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- <text id=94TT0657>
- <title>
- May 23, 1994: History:Did Oppenheimer Help Moscow?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 23, 1994 Cosmic Crash
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HISTORY, Page 63
- Did Oppenheimer Really Help Moscow?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A former Soviet spy's story draws fire from critics, who insist
- it contains errors and inconsistencies
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by David Aikman/Washington and John Kohan/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> He carried out one murder with his own hands, planned at least
- one more, speaks with repellent offhandedness about still other
- assassinations. He is capable of warmth, though--for his old
- boss, Lavrenti Beria, and for Beria's boss, Joseph Stalin; he
- still admires both even while acknowledging their "criminal
- activities." None of which by itself discredits Pavel Sudoplatov's
- sensational tales of Soviet espionage; in fact his closeness
- to Beria, Stalin's last secret-police chief (1938-53), whom
- he served as a spy master, put him in a position to know. But
- Sudoplatov's most stunning charge--that world-renowned physicists
- J. Robert Oppenheimer, Enrico Fermi, Niels Bohr and Leo Szilard
- knowingly funneled U.S. atom-bomb secrets to Moscow during the
- World War II era--has been assailed by critics right and left,
- scientists and historians, American and Russian. They cite enough
- errors, inconsistencies and implausibilities to make a troubling
- case.
- </p>
- <p> At issue is a single chapter, excerpted in the April 25 issue
- of TIME, of the book Special Tasks: The Memoirs of an Unwanted
- Witness--A Soviet Spymaster. Though Sudoplatov and his son
- Anatoli are listed as the authors, the book was actually put
- together by American journalists Jerrold Schecter, a former
- Moscow bureau chief for TIME, and his wife Leona, from 20 hours
- of taped interviews with Sudoplatov, together with his official
- writings for KGB archives and other documents gathered by his
- son. The spymaster, however, now 86, read and signed the written
- Russian-language version of the disputed chapter. In it he asserts
- that Oppenheimer and the other physicists passed atomic secrets
- to people they knew to be Soviet moles, out of a desire to help
- the U.S.S.R., then an American ally, defeat Hitler, and because
- they believed widespread knowledge of the secrets of nuclear-bomb
- making would contribute to world peace. Sudoplatov alleges that
- Oppenheimer, Fermi and Szilard would leave secret papers available
- in laboratories, including the one in Los Alamos, New Mexico,
- where the bomb was developed, knowing the moles would find and
- copy them.
- </p>
- <p> That the Soviets did penetrate the Los Alamos laboratory and
- learn many valuable secrets that hastened the development of
- their own atom bomb is incontrovertible. But the allegation
- that physicists who are still idols in the world scientific
- community cooperated with the espionage network? "Gumshoe braggadocio,"
- fumes Richard Rhodes, author of a 1986 Pulitzer-prizewinning
- book on the making of the A-bomb. Edward Teller, father of the
- hydrogen bomb and a fervent anticommunist, scoffs at the idea
- that Fermi would ever have cooperated with the Soviets, because
- Fermi "clearly opposed the Stalinist nightmare."
- </p>
- <p> In Moscow the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service--a successor
- to the agency that Beria once headed and Sudoplatov worked for--put out a rare public disclaimer. Sudoplatov's "allegations
- ((about)) Enrico Fermi, Leo Szilard, Robert Oppenheimer," it
- said, "do not correspond to reality." Oleg Tsarev of the same
- agency, an in-house expert on atomic spying, says, "Having seen
- the summary file ((on nuclear espionage)), I can tell you there
- are no such names as Sudoplatov mentions in it." He makes one
- tiny exception: "One of our sources had a discussion with someone
- who knew Oppenheimer in 1945." But the report about the conversation
- was thirdhand and maddeningly vague, and nothing came of it.
- </p>
- <p> The Schecters argue that simply presenting Sudoplatov's account--not corroborating it--was all they set out to do. "One
- of the reasons we left it in the first person and let him say
- some outrageous things was that this is his story," says Leona
- Schecter. After his boss Beria was purged and shot in 1953,
- Sudoplatov was accused of mass murders by the victorious Nikita
- Khrushchev and jailed for 15 years. He was eventually rehabilitated
- after addressing a 1982 plea to the Communist Party Central
- Committee mentioning his exploits in obtaining atomic information
- from Oppenheimer, Fermi and Bohr, among others. The committee,
- say the Schecters, could easily have checked every word.
- </p>
- <p> But as for direct documentation--well, says Anatoli Sudoplatov,
- many of the papers that might substantiate his father's story,
- including the record of atomic-espionage work in the so-called
- Enormous File, are missing or have been tampered with or destroyed.
- So, he says, the elder Sudoplatov's report "is based on oral
- witnesses...reconstructed from memory" of what his father
- learned from spies he worked with.
- </p>
- <p> Maybe, but those 50-year-old memories seem to have led Sudoplatov
- into some serious errors and inconsistencies:
- </p>
- <p> In a taped interview, Sudoplatov asserts (more flatly than in
- the book) that "in 1944 we received from Szilard material about
- his work at Los Alamos. This was very important." But Szilard
- did not work at Los Alamos in 1944--or ever.
- </p>
- <p> By the end of January 1943, says Sudoplatov, the Soviets received
- a full report on the secret experiment conducted the month before
- by Fermi in Chicago, in which a self-sustaining nuclear chain
- reaction was produced for the first time. But in a memo dated
- July 3, 1943, and reprinted in an appendix to the book, physicist
- Igor Kurchatov says he thinks the Americans might conduct such
- a successful experiment "in the near future"; he apparently
- did not know they had done it six months earlier. And Kurchatov
- was almost the last person from which that knowledge would have
- been kept: he headed the team of scientists working to produce
- a Soviet A-bomb.
- </p>
- <p> Sudoplatov reports a conversation between Bohr and Yakov Terletsky,
- a Soviet physicist and intelligence agent, in Denmark in 1945.
- Terletsky supposedly told Bohr that a nuclear reactor built
- in the U.S.S.R. would not work, and Bohr gave precise advice
- on what went wrong and how to fix it. The conversation did occur,
- but Bohr's son Aage, who was present, insists his father gave
- away no technical secrets. His account was backed up by Terletsky--at least according to Roald Sagdeev, a former Soviet physicist
- now teaching at the University of Maryland, and other scholars
- who have read a 30-page report Terletsky wrote before he died.
- Terletsky, they say, termed the meeting a failure.
- </p>
- <p> Oppenheimer, says Sudoplatov, suggested that Klaus Fuchs be
- included in a group of British scientists sent to Los Alamos
- to work with Oppenheimer's American team on developing an atom
- bomb. That claim was based on a report by a Soviet agent named
- Alexander Feklisov. But the documentary record indicates the
- team members were selected by British authorities. The point
- is of more than passing importance: Fuchs was later found to
- have provided the Soviets with actual drawings of the American
- atom bomb.
- </p>
- <p> Even after the last Russian and American intelligence archives
- are opened, if that ever happens, it may be impossible to prove
- or disprove Sudoplatov's allegations conclusively. His recounting
- of his career is, after all, the oral history of an old and
- hardly admirable man, a product of the intrigues and maneuvers
- of the Stalinist era. As the eminent historian Robert Conquest
- says in his introduction to Sudoplatov's book: "Individual reminiscences
- must, indeed, be treated critically--but so must most documents.
- Both are simply historical evidence, none of which is perfect,
- and none of which is complete. Even in the spate of documentation
- now emerging in Russia, Sudoplatov's evidence is vastly informative
- in major but (as yet, at least) undocumented areas." Informative--and debatable, as the reaction to his attack on the reputations
- of America's pioneer bomb builders clearly shows.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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