Before there was a CIA, during World War II, there was the OSS and now more than half a century later the National Archives is releasing files on almost 24,000 Americans who worked for the agency, including Julia Child.
Although she will be mentioned in the same breath as Valerie Plame, there was nothing covert about Julia, with whom I worked for more than a decade and whose only secretive moment came on camera when she dropped food on the kitchen floor, picked it up and confided to viewers, “Don’t forget. If you’re alone in the kitchen, no one will know.”
The OSS revelations won’t come as news to anyone who knew her, since she reveled in telling about her most dramatic exploit, helping to cook up a shark repellent to coat underwater explosives and keep them away from devices meant to blow up German U-boats.
The newly released list is a reminder of that innocent time when secretly working for your country was a source of pride for people like historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr., who later worked in JFK’s White House as well as two sons of Theodore Roosevelt and Sterling Hayden, the actor now immortalized as Al Pacino’s first murder victim in “The Godfather.”
Nobody had to worry about the likes of Scooter Libby blabbing their names.
Cross-posted from my blog.