Betraying the United States government is usually a bad idea, especially if you're an American Citizen. Sometimes we've been too hard on people who were forced at gunpoint to assist the enemy such as the case of Tokyo Rose, a Japanese American woman visiting a relative in Japan and trapped there when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. It was later shown that she had been forced to broadcast propaganda for Japan. But on the other hand, sometimes we've been too soft on willing collaborators. Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed for providing atomic secrets to the Soviet Union yet others who did the same thing at the same time didn't even do prison time even though their activities were uncovered.
Here are eight Americans who let our side down, ranging from the Revolutionary War to present times.
8) BENEDICT ARNOLD
When your name becomes synonymous with the word traitor,
you can usually expect to have it pop up on a fair number of lists of famous
traitors. You can also usually expect to have been executed by angry patriots
long before you get to read any of these lists, but in Benedict Arnold's case,
he was able to die peacefully in Canada at a safe distance from everyone who
wanted to kill him. Arnold was actually on track to become an American hero of
the Revolutionary War, scoring important victories at Fort Ticonderoga and
Saratoga and often leading his men from the front lines. Unfortunately for him,
his short temper and lack of understanding about the ins and outs of politics
made him some powerful enemies and few friends in the political structure of
the Continental Army. He was also deep in debt after paying for much of his
soldiers' equipment out of his own pocket, so when he found himself relegated
to military command of Philadelphia he developed contacts among Loyalist
colonists and eventually started selling crucial bits of intelligence to the
British spy service. When his handler was captured, Benedict Arnold officially
joined the British Army as a brigadier general, leading several attacks on
targets in New York before settling down in Canada, where he played a minor
role in British military intrigues and shipping but was mostly remembered for
being an incredibly bitter and unpleasant man. A foot note to his downfall has
more recently come to light with the theory that it was his young and ambitious
wife who actually led him into the world of espionage and ultimate downfall.
7) ALDRICH AMES
The most damaging mole in CIA history and believed to be the
most damaging spy in American history in general (until the discovery of the
FBI's Robert Hanssen several years later), Aldrich Ames first started working
for the Russians in 1985. Nine years later, the CIA noticed that one of their
analysts was a $60,000 per year desk worker who owned a $50,000 Jaguar and a
$540,000 house, both of which he had paid for in cash, and credit card debt
with a minimum monthly payment of more than his monthly salary. They belatedly
realized that these just might be signs of a man with more than one source of
income. After making sure that Ames hadn't recently inherited a fortune from
some previously unknown relative, the CIA arrested him. He casually admitted
that he had sold the Soviets information that had resulted in the exposure of
over a hundred Western agents behind the Iron Curtain, several of whom had been
executed based on his information. Ames pleaded guilty to dodge the death
penalty and the American intelligence apparatus breathed a sigh of relief
knowing that their worst leak had successfully been patched up…but that feeling
of relief wouldn't last long.
6) ROBERT HANSSEN
A computer and wiretapping expert, Robert Hanssen rose to
the top levels of the FBI hierarchy even though he was actively spying for the
Soviet and Russian Federation governments for all but the first three years of
his career. His work compromised hundreds of American counter-espionage
investigations and earned him over $1.4 million from grateful KGB and GRU
agents. Using a system of code names and dead drops to exchange information and
cash, Hanssen maintained a much lower profile than Ames and would have never
been caught if his brother-in-law (also an FBI agent) hadn't spotted a gigantic
stack of money on Hanssen's nightstand during a visit. When arrested in 2001
after twenty-two years as a double agent, Hanssen is reported to have said,
"What took you so long?"
5) EZRA POUND
American expatriate Ezra Pound was a revolutionary poet and
literary critic, a personal friend to nearly all the American and British
writers of the time, and a proud and committed fascist. Pound blamed the
international banking system for World War I, which disillusioned and
embittered him, and he felt that the experimental system of social credit
that was needed to replace the banks could only be implemented by a fascist
government. After moving to Italy and meeting Mussolini, Pound began working
less on his poetry and more on his economic and social lectures and pamphlets,
where he increasingly replaced the term international banking with international
Jewry and his articles or letters would end with the salutation, Heil
Hitler. During the invasion of Italy in World War II, Pound convinced the
government of Rome to allow him to make propaganda broadcasts to American
troops, which were of dubious value as his voice was described as "like
the sound of a hornet stuck in a jar" and there were few poetry
aficionados in the army at the time to know who he was. Arrested in 1945 by
partisan troops, Pound endured harsh conditions in an American prison camp
outside Pisa, an experience that allegedly drove him insane (or more than he
already was, according to some) and left him unfit to stand trial. After his
release from a Pennsylvania mental asylum in 1958, Pound returned to Italy to
live out the rest of his days in bitterness and failing health.
4) FRITZ JULIUS KUHN
Born in Germany but living and working in America since
1928, Fritz Kuhn was the man in charge of the infamous U.S. Nazi group, the
German-American Bund. An enthusiastic supporter of Hitler's ideas on racial
purity and the fascist system, Kuhn was also a fan of Hitler's political style.
Bund gatherings were known for dramatic outbursts of violence in a way America
had never seen before that time. Ironically, Hitler wasn't much of a fan of
Kuhn and his makeshift Nazi party—the dictator wanted Nazi influence in America
to be powerful, but not so powerful that it might backfire and draw America
into the war. The Bund's front-page antics weren't falling in line with that
goal. Eventually, Kuhn was taken down by a New York City tax investigation that
showed he had embezzled $14,000 from his own organization. When he emerged from
that jail sentence, he was immediately arrested for being an enemy agent. Kuhn
was released at the war's end and returned to Germany a bitter, broken man.
3) AMERICAN WAFFEN-SS VOLUNTEERS
One of the stranger details about Germany's Nazi-run
Schutzstaffel (more commonly known as the SS) was that it formed a number of
volunteer and propaganda divisions of decidedly non-German and sometimes even
non-Aryan ethnicities. For years there were rumors of a so-called "George
Washington Brigade" made up entirely of renegade Americans. The GWB turned
out to be a myth, but it was a myth reinforced by the occasional discovery of
SS troops with American accents or names, who often turned out to be not just
naturalized citizens but born on American soil. It's impossible to know for
sure how many Americans fought for the Nazis as records are unavailable after
May of 1940.
2) MARTIN JAMES MONTI
One particularly noteworthy American SS was Army Air Force
pilot Martin James Monti, who in October of 1944 hitchhiked and transferred his
way to an Italian airbase, stole a fast reconnaissance plane and promptly flew
it north into Axis hands to defect. Searching around for something to do, Monti
made a few propaganda broadcasts under the name Martine Wiehaupt, but his radio
voice was lacking and he eventually became an SS sergeant in the closing weeks
of the war. Nobody is quite sure of Monti's motivation or why he chose to defect
to a country that was clearly losing the war. He served a brief jail sentence
before being released back into the Army, where he kept a low profile and
managed to make sergeant by 1948 before the FBI caught up with him. He served
the next twenty-five years in prison.
1) AARON BURR
Burr was vice president to Thomas Jefferson, back when the
president and the vice president tended to be from opposing political parties.
They spent a lot of time yelling at each other. He who shot Alexander Hamilton
in that famous duel. What most school history lessons don't really cover is
that Burr became so unpopular after essentially murdering his political
opponent that he decided his career was over unless he did something really
dramatic. He formulated a plan to take control of the Texas and Louisiana
Territories with groups of armed farmers and the help of sympathetic army
officers and possibly even invade either Mexico or Washington, D.C. if he could
talk Spain into the deal. Unfortunately for Burr, Jefferson had been keeping an
eye on his former vice president, and various state district attorneys were
busy collecting evidence of the so-called Burr Conspiracy.
The hammer finally dropped after Burr's co-conspirator, General James Wilkinson, sent Congress the deciphered text of a letter Burr had written of a planned attack on several important Mississippi River towns. Upon seeing his treasonous letter published in full in a New Orleans newspaper including a reward for his capture, Burr abandoned his tiny army and attempted to hide in the vast marshes of the Louisiana Territory. Aaron Burr was eventually captured by troops from Fort Stoddard and delivered to Richmond, Virginia for his trial at the Supreme Court. Despite Jefferson's desire to have Burr executed, a stubborn Chief Justice John Marshall eventually threw the case out based on technicalities. The case became one of the earliest tests of Constitutional law and the limiting of the executive branch. Burr briefly exiled himself to Europe, but returned later under an assumed name to try and start anew. True to form, he was pestering various governments with plans to conquer Mexico and installing himself as governor, even under his new identity. He died hounded by creditors from both his old life and the new one.
3 comments:
Interesting post! Nothing seems to change, does it?
If only Aldrich Ames had read the epic fact based stand-alone #spy novel #BeyondEnkription in #TheBurlingtonFiles series by Bill Fairclough aka #EdwardBurlington in #MI6 & the #CIA. It’s a must read for espionage cognoscenti.
Ilona: Yep. Different names and different times, but the same concept.
Thanks for your comment.
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