Read America's Great Game Online
Authors: Hugh Wilford
Steve Meade, the roving, Bond-like CIA operative who befriended the Syrian dictator Za‘im.
ARCHIE ROOSEVELT PAPERS, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
CIA officer Miles Copeland and wife, Lorraine, under diplomatic cover.
LENNIE COPELAND/JERRY DAVIS
A fresh-faced Mather Greenleaf Eliot, the CIA case officer for Kim Roosevelt’s Arabist, anti-Zionist citizen group, the American Friends of the Middle East.
ELIOT FAMILY PAPERS, UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH LIBRARY
Kim Roosevelt’s close friend and fellow anti-Zionist activist, Rabbi Elmer Berger.
WISCONSIN HISTORICAL SOCIETY
The celebrity journalist Dorothy Thompson visiting Iraq as president of the CIA-funded American Friends of the Middle East.
DOROTHY THOMPSON PAPERS, SPECIAL COLLECTIONS, SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
Garland Evans Hopkins, the ardently pro-Arab and anti-Zionist chief executive officer of the American Friends of the Middle East. The CIA removed him from his position after the Eisenhower administration abandoned its policy of support for Arab nationalism.
DOROTHY THOMPSON PAPERS, SPECIAL COLLECTIONS, SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
Edward Elson traveling with the American Friends of the Middle East. The Presbyterian pastor of both John Foster Dulles and Dwight Eisenhower, Elson courted controversy with his criticisms of Israel and support for Arab nationalism.
EDWARD L. R. ELSON PAPERS, PRESBYTERIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY
The September 1950 wedding of Archie and Selwa “Lucky” Roosevelt, the personally happiest expression of the early CIA’s romance with the Arab world.
ARCHIE ROOSEVELT PAPERS, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
The overt and covert faces of US foreign policy during the Eisenhower years: John Foster Dulles (left) and brother, Allen.
ALLEN W. DULLES PAPERS, PUBLIC POLICY PAPERS DIVISION, DEPARTMENT OF RARE BOOKS AND SPECIAL COLLECTIONS, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
A nighttime meeting in Cairo: Kim Roosevelt (center) confers with the head of Egypt’s revolutionary government, Muhammad Naguib (right), and the man soon to replace him—and carry the CIA’s hopes for the Arab world—Gamal ‘Abdel Nasser (left).
KERMIT ROOSEVELT III/JOE AYELLA
Gamal Nasser and Kim Roosevelt, friends and rivals in America’s Great Game.
KERMIT ROOSEVELT III/JOE AYELLA
Iranian prime minister Mohammed Mosaddeq touching the Liberty Bell in Independence Hall during a 1951 visit to the United States. Two years later, Mosaddeq would be overthrown in a coup carried out, on the American side, by Kim Roosevelt.
DEPARTMENT OF STATE, HARRY S. TRUMAN LIBRARY