- Harold Glasser
::"For others see
Harold Glasser (disambiguation) "Harold Glasser (
November 24 ,1905 - ?), was an economist in the United States Department of the Treasury and spokesman on the affairs of theUnited Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) 'throughout its whole life' and he had a 'predominant voice' in determining which countries should receive aid. Glasser was a member of thePerlo group of Soviet spies duringWorld War II and worked closely withHarry Dexter White . [cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Brownell |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,823119-6,00.html |quote=Harold Glasser, a close subordinate and associate of White, was described in the FBI report as an active member of the espionage ring. |publisher=Time (magazine) |date=November 30 ,1953 |accessdate=2008-05-31 ] His code name in Soviet intelligence and in theVenona files is "Ruble".Transfer to GRU
Harold Glasser joined the United States Department of Treasury in 1936 and became its assistant director of the Division of Monetary Research by late 1938. In 1937,
Josef Peters transferred Glasser to the Soviet Main Intelligence Directorate ("Glavnoe Razvedyvatel'noe Upravlenie") orGRU in order to report onHarry Dexter White 's cooperation with Soviet intelligence (Soviet case officerBoris Bykov had pressuredWhittaker Chambers on the subject of White's intelligence production). Glasser, the number two man in the division beneath White, reported back that as far as he could discern, White was providing everything of importance.In 1940, Glasser was appointed Chief American economic adviser to
Ecuador through a joint program of the Treasury andU.S. Department of State . In December 1941, the Secret Service forwarded a report to Harry Dexter White indicating that it had evidence Glasser was involved in Communist activities. White never acted on the report. Glasser continued to serve in Ecuador until 1942.After America became involved in
World War II , Glasser received appointments to higher-level positions, such as Vice-Chairman of theWar Production Board , was dispatched to serve as economic adviser to American forces in North Africa, U.S. Treasury representative to the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, and Treasury representative to the Allied High Commission in Italy.Perlo group
When Glasser returned to the United States in 1944, he reestablished contact with the
Perlo group . Victor Perlo, the groups head, explained toElizabeth Bentley that Glasser had been a member of the group before the War started, and Glasser was transferred to work with another group.Charles Kramer , another member of the Perlo group, told Bentley that Glasser was transferred to a group working for theGRU headed byAlger Hiss .In an 25 April 1945 memo from
Pavel Fitin , head of KGB foreign intelligence, to Vsevolod Merkulov, head of the overall KGB organization, Fitin asked fair treatment for an award to be given to a longtime operative, Harold Glasser. Fitin called Merkulov's attention to the fact that Glasser had been working for Soviet intelligence for a long time, since May 1937, usually for the KGB but also at times for the GRU. Fitin explained how, while Glasser was working with the GRU, Glasser felt he had been slighted. Fitin explained how the group of GRU agents of which Glasser was part, was decorated with honors of theSoviet Union , but Glasser had been neglected because of his transfer back to KGB. The text from KGB Archives reads in part as follows::"Our agent RUBLE, drawn to work for the Soviet Union in May 1937, passed initially through the military "neighbors" and then through our station valuable information on political and economic issues.... To our work RUBLE gives much attention and energy is devoted and disciplined agent.
:"According to data from VADIM the group of agents of the "military" neighbors whose part RUBLE was earlier, recently was decorated with orders of the USSR. RUBLE learned about this fact from his friend ALES, who is the head of the mentioned group. Taking into account RUBLE's devoted work for the USSR for eight years and the fact that, as a result of transfer to our station, RUBLE was not decorated together with other members of the ALES group, consider expedient to put him forward for a decoration of the
Order of the Red Star . Ask for your consent.Fitin's account corroborates Elizabeth Bentley's deposition.
In the transcript # 1759 KGB Washington to Moscow 28 March 1945, Glasser reports the Treasury Department is sending a young lawyer,
Josiah DuBois , to Moscow to serve on the American delegation to theAllied Reparations Commission meeting. Glasser says he established “most friendly relations” with DuBois and judged him to be ideologically a Communist, although he was not a CPUSA member. Glasser reports how he counseled DuBois to be more “discreet” in expressingleft-wing views and notes that his personal relationship with DuBois was such that he could “normally obtain by asking” anything he wanted.Glasser is in the subject of several June 1945 Venona cables. Three June 1945 transcripts report Glasser's transmitting U.S. State Department reports of Soviet war losses, a State Department report on a Finnish company believed to be hiding Nazi financial assets, and an
Office of Strategic Services report on the movement of Nazi gold through Swiss banks.ISS investigation
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.