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WW 2 History Club. The Bomb. 24 - Aug - 2011. Topics. Technology and Creation Competitive Development Elsewhere Military Situation in 1945 Political Situation in 1945 Alternatives July,1945 (Potsdam, the test, final prep) August,1945 (bombs dropped, Japan surrenders) Immediate Effects
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WW 2 History Club The Bomb 24 - Aug - 2011
Topics • Technology and Creation • Competitive Development Elsewhere • Military Situation in 1945 • Political Situation in 1945 • Alternatives • July,1945 (Potsdam, the test, final prep) • August,1945 (bombs dropped, Japan surrenders) • Immediate Effects • Current Views
Technology & Creation • Einstein’s early theories suggest incredible power release (E=mc2 ) • Szilard: chain reaction, large bomb (tons of fissionable material required) • Einstein/Szilard letter to FDR • Briggs Committee (US): slow and ponderous; not focused on weapons • Frisch–Peierls Memorandum: small bomb (just lbs of fissionable material) feasible • MAUD Committee (UK): urgent -- UK at war; focused on weapons • NDRC collaboration with UK • Manhattan Project: the real initiative • Initiated before scientists were “sure” it could be done • Oak Ridge (uranium enrichment) • Hanford (plutonium production) • Uranium vs Plutonium • “Gadget” test: New Mexico, July 1945 • B29: • Nov 1943: Operation Silverplate • 509th Composite Group (led by Tibbets) formed to train for the drops • British Lancaster would require fewer mods but crews, parts, maintenance would have been a large problem.
The Manhattan Project:Los Alamos, NM I am become death, the shatterer of worlds! Major GeneralLesley R. Groves Dr. Robert Oppenheimer
Manhattan Project Numbers • 3 years duration • 30 sites (Oak Ridge, Hanford and Los Alamos are best known) • 130,000 people • $2 billion (~ $25 billion today) • 90% to produce fissionable materails • 10% on the actual weapons • 2 different type of bombs • Uranium • Relatively simple “gun type” bomb • One bomb initially • Plutonium • More complex “implosion type” bomb • Three bombs initially (one used in test)
Competitive Development • Britain • Ahead of the US in the 1930s and early 1940s • More focused on a bomb than on heat and power • Frisch–Peierls Memorandum (aircraft delivered bomb possible) • Lots of good people (many who fled Germany) but lacked the necessary resources to develop a bomb within the perceived timeframe of WWII • Collaboration with the US was the most productive course
Competitive Development • Germany • Hitler did not want “Jewish Science” (initially) • Very capable scientists; several who made significant contributions • Anti-Semitic policies caused many scientists to flee Germany • Germany had one of the few sources of uranium • Werner Heisenberg led effort for several years • Heavy water was selected as the reactor control medium • The German attempt to build a reactor was feeble & disorganized • Their effort to build an atomic weapon was nonexistent partially because they continued to believe that the amount of fissionable material was several tons. • BUT Allies did not know precisely what German’s capabilities were • After the war • Heisenberg suggested that he purposely mismanaged project(s). • Conversations taped while Heisenberg was under arrest suggest that he did not fully understand bomb mechanics
Competitive Development • Japan • Leading scientist was Dr. Yoshio Nishina; well regarded • Cyclotron work in 1930s • Recognized potential for nuclear weapon in 1939; worried that US was already pursuing • No real weapons program until 1941 • March 1943: Japan concluded that task was to large for even the US; major effort refocused on radar and other technologies • Ni-Go Project: Army continued to pursue atomic weapon; some progress but bombed out of existence in 1945 • F-Go Project: another Navy effort; some progress but way short of actual weapon … • After the war: • Weapons Test Rumors: that F-Go project had conducted a test in 1945 at Konan Camp, Korea • Repeatedly debunked, but the rumors persist.
Military Situation – Summer 1945 • War in Europe is over; Allies can now focus on Japan, but … • War in Pacific gets more deadly every day; Okinawa was a blood bath • Advantages of US island hoping strategy decay as we near Japan • US kill ratio declining • Japanese Navy virtually eliminated, but Kamikazes still a real threat • Japanese army is still large, powerful and determined
Political Situation – Summer 1945 • US tired of war; running out of draftees • Russia flexing its muscles • Most major Japanese cities destroyed • Most major Japanese industries destroyed • But Japanese “will to resist” unchanged • Japanese military in control • Defeat is unacceptable to Japanese
Political Situation – Russia • Russian (land and air) war machine very powerful • Millions of men can be involved in PTO • Stalin’s intentions are clear – take what he can by force • Russian invasion of Japanese held territory in Far East is good (for US) short term but a real problem (for US) long term
Potsdam Conference:July, 1945 • FDR dead, Churchill voted out of office as Prime Minister during conference. • Stalin only original. • The United States has the A-bomb. • Germany to be divided into occupation zones • Japan must surrender unconditionally P.M. Clement President Joseph Atlee Truman Stalin
July 1945 Test Trinity Site, White Sands, NM • Culmination of hundreds of thousands of man-years work • Some debate as to what might happen • Air burst (tower) • Plutonium bomb successful • Yield exceeded expectations
Alternatives • Negotiated Peace • Unacceptable to Allies • Violates Potsdam • Impossible to sell to Allied home fronts • Does not really solve the problem • Does not completely disarm military • Does not occupy Japan (considered a requirement to change culture)
Alternatives • Blockade, Bomb and Wait • Preferred USN option • Few real targets left • Kamikazes still a threat • Could drag on for years • Does not stop Russian advance; divided Japan possible • No guarantees
Alternatives • Homeland Invasion • Preferred USArmy option (MacArthur) • Operation Downfall • Operation Olympic: X-Day 1-Nov-1945 • Operation Coronet: Y-Day 1-Mar-1946 • Massive logistical effort • 42 carriers, 24 battleships, 400 destroyers, …, 39 divisions • Olympic would be approx the size of Overlord • Coronet would be twice the size of Overlord • 12 to 18 month effort • Does not stop Russian advance; divided Japan likely • Japanese military likely to fight to the death • Japanese civilians likely to fight to the death • Causality estimates very high • Allies: 1 million+ dead • Japanese: 5 - 10 million+ dead • Japan planned to launch thousands of kamikazes at US troop ships and estimated that they would kill 30% to 50% of the invasion force before they reached the shore
Alternatives • Ultimately decision is up to Truman • Key dilemma for Truman is how to explain any additional Allied deaths when he has the power to end the war with no more loss of Allied blood. • US (and Allied) hatred of Japs made the decision easier
Final Phase • Tinian selected for staging and B29 base • Little Boy (uranium) components shipped to Tinian on USS Indianapolis (sunk by Jap sub 4 days after delivery) • Fat Boy (plutonium) components (2 bombs) shipped on modified B29s (509th Composite Group) • Secy of War Stimson ruled out Kyoto as a target (for a-bomb or conventional bombing) and made final targeting decisions
Tinian Island, 1945 Little Boy Fat Man Enola Gay Crew
The Beginning of theAtomic Age 0815 hours (local time) 6 – Aug - 1945
Hiroshima–August 6, 1945 • B29, Enola Gay • 70,000 killed immediately. • 48,000 buildings. destroyed. • 100,000s died of radiation poisoning & cancer later.
Nagasaki – August 9, 1945 • B29, Boch’s Car • 40,000 killed immediately. • 60,000 injured. • 100,000s died ofradiation poisoning& cancer later.
Immediate Effects • 110,000 killed (both bombs) • 100,000+ injuries • Truman warned of a rain of death (a bluff?) • Japanese were shocked but were the ruling military sufficiently shocked? • Emperor intervened • Last ditch effort by ruling military to thwart Emperor’s plan failed • Japan surrendered within a week (endured the unendurable)
Immediate Effects • 3 Russian Army groups composed of most experienced European conflict veterans attacked across the Manchurian border on 8-Aug-1945 • Russians are highly mechanized and quickly enveloped much of the Japanese Kwantung Army • Japan provisionally accepted Potsdam ultimatum on 10 Aug 1945 with one proviso: emperor stays • Russian army continued to advance until 24 Aug 1945 • In two weeks, the Russian army took thousands of square miles of Manchuria, China and Korea and 750,000 prisoners • Russia subsequently turned over most of the captured Japanese war material to the Chinese Communists and stripped Manchuria of its industrial plant as war reparations.
Current Views • Controversy continues • Should-Not-Have-Dropped-The-Bomb side argues: • Japan was worn out • Traditional bombing and blockade were working • Russia had invaded Manchuria so Japan would be fighting on multiple fronts • Japan was testing the negotiated peace prospects through Russian (initially) and later Swedish contacts • Invasion of Japanese homeland would cause “modest” Allied casualties • Was unconscionable to kill so many civilians
Current Views • Dropping-The-Bomb-Was-Right side argues: • Japan only appeared to be worn out; US home front was tired of war • Traditional bombing and blockade were clearly not working • Russian invasion of Manchuria could easily have led to a divided Japan • Japan was testing the negotiated peace prospects but efforts would have led to nothing (unconditional surrender was unacceptable) • Invasion of Japanese homeland would cause “substantial” Allied casualties (see “Hell To Pay”) • Invasion would have added at least 18 months to the war • In the grand scheme of things, very few people were killed (less than 0.2% of total deaths in WWII and far fewer than the Japanese massacred at Nanking) • An invasion would have likely killed at least 10 million Japanese (100X total death toll at Hiroshima & Nagasaki)
In Closing • Manhattan Project started 3 years after Einstein’s letter • Project took 3 years, involved 130,000 people across 30 sites • Project spent $3 billion; 90% on materials • Not until late summer July 1944 was bomb success moved from doubtful to probable • B29 Program was even longer and more expensive • ~110,000 people died in two A-bombs • ~183,000 died in two firebomb raids on Tokyo • Russian land grab in Aug 1945 was a significant help to Communist Chinese • MacArthur wanted to lead largest amphibious invasion in history; interesting to speculate on what would have happened had this occurred … who would have been the 1948 Republican Presidential candidate? 1952? • 500,000 Purple Heart medals were manufactured during the summer of 1945 in anticipation of Operation Olympic. 60 years later there are still 100,000 left