Rachel Maddow Presents: Ultra - Episode 5: Coming Home
Episode Date: July 15, 2024The U.S. government’s search for American fascist Francis Yockey picks up steam as Yockey secretly returns home to America and joins forces with the growing pro-Nazi American ultra right. With inves...tigators continually one step behind, Yockey suddenly turns up alongside one of the country's most powerful political figures who is ascending toward the height of his powers.
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um well in my 20s i happened to walk into a used bookshop up in van nuys california
where i was living that's journalist anthony mostrom it might have been the unusual book
jacket design but it just grabbed my eye i had had no idea what it was. That book that he spotted that day, it had sort of a magenta-colored cover,
as thick as a phone book. And it was just strange enough looking that he decided,
you know, what the heck? He stuck it under his arm, brought it up to the counter.
I bought it, you know. It was a used book for like five bucks or whatever.
Took it home. And, you know, after that, I didn't really
think much more about it. It was just sort of, I put it on in my home library and it was just
another one of my extremist books on my shelf, right? Across the country, right around the same
time, a historian named John Jackson was having a similar experience. I found a copy in the early 90s in a used bookstore.
And so I went up to the counter and put it down
and the bookseller kind of looks at the book
and kind of looks at me, a big bald white man,
and kind of says something like,
oh, it's a controversial book.
And I go, I'm a historian.
This is interesting.
I'm not a Nazi. Please don't think that.
This book that both John Jackson and Anthony Mostrom are describing here, this book they both happened upon and used bookshops, it's a book called Imperium.
And the content of that book is why a bookshop owner might shoot a sideways glance at somebody who was picking it
up. It's very much an anti-Semitic book. It's very much a hate book. Imperium was published in the
late 1940s, but only barely. Its initial print run was maybe a couple hundred copies. And the author
of the book, that was kind of hard to figure out.
The book was published under a pseudonym.
Ulic Varange.
Ulic is a given Irish name, and Varange refers to a nomadic tribe of Vikings who some historians say were the first to settle Russia.
Ulic or Ulic Varange was listed as the author,
but that was a false name.
Imperium had to be released under a false name because the real author of the book,
when he wrote this thing, he was on the run.
Ulic Varange was the pseudonym
of the American fascist Francis Parker Yockey.
By the late 1940s, by the time he
wrote this book, Yockey had been wanted for questioning about his relationship with a Nazi
saboteur who was executed in the United States during World War II. They brought with them a
great store of explosives with which to blow up factories and demoralize civilian life. He had
been linked to the German-American Bund and to the Silver Shirts,
the leadership of which had been charged with sedition during World War II.
Yockey himself had gone AWOL from the U.S. Army.
He'd been thrown out of the U.S. Army, which listed him as a Nazi sympathizer.
And after all that, astonishingly, he had been given a job as a U.S. government lawyer
at the Nazi war crimes trials in Germany.
Twenty-two Nazi war criminals went on trial at 10 o'clock this morning.
Once there, he became a mole inside the prosecutions, using his position to surreptitiously help the Nazi defendants he was sent there to prosecute.
Army counterintelligence files from the time say Yockey was also trying to recruit German army officers, Nazi veterans, into an underground movement that would rise up against the Allied
occupying forces in Germany.
But when U.S. intelligence officials decided they wanted to go question him, he was gone.
He's being tracked by U.S. intelligence, yet he's able somehow to fly out of Germany without any, you know, no one stopping him.
Francis Yockey somehow slipped out of Germany, ahead of the counterintelligence agents who were looking for him.
He left behind his wife and his two young daughters.
What do they call it in the spy shows? He goes to ground.
Yockey is always slipping in and out, using false passports, false names,
and just jumping from continent to continent.
Where Yockey first surfaces is way off the beaten path.
He secured a room at a small inn on the Irish coast
to write what would eventually become a 600-page book, which was called Imperium.
Francis Yockey holed himself up inside that little cottage for months,
working on that book that you can still stumble across in a used bookshop.
You can get odd glances from the shop owner if you dare pick it up.
You might also find one of the many newer editions
and reprints of this book,
or the French edition,
or the Spanish edition,
or the one in German.
For a lot of people on the far right worldwide nowadays,
the Bible is imperium, replacing Mein Kampf.
The book that Francis Yockey churned out inside that cottage on the Irish coast
is a sprawling, unrelenting, 600-page-long, super-boring fascist battle cry.
It's basically an argument for the creation of a global fascist empire
to finish what Hitler started.
The book is actually dedicated to Hitler.
Yackey calls him the hero of the Second World War.
The book calls Jewish people culture distorters.
It rants about the supposedly poisoned bloodstream and lost vitality of the West.
It's all the fault of the Jews.
And it's the fault of democracy. It is the duty of the West to rule the world. And that can only be accomplished
through strong leadership. Democracy is a sham. And the Jews are the great enemy and need to be dealt with.
Democracy is a sham, and America is a lost cause.
According to Yockey, America's global influence was really just another way for the Jews to secretly control the world.
In Imperium, and also in his later writings, what set Yaki's Nazi claptrap apart
from other more garden-variety Nazi claptrap is that while he was harshly critical of the U.S.,
Yaki said he admired Russia instead, not for its communism, but for its anti-Semitism,
for the Stalinist show trials and purges and pogroms and murders of Jews. He thought Russia had a pure and
somehow primitive culture that was preferable to America's modern, terrible, multiracial democracy.
And so in Francis Yockey's Imperium, Europe would finish the genocide of the Jews and would have a
fascist empire in cahoots with Russia against the great Satan,
which was the United States. Down with NATO, up with Russia. That is what Francis Yockey cooked up while on the run from American authorities. The Yockey lore is that he wrote the book
in six months, all 600 pages, without any notes, no books, no references.
They always talk about, oh, Yockey was such a genius that he sat in this little cottage in Ireland
and just didn't have any books to refer to and just knew all this stuff and wrote it up,
which is not the way you write a scholarly book, right?
Yeah, well, it's easy. It's easy. You don't need a library of stuff if you're just making it up.
Yockey's manifesto would have decades of influence on the American right. It was also nonsense. It
was just made up. And it was also the American starting point for one of the most dangerous lies in human history.
For people like Yockey, who wanted to revive Nazism, who wanted to keep the fascist dream alive after World War II, explaining the monstrous body count from the Nazis' time in power was a
real challenge. There were basically two paths you could choose. The first path, the most direct path, was to argue that the Holocaust was good,
that it was somehow justified,
that the Nazis had a right to do it.
That defense was tried at the war crimes trials.
During the first nine months of Olendorf's year in command,
this force destroyed more than 90,000 human beings,
killed at an average rate of 340 per day. The trial of this one particular Nazi commander is famous still to this day. An SS
commander named Otto Ohlendorf was responsible for the killing of about 90,000 Ukrainians during World War II.
This remains a notorious case even decades later,
not only because of the huge number of victims
attributed to this one Nazi SS commander,
but also because of the defense that was mounted for him at trial.
His defense was that it wasn't a crime
to kill tens of thousands of civilians.
It wasn't even a bad thing because the victims were Jews. SS death squads needed to kill every
Jewish man, woman, and child they could find because even Jewish babies were going to still
grow up to be Jews. And Jews were inherently communists. And communism was an existential threat to Germany.
So those civilian massacres, the defense argued,
those massacres of tens of thousands of people,
those were necessary.
They were justified.
This wasn't just a defense
of this one accused Nazi war criminal.
This was an argument for Nazism,
for the Holocaust,
for what they did.
American prosecutors at that trial,
when they realized that was the defense
they were up against,
they were just shocked by it.
Some of these defendants still believe
that what they did was not murder
because the victims were Jews.
No system of domestic
or international penal law
could possibly survive
under which the determination of guilt for murder
is governed by the political or religious creed
or racial origin of the victim.
The lawyer who mounted that defense in that case,
the ubiquitous Nazi defense lawyer Rudolf Aschenauer,
he got help in preparing that defense.
Yockey would surreptitiously send exculpatory documents
to Ohlendorf's defense lawyer behind the scenes.
American fascist Francis Yockey had used his position
at the American war crimes trials in Germany
to steal material to help in the notorious
Ohlendorf defense. So Yockey tried that path. He tried claiming the Nazis were right to do what
they did. But he also tried the other path, the more insidious path, which was to deny that any
of it had happened. Yockey wrote in Imperium that gas chambers, quote,
did not exist, and that thousands of people
who had supposedly been killed weren't killed at all
because they, quote,
published accounts of their experiences in these camps.
Yockey's book, Imperium, is considered by some scholars
to be the first written instance,
the earliest example of Holocaust denial by an American.
Yockey was writing this just after World War II had ended,
while the world was still absorbing the scale of the Nazis' atrocities,
the images of the concentration camps and the gas chambers.
This isn't even history at that point.
It's current events.
There are myriad living survivors who escaped the horrors themselves. Thousands of allied troops who liberated the camps, who saw it all with their own eyes. Yaki himself had just come
from the Nuremberg trials, which dealt with vast, vast quantities of evidence.
Deliberate, premeditated murder.
Murder on a gigantic scale.
Murder committed for the worst of all possible motives.
But Yockey would write that none of it had happened, that it was all a hoax.
And then he was on the move again.
U.S. authorities tracked him to Italy, where he spoke at fascist meetings.
They tracked him to England, where he gave speeches and did organizing
for the British fascists led by Sir Oswald Mosley,
who had been imprisoned during the war.
Yockey helped form something called the European Liberation Front.
Yockey wrote that the European Liberation Front. Yackey wrote that the European Liberation Front
was calling for the expulsion of all Jews
and other parasitic aliens from the soil of Europe.
Advocating for expelling all Jewish people from Europe,
writing America's Mein Kampf,
sowing the first American seeds of Holocaust denial.
That's what Francis Yockey was working on.
But Yockey would not just be a problem we created and then unleashed on the world,
a rogue American fascist who we exported.
He was about to become our problem too,
because he was about to come home to the America that he hated. He had friends here
who wanted him to get to work here, and he did, in what would turn out to be surprisingly high places.
This is Rachel Maddow Presents Ultra. Democracy, he argued, is no good. His goal was to seize the American government.
I'm completely dissatisfied with this whole investigation.
Any man who can add two and two must be dissatisfied.
He attracts all kinds of far-right people to his group.
One of the greatest living foes of communist slavery,
that man is Joe McCarthy.
Episode 5, Coming Home.
It was a big ad in the L.A. Times for a multi-day convention that was going to be held in downtown Los Angeles.
Four days at the embassy auditorium, and there was a huge photo of the headline speaker for the event.
It took up almost half the ad. In the unlikely event that readers didn't recognize his very famous face, there was his name right across the top in big letters. Gerald L.K. Smith.
Gerald L.K. Smith was a religious leader, self-proclaimed religious leader,
who in many ways took over the mantle of anti-Semitism from Father Coughlin.
That's historian and author Stephen Ross.
Before World War II, Gerald L.K. Smith headed up something called the America First Party.
During the war, he ran for president on the America First Party platform,
which included the sterilization and expulsion of all Jewish people from the United States.
There is a highly organized campaign
to substitute Jewish tradition or Christian tradition.
After the war was over,
Gerald L.K. Smith shifted from his America First Party
to a new organization.
He called it the Christian Nationalist Crusade.
He attracts all kinds of people,
all kinds of far-right people to his
group. Their enemies are Jews and communists who are trying to take over America, and we
loyal Christians are going to stop this effort to pervert our country. It's Los Angeles in the
summer of 1950, and Gerald L.K. Smith is gearing up to treat his followers to four whole days of that.
Some of the speakers included one of Smith's loyal lieutenants.
She spoke against what she called mongrelization of the white race in the United States.
And this seems to have been the main theme of the conference, actually.
Journalist Anthony Mostrom again.
It's kind of hard to believe for us now,
especially a native Angeleno like myself,
to think that this was a well-attended convention
of very far right-wing political speakers.
But there they were.
There they were.
Packed into the embassy auditorium.
Thousands of people.
There was one speaker at the embassy auditorium for that event
who was a surprise to the crowd.
He hadn't been listed on the program,
but Gerald L.K. Smith got up himself
and told the crowd who he was and that he would be speaking.
He was a young man with an unusual name. He introduced him as Yulik Varange. It was Francis
Yockey. Yockey was the only one, to my knowledge, who was not mentioned in the programs at all,
probably because of his outlaw status at this point.
Francis Yockey had come home, back to the United States.
He was wanted by U.S. authorities, wanted for questioning.
But somehow he slipped back into the country undetected.
And once he was here, he linked up with the remnants of the America First movement.
He started speaking at these Gerald L.K. Smith rallies across the country,
in the Midwest, in Oklahoma, in California. FBI files record that these events featured calls to lock up President Harry Truman, lock him up for treason. One speaker claimed that he had
inside information that one of Truman's top White House advisors had been forced to change his name
because he was secretly a pedophile. One speaker yelled to the crowd that the real
communist party in this country is the Democratic Party. And then, Francis Yockey,
with a speech that would take the bark off a tree. The substance of Yockey's oration was that the Nuremberg trials,
which he had attended
and which he worked as part of,
that the Nuremberg trials were a sham
and that thousands of what he called
white Christian Germans
had been convicted without trial
and that the Jews control the world today.
According to accounts from the time,
Francis Yockey was the only speaker in Los Angeles
to receive a full-on standing ovation from the crowd.
Yockey would later boast to a friend
that he delivered what he called a tremendous speech
to this convention's 3,000 attendees.
That is not a typical way to hide from the feds when you're wanted for
questioning. But there he is, after years on the run, back home, basking in the applause,
somehow staying one step ahead of investigators. J. Edgar Hoover was being apprised of Yockey's
movements. There are thousands of documents that Hoover himself
signed off on telling various FBI offices across the country where there might have
been a sighting of Yockey.
While FBI files and newspaper archives trace the trail of Yockey's 1950 speaking tour
with Gerald L.K. Smith, The man whose speeches were the real hot ticket
in American politics just then was a senator.
One of the greatest living foes of communist slavery,
that man is Joe McCarthy.
In early 1950, Senator Joe McCarthy
had delivered the speech that would make him a household name.
His, I hold in my hand a list of known communists speech.
That speech was only a few months after his crusade to try to make the Malmedy massacre trial a scandal.
Multiple reviews of the Malmedy case and a comprehensive months-long Senate investigation
disproved the kinds of wild claims he was making.
The Senate investigation even found that where those lies came from was from unrepentant Nazis
who were trying to come back to power in Germany. But those conclusions, the actual truth of the
matter, never got much traction in the press. The false allegations got headlines.
The truth, not so much.
The New York Times put on its front page the, quote, storm of charges
about outright brutality by U.S. soldiers.
But then the determination that that storm of charges
had been made up and made up by Nazis
and made up specifically to hurt the United States,
well, that didn't make the front page.
Nor did the much more explosive story lurking there in plain sight,
which was that senators like Joe McCarthy
had uncritically stovepiped
a false and dangerous Nazi propaganda operation
right into the United States Senate.
And, well, right under the front pages into the United States Senate. And, well,
right under the front pages of the New York Times.
The senators are probing reports
that the Germans were beaten and starved
to get confessions from them.
McCarthy's lurid and outrageous lies
had been comprehensively disproven.
They'd even been exposed as a Nazi propaganda plot. But McCarthy
never paid for that. Because he was learning in real time that shocking lies will always get more
and better press than the calm, rational debunking of those lies. And if you're a talented and
ambitious demagogue, that's the kind of lesson you don't forget.
That's more than a lesson.
That's a game plan.
Hearings on Senator McCarthy's charges of communists in the State Department
developed into a committee wrangle to find out whether McCarthy had in his files
the name of the high official who allegedly covered up communists.
McCarthy's shocking confrontational claims about all the supposed communists he knew about in the government,
those claims got a ton of press, just as his claims about Malmedy had got a ton of press.
And, just like Malmedy, those claims would soon be the subject of a full-blown Senate investigation.
You believe as of the moment there are communists in the State Department?
Communists or worse. Or Department? Communists or worse.
Or what?
Communists or worse.
Want to name a few?
When the Senate started its investigation into McCarthy's claims about communists in the government,
he did what he had done in the Malmedy case.
He basically hijacked the investigation and turned it into a spectacle. Not where you got it, not how you got it, not who gave it to you, but have you the material?
All of the affidavits, all the photostats, are easily accessible to you.
You can get them without any trouble at all. They're all in those files.
Senator Millard Tidings led this investigation, and he and McCarthy wrangled for months.
The investigation looked into all of McCarthy's claims exhaustively.
And just like with the Malmedy case, this investigation also concluded that McCarthy basically didn't know what he was talking about.
But it wasn't just that he was wrong. It was worse than that. Tiding said that what McCarthy was pushing was not just false, it was pernicious.
It was confusing and dividing the American public.
Like the Malmedy investigation, though, this official debunking of his false claims,
the spotlighting of what damage those false claims were doing, it didn't make much of a splash.
What did make a splash had been McCarthy's initial shocking charges, and also his new
charge when the investigation was over, when McCarthy said it had all been rigged.
I'm completely dissatisfied with this whole investigation. Any man who can add two and two
must be dissatisfied. We've had the most fantastic exhibition
I have ever seen put on by a Senate committee.
To McCarthy's growing legion of fans,
this rejection of him by the Senate was a call to arms.
There was a cover-up.
The whole Senate was in on it.
The whole government was in on it.
Joe was the only one they could trust.
And so, naturally, McCarthy's next step
was to set out to destroy the man who had dared to oppose him. He started implying that this
longtime conservative senator, Millard Tidings, was maybe himself a communist. He said Tidings was,
quote, suspiciously kind to traitors. Then it got worse.
Tidings was up for re-election that year. McCarthy and his staff produced a fake photo
that made it look like Tidings was secretly meeting with a leading communist.
They distributed that fake photo all across Tidings' home state. And after holding that seat for 24 years,
Millard Tidings lost.
He was defeated for re-election.
Because that's what you got when you crossed Joe McCarthy.
Little Millard is with us no longer.
Little Millard is with us no longer.
This was his playbook.
The insistent, dangerous lying.
The no-holds-barred revenge on anyone who confronted him.
Also, the belittling of his opponents, the name-calling.
And then there were the journalists,
who seemed to make McCarthy the most viscerally upset.
This is Drew Pearson.
I'll be back in a minute with a prediction on Senator McCarthy and the latest inside news from
Washington. Columnist Drew Pearson had done as much as any national reporter to criticize Joe
McCarthy. McCarthy's attacks on Pearson included violence. In 1950, at the Sulgrave Club in Washington, D.C., McCarthy
physically attacked Pearson. He tried to beat him up. He kneed him in the groin. He hit him in the
head. He had to be pulled off of him. The American Veterans Committee called for McCarthy to be
impeached from the Senate for that. But Pearson wasn't the only one. When colonist Joe Alsop criticized McCarthy,
McCarthy started calling him not Alsop, but Al-slop. I don't care how high-pitched becomes
the screaming and squealing of the left-wing element of press and radio. I don't care what
the Drew Pearsons and the Mark Childs and the Al Slops and the Time magazines.
I don't care what they have to say.
I don't care how much they scream and squeal.
As long as I am in the Senate, and I hope that's for some time yet,
as long as I am in the Senate, this task is not going to become a dainty task.
If anyone wants to come in and remove them in some dainty fashion, they're welcome to it.
But in the absence of that, turned off
Americans who were repulsed by that kind of politics, by that kind of man.
But not everyone disapproved.
The two greatest symbols in this civilization are the cross and the flag.
Senator McCarthy was not only building an increasingly large, increasingly fervent
mainstream public following, he was also becoming a hero, sort of a North Star,
to figures on the edge like Gerald L.K. Smith. Fight mongrelization and all attempts being made
to force the intermixture of the black and white races. In 1950, not long after his Francis Yockey anti-mongrelization, anti-Nuremberg speaking
tour, Gerald L.K. Smith actually did work with Joseph McCarthy in the U.S. Senate.
Anna Rosenberg presented a detailed account of the new defense set up to a Senate committee.
Anna Rosenberg was one of the most accomplished women
to have ever served in American national security.
Among other things, she devised the National Manpower Plan
for America's wartime military buildup for World War II.
When the U.S. government created a new award at the end of the war,
the Medal of Freedom,
the first American ever given that award
was Anna Rosenberg for her wartime service.
But then after the war,
Anna Rosenberg had the misfortune
of getting nominated to a top Defense Department job
just as Joe McCarthy was reaching the height of his powers.
She was nominated to a position in the Defense Department.
That's author and historian David Austin Walsh.
Anna Rosenberg's Pentagon nomination, at first, sailed right through the Senate Armed Services Committee.
But then there was a hitch in the process.
McCarthy went after her. McCarthy teamed up with Gerald L.K. Smith
to try to make the Anna Rosenberg nomination
into another national scandal.
He met with one of Smith's top aides,
who was becoming well-known in his own right
as a Holocaust denier.
He said his stated mission in meeting with McCarthy
was to, quote,
keep the Zionist Jew Anna Rosenberg
from becoming, quote, dictator of the Pentagon.
McCarthy and his allies turned on the spigots
of conservative media against her.
And they persuaded the Senate
to reopen Rosenberg's confirmation hearings,
whereupon McCarthy produced a bombshell witness
who swore that he had personally met Anna
Rosenberg at a communist meeting in New York. But it wasn't true. None of it was true. McCarthy's
star witness had never met Anna Rosenberg, not at a communist meeting, not anywhere. Rosenberg told
the Armed Services Committee, quote, I would like to by at least one of the senators on that committee,
Lester Hunt of Wyoming.
He told reporters,
I just hope that no Hollywood producer ever gets hold of the complete transcript of this thing. If it were put into a movie,
it would do more than anything so far
to discredit Congress.
Senator Lester Hunt had seen Joe McCarthy's tactics
up close during the Malmedy hearings.
And now here it was again.
Senator Hunt's personal files show him writing to a colleague
about McCarthy's attacks on Anna Rosenberg,
saying,
Hunt's files also reveal stacks of vile letters he got from the public,
letters smearing Anna Rosenberg,
accusing her of disloyalty and worse.
None of it true.
These smears were being spread by known anti-Semitic agitators
like Gerald L.K. Smith
and also now by Lester Hunt's own Senate colleague, Joe McCarthy.
McCarthy was happy to go along with it.
He would take information wherever he could find it.
And if it meant working with far-right people
with a specific agenda, then he would do that.
And once you start down that kind of a road,
it can get real dark real fast.
That's next.
It used to be called East River Drive
because it ran up the edge of Manhattan right alongside the East River.
But in 1945, after the death of President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
they renamed it in his honor.
It would now be FDR Drive,
which must have seriously annoyed Yorkville. Yorkville had been the heart of Nazi
America before World War II. That's historian and professor Stephen Ross. If you were a Jew
living in the Yorkville area, you had to be very afraid for yourself. You had to be very afraid of
what you would wear that was openly
Jewish, whether it was the yarmulke or whether it was a Star of David. In Yorkville, right at the
end of World War II, a new American pro-Nazi group opened its headquarters on the east side
of Manhattan, right near the newly christened FDR Drive. They were funded in large part by a wealthy German-American who had
been interned during World War II as a Nazi supporter. After the war ended, he funded Nazi
groups in Europe and in Latin America, and also in Manhattan, in Yorkville, the home of the new
National Renaissance Party. The very name National Renaissance Party was inspired by
Hitler's last political testament. Before his suicide, he wrote that he hoped for a radiant
renaissance of Nazism throughout the world, inspired by what he had done in Germany.
A radiant renaissance of Nazism.
James Madol, who was head of the National Renaissance Party, was trying to mobilize New Yorkers and a nation to understand the Jewish black threat to a white superiority, white Anglo-Saxon superiority. And therefore, he was holding regular demonstrations on 88th Street and First Avenue in New York, the heart of Yorkville. The idea behind the National Renaissance Party
was not subtle. This was not a soft sell they were making. He told a crowd in Yorkville,
and I'll quote him, I will plant the swastika in Washington.
He promised the crowd, quote,
what Hitler accomplished in Europe,
the National Renaissance Party shall yet accomplish in America.
The National Renaissance Party's stock in trade was to be as visible and as provocative as possible.
They would dress in Nazi uniforms. They would dress in Nazi uniforms.
They would give the Nazi salute.
They would actually engage from time to time in open violence with Jewish war veterans.
When Madoll would deny the Holocaust ever occurred,
they would often try to break through the police barriers and attack him.
Sometimes the Nazis won.
Sometimes the Jewish war veterans won,
but the Nazis always claimed victory. Street violence was sort of the calling card of the National Renaissance Party. That's what they wanted to be known for, for their physical menace
on the streets. But they were aiming at more than just hurting people physically.
They were trying both to terrorize
and to galvanize.
They were trying to set something off.
Democracy, he argued, is no good.
He would create a fascist government in America
that would educate the entire country
into sort of, we would now call white supremacy. There would be a rebellion
that Christians, loyal Christians, would join in, understanding that Jews and blacks were perverting
their nation, and they would create a new country, a new renaissance that would create an America
that would realize Hitler's dreams for the world,
only it would start in the U.S. rather than Germany. The National Renaissance Party was small,
but they were growing. He had chapters in Atlanta, he had chapters in Louisville.
He was trying to open chapters in every city in America. And many of those chapters were
accumulating arms. His goal was to seize
the American government, either preferably through an election, and if not through an election,
through amassing so many troops that they would take over the American government.
It was still happening. During World War II, the leaders of American pro-fascist and pro-Nazi groups that had done stuff like this,
they'd all been indicted by the U.S. Justice Department in what was called the Great Sedition Trial.
Now, after the war, the most famous of all the Great Sedition Trial defendants,
George Sylvester Varek, the man who's been prominent for several years
as a Nazi propagandist.
He was working as an early advisor
to the National Renaissance Party.
George Sylvester Virick
had been indicted
in the Great Sedition Trial.
But in addition to that
sedition indictment,
he had also been indicted
and tried and convicted
and imprisoned as a Nazi agent for coordinating
a multi-million dollar German propaganda operation that covertly targeted the American public.
When he had been a highly paid, highly placed agent for the Hitler government,
Virick's secret weapon had been his close ties with America First members of Congress,
like Senator Ernest Lundin of Minnesota, for whom Virick wrote speeches,
like Congressman Hamilton Fish of New York,
whose office Virick used as a clearinghouse for literally tons, millions of pieces
of German government propaganda.
But in the post-war era, for groups like the National Renaissance Party, Hamilton Fish, Ernest Lundin, politicians like that were the old class, the previous generation.
Who could these guys hope to work with now?
Here's Stephen Ross with producer Mike Yarvitz. particular elected politicians that they liked, that they were kind of drawn to, that the National
Renaissance Party saw as singing a similar tune as them? St. Joe, Joseph McCarthy, was the one
politician that James Madol and many of the others rallied around, that they thought he was the only
one speaking the truth. St. Joe, Joseph McCarthy.
That's who the National Renaissance Party believed was their guy.
Madol found Joe McCarthy the only American politician really worth listening to and supporting.
He spoke their language.
He never tried to dissociate from far-right groups that supported him.
And they considered him as, they would say, meeting St. Joe.
And he was a true American patriot.
They took the name for their group from Hitler's Last Testament.
They had designs on a fascist government in America, and they were quite open about that.
Their stock and trade, what they were known for,
was beating up Jewish people in the streets.
They were working with a notorious convicted Nazi agent.
And they believed there was one politician out there
who was truly speaking for them.
When Madoll would start his meetings by hiling Hitler
and then hiling McCarthy, word of that got back to McCarthy.
He never said boo. He wasn't going to stop any group that supported him, even if they were hiling Hitler.
Now, you can't control who likes you.
And while they were hiling him along with Hitler, it's not like Senator McCarthy
was hiling the National Renaissance Party right back. But it wasn't a total mystery why they liked
him, and it wasn't only because of his public image. In the early 1950s, Senator McCarthy tapped
an employee at the Library of Congress to help him as a researcher. That researcher, his name was
Eustace Mullins, was also a member of the National Renaissance Party. He would occasionally refer to
himself as Fuhrer Mullins. There was also the speech. In 1952, Senator Joseph McCarthy was
invited and he quickly accepted an invitation to speak at an event that was billed as an American-German friendship rally.
The event, naturally, was in Yorkville.
The chairman of the rally was from the National Renaissance Party.
The list of scheduled speakers included a who's who of early Holocaust deniers and anti-Semitic and pro-Nazi authors.
And also sitting U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy.
McCarthy then enlisted someone to write a speech for him for that event.
A man who, by this point, needs no introduction.
There's no doubt that Francis Parker Yockey met Senator Joe McCarthy.
Francis Parker Yockey.
That's who McCarthy brought on board.
Here's journalist Anthony Mostrom.
Yockey was staying in Washington, D.C.,
and he met McCarthy through a lawyer friend.
Francis Yockey, at this point,
is on the run from American authorities.
He had been a mole inside the war crimes trials in Germany to help the Nazis there.
He had founded a group pledging to
cleanse the soil of Europe of all Jews.
He had pioneered American Holocaust denial.
He had published his 600-page fascist manifesto
that was considered to be America's Mein Kampf. It advocated for the creation of a fascist empire and the destruction
of the United States of America. So obviously, in a career like that, the next step is U.S. Senate
speechwriter. But that is who McCarthy enlisted to write this speech for him,
this speech for Yorkville.
Yockey landed what you might call an unusual job.
And that job was writing the speech for Senator Joe McCarthy
at a German-American friendship meeting in Yorkville, New York.
Yockey wrote to a friend about it at the time.
He explained that a lawyer for one of the Chicago Tribune's
chain of conservative newspapers had made the arrangements.
Through that lawyer, an appointment had been, quote,
arranged for me with Senator McCarthy for Saturday night.
Yockey said, quote,
he wanted me to write a speech for him based on a whole batch, a huge corpus of material, to have it ready by Monday.
Even Yockey himself couldn't quite seem to believe it.
He said, quote, there are still several things to settle with him, quote, but it looks as
though I have a job.
And apparently he did.
And one of the ways we know he did is because the FBI was onto it too.
The FBI became aware of the speech.
And in FBI records from the time, they take great pains to try to give Senator McCarthy the benefit of the doubt.
To say that based on some passages of the speech,
it looked like maybe the senator himself wrote it.
Although maybe it was this guy, Yockey.
They really couldn't be certain.
The FBI reports say that Yockey's, quote,
location at the present time is unknown.
But given what they were learning about this relationship
between a powerful U.S. senator and this Nazi guy who they were searching for,
given all the information they then had, the FBI memo says that agents, quote,
made desire to contact Senator McCarthy to learn more.
Yeah, maybe.
If any anti-McCarthy journalist had learned about this connection,
I think Joe McCarthy's career would have been severely damaged right then and there.
But the fact is, no one found out.
Senator Joe McCarthy, by this point in 1952,
was ascending to the heights of American politics.
He was building a major popular following.
He had the conservative press cheering his every move. He was running roughshod over his political enemies,
both in the Democratic Party and also his own party. He had pushed a Nazi propaganda hoax to
the American people about Jews in the U.S. Army in the Malmedy case, supposedly torturing Nazi soldiers. He was also pushing
for individual convicted Nazis, both here and overseas, to be freed from prison. After helping
win parole for American fascist William Pelley, McCarthy also helped Senator William Langer
campaign for clemency for Martin Sandberger, a Nazi SS commander who had been convicted and sentenced
at Nuremberg. In Congress, McCarthy worked with some of the country's most fire-breathing
anti-Semites and Holocaust deniers to make false accusations against a prominent Jewish
U.S. government official. And now McCarthy was hiring an influential American fascist to speech write for him.
The speech was about how America had been too tough on Germany in the war. It was to be delivered
by McCarthy at an event chaired by a National Renaissance Party guy, which is literally a group
that dresses up like stormtroopers. The speech Yockey wrote for McCarthy, you can read it in the FBI files.
It ends with a rallying cry that, quote,
we shall sweep America clear of its inner enemies.
Senator Joseph McCarthy never did deliver that speech in Yorkville
that Francis Yockey wrote for him.
And that's because the press,
a handful of journalists, got wind of McCarthy's involvement in that rally,
and they started exposing who McCarthy was preparing to share the stage with.
The journalists reported that one of the announced speakers had been linked to street violence there
in Yorkville. Another of the speakers was becoming renowned as a Holocaust denier.
Another speaker had been calling for the execution,
the hanging of Dwight Eisenhower.
Another was quoted saying,
here in America, we hate the Jews and the Negroes.
After that reporting,
Senator McCarthy's office discovered that
actually he had a scheduling conflict he
hadn't noticed before. His name was already printed on the posters for the Yorkville event,
but they sent late word that Senator McCarthy could no longer make it.
There was such an outcry that the roster of speakers was stuffed with pro-Nazis that canny Joe McCarthy decided to bail out.
In the end, Senator Joe McCarthy narrowly avoided reading the words that had been written for him
by the fugitive godfather of American Holocaust denial.
And ironically, he probably had the press to thank for that.
But while McCarthy's political star was rising, at the same time as his radicalism,
while the circle around him was getting weirder and wilder and more and more reckless,
so were his tactics.
So was his war with the press.
And so was his war with his fellow senators.
That Senator McCarthy will have no more luck bulldozing his fellow senators than he had in silencing ruin the lives of people who got in his way
was something that Lester Hunt had never encountered, probably could not have imagined
until his encounter with McCarthy. McCarthy's bullying, his total dislocation from the truth,
his increasingly impassioned followers who trusted no one but him.
His willingness to introduce threats and violence into American politics.
Things like that tend to eventually reach the point of no return.
He made the decision this would be the last day of his life.
That is next time on Rachel Maddow Presents Ultra.
Ultra is a production of MSNBC.
This episode was written by myself and Mike Yarvitz.
The series is executive produced by myself and Mike Yarvitz.
It's produced by Jen Mulraney Donovan and Kelsey Desiderio.
Our associate producer is Vassilios Karsalakis.
Archival support from Holly Klopchin.
Audio engineering and sound design
by Bob Mallory and Catherine Anderson.
Our head of audio production
is the indefatigable Bryson Barnes.
Our senior executive producers
are Corey Nazo and Laura Conaway.
Our web producer is Will Femia.
Aisha Turner is the executive producer
for MSNBC Audio.
Rebecca Cutler is the senior vice president for content strategy at MSNBC.
Archival radio material is from NBC News via the Library of Congress.
I'd like to acknowledge the late Kevin Coogan, whose book, Dreamer of the Day,
is the definitive scholarship on the life of Francis Parker Yockey.
Links to Mr. Coogan's book and other key sources on this subject,
like Larry Tye's great McCarthy biography, Demagogue,
those are all posted at our website, msnbc.com slash ultra. My sister, Mary Driscoll, had a job on Capitol Hill as Joe McCarthy's executive secretary.
I despised him, and she did not.
I could not discuss him without getting into four-letter words, and I still can't,
because he was the biggest liar in the history of the United States.
I think that rings true.
I can't think of a bigger liar we've ever had.
So I loathed him.
She did not.
And I asked her, my sister Mary, he said he had the names of 205 communists.
Where did he get them?
And she said he made it up.
And she knew. She was in his office with him.