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| Letters to the Editor | The Journal of American History, 89.2 | The History Cooperative
89.2  
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September, 2002
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Letters to the Editor


To the Editor:

Although Todd Bennett's discussion of Mission to Moscow (September 2001 JAH) expresses a desire to illuminate "the elusive linkages between culture and power," his article may too readily succumb to the power and culture of the Cold War. The film Mission to Moscow represented a crucial controversy over our foreign policy as, in the interest of winning Soviet trust and cooperation, the Roosevelt administration challenged a powerful anti-Soviet tradition. Bennett slights the importance and promise of that challenge while simply endorsing the wisdom of the anti-Soviet rationale that replaced it. He even attributes such a rationale to Franklin D. Roosevelt by asserting that the film's "unintentional provision of ideological support to the Stalinist regime . . . exposed a weakness in Roosevelt's approach." But did Roosevelt himself consider this a weakness? Or was he, unlike his successor, prepared to cultivate and fully accept the friendship and legitimacy of the Soviet government? If Roosevelt's utilization of Mission to Moscow was not "as 'naïve' as critics have claimed" because it initiated a cultural penetration of the Soviet Union, is this because Roosevelt assumed a two-way street that would build understanding and even some imitation in both directions? Such flexibility did not survive Roosevelt's death. While Roosevelt had resisted the strongly anti-Soviet urgings of Winston Churchill, George Kennan, and Averell Harriman, they all found an eager follower in Harry S. Truman, who was soon praised by those who had denounced both the film and Roosevelt's foreign policy.

Objections could be raised to a variety of Bennett's Cold War assumptions, including his conception of a "totalitarian coalition," but let us focus upon one: Joseph Stalin's supposed attempt to reach a separate peace with Adolf Hitler in 1943. This particular demonization of Stalin reached full expression in an article published by Vojtech Mastny in 1972. Lacking firm evidence of any such peace effort, Mastny did display an uncanny ability to speculate on the possible meaning of possible occurrences and to twist Soviet actions or words into something either nefarious or contrary to their apparent meaning. Because the Soviets reacted to this accusation in 1947 by pointing out that one of the named participants was in Australia at the time he was supposed to be meeting Nazi representatives in Sweden, Mastny concluded that "Russian sensitivity about the subject enhances rather than reduces the possibility" of such an effort. Recognizing the weakness of his case, he also expressed regret that "conclusive evidence from the Moscow archives may not be available for some time to come." In the thirty subsequent years, no such evidence has emerged, and as Robert H. McNeal, no Soviet sympathizer, concluded in 1988, "it is unlikely that Stalin was seriously interested in negotiations at this time." Certainly such Allied fears existed, but they were reflective of anti-communist prejudice and, perhaps, Allied embarrassment rather than Soviet treachery. Up to that time, not only had the Soviet Union borne the brunt of the war, but commitments to launch a second front had not been met in 1942 and 1943 and convoys to Murmansk had been halted three times, the last during the decisive Battle of Stalingrad no less. As for Roosevelt, rather than being motivated by anti-communist suspicions, he deplored them and remained primarily concerned with enhancing the vital war and postwar role of the Soviet Union. In pursuit of that end he desired to utilize Mission to Moscow to build a lasting friendship, and it is of some significance that the reception of that film (despite its cultural penetration) was overwhelmingly favorable in the Soviet Union, while it was being widely denounced in the United States.




Otto H. Olsen
Gainesville, Florida
Ephraim Schulman
Valdosta, Georgia



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