Marco Polo, If You Can - Book Review
74William F. Buckly and His Spy Blackford Oakes
The late William F. Buckley Jr. (1925 - 2008) is well known as a leading figure, one could even say the father of, the revival of the Conservative movement in the United States following its near extinction during the New Deal era, as well as a prolific writer, speaker and host of the long running (1966 - 1999) PBS public affairs show Firing Line. While most people know about Buckley's writing on politics (he founded and was the long time editor the influential magazine, National Review) many do not know that he was also the author of a number of best selling novels including a series of eleven action packed spy novels detailing the espionage adventures of Buckley's fictional spy Blackford Oakes (there is also a twelfth book The Blackford Oaks Reader which is a non-fiction account describing how he came to write the series and how the character Blackford Oakes came about and evolved).
Oakes and Buckley had much in common. Both were born in 1925, both served as officers in the U.S. Army during World War II and both enrolled in Yale University following the war and, upon graduation, both were recruited into the CIA (America's first spy, Nathan Hale, was also a graduate of Yale University and Yale was a major recruiting ground for military intelligence services and the OSS - Office of Strategic Services - during World War II as well as the CIA during the Cold War). While Oakes ended up spending his career as a CIA agent, Buckley's time with the agency lasted about one year, part of which was on assignment as an field agent in Mexico City with E. Howard Hunt, of Watergate fame, serving as his handler. Finally, both men hailed from upscale East Coast patrician families and both were Catholic, Conservative Republican (although Oakes' long time girlfriend was a Liberal Democrat and his polar opposite politically) and ardent Cold Warriors. While suave and debonair like Ian Flemming's James Bond, Blackford Oakes does not outlive his creator and instead, is killed in an exchange of bullets with the traitor Kim Philby on what was to be his last assignment in 1988. Even though Oakes dies nearly two decades before his creator, the book, Last Call for Blackford Oakes, which recounts Oakes' fatal last assignment was written and published three years before Buckley's own death from complications of old age.
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Good Historical Fiction Stays Close to the Truth
Like any good spy novel, Marco Polo, If You Can, deftly blends fact and fiction in such a way as to make readers feel they are reading a true tale. And much of the story is true in that the then Soviet dictator Nikita Khrushchev made the first state visit by a Soviet chief of state to the United States in September of 1959 during which he was a guest of President Eisenhower at the President's retreat at Camp David. Following Chairman Khrushchev's visit, President Eisenhower was supposed to meet in Paris the following year for a major East-West Summit Conference, however, this was canceled following the shooting down on May 1, 1960 of an American U2 spy plane by the Soviets. The U2 pilot, CIA agent Francis Gary Powers, was taken prisoner and tried for espionage at a trial in Moscow parts of which were televised for propaganda purposes. While he could have been sentenced to death, the traditional punishment for spies, Powers was instead sentenced to ten years in prison, seven of which were to be at hard labor. However, shortly after his trial a spy swap was arranged and, on February 10, 1962, at a bridge connecting East and West Berlin, the Soviets traded Powers for KGB Colonel Rudolf Abel, a major Soviet spy who had been imprisoned in the U.S. since his capture in a raid on his apartment in Brooklyn, New York on June 21, 1957. Like any history this information is freely available and was widely reported in the media at the time.
However, there are missing details and little mysteries in accounts of any event, current or historical and, when dealing with spies and secret intelligence operations, a lot is missing. It then becomes the task of the novelist to fill in these missing pieces in such a way that the story becomes complete and readers find themselves caught up in a story rather than a readable distillation of the available facts.
Chairman Khrushchev Offends President Eisenhower and a U2 Spy Flight is Planned
In Marco Polo, If You Can, Buckley substitutes Blackford Oakes for Francis Gary Powers, Hans Steiner for Rudolf Abel, a shadowy character known as Rufus, Oakes' CIA superior in the series, for the unknown CIA handler responsible for Powers along with a few other minor fictional characters. The rest of the characters in the book from CIA Director Allan Dulles, to President Eisenhower to Nikita Khrushchev are all as real as the the publicly reported events described above.
Buckley then proceeds to fill in the untold parts of the story, many of which to this day remain shrouded in secrecy. What information was the CIA seeking when it launched this flight? In the book President Eisenhower is deeply offended, actually outraged, when, after consuming a large amount of alcohol while a guest of the President at Camp David, Chairman Khrushchev suddenly calls Eisenhower "Ike" and pretends to scold him for swearing in meetings. Eisenhower apparently did not mind close friends calling him Ike and nor mind being referred to as Ike on campaigns as it made voters feel he was one of them, but for a stranger to call him Ike, that, to him was an invasion of his personal space and he did not like it one bit. The President went to bed angry and, though he remained angry the next day he also cooled off enough to wonder how the Soviet Premier knew that he swore in private meetings with his National Security Council. There was obviously a Soviet mole with access to information discussed in the most secret councils of government.
But the problem was how to find the mole. After studying and pondering this, Rufus and Allan Dulles come up with a plan involving a U2 being shot down by the Soviets. The plan is very risky and very elaborate as the Soviets must not only learn of the flight in advance but capture it despite the fact that they have no fighter plane or anti-aircraft artillery capable of reaching the 70,000 foot altitude that the U2 was designed to fly at. When Francis Gary Powers was shot down the U.S. government and the CIA first denied it was their plane, then claimed that it was a weather reconnaissance plan that had flown off course and into Soviet airspace before finally being forced to acknowledge that the plane and pilot were on a CIA initiated spy mission. However, the CIA to this day, has claimed that the Soviets could not have downed the plane with anti-aircraft fire or attack by a fighter do to its being able to fly higher than anything the Soviets had in their arsenal, as well as arguing that the Soviet claim that they shot the plane down with a surface to air missile, if true, would have resulted in the death of the pilot. In the novel, Buckley explains how the CIA maneuvered to have the Soviets capture the plane and pilot without suspecting a plot.
Like all of the books in this series, Marco Polo, If You Can, is an action packed spy thriller that leaves the reader wondering where the facts end and the fiction begins.
1960 Newscast of U2 Incident
Espionage in the News
- Canadian coin spurs fears of espionage3news2 hours ago
How much does the US government really trust Canada? Maybe less than you think.
- Mother of Iranian-American scholar held on espionage charges in Tehran urges releaseMinneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune2 days ago
WASHINGTON - The mother of an Iranian-American scholar facing espionage charges in Tehran is urging the Iranian government to release her son.
- Congo court upholds Norwegians' death sentencesBoston Globe4 hours ago
A Congolese court has upheld death sentences for two Norwegians convicted of espionage and murder, U.N. radio said Thursday, prompting condemnation from Norwegian officials.
- Secret e-mails: Trust Canada in spy-coins caper? 'Who knows,' wrote top Pentagon spy-catcherMinneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune6 hours ago
WASHINGTON - How much does the U.S. government really trust Canada? Maybe less than you think. Espionage warnings from the Defense Department caused an international sensation a few years ago over reports of mysterious coins with radio frequency transmitters, until they were debunked.
- Secret emails: Trust Canada in spy-coins caper? 'Who knows,' wrote top Pentagon spy-catcherBrandon Sun55 minutes ago
WASHINGTON - Can Canada be trusted? In the midst of what turned out to be a bogus espionage scare over commemorative coins, senior Pentagon officials speculated whether Canadians - widely considered to be among America's closest allies - might be "bad guys" involved in the spy caper.
- Secret Pentagon e-mails: Trust Canada? 'Who knows'Boston Globe13 hours ago
How much does the U.S. government really trust Canada? Maybe less than you think. Espionage warnings from the Defense Department caused an international sensation a few years ago over reports of mysterious coins with radio frequency transmitters, until they were debunked. The culprit turned out to be a commemorative quarter in Canada.
- Congo court upholds death penalty for NorwegiansDeepika89 minutes ago
KINSHASA, Nov 3 (Reuters) A Congolese military appeal court today upheld death sentences against two Norwegians convicted of murder and espionage and ordered them and their government to pay more than 500 million dollar in damages, the judge said.
- Poppy quarter sparked U.S. distrust of CanadaFort Frances Times3 hours ago
How much does the U.S. government really trust Canada? Maybe less than you think. Espionage warnings from the U.S. Defence Department caused an international sensation a few years ago over reports of mysterious coins with radio frequency transmitters—until they were debunked.
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Woody Marx says:
15 months ago
Although I have never been a fan of his novels, I was and still am a big fan of William F. Buckley, not specifically for his political views, but for his programme Firing Line which used to air on PBS. I loved the mannerisms and obstruse vocabulary choices he practised on the show and his guests were always stimulating and highly thought-provoking, whether you agreed with their agendas or not. Thanks for reminding me of it! :)