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Page 26 Cold War America Lesson #2: The Cold War Abroad Copyright © 2013, The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved CWA 2.5 The President’s Daily Bulletin (Nuclear Arms Race) Timeline 1942 x US begins work on the Manhattan Project, a research and development effort that produced the first atomic bombs. As the project moves forward, Soviet spies secretly report on its developments to Moscow. Summer, 1945 x On July 16, the US detonates the first nuclear device at the Trinity test site in New Mexico. x On July 24, Truman officially briefs Stalin on the development project at the Potsdam Conference. x The US drops two atomic weapons on Japan to end WWII. “Little Boy” was dropped on Hiroshima on August 6; “Fat Man” was dropped on Nagasaki on August 8. 1946 x At its first General Assembly meeting in January, the United Nations forms the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission, whose stated goal was the elimination of all nuclear weapons. o In response, the US proposes the Baruch Plan, which advocated for an international body to provide oversight. The USSR calls for universal disarmament. Both proposals were rejected by the UN. x In the summer of 1946, the US government tests two more bombs in the Bikini Atoll in the Pacific. 1949 x On August 29, the Soviet Union detonates its first atomic weapon, called RDS-1 by the Soviets, and both “Fast Lightning” and “Joe-1” after Joseph Stalin by the West. 1950 x Emil Fuchs was convicted of spying for the Soviet Union. Fuchs confessed and was sentenced to fourteen years in prison. Fuchs was a German theoretical physicist who became a British citizen during WWII. After the war, Fuchs worked on the Manhattan Project in New Mexico and passed information about the development of the hydrogen bomb onto the Soviet Union. x Harry Gold was also convicted as a Soviet spy Gold served as a courier for Fuchs, helping transport information from the Manhattan Project to the Soviet Union. 1952 x On November 1, the US detonated “Mike,” the first hydrogen bomb.

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Page 1: CWA 2.5 The President’sDaily Bulletin (Nuclear Arms Race ... · PDF fileTitle: The History Blueprint: The Civil War Author: University of California, Davis Subject: The California

Page 26

Cold War America Lesson #2: The Cold War Abroad Copyright © 2013, The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved

CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race)

Timeline

1942

x US begins work on the Manhattan Project, a research and development effort that produced the first atomic bombs. As the project moves forward, Soviet spies secretly report on its developments to Moscow.

Summer, 1945

x On July 16, the US detonates the first nuclear device at the Trinity test site in New Mexico. x On July 24, Truman officially briefs Stalin on the development project at the Potsdam Conference. x The US drops two atomic weapons on Japan to end WWII. “Little Boy” was dropped on Hiroshima on

August 6; “Fat Man” was dropped on Nagasaki on August 8.

1946

x At its first General Assembly meeting in January, the United Nations forms the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission, whose stated goal was the elimination of all nuclear weapons.

o In response, the US proposes the Baruch Plan, which advocated for an international body to provide oversight. The USSR calls for universal disarmament. Both proposals were rejected by the UN.

x In the summer of 1946, the US government tests two more bombs in the Bikini Atoll in the Pacific.

1949

x On August 29, the Soviet Union detonates its first atomic weapon, called RDS-1 by the Soviets, and both “Fast Lightning” and “Joe-1” (﴾after Joseph Stalin)﴿ by the West.

1950

x Emil Fuchs was convicted of spying for the Soviet Union. Fuchs confessed and was sentenced to fourteen years in prison. Fuchs was a German theoretical physicist who became a British citizen during WWII. After the war, Fuchs worked on the Manhattan Project in New Mexico and passed information about the development of the hydrogen bomb onto the Soviet Union.

x Harry Gold was also convicted as a Soviet spy – Gold served as a courier for Fuchs, helping transport information from the Manhattan Project to the Soviet Union.

1952

x On November 1, the US detonated “Mike,” the first hydrogen bomb.

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Cold War America Lesson #2: The Cold War Abroad Copyright © 2013, The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved

CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race)

Timeline (continued)

1953

x Soviets detonate their first thermonuclear bomb that could be dropped from an airplane.

1954

x On March 1, the US conducts the BRAVO test of a hydrogen bomb, again at Bikini Atoll. The largest nuclear explosion yet by the US, the bomb yielded 14.8 megatons of destruction, which spread nuclear fallout up to 300 miles away.

1955

x The USSR detonates its first hydrogen bomb on November 22 with a 1.6 megaton yield. By 1961, the Soviets’ hydrogen bombs had a 58 megaton yield.

1957

x The USSR launches Sputnik, a satellite, into Earth’s orbit. Development of this technology demonstrated that the Soviet Union could not only utilize air bombers to deliver nuclear weapons – they could launch them across continents. In response, the US launches its own satellite in 1959.

x By the late-1950s, both the US and the USSR had the capability of not only launching a first strike against each other, both could also survive a first strike and launch a response, known as a second strike. This knowledge provided a sense of security and deterrence for the two superpowers. Known as Mutually Assured Destruction, or MAD, both sides were reluctant to attack the other because they knew that their opponent could still surmount a second strike, which would lead to their annihilation. MAD spurred on the arms race as each side sought to maintain equal or greater capacity for destruction, and thus assured, paradoxically, their own safety.

1962

x In October, the US and the Soviet Union came closest to nuclear war during the Cuban Missile Crisis, when the Soviet Union sought to secretly place nuclear missiles on Cuban soil, capable of quickly reaching the territorial United States. President Kennedy responded by blockading Soviet ships sailing to complete the final installation. As tensions mounted during the crisis, Kennedy increased military alertness to DEFCON 3, the level just before nuclear war. Thankfully, back door negotiations ended the crisis. The Soviets agreed to remove the missiles and their bases from Cuba. In response, the US removed their missiles from Turkey, which threatened the Soviet Union.

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Cold War America Lesson #2: The Cold War Abroad Copyright © 2013, The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved

CWA 2.5 – The  President’s Daily Bulletin (Nuclear Arms Race)

Second atomic bombing of Nagasaki, Japan, August 8, 1945. Official US Army Air Force photograph. Source:

Library of Congress, http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/98506956/.

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Cold War America Lesson #2: The Cold War Abroad Copyright © 2013, The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved

CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race)

Mushroom cloud with ships below during Operation Crossroads nuclear weapons test on Bikini Atoll, July, 1946. Source: Library of Congress, http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2012648160/

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Cold War America Lesson #2: The Cold War Abroad

Copyright © 2013, The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved

CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race)

Little Denise Davidson, 5 months old, sleeps peacefully while her mother, Mrs. Donald Davidson, of 278 Clinton St., Bklyn.,

marches with ban-the-bomb group outside the United Nations to protest resumption of A-[bomb] tests by the United

States / World Telegram & Sun photo by Dick DeMarsico, 1962. Source: Library of Congress,

http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/00649688/.

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Cold War America Lesson #2: The Cold War Abroad Copyright © 2013, The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved

CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race)

Persons picketing against the use of tax dollars for the development of nuclear weapons] / World-Telegram photo by Fred

Palumbo, March 15, 1950. Source: Library of Congress, http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/95506930/.

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CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race)

Truman's handwriting on the back of a Potsdam photograph describing telling Stalin about the atomic bomb: "In which I tell Stalin we expect to drop the most powerful explosive ever made on the Japanese. He smiled and said he appreciated my telling him--but he did not know what I was talking about--the Atomic Bomb! HST". 1945. Source: Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum, National Archives Accession # 63-1456-46A, http://www.trumanlibrary.org/photographs/view.php?id=14584.

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Cold War America Lesson #2: The Cold War Abroad Copyright © 2013, The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved

CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race)

Scientists’ Petition to the President of the United States, July 17, 1945. Source: Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum, http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlestop/study_collections/bomb/large/documents/index.php?documentdate=1945-07-17&documentid=79&studycollectionid=abomb&pagenumber=1.

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Cold War America Lesson #2: The Cold War Abroad Copyright © 2013, The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved

CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race, White House Release)

Press Release by the White House, August 6, 1945. Source: Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum,

http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlestop/study_collections/bomb/large/documents/index.php?pagenumber=2&docume

ntid=59&documentdate=1945-08-06&studycollectionid=abomb&groupid=.

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CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin (Nuclear Arms Race, White House Release)

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Cold War America Lesson #2: The Cold War Abroad Copyright © 2013, The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved

CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race, Evaluation of Atomic Bomb)

Editor’s Note: The following document is an excerpt from, “Evaluation of the Atomic Bomb as a Military Weapon,” was a June 30, 1947 report by the Joint Chiefs of Staff Evaluation Board for Operation Crossroads, the name of the Bikini Atoll tests. The report was prepared for President Truman and is part of the President’s Secretary Collection at the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum, http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlestop/study_collections/bomb/large/documents/index.php?pagenumber=1&docu

mentdate=1947-06-30&documentid=81&studycollectionid=abomb.

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Cold War America Lesson #2: The Cold War Abroad Copyright © 2013, The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved

CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race, Evaluation of Atomic Bomb)

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CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race, Evaluation of Atomic Bomb)

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Cold War America Lesson #2: The Cold War Abroad Copyright © 2013, The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved

CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race, Evaluation of Atomic Bomb)

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CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin (Nuclear Arms Race, Reaction to Sputnik)

Reaction to the Soviet Satelllite (Sputnik) – A Preliminary Evaluation, 1957. White House Office of the Staff Research Group, Box 35, Special Projects: Sputnik, Missiles and Related Matters. Source: Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum, http://www.eisenhower.archives.gov/research/online_documents/sputnik/Reaction.pdf.

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CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race, Reaction to Sputnik)

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CWA 2.5 – The  President’s  Daily  Bulletin  (Nuclear Arms Race)

Director of Central Intelligence R.H. Hillenkoetter, memorandum to the President, "Estimate of the Status of the Russian Atomic Energy Project," 6 July 1948, Top Secret. Source: Harry S. Truman Library, Presidents Secretary's File, box 249, Central Intelligence-Memoranda 1945-1948 (copy courtesy of Jeffrey Richelson). Online access: National Security Archive at George Washington University: http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/nukevault/ebb286/doc03.PDF.