First
Atomic Bomb (20,000-Ton TNT Power) Hits Japan 7
August 1945 The Daily News (Perth, WA) |
Washington, Mon -The first atomic bomb
ever used in warfare, with a blasting power greater than 20,000 tons of
T.N.T. and 2000 times greater than that of the largest bomb used up to
now, has been dropped on Japan. Target chosen was the port and
ordnance centre of Hiroshima, which had a population of 318,000. After the bomb fell, an impenetrable
pall of dust and smoke cloaked the city. Until this clears, the world will not
know what shattered devastation and ruin this frightful new weapon wrought at
what was Hiroshima. But when a test was made last month in
the New Mexico desert, the terrific force of the explosion
jarred windows in homes as far distant as southern Arizona, the next
State. At Albuqerque,
120 miles away, when the flash from the test explosion lit the sky, a blind
girl, before the explosion could be heard, asked "What was that?"
Said President Truman, who last night announced the use of the
bomb: "The Japanese may now expect a rain of ruin from the air the like
of which has never been seen on earth." "We are now prepared to
obliterate completely every productive enterprise the Japanese have above
ground in any city. We shall completely destroy Japan's
power to make war." President Truman said that the
discovery of the atomic bomb might open the way for an entirely new concept
of force and power. He forecast that sea and land forces would
follow up this attack in numbers and power which the Japanese had never be- fore
seen. Office of War Information has already
begun broadcasting President Truman's statement to Japan from San
Francisco, Hawaii and Saipan. Statement will also be included
in leaflets dropped over Japan. Correspondents predict that the Allies
will now give Japan another ultimatum of surrender or be destroyed. Scientists have been working since 1939,
at a cost of more than £650, 000,000, in both Britain and America in
what President Truman called the greatest scientific gamble in history. Race With Nazis It was a race
with German scientists, who also were working feverishly to discover a way to
use atomic energy. Said Winston Churchill: ''By God's
mercy British and American science outpaced all German efforts. Possession of these powers by the
Germans might at any time have altered the result of the war." In his statement, which was writ ten
while he was Prime Minister and which was released by Prime Minister Attlee
last night, Mr Churchill said that every effort was made by the
Intelligence and air force to locate in German-occupied Europe anything
resembling the atom-bomb plants which the Allies were building in
America. In the winter of 1942-43,
gallant attacks were made by British commandos and Norwegian forces upon stores
of what was called "heavy water" - an element in one of the possible
atom-bomb processes. The second of these attacks,
which were made at heavy cost of life, was completely successful.
Allied plants were established in America
as Britain could not afford interference with her current munitions
programme and because Britain was within easy range of enemy bombers.
Up to that time parallel progress had
been made in experiments by British and American scientists working in
cooperation. Canadian Government provided an indispensable
raw material and the facilities for a section of the work which was
carried out in Canada. 'Manhattan
Project' "Manhattan project" was the
name under which the atomic bomb was produced. Those two words magically conjured up
needed materials, however scarce, as well as the manpower to carry
out the vast research. "Manhattan project" whispered
into the right ears meant the highest priorities for materials and
manpower. Thousands knew of the "Manhattan project"
but few knew more than that it was a super-secret. Scores of universities and scientific
laboratories had a part in the work. They were assigned to one problem
at a time, providing the answers without knowing where their work was
ultimately leading. Army officers who carried even
the smallest bits of information about the "Manhattan project"
moved with the briefcases chained to their wrists and often with a guard
of ten. Releasing details of the years of work,
War Secretary Stimson said that a group of British scientists transferred
to America in 1943. In addition, one of Denmark's great
scientists, Dr Neils Bohr, was whisked from
the grasp of the Nazis in Denmark and later helped in the bomb's
development. A vast excluded area was established
at Richland in Washington State comprising 15 townships and half a
million, acres, every acre of which was purchased by the Government. Richland chemical plants are the most
remarkable ever designed. Enormous quantities of materials are
handled through many successive processes with no human eye ever seeing
what actually goes on except through a complicated series of dials and
panels enabling the operators to maintain perfect control of
every single operation at all times. Operations are performed in remote
cells and when each is completed the treated material invisibly moves on
to the next cell until the process ends, when the material Desert
Experiment emerges ready for the next stage at other plants. Age of atomic force was ushered in when
a group of renowned scientists and military leaders assembled in New
Mexico Desert to witness experiments. The test took place on July 17 at Alamogordo
air base where a small amount of the matter which was the product of a
chain of plants was made to release the energy which has been
locked up within the atom from time's beginning. Final assembly of the atomic bomb began
on July 12 in an old ranch house where the various components were
put together. One false move would have blasted
the scientists and their efforts into eternity. On July 14 the unit which was to determine
the success or failure of the entire project was elevated to the top
of a steel tower. All that day and the next preparations
went on. Nearest look-out point was established 10,000 yards from the steel tower
and key figures in the experiment took up positions ten miles away. They were instructed to lie down with
their heads away from the blast. At the appointed time there was a blinding
flash which lit up the whole area brighter than the brightest daylight. A mountain range three miles from
the observation point stood out in bold relief. Then came a
tremendous sustained roar and a heavy pressure wave which knocked down
two men outside the control centre. Immediately after that a huge multi-coloured
surging cloud boiled to an altitude exceeding 40,000 feet. The test was over. "Manhattan project"
was a success. The steel tower had been entirely
vaporised. Where the tower had stood there
was a huge sloping crater. Scientists, dazed but relieved, promptly
marshalled their forces to estimate the strength of the new weapon. Major-General Leslie Groves, head of
atomic bomb project, said: "First came a burst of light of a brilliance beyond
any comparison. We all rolled over and looked through
dark glasses at the ball of fire. "About 40 seconds later came the shock
wave, followed by the sound." Sixty-five thousand people are now working
in plants for producing atomic power. British Research Mr Churchill's
statement says that the early (1939) British research into the
possibilities of an atomic bomb was carried out mainly at Oxford, Cambridge,
London, Liverpool and Birmingham Universities. Ministry of Aircraft Production was
advised on it by a scientific committee headed by Sir George
Thomson. By the summer of 1941 the
committee was able to report that there was a reasonable chance of
the atomic bomb being produced before the end of the war. General responsibility for directing
the research was later given to then Lord President of the Council Sir
John Anderson. In 1942 it was decided to proceed with the construction of large-scale production
plants in America and a number of British scientists went there to
assist. "It is now for Japan to realise in
the glare of the first atomic bomb which has smitten her
what the consequences will be of indefinite continuance of this
terrible means of maintaining the rule of law in the world,"
Mr Churchill said. "This revelation of the secrets
of nature, long mercifully withheld from man, should arouse the
most solemn reflections in the minds and consciences of every human
being capable of comprehension. "We must indeed pray that these awful
agencies will conduce to peace among nations and that, instead of wreaking
measureless havoc upon the entire globe, they may become a perennial
fountain of world prosperity.” |