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Death of a Bounder
Townhall.com ^ | November 7, 2014 | Paul Greenberg

Posted on 11/07/2014 9:16:32 AM PST by Kaslin

"I love him like a brother. David Greenglass."

--Woody Allen's character in "Crimes and Misdemeanors"

David Greenglass was a prominent member of the supporting cast in a real-life spy story that shook the country in the 1950s -- the Rosenberg case. Indeed, it was his testimony that sent his ill-fated sister Ethel, the wife of Julius Rosenberg, to the electric chair along with her husband in 1953.

David Greenglass' death at 92 should have been big news, at least on the obituary pages. For he was as much a part of American history as Benedict Arnold or Alger Hiss, yet it took months after he died in July for the news to make the papers. Even then the announcement didn't come from his family. The nursing home where he'd been living under an assumed name confirmed his death when a reporter for the New York Times got wind of it and called.

Say what you will about the Times' always politically and culturally correct news coverage, its obituaries remain the best in the country. However colored they may be by the Times' prejudices, its stories about the dead are always so ... lively.

If he died in obscurity, David Greenglass had good reason to seek it. A devoted Communist who became a devoted squealer, he would wind up separately but equally despised by both sides in the Cold War. For good reason.

Years later, he would recant his testimony when a reporter, again for the indefatigable Times, hunted him down and asked him why he would rat on his own sister. To save his wife, Ruth, he claimed, again blaming the nearest woman. He did it for her. Right. Not because turning state's evidence also assured more lenient treatment for himself. By that time no one on either side of the Rosenberg case could trust him.

It was his wife, David Greenglass told the reporter from the Times, who probably typed up those atomic secrets he stole from the Los Alamos National Laboratory, where he'd been sent as an Army sergeant with experience as a machinist in civilian life. That was during the Second World War, and he was one of the many working on the super-secret Manhattan Project -- the historic effort that beat the Germans to the world's first atomic bomb.

According to the latest and best judgment offered by historians who have chronicled the annals of nuclear espionage -- "The Rosenberg File: A Search for the Truth" by Ronald Radosh and Joyce Milton -- Ethel was certainly part of the spy ring, had played a key role in recruiting others to join it, and was guilty as charged. But her role was subsidiary to her husband's. She was an accessory to the crime, not the central figure Julius was.

That's not what the jury heard from the government's zealot of a prosecutor -- Irving H. Saypol -- who could have been Andrei Vishinsky leading the charge against all those old Bolsheviks put to death in one of Stalin's great purges. Ethel Rosenberg, the prosecutor declaimed in grand style, was fully deserving of the death penalty because she'd typed up her brother's notes. ("Just so had she, on countless other occasions, sat at that typewriter and struck the keys, blow by blow, against her own country in the interests of the Soviets.") Off with her head!

Ethel Rosenberg's having typed up those stolen secrets became the central accusation against her, and certainly the most emotionally resonant one. It was the linchpin of the government's argument for putting her to death. And the jury bought it.

Both of the Rosenbergs, duly convicted, would be executed at Sing Sing on June 19, 1953. Despite worldwide protests from Paris to Moscow organized by the Communist Party and its fellow travelers, who were always on the lookout for a good cause celebre, however inflated or short-lived, before moving on the next subject of their agitprop. The Rosenberg Case made fine fodder for America's enemies.

It wouldn't be the first time our Justice Department showed a fine disregard for justice. That pattern scarcely began with the present administration, which has only continued it, not inaugurated it. There is no shortage of precedents, legal and historical, for scandals like Fast and Furious or the IRS' selective tax exemptions. And high among those injustices was the execution of Ethel Rosenberg on the dubious testimony of her own brother. It is now highly doubtful that she was the one who transcribed those notes of her brother's, the most inflammatory accusation against her.

But the truth has a way of outing, however long it takes. More and more of it is revealed as the years pass. Every time a key figure in the case passes on, another opportunity to revise the historical record presents itself. No matter who that historic figure is, and whether the moral standard he set was high or low, or, in David Greenglass' case, the lowest.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: 1953; davidgreenglass; justicedelayed; rosenbergs

1 posted on 11/07/2014 9:16:32 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

I read about these people...they were real maggots


2 posted on 11/07/2014 9:21:38 AM PST by SMARTY ("When you blame others, you give up your power to change." Robert Anthony)
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To: Kaslin

“Ethel was certainly part of the spy ring, had played a key role in recruiting others to join it, and was guilty as charged.”

“high among those injustices was the execution of Ethel Rosenberg”

These two statements seem contradictory to me. Somehow typing up notes is more heinous than recruiting for the spy ring?


3 posted on 11/07/2014 9:29:04 AM PST by marktwain (The old media must die for the Republic to live. Long live the new media!)
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To: Kaslin

Arguing about who was the biggest worm among the Rosenbergs and Greenglass is like trying to pick the nastiest turd from a pigsty.


4 posted on 11/07/2014 9:30:35 AM PST by IronJack
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To: Kaslin
I have always wondered if there is more to the story on how David Greenglass got assigned to Los Alamos in the first place. Julius' spying didn't start with the Manhattan Project. An engineer by training, he was already running a substantial industrial espionage ring when DG got sent to help make the bomb. Granted: internal security was pretty leaky at the time, but Julius, Ethel, and David were all Red as could be, had been for years, had more incriminating associations than you can count, and should have triggered some kind of alarm had they been checked at all. Assigning the brother and brother in law of a Russian spy couple to the Manhattan Project is pretty darn-tootin' coincidental.

Coincidences do happen, but does anyone know if there is a backstory on this?

5 posted on 11/07/2014 9:51:04 AM PST by sphinx
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To: Kaslin

This is way before my time.

We weren’t taught it in school (in the 70’s) and I doubt it’s taught now.

To the extent it was taught, we were taught it was a railroad of innocent idealists by the evil USA that called for blood sacrifices.

But it was all true, they did do what they were executed for. It’s indisputable now.

This is so long ago. Almost romantic, the internecine, clandestine intrigues.

But it was deadly serious on both sides.

I write this all to ask about today. There are the equivalents of the Rosenbergs today.

How will it look 60 years hence (assuming we don’t lose) with respect to how we act now?


6 posted on 11/07/2014 9:54:41 AM PST by ifinnegan
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To: marktwain

That would be because you fail to appreciate the gravity of the contents of the notes.


7 posted on 11/07/2014 10:00:03 AM PST by MrEdd (Heck? Geewhiz Cripes, thats the place where people who don't believe in Gosh think they aint going.)
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To: sphinx

“I have always wondered if there is more to the story on how David Greenglass got assigned to Los Alamos in the first place”

I’ve had the same question. But of course, that would make me sound like McCarthy...


8 posted on 11/07/2014 10:39:31 AM PST by CondorFlight (I)
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To: Kaslin
I teach history in high school. I always go out of my way to bring this story up and tell my students that no matter what they hear in college, these guys and Alger Hiss were as guilty as sin.
9 posted on 11/07/2014 10:41:09 AM PST by fungoking (Tis a pleasure to live in the Ozarks)
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To: fungoking

I teach history at a small community college and I do the exact same thing! I also let them know how McCarthy was vinidcated by the discovery of the Venona Project in 1992.


10 posted on 11/07/2014 10:46:57 AM PST by AnnGora (I'm suing my tagline for sexual harrassment.)
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To: AnnGora; Kaslin
If the rules of engagement allow it, you need to take it a step further. Hiss and the Rosenbergs were defended by a great many people who knew perfectly well that they were guilty. There were also some innocent dupes, but as time went on -- and certainly since publication of The Rosenberg Files and Perjury, and the Venona revelations -- the cases became clear. There are no longer any intellectually respectable grounds for doubt of their guilt. The questions students need to absorb are: who is lying about these cases, both then and now; why are they lying; and what does their lying tell us about their hidden agendas and reliability in other matters.

In other words, we need to go on offense, not just play defense all the time.

11 posted on 11/07/2014 11:01:37 AM PST by sphinx
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To: sphinx; AnnGora; Kaslin

And if that puts a teacher down the hall on the spot, so be it ....


12 posted on 11/07/2014 11:03:07 AM PST by sphinx
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To: sphinx

Must not leave out sheer incompetence, however. There are some people who have never stepped out the left-wing bubble, who have absorbed the notion of Hiss and the Rosenbergs as victims from very dated sources, and who have never questioned their inherited mythologies. Before accusing a colleague of lying, one should always allow him to plead to being a fool.


13 posted on 11/07/2014 11:07:28 AM PST by sphinx
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To: Kaslin

Rather strange considering that Stalin was an anti-Semite who persecuted Jews.


14 posted on 11/07/2014 11:11:53 AM PST by AppyPappy (If you are not part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: sphinx
Coincidences do happen, but does anyone know if there is a backstory on this?


15 posted on 11/07/2014 12:25:01 PM PST by Talisker (One who commands, must obey.)
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To: Kaslin
Our good old State Dept. That shitehole was full,is and will always be full of commie bastards.

Want to stop 3/4 of the spying in this country. Shut that place down.

Ed

ps, Nixon was right about Hiss and that is one reason the libs hated him.

16 posted on 11/07/2014 1:40:21 PM PST by husky ed (FOX NEWS ALERT "Generalissimo Francisco Franco is still dead" THIS HAS BEEN A FOX NEWS ALERT)
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To: Talisker

Bookmark


17 posted on 11/07/2014 2:44:27 PM PST by southland ( I have faith in the creator Republicans freed the slaves. psalms 37:4)
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To: Kaslin

From the title thought this article was about a motorhome?


18 posted on 11/07/2014 2:45:59 PM PST by TruthWillWin (The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other peoples money.)
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To: ifinnegan

Bowe Bergdahl, Obama’s hero.


19 posted on 11/07/2014 10:06:15 PM PST by Graybeard58 (Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole duty of man. Eccl 12 V.13)
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