Markin comment:
THEY WERE NOT OUR PEOPLE-BUT, THEY WERE OUR PEOPLE
Frankly, I have not, until recently
when I read The Rosenberg File by Ronald Radosh and Joyce Milton (written in
1983 and which I will review separately in this space), read any books on the
case so that one of my tasks is to re-read the old material, read the new
post-Soviet material, and make some suggestions about what to look for in
trying to understand its history. This commentary will thus express my own
thoughts on the Rosenbergs
more than present the questions raised by the scholarship on the case.
And what is the scholarship on the
case? Was their trial a frame-up in classic American-style against leftist
political opponents of the Cold War and American foreign policy? Were they,
individually or collectively, “master spies” at the service of the Soviet Union ? Were they innocent, if misguided,
progressives caught up in the turmoil of the American “red scare” of the post-World
War II period? Did the government through its FBI and other security agencies,
its attorneys, its judges stumble into a case which would make many
reputations? Did the American Communist Party, itself under severe scrutiny,
betray the Rosenbergs ?
Did the various international campaigns on behalf of the couple work at cross
purposes with their various demands for a new trial, reduction of sentence and
clemency? What kind of people were these Rosenbergs ?
In short, were the Rosenbergs
heroic Soviet spies, martyrs, dupes or innocents? Those are the questions
thoughtful readers are confronted with and I will deal with at least some of
them in due course.
My own evolution on the case goes
something like this. In my young left-liberal and social democratic days I
believed, based on my reading of the evidence and a belief then of the basic
fairness of the American justice system that unlike Sacco and Vanzetti, they
were guilty of the charges but as an opponent of the death penalty they should
not have been executed. As I moved left closer to Marxist politics I still
believed they were ‘guilty’. However, I came to believe that the question of
guilt or innocence was beside the point and their actions on behalf of the Soviet Union made them heroes of the international
working class. That, dear reader is still my basic position.
And what is the basis of that
position. At one time I was ‘in the orbit’ of the American Communist party, a
fellow traveler if you will. One of the criteria for that position was a
question of defending the gains of the Russian Revolution, as I then understood
it. And that meant defense of the interests of the Soviet
Union . I saw the Rosenberg case as
part of that same continuum, those who could actively aid the Soviet cause, by
any means necessary, were kindred spirits although other than propaganda I
never did anything materially to aid the Soviet Union .
Those who have read this space over last year know that I am an ardent
supporter of the work of Russian Bolshevik warrior Leon Trotsky. As one should
also know there is a river of blood, including the physical destruction of the
Left Opposition inside the Soviet Union and
elsewhere and Trotsky’s assassination by a Stalinist agent in 1940, between
those two concepts of socialist society.
Nevertheless to his dying breath Trotsky
defended the Soviet Union against foreign and
internal counterrevolution. Thus, despite that political divide the Rosenbergs ’ action,
according to their lights, was not affected by my change of political orientation.
Nor should it have.
In the headline above I called them soldiers of the revolution, as they saw it. I think that is a fair assessment and one that I hope they would agree with despite our divergence political perspectives. I like the picture of Julius Rosenberg standing up for the almost forgotten labor martyr Tom Mooney in the early 1930’s at City College of New York. I like the picture of the ‘premature’ anti-fascist Ethel Rosenberg singing in
No comments:
Post a Comment