{"id":90018,"date":"2021-10-20T17:05:30","date_gmt":"2021-10-20T15:05:30","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/?p=90018"},"modified":"2021-10-11T07:47:43","modified_gmt":"2021-10-11T05:47:43","slug":"20-09-67","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/?p=90018","title":{"rendered":"The Eternal Return of Ethel Rosenberg"},"content":{"rendered":"<h5 style=\"text-align: center;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/mosaicmagazine.com\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"center alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/www.reunion68.com\/Biuletyn\/img\/mosaic.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"35%\" \/><\/a><span style=\"text-decoration: underline; color: #000080;\"><strong><a style=\"color: #000080; text-decoration: underline;\" href=\"https:\/\/mosaicmagazine.com\/essay\/history-ideas\/2021\/10\/the-eternal-return-of-ethel-rosenberg\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">The Eternal Return of Ethel Rosenberg<\/a><\/strong><\/span><\/h5>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><strong>HARVEY KLEHR<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<hr style=\"height: 15px; background: #d0e6fa; width: 100%;\" \/>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong>A much-loved new biography argues that the convicted Soviet spy \u201cbetrayed no one.\u201d How has the myth of her innocence become so untethered from the evidence of her guilt?<\/strong><br \/>\n.<br \/>\n<img decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter\" src=\"https:\/\/mosaicmagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/Rosenberg.jpg\" width=\"100%\" \/><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><em>Ethel Rosenberg escorted by U.S. marshals as she arrives at Sing Sing Prison in the early 1950s. Ossie Leviness\/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images<\/em><\/span>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>O<\/strong>n June 19, 1953, Ethel and Julius Rosenberg went to the electric chair at Sing Sing Prison in New York, having been convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage by transmitting atomic secrets to the Soviet Union. The Rosenbergs were, as the British writer Anne Sebba notes in her new biography,\u00a0<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><strong><a style=\"color: #000080; text-decoration: underline;\" href=\"https:\/\/us.macmillan.com\/books\/9781250198655\"><em>Ethel Rosenberg: An American Tragedy<\/em><\/a>,<\/strong><\/span> the only American civilians executed for espionage during peacetime and Ethel remains the only American woman executed for a crime other than murder.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">At the time, and ever since, the trial and its outcome have been surrounded by controversy. They have been held up as examples of McCarthyite excess, of the paranoid style of American politics, and even of anti-Semitism. Yet while there is still room for reasonable disagreement about some of the legal, moral, and historical details, new information has come to light in the past 30 years that ought to have quieted much of the controversy. Sebba\u2019s new book is an attempt to reopen it\u2014or, perhaps we should say, to take advantage of the fact that for many the case is still not closed.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<h4 style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><strong>I. No Paranoid Fantasy<\/strong><\/span><\/h4>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">With the end of the cold war and the partial opening of American and Soviet archives long inaccessible to researchers, a much fuller picture of the USSR\u2019s atomic espionage has emerged. In 1995, the National Security Agency released the Venona messages\u2014communications between KGB headquarters in Moscow and its American stations that U.S. intelligence had decrypted over a 37-year period. A KGB archivist named Vasiliy Mitrokhin over the years had copied thousands of secret documents, which he turned over to Great Britain after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Alexander Vassiliev, a former KGB officer, was given access to the agency\u2019s files for a book project; his 1,100 pages of detailed notes confirmed the accuracy of the Venona and Mitrokhin material and added copious new information about additional Soviet spies. Together these documents exposed the activities of several Britons and Americans who were giving Soviet intelligence information about the Manhattan project, which the KGB dubbed \u201cEnormoz.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">In other words, it is no longer possible to claim that Soviet espionage was some sort of paranoid fantasy. Julius Rosenberg, we now know, recruited two atomic spies. One was his brother-in-law, David Greenglass, who worked as a machinist at Los Alamos. The second was a long-time friend and fellow engineer Russell McNutt, who, with Julius\u2019s encouragement, obtained a position at the company that built the enormous gaseous-diffusion plant at Oak Ridge, Tennessee that produced the uranium used for the first nuclear weapons. While the information they provided was quite valuable, it paled in comparison to what the Soviets obtained from Theodore Hall and Klaus Fuchs, two physicists who worked at Los Alamos. Fuchs, a German-born British subject, was tried and convicted of espionage in the UK in 1950, but Hall\u2019s involvement remained unknown to the general public until the release of the Venona records in 1995. Neither Fuchs nor any other atomic spy, however, has generated so much attention as the Rosenbergs.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><strong>It\u2019s no longer possible to claim that Soviet espionage was some sort of paranoid fantasy. Julius Rosenberg, we now know, recruited two atomic spies.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The Rosenberg case offers enough different lenses to satisfy almost any interpretive scheme and enough angles to shine light on a variety of issues in American history and politics. Its main characters include enough potential heroes and villains to staff several television series. For anyone inclined to traffic in conspiracy theories and attribute bad faith to government claims about the defendants\u2019 guilt, the case had numerous possible flaws and anomalies. The investigation was led by the FBI, then headed by J. Edgar Hoover\u2014lauded by many Americans as the nation\u2019s greatest crime-fighter, but also reviled by much of the American left as the head of an incipient American secret police that pried into the private lives of dissidents, blackmailed opponents, and abused civil liberties.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The prosecutors included Roy Cohn, at the time a young assistant U.S. attorney, praised as a brilliant and tenacious litigator and denounced as a vicious and unprincipled attack dog, who used the case as a springboard to become the chief aide to Senator Joseph McCarthy. Late in his life, he was disbarred for unethical acts, including attempting to alter the will of a millionaire client. Critics complained that he solicited perjury to buttress the prosecution of the Rosenbergs. And although Cohn died of AIDS in 1986, he continues to remain a figure in the public imagination: he was a character in Tony Kushner\u2019s\u00a0<em>Angels in America<\/em>; he at one point worked closely with the Republican political consultant and convicted felon Roger Stone; and he has been described as a political mentor to Donald Trump, whom he represented in some high-profile cases.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The chief witnesses in the case were David Greenglass and his wife Ruth. Not only was David Ethel\u2019s brother, making the Rosenberg case a family drama, but, by implicating his sister and brother-in-law, he cut a deal with the prosecutors to enable Ruth, an unindicted co-conspirator, to avoid arrest and a trial, even though she had confessed to participating in espionage.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">As if a brother condemning his own sister was not enough family drama, the dysfunctional Greenglass family fractured over the case, with Ethel\u2019s own mother, Tessie, abandoning her. Always critical of her only daughter and dismissive of her achievements, Tessie and the rest of the Greenglass clan blamed Julius for Ethel\u2019s troubles. Visiting her daughter on death row, she asked why Ethel had not backed up David\u2019s account on the witness stand; when Ethel remonstrated that doing so would be perjury, Tessie replied, \u201cYou wouldn\u2019t be here.\u201d Five days after her execution, Tessie called the FBI and denounced her dead daughter as a \u201csoldier of Stalin.\u201d Here Judaism enters the picture. Not only were the defendants in the trial Jewish, but the main prosecutors and the judge were too. And yet, in the most Jewish city in the world, not one juror was Jewish. Charges of anti-Semitism pervaded the case. To some anti-Communists, the Rosenbergs were prime examples of the Jewish predilection for Communism. Rosenberg defenders argued that the Jewish establishment had abandoned them to prove its own patriotic bona fides. Mainstream Jewish organizations denied the Rosenbergs had been singled out as Jews, while Communists and their allies claimed that two ordinary Jews had been scapegoated in a modern-day Dreyfus affair. Anti-Communists noted that the charge was made in bad faith, since those advancing it ignored anti-Semitic show trials in Czechoslovakia at the same time.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Almost immediately after the Rosenbergs were convicted, left-wing writers began a campaign that has continued to the present day to discredit the evidence used in the trial and to disparage the American justice system. For more than two decades the dominant theme was that the Rosenbergs had been framed by the American government with the assistance of disgruntled family members. The most influential argument was made by Walter and Miriam Schneir in\u00a0<em>Invitation to an Inquest\u00a0<\/em>(1965). They claimed that Harry Gold, the supposed KGB courier who had picked up information from David Greenglass in New Mexico in 1945, had never done so; the government had forged his registration slip at an Albuquerque hotel. David Greenglass, meanwhile, was said to have falsely confessed to espionage because he had stolen a slug of uranium from Los Alamos and had been coerced by the FBI. Having fallen out with Julius over a business dispute, he was willing to sacrifice his sister and brother-in-law. A PBS documentary aired in 1975 gave their claims more widespread attention. That same year, the Rosenbergs\u2019 sons, Robert and Michael Meeropol, sued to force the FBI to release its files on the case, convinced that they would demonstrate government malfeasance. They were stunned by the results. The first historian to use them, Ronald Radosh, a one-time Communist who had long believed the Rosenbergs had been framed, was startled by what he found. His conclusion was encapsulated by the headline of the article he and Sol Stern published in the<em>\u00a0New Republic<\/em>\u00a0in 1979: \u201cThe Hidden Rosenberg Case: How the FBI Framed Ethel to Break Julius.\u201d Critical of the conduct of both prosecution and judge, Radosh and Stern argued that Ethel was, at best, a minor figure who was indicted, tried, and given a death sentence as part of an effort to pressure her husband to confess and expose the other members of his extensive spy ring. That claim was largely ignored by Rosenberg defenders, who denounced Radosh and Stern for admitting Julius\u2019s guilt in the first place\u2014and thereby providing ammunition for anti-Communists.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">In 1983 Radosh and Joyce Milton published\u00a0<em>The Rosenberg File<\/em>, a thorough and detailed account of the case. While their book was hailed in the mainstream media, writers and critics on the left rushed to defend\u00a0<em>both<\/em>\u00a0Rosenbergs as martyrs. At a crowded public debate with the Schneirs, Radosh and Milton were accused of being in the pay of the FBI and denounced for violating the norms of historical scholarship. The release of the Venona decryptions in 1995 upended the debate about the Rosenbergs. Numerous messages made unequivocally clear that Julius had directed an extensive spy ring, only a small part of which involved atomic espionage. Harry Gold and David Greenglass had done what they confessed to. Their prior arguments entirely shredded, the Schneirs produced a slim new book,\u00a0<em>The Final Verdict: What Really Happened in the Rosenberg Case<\/em>, repudiating their earlier claims, but insisted they had \u201cNo apologies, no regrets.\u201d Their new mantra was that Julius was not primarily an atomic spy, that Ethel was still entirely innocent, and that their refusal to confess was justifiable because it prevented the demonizing of the Communist Party of the United States (CPUSA) as an accomplice of Soviet espionage.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Nor were the Venona messages the only blows suffered by the Rosenberg defenders. Alexander Feklisov, who had been Julius\u2019s KGB handler, meeting him some 50 times, published a memoir in 2001, lauding his idealism and total commitment to the Soviet Union, while insisting on Ethel\u2019s innocence, despite her knowledge of what her husband was doing.\u00a0<a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"https:\/\/mosaicmagazine.com\/essay\/history-ideas\/2019\/06\/the-death-of-morton-sobell-and-the-end-of-the-rosenberg-affair\/\">Morton Sobell<\/a>, although not involved in atomic espionage, had been tried and convicted along with the Rosenbergs and had served a lengthy prison sentence. For decades he maintained they were all innocent and spearheaded the campaign to clear their names. In 2008 he admitted he and Julius had been spies, but denied Ethel was. In the face of all these revelations, the Rosenberg children admitted their father had been \u201ca minor spy,\u201d but insisted their mother had been killed by the American government in a doomed effort to use her as a lever to force Julius to confess and name the other members of his spy ring. They continued their effort to have President Obama provide a posthumous pardon. The claims about Ethel\u2019s innocence were challenged by the details provided in Alexander Vassiliev\u2019s notebooks, which were placed online in 2009 simultaneous with the publication of\u00a0<em>Spies: The Rise and Fall of the KGB in America<\/em>, by John Haynes, Vassiliev, and myself. As we argued, the new evidence made clear that she was a liar and perjurer and guilty of conspiracy to commit espionage, the charge on which she was convicted.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<h4 style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><strong>II. A False Tragedy<\/strong><\/span><\/h4>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Yet Anne Sebba, in her wildly well-received new biography, refuses to acknowledge any of this. The book is in fact devoid of any new information; virtually everything in it comes from secondary sources, and she either never examined new archival information that has emerged in the past two decades or chose to ignore what it revealed about the case. There are jaw-dropping asides: at one point she muses, \u201cIt was possible, for instance, to argue that in \u2018stealing secrets\u2019 from Los Alamos, Julius\u2019s \u2018spy ring\u2019 was only doing illegally\u201d what Robert Oppenheimer, the former director of the Manhattan Project, was advocating in the 1950s\u2014sharing information with the Soviet Union. The idea that the activities of Julius\u2019s spies were just a smidge different than openly arguing for a policy of greater cooperation with the Soviet Union is risible.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Such insouciance towards espionage is connected with her effort to suggest that the Rosenberg case would not have resonated quite so loudly if it weren\u2019t for some collective mania into which the U.S. had sunk due to the onset of the cold war. \u201cThroughout the spring and summer of 1950,\u201d she writes, \u201canti-Communist paranoia was rising to a fever pitch as unscrupulous politicians such as Senator McCarthy as well as FBI director J. Edgar Hoover regularly made speeches taking advantage of the increasingly grim world situation.\u201d Just weeks after David\u2019s arrest and confession the Korean war began \u201cas U.S. paranoia about the Soviet threat reached unprecedented levels.\u201d Ethel\u2019s arrest has \u201cto be seen against the paranoid cold war backdrop of the previous years, which had now come to a head.\u201d The Rosenberg case illustrated America\u2019s \u201crapid descent after World War II from military euphoria to cold-war paranoia.\u201d While she briefly admits the fear was genuine, the USSR was expansionist, and the CPUSA loyal to Moscow, Sebba seems never to understand the depth of the threat. After all, even paranoids have real enemies. She inaccurately claims that \u201cno one in authority seriously believed\u201d that the invasion of South Korea had been prompted by Soviet possession of an atomic bomb\u2014yet declassified documents indicate it had been. She never mentions that American cryptanalysts were uncovering dozens and dozens of American spies as they slowly broke into the Venona messages, giving intelligence agencies real reason to be on the lookout for espionage. Ultimately more than 350 code-names were identified, but most of them could not be linked to real people. The vast majority were, like the Rosenbergs, members or sympathizers of the Communist party. Soviet espionage was a significant national-security threat; just because Senator McCarthy demagogued the issue did not mean it was not real.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Sebba recounts Ethel\u2019s fraught upbringing and early life, suggesting that it contributed to her radicalization. She grew up in poverty; her father had a small repair shop on the ground floor of a cold-water tenement, across the street from a stable. The family lived upstairs in a damp, dark, and cold apartment that sweltered and stank in the summer. Her mother discouraged her academic and artistic goals and favored her younger brother, David. An excellent student and talented singer, she took a secretarial class after graduating from high school and in 1932 got hired as a shipping clerk. Her singing was good enough to win her a place in a prestigious amateur chorus. By 1935 she was one of the leaders of a strike conducted by her union and soon was moving in Communist circles. She met Julius while performing at a Communist-affiliated group\u2019s New Year\u2019s Eve party in 1936 and the two quickly became inseparable. Three years younger than Ethel, he came from a family slightly more economically secure. He enrolled in City College in 1934 to study engineering, becoming a stalwart of the Communist students who congregated in one of the famous alcoves in the cafeteria. They were married in June 1939. Both were fervent believers in Communism, and Sebba notes that her \u201cdogged persistence\u201d easily morphed into what her brother called \u201cfanaticism\u201d and even her Communist friends characterized as uncritical, unquestioning, and aggressive support for the party line. Sebba oddly insists that there is no evidence either of the Rosenbergs ever formally joined the CPUSA (the FBI had a copy of Julius\u2019s party card), just before admitting Ethel was passionate about its ideals. There was no sign they were bothered by the Nazi-Soviet Pact, but they quickly embraced the CPUSA\u2019s about-face once the Soviet Union was invaded by Germany in 1941.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong>Sebba correctly notes that embracing Communism wasn\u2019t rare among Jews on the Lower East Side. But she ignores the powerful hostility to Communism from the overwhelming majority of the Jewish community.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Sebba correctly notes that embracing Communism was hardly an anomaly among Jews on the Lower East Side. But she ignores the powerful hostility to Communism from the overwhelming majority of the Jewish community, including its working-class base in the garment unions, socialists, members of the Jewish Bund, and Zionists\u2014spurred not only by the party\u2019s anti-democratic beliefs, but also its willingness to alter its policies to align with Soviet foreign policy. The Rosenbergs moved to Washington in 1940 where Ethel had obtained work as a government clerk. When Julius was hired by the Army Signal Corps in August 1940, she resigned. Only a few months after starting work, Julius faced a loyalty hearing because Ethel had signed a CPUSA nominating petition. He survived the investigation by lying about his party membership. But as an inspector visiting companies supplying equipment and devices to the Army, Julius was determined to assist the Soviet Union. Beginning in 1941, he recruited several of his fellow engineers from City College and turned their information over to Jacob Golos, a high-ranking CPUSA official, who served as the party\u2019s liaison with Soviet intelligence. In September 1942, he was transferred to the direct supervision of the KGB. By December 1944 he was supervising eight espionage sources.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">David Greenglass, meanwhile, was drifting. He had admired Julius from the day his sister met him and eagerly responded to his enthusiasm for Communism. After graduating from high school in 1940, he attended Brooklyn Polytechnic for one semester before flunking out. He married Ruth in November 1942, and was drafted in March 1943. In 1944 he was sent to Oak Ridge as part of a detachment of machinists and in August 1944 was transferred to Los Alamos. A passionate Communist, he was often embroiled in arguments with fellow soldiers; in correspondence with Ruth, the two of them professed their admiration for Julius and the cause.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">When he learned that his brother-in-law was employed at Los Alamos, Julius quickly informed the KGB\u2014he already had some inkling of the Manhattan Project from Russell McNutt, whom he had recruited earlier. A deciphered Venona message of September 1944 recommended recruiting Ruth to set up a safe house in New Mexico: \u201cLiberal [Julius\u2019s code name] and wife recommend her as an intelligent and clever girl.\u201d The only other Venona telegram that mentioned Ethel described her as a Communist since 1938, who \u201cknows about her husband\u2019s work\u201d and the spying activities of several of his sources, and who because of her \u201cdelicate health does not work.\u201d Sebba\u2019s treatment of this information leaves much to be desired. She correctly notes that the latter message is ambiguous about whether \u201cwork\u201d referred to employment or to work in the spy network. But, she claims, even the former cable might not implicate Ethel in recruiting Ruth. After all, she notes, a Canadian academic, Bernice Schrank, once suggested that the cable\u2019s reference to Ethel may just have been a casual aside. Schrank, however, is a crank, whose expertise is literature, and who insisted in the same article that the Venona messages were benign and proved nothing about whether Julius was a spy\u2014even castigating the Schneirs for \u201cpremature capitulation\u201d to right-wing anti-Communists by admitting that Venona demonstrated anything.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Moreover, at the trial Ruth testified that at a meeting at the Rosenbergs\u2019 apartment in November 1944, just before she left to visit David in New Mexico, Julius and Ethel pressed her to get him to agree to supply information about the development of the atomic bomb. David testified that Ruth repeated the conversation to him. Sebba never mentions a KGB message in the Vassiliev notebooks, sent to Moscow on December 5, 1944, and available to scholars since 2009, in which Julius described their conversation. Ruth assured him \u201cit would be a privilege\u201d to help the Soviet Union. When \u201cEthel mentioned David, she [Ruth] assured us that it was her [Ruth\u2019s] judgment such was also David\u2019s understanding,\u201d i.e., Ruth believed that David shared her admiration for the USSR and would assist. After Julius gave her a list of questions to ask David and warned her never to write anything down, \u201cEthel here interposed to stress the need for the utmost care and caution in informing David of the work in which Julius was engaged.\u201d Then, \u201cat this point we asked Ruth to repeat our instructions which she did satisfactorily.\u201d This cable was not available to the prosecution in 1951, but it clearly and unequivocally confirms Ruth\u2019s testimony that Ethel pressed her to recruit David. It makes mincemeat of Sebba\u2019s efforts to exculpate her. Ethel may not have been a spy\u2014that is, she might not have actually passed on classified information\u2014but she was an active participant in her husband\u2019s spy network, not just someone who happened to agree with her husband about politics. In her desperate defense of Ethel, Sebba throws out various contradictory claims. \u201cIt is inconceivable,\u201d she writes at one point, \u201cthat she did not know and encourage his espionage for the Russians, which in the legal terms of 1951 [and of today] made her complicit to a conspiracy. But was that a crime\u2014let alone a crime punishable by death?\u201d But later she asserts that even if she knew what Julius was up to, \u201cit was not a crime under U.S. law to approve spousal wrongdoing.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Nor is this damning cable the only new evidence in the Vassiliev notebooks that Sebba ignores of Ethel\u2019s participation in a conspiracy. In June 1949 the New York KGB office concocted a plan to have David enroll at the University of Chicago and befriend other Los Alamos veterans working there with an eye to recruiting them. Every two months he would write a report and convey it to Ethel, working as a courier. The plan went nowhere, but it illustrates that the KGB saw her as a willing participant in espionage.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Sebba is also less than curious about several of Ethel\u2019s close friends. Take, for instance, Ann Sidorovich and her husband Michael, who lived in the same apartment building in lower Manhattan\u2019s Knickerbocker Village. Ann and Ethel were particularly close until the couple moved to Cleveland in late 1943. Sebba never mentions the reason they left New York: Julius had arranged for them to set up a safe house to collect information from another one of his spies, William Perl, who was working at a flight-propulsion laboratory in Cleveland. At a meeting at the Rosenbergs\u2019 apartment in January 1945, David and Ruth met Ann and learned she was likely to be the courier who would visit them in Albuquerque. After she left, the discussion turned to what to do if she was unable to make the trip. Ethel, Ruth, and Julius went into the kitchen and returned with a half of a Jell-O box top, cut irregularly, to serve as identification. The other half was used by Harry Gold when he collected Greenglass\u2019s information in early June. Sebba merely notes that Ann Sidorovich denied to the grand jury that she was present at such a meeting, never considering that her own role as courier in the spy ring made her testimony worthless.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Those who believe that Ethel was a largely innocent bystander place great weight on the fact that she was arrested and tried largely as a lever to force Julius to confess and to name the other members of his ring. She appeared twice before a grand jury after he had been arrested and refused to answer most questions by pleading the Fifth Amendment. In his appearance, David Greenglass had refused to implicate his sister, and Ruth had said nothing about Ethel typing David\u2019s notes that she had brought from New Mexico. Yet, after her second appearance, she was arrested on the way home.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Sebba claims that \u201cactual evidence of Ethel\u2019s \u2018espionage\u2019 was nonexistent, while without a confession by Julius the evidence against him too might not be enough to convince and jury he was guilty.\u201d But, once again she is playing fast and loose with the facts. Neither of the Rosenbergs was charged with espionage, but with conspiracy to commit espionage. The evidence against Julius was overwhelming. At the trial, Max Elitcher, another Communist friend from City College, testified that Julius had solicited him to spy. David and Ruth testified to being recruited by both Rosenbergs. David discussed his visit to New York in January 1945 and Julius\u2019s taking him to meet a Russian agent, Anatoly Yatskov, to whom he provided information. Harry Gold confirmed David\u2019s story of turning over information in New Mexico after he presented the Jell-O-box identifier. And that\u2019s not all: another KGB courier, Elizabeth Bentley, testified that her espionage superior, Jacob Golos, had told her about a group of Communist engineers who provided information to him, and that she had received several calls from one of them named Julius. The government found a photographer who had taken passport photos of the Rosenberg family just before the arrests, contradicting Julius\u2019s denial that he had ever thought about fleeing the country.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">If the evidence was so overwhelming, why did Ruth and David add a startling new claim when they testified? Ruth insisted that in September 1945 at the Rosenberg\u2019s apartment, Ethel had typed up notes David had written about Los Alamos. David concurred. In an interview decades after the trial, David admitted that he had lied to back up his wife\u2019s story; he had no recollection of Ethel\u2019s typing anything. Sebba insists that Roy Cohn had pressured David, reminding him that Ruth had been a partner to the conspiracy and they knew he had been protecting his sister during his grand-jury testimony. Cohn\u2019s tactics were reprehensible, but even if Ethel\u2019s typing had never been introduced into the trial, there is little doubt the verdict would have been the same.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Even Sebba admits that Julius came across as slippery and evasive in his testimony, while Ethel\u2019s reliance on the Fifth Amendment and refusal to show any emotion hurt her. By lying, and refusing to admit their Communist ties, the Rosenbergs cast doubt on their denials of espionage.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<h4 style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><strong>III. Whom the Rosenbergs Betrayed<\/strong><\/span><\/h4>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Not only does Sebba fail to make a credible argument for Ethel\u2019s innocence, but her portrait of Ethel as a human being\u2014which is very much at the heart of the book\u2014is unconvincing, to say the least. No one can deny the horrible situation in which Ethel found herself. The case that she did not deserve the death is clear-cut: her activities, while they legally made her part and parcel of a conspiracy to commit espionage, were far less significant than those of her husband, her brother, and her sister-in-law. Ripped away from her husband and two young children, incarcerated in grim conditions, and sentenced to death, with little family support, she managed to retain her sanity and courage. Yet, the situation was one she had created. There is no indication that she ever remonstrated with Julius about what he was doing. She had helped set the whole play into motion by urging the recruitment of her brother. Neither one of them apparently ever considered the consequences for their children.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">In her enthusiasm to portray Ethel as hero and victim, Sebba seeks to blame everyone else. At one point she praises Robert Coover\u2019s novel about the Rosenbergs as having succeeded \u201cin showing how everyone in cold-war America was implicated directly or indirectly in the ruthless public burning of the Rosenbergs,\u201d especially Richard Nixon, who by pursuing Alger Hiss from 1948 to 1950 supposedly started the whole hunt for spies. According to this logic, Nixon was guilty for investigating Hiss, a State Department official who cooperated with Soviet intelligence, but the Rosenbergs\u2014who merely helped provide classified information about sophisticated and powerful weapons to a murderous and hostile regime\u2014were just unfortunate victims of cold-war mania. Again, Sebba seems unable to admit that American concern over Soviet espionage was the result of the fact that the USSR was an enemy state running a vast network of spies in the United States, most of whom were Communists or sympathizers. Or that, because of this espionage, the Soviet Union developed an atomic bomb at least three years before it would have otherwise been able to\u2014a bomb that was an exact copy of the one America had used at Nagasaki. Sebba might believe that passing secrets to the KGB was not\u00a0<em>morally<\/em>\u00a0wrong, just as she might believe that the U.S. and the Soviet Union shared equal responsibility for the cold war. Those are questions of opinion, albeit perverse ones. But the Rosenbergs\u2019 involvement in espionage is at this point a fact, and it is impossible to imagine any country that wouldn\u2019t see their activities as requiring a harsh response.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><strong>Even after they were sentenced to death, the Rosenbergs could have escaped execution. The government offered them a final chance to confess just before the day of their execution. Both refused.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Even after they were sentenced to death, the Rosenbergs could have escaped execution. James Bennett, director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, acting on behalf of the attorney general, offered them a final chance to confess and cooperate with the government just before the day of their execution. Both refused. Ethel responded that \u201cby asking us to repudiate the truth of our innocence, the government admits its own doubts concerning our guilt.\u201d But neither she nor Julius were innocent. They would not be bearing false witness but telling the truth to save themselves. But informing, Sebba insists, meant betraying Julius and their friends. Inevitably, Sebba uses E.M. Forster\u2019s famous quote about loyalty as an epigraph. \u201cPersonal relations are despised today. They are regarded as bourgeois luxuries, as products of a time of fair weather which is now past, and we are urged to get rid of them, and to dedicate ourselves to some movement of causes instead. I hate the idea of causes, and if I had to choose between betraying my country and betraying my friend, I hope I should have the guts to betray my country.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Forster\u2019s homily can be used to rationalize all kinds of bad behavior, but as has been pointed out, people who betray their country also betray many friends who believed and trusted in them. But even if we accept Forster\u2019s dictum, it\u2019s hard to think of a worse violator than Ethel. Having devoted most of her life to a cause, namely Communism, she in the end chose her loyalty to that cause over her sons, then ages eight and ten. When her children believed in their parents\u2019 innocence, they could rationalize their parents\u2019 decision not to name names as a refusal to lie and hurt others. Once Venona had established their father\u2019s guilt, they could cling to the same belief about their mother. Facing the painful fact that Ethel was so loyal to the Communist beliefs she had held for much of her adult life that she would make her children orphans rather than tell the truth about what she had done is something almost unimaginable\u2014even to those who don\u2019t subscribe to Forster\u2019s critique of patriotic loyalty.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><em>recommended by:\u00a0<strong>Leon Rozenbaum<\/strong><\/em><\/span><br \/>\n<\/span><\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/www.reunion68.com\/Biuletyn\/ico\/leon-r.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Yet Sebba concludes that Ethel Rosenberg was a \u201cprofoundly moral woman.\u201d Unlike everyone else in this tragedy\u2014David, who betrayed his sister; Julius, who pursued his dream of aiding the Soviet Union, regardless of its impact on his family; Ruth, who lied about her sister-in-law; Tessie Greenglass, who abandoned her daughter; the prosecutors Saypol and Cohn, who perverted justice; Judge Kaufman, who imposed a draconian sentence; Presidents Truman and Eisenhower, who rebuffed pleas for clemency\u2014\u201conly Ethel betrayed no one.\u201d But of course she did. She betrayed her kid brother, helping to recruit him for espionage. She betrayed her children. And she betrayed her country.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Communism, along with Nazism, was one of the great evils of the 20th century. Regrettably, an inordinate number of Americans gave their allegiance to that cause, often with noble motives. Several hundred did more: actively aiding and abetting the USSR by providing crucial military, diplomatic, and industrial secrets to a dictatorial, repressive, and murderous regime. Rather than confront that unpalatable fact, some on the left instead blame America for responding. This was the reaction of many on the non-Communist left in the 1950s, and it is a view that a segment of the left still clings to today, in spite of overwhelming evidence.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Here is the\u00a0<em>Guardian<\/em>\u2019s Melissa Benn, writing about Sebba\u2019s book:<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">The [Rosenberg] case continues to polarize opinion to this day, and reading this book it is only too easy to see why. There are striking similarities between the poisonous atmosphere of the cold war and that of contemporary politics, and particularly Trump\u2019s America: the official lies, the raw misogyny, the hounding of the radical left and racial and ethnic minority people, the disregard for, and twisting of, the legal process, the cowardice of so many moderate, mainstream politicians.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Ethel Rosenberg was guilty of the charge of which she was convicted. Her trial may have been flawed and she may not have deserved the penalty she received, but she still had ample opportunity to alter her fate. She chose not to take that opportunity because she and her husband remained hostile to American democracy and devoted to Communist ideals, and they refused to implicate others who shared their mission. Her loyalty to Communism blinded her to the cruelty and repressiveness of the country for which she sacrificed her life, not to mention its pervasive anti-Semitism, which destroyed thousands of Soviet Jewish writers, actors, doctors, and ordinary citizens, for being \u201crootless cosmopolitans.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000080;\">Anne Sebba should have put the blame for Ethel Rosenberg\u2019s fate where it belongs: on the woman herself, and the perverted ideals in whose service she died.<\/span><\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><em><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><strong>About the author<\/strong><\/span><\/em><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><em><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><strong><u>Harvey Klehr <\/u><\/strong>is the Andrew W. Mellon professor of politics and history, emeritus, at Emory University. He has written many books on espionage in the United States and the history of the American Communist party.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left;\"><em><span style=\"color: #808080;\"><strong><u>Anne Sebba<\/u><\/strong>,\u00a0<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\"><strong><a style=\"color: #808080; text-decoration: underline;\" href=\"https:\/\/us.macmillan.com\/books\/9781250198655\">Ethel Rosenberg: An American Tragedy<\/a>\u00a0<\/strong><\/span>&#8211; St.Martin&#8217;s Publishing Group, 2022.<\/span><\/em><\/p>\n<hr style=\"height: 15px; background: #d0e6fa; width: 100%;\" \/>\n<div id=\"content\" class=\"content-alignment\">\n<div id=\"watch-description\" class=\"yt-uix-button-panel\">\n<div id=\"watch-description-text\" style=\"text-align: center;\">\n<p><em>Zawarto\u015b\u0107 publikowanych artyku\u0142\u00f3w i materia\u0142\u00f3w nie reprezentuje pogl\u0105d\u00f3w ani opinii Reunion&#8217;68,<\/em><em><br \/>\nani te\u017c webmastera Blogu Reunion&#8217;68, chyba ze jest to wyra\u017anie zaznaczone.<br \/>\nTwoje uwagi, linki, w\u0142asne artyku\u0142y lub wiadomo\u015bci prze\u015blij na adres:<br \/>\n<\/em><span style=\"color: #000080;\"><strong><em><a style=\"color: #000080;\" href=\"mailto:webmaster@reunion68.com\"><span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">webmaster@reunion68.com<\/span><\/a><\/em><\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<hr style=\"width: 100%;\" \/>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Eternal Return of Ethel Rosenberg HARVEY KLEHR A much-loved new biography argues that the convicted Soviet spy \u201cbetrayed no one.\u201d How has the myth of her innocence become so untethered from the evidence of her guilt? . Ethel Rosenberg escorted by U.S. marshals as she arrives at Sing Sing Prison in the early 1950s. [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[6],"tags":[26,24],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/90018"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=90018"}],"version-history":[{"count":9,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/90018\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":90035,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/90018\/revisions\/90035"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=90018"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=90018"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.reunion68.se\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=90018"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}