THE MANHATTAN PROJECT
AND THE SECOND WORLD WAR
(1939-1945)
Events: Dawn
of the Atomic Era,
1945
The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the surrender of Japan
were the last acts
of the Second World War. The most destructive weapon in the history of
combat had helped bring an end to the most destructive conflict in human history.
The Manhattan Project and the devastation that its successful outcome
wrought are inexplicable outside the context of the Second World
War. The project began as a race to acquire the bomb before Nazi Germany did,
and the prospects of an atomic bomb in the hands of one of the world's
most oppressive and murderous regimes were chilling indeed. In
a war initiated by German aggression and dreams of conquest, tens of
millions died. Few European nations
escaped grievous injury, but nowhere was the suffering worse than in Poland, where six million
or more lost their lives, and in the Soviet Union, where more than 25
million may have died. Other Allies
suffered terribly as well, including about 600,000 deaths in France and 400,000 dead
Britons (including many in the Pacific Theater). Approximately six million
Jews of all nations died during the Holocaust. Even small and too
often forgotten nations suffered horribly. In Yugoslavia, for example, as
many as two million people may have died during the war. Germany itself
lost over four million. The stakes in the race for the bomb were thus
very high. Tens of million more might have died -- and Western
civilization itself might have been eclipsed -- if Germany had proven the
victor.
The
loss of life in the Pacific war was equally horrific. Victims of Japanese aggression
suffered terribly, from
Korea to the Philippines to Southeast Asia to the islands of the Pacific. The nation
hardest hit, however, was probably China. Beginning with the invasion by Japan in 1931,
perhaps 15 million Chinese died at the hands of the Japanese Army
or from the war's attendant starvation and disease. The toll on Asia and
the Pacific was psychological as well as physical; controversy still rages over
the numerous war crimes committed by the Japanese Army, including biological
warfare experiments conducted on civilians, the execution of prisoners of war,
and wholesale rape and murder committed against entire cities, such as
happened in 1937 in the Chinese city of Nanking where 200,000 or more Chinese
civilians may have died. Well over two million
Japanese soldiers and civilians lost their lives during the war, of which perhaps as many as
300,000, or even more, were as a result of the
two atomic bombings. About 300,000 Americans died during the wars against
Germany and Japan. Though no one will ever know for certain, the worldwide
death toll for the war from 1931 to 1945 probably reached 60
million. 
The atomic bomb was the scientific and technological exclamation point
at the end of this worst-of-all wars that was won by
technologically-advanced industrial might. That the bomb was completed by the United States in time to help
finish the conflict
is
remarkable. Most of the theoretical breakthroughs in nuclear physics that
made it possible dated back less than twenty-five years, and, with new findings occurring faster
than they could be absorbed by practitioners in the field, many fundamental
concepts in nuclear physics and chemistry had yet to be confirmed by laboratory
experimentation. Nor was there any conception initially of the design and
engineering difficulties that would be involved in translating
what was known
theoretically into working devices capable of releasing the enormous energy of
the atomic nucleus in a predictable fashion. The industrial base created
in a handful of years to transform these theories into reality was, by 1945,
comparable in size to the American automobile industry. Approximately
130,000 people were employed by the project at its peak, from laborers to Nobel
Prize winners. The
Manhattan Project was as much a triumph of engineering and industry as of
science. 
Without the leadership of Leslie Groves and Robert Oppenheimer (right), as
well as that of Crawford Greenewalt of DuPont and other contractors, the revolutionary
breakthroughs in nuclear science achieved by Enrico
Fermi, Niels Bohr, Ernest
Lawrence, and their colleagues would not have produced the atomic bomb during
World War II. Despite numerous obstacles, the United States was able to
combine the forces of science, government, academia, the military, and industry into an
organization that took nuclear physics from the laboratory and on to the battlefield with
a weapon of awesome destructive capability, making clear the importance of basic
scientific research to national defense. The Manhattan Project became the
organizational model behind the remarkable achievements of American "big
science" during the second half of the twentieth century. When
President John F. Kennedy announced his goal of putting a man on the moon by the
end of the 1960s, it was the Manhattan
Project that he invoked for its spirit of
commitment and patriotism.
To view the next "event"
of the Manhattan Project, proceed to "1945-present:
Postscript -- The Nuclear Age."

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