Formally a semi-private joint-stock company and American corporation, Amtorg occupied a unique position in the market as the single purchaser for a communist state. Even though it did not officially represent the Soviet government, it was controlled by the People's Commissariat for Foreign Trade and, prior to the establishment of diplomatic relations between the US and the USSR in 1933, served as a de facto trade delegation and a quasi-embassy.
Amtorg handled almost all exports from the USSR, comprising mostly lumber, furs, flax, bristles, and caviar, and all imports of raw materials and machinery for Soviet industry and agriculture. It also provided American companies with information about trade opportunities in the USSR and supplied Soviet industries with technical news and information about American companies.[4][5]
The first headquarters were first located in Manhattan, at 165 Broadway.[4][5] After 1929, it was located at 261 Fifth Avenue, with several branch offices, including, at different times, Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle.[6]
From 1927 to 1930, under the direction of Saul Bron and Pyotr Bogdanov, Amtorg expanded into a major commercial enterprise, with more than 100 employees. During this formative period, Amtorg was very careful to clear any legal hurdles through the leading New York law firm of Simpson Thacher & Bartlett.[7]
The main financial consultant and banker for Amtorg at that time was Chase National Bank.[8]
In May 1930 Amtorg was investigated by the Hamilton Fish Committee on communist activities in the United States of the House of Representatives on charges of distributing communist propaganda.[11]
Even though some propaganda efforts indeed must have taken place, the Fish Committee agreed that the main evidence, the so-called "Whalen documents," was bogus. It was found that there was no sufficient competent legal evidence to prove a connection of Amtorg with subversive activities. Ironically, Amtorg would become a more important player in "subversive activities" after 1930 as it became a center not so much for communist propaganda as for industrial espionage.[5][12]
According to some sources, prior to the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries in 1933, Amtorg served as a front for GRU/OGPU (Soviet intelligence service) operations in the US.[13][14][15][16]
However, Russian historian Prof. M. Yu. Mukhin (Institute of Russian History, Academy of Science of Russian Federation) asserts that during that period, Amtorg was too important for the Soviets as the only Soviet trade agency in the US, and its main focus was on obtaining credit and negotiating trade and technical-aid contracts, and that systematic intelligence gathering by the Soviets in the USA actually began after President Franklin D. Rooseveltrecognized the Soviets in 1933, allowing them a permanent embassyinWashington, D.C.[17]
There was an agreement between Nikola Tesla and Amtorg, as highlighted in declassified FBI files on Tesla.[18] Contained within the extract Tesla agreed to supply plans, specifications, and complete information on a method and apparatus for producing very small particles in a tube open to air, for increasing the charge of the particles to the full voltage of the high-potential terminal, and for projecting the particles to a distances of a hundred miles or more. The maximum speed of the particles was specified as not less than 350 miles per second. The receipt of $25,000 fee for this disclosure was acknowledged by Nikola Tesla and by A. Bartanian of the Amtorg Trading Corporation.
During World War II, Amtorg handled the flow of military supplies to the Soviet Union, including armaments, raw materials, food, and uniforms, under the Lend-Lease program.
During the Cold War years, the scope of Amtorg's enterprise was more limited, but it continued to conduct its business at 49 West 37th Street, in New York City, maintaining a skeleton staff.[5]
As an arm of the Soviet state, Amtorg, at that time located at 355 Lexington Avenue in New York City, was targeted in two bombing attempts, in 1971 and 1976, by members of the Jewish Armed ResistanceArchived 2010-04-14 at the Wayback Machine, an extremist group affiliated with the Jewish Defense League.
Surrounded by continuing controversy, Amtorg survived the Cold War but did not survive the collapse of the Soviet Union, quietly disappearing in 1998.[8] Its last address was on the 86th floor of the World Trade Center in New York City.
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Saul, Norman E. (2008). Historical Dictionary of United States-Russian/Soviet Relations. Scarecrow Press. p. 24. ISBN9780810855373. OCLC230802271.
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Ivanian, E. A. (2001). Entsiklopedia rossiisko-amerikanskikh otnoshenii XVIII-XX veka (in Russian). Moscow: Mezhdunarodnye otnosheniia. ISBN9785713310455. OCLC48857764.
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"44 American Firms Are Aiding Soviets". The New York Times. 30 November 1930.
^Investigation of communist propaganda. Hearings before a Special committee to investigate communist activities in the United States of the House of Representatives, Seventy-first Congress, second session. Washington, D.C., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1930-31. OCLC739254.
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Siegel, Katherine A S (2015). Loans and Legitimacy: the Evolution of Soviet-American Relations, 1919-1933. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky. pp. 134, 184, note 8. ISBN9780813161334. OCLC900344942.
^Vaksberg, Arkady (2011). Toxic Politics: The secret history of the Kremlin's poison laboratory – from the Special Cabinet to the death of Litvinenko. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger. p. 92. ISBN9780313387463. OCLC669750064.
Richard B. Spence, "Death in the Adirondacks: Amtorg, Intrigue, and the Dubious Demise of Isaiya Khurgin and Efraim Sklyansky, August 1925," American Communist History, vol. 14, no. 2 (Aug. 2015), pp. 135–158.