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So sorry there's no discussion on this item. The story of Sorge is just one of many thousands of fates of Stalin's era but this by a flick of chance became known widely. (If you don't aware of how this happened - Nikita S. Khrushchyov once saw a French movie of the Sorge group - because one of his guy was a French - and he - Mr. Commie General - was very much astonished because even he was unfamiliar with such name.He quired his KGB brass, they said this was not their field so he switched to his Soviet Army Headquarters Intelligence Dept. (GRU - the 2nd General Dept. of the HQ) and they confirmed: "Yes, Sir! There was such intelligence battle station (non-legal,as this is called in Russian) "Ramzai" in Tokyo before WWII,uncovered by the police, all arrested, sent to trial etc. So puzzled and surprized Maiz Disseminator awarded The Ramzai with the medal "The Hero of The Soviet Union" with the "Order of Lenin" - the highest both military/civil honor in the former USSR.).
Here we encounter with a problem unseen at first sight. What for? What he was praised for?
--This: "Before the battle for Moscow, Sorge transmitted information that Japan was not going to attack Soviet Union in the East. This information allowed Georgy Zhukov to redeploy Siberian troops for the defense of Moscow." seems worthy of high praise, don't you think?
Official Soviet propoganda claimed that Sorge's battle group was operating on the territory of the sovereign foreign state (the Japanese Empire) just with the peaceful intentions to prevent the war between the USSR and Germany so, in other words, their its activity was not aimed at Japan but against the third party - Fascism.
Good'n'clever so far. If only this would not be a lie!
Does anyone have the citation for the award to Sorge of the decorations "The Hero of The Soviet Union" with the "Order of Lenin"?--Marktunstill 17:39, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
anyone knows the content of the 1960 movie "who are you, Dr. Sorge ?" ? ... also published as a book in Germany.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0055350/ says it is a 1961 production written by Hans-Otto Meissner. Dr Meissner became Third Secretary at the German embassy in Tokyo in 1936 according to Target Tokyo The Story of the Sorge Spy Ring by Gordon Prange with Donald M Goldstein and Katherine V Dillon.--Marktunstill 17:49, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
Question for any Dr. Sorge experts: I am presently working on a list of members of the Sorge ring. Two questions: (1) What would be considered the proper name of the "Sorge ring", and (2) what names could all be included. (I have four thus far). Thank you. nobs 15:49, 9 August 2005 (UTC)
What about including the title as "honorary Hero of the Soviet Union" in the intro with journalist, etc. It is, after all, very unusual in any society for a lowly covert spy to recieve such high recognition. Nobs01 16:35, 10 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Please note Agnes Smedley is not written into the narrative yet. Thank you. nobs 18:54, 9 August 2005 (UTC)
The intro and the closing "conspiracy theory" section" says Sorge worked for the KGB & "continuned to work for the KGB"; the body of the text says he was transferred to GRU in 1930. This needs to be clarified. nobs 01:17, 28 August 2005 (UTC)
How Sorge could transmit information related with Stalingrad siege if he was arrested in 1941? :-)--Nixer 14:04, 22 November 2005 (UTC)
That's the job of the spy, isn't it to find out the information about what is about to take place. He also predicted the invasion by Germans of the USSR (Operation Barbarossa).
His uncle had been a secretary for Karl Marx.
Uncle or grandfather? --Morpheios Melas 07:29, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
I can confirm it was his Uncle, despite Sorge himself thought it was is grandfather, but he made the same mistake as most investigators did. 81.243.161.236 20:26, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
I've reffed Gordon Prange's book; 550 pages but very readable. If read with Whybrant's book, the English-speaking novice will find out all the grey areas.Stamboul 12:48, 31 December 2006 (UTC)
The article says, "In 1920 he graduated with a Ph.D. in political science." in Richard Sorge#Early_life. Later, in Richard Sorge#Posthumous_comment_and_analyses, it says, "However, Sorge never studied for a doctorate." Obviously there is a contradiction here, but I do not know which is true so I cannot correct it. --Danny Rathjens 15:24, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
In Target Tokyo The Story of the Sorge Spy Ring by Gordon Prange with Donald M Goldstein and Katherine V Dillon, the Chronology in the Appendix records "August 1919 Sorge receives Ph.D. in political science at University of Hamburg."--Marktunstill 17:32, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
"Sorge was survived by his mother, still living in Germany." That's very bad wording. How could his mother be still alive if he was born in 1895? --193.6.17.39 (talk) 12:46, 9 December 2007 (UTC)
"[...] Sorge alerte: « 170 divisions allemandes massées sur frontière soviétique attaqueront sur ensemble frontière le 21 juin - STOP - Direction effort principal Moscou. » [...] Churchill, « Lucie », Sorge, etc. Staline n'a cure de ces mises en garde. Aucune ordre, aucune directive ne mettront l'Armée rouge en état d'alerte. Partout, elle sera surprise par Barbarossa.
MONTAGNON, Pierre. La Grande Histoire de la Seconde Guerre Mondiale (Volume II) De l'Armistice à la Guerre du Désert, pg. 306-307. Plastic Racoon (talk) 01:57, 21 May 2008 (UTC)
Battle of Stalingrad began in July of 1942. Sorge was arrested in October of 1941. That was during the Battle of Moscow, around the time when it was widely believed that Moscow will fall and hence any war in the south would be a non-issue. So how exactly could Sorge say find out and transmit any useful info about Stalingrad-related events if at the time (in 1942) he was in Japanese prison? 76.24.104.52 (talk) 07:27, 25 April 2009 (UTC)
In reading this article, I came across this text at the bottom, under the heading "Conspiracy Theory":
An interesting but rather little-known conspiracy theory of the Cold War held that Richard Sorge had only been "mock-executed" by the Japanese and had actually been returned to the Soviet Union where he continued to work for the KGB. Though many mysteries of the Cold War have been solved since the fall of communism in the USSR, no proof of this theory has emerged. In one of his novels, M.E. Chaber (pen-name of Ken Crossen), an American writer who penned the Milo March detective series, has his hero meet an unnamed Russian master-spy who, the book hints, is none other than Richard Sorge.
So basically, this is a conspiracy theory that is "interesting" (to whom?), but without any proof whatsoever, and seems to be only notable in that it was used as a minor plot device in a spy novel. I can't see any reason why this should be included here beyond possibly mentioning that he's been popular as a fictionalized character in spy novels. Certainly, the reprinting of an already admittedly "little-known" crank conspiracy theory in a biographical article is totally inappropriate. siafu (talk) 23:24, 29 April 2010 (UTC)
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@Charles01: Regarding your edit where your edit summary says:
I am fine with your restoring both birth and death dates. Originally it just had "(d. 1907)", which makes it like an incident that is part of the chronology of Richard's life, and based on where it is in the text that date makes the chronology confusing. So I removed it and said in my edit summary that restoring his life was fine, as you have. By giving the full length of his life, it's not so confusing.
In summary, I'm fine with your edit and the issue is settled unless other editors have different ideas.
While I have your attention, I did create a Wikipedia article for his father (Gustav Wilhelm Richard Sorge) based on the German article and information and sources from this article. If you would like to help me improve that article, and look for any errors I might have made, please come on by. Do you speak German? I studied German 4-5+ years, but at times I still have trouble deciphering the exact meaning of the German writings.
I have one more question below about sources. --David Tornheim (talk) 18:53, 1 May 2019 (UTC)
(1) The first line of Richard Sorge's early life reads:
References
Those sources don't look great. My feeling is they probably are not reliable--although I have not checked carefully into them. Maybe we can do better. Thoughts on this?
(2) A significant number of the sources (especially in Richard's early life) are books and quotes (Richard_Sorge#References). With regard to the father (Gustav Wilhelm Richard Sorge), much of the material from the father's German article (copied here to the English article) doesn't attribute which source goes with each line. And, unfortunately, I don't have those books. It would be nice to be able to look at the source text that is cited and/or provide additional sources that can be read online that have the same information. It's hard to verify the information is accurate if you don't have easy access to the source material. Any help with either would be appreciated. Anyone who speaks German is a plus. I have studied it 4-5+ years.
--David Tornheim (talk) 19:05, 1 May 2019 (UTC) [revised for clarity and wikilinks 19:18, 1 May 2019 (UTC)]
Die warmherzige Mutter bedauerte ihre Internatssprößlinge innig.Google translate says that means
The warm-hearted mother sincerely regretted her boarding-school sprouts.I suspect "linge" does not mean "sprouts" in that context. :) I have asked my German friends what Internatssprößlinge means. You have any idea?
It was later to betray his fatherland, but in favor of his motherland.Took a second to figure out what the original was saying. My translation:
Sorge's spying had the effect of betraying his father's nationalism and loyalty towards Germany, but not his and his mother's birthplace of Azerbaijanor something along those lines. However, the sentence fails to address that Sorge's apparent loyalty was less towards nation-states (especially the imperialism and racism of the temporary controlling leadership of Nazi Germany), but instead towards international communism. Pretty bad sentence original and translation, but interesting nonetheless for its clever construction using Vaterland and Mutterland that is somewhat poetic. :) --David Tornheim (talk) 20:03, 1 May 2019 (UTC)
The WP:LEDE mentions a trial, and there is a section Arrests and Trials. However, there is no mention of any trial(s) in the actual text of the WP:BODY. In the Comments about Sorge section, one quote comes from "Mitsusada Yoshikawa, Chief Prosecutor in the Sorge trials who obtained Sorge's death sentence." So I think it safe to say there was at least one trial. It would helpful to have more text on that--with WP:RS of course. The same paragraph of the WP:LEDE that mentions a trial also mentions one count of espionage. Is it just one? One cannot really tell what exactly he was formally charged with in the body either. --David Tornheim (talk) 07:47, 25 December 2019 (UTC)
The introductory section veered off into details, and debate about those details, which are more appropriately covered in section 2.4 of the article:
Various writers have speculated that this information allowed Stalin to transfer 18 divisions, 1,700 tanks, and over 1,500 aircraft from Siberia and the Far East to the Western Front against the western Axis Powers during the Battle for Moscow. However, Soviet code-breakers had broken the Japanese diplomatic codes, and Moscow already knew from signals intelligence that there would be no Japanese attack on the Soviet Union in 1941.[1]
Then there's this seemingly tacked on information about something else entirely, which is no where mentioned in the main article:
While his message and the decoding of the Japanese diplomatic codes may have facilitated the Soviets knowing Japan's intentions, Richard Sorge can still be credited for his spy ring which helped an American, James "Jack" Turner Stephens, Jr., conduct a phone call between Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt.[2] Jack was sent to facilitate the connection between the United States and directly to Soviet telephone networks. This was the only secure passage for a phone call for Roosevelt to talk directly to Stalin without having to cross Nazi Europe. It was this phone call that Roosevelt gave Stalin his bond allowing for Stalin to move his divisions from Siberia to rescue Moscow from German forces.[3]
I removed both these from the Intro.
- - Zulu Kane (talk) 04:33, 9 August 2020 (UTC)
References
Просьба сведущим исправить полнейшую белиберду, записанную как награды Рихарда Зорге. 95.31.164.29 (talk) 17:38, 29 May 2022 (UTC)
Просьба сведущим исправить полнейшую белиберду, записанную как награды Рихарда Зорге. 95.31.164.29 (talk) 17:39, 29 May 2022 (UTC)