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Stewart Bloom, 86, another CCNY trainee, recalls that Koval lacked a New York accent. "I always thought he was straight out of Iowa," says Bloom, a Chicago native. But in the urgency of war, Bloom says, he gave it little thought until nearly a decade after the war ended, when FBI agents showed up at the Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island, where he was then working, to ask about his former colleague.
The ASTP proved short-lived. Toward the end of 1943, just a few months after Koval enrolled, the war was tipping in favor of the Allies and the military was demanding ever more combat troops for a final push to victory. In early 1944, the program was dissolved and most of the participants were sent to the infantry.
Not Koval. He, along with Kramish and about a dozen others from CCNY, was selected for something called the Special Engineer Detachment (SED). It was part of the Manhattan Project, the covert enterprise that organized the talents of U.S., British and Canadian scientists at facilities across the United States for the purpose of designing and building an atomic bomb.
By the time Koval joined the SED in mid-1944, Manhattan Project scientists were pursuing two very different bombs. One was based on a known and relatively simple technology that required a rare, enriched form of uranium. (Indeed, it was in such short supply that its first "test" was in the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima.) The other bomb would use plutonium—an element that had not been isolated until 1941. The Oak Ridge laboratories were central to the development of both types of bombs.
Koval was assigned to Oak Ridge.
There, Koval's good fortune seemed only to build on itself, almost like a nuclear reaction: he was made a "health physics officer," charged with monitoring radiation levels throughout the sprawling facility. That, according to FBI files, gave him top-secret clearance. "He was one of the very few people who had access to the entire program," says Kramish, who worked in a different Oak Ridge lab. Still, the two saw each other frequently. In August 1944, Kramish was transferred to Philadelphia (where he was injured in a lab accident that killed two co-workers), but he returned to Oak Ridge before being assigned to Los Alamos, New Mexico.
"These things could not have been planned by the Soviets or anyone," writes nuclear historian Robert S. Norris in "George Koval, Manhattan Project Spy," a paper to be presented at a conference in Washington this month and published in the Journal of Cold War Studies. "Rather, it was just a lucky hit for the GRU."
Based on experiments conducted at Oak Ridge and elsewhere, reactors that could produce enough plutonium for a bomb were commissioned in Hanford, Washington. Meanwhile, scientists discovered that reactor-produced plutonium was too unstable for the bomb design they had in mind; the material would fizzle out. They had to come up with an "initiator" that would help the plutonium achieve the necessary chain reaction. For that initiator, they chose a form of another rare element, polonium—which was also produced at Hanford and Oak Ridge.
According to Lota, Koval was charged with keeping track of Oak Ridge's polonium. Through a Soviet contact known by the code name Clyde, Koval transmitted production information about it to Moscow via couriers, coded cables and the diplomatic pouch from the Soviet Embassy in Washington. One key fact he passed along was that Oak Ridge's polonium was being sent to Manhattan Project labs in Los Alamos—where Klaus Fuchs happened to be working as a Soviet agent.
"Fuchs passed the Soviets really detailed information on the design of the bombs," says David Holloway, a professor of history and political science at Stanford University and a leading authority on the atomic arms race. But Koval, he adds, knew that the polonium coming out of Oak Ridge "played some role in the development of the bomb"—knowledge that helped the Soviets connect the dots between Oak Ridge and Los Alamos.
Related topics: US Army People Cold War USSR
Additional Sources
"A Spy's Path: Iowa to A-Bomb to Kremlin Honor" by William J. Broad, The New York Times, November 12, 2007


Comments
Wow that is pretty amazing dude!
RT
www.privacy.pro.tc
Posted by Jason Wright on April 21,2009 | 11:24AM
Two complaints:
1. Lumping Harry Dexter White with the atomic spies misleads the reader to the false conclusion that White betrayed atomic secrets to the Soviets. There is no evidence of that, not even in Herbert Romerstein's account.
Further, some historians do not accept that White was a Soviet agent. See James Boughton and Roger Sandiland. I too am not convinced. There is one VENONA cable that implies that White, under the covername RICHARD, was a journalist or PR person. This cable has the NSA footnote pointing out this discrepancy. The NSA footnote does not exculpate White because in this instance it is possible that RICHARD was somebody else as yet unidentified. The Soviet agencies changed covernames, and were sometimes inconsistent.
My point is, the VENONA decrypts alone are not sufficient to inculpate White.
My second objection is to your unresearched claim that the decrypted cables had to be kept secret so as not to jeopardize the code breaking.
No.
The Soviets already knew we were reading their cables. They had been informed by Philby, MacLean, and the code breaker Weissband who kept checking on Meredith Gardner's progress (the latter is claimed as the principle code breaker).
Second, the cables were not evidence acceptable to a court. There is a memo from Alan Belmont, third in command at the FBI, that advised not to use the cables in court because they would be hearsay. Belmont explains exceptions to the hearsay rule under which the cables could have been used, but that would open up counter attacks to the defense. There were too many gaps in the decrypts, too many guesses, too many uncertainties as to what the cables really said or meant. I do not mean this as an insult to the NSA - cryptanalysis is a trial and error process, and the decrypts were too early in that process.
In a magazine of your importance, you must do more fact checking and research than I would expect from the National Enquirer.
Posted by John K. Taber on April 22,2009 | 05:47AM
This IS (mmmmmm)very Interesting.
Posted by Tanikki on April 24,2009 | 11:33AM
You can say what you want about Russia, the Soviets, or whoever else, but remember this: in the end, they were with us in WWII. Personally, I am half of them through my mother (my great grandparents came here) and they saved the other half (my father, a veteran) during WWII. They were there for all of us when it counted. I shall never forget. They are an incredible group of people, a macro-communal society (as are we, by the way) encompassing diverse ideas, people and territory with the seminal gifts of music, mathematics, chess, physics, and the dogged determination to maintain forward, principally as expedited through their DOD. Furthermore, they made it from the horse and buggy in 1917 to Sputnik in 1957 in forty years, one and a half generations; the CIA still studies this amazing feat. They are potential and indispensible allies in the current state of world affairs forward.
Posted by Scott Croly on April 24,2009 | 03:27PM
John Taber. Thank you for all that detailed and important information and observations. Much appreciated,
Posted by Don Noyes-More on April 24,2009 | 05:47PM
Enjoyed Michael Walsh's interesting article about the spy, George Koval (Iowa-Born, Soviet Trained, 'Smithsonian," May 2009). What wasn't mentioned was a contemporary of Koval's, a brilliant young physicist by the name of Ted Hall, code-name "Mlad." Ted was at Los Alamos concurrently with the time of Koval's misadventures. His name appeared in an earlier Smithsonian article, "Spies Who Spilled Atomic Bomb Secrets." Although he was known to the CIA and FBI, Ted Hall managed to elude incarceration, and eventually "escaped" to Russia (still a mystery). Even more mystifying was the part played by his older brother, Air Force Colonel Ed Hall, also brilliant and one of the leading experts on missile propulsion. I knew Ed Hall in the Air Force's missiles program, and he had a very strange personality and demeanor clearly recognized by his associates and bosses, Colonel (later Lt. General) Charles Terhune, and Brigadier General (later four star general) Bernard A. Schriever, my direct boss. The Hall brothers' parents were Barney and Rose Holtzberg of New York City. Julius Rosenberg was a classmate of Colonel Ed Hall at the City College of New York. The City and College in the mid-1930s "were hotbeds of Depression-spawned Marxist activism." Whether Ed Hall was complicit in or at least knowledgeable of his brother's espionage is still a subject of debate. Their activities came to public light with the publication of the "Venona Transcripts" in 1996. The full story up to 2004 was well-described in an amazing book written by ex-Secretary of the Air Force, Thomas C. Reed, At The Abyss; An Insider's History Of The Cold War, (Random House Publishing Group, New York, 2004) from which the details above derived. The much-maligned Senator Joe McCarthy had reason for his passion against Communists in the government.
Posted by Bill Getz on May 6,2009 | 11:45AM
Comments on the Comments: 1. Scott Croly reminds us that, whatever may be said about the Soviets, "in the end, they were with us in WWII." Historical facts provide a more nuanced view of who was with whom, and why. First, on August 23, 1939, a bare week before WWII officially began in Europe, Nazi Germany signed a non-aggression pact with the Communist USSR known as the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact (named for their respective foreign ministers, who signed it in Moscow). This pact assured Hitler of a free hand in Western Europe while reassuring Stalin with both peace and the vision of a Poland divided between them. British cartoonist David Lowe's famous cartoon of the day showed Hitler and Stalin bowing to each other with the greetings: "Bloody assassin of the workers, I presume?" and "Scum of the earth, I believe?" Hitler, as we know, had his own plans, and in December 1940 launched a full-scale attack against an unready Soviet Union (and shocked Stalin) known as Operation Barbarossa. When the U.S. entered the war a year later (after our "Pearl Harbor"), it was in both the U.S.-British and Soviet interests to keep the USSR in the war, despite our antithetical ideologies. Thus, sheer pragmatism, rather than any "hands-across-the-sea" friendship, sustained the Alliance, although to assure popular support at home (especially in light of the sacrifices that resupplying Russia entailed), the USSR was then publicly portrayed as a vital ally in our common struggle against the Axis powers. (The current PBS TV documentary, "World War II: Behind Closed Doors: Stalin, the Nazis and the West" reveals more of Stalin's viewpoint during this time, culled from Soviet archives during the past dozen-odd years.)
Posted by Jonathan Myer on May 10,2009 | 02:09AM
I feel there is something missing here. Who was instrumental in transferring Mr Koval to these various posts within our atomic program? Seems mighty handy to be placed in one of the few positions which allowed him to do his spying time after time.
Posted by s.orvik on May 14,2009 | 07:57PM
Sioux City Central High School is not made out of red brick, but, rather is constructed of brownish-pink Lake Superior sandstone (Sioux Falls granite. It really does resemble a castle and it really is on a hill.
Posted by Lucinda Keller Mahmoud on August 7,2009 | 04:41PM