It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by surfup
One was dropped on Hiroshima and another one on Nagasaki, and another one test in New Mexico.
Did the U.S. have a nuke at disposal when they threatened Japan to nuke Tokyo if they did not surrender?
Not sure of another nuke, but the Soviets were advancing on the Japanese as well and they had their backs up against the wall. They had to surrender.
Originally posted by surfup
Not sure of another nuke, but the Soviets were advancing on the Japanese as well and they had their backs up against the wall. They had to surrender.
I remember seeing a Japenese video showing that the common people were getting ready to fight off the Japs with forks and knives, doubt they would have surrendered.
Back to the question: So U.S. gambled on Japan surrendering and won?
Originally posted by Aero
Towards the end of World War two the communist Soviet Union had eyes on invading Japan with American aid. The Soviets were dedicated to invading main Japan on an August 8th date We had defeated the main threat in Europe and now had to deal with a people who would never surrender as long as there was a threat to their emperor who they believed to be divine or divinely chosen. America with two nuclear bombs and President Harry Truman did not want the Soviet Union to have anything to do with reconstructing Japan, or anything else as is evident by the Truman Doctrine And the name of the game at this point was beating the Soviets to the Japanese mainland.
Originally posted by surfup
I was wondering if anyone knew to what extent did Albert Einstein participate in the Manhattan Project or if he even participated in the project.
I remember him sending a letter to FDR that the Nazis have successfully completed atmoic fission of uranium, which is the first part toward creating the atom bomb, but did he help in the Manhattan project?