Reviews
Gellman's research is solid, as is his grasp of both the detail and the outlines of American foreign policy in the 1930s and World War II years.
The thoroughness with which Gellman deconstructs Hull... can be appreciated only by those of us old enough to recall Hull's overriding popularity... Gellman has combined meticulous research with Washington gossip for a fascinating piece of history.
Cordell Hull seemed the safest of bets... just about right, come to think of it, for a really solid burst of revisionist history. This he has now got, and in heaping measure, from Irwin F. Gellman.
Irwin Gellman explores the little-known hierarchy of the State Department during the New Deal years and World War II, and brilliantly illuminates their impact upon Franklin D. Roosevelt and the conduct of foreign policy. A very different Cordell Hull appears than the good, gray Secretary of State who won the Nobel Peace Prize. Sumner Welles is portrayed as a prime policy maker until Hull and William Bullitt forced him out. This is a fascinating, often startling, account.
Secret Affairs is a fascinating narrative whose pulse never quite detracts from the fact that this is serious history of a high quality. The dramas, ambiguities, and secrets of the relationship between Roosevelt, Cordell Hull, and Sumner Welles—three fascinating and vulnerable men—is superbly narrated. The vigor of Gellman's tale underlines the robust positions he takes on large issues to do with the Roosevelt era, in particular the question of the administration's level of knowledge regarding the fate of European Jews during World War II.
Gellman's findings corroborate the impressions I have formed in my own work on the formation of foreign policy in the Roosevelt years. Secret Affairs is not only an important contribution to the history of American foreign policy, but it is a good story, splendidly researched and well told.
Book Details
Preface
Dramatis Personae
Chapter 1. The Chief Sets the Tone
Chapter 2. Enter Hull
Chapter 3. Welles in Cuba
Chapter 4. The Balance of the First Term
Chapter 5. The Bloodiest Bureaucratic Battle
Chapter
Preface
Dramatis Personae
Chapter 1. The Chief Sets the Tone
Chapter 2. Enter Hull
Chapter 3. Welles in Cuba
Chapter 4. The Balance of the First Term
Chapter 5. The Bloodiest Bureaucratic Battle
Chapter 6. Reorganizing the Department
Chapter 7. The Welles Mission
Chapter 8. The Sphinx, Hull, and the Others
Chapter 9. An Incredible Set of Circumstances
Chapter 10. Provoking War
Chapter 11. Hull Loses Control
Chapter 12. Working for Victory
Chapter 13. Ruining Welles
Chapter 14. Resi gnation
Chapter 15. Hull's Last Year
Chapter 16. Roosevelt's Last Months
Chapter 17. Those Who Survived
Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index