The Hounding of a Chess Legend
by
Richard Wall
by Richard Wall
"Chess
demands total concentration and a love for the game" ~ Bobby
Fischer
1.
The Mortal Danger of Being a Chess Prodigy
On
May 17, 1998 the final episode in the Fifth Season of the X-Files
TV series was first broadcast in America. It is entitled "The
End," and begins with a chess match taking place before
a large audience, between a young American boy and an older, Russian
grandmaster.
As
the match progresses, the viewer is made aware of a sniper taking
up position in a gallery overlooking the vast auditorium. The child
player, who is gifted with extra-sensory perception and the ability
to read others’ thoughts as they occur, becomes restless as he senses
something threatening in the air. Tension rises as the sniper prepares
to take aim, and the game is reaching its climax. The sniper fires.
At this crucial moment the boy, having made his final move and check-mated
his opponent, moves slightly down and backwards, and the shot which
was intended for him kills the Russian grandmaster instead. Double
check-mate!
Later,
it emerges that the gifted child possesses his psychic powers as
a result of a top-secret biological implant in his head, of alien
origin. The evil conspiratorial elite which runs world affairs wants
to see him dead because the abilities they have given him have turned
out to be no longer required, or perhaps too much of a threat to
their own sinister plans.
I
suspect the show’s producers
fully intended that viewers of this riveting opening scene should
have had ‘Bobby Fischer,’ ‘exceptional abilities’ and ‘paranoia’
running through their minds in the same instant. Think chess, and
the chances are that you will indeed think Bobby Fischer.
2)
From Iceland to Montenegro to Japan
In
1972 in Reykjavik, Iceland,
Robert James Fischer, born 1943, became a national hero for winning
a historic match against Boris Spassky, and thereby wresting the
world chess championship from the Soviet Union, America’s corrupt
arch-enemy in the Cold War.
Twenty
years later Fischer again beat Spassky in Montenegro,
then part of Yugoslavia,
in an anniversary replay of their 1972 encounter. The match was
played under controversial circumstances which led to his being
effectively exiled from the United States ever since.
The
late Murray Rothbard, writing in the Rothbard-Rockwell
Report in October 1992, courageously protested a chorus of voices
demanding that Bobby Fischer tow the line of political correctness.
These were his prophetic words:
Why
the unfair and out-of-line hysteria about Bobby? Well, it turns
out that Bobby, an independent thinker in other fields than chess,
is definitely not Politically Correct. Apparently, even chess
players are not allowed to stray beyond the narrow bounds of PC
without being severely punished.
Are
we going to have to say, metaphorically, and even literally if
he is nabbed for "violation of sanctions": Free Bobby Fischer
and All Political Prisoners?!
Well,
yes we are. Bobby Fischer was finally ‘nabbed’ in July this year
at Tokyo’s Narita airport, as he was boarding a flight for Manila,
his 1997–issue US passport (valid till 2007) having earlier been
revoked
by Uncle Sam, apparently unbeknown to its bewildered holder.
Why
does the US government in 2003 cancel a valid passport, if it could
quite happily issue that same passport in 1997, when Fischer was
presumably no less in
violation of the sanctions than he is now? It is hardly cynical
to say that this officious measure betrays every sign of deliberate
and petty victimisation of an individual citizen. Sign of the times.
So
Bobby Fischer, 61, the eccentric and, as Deweyians
and psychologists would say, never properly socialized chess champion,
is now in detention in Japan.
He has been so held since his arrest at the airport, while legal
proceedings proceed slowly, as they can be made to do, in connection
with the compliant Japanese government’s order for his deportation
to the United States, which has been challenged by Fischer’s lawyers.
The
barracuda press, primed with unseemly haste, took vindictive pleasure
at his misfortune. "Fugitive chess king Fischer caught,"
the Associated
Press bulletin of July 16 obscenely exulted, informing us a
little further on that "Fischer is wanted in the United States
for playing a 1992 chess match in …Yugoslavia, in violation of international
sanctions," for which he may face 10 years in jail, a fine
of US$250,000 and confiscation of his prize money from the match,
estimated at over US$3 million.
3)
Free Bobby Fischer!
Were
he still alive today, Murray Rothbard would no doubt ruefully smile
at the fact that, sure enough, a ‘Free Bobby’ website
has sprung up, T-shirts are being produced, accusations
are flying that his defenders are only in it for their own self-promotion,
and numerous petitions and letters have been written, including
a poignant plea to the president from Fischer’s former chess opponent
and now friend, Boris Spassky, who writes:
Bobby
is a tragic personality. … He is an honest and good-natured man.
Absolutely not social. He is not adaptable to everybody’s standards
of life. He has a very high sense of justice and is unwilling
to compromise as well as with his own conscience as with surrounding
people. He is a person who is doing almost everything against
himself.
I
would not like to defend or justify Bobby Fischer. He is what
he is. I am asking only for one thing. For mercy, charity.
If for
some reason it is impossible, I would like to ask you the following:
Please correct the mistake of President François Mitterand
in 1992. Bobby and myself committed the same crime. Put sanctions
against me also. Arrest me. And put me in the same cell with Bobby
Fischer. And give us a chess set.
~
Boris Spassky, Appeal
to President Bush, August 7, 2004
The
appeal is likely to fall on deaf ears, I fear. Fischer has been
known to hurl some choice words of abuse at US officials, including
the president words which Dubya would no doubt recognize
as parts of his own colorful vocabulary. If there is one thing for
which George W. Bush does have a documented record in Texas, as
the born-again ghost of executed murderess Karla
Faye Tucker could testify, it is that he is not responsive to
pleas for clemency, and “has a long memory for slights.” As Texas
governor, Bush did not just turn down her plea for clemency; he
actually sneered and made fun of that plea as he confirmed the order
for her execution.
In
a recent Philippines radio interview, a medium he has taken to with
relish over the last few years, the true-to-form Bobby vows
revenge against the Japanese prime minister and the US President
for his imprisonment, and excoriates both of them as ‘motherf****rs’
who are ‘going to pay for this, and ... for your crimes in Iraq,
too.’
Poor
Bobby! How is it all going to end? Will he be allowed to walk free,
as any rightful sentiment of human justice would decree? Or is he
going to continue to be subjected to a petty vendetta waged by the
US government and its ever-ready-to-be-vengeful mass media, in the
name of an absurdly contrived form of collective punishment for
the alleged
sins of the Serbs?
Or
will he just be left to rot? The ‘paranoid’ Bobby, as the press
and other
commentators love to label him, also complains that he is being
kept in a cell which is life-threateningly close to the site of
a past nuclear radiation leak. At the rate things are going, the
US and Japanese governments’ Bobby Fischer problem will be solved
by natural causes, he fears. And who would not fear this? When it
comes to radiation, I defy anyone not to be a firm advocate of NIMBY,
except perhaps the over-imaginative, fast-moving Chernobyl
bikers, whose intriguing website has turned out to be a
fake.
The
mind-addled couch-potato generation’s short span of attention has
barely been disturbed by news of Bobby’s detention and the sad plight
of their exceptional fellow human being.
The
arrest was briefly newsworthy, as are his occasional outbursts,
but the approved media have long ago pigeon-holed him as a has-been
and a freak, a diseased mind, and a far-out – way, way far-out –
anti-Semitic and politically incorrect ranter to boot. Even in a
forum on the Free Bobby website there is someone, well-meaning enough
but thoroughly imbued with the erroneous idea that the combination
of government and medicine can actually do some good, who is advocating
that Bobby should be treated with drugs for mental illness.
Are
all these people completely unable to see beyond the end of their
sanctimonious noses? Could not the poor man be left alone to live
the rest of his life in peace?
4)
Private Man, Public Property
Things
were not always this bad, or this depressing. Between his first
ventures into chess at age 6 in the late 1940s, his teenage grandmastership
in the 1950s, and his most famous victory against Spassky in 1972,
Bobby Fischer became a true global
chess legend and household name, and has remained so to this
day.
This
status is reflected in the attention still given to analyzing his
games, to his chess books, and to the new form of the game which
he invented, Fischer
random chess. Inevitably, because of the Cold War context of
his triumph, Bobby Fischer the American champion came to be seen
as a public property. There has always a part of him which resented
that, and sought refuge in privacy and seclusion (and maybe even
in all his ‘unreasonable’ demands).
So
much so that when an inspirational movie came out in 1993, entitled
Searching
for Bobby Fischer, he was apparently upset at the use of
his name, which was presumably not authorized or paid for. He sought
to have it removed from the film’s title.
In
some markets the movie was accordingly given the truly dire and
ridiculous new title "Innocent Moves," thereby
destroying a major part of the significance of the original name,
which was to show (a) how a new young chess prodigy, Josh
Waitzkin, aspired to the same heights of achievement as Bobby
Fischer (the movie cleverly uses old black-and-white clips of the
1972 Fischer-Spassky game and other historical moments to convey
Josh’s thoughts of Fischer), and (b) how those around him – parents
and teachers of rival prodigies, tournament organizers, players
– also yearn and compete to find another champion who would be a
worthy successor to Fischer.
I
wonder in passing whether such a problem could not easily have been
solved by a courteous request to Fischer, or his nominated agent,
in recognition of the extent to which he had indeed become an admired
household name in America. It costs little to ask nicely for permission,
or even offer a small fee, but it is presumptuous to assume you
can do anything with anyone’s name, let alone a national celebrity’s.
The
movie’s end-titles make a heavy-handed point of telling us explicitly
how well-balanced Josh Waitzkin is, with his interests in a variety
of sports other than chess and in life’s activities in general,
in clear contrast to the totally chess-absorbed, and therefore by
implication unbalanced, Fischer. Any half-observant viewer would
have realized this for himself without having to have it spelled
out. But this is a minor quibble in an otherwise delightful film.
5)
A Family Spied on by the FBI
However
bizarre Bobby’s behavior on the chess tournament circuit may have
been (and it was), and however strange and seemingly inexplicable
his long self-imposed absence from it, things were never as personally
vicious as they are today, when, as T. V. Weber cogently
writes, self-perpetuating bureaucrats fool the public into thinking
they are delivering justice by making examples of easily-targeted
celebrities who stray outside approved PC lines:
"One
does not have to be much of a cynic to observe that the actions
of the State Department, the Justice Department, the FBI, the CIA,
et al., serve only to create a false sense of security that affords
cover to America’s genuine enemies."
But
there was always plenty of official paranoia, especially under FBI
director J.
Edgar Hoover, the friskily unorthodox cross-dresser who held
down his job for 50 years by keeping the goods on every public figure
and candidate you could possibly mention, even if an already heavily
propagandized and bamboozled public failed to realize it at the
time.
For
it turns out from now declassified
FBI files that Bobby’s biological parents, Paul Lemenyi and
Regina Fischer (née Wender), were for many years spied on
by the federal government, which feared they had pro-Soviet sympathies.
Her husband, Gerhardt Fischer, whom she divorced in 1945 when Bobby
was 2 years old, had in 1939 been permanently barred from entering
the United States on account of his suspected Commie
sympathies, and according to the FBI never did so. Short of also
being possessed of magical powers of impregnation by a process of
thought or telepathy, he could therefore not have fathered young
Bobby.
In
the federal language of immigration, all these people were ‘aliens’
and so, as the X-Files intriguingly reminds us, inherently threatening
to the status quo.
The
declassified files reveal that Bobby’s talented multi-lingual mother,
who had to struggle to bring up two children on her own under difficult
circumstances, was spied on for over 30 years, from around 1940
until 1973.
If
you hear FBI footsteps for as long as this, as Bobby and his mother
did, is it any wonder that she was judged by one psychiatrist to
be "brilliant, but paranoid," suggest Peter Nicholas and
Clea Benson in their groundbreaking
November 2002 investigative report in the Philadelphia Inquirer.
"The
FBI went so far as to read case notes compiled by the social workers
she visited as a struggling single mother who moved from state to
state." These were the same social workers she had consulted
in 1957, when Bobby was 14, describing her son as "temperamental,
unable to get along with others, without friends his age, and without
any interests other than chess."
In
a
fascinating later article, they go on to write: "Paul F.
Nemenyi – Fischer’s father, though not listed on the birth certificate
– was a Hungarian scientist with a gift for spatial relations, a
gift clearly passed on to his son," and they sum up the Bobby
Fischer story thus:
"This
is a story about who Fischer really is, about his parents, his
origins, his life. The story begins with two Jewish immigrants.
They would meet. They would have an affair. Together, they would
produce a troubled little boy who would become the best chess
player who ever lived."
Nicholas
and Benson end their article reflecting sadly on Bobby’s isolation
in recent times, and on the eerie parallels with the life of his
predecessor prodigy Paul
Morphy (18371884), right down to the reclusiveness and
the claims of persecution.
Endgame
Perhaps,
like Paul Morphy whom he is said to revere, Bobby Fischer is destined
to become a tragic legend.
But
I hope not.
I
hope he will just be able to settle
down quietly with that nice homely-looking lady who is the acting
president of the Japanese chess federation, that he will be able
to live into a comfortable old age off his book royalties and whatever
might be left over of his prize money, and that a humbled USG will
realize that, just as no WMD were on their way from Baghdad to London
in 45 minutes, so too there are no real threats to anyone coming
from Bobby Fischer’s big mouth.
Selected
Links, Further Reading, and Further Viewing
- Online
list of Articles
about Bobby Fischer, including:
- Other links:
- Roger Ebert’s
Review
of Searching for Bobby Fischer Chicago Sun Times,
August 11, 1993.
- Ryan McMaken,
The
X-Files and the Decline of the State – LewRockwell.com, January
6, 2003 (a review of Paul Cantor’s Gilligan
Unbound: Pop Culture in the Age of Globalization
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers September 1, 2001).
- Murray
N. Rothbard, The
Lynching of the Returning Hero, in The Irrepressible Rothbard,
Chapter 58 (original ‘Triple R’ article: October 1992).
- United States
Government, Department of the Treasury, Office of Foreign Assets
Control, Order
to Provide Information and Cease and Desist Activities – August
21, 1992
This is the government order on which Fischer famously spat.
- T.V. Weber,
Bobby
Fischer: America’s Disposable Hero – September 3, 2004.
- DVDs:
October
19, 2004
Richard
Wall (send him mail) has a Master's
degree in International Relations from the London School of Economics
& Political Science, and lives in Estoril, Portugal, where he currently
works as a freelance writer and translator.
Copyright ©
2004 LewRockwell.com
Richard
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