Introduction
I THE NUCLEAR AGE: BACKGROUND AND VISIONS
1. Nuclear Energy: H. G. Wells's Vision, 1914
2. Leo Szilard and the Discovery of Fission
3. The Szilard-Einstein Letter, August 2, 1939
4. The Frisch-Peierls Memorandum, 1940
5. The MAUD Report, 1941
II THE MANHATTAN PROJECT
6. Letters of J. Robert Oppenheimer, 1942-45
7. The Quebec Agreement, August 19, 1943
8. Anglo-American Declaration of Trust, June 13, 1944
9. Roosevelt-Churchill Hyde Park Aide-Memoire, September 19,
1944
10. O. R. Frisch, Eyewitness Account of "Trinity" Test, July
1945
11. General Groves's Report on "Trinity," July 18, 1945
12. Truman-Stalin Conversation, Potsdam, July 24, 1945
13. Military Policy Committee Minutes, May 5, 1943
14. Stimson and the Interim Committee, May 1945
15. Interim Committee Minutes, May 31, 1945
16. Science Panel: Recommendations on the Immediate Use of Nuclear
Weapons, June 16, 1945
17. Stimson and the Scientists' Concerns, June 26, 1945
18. Chicago Scientists' Petition to the President, July 17,
1945
19. White House Press Release on Hiroshima, August 6, 1945
III ATOMIC ENERGY IN A POSTWAR WORLD
20. Henry Stimson to Harry S. Truman, September 11, 1945
21. The McMahon Bill, December 20, 1945 (Atomic Energy Act of
1946)
22. The Baruch Plan
23. "What Is the Atom's Industrial Future?" March 8, 1947
24. President Dwight D. Eisenhower's ''Atoms for Peace" Address to
the United Nations General Assembly
25. Excerpts from President Eisenhower's Press Conference, March
31, 1954
IV THE HYDROGEN BOMB
26. "Political Implications of Detonation of Atomic Bomb by the
U.S.S.R.," Department of State, Policy Planning Staff PPS/58,
August 16, 1949
27. Statement by the President on Announcing the First Atomic
Explosion in the USSR, September 23, 1949
28. USAEC General Advisory Committee Minutes, October 28-30,
1949
29. USAEC General Advisory Committee Report on the "Super," October
30, 1949
30. Lewis Strauss to Harry S. Truman, November 25, 1949
31. Statement by the President on the Hydrogen Bomb, January 31,
1950
32. Hans Bethe, Comments on the History of the H-bomb, 1954
V THE OPPENHEIMER CASE
33. K. D. Nichols, General Manager, AEC, to J. R. Oppenheimer,
December 23, 1953
34. J. R. Oppenheimer to K. D. Nichols, March 4, 1954
35. Testimony in the Matter of J, Robert Oppenheimer
36, Findings on the Case of J. Robert Oppenheimer: K. D. Nichols to
the USAEC, June 12, 1954
37. Arthur Holly Compton to Gordon Gray, April 21, 1954, "Evidence
Regarding Loyalty of Robert Oppenheimer
VI NUCLEAR TESTING AND THE TEST BAN
38. Announced Nuclear Tests, 1945-52
39. Reported Nuclear Test Explosions, 1945-68
40. "Civil Defense Faces New Perils," Ralph E. Lapp, 1954
41. Atomic Energy Commission Meeting 1376, May 21, 1958
42. Atomic Energy Commission Meeting 1377, May 28, 1958
43. W. K. Wyant, Jr., ''50,000 Baby Teeth," The Nation, June 13,
1959
44. Treaty Banning Nuclear Weapon Tests in the Atmosphere, in Outer
Space, and Under Water, August 5, 1963
45. Treaty between the United States of America and the Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics on the Limitation of Underground Nuclear
Weapon Tests, July 3, 1974
46. Protocol to the Treaty between the United States of America and
the Union of Soviet Socialist Reepublics on the Limitation of
Underground Nuclear Weapon Tests, July 3, 1937
VII DETERRENCE
47. Bernard Brodie, The Absolute Weapon, 1946
48. John Foster Dulles on "Massive Retaliation," 1954
49. Herman Kahn, On Thermonuclear War, 1960
50. Robert McNamara and Counterforce "No Cities" Doctrine, 1962
51. Presidential Directive 59, 1980
52. President Ronald Reagan on Deterrence, November 23, 1982
VI ARMS CONTROL
53. "Broken Arrows": Nuclear Weapons Accidents, 1950-68
54. White House Statement on the Soviet Missile Sites in Cuba,
October 26, 1962
55, White House Statement on Soviet Proposals Relating to
International Security, October 27, 1962
56. Message to Chairman Khrushchev Calling for Removal of Soviet
Missiles From Cuba, October 27, 1962
57. Message in Reply to a Broadcast by Chairman Khrushchev on the
Cuban Crisis, October 28, 1962
58. Statement by the President Following the Soviet Decision to
Withdraw Missiles from Cuba, October 28, 1952
59. Memorandum of Understanding between the United States of
America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Regarding the
Establishment of a Direct Communications Link, June 20, 1963 (with
Annex)
60. Treaty on the Nonproliferation of Nuclear Weapons, March 5,
1970
61. Treaty between the United States of America and the Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics on the L...
62. Interim Agreement between the United States of America and the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republi...
63. USA-USSR Agreement to Reduce the Risk of Nuclear War Outbreak,
September 30, 1972
64. Protocol to the Treaty Between the United States of America and
the Union of Soviet Socialist Re...
65. Salt II Treaty between the United States of America and the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics ...
66. U.S. Bishops' Pastoral Letter on War and Peace: A Summary
67. William P. Clark, National Security Council, to Archbishop
Joseph L. Bernadin, Chairman of the N...
IX NUCLEAR POWER
68. Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (selections)
69. Report of the AEC Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards on
the Fermi Nuclear Power Plant, 195...
70. AFL-CIO Statement on Fermi, 1956
71. Preliminary Report on Fuel Damage in Fermi Reactor, 1966
72. Calved Cliffs Coordinating Committee versus U.S. Atomic Energy
Committee, 1971
73. Three Mile Island; Nuclear News Special Report, April 6,
1979
X Afterword
Index
Philip L. Cantelon is President of History Associates, Inc. Richard G. Hewlett is Senior Vice President of History Associates, Inc., and former chief historian of the Atomic Energy Commission. Robert C. Williams is Professor of History, Dean of the Faculty, and Vice President for Academic Affairs at Davidson College.
"Chernobyl has once more demonstrated, as did Three Mile Island,
that a nuclear accident anywhere is a nuclear accident
everywhere."
*Alvin Weinberg*
"Debate over nuclear policy, whether about nuclear weapons or
nuclear energy, most often focuses on issues of the present or the
future. The documents collected in The American Atom remind us,
however, that the issues involved have a past. . . . We follow the
story of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the 'father of the American bomb,'
thorough his letters, observations of those close to the Manhattan
Project and testimony to the Atomic Energy Commission. President
Dwight Eisenhower's 1953 'Atoms for Peace' speech demonstrates how
far back calls for nuclear sanity go, and the listing of
nuclear-weapons accidents shows how dangerous it may be to ignore
those calls. The book's purpose is not advocacy . . . but
historiography, and among its virtues are listings of readings and
suggestions for obtaining source documents. Those interested in the
nuclear-technology debate will benefit from this extremely useful
compendium."
*New York Times*
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