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The Manhattan Project Heritage Preservation Association, Inc. "Preserving, Exhibiting, Interpreting and Teaching the History of the Manhattan Project" |
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Letter to FBI Director - J. Edgar Hoover
by: William L. Borden
| From the day the news of Oppenheimer's security hearing broke, it had been rumored that the immediate impetus behind the Commission's decision to initiate its procedures had come in the form of a letter of accusation from a former employee of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy. It was not until a late stage in the hearing, however, that the truth of the rumor was admitted, and then only partially. On April 30, 1954 the writer of the letter, William L. Borden, was summoned as a witness for the Commission, and during his testimony, some - but far from all - of his role in the affair was revealed. Borden had been Executive Director of the Joint Committee between January 1949 and June 1953 and during that time had apparently become convinced that Oppenheimer was a critical threat to the country. The last thing he had done before leaving the Committee was to formulate no less than 400 questions about Oppenheimer's activities, and soon after leaving he had taken the matter a stage further by putting his conclusions down in writing, as a letter to the Director of the FBI, J. Edgar Hoover. Following is that letter: |
| November 7, 1953 Dear Mr. Hoover, RE: This letter concerns J. Robert Oppenheimer As you know, he has for some years enjoyed access to various critical activities of the National Security Council, the Department of State, the Department of Defense, the Army, Navy, and Air Force, the Research and Development Board, the Atomic Energy Commission, the Central Intelligence Agency, the National Security Resources Board and the National Science Foundation. His access covers most new weapons being developed by the Armed Forces, war plans at least in comprehensive outline, complete details as to atomic and hydrogen weapons and stockpile data, the evidence on which some of the principal CIA intelligence estimates is based, United States participation in the United Nations and NATO and many other areas of high security sensitivity. Because the scope of his access may well be unique, because he has had custody of an immense collection of classified papers covering military, intelligence, and diplomatic as well as atomic-energy matters, and because he also possesses a scientific background enabling him to grasp the significance of classified data of a technical nature, it seems reasonable to estimate that he is and for some years has been in a position to compromise more vital and detailed information affecting the national defense and security than any other individual in the United States. While J. Robert Oppenheimer has not made major contributions to the advancement of science, he holds a respected professional standing among the second rank of American physicists. In terms of his mastery of Government affairs, his close liaison with ranking officials, and his ability to influence high-level thinking, he surely stands in the first rank, not merely among scientists but among all those who have shaped postwar decisions in the military, atomic energy, intelligence, and diplomatic fields. As chairman or as an official or unofficial member of more than 35 important Government committees, panels, study groups, and projects, he has oriented or dominated key policies involving every principal United States security department and agency except the FBI. The purpose of this letter is to state my own exhaustively considered opinion, based upon years of study, of the available classified evidence, that more probably than not J. Robert Oppenheimer is an agent of the Soviet Union. This opinion considers the following factors, among others: 1. The evidence indicating that as of April 1942:
2. The evidence indicating:
3. The evidence indicating that:
4. The evidence indicating that:
From such evidence, considered in detail, the following conclusions are justified:
It is to be noted that these conclusions correlate with information furnished by Klaus Fuchs, indicating that the Soviets had acquired an agent in Berkeley who informed them about electromagnetic separation research during 1942 or earlier. Needless to say, I appreciate the probabilities identifiable from existing evidence might, with review of future acquired evidence, be reduced to possibilities; or they might also be increased to certainties. The central problem is not whether J. Robert Oppenheimer was ever a Communist; for the existing evidence makes abundantly clear that he was. Even an Atomic Energy Commission analysis prepared in early 1947 reflects this conclusion, although some of the most significant derogatory data had yet to become available. The central problem is assessing the degree of likelihood that he in fact did what a Communist in his circumstances, at Berkeley, would logically have done during the crucial 1939 - 1942 period...that is, whether he became an actual espionage and policy instrument of the Soviets. Thus, as to this central problem, my opinion is that, more probably than not, the worst is in fact the truth. I am profoundly aware of the grave nature of these comments. The matter is detestable to me. Having lived with the Oppenheimer case for years, having studied and restudied all data concerning him that your agency made available to the Atomic Energy Commission through May 1953, having endeavored to factor in a mass of additional data assembled from numerous other sources, and looking back upon the case from a perspective in private life, I feel a duty simply to state to the responsible head of the security agency most concerned the conclusions which I have painfully crystallized and which I believe and fair-minded man thoroughly familiar with the evidence must also be driven to accept. The writing of this letter, to me a solemn step, is exclusively on my own personal initiative and responsibility. Very truly your, William L. Borden
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