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Research Article
1 November 2008

Rethinking Cold War History

Publication: Labour History: A Journal of Labour and Social History
Number 95

Abstract

Historians have rethought some of the prevailing assumptions employed in writing about the Cold War in Australia. Until recently, the history of the Cold War in Australia was often written with too little detachment and skepticism toward the Left, and with a failure of scholarly empathy toward the claims of the anti-Communist Right. The opening of new archival and intelligence sources (such as the ‘Venona’ papers) is one reason for the shift in the field. Another is a reassessment of the link between the USSR and the Communist Party of Australia (CPA), that leads to questions about the CPA’s dogmatic pro-Soviet stance, and to what degree this was partly responsible for its defeats, rather than simply victimisation. New archival sources establish that some clandestine political activity was undertaken, including espionage and that Soviet funds were given to the CPA over a long period. Not every historian, however, has embraced this new evidence. The present article critiques recent contributions by Cain and Hocking, suggesting that discussion of political fundamentalism on the Left and the security response to it is vital if Cold War history is to be understood and made relevant to discussions of contemporary terrorism.

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Endnotes

1.
Phillip Deery, ‘Decoding the Cold War: Venona, espionage and "the communist threat"’ in Peter Love and Paul Strangio (eds), Arguing the Cold War, Red Rag Publications, Carlton North, 2001, p. 115.
2.
John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr, Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1999.
3.
David Lowe, Menzies and the ‘great world struggle’: Australia’s Cold War, 1948-1954, UNSW Press, Sydney, 1999
Desmond Ball and David Horner, Breaking the Codes: Australia’s KGB Network, 1944- 1950, Allen & Unwin, St Leonards, 1998
Phillip Deery, ‘Decoding the Cold War’
David McKnight, ‘The Moscow-Canberra cables: how Soviet intelligence obtained British secrets through the back door,’ Intelligence and National Security, vol. 13, no. 2, 1998, pp. 159-170.
4.
Robert Manne, The Petrov Affair: Politics and Espionage, Pergamon Press, Sydney, 1987.
5.
Mark Jackson, ‘Once More on Vladimir Petrov’, Arena, no. 81, 1987, pp. 177-184.
6.
Lowe, Menzies, pp.120, 124.
7.
A.W. Martin, Robert Menzies: A Life, Vol 2. 1944-1978, Melbourne University Press, Carlton South, 1999, pp. 273-285; pp. 576-77.
8.
Bruce Duncan, Crusade or Conspiracy: Catholics and the Anti-Communist Struggle in Australia, UNSW Press, Sydney, 2001, p. 397.
9.
Patrick Morgan (ed.) Your Most Obedient Servant: B.A. Santamaria Selected Letters, 1938-1996, Melbourne University Press, Carlton South, 2007.
10.
John McLaren, ‘Peace Wars: the 1959 ANZ Peace Congress’, Labour History, no. 82, May 2002, pp. 97-108.
11.
David McKnight, Australia’s Spies and Their Secrets, Allen & Unwin, St Leonards, 1994, p. 116.
12.
Untitled memo, 18 Sept 1959, ‘Spoiling Operations; Media P, Vol. 2’ A6122, item 2013, pp. 25-26, National Archives of Australia (NAA).
13.
Ralph Summy and Malcolm Saunders, ‘The 1959 Melbourne Peace Congress: culmination of anti- communism in Australia in the 1950s’ in Ann Curthoys and John Merritt (eds), Australia’s First Cold War 1945-59: Better Red than Dead, Vol 2, Allen and Unwin, North Sydney, 1986.
14.
McLaren, ‘Peace Wars’, p. 98.
15.
Ibid., p. 106.
16.
Jenny Hocking, Terror Laws: ASIO, Counter-Terrorism and the Threat to Democracy, UNSW Press, Sydney, 2004.
17.
McKnight, Australia’s Spies, ch. 2, 5
Ball and Horner, Breaking the Codes, ch. 9, 15.
18.
Hocking, Terror Laws, p. 21, p. 24.
19.
Robert Manne, Petrov Affair
McKnight, Australia’s Spies
Ball and Horner, Breaking the Codes.
20.
McKnight, ‘The Moscow-Canberra cables’
Ball and Horner, Breaking the Codes.
22.
Ibid., Canberra-Moscow, 19 March 1946.
25.
Venona, Canberra-Moscow, 16 November 1945
8 May 1946.
26.
Venona, Canberra- Moscow, 8 March 1946.
27.
Frank Cain, ‘Venona in Australia and its long term ramifications’, Journal of Contemporary History, vol. 35, no. 2, 2000, pp. 231-248.
28.
Frank Cain, ASIO: An Unofficial History, Spectrum Publications, Richmond, 1994, pp. 180-181.
29.
Cain, ‘Venona in Australia’, p. 238.
30.
Ibid., p.240.
31.
Moscow to Canberra, 5 June 1948
McKnight, Australia’s Spies, p. 78.
32.
Cain, ‘Venona in Australia’, p. 240.
33.
Age, 13 July 1994.
34.
Frank Cain, ‘Dr Evatt and the Petrov affair: a reassessment in the light of new evidence’ in Julie Kimber, Peter Love, Phillip Deery (eds), Labour Traditions: Proceedings of the Tenth national Labour History Conference, Australian Society for the Study of Labour History, Melbourne, 2007, pp. 52-55.
35.
Laurence W. Maher, ‘H.V. Evatt and the Petrov defection: a lawyer’s interpretation’ in Kimber, Love, Deery, Labour Traditions, pp. 138-144.
36.
L.J. Louis, Menzies Cold War: A Reinterpretation, Red Rag Publications, Carlton North, 2001, p. 40.
37.
Venona, Canberra-Moscow, 17 March 1945.
38.
McKnight, Australia’s Spies, p. 50, p. 82.
39.
Moscow-Canberra, 5 May 1945.
40.
Frances Stonor Saunders, Who Paid the Piper? The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Granta Books, London, 1999.
41.
McKnight, Australia’s Spies, ch. 17.
42.
Stuart Macintyre, The Reds: The Communist Party of Australia, From Origins to Illegality, Allen & Unwin, St Leonards, 1998, pp. 356-57.
43.
Courier Mail, 10 January 1998
Weekend Australian, 3-4 April 2004.
44.
John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr, In Denial: Historians, Communism and Espionage, Encounter Books, San Francisco, 2003, pp. 68-70.
45.
Martin Linton, ‘Moscow gold bankrolled communists’, The Guardian, 15 Nov 1991.
46.
Kevin Morgan, Bolshevism and the British Left: Labour Legends and Russian Gold, Lawrence and Wishart, London, 2006.
48.
Eric Aarons, undated letter and email dated 20 May 2005 in author’s possession.
49.
Eric Aarons, ‘Soviets did their dough’, Courier Mail, 24 January 1998.
50.
David McKnight, Espionage and the Roots of the Cold War: the Conspiratorial Heritage, Frank Cass Publishers, London, 2002.
51.
Haynes and Klehr, In Denial.
52.
McKnight, Espionage and the Roots of the Cold War, ch. 6.
53.
Denis Freney, Map of Days: Life on the Left, William Heinemann, Melbourne, 1991, ch. 4.
54.
‘CPA Interest in Political Parties, Australian Labor Party’, vols 1-14, A6122 series, NAA.
55.
Phillip Deery, ‘Communism, security and the Cold War’, Journal of Australian Studies, no. 54/55, 1997, pp. 162-175.
56.
Macintyre, The Reds, pp. 2-3.

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Labour History: A Journal of Labour and Social History
Number 951 November 2008
Pages: 185 - 196

History

Published in print: 1 November 2008
Published online: 24 October 2022

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