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Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, Cold War Casualties (Part Two)



Soviet spies who betrayed the secret of the A-Bomb or innocent victims framed by Cold War hysteria, legal corruption and anti-Semitism? Over seventy years later the debate rages on.

Morton Sobell, while traveling to East Germany in the seventies

Sobell was a co-defendant of the Rosenbergs and claimed to be an innocent victim of a government frame-up.  He eventually admitted that he had passed secrets to the Russians and that Julius Rosenberg was an espionage agent.  But, he also claimed that Ethel Rosenberg was not part of the conspiracy.  Sobell spent almost eighteen years in prison before his release and death in 2018, age 101. 

Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, minutes after their conviction

Other federal defendants who were transported to court with the Rosenbergs mention their deep devotion and affection for each other despite harrowing circumstances. 

Soviet intelligence agent Alexander Feklisov

Feklisov was the case officer who coordinated the espionage ring involving Klaus Fuchs, Harry Gold and Julius Rosenberg.  Feklisov was named the Washington, DC station chief in 1960 and played a prominent role in resolving the Cuban Missile Crisis.






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