Sleeper agent The atomic spy in America who got away

Ann Hagedorn

Book - 2021

"The little-known story of a spy on the atom-bomb project in World War II who had top security clearance--American born, Soviet trained, he was never even suspected until after his information was in Soviet hands and he was safe in the USSR. It's LeCarre and "The Americans" for real"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Simon & Schuster 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Ann Hagedorn (author)
Edition
First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition
Physical Description
x, 259 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, portraits ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 245-252) and index.
ISBN
9781501173943
9781501173950
  • Prologue
  • Part I. The Lure
  • Chapter 1. The Dream on Virginia Street
  • Chapter 2. "Nothing but the Truth"
  • Chapter 3. The Arrest
  • Part II. The Deception
  • Chapter 4. "The Business Trip"
  • Chapter 5. Undercover in the Bronx
  • Chapter 6. General Chemistry
  • Chapter 7. Lies and Ties
  • Chapter 8. The Man in the Jeep
  • Chapter 9. The Playhouse Secret
  • Chapter 10. Spycraft
  • Chapter 11. Defections and Detections
  • Chapter 12. The Joiner
  • Chapter 13. The Escape
  • Part III. The Hunt
  • Chapter 14. Sovershenno Sekretno (Top Secret)
  • Chapter 15. Postcards from Paris
  • Chapter 16. The March 1953 Letters
  • Chapter 17. Exposed
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

At the time, nobody suspected a Soviet spy could be deeply embedded in the Manhattan Project, which led to America's creation of the atomic bomb. But as Hagedorn (The Invisible Soldiers, 2014) writes in her compelling history: "Sometimes the clues that should have been warnings are lost in a blur, only to be seen in hindsight." George Koval was born in Iowa in 1913 to Russian Jewish parents. Years later, he relocated to the Soviet Union, where, as a skilled chemist, he was recruited by the military. Koval returned to the U.S., was drafted, and during WWII had full access to vital, top-secret information that directly led to a functioning atomic bomb. After the war, Koval escaped from the U.S. undetected, and in 1949, Soviet scientists created their own nuclear weapon. Throughout this narrative, readers should expect many unanswered questions since key information on Koval remains inaccessible. Nevertheless, Hagedorn's well-researched account employs a host of primary and secondary sources to convincingly connect the dots between Koval, the Soviet spy network, and the creation of the atomic bomb.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist Hagedorn (The Invisible Soldiers) unearths the little-known story of Soviet spy George Koval (1913--2006) in this doggedly researched account. Posthumously awarded Russia's highest civilian honor, Koval flew so far under the radar that Vladimir Putin hadn't heard of him before attending a Moscow exhibition on Cold War--era spies in 2006. Culling FBI reports, school yearbooks, and immigration forms, Hagedorn details Koval's early life in Sioux City, Iowa, where he was born to Russian Jewish immigrants, who, in the face of rising American anti-Semitism in the 1930s, returned to their native country to join a collective farm in the Jewish Autonomous Region of Russia's Far East. After WWII began, Koval, who had been pursuing a chemistry degree, was recruited by military intelligence and sent back to the U.S. in 1940 as a spy. He infiltrated Manhattan Project facilities in Oak Ridge, Tenn., and Dayton, Ohio, supplying his handlers with classified information about the production of enriched uranium, plutonium, and polonium. After fleeing the U.S. in 1948, Koval became a teacher at the Mendeleev Institute in Moscow; Hagedorn suggests that embarrassment over his escape led the FBI to keep his case quiet. Enlivened by its brisk pace and lucid scientific details, this is a rewarding introduction to a noteworthy episode in the history of Soviet espionage. (July)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Journalist and author Hagedorn (Beyond the River; Savage Peace) has written another fast-paced historical account with themes of intrigue and prejudice. Here, she focuses on George Koval (1913--2006), born in the United States to a Russian Jewish family. Amidst virulent antisemitism, the family returned to Russia, and Koval studied chemistry in Moscow as a Soviet citizen. After the GRU (Soviet military intelligence) engaged and trained him, Koval returned to the United States in 1940 and became a U.S. army draftee and an agent who would "sleep" under cover until his activation by the Soviet Union. The reclusive Koval was the only Soviet military spy with security clearance on the Manhattan Project (he tendered information that accelerated the 1949 detonation of the Soviet A-bomb), but he lacked the notoriety of high-profile spies like Klaus Fuchs; he preferred to keep details of his life hidden. Hagedorn effectively tells how Koval returned to the Soviet Union in 1948 to live quietly and eventually receive posthumous recognition. This expertly researched, psychologically thrilling history makes good use of available primary sources, such as FBI reports, letters, and interviews, as well as secondary literature. VERDICT Engaging narrative nonfiction that will thrill readers who are drawn to works by Ben Macintyre and Kate Moore.--Frederick J. Augustyn Jr., Lib. of Congress, Washington, DC

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The biography of a Soviet spy whose story may be new even to history buffs. The son of a Russian-Jewish immigrant who settled in Iowa, George Koval (1913-2006) grew up in a middle-class family, performed brilliantly in high school, graduated at age 15, and enrolled in the University of Iowa to study engineering. Unlike most American Jews, Koval's parents welcomed the 1918 Bolshevik Revolution, and by the time the Depression overwhelmed the nation, George was a dedicated communist. In 1932, George and his family immigrated to the Soviet Union, where he entered the elite Mendeleev Institute in Moscow to study chemistry. His talents caught the attention of Soviet army intelligence, which recruited him and sent him back to America, where he enrolled at Columbia University. As accomplished as he had been in Moscow, Koval impressed the army after being drafted in 1943 and found himself part of the Manhattan Project in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, where he kept Moscow informed. He did the same after his transfer in 1945 to Dayton, Ohio, where polonium was assembled into the triggers essential to nuclear explosions. In an intriguing narrative, journalist Hagedorn emphasizes that Dayton was as important as Oak Ridge and Los Alamos in the creation of the atomic bomb. After the war, Koval returned to New York. Although he no longer engaged in weapons research, the Cold War had begun, and defections of Soviet agents had exposed several of Koval's contacts. Still off the official radar, he returned to Russia in 1948. The final 50 pages of the book are the most fascinating. Despite Soviet reports extolling Koval's work, he received no rewards. Unable to find work, he wrote a pleading letter to the director of Soviet intelligence. The result was a modest teaching position at the Mendeleev Institute, from which he retired after 35 years on a pension so meager that he applied (unsuccessfully) for U.S. Social Security benefits in 1999. Learning this and fearing bad publicity, Russian intelligence raised his pension. An eye-opening account of perhaps the Soviet Union's most successful sleeper agent. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Prologue PROLOGUE Sometimes the clues that should have been warnings are lost in a blur, only to be seen in hindsight. Caught in the need to move ahead, most people rush, like speeding trains, past the truths and half-truths tucked into the terrain they thought they knew. And so it would be for a man and a woman one evening in 1948 at New York City's Grand Central Palace, each soon to learn the timeless cost of missing clues. It was September 19, the last day of the Golden Anniversary Exposition commemorating the 1898 consolidation of the city's five boroughs, a celebration that had begun in late August with one of the most memorable opening ceremonies in New York history. After a black-tie dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, a torchlight procession of invited guests walked east to Lexington Avenue where for ten blocks, from Forty-Second Street north, all electric signs were turned off and street lamps dimmed to the level of gaslights fifty years before. Led by their hosts, New York mayor William O'Dwyer and David E. Lilienthal, the head of the US Atomic Energy Commission, the men and women, at least a hundred, stopped at the Forty-Seventh Street entrance to the Grand Central Palace where they joined thousands of opening-night guests along with fifty thousand or more spectators crowding the sidewalks of Lexington Avenue. Then, all at once it seemed, everyone looked up. At the top of the Empire State Building were two planetarium-projector-size telescopes aimed at Alioth, the brightest star in the Big Dipper. What happened next was a new atomic-age ribbon-cutting. At exactly 8:30 p.m., the light streaming from Alioth activated photoelectric cells in the eyepiece of each telescope. This energy pulse moved through telegraph wires to the fourth floor of the Grand Central Palace where it excited a uranium atom, causing a switch to flip and current to be sent to ignite a mass of magnesium woven into a block-long strip of ribbon on Lexington Avenue. The flaming magnesium cut through the ribbon, making loud crackling sounds, as bright lights returned to the area and the mayor announced the official start of the anniversary celebration: "It is highly appropriate that we open this Golden Anniversary Exposition with energy from the uranium atom. One of the biggest features here is 'Man and the Atom,' the most complete exhibit on atomic energy ever assembled." To be sure, the multifaceted exhibit on the fourth floor of the Palace was extraordinary, especially in the way that it explained the erudite topic of the atomic bomb in layman's language, demonstrating how atom smashers and nuclear fission worked and even linking the most fear-laden weapon in human history to the cause of peace. Throughout the month of the Golden Anniversary, the exit polls revealed that the most popular exhibit was the one that took the narrative of the atomic bomb from fear to fascination. "?'Man and Atom': Best Show in New York" one September newspaper headline read. Such rave reviews may have inspired the man and the woman meeting for a date at the Grand Central Palace to visit the exhibition before it shut down on the nineteenth. Or their interest may have been instigated by the current relevance of atomic energy issues, such as the hot debates over international control of nuclear power or by the ever-mounting allegations of Soviet espionage during the war at the labs where the first US atomic bombs were developed. Nearly every day in the month of September there had been news about the suspected wartime spies. On the Saturday when the man, whose name was George Koval, invited Jean Finkelstein to the exhibit, the New York Times lead story centered on a soon-to-be-released report that would unveil "a shocking chapter in Communist espionage in the atomic field," exposing previously unknown individuals allegedly tied to a spy ring partly based in New York City. But Koval told his date that his reason for wanting to visit the Palace exhibits was to meet old friends there, former colleagues from the war years when he worked at the atomic energy plants in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. He was certain they would come to see "Man and the Atom"--and see it with him. Out of respect for the man she believed she might marry, Jean agreed to his suggestion. And, having read reviews of the exhibits, such as the scale model of the Oak Ridge gaseous diffusion lab and the animated panels demonstrating how plutonium, a highly radioactive element, was produced, Jean was eager to go. Oak Ridge. Plutonium. Radioactivity. These were things her boyfriend knew a lot about, but she did not. And she wanted to know everything about this man: his interests, his past, and whatever part of his scientific knowledge she could learn. Jean had first met George Koval one night in March 1948 at a bowling alley near the campus of the City College of New York. She was a twenty-one-year-old part-time student at CCNY and he was a thirty-four-year-old member of the same honorary fraternity in which her brother Leonard was active, both men having been recent classmates in CCNY's department of electrical engineering. That night the fraternity was competing for a bowling league title. And Leonard wanted his sister to meet his "interesting and rare friend," an electrical engineer who could recite verses from Walt Whitman and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Years later when asked about that evening, Jean said only, "It was serious from the start." She would remember Koval as slender with broad shoulders, standing about six feet, appearing very masculine. He had short, straight brown hair, brown eyes, and very full lips, making his broad smile all the more attractive. A clean-cut guy, only two years out of the US Army, he typically wore a dark navy blazer and khaki trousers. And though he never seemed to be clothes conscious, he looked smart, urbane, more like a seasoned New York intellectual than a former soldier born and raised in Iowa, which he was. Still, it must have been his Midwest upbringing that caused traces of innocence to seep through his streetwise exterior. Or perhaps it was his curiosity about everyone and everything that surrounded him. Koval was like a cat, always watching and ready to act, with a playful mix of enthusiasm and caution. When asked about Koval, Jean would say he was suave and spirited, but also cut from rugged rock. Few people knew his solemn side, which she believed may have been rooted in a distressed childhood. That also would have explained why he avoided detailed discussions about his past. However, he did tell her that he was born in Sioux City on Christmas day in 1913, that he was seventeen when he left home, and that shortly thereafter both of his parents had died. As an only child, that was the end of his family, he told her. She listened and had no reason to doubt his story. Besides, there was so much more to talk about, such as baseball, his ultra-passion. Koval could reel off the history and complete stats of every big-league pitcher in 1948. He was even renowned among friends for his skills as a shortstop. During the months of planning her life around him, Jean was not on the hunt for evidence of anything negative. Why would she be? Occasionally she noticed that he went out of his way to validate his sincerity. He also had a tendency to suddenly be silent, as though a part of his machinery had abruptly shut down. He was always precise, never diverging from the norm and never saying more than he meant to. And he was very punctual. But on September 19, he was late--and he seemed quite agitated about it. From the start of the evening, he was not the smooth, charming companion Jean had known thus far, and the longer they stayed at the Grand Central Palace the more troubled he seemed to be. Possibly to ease his anxiety, they were on the move constantly, visiting every exhibit, but always returning to "Man and the Atom," likely to be certain they hadn't missed the arrival of his friends. Nothing could distract him, not even the popular model of a 200,000-volt generator, used in atomic experiments, which had the capability of creating fierce electrical energies; it was on display in a compartment where viewers could enter and watch their hair stand on end. Koval wasn't interested. He seemed like an actor who had forgotten his lines. Anxious. Distant. Alone. The exposition shut down at midnight and the couple stayed until the last second. No friends, no former colleagues from Oak Ridge, no war buddies ever arrived. Then, taking the subway back to the borough of the Bronx, where each of them lived, they had what Jean would later describe as "a lovers' quarrel, which had never happened before." With time, the reason for the spat would fade, but not the memory of how he "seemed to be picking a fight." When he walked her to the apartment where she lived with her parents, whether he said "good night" or "good-bye" was a detail she could never recall. In the weeks ahead, Jean left him alone, as advised by her brother Leonard and guided by her own instincts. Such a standstill must have required remarkable discipline, especially considering the exchanges they could have been having about the two rousing battles consuming front-page news: one in sports and one in politics. In baseball, two underdog teams were headed to the 1948 World Series: the Boston Braves, which hadn't won a pennant since 1914; and the Cleveland Indians, absent from the winner's circle since 1920. It was the kind of contest that Koval, as a dedicated champion of the underdog, would closely follow. And in politics, there was a continuing blast of intriguing headlines about Soviet espionage in New York, including atom bomb spy networks. One headline read, "Spies in U.S. Are 'On Run.'?" Still, Jean resisted a daily urge to hear his voice. And when she finally had to talk to him and made the call, the landlady answered, telling her that Koval wasn't there and wouldn't be back for a while, a long while--perhaps never again. He didn't live there anymore, she said, and at that very moment he was on a ship heading to Europe. He had left "yesterday morning, with only a duffle bag." For Jean, it must have seemed like sudden thunder on a clear day. After calling her brother, who said he knew nothing about Koval's leaving town, she contacted the man she believed to be Koval's closest friend, Herbie Sandberg. He confirmed that Koval had departed from New York on October 6, with a plan to work as a manager at the construction site of an electric power plant in Poland. Sandberg didn't know when his friend would return nor did he have a forwarding address to offer her. He did know that Koval left on a transatlantic liner called the SS America , from Pier 61, and he remembered that it had rained that day. But nothing more. Though documents and interviews would someday expose parts of the truth about Koval's escape from America, some questions would never be answered, like what he was thinking as he watched the New York skyline diminish and the ocean's vast expanse draw near. Was he remembering the last time he had left America, in May 1932, with his parents and his two brothers on a ship leaving from Pier 54, bound eventually for the Soviet Union, or the details of his father's stories about being a Russian immigrant and seeing America for the first time in 1910? Did he have the manner of a professional, lacking last-minute hesitations or sentimentality, as the ship passed by the great statue symbolizing the freedoms of the country that was his birthplace? And did he struggle to push back all thoughts of what and whom he was leaving behind? By November, Koval would be living in the Soviet Union, in Moscow, with his wife of twelve years, Lyudmila Ivanova Koval, and he would soon reunite with his sixty-five-year-old father, Abram; his mother, Ethel, then fifty-eight; and Isaiah, one of his two brothers. What he told them about his past eight years in America on a "business trip" for Soviet military intelligence is unknown. But one certain fact is that George Koval left the US just in time. And, as anyone who knew him would likely say, his timing was always nearly perfect. Excerpted from Sleeper Agent: The Atomic Spy in America Who Got Away by Ann Hagedorn All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.