Cold War
1950
Klaus
Fuchs arrested for passing atomic bomb information to Soviets
Klaus Fuchs, a
German-born British scientist who helped developed the atomic bomb, is arrested
in Great Britain for passing top-secret information about the bomb to the Soviet
Union. The arrest of Fuchs led authorities to several other individuals
involved in a spy ring, culminating with the arrest of Julius and Ethel
Rosenberg and their subsequent execution.
Fuchs and his family fled
Germany in 1933 to avoid Nazi persecution and came to Great Britain, where
Fuchs earned his doctorate in physics. During World War II, British authorities
were aware of the leftist leanings of both Fuchs and his father. However, Fuchs
was eventually invited to participate in the British program to develop an
atomic bomb (the project named “Tube Alloys”) because of his expertise. At some
point after the project began, Soviet agents contacted Fuchs and he began to
pass information about British progress to them. Late in 1943, Fuchs was among
a group of British scientists brought to America to work on the Manhattan
Project, the U.S. program to develop an atomic bomb. Fuchs continued his
clandestine meetings with Soviet agents. When the war ended, Fuchs returned to
Great Britain and continued his work on the British atomic bomb project.
Fuchs’ arrest in 1950
came after a routine security check of Fuchs’ father, who had moved to
communist East Germany in 1949. While the check was underway, British
authorities received information from the American Federal Bureau of
Investigation that decoded Soviet messages in their possession indicated Fuchs
was a Russian spy. On February 3, officers from Scotland Yard arrested Fuchs
and charged him with violating the Official Secrets Act. Fuchs eventually
admitted his role and was sentenced to 14 years in prison. His sentence was
later reduced, and he was released in 1959 and spent his remaining years living
with his father in East Germany.
Fuchs’ capture set off a
chain of arrests. Harry Gold, whom Fuchs implicated as the middleman between
himself and Soviet agents, was arrested in the United States. Gold thereupon
informed on David Greenglass, one of Fuchs’ co-workers on the Manhattan
Project. After his apprehension, Greenglass implicated his sister-in-law and
her husband, Ethel and Julius Rosenberg. They were arrested in New York in July
1950, found guilty of conspiracy to commit espionage, and executed at Sing Sing
Prison in June 1953.
Courtesy: HISTORY.com
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