In the Garden of Beasts.
Butler, Michael
Franklin D. Roosevelt's ambassadorial appointments included
the highly successful (Laurence Steinhardt), the able but duplicitous
(William C. Bullitt) and the self-important dilettante (Joseph E.
Davies). Roosevelt's decision in 1933 to send William E. Dodd as
his representative to Berlin was one among a series of foreign-policy
missteps during his first weeks in office. Overwhelmed by his duties as
chairman of the History Department at the University of Chicago, Dodd
lobbied for appointment as Minister to Brussels or The Hague, under the
quaint assumption that those offices required little effort and offered
time to write. Unable to convince a man of stature to become Ambassador
to Hitler's Germany, Roosevelt finally settled on Dodd. Suspecting
the position would be too much for him, Dodd accepted nonetheless,
compounding his error by inviting his two adult children to accompany
him to Berlin. The appointment was one of several that reduced the
quality and influence of American representatives in key European
capitals. Roosevelt's first ambassadors in Paris and London
qualified principally because of their early and generous support of his
candidacy. Hoover's representatives in Germany, France and Great
Britain included two former US Senators, a former US Vice-President and
a former Secretary of Treasury.
Erik Larson draws from Dodd's papers and published diary and
the papers and published memoir of his daughter Martha (1) to draw a
vibrant picture of a man (and family) under psychological siege in
Berlin from the Nazi regime and, in Dodd's mistaken view, from his
embassy staff and counterparts in Washington. Larson vividly depicts the
chaos that accompanied Hitler's consolidation of power, and
justifiably portrays the decline of the democratic German polity and
society as tragic for the many decent people who inhabit his narrative.
The story benefits from Martha Dodd's appalling judgment: escaping
a dying marriage in Chicago, her lovers included an NKVD officer under
Soviet diplomatic cover, the chief of the Gestapo, Goring's
second-in-command at the Luftwaffe, Kaiser Wilhelm's grandson and a
French diplomat. "This was not a house," Dodd's German
butler lamented, "but a house of ill repute." Martha
Dodd's papers provide Larson material that a novelist would be
ashamed to invent.
Larson judges Dodd successful at satisfying Roosevelt's desire
to have a living example of American liberalism in the Nazi capital. Yet
it is clear - less from Larson's account than other sources - that
Dodd did not fulfill the diplomatic and representational
responsibilities of the office. A successful American ambassador in
Hitler's Berlin would have combined diplomatic nuance and personal
forcefulness and would have sought every opportunity to press American
policy upon everyday Germans and Nazi officials. Dodd was none of this.
In fact, among Berlin's political and diplomatic community he was
something of an oddball. Dodd took Roosevelt's direction literally,
disdained what he considered diplomatic pretension, and treated all
other instructions as secondary or irrelevant. He also allowed his
progressive personal politics to trump his professional duties. Dodd
resisted Washington's instructions to represent faithfully American
holders of German debt, earning a sharp and justified reprimand from the
Secretary of State. American money had kept Germany afloat for more than
a decade and the failure to honor the debt ensured a transfer of wealth
from American bondholders to Hitler's rearmament program. Dodd
ignored American commercial interests, even as Cordell Hull sought to
break monopolistic German trade practices.
Dodd shared the Roosevelts' contempt for America's
professional diplomatic service, (2) and judging from Larson's
frequent snide references to "a Pretty Good Club," he agrees.
Dodd's frustration grew as he realized that his duties left little
time for writing and that his salary - from which he had to pay
household and representational expenses - paled next to the wealth of
his staff. He raged at their tendency to arrive late at the office after
an evening of social events that he made a point to avoid. Yet American
diplomats of that era were an able group, highly respected by their
peers in more established diplomatic services. In Berlin's
repressive milieu, off-line exchanges in social settings could prove
more effective than formal conversations in ministries. And while Dodd
eventually came to comprehend the evil of Hitler's regime, others
in the embassy were warning of its dangers while the Dodds were still
enraptured by romantic notions of the Nazi revolution. (3) Consul
General George S. Messersmith, while hoping "moderate"
leadership would control the radical Nazi masses, described the brutal
system that he confronted in his daily duties in long reports to the
State Department. (4) Dodd's steadily growing resentment of
Messersmith, well outlined in Larson's account, reveals the
Ambassador's paranoia and pettiness as well as his steady
deterioration under pressure. For his part, Messersmith believed Dodd
"had really very little conception of what the duties of an
Ambassador were," and concluded that "[i]t was seldom that I
had worked with a chief of mission who was more futile and
ineffective." As for Dodd's adult children, Messersmith dryly
suggested that "they were never any help to the father." (5)
Larson dwells on Dodd's tragedy while downplaying his
children's treachery. Martha Dodd's Soviet lover was
recruiting rather than courting her, and she became an active and
enthusiastic NKVD agent, probably by early 1934. She reported on her
father's correspondence with Roosevelt and the State Department,
pressed a weary Dodd to remain as Ambassador, applauded his reluctance
to support American commercial and financial interests, and offered her
influence (and, indirectly, Dodd's) to have a man of the
Soviets' choosing succeed her father. As his paranoia grew, Dodd
wrote reports to Roosevelt by hand, fearing his clerical staff was
spying for his enemies in Washington; ironically, Dodd's daughter
relayed to the Soviets what he sought to hide from his own government.
The Soviets also recruited Dodd's son Bill and financed his
unsuccessful 1938 congressional campaign and subsequent career in
journalism. (6) Martha and Bill Dodd's loyalties raise intriguing
questions, not addressed by Larson, about their influence on both
American policy towards Germany and their father's relationship
with his own government.
The political slaughter of mid-1934 completed Dodd's
disillusionment with the Nazi regime. In 1937, Roosevelt appointed a
senior professional diplomat as Ambassador in Berlin. Dodd, embittered
and in failing health, spent the final years of his life touring the
United States warning of the Nazi menace and establishing his reputation
as a statesman who opposed the Nazis rather than a failed Ambassador.
Dodd's beloved wife passed away within six months of their return
from Berlin; he was later convicted of hit-and-run driving following an
accident that severely injured a four-year-old child. Dodd died in
February of 1940. Martha Dodd's Russian lover perished in
Stalin's execution chambers, a fact that her handlers were careful
to hide from her. She married a wealthy left- wing activist whom she
recruited for the Soviets. They fled the US during the 1950s as Russian
spy rings began to unravel. Exiled in Mexico, her US passport cancelled,
Martha Dodd and her husband purchased Paraguayan nationality and fled to
the Soviet bloc. She died a lonely woman in Prague, shortly after the
fall of the Berlin Wall.
(1.) William E. Dodd, Ambassador Dodd's Diary, 1933-1938. ed.
by William E. Dodd, Jr., and Martha Dodd (New York: Harcourt Brace,
1941); Martha Dodd, Through Embassy Eyes (New York: Harcourt, Brace,
1939).
(2.) See, for example, the entries of 30 October 1934, 22 November
1934, 6 February 1934, and 2 and 10 May 1935, Dodd, Ambassador
Dodd's Diary, pp. 183, 194-95, 213, 240 and 242; and Robert Dallek,
Diplomat and Democrat: The Life of William E. Dodd (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1968) pp. 193-94, 231, 237-38.
(3.) The reporting from American Embassy Berlin prior to
Dodd's arrival astutely analyzed both the Nazis parallel governing
structure and the broader dangers of the Hitler regime. See U.S.
Department of States, Foreign Relations of the United States, 1933, vol.
II (Washington, Government Printing Office, 1949), pp. 188- 247.
(4.) Messersmith to Moffat, 25 April 1933, George S. Messersmith
Papers, University of Delaware Library, Newark, Delaware, Box 2, File
10; Messersmith to Phillips, 20 June 1933, Messersmith papers Box 2,
File 13; Messersmith to Phillips, 26 June 1933, Messersmith Papers Box
2, File 14. The Messersmith papers are digitized and available at
http://www.lib.udel.edu/ud/spec/findaids/messersmith/index.html.
(5.) George S. Messersmith, "Some Observations on the
Appointment of Dr. William Dodd, as Ambassador to Berlin," undated
memorandum, Messersmith Papers, Box 18, File 134. For a view of the
Dodd-Messersmith relationship, see Jesse H. Stiller, George S.
Messersmith: Diplomat of Democracy (Chapel Hill: University of North
Carolina Press, 1987).
(6.) Allen Weinstein and Alexander Vassiliev, The Haunted Wood:
Soviet Espionage in America - The Stalin Era (New York: Random House,
1999), pp. 50-71; John Earl Heynes, Harvey Klehr and Alexander
Vassiliev, Spies: The Rise and Fall of the KGB in America (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 2009), pp. 150-51, 179-83, 431-45; John Earl
Haynes and Harvey Klehr, Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999), pp. 269- 73.
Book reviewed: Erik Larson. In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror,
and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin. New York: Crown, 2011.
448 pp., $13.50