Title: The Dawn of the Atomic Age
1The Dawn of the Atomic Age
- The Cold War and the Bomb
2Early Regulation
- United Nations
- UN Atomic Energy Commission, 1946
- Soviets call for complete disarmament
- US rejects this
- US creates Baruch Plan
- Regulation and inspection of all nuclear
activities - Soviets reject this
3US Policy
- McMahon Act (Atomic Energy Act of 1946)
- Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
- Takes nuclear control from military
- Robert Oppenheimer first head
- Nuclear cooperation with Britain halted
- But British continue anyway
4Operation Crossroads, 1946
- US tests two atomic bombs at Bikini Atoll
- ABLE, July 1
- First post-war nuclear test
- Airborne
- BAKER, July 25
- Underwater
- Very destructive high radiation
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6Russia Goes Nuclear
- Klaus Fuchs, Soviet Spy
- Worked on Manhattan Project with British
- Gave atomic secrets to Russia
- Joe-1
- First nuclear test
- August 29, 1949
7Race for the Hydrogen Bomb
- The Super
- Atomic bomb is fission
- Hydrogen bomb is fusion
- Much more explosive and deadly
- Oppenheimer opposes development
- He is removed in 1953
- Falsely accused of having associations with
communists
8Race for the Hydrogen Bomb
- Edward Teller
- Father of the Hydrogen Bomb
- MIKE, November 1, 1952
- Enewetak Atoll
- BRAVO, March 1, 1954
- Bikini Atoll
- Much larger yield than expected, 14.8 megatons
- Largest US test ever
- Makes region uninhabitable for years
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10Massive Retaliation
- Perception that US conventional forces lag behind
USSR and China - Eisenhower does not want massive troop buildup
- US Nuclear superiority is deterrent
- John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State
- Local defense must be reinforced by the further
deterrent of massive retaliatory power. - 1954
11Race for the Hydrogen Bomb
- Soviets develop Super
- August 12, 1953
- Central Siberia, not as powerful
- October 23, 1961
- 58 megaton H-Bomb
- By far the lagers nuclear blast ever
- Americans expected much longer lag
12The War at Home
- Federal Civil Defense Act, 1950
- FCDA charged with creating plans in case of
nuclear attack for - Shelter
- Evacuation
- Training
- Funds distributed to local government agencies
13The Nuclear Club Expands
- Britain, 1952
- Hurricane
- France 1960
- Blue Gerbil
- China, 1964
14Mutually Assured Destruction
- From late 1950s-1960s
- Advent of second strike capabilities
- Inter-continental ballistic missiles (ICBMs)
- Nuclear submarines
- Each side has more than enough capacity and
capability to decimate the other - If Cold War gets too hot its the end of the
Earth
15US and Soviet Nuclear Strategic Forces, 1950-2000
US USSR/Russia Year Launchers Warhe
ads Launchers Warheads 1950 462 400 22 8
4 1960 1,559 3,127 144 354 1970 2,100
5,239 1,985 2,216 1980 2,022 10,608 2,545
7,480 1990 1,903 12,477 2,500 10,271 2000
1,407 7,519 1,266 6,094 2005 1,225 5,966 98
1 4,732
Source Arms Control Association, Fact Sheets
(2005)
1956 totals