Fitzgerald worked for six years at a New York law firm. At the outbreak of World War II Fitzgerald was "a 31-year-old attorney with a wife and a child" yet he enlisted as a private in the Army. He soon transferred to Officer Candidate School and was commissioned as an officer. His assignment was as liaison to the Chinese army operating in the China-Burma-India theater, where he was promoted to the rank of major and awarded the Bronze Star. He was linked with the Chinese 6th army which operated in Burma. After the war, Fitzgerald returned to New York City, where he worked at a Wall Street law firm. He enjoyed connections with the city's elite social circles.
CIA
Fitzgerald was recruited to the CIA's Office of Policy Coordination by Frank Wisner in 1950. According to Prados, Fitzgerald worked in the CIA's Far East Division on a diverse array of projects, dealing with Tibet, China, Philippines, Japan, and Korea. He became friends with William Colby, also in the Far East Division. Fitzgerald was especially interested in the Tibetan Task Force, which supported the continuing Tibetan resistance against the Maoist Chinese takeover and, particularly, the 1959 Tibetan uprising. He told officers to work with Tibetan leader Gyalo Dhondup. He warned other officials against the agency becoming involved in a failed 1958 rebellion in Indonesia. Ralph McGehee's CIA memoir mentions FitzGerald, describing him as Chief of Station in the Philippines in 1955 or 1956. In January 1961, Fitzgerald approved James William Lair's proposal for arming Hmong guerrillas to fight in the Laotian Civil War. In February 1964, Fitzgerald became chief of Western Hemisphere Division responsible for clandestine operations in Central America, South America, Caribbean and Cuba. In June 1965, Fitzgerald was selected as Deputy Director of Plans, responsible for worldwide collection of foreign intelligence. Fitzgerald supervised the increase in personnel assigned to Vietnam to support military operations. In one instance he asked Edgar Applewhite to attack Ramparts magazine as part of the CIA's cold war strategy. Applewhite claimed he used "dirty tricks" and blackmail to harm the magazine's business Later, Fitzgerald worked on the CIA's accurate prediction of the outbreak of the Six-Day War in the Middle East between Egypt and Israel. He was regarded highly by many, including Allen Dulles, who became director of the agency. Dulles described Fitzgerald as "an officer of imagination and sense of daring, backed by his credentials as a fellow Wall Street lawyer and his impeccable social connections, coupled with his ability to get things done." John Kenneth Galbraith, an economist and diplomat who was influential in the Kennedy administration, also admired him, although also describing Fitzgerald as reckless.
Personal life
On September 2, 1938, Fitzgerald married Marietta Peabody. Following World War II, Fitzgerald divorced Marietta. Fitzgerald's daughter Frances FitzGerald was a journalist and a writer. In 1967, while playing tennis in Virginia, Fitzgerald suffered a heart attack and died. He was 57.
Legacy and honors
He was posthumously awarded the National Security Medal.
Additional sources
Conboy, Kenneth and James Morrison. Shadow War: The CIA's Secret War in Laos. Paladin Press..
McGehee, Ralph.Deadly Deceits: My 25 Years in the CIA. Ocean Press..