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INSUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE (1) answer(s).
 
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ID:   134059


Harry Hopkins and Soviet espionage / Klehr, Harvey; Haynes, John Earl   Journal Article
Haynes, John Earl Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract One of the intriguing unidentified cover names in the Venona decryptions released in the mid-1990s was '19', a Soviet source senior enough to report taking part in a conversation with President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill, and Vice-President Wallace at the 1943 Trident conference. While some historians thought the evidence too ambiguous to identify the real name behind '19', others built a case that it was presidential adviser Harry Hopkins. Alexander Vassiliev's notebooks, made public in 2009, resolved the issue by firmly identifying '19' as State Department official Laurence Duggan. There remain, however, writers who refuse to accept the evidence that '19' was Duggan and insist that Hopkins was a Soviet agent on the basis of insubstantial evidence.
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