On a frosty February night in 1950, freshman Senator Joseph R. McCarthy told a Republican audience in Wheeling, West Virginia, that he held “a list of 205 Communists” working in the State Department. Reporters pounced, critics scoffed, and the phrase McCarthyism soon became shorthand for reckless accusation. Yet the deeper question never vanished: Was McCarthy’s core warning—that Communist operatives had burrowed into key American institutions—actually correct?
What the Venona Project Revealed
Fast-forward to 1995, when the National Security Agency declassified thousands of wartime Soviet cables broken by U.S. Army cryptanalysts under the code name VENONA.
What was Venona?
A 37-year counter-intelligence program (1943-1980) that painstakingly decrypted roughly 3,000 messages sent by Soviet spy agencies.
Why does it matter?
The cables confirmed more than 300 Soviet assets and sympathizers inside the U.S., including high-ranking officials:
- Alger Hiss (State Department/U.N. founder) – code-name “ALES.”
- Harry Dexter White (Assistant Secretary of the Treasury) – code-name “JURIST.”
- Julius and Ethel Rosenberg – atomic-spy couriers.
These very names, flagged privately by McCarthy’s investigators, were long derided as innocent victims of a “Red Scare.” Venona proves they were, in fact, working for Moscow.
McCarthy’s Case—Bullhorn Versus Files
Armed with public anxiety and new subpoena power in 1953, McCarthy grilled diplomats, Voice-of-America editors, and—fatally—the U.S. Army. His methods were often bruising and numbers sometimes sloppy, but FBI memoranda later released under the Freedom of Information Act show that many of his targets overlapped with Bureau surveillance lists—names federal prosecutors could not haul into open court without blowing the Venona secret. Journalist M. Stanton Evans summarized the paradox in Blacklisted by History: McCarthy “was closer to the truth than those who mocked him.”
Why the Threat Ran Deeper Than Espionage
Communist infiltration was never just about stealing blueprints; it was also about bending the cultural mood of a confident, post-war America. Here the trail shifts from cloak-and-dagger Communism to the Frankfurt School of “Critical Theory,” European Marxists who fled Hitler and replanted their ideas at Columbia University:
- Core move: Swap Marx’s class war for a broader oppressor vs. oppressed narrative focused on culture—religion, family, schools, media.
- Catch-phrase: German activist Rudi Dutschke’s 1967 slogan “the long march through the institutions”—change society from the inside out.
By the late 1960s these ideas energized radical “liberation” movements:
Movement | Marxist fingerprints | Lasting legacy |
---|---|---|
Black Panther Party (1966) | Declared itself “Marxist–Leninist”; studied Mao’s tactics. | Coined “police oppression” narrative still central to activist rhetoric. |
Weather Underground (1969) | Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) off-shoot calling for armed struggle against “imperialist” America. | Pioneered campus-to-street radical pipeline. |
Antifa (name revived from 1932 German Antifaschistische Aktion run by the Communist Party) | Militant “anti-fascism” equating capitalism with fascism. | Decentralized black-bloc tactics in 2020 riots. |
From Critical Theory to “Anti-Racism”
When class conflict failed to ignite revolution in an affluent West, activists replaced “worker” with race, gender, and sexuality:
- Black Lives Matter. Co-founder Patrisse Cullors openly called herself a “trained Marxist.”
- Critical Race Theory (CRT). Scholar Ibram X. Kendi teaches that the “only remedy to past discrimination is present discrimination … future discrimination.”
Under the new banner of Diversity-Equity-Inclusion (DEI), this worldview now writes corporate hiring policies and public-school lesson plans—pursuing equity by reallocating power rather than opportunity.
Where McCarthy Went Wrong—and Right
- Wrong on procedure. He bullied witnesses, swung unverified numbers, and self-destructed on live television during the Army hearings.
- Right on substance. Venona irrefutably shows real spies existed—and more of them than even McCarthy claimed. The senator’s blunt instinct that small, dedicated cadres could steer government and culture has aged far better than his detractors expected.
Why This History Still Matters
Today’s Neo-Marxists seldom wave hammer-and-sickle flags; they speak the language of justice and inclusion. Yet the framework is recognizably Marxist: society is a zero-sum struggle between dominant and victim groups, and “equity” demands coercive leveling. Europe’s ongoing turmoil—riots in French suburbs, censorious hate-speech laws, collapsing social trust—shows how cultural capture can fray an entire civilization.
Takeaways for a Watchful Citizen
- Facts matter. Declassified archives, not slogans, vindicated McCarthy’s core claim.
- Ideas outlive espionage rings. Marxist theory migrated from Soviet spy nets to college curricula and HR manuals.
- Guard the institutions. A free society defends due process (where McCarthy failed) and resists ideologies that demand permanent group guilt (where he was prescient).
In short, Joe McCarthy’s style is best left in the past—but his underlying warning remains urgent. Liberty can die by a thousand quiet bureaucratic edits as surely as by stolen nuclear secrets. Knowing the Venona story arms us to spot the difference between genuine tolerance and a velvet-gloved revolution.
S.D.G.,
Robert Sparkman
christiannewsjunkie@gmail.com
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