In response to The Bloodless War
(October 23, 1997)
To the Editors:
In Thomas Powers's excellent review of Battleground Berlin [NYR, October 23] I hardly recognized myself in his description of the careers of the authors. I never had to do with the fifth corps of any army and the only General Huebner I know of was the official Austrian observer in the Russo-Japanese War. I never did any joining in Munich except with Radio Liberty in 1982 as director. My liaison activity with the CIA was confined to Berlin (1951-1954), three out of seventeen years in that wonderful city. But the most grievous error in Mr. Powers's account is the statement that I, like David Murphy and Sergei Kondrashev, am deeply versed in espionage tradecraft. I knew the difference between "dead drop" and "drop dead!" but not from any operation acquaintance with either. In short, apart from the training I received in Military Intelligence, I never had a lesson in my life. I entered Germany not in 1945 but in 1944 with the Third Armored Division (Seventh Corps, First Army). And Czech is not one of the languages I speak with any confidence. As for the epithet "CIA writer"—I wrote few things for the agency in the early Fifties, including an essay on the illegal (Nazi) state and a satire reversing the Collier's magazine hypothesis of an American occupation of the Soviet Union. These efforts never saw the light of day and proved irrecoverable. So my problem was not that I had anything to hide but rather that I had nothing to show. To correct this I became a journalist. It was in this capacity that I took part in writing Battleground Berlin.
George Bailey
Munich, Germany