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Tribute
from the Pugwash Secretary General | Pugwash
Council Statement | From
Polish Pugwash Group http://hnn.us/articles/14428.html By Lawrence S. Wittner Dr. Wittner is Professor of History at the State University of New York at Albany. His latest book is Toward Nuclear Abolition: A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement, 1971 to the Present (Stanford University Press). He is a member of POTUS, HNN's presidential history/politics blog.
But Rotblat's
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, America's own atomic
bomb program that he-like many other scientists-hoped would deter
Germany's 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 country's top scientists. Much
like America's 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 1947-48,
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. Rotblat's
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. 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 government's standpoint,
the Pugwash conferences were little better than "Communist
front gatherings." 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." And so
it goes. Today's dangerously peace-minded heretic is tomorrow's
hero. Abraham Lincoln-that staunch critic of the Mexican War-became
America's best-loved President. Robert LaFollette-reviled and burned
in effigy for his opposition to World War I-emerged as one of this
nation's most respected senators. Martin Luther King, Jr.-condemned
for his protests against the Vietnam War-is now honored as this
country's great peacemaker. Perhaps today, when governments promise us endless military buildups and wars, opposition politicians should take note of this phenomenon. |
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