The Political Rehabilitation of Joseph Rotblat
by
Lawrence S. Wittner
by Lawrence S. Wittner
By
the time of his death, which occurred on August 31, 2005, Joseph
Rotblat was a revered figure. A top nuclear physicist, Rotblat received
among many other honors and awards a British knighthood
and, together with the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World
Affairs (an organization that he had helped to found), the Nobel
Peace Prize (1995). As the president of the Pugwash conferences
recalled: Joseph Rotblat was a towering figure in the search
for peace in the world, who dedicated his life to trying to rid
the world of nuclear weapons, and ultimately to rid the world of
war itself.
But
Rotblats steadfast support for nuclear disarmament and peace
did not always receive such plaudits, as I discovered when I conducted
two interviews with him and did extensive research in formerly secret
British government records.
Born
in Warsaw in 1908, Rotblat moved to Britain in 1939, where he became
a promising young physicist. During World War II, when he feared
that Nazi Germany might develop the atomic bomb, he came to the
United States to work on the Manhattan Project, Americas own
atomic bomb program that he like many other scientists
hoped would deter Germanys launching of a nuclear war. But,
in late 1944, when Rotblat learned that the German bomb program
had been a failure, he resigned from the Manhattan project and returned
to London to engage in nonmilitary work. This decision, taken for
humanitarian reasons, plunged him into hot water with the authorities.
Shortly after telling his U.S. supervisor of his plan to leave Los
Alamos, he was accused by U.S. intelligence of being a Soviet spy.
The charge, totally without merit, was eventually dropped.
Back
in Britain, Rotblat engaged in peaceful research and, in the postwar
years, helped to organize the Atomic Scientists Association
(ASA), which drew together some of that countrys top scientists.
Much like Americas Federation of American Scientists, the
ASA promoted nuclear arms control and disarmament. However, British
government officials, then more interested in building nuclear weapons
than in eliminating them, looked askance at its activities. In 194748,
when the ASA organized an Atomic Train to bring the dangers of nuclear
weapons (and the supposed benefits of peaceful nuclear power) to
the attention of the British public, Prime Minister Clement Attlee
objected strongly to plans for government cooperation with it. In
March 1948, when Rotblat invited Attlee to visit the Atomic Train
during its stay in London, the foreign secretary and the defense
minister advised the prime minister to reject the offer, which he
did.
Rotblats
relations with the British government continued on a difficult course
in the 1950s. Working closely with the philosopher Bertrand Russell,
Rotblat signed the Russell-Einstein Manifesto of July 9, 1955, which
warned nations that if they persisted in their plans for nuclear
war, civilization would be utterly destroyed. This venture, in turn,
led to the Pugwash conferences so named because they began
in 1957 at a private estate in Pugwash, Nova Scotia. Designed to
bring together scientists on both sides of the iron curtain
for serious, non-polemical discussions of the nuclear menace, these
conferences were low-key operations, with little publicity outside
of scientific circles. Nevertheless, British officials were deeply
suspicious of the Pugwash conferences and of Rotblat, who did most
of the organizational work for them and, in 1959, became Pugwash
secretary-general.
Convinced
that the Communists wanted to use the 1958 Pugwash conference
to secure support for the Soviet demand for the banning of
nuclear weapons, the British Foreign Office initially sought
to promote an attitude of skepticism toward it. But, when Rotblat
asked J.D. Cockcroft, a member of Britains Atomic Energy Authority,
to suggest who might be invited to it, Cockcroft and the Foreign
Office decided that a better strategy would be to go with the flow
and arrange for the participation of a staunch proponent of the
British governments position in the meeting, which they did.
Although
one British diplomat noted that the conference passed off
quietly enough, and not too unsuccessfully from our point of view,
the British government remained on guard. Learning of plans for
another Pugwash conference, in Vienna, the Foreign Office warned
of the possibility that this will be more dangerous from our
point of view than its predecessors. Communist participants
might launch a major propaganda drive against nuclear weapons,
and the organizing committee consists of Lord Russell and
Professor Rotblat. From the British governments standpoint,
the Pugwash conferences were little better than Communist
front gatherings.
But
British policy gradually began to shift, as the government grew
more interested in nuclear arms controls. Asked by Rotblat if he
would like to join the advisory body of the British Pugwash committee,
Cockcroft referred the matter to the Foreign Office, which responded
that he should do so, as it would help prevent Pugwash from being
exploited for propaganda purposes. Although the Foreign Office
did not think he should attend the next Pugwash conference, in Moscow,
during 1960, it reversed course that summer and urged him to recruit
additional politically reliable scientists to attend. Indeed, it
now sought to take over the Pugwash movement for its own purposes.
In response to a suggestion by Cockcroft, a Foreign Office official
opined that it would be most helpful if the Royal Society
could be persuaded to sponsor British participation . . . and if
this were to lead to the winding up of the present Pugwash Committee.
But
the plans for a takeover failed. When the British government suggested
topics for Pugwash meetings and more government officials who should
be invited to them, Rotblat resisted, much to government dismay.
In October 1963, a Foreign Office official complained that the
difficulty is to get Prof. Rotblat to pay any attention to what
we think. . . . He is no doubt jealous of his independence and scientific
integrity. Securing a new organizer for the British
delegation seems to be the first need, but I do not know if there
is any hope of this.
Nonetheless,
despite lingering resentment at Rotblats independence and
integrity, the British government had arrived at a positive appraisal
of the Pugwash conferences. As a British defense ministry official
declared in January 1962: Pugwash was now a very respectable
organization. When the Home Office, clinging to past policy,
advised that Pugwash was a dirty word, the Foreign Office
retorted that the movement now enjoyed official blessing.
Explaining the turnabout, a Foreign Office official stated that
the process of educating Soviet experts is bound
to be of some use to us. Furthermore, we ourselves may
pick up some useful ideas from our own scientists . . . and are
not likely to be embarrassed by anything which they suggest.
Finally, if there is ever to be a breakthrough, it is not
inconceivable that the way might be prepared by a conference of
this kind.
In
fact, there soon was a breakthrough: the Partial Test Ban Treaty
of 1963 a nuclear arms control measure that the Pugwash conferences
played a key part in generating. The British government had no doubt
about the connection, and in 1964 it honored Rotblat with a CBE
Commander of the British Empire for his organization
of the Pugwash conferences.
And
so it goes. Todays dangerously peace-minded heretic is tomorrows
hero. Abraham Lincoln that staunch critic of the Mexican
War became Americas best-loved President. Robert LaFollette
reviled and burned in effigy for his opposition to World
War I emerged as one of this nations most respected
senators. Martin Luther King, Jr. condemned for his protests
against the Vietnam War is now honored as this countrys
great peacemaker.
Perhaps
today, when governments promise us endless military buildups and
wars, opposition politicians should take note of this phenomenon.
September
5, 2005
Lawrence
S. Wittner [send him mail]
is Professor of History at the State University of New York/Albany.
His latest book is Toward
Nuclear Abolition: A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement,
1971 to the Present (Stanford University Press).
This
article originally appeared on the History
News Network.
Copyright
© 2005 History News Network. Reprinted
with author's permission.
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S. Wittner Archives
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