? What was that story? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, C--Copaw, as you've just read, didn't
                  seem to fit anywhere. He had German ancestry, and
                  consequently, he was enamored of--of what was happening in
                  Germany and very much impressed by Hitler's early victories
                  and manages to get himself thrown out of the US Navy
                  for being overtly pro-Nazi; manages, through merchant
                  vessels, to get himself to Europe, and he volunteers with
                  another figure to carry on probably the last attempt the Nazis
                  made to--to land saboteurs ashore on the United States. He
                  meets one of his former schoolmates, who persuades him that
                  this is madness. Copaw turns himself in, serves a--a--a
                  modest sentence after the war. We knew we had victory in
                  hand now, and there wasn't quite this s--spirit of vengeance
                  that FDR had expressed earlier. 
                  
LAMB: But you put--I mean, one of the things that's
                  interesting is that he was dropped into Frenchman's Bay up
                  there in--I assume, in Maine. 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Yeah. Yeah. 
                  
LAMB: That's the way he got back into the country. 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Right. He--he did--he did make it back to the
                  United States wi--with a bundle of money. He had a good
                  time with the Fuehrer's dollar supply but was useless as an
                  agent. And I think the--the lack of appropriateness of this
                  man and the previous team I talked about is an indication of
                  how weak German intelligence was as targeted against the
                  United States. 
                  
LAMB: Who's this fellow right here? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: That man is Ernst "Putzi" Hanfstaengel. That
                  was his nickname, Putzi. He had been a close personal
                  associate of Hitler's. He handled the foreign press for Hitler.
                  He was a pretty good pianist, and he was dubbed Hitler's
                  piano player. Hanfstaengel was eventually driven out of
                  Hitler's circle by more ruthless Nazi rivals, became fighting for
                  his life, went to England, the war breaks out, and
                  Hanfstaengel is interned in a POW camp. He is subsequently
                  sprung by one of FDR's personal agents, John Franklin Carter,
                  who I mentioned earlier, and they bring him to the United
                  States and they install him in a safe house in Washington
                  suburbs. 
                  Now Roosevelt is very interested in Hanfstaengel because,
                  first of all, he is half-American and he comes from a pedigreed
                  New England family, and like FDR, he went to Harvard.
                  Hanfstaengel's job is to provide the president with inside
                  information on the cast of characters in the Third Reich and
                  anything else he can provide of value. Much of what he
                  provides is--is more titillating than elevating. He sent
                  re--reports to Roosevelt about how Hitler had ex--sent out
                  agents to recover pornographic paintings that the--the
                  Fuehrer had done as a penniless artist in Vienna. He--he was
                  able to report to the president on how the Hitler-Eva Braun
                  romance had begun. He further was able to tell the president
                  about Hitler's sexual ambiguity. 
                  He also was able to deliver some intelligence or estimations
                  that were of s--of substance. For example, he was the first
                  to insist that Hitler, no matter how bad things got, would not
                  surrender, that he would commit suicide first, which is,
                  indeed, what happened. The president looked forward to
                  these reports from Hanfstaengel. He called them `my Hitler
                  bedtime stories.' 
                  
LAMB: What en--what hap--ended up happening to Putzi? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, Putzi s--seemed to lose favor when he got
                  done telling his bedtime stories or when he had revealed
                  whatever he knew, which--about the Third Reich and he's
                  now a number of years divorced from that, and because he's
                  kind of a pain in the neck who expects the United States to
                  provide him with a piano, take care of all of his dental work.
                  He's finally shipped back to the POW camp in Britain, and that
                  is the end of his spy career. 
                  
LAMB: Also, you have sprinkled in your book some stories
                  that, if it were to happen today, they would keep some cable
                  networks going for about three months. And what I'm getting
                  at is things like the Eleanor Roosevelt-Joseph Lashe story, the
                  personal side of that. Where do those--did--did the--how did
                  the president--did the president know about those kinds of
                  stories? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, there's an--there's an interesting
                  dichotomy in--in Hoover's relationship with FDR and with
                  Eleanor Roosevelt. He got along surprisingly well. You have
                  this genial, patrician, charming figure on one side and the dour
                  Hoover on the other, but they cooperated very closely.
                  However, Eleanor Roosevelt had made the mistake once of
                  referring to J. Edgar Hoover as stupid because he was
                  pressing a background clearance of a White House staffer who
                  had been around for years. Hoover was not the kind of figure
                  who would forget a slight, and consequently, when the Army
                  came up with a preposterous report that Eleanor Roosevelt
                  had been involved in a sexual tryst with her young protege,
                  Joe Lash, Hoover kept this information in his own private files
                  to the day of his death. 
                  
LAMB: What was the story, though? Did--was it ever proved
                  that they had a relationship? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: No. The Army intelligence people that provided
                  this information to Hoover had made a--a small error in their
                  eavesdropping. They had found Eleanor Roosevelt in a--in a
                  hotel with Lash visiting. But what they produced as proof of
                  a tryst was young Lash's involvement with hi--with his
                  girlfriend. He was having an affair with a married woman at
                  the time, who he subsequently married himself. But the--the
                  Army mili--military intelligence people are--are taping this,
                  they're peeping through--through holes in the wall, and
                  somehow it gets mixed up that it's not Lash and his girlfriend
                  Trudy, but it's Lash and Eleanor Roosevelt. 
                  
LAMB: How public has the Sumner Welles story been, the one
                  in the train? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: It's--it's fairly well-known. And you--what
                  you're referring to is the fact that Sumner Welles, who was
                  the undersecretary of State in the Roosevelt administration
                  and who was an important figure, he was Roosevelt's man.
                  The secretary of state was Cordell Hull, and Roosevelt pretty
                  much circumvented him and--and worked through Sumner
                  Welles, who was an old family friend. Welles had made some
                  sexual advances on trains, part of his--his business trips, to
                  black porters on these trains, who reported him. This was
                  concealed for a long time. It was two or three years before it
                  finally erupted. Roosevelt is under tremendous pressure from
                  people who fear that having a man with homosexual
                  tendencies in such a sensitive position at State--we have to
                  remember we're not talking about the current world; we're
                  talking about the attitudes of the--of the 1940s. He's looked
                  upon as a--as a--a security threat, and Roosevelt very
                  unhappily eventually dismisses Sumner Welles. 
                  What I thought was interesting was after he has to--has to
                  force Welles out of the State Department, he considers
                  sending Welles on a mission to Moscow for him, and he's
                  talked out of that. But one can only imagine, with the
                  capabilities of the NKVD to--to blackmail and to lead people
                  into compromising positions, what might have come of that
                  assignment. 
                  
LAMB: And how does William Bullitt fit into all this? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: William Bullitt was a--a rival of--of Sumner
                  Welles. Bullitt had been FDR's ambassador to France.
                  Obviously he has to come back when France falls, and he is
                  one who is pressuring the president to do something about
                  Sumner Welles, to get rid of him. Roosevelt i--is--is loyal to
                  people, and he's very fond of Sumner Welles, and he is very
                  dependent on Sumner Welles. And after he hears of the
                  tarring of Sumner Welles by Bill Bullitt, he, in effect, says to
                  Bill Bullitt, `What Sumner Welles is doing is wrong, but what
                  you are doing to denigrate another man will send you down
                  there,' and he makes this hellward gesture. 
                  
LAMB: There are so many stories, as you know, in this book.
                  You be--in the back you have a legend of where you got a lot
                  of it. You mentioned the library. How much time did you spend
                  at the Hyde Park Library? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, I was practically living there for many
                  months. Hyde Park was a--a commute for me almost. It was
                  about an hour and a half from my home in Albany, New York.
                  That was my greatest source. I also had marvelous results in
                  my research at the National Archives, the Library of Congress.
                  The stories I was telling about the messages that were
                  intercepted by Ambassador Oshima I managed to track down
                  at the National Archives. I don't think they'd been looked at
                  very much or at all since that time. That was very rewarding
                  for a researcher. 
                  
LAMB: Well, o--one of the things you have listed is PS--and
                  you have the little designation so you can tell where
                  something's coming from--`PSF, president's secretaries file,
                  Roosevelt Library.' Have a lot of people mined that file? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Certain areas, things have been mined rather
                  heavily. But there--there are always fresh revelations
                  that--that--that astonish me. For example, there was some
                  suspicion that an economist by the name of Lachlan Curry,
                  who was an--a utility infielder for President Roosevelt, took
                  on--undertook many trusted missions--there was some
                  suspicion about his--his loyalty, and I'm plowing through the
                  archives at Hyde Park, and I find that Lachlan Curry was the
                  White House man tracking the development of the secret
                  explosive RDX. Somehow Soviet Union finds out about the
                  development of RDX. On another occa--on another occasion,
                  he is assigned to track the development of a new bomber, the
                  B-29. Somehow the Soviet Union finds out about the B-29.
                  These were things that I discovered that I--I don't imagine
                  anybody paid any attention to before. So there are still,
                  among these millions of pages, some fresh research nuggets. 
                  
LAMB: Whatever happened to Lachlan Curry? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, Lachlan Curry denied, after the war,
                  that--that he had ever been a--a spy or that he's ever been
                  a member of the Communist Party. Lachlan Curry was one of a
                  number of--of--of people who were useful to the Soviet
                  Union, who took the position at that period that Russia is our
                  ally, why should we hold anything back from the Soviet Union?
                  So a g--a guy like Curry may not have been a spy in the
                  White House in the most narrow, technical sense, but he
                  certainly was a--a--a--a priceless source of in--of
                  intelligence. 
                  
LAMB: It's not often that I would cite a PR insert in a book,
                  but this was the most complete PR advance work I've ever
                  seen. I guess it's from Random House. 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: That's right, my publisher. 
                  
LAMB: And the reason I cite it is 'cause it--in spite of reading
                  the book, it makes it so easy. I'm gonna go down the list of
                  things that they point out here, because time goes by very
                  quickly, but just give people just a little nugget of
                  what--what you're talking about here. It says here, `Among
                  the revelations discussed in "Roosevelt's Secret War," the
                  failure of US intelligence to anticipate the surprise Pearl
                  Harbor attack.' 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well... 
                  
LAMB: Why--why did they fail? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Because, a--as I have explained to people at
                  the time or--I sh--excuse me, after the fact, that thread of
                  intelligence running from A to B to C to Pearl Harbor seems
                  glaringly obvious, or from X to Y to Z... 
                  
LAMB: But did they have the in--the intelligence information? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: They--they had--they had the intelligence.
                  They had the information, but it came in a flood tide.
                  In--in--in the Roosevelt era, you know, Roosevelt didn't get
                  in--intelligence decrypts that had been examined by analysts
                  and--and placed together like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. He
                  got raw intelligence. You know, it's very hard to sense, what's
                  the direction of this? What's it warning us about? What is our
                  antagonist likely to do next? Also we had--we had nobody on
                  the ground. We had no spies inside Ja--Japan, just as
                  apparently we--we haven't done very much to penetrate the
                  inner sanctum of--of our current adversaries. 
                  
LAMB: Another item: `FDR wanted to bomb Tokyo before Pearl
                  Harbor.' 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Yeah. That's amazing. Roosevelt was outraged
                  by the behavior of the Japanese in the war against
                  China--machine-gunning civilians in the street, bombing
                  defenseless cities. He considered a plan--This was a y--a
                  year in advance of Pearl Harbor--whereby the United States
                  would give B-17 bombers to the Chinese and train Chinese
                  pilots to fly them against Tokyo. He was told that it would
                  take too long to train these pilots. So the backup position was
                  we would give the bombers to China; we would have American
                  pilots resign from the Air Force and volunteer to fly them. So
                  we would have American pilots flying American planes a year
                  before Pearl Harbor against Tokyo. He was advised by cooler
                  heads that this would be an outright provocation and could
                  only lead to war. 
                  
LAMB: `The British fed FDR phony intelligence to draw the
                  United States into the war.' 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, Winston Churchill was very eager to have
                  the United States join the war against Hitler, and
                  consequently, British agents were to provide intelligence that
                  would help ro--this happen. They told Roosevelt about the
                  fact that the Germans had taken a map and cut Latin America
                  into six future Nazi vassal states, that--that a Bolivian pro-US
                  government was going to be toppled by the Nazis, that we
                  had 6,000 Brazilian troops--excuse me, 6,000 German troops
                  in Brazil. Roosevelt used some of this information in his
                  speeches and in his Fireside Chats. It was all fabricated by
                  the--by the British to help encourage the United States to
                  enter the war. 
                  
LAMB: `FDR's yielding to Churchill led to the theft of the
                  A-bomb.' 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Yeah. A curious tale. In the beginning, the
                  United States and Britain were full partners in developing an
                  atomic weapon, but as time went on and the United States
                  launched the Manhattan Project, was putting millions of
                  dollars into this, creating the facility at Los Alamos, we
                  became the dominant partner and started cutting the British
                  out of what was happening for security reasons. Churchill
                  comes to the United States at one point, sees Roosevelt at
                  Hyde Park. He's furious. He accuses Roosevelt of reneging. So
                  a compromise is reached: The British will not be getting
                  s--information on the A-bomb imported into Britain, but we will
                  allow a small team of British physicists, mathematicians and
                  other scientists to work at Los Alamos. One of them turns out
                  to be Klaus Fuchs. So as we know, Klaus Fuchs steals major
                  secrets of the bomb, gives this information to his Soviet
                  controllers. He is it--at Los Alamos because of a deal cut
                  between Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill. 
                  
LAMB: What happens to Klaus Fuchs? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Fuchs is finally unmasked several years after
                  the war in--in 1950. He was sentenced, I think, a 14-year
                  prison term. Eventually, upon his release, he--he continued
                  his work in East Germany. 
                  
LAMB: How did he get into this in the first place? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, he--Klaus Fuchs had been a young, avid
                  Communist in his native Germany. Things got very tough
                  for--for Communists in Germany as the Nazis came to power,
                  so he fled to Great Britain and eventually became a British
                  citizen. 
                  
LAMB: Back to the PR sheet here, which--by the way, did you
                  write this? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: I made some suggestions. 
                  
LAMB: Because, you know, sometimes authors don't, and then
                  they're always surprised by what's in here. `A leaked FDR plan
                  led Hitler to declare war on the United States.' 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Yeah, this is frequently overlooked, Brian,
                  th--that the United States did not cl--declare war on
                  Germany; we declared war only on Japan on December 8th,
                  1941. Why did Hitler do something seemingly so rash? There
                  was a leak of an important document called Rainbow Five, a
                  contingency plan that Roosevelt had called for: What would
                  we need, should we go to war against Germany by 1943? How
                  many divisions, how many ships, how many aircraft, how much
                  fuel, etc.? The Chicago Tribune gets a hold of this secret plan
                  and front-pages it, does not play it as a contingency plan.
                  The Tribune plays it as a war plan, and the--the headline says
                  FDR, Five Million Troops Against Germany by '43. And when
                  Hitler declares war on the United States four days after Pearl
                  Harbor, he--he virtually quotes this. He says, `Fra--President
                  Roosevelt intends to make war against us by 1943,' so in
                  declaring war against the United States, he doesn't view it as
                  being rash. He views it as anticipating the inevitable and
                  getting the draw on the US. 
                  
LAMB: `The relationship between FDR and Josef Stalin.' 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, the--the president recognized that Stalin
                  was taking 80 percent of the casualties during World War II
                  and inflicting 80 percent of the casualties on the Germans. So
                  he was very, very eager to cultivate and placate Joe Stalin,
                  would bend over backwards. I'll g--I'll give one example. There
                  is the long-standing controversy about the Katyn forest. Who
                  murdered 9,000 Poles in the Katyn forest? The Germans
                  claimed the Soviet Union did it. The Soviet Union claimed that
                  it happened when the Germans occupied this territory. This
                  story was rather controversial for a half a century.
                  Interestingly enough, Roosevelt and Churchill knew from day
                  one that these murders of the Poles had been done by Soviet
                  Union on Joe Stalin's orders. They didn't say anything, again,
                  because they did not want to alienate Stalin, who could
                  conceivably make a separate peace with Germany; then we
                  would have been left with the bulk of the fighting and the bulk
                  of the casualties. 
                  
LAMB: Page 273. This seemed to be one of those sentences
                  that people who don't like FDR probably use when they're
                  talking about him. "I th"--and this is a quote: "I think if I give
                  Stalin everything I possibly can and ask for nothing from him
                  in return, noblesse oblige, he won't try to annex anything and
                  will work with me for a world of democracy and peace." Where
                  does that come from? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: It comes out of Franklin Roosevelt's character,
                  which is a reliance on a--an almost overwhelming charm.
                  Roosevelt could charm almost anybody, and he thought that
                  he could charm Joe Stalin by being utterly--utterly respectful
                  and admiring and not questioning anything that Stalin did,
                  underrating the hard pragmatism of a Joe Stalin. 
                  
LAMB: Did that hurt us in the negotiations? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Well, it hur--it hurt us to the extent--for
                  example, the story I just told about the Katyn forest, that
                  we--we are not letting the American people know the--that
                  the monstrousness of Stalin is not all that different from that
                  of--of Adolf Hitler. But in--in the end, I--I--I don't accept the
                  charge that--that Roosevelt gave the store away at Yalta,
                  which is a common conclusion of--of many who discuss this
                  era. He was too forgiving and too accommodating to Stalin. I
                  do--but I--I don't think he--he gave anything away that
                  created our--our post-war confrontation with the Soviets. 
                  
LAMB: Did you learn anything about his relationship with
                  Winston Churchill that you hadn't known in the past? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: It was a relationship that s--that started
                  poorly. Franklin Roosevelt had a tre--tremendous ego. As a
                  young assistant secretary of the Navy, he had visited Britain,
                  and he'd come away with a very poor opinion of Winston
                  Churchill. He said that Winston Churchill had not shown
                  any--any respect for him. He called Winston Churchill `a
                  stinker.' Subsequently, wh--when Pearl Harbor is attacked,
                  Churchill calls him and says, `We're all in the same boat now.'
                  They pretty much behaved that way, although we have two
                  men, both with--with giant egos, and--and they--and they do
                  collide occasionally because Britain's ob--ob--objectives are
                  not the United States' objectives, and this is clearest
                  in--in--in Churchill's determination to win this war, at least in
                  part, to be able to restore the British Empire, much of which
                  had been taken away by the Japanese. And Chur--and
                  Roosevelt wants to go in the opposite direction. He wants this
                  war to serve the human end of allowing countries to develop
                  their--their--their own independence, their own freedom. So
                  there is a real collision. 
                  
LAMB: You--you say that President Kennedy's father, Joseph
                  Kennedy, called him at one point, quote--he was angry, called
                  him a "crippled SOB." Do you remember where that quote
                  came from, and why did he call him that? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Joe Kennedy had a son, Joe Kennedy Jr., the
                  elder brother of the future president. Roosevelt was very
                  insistent that a certain secret operation take place in which
                  an aircraft would be loaded with high explosives. The pilot and
                  the co-pilot would head it towards the target, V-1s and V-2s,
                  the German secret weapon launching sites. The pilots would
                  bail out and a guide plane would--would--would, in effect,
                  lead this flying bomb towards the target through radio remote
                  control. Churchill opposed this. Churchill was afraid that the
                  Nazis would retaliate against London, and Roosevelt took the
                  position, `We know they're developing these secret weapons.
                  They're gonna strike London anyway.' 
                  So this plan, Aphrodite, went forward, and on the first
                  mission, Joe Kennedy and his pilot take off with this
                  explosives-laden aircraft. It--it explodes mysteriously. Both
                  men are killed. Joe Kennedy, Sr., who at one point had been
                  Roosevelt's ambassador to Great Britain, runs into Harry
                  Truman at an event. Truman is then Roosevelt's vice
                  presidential candidate in the 1944 election. And Joe Kennedy
                  says to Harry Truman, `Harry, what are you doing working for
                  that crippled SOB who killed my son Joe?' 
                  
LAMB: There's a woman that is always around FDR in your
                  book, someone named Margaret Suckley, Daisy Suckley. Who
                  was she and where did you get the information about her? 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Daisy Suckley was a distant cousin of
                  Roosevelt. 
                  
LAMB: She's in the middle in this picture. 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Let me take a little closer look. Yes. And Daisy
                  Suckley was a person who Roosevelt would confide in, things
                  that he would not tell to anybody else. He felt perfectly
                  comfortable. Because she adored him, he knew he had her
                  absolute trust. So he to--he told her things that, for example,
                  would have very much surprised other members of the--of the
                  Roosevelt team, one of which was the state of FDR's health.
                  From the last year at least of FDR's life, he w--he was a dying
                  man. He had been examined at the Bethesda Naval Center by
                  cardiologists that realized he had astronomic blood pressure,
                  that he was suffering from hardened--hardening of the
                  arteries. Amazingly, Roosevelt never asked a question. He
                  never asked: What was the result of these examinations?
                  What had they found? A cardiologist is assigned to him in the
                  White House who checks him out daily. He joshes with the
                  cardiologist, gossips with him, never asks about his condition. 
                  So one would have the sense that he doesn't know what's
                  happening or doesn't want to know. But he, on one occasion,
                  in one of these private sessions with his confidante and
                  distant cousin, Daisy Suckley, he says, in effect, `I--I am
                  very sick, much sicker than I have been told, and if I am sick
                  enough, I will not run for another term. I must be convinced
                  that I can complete another term.' He's talking about a fourth
                  term. And as we know, he--he--he's right on one count. He
                  runs again. He's wrong on another count, he dies only four
                  months into his fourth term. 
                  
LAMB: Unfortunately--no, fortunately, I have about a hundred
                  more questions for you, but unfortunately, it's--time is up.
                  Our guest has been Joseph Persico. His book is called
                  "Roosevelt's Secret War." Thank you very much for joining us. 
                  
Mr. PERSICO: Thank you for having me, Brian.
 
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