In the interest of democracy : the rise and fall of the early Cold War alliance between the American Federation of Labor and the Central Intelligence Agency

著者

    • Hughes, Quenby Olmsted

書誌事項

In the interest of democracy : the rise and fall of the early Cold War alliance between the American Federation of Labor and the Central Intelligence Agency

Quenby Olmsted Hughes

(Trade unions past, present and future / edited by Craig Phelan, v. 13)

Peter Lang, c2011

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. [191]-198) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Until recently, there has been little concrete evidence linking the American Federation of Labor (AFL) to the U.S. government’s Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in the late 1940s and early 1950s. In this book, based upon recently opened archival collections, the author investigates this controversial and complicated early Cold War relationship. Contrary to arguments that the AFL’s international activities were entirely controlled by the U.S. government to the detriment of the independent international labor movement, or that the AFL acted on its own without government involvement to foster legitimate anti-communist trade unions, the author’s examination of the archival sources reveals that the AFL and the CIA made an alliance of convenience based upon common goals and ideologies, which dissolved when the balance of power shifted away from the AFL and into the hands of the CIA. In addition to tracing the complicated historical threads which resulted in an apparently unlikely relationship, three specific examples of how the AFL worked with the CIA are investigated in this book: the development of the anti-communist trade union federation Force Ouvrière in France; the AFL campaign against the Soviet Union’s use of «slave labor» at the UN; and labor’s role in the activities of the National Committee for a Free Europe, including Radio Free Europe and the Free Trade Union Center in Exile.

目次

Contents: «In the Lead of the World:» From the Birth of the American Federation of Labor in the 1880s to Jay Lovestone’s Expulsion from the CPUSA – «There’ll Be a Revolution:» Industrial Unionism, Communism and Lovestone’s Shift to the Right – Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy: Enter the Free Trade Union Committee and the Central Intelligence Agency – «Fertile Fields:» The Free Trade Union Committee in France – «A Certain Strategic Emergency:» The Free Trade Union Committee, the United Nations and the Issue of Slave Labor – «People Speaking to People:» Labor’s Role in the Radio Free Europe and with the National Committee for a Free Europe – «AFL Stooges:» The Unraveling of the Relationship Between the Free Trade Union Committee and the National Committee for a Free Europe – «Allies and Not Agents:» The Decline of the Relationship between the Free Trade Union Committee and the Central Intelligence Agency.

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