Friday, 1 February 2008

James Cumes: Petrov affair dramatises injustices of the Menzies era, The Australian, 1 February, 2008.





Petrov affair dramatises injustices of the Menzies era: [6 NSW Country Edition]

Stapleton, JohnThe Australian; Canberra, A.C.T. [Canberra, A.C.T] 01 Feb 2008: 14.

Abstract

As first secretary in the Department of External Affairs in 1954, [James Cumes] knew many of the people involved in the Petrov affair. As he cheerfully puts it, he worked "cheek by jowl with the `nest of traitors' alleged at the time to infest the department". He knew personally some of those whose careers were "most unjustly" destroyed.
Far from saving them, Vladmir and Evdokia's defection appears to ultimately have ended their own once loving relationship. "When [Vladimir Petrov] defects, he betrays his cause -- whether we regard it as good or evil -- his country and his professional ethic," Cumes records. "What he opts for turns out to be a boring and rather feckless freedom."
"[Eva Petrov] and Vladmir would never be forgotten, but they were ignored," Cumes says. "She and Vladimir were able to live out their lives quietly in suburbia. They may have ceased to be lovers and became outcasts, unrecognised and unacclaimed by either side, except as they would be seen as leading actors in an episode of historic conflict."

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