John Barron (American journalist) explained

John Barron
Birth Name:John Daniel Barron
Birth Date:26 January 1930
Birth Place:Wichita Falls, Texas, U.S.
Death Place:Virginia, U.S.
Alma Mater:University of Missouri
Awards:Raymond Clapper Memorial Award (1964)

John Daniel Barron (January 26, 1930 – February 24, 2005) was an American journalist and investigative writer. He wrote several books about Soviet espionage via the KGB and other agencies.

Early life

John Barron was born January 26, 1930, in Wichita Falls, Texas, the son of a Methodist minister.

He graduated from the University of Missouri and studied Russian at the United States Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. He served in Berlin as a naval intelligence officer.

Journalistic career

In 1957, he joined the Washington Star as an investigative reporter. In 1964, he and fellow Star reporter Paul B. Hope were given the Raymond Clapper Memorial Award "for their work on the Baker case, which was presented to them during an awards dinner in Washington, by guest speaker Alfred Hitchcock."[1]

In 1965, Barron joined the Washington bureau of Reader's Digest. There he wrote more than 100 stories on a wide variety of subjects - notably a 1980 story concerning unanswered questions surrounding the drowning death of Mary Jo Kopechne at Chappaquiddick in a car driven by Ted Kennedy.

After Barron published his 1974 book KGB: The Secret Work of Soviet Secret Agents, the KGB attempted to discredit him by faking claims that Barron was part of a Zionist conspiracy as well as "...made much of his Jewish origins...".[2] In 1996, Barron published a book detailing the saga of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Operation SOLO, involving the infiltration of the top leadership of the Communist Party USA by the FBI's secret informant Morris Childs. From 1958 through 1977, Childs traveled to Moscow over 50 times, acting as a courier between the CPUSA and Communist Party of the Soviet Union.[3] Childs was instrumental in helping with the transfer of over $28 million from the Communist Party of the Soviet Union to the Communist Party of the US to help fund its activities, with each transaction painstakingly reported by Childs to his FBI handlers.[4]

Barron's and co-author Anthony Paul's 1977 book Murder of a Gentle Land: The Untold Story of Communist Genocide in Cambodia was important in overturning the Cambodian genocide denial and the myth that the Khmer Rouge rulers of Cambodia were benign agrarian reformers.[5]

Death and legacy

John Barron died in Virginia on February 24, 2005. He was 75 years old at the time of his death.

Barron's papers are held by the Hoover Institution Archives at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California.[6]

Works

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Portrait of a 'Star' reporter. Gary . Wilson . Jul 8, 2009. Perry County Tribune.
  2. Book: The Sword and the Shield . Basic Books . Andrew, Christopher . Mitrokhin, Vasili . 1999 . Chapter 1, p 19 . 0-465-00310-9 . registration .
  3. Richard Gid Powers, "Double Agent," New York Times, April 21, 1996.
  4. [John Earl Haynes]
  5. Thompson, Larry Clinton Refugee Workers in the Indochina Exodus, 1975-1982, Jefferson, NC: McFarland Publishing Co., 2010, p. 131
  6. Lora Soroka and Xiuzhi Zhou, "Register of the John Barron Papers, 1927–1996," Palo Alto, CA: Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, 1999.