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Remembering the Rosenbergs -- 50 years on
AFP ^ | Wed, Jun 18, 2003

Posted on 06/18/2003 11:13:46 AM PDT by presidio9

On June 19, 1953, six-year-old Robert Meeropol was shooed outside to play ball with a friend while his father and mother were being executed.

AFP/Intercontinentale/File Photo

Robert's parents were Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, whose execution for passing atomic secrets to the Soviet Union remains, for many, an enduring symbol of the anti-communist hysteria of the McCarthy era.

In a memoir published to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the Rosenbergs' death by electric chair, Meeropol recalls watching television at a friend's house with his elder brother Michael when news flashed across the screen that their parents' final appeal had been turned down.

"I could not read the words and do not recall Michael's reaction, but he remembers moaning, "That's it, good-bye, good-bye."

Robert was ushered into the backyard where he played until after the executions had taken place and it was too dark to see the ball.

"I doubt I fully comprehended that my parents had just been killed, but I feigned complete ignorance to avoid the commotion, and went to bed," he wrote.

There are those who believe the Rosenbergs were guilty and deserved to die, while others feel the sentence was too harsh and some think they were framed.

Contrary to the public perception -- fostered by the government at the time -- that the Rosenbergs had all but handed Stalin the bomb, they were never charged with treason, or even with spying.

They were tried and convicted in 1951 of conspiracy to commit espionage, by enlisting Ethel's brother, David Greenglass, to steal secrets from the Los Alamos atomic laboratory where he worked as an army machinist.

Greenglass confessed to passing information and identified his wife Ruth and the Rosenbergs as participants in a Soviet spy ring.

The case against Ethel Rosenberg was particularly flimsy and rested solely on Greenglass's testimony that she had typed up messages containing US nuclear secrets.

Greenglass, who was spared execution for his cooperation, publicly admitted in 2001 that his trial testimony regarding Ethel's involvement was false, saying he was pressured by the prosecution to commit perjury -- and did so to protect his wife from prosecution.

Declassified files suggest the FBI (news - web sites) had charged Ethel with a capital crime in the hope that fear of having their two young children orphaned would pressure one or both the Rosenbergs into a confession.

The ploy failed as both continued to protest their innocence right up to the end.

"She called our bluff," William Rogers, the deputy attorney general at the time, said shortly before he died in 2001.

The Rosenbergs were executed despite protests in the United States and abroad, as well as numerous appeals for clemency, including one from Pope Pius XII.

Documents that have since come to light -- including information released after the collapse of the Soviet Union -- have removed most doubts that Julius Rosenberg was involved in some kind of espionage.

But Meeropol, while no longer believing in both his parents' "unequivocal innocence," still argues they were ultimately victims of their time.

"They were unrepentant communists during a period when even repentant communists were in trouble," he told AFP in an interview.

"Neither committed the act for which he and she were executed. And the US government knew all along that Ethel Rosenberg was not an espionage agent of any kind."

Meeropol was brought up by communist friends of his parents and lived anonymously for nearly 20 years before publicly acknowledging his mother and father.

"I have no resentment towards my parents. I never felt they abandoned me for their beliefs," he said. "I'd much rather be the child of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg than the child of David and Ruth Greenglass."

In 1990, Meeropol established the Rosenberg Fund for Children, which provides educational grants for children of activists who have been injured, jailed or lost their jobs as a result of their beliefs.

Meeropol has few illusions that his parents' case will ever be reopened and their convictions quashed.

"Strange things happen in this world, so I don't want to close all hope. But I'm not optimistic," he said.

As for his parents iconic stature, Meeropol has mixed feelings.

"They have been both demonised and canonized," he said.

"This whole thing of idealising people is a tremendous mistake from a political perspective. If we demand perfection of our activists, we're setting ourselves up to be perpetually disillusioned, because people aren't perfect."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: rosenbergs
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To: presidio9
I was stationed at Quantico, Va. at the time and on a number of occasions went up to DC. The Communist Party brought a number of their people down from NY to picket the Justice Dept. They handed out pro Commie literature. At the same time, I knew of several Marine Officers, in civilian clothes, that drove their cars around the demonstrators with signs on them i.e. "FRY the SPIES. etc, which is just what happened. I do recall, some tense times in DC with actions taken against the Commie dupes.
21 posted on 06/18/2003 12:14:16 PM PDT by Joee
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To: dfwgator
"In my book that qualifies for execution."

Mine, too.

But the Government has reasons of state to consider, as well.

These reasons do not always 'translate' well to the general public - some thing's must be secret.

World politics is not a board game.
22 posted on 06/18/2003 12:27:04 PM PDT by headsonpikes
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To: headsonpikes
Dang!

Drop the apostrophe in 'things'.

Aggghhh...!
23 posted on 06/18/2003 12:28:40 PM PDT by headsonpikes
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To: presidio9
If anyone reads "The Sword and The Shield" they can see that both the Rosenbergs deserved what they got.
24 posted on 06/18/2003 12:30:23 PM PDT by sticker
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To: sticker
Yeah, that book will give you nighmares. The Communists were real, they were here, if they had their way anyone to the right of Barbra Striesand would have been shot.
25 posted on 06/18/2003 12:37:56 PM PDT by Constantine XIII
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To: headsonpikes
You are correct. Ames and Pollard can be useful to clearify the damage they did.
There was little doubt about the Rosenbergs.
26 posted on 06/18/2003 12:40:10 PM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: belmont_mark
Jane Fonda is today's Rosenbergs, and she is feted a s a Woman of the Century!
27 posted on 06/18/2003 12:44:15 PM PDT by Rushian
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
Ethel typed her husband's notes and was the ideologically more committed of the couple. Ethel also recruited her brother.

That was the Government's argument with respect to Ethel, but even people on the Government side have expressed some doubt about Ethel's actual participation. The proof against her was thin, and there is no doubt, as the article notes, that the Government was using her as a bargaining chip to get Julius to open up. All of which does not mean she was innocent. It just casts doubt on whether the Government really proved her guilt.

28 posted on 06/18/2003 12:57:53 PM PDT by blau993 (Labs for love; .357 for Security.)
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To: presidio9
I remember walking home in front of the White House with my father on the evening the Rosenbergs were executed. It was a cool and drizzly day. A bunch of CPUSA members had been bused down from NYC to walk a long, oval picket-line in front of the WH carrying "Save the Rosenbergs" signs, chanting, etc.

As we drew near the gate on West Exec. Ave, a tall, well-dressed black man broke out of the pack and attempted to press a leaflet on my father. "Save the Rosenbergs, Sir? Save the Rosenbergs?" My USMC-vet father gave him a wicked Gunny-sergeant glare, and the guy sheepishly spun around and tried to hit some other passers-by.

We got up to the corner of 17th St. and my father stopped and looked back. "Mm. That was Paul Robeson," he said.

"Who?" I asked.

"Never mind," he explained.

29 posted on 06/18/2003 1:02:38 PM PDT by Snickersnee (Where are we going? And what's with this handbasket???)
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To: blau993
I think serious (as opposed to ideologically blinded) historians agree with the facts in my sentence you cited. Proof is in the eye of the beholder. Ethel Rosenberg died of arrogance. She could have asked for mercy and she did not. She cared more for her ideological reputation than her children. Her children will never accept this fact.

A lot of people in the 1950's were certain that Communism was the wave of the future. She saw herself as the very avatar of that future and would do nothing that might diminish that stature.
30 posted on 06/18/2003 1:05:51 PM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets ("ALL THE NEWS THAT FITS, WE PRINT")
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To: belmont_mark
Who are today's Rosenbergs and why are they not on death row?

I nominate Bill Clinton & Al Gore for the technology passed to the Chinese Communists.

31 posted on 06/18/2003 1:14:15 PM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
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To: dfwgator
They should have
32 posted on 06/18/2003 1:49:46 PM PDT by y2k_free_radical (i)
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
I don't quarrel with your characterization of Ethel (and Julius) as arrogant. They surely saw themselves as martyrs for a cause they believed in.

I do think the judgment of history has been that they did not "deliver the Atom Bomb to Stalin." That may be a fair charge to make against Klaus Fuchs, but it overstates the importance of the Rosenbergs. Nevertheless, it was not for want of trying.

33 posted on 06/18/2003 2:50:08 PM PDT by blau993 (Labs for love; .357 for Security.)
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To: southland
I don't believe WHL at all. Everyone I know who works at Los Alamos and other such government labs say he downloaded a whole lot of stuff he shouldn't have and there is no reason for it. He wasn't cleared for that security level yet somehow he had access to it. Also, the feds wanted to tap his phone and Janet Reno (now there's a candidate for imprisonment) said no. The government was cowed into apologizing because as usual the demagogues started screaming about racism (sounds like you buy that). Since that is the worst thing you can call someone, they always turn somersaults to disprove you, in this case by just not following through with Wen.
34 posted on 06/18/2003 5:12:00 PM PDT by Inkie
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To: Snickersnee
I was a young girl in Atlanta at the time. My grandfather worked in the office at the Fischer Body plant across the street from the Federal Pen, as we all called it, where the traitors were executed.

On the day, after they were executed my grandfather, who was not the type to swear, said a friend of his, in my presence,

" I stood across the street from the gates at the Pen and said I was glad the BASTURDS were dead."

I have remembered this comment all my life. That was the only time I had ever heard him swear... and, I never heard it again. He passed away in 1965.

35 posted on 06/18/2003 7:27:08 PM PDT by crazykatz
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