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"Terror and mystery": The United Sta...
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Rezelman, David.
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"Terror and mystery": The United States and nuclear fear, 1905--45.
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
"Terror and mystery": The United States and nuclear fear, 1905--45./
作者:
Rezelman, David.
面頁冊數:
314 p.
附註:
Adviser: Richard H. Immerman.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International67-09A.
標題:
History, Modern. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3233466
ISBN:
9780542870866
"Terror and mystery": The United States and nuclear fear, 1905--45.
Rezelman, David.
"Terror and mystery": The United States and nuclear fear, 1905--45.
- 314 p.
Adviser: Richard H. Immerman.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Temple University, 2006.
Albert Einstein's realization in 1905 that matter could be converted into energy changed the world forever. The United States government recognized the danger in 1939, and fear of nuclear weapons has been one of the primary forces driving U.S. national security policy ever since. Although the German nuclear weapons program ultimately proved to be a pale shadow of its American counterpart, the fear it caused had a tremendous effect on the evolution of U.S. nuclear policy in the Second World War. Further, coping with the possible German threat was the formative experience with nuclear fear that influenced many of the most important makers of U.S. national security policy during the Cold War that followed.
ISBN: 9780542870866Subjects--Topical Terms:
516334
History, Modern.
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Albert Einstein's realization in 1905 that matter could be converted into energy changed the world forever. The United States government recognized the danger in 1939, and fear of nuclear weapons has been one of the primary forces driving U.S. national security policy ever since. Although the German nuclear weapons program ultimately proved to be a pale shadow of its American counterpart, the fear it caused had a tremendous effect on the evolution of U.S. nuclear policy in the Second World War. Further, coping with the possible German threat was the formative experience with nuclear fear that influenced many of the most important makers of U.S. national security policy during the Cold War that followed.
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The absence of specific intelligence information forced U.S. scientists and government officials to make decisions about nuclear policy during most of the Second World War based not on what Germany was doing, but on what it might be capable of doing in a worst case scenario. The perception of just how bad that "worst case" might become evolved as the war situation from 1939 to 1942. During these years even the possibility that Germany might soon be able to mount large-scale conventional attacks on North America was no longer discounted.
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Late 1941 and early 1942 was also the period when the U.S. government became convinced that the creation of nuclear weapons was possible and embarked upon a crash program to create them. These factors all combined in 1942 to cause wartime nuclear fear to reach its zenith. Concerns about a possible Nazi atomic bomb only began to lessen gradually in 1943 as the Allies came to understand from their own experience just what a massive undertaking something like the Manhattan Project had to be. It was nonetheless not until Allied armies reentered Europe that captured documents and interviews with nuclear researchers on the continent caused fears of German nuclear weapons to completely dissipate.
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