Hiroshima : the world's bomb

Rotter, Andrew Jon

Series: Making of the modern world
Notes
viii, 371 p., [16] p. of plates : ill 24 cm The world's atom -- Great Britain : refugees, air power, and the possibility of the bomb -- Japan and Germany : paths not taken -- The United States I : imagining and building the bomb -- The United States II : using the bomb -- Japan : the atomic bombs and war's end -- The Soviet Union : the bomb and the Cold War -- The world's bomb -- Epilogue : nightmares and hopes Introduction: The World's Bomb -- 1 The World's Atom -- 2 Great Britain: Refugees, Air Power, and the Possibility of the Bomb -- 3 Japan and Germany: Paths not Taken -- 4 The United States I: Imagining and Building the Bomb -- 5 The United States II: Using the Bomb -- 6 Japan: The Atomic Bombs and War's End -- 7 The Soviet Union: The Bomb and the Cold War -- 8 The World's Bomb -- Epilogue: Nightmares and Hopes "The US decision to drop an atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima on 6 August 1945 remains one of the most controversial events of the twentieth century. However, the controversy over the rights and wrongs of dropping the bomb has tended to obscure a number of fundamental and sobering truths about the development of this fearsome weapon." "The principle of killing thousands of enemy civilians from the air was already well established by 1945 and had been practiced on numerous occasions by both sides during the Second World War. Moreover, the bomb dropped on Hiroshima was conceived and built by an international community of scientists, not just by the Americans. Other nations (including Japan and Germany) were also developing atomic bombs in the first half of the 1940s, albeit haphazardly. Indeed, it is difficult to imagine any combatant nation foregoing the use of the bomb during the war had it been able to obtain one. The international team of scientists organized by the Americans just got there first." "As this new history shows, the bomb dropped by a US pilot that hot August morning in 1945 was in many ways the world's offspring, in both a technological and a moral sense. The race to create and deploy the atom bomb was international, and the consequences of that race are carried by the whole world to this day"--Book jacket Making of the modern world (Oxford University Press)
Additional Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. [310]-355) and index
Librarian's Miscellania
Andrew J. Rotter
Location edition Bar Code due date
NON FICTION A01505