In 1952, while serving in
Austria, Grossman swam across the
Danube into the Soviet-occupied zone of Austria, and became one of a handful of soldiers from the
NATO nations who
defected to the
Eastern Bloc. Following assessment by Soviet authorities, Grossman was sent to
East Germany (GDR), where he adopted the name "Victor Grossman" and worked at a
train car building firm. After graduating, he worked as an editor at the
Berlin book publisher Seven Seas. From 1959 to 1963, Grossman worked for the German Democratic Report, an English digest of GDR press. He then worked as the North America editor at
Radio Berlin International until 1965. In 1994, the U.S. Army dropped charges of desertion against him. He reclaimed his U.S.
passport and traveled to America several times, including a book tour to promote his memoir
Crossing the River: A Memoir of the American Left, the Cold War, and Life in East Germany, published in 2003. Grossman was a frequent contributor to the Marxist magazine
Monthly Review. He later joined the German
Party of Democratic Socialism and
Die Linke. ==Death==