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Brotherhood of the Bomb

Page 65

by Gregg Herken


  proposal regarding renunciation of Super

  proposal to share atomic energy information with

  recruiting Americans

  Sputnik launch

  State Defense Committee

  and superbomb

  test-ban

  thermonuclear warheads

  Spanish Loyalists

  Special Committee on the Los Alamos Project (Univ. of Calif.)

  Special Study Group in Air Force Intelligence

  Spiers, Ron

  spies

  Bay Area

  Canada

  Los Alamos

  in nuclear weapons program

  Oppenheimer in plot (alleged)

  targets for

  see also espionage

  Sproul, Robert Gordon

  and army contract(s)

  army-navy E award

  and contracts with AEC

  and loyalty oath

  and Oppenheimer reinvestigation

  recruiting Oppenheimer

  Sputnik

  spy hearings

  staged bomb (H-bomb)

  Stalin, Joseph

  Starbird, Alfred

  Stassen, Harold

  State Department

  Communists in

  Panel of Consultants on Disarmament

  and test-ban proposal

  Stettinius, Edward

  Stevenson, Adlai

  Stimson, Henry

  approach to Russia

  Stone, Robert

  Stone and Webster (co.)

  Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI)/“Star Wars”

  Strauss, Lewis

  AEC chairman

  and case against Oppenheimer

  and clean bomb

  critics of

  and espionage

  fight against communism

  Lawrence and

  and Los Alamos spy (“second Fuchs”)

  and moratorium idea

  obsession with Oppenheimer

  and Oppenheimer

  and Oppenheimer hearing

  recording AEC meetings

  report on Oppenheimer hearing

  and Russian atomic bomb

  and second lab

  special assistant for atomic energy

  and the Super

  and test ban

  Strong, George

  submarine

  ballistic missiles

  nuclear

  “Super” (the)/superbomb

  charge that Oppenheimer delayed

  espionage involving

  ethical argument against

  GAC and

  inability to stop

  international control of

  Livermore

  new (radiation implosion)

  Oppenheimer opposed

  opposition to

  postwar research

  presentation on status of (1943)

  progress toward

  proponents of

  prospects of

  secrets of, compromised

  showdown over

  simulating explosion of hypothetical

  Teller’s work on

  Truman’s decision to go ahead with

  uncertainties regarding

  as way to recover U.S. hegemony

  work on

  “Super-Gadget Program”

  “Super Handbook”

  Synchrotron

  Szilard, Leo

  appeal not to use atomic bomb

  Task Force on Nuclear Inspection

  see also Project Alpine

  Tatlock, Jean

  Teapot series (nuclear tests)

  technical surveillance (tesur)

  Teeple, David

  Teller, Edward

  and atomic bomb tests

  briefs Pentagon officials on H-bomb

  and control of atomic energy

  and disarmament panel

  effect of Oppenheimer case on

  FBI interview with (1952)

  H-bomb concept

  and Hiroshima bombing

  history of H-bomb project

  hydride bomb

  hydrogen bomb

  and implosion design (Los Alamos)

  Joint Committee interview (1950)

  at Los Alamos

  at Livermore

  and loyalty oath

  and Mike test

  and moratorium idea

  and Oppenheimer hearing

  and Oppenheimer’s loyalty

  and politics

  postwar activities

  resignation from Los Alamos

  return to Los Alamos

  “Russian Atomic Plan, The”

  and second lab

  seeking vindication

  and security strictures

  and Soviet bomb

  and the Super

  and test ban

  thermonuclear research

  and use of atomic bomb

  x-ray laser

  Tennessee Eastman Corporation

  Tennessee Valley Authority

  Tenney, Jack

  Tenney Committee

  Tesla (test)

  test ban

  Livermore and

  making permanent

  opposition to

  violation of

  test-ban talks

  test-ban treaty

  tests/testing

  atomic bomb

  cheating on

  clean bomb

  control over

  detecting

  end of

  Fat Man

  Little Boy

  Livermore

  moratorium on

  safety of

  Soviet

  thermonuclear

  underground

  Theoretical Megaton Group (Los Alamos)

  thermonuclear reactions

  atomic explosion triggering

  thermonuclear research/tests

  thermonuclear weapons

  Thin Man

  Thomas, J. Parnell

  threshold test ban

  Tichvinsky, Leo

  Tinian Island

  Tolman, Richard

  Committee on Postwar Policy (Tolman Committee)

  Top Policy Group

  Trinity (gadget)

  Trinity (test)

  tritium

  production of

  see also Benicia Laboratory

  Truman, Harry

  atomic monopoly

  containment policy

  and control of atomic energy

  election victory

  and Fuchs spy scandal

  ignorance of H-bomb

  postwar policy

  and Soviet atomic bomb

  and the Super

  Turk (test)

  Tuve, Merle

  U-235

  critical mass

  enriched

  fissionability of

  from gaseous diffusion

  production of

  shipped to Los Alamos

  U-238

  Ulam, Stanislaw

  Underhill, Robert

  United Nations

  University of California

  army alliance with/funding

  Civil Engineering Testing Laboratory (Rad Lab)

  contracts with AEC

  Faculty Club

  LeConte Hall

  Oppenheimer at

  Personnel Security Boards

  security concerns

  Soviet spy ring at

  University Hospital

  see also Berkeley

  University of California (UCLA)

  University of Chicago

  Midway Laboratory

  University of Minnesota

  uranium

  atom splitting

  for bomb

  contaminants added to (denaturing)

  critical mass

  moratorium on publication about

  shipped to Los Alamos

  in superbomb

  uranium, enriched/enrichment

  given to Russians
/>
  production of

  uranium bomb

  Uranium Committee (Briggs)

  uranium gun

  see also Little Boy

  uranium separation

  electromagnetic method

  facility for

  Urey, Harold

  vacuum tube technology/tubes

  Van Vleck, John

  Vandenberg, Hoyt

  Veksler, V. I.

  Velde, Harold

  Vinograd, Jerome

  Volpe, Joseph

  Von Kármán, Theodore

  von Neumann, John

  W-47

  Walker, John

  Wallace, Henry

  Wallace Plan

  Walter, James

  Weapons Development Committee (Los Alamos)

  Weapons Effects Handbook

  Weaver, Warren

  Weinberg, Joseph (“Joe”)

  case against

  in Communist Party

  identified

  investigation of

  and Oppenheimer hearing

  optics research

  Weinberg case

  trial

  Wheeler, John

  Wheeler incident

  White, Harry Dexter (Richard)

  Whitson, Lish

  Wick, Gian Carlo

  Wideröe, Rolf

  Wigner, Eugene

  Wilkes, Dan

  Wilson, Carroll

  Wilson, Charles

  Wilson, Robert

  Wilson Tract

  Wood, John

  Wood, R. W.

  Y-12 (Oak Ridge)

  postwar

  shutting down Calutrons

  York, Herbert

  clean bomb

  at Livermore

  test ban

  Young Communist League

  Zindel, Harold

  Zubilin, Vassili (Maxim)

  Zuckert, Eugene

  Zuni (test)

  Also by Gregg Herken

  The Winning Weapon: The Atomic Bomb in the Cold War, 1945–1950

  Counsels of War

  Cardinal Choices: Presidential Science Advising from the Atomic Bomb to SDI

  Praise for Brotherhood of the Bomb

  “Herken writes with an assurance that enables him to cover a lot of ground swiftly, and to paint the political and scientific landscape in bold strokes.… The story is well-crafted and meticulously researched, drawing on recently declassified FBI files and documents, and it moves at a helter-skelter pace.… A gripping account of three tangled lives.”

  —Jennet Conant, The Washington Post Book World

  “Immensely readable … a well-written, well-documented, exciting and yet unhappy tale of a crucial encounter between science and politics.”

  —David Holloway, Los Angeles Times

  “Authoritative … Herken deftly guides us through the scientific-governmental and political-military thicket, explaining how key decisions were made.”

  —Roger Bishop, Bookpage

  “The power of science and technology is the pivotal story of our times. A bright light is cast on the practical and moral issues by this joint biography of the three physicists most prominent in the rise of nuclear weapons. After half a century, much information once secret has emerged, and Herken has done a thorough job of scouring the archives and contacting witnesses. With his combination of deep research and lively writing, Herken has given us the definitive telling of the story of these extraordinary men in all their conflicts and sad triumphs.”

  —Spencer Weart, director, AIP Center for History of Physics

  “Herken brings to life a whole world of intrigue, ambition and political passions of every variety.… [It is] smoothly written and notable for its lucid scientific expositions and nice use of human touches … a fresh and original work with much to tell us about the fearsome weapon whose creation, funding and deployment had major social and economic consequences that we live with today.”

  —Wendy Smith, Newsweek

  “A complete and compelling narrative of the advent of weapons of mass destruction.”

  —Science News

  “Meticulous and authoritative … might supercede every previous account. A work in league with Richard Rhodes’ Dark Star.”

  —Gilbert Taylor, Booklist

  “Gregg Herken has written a fine human history of how Lawrence, Teller, and Oppenheimer worked and argued together, and he brings to life the dozen years when they led the world into the nuclear age.”

  —Tom Powers, author of Heisenberg’s War: The Secret History of the German Bomb and The Man Who Kept the Secrets: Richard Helms and the CIA

  “Exceptionally detailed and thoroughly researched … an extraordinary and revealing examination of the people and atomic issues during and after World War II told with vivid, fast-paced flair … an absorbing history of a perilous time, a political thriller and a moral lesson for the future.”

  —David Perlman, San Francisco Chronicle

  “Detailed, engrossing … If there was ever a question that politics plays a part in science, this book washes away any doubts.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “The dramatic story of physicists who put science at the service of the state, with momentous results for themselves and the world … Thoughtful and important.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  “In this engaging and wonderfully researched book, Gregg Herken unveils a new dimension in the American saga of the nuclear scientists who created the world’s first atomic and hydrogen bombs. Here is a suspenseful history of how three brilliant minds overcame daunting obstacles in a time of world crisis. Yet it is not always a pretty story. It is full of troubling insights on Oppenheimer’s flirtation with the Communist Party, Lawrence’s scientific empire-building, and Teller’s compulsion to build bigger and bigger bombs. A timely and thoughtful book.”

  —Joseph Albright, coauthor of Bombshell: The Secret Story of America’s Unknown Atomic Spy Conspiracy

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  GREGG HERKEN is a senior historian and curator at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space Museum and previously taught at Oberlin College, Yale University, and Caltech. He is the author of The Winning Weapon, Counsels of War, and Cardinal Choices. Herken received a MacArthur research and writing grant for Brotherhood of the Bomb and in 1984–85 was detailed as a senior research and policy analyst to the President’s Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments, as a result of some of the discoveries he made researching this book. He and his family live in Alexandria, Virginia.

  Owl Books

  Henry Holt and Company, LLC

  Publishers since 1866

  175 Fifth Avenue

  New York, New York 10010

  www.henryholt.com

  An Owl Book® and ® are registered trademarks of Henry Holt and Company, LLC.

  Copyright © 2002 by Gregg Herken

  All rights reserved.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Herken, Gregg, 1947–.

  Brotherhood of the bomb : the tangled lives and loyalties of Robert Oppenheimer, Ernest Lawrence, and Edward Teller / Gregg Herken.—1st ed.

  p. cm.

  Includes bibliographical references and index.

  ISBN-13: 978-0-8050-6589-3

  ISBN-10: 0-8050-6589-X

  1. Oppenheimer, J. Robert, 1904–1967. 2. Lawrence, Ernest Orlando, 1901–1958. 3. Teller, Edward, 1908–. 4. Physicists—United States—Biography. 5. Atomic bomb—United States—History—20th century. 6. Nuclear physics—United States—History—20th century. I. Title.

  QC16.O62 H47 2002

  539.7'092'273—dc21

  [B]

  2002017219

  First published in hardcover in 2002 by Henry Holt and Company

  First Owl Books Edition 2003

  A John Macrae / Owl Book

  eISBN 9781466851559

  First eBook edition: July 2013

  * Oppenheimer’s nickname varied a
ccording to time, place, and associates. It was “Opje” while he was a postdoc in Holland, later becoming “Oppy” or “Oppie” when he moved to California. The J at the beginning of his name was given to him at birth by his father, Julius. The initial did not stand for anything, and Oppenheimer rarely used it as an adult. His wife, Kitty, tried—but failed—to get friends to address him as “Robert.”

  * Hamilton later achieved notoriety as the physician who oversaw secret human radiation experiments at University Hospital, where three patients were injected with plutonium between 1945 and 1947. Although these experiments were funded by the wartime Manhattan Project and its successor, the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, Hamilton’s apparent intent was to identify so-called magic bullets—radioisotopes that would concentrate selectively in different organs—for eventual therapeutic use.

  * Wrote Chevalier in a subsequent, fictional account of his friendship with Oppenheimer: “No amount of casuistry, however, could eradicate the fact that in joining the Communist Party, as in taking holy orders or in committing murder, one entered a world that separated one from all those who did not belong to the brotherhood.… [i]t was a world of passion, of dedication and sacrifice, and it bore the future darkly in its womb.”

  * “For, on lustful kings, / Unlook’d-for, sudden deaths from heaven are sent, / But curs’d is he who is their instrument.”

  The quotation was from the finale of The Maid’s Tragedy, a play written in 1622 by Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher, English poets who were contemporaries of Donne. It was vintage Oppie.

  * In pencil at the bottom, Oppenheimer added this partial disclaimer: “I have endeavored to make this list complete. It includes all organizations to which I now belong. It does not include so-called sponsorships. It includes all past memberships I can remember. I believe it to be accurate.”

  * Perhaps anticipating that he would have trouble with the temperamental Hungarian, Oppie invited Edward and his wife, Mici, to Eagle Hill near the seminar’s end. Nearly sixty years later, Teller remembered that Oppenheimer found his house gift—a recording of Mozart’s Piano Concerto in E-flat Major, one of Edward’s favorites—“uninteresting,” and that Oppie predicted only the atomic bomb would be able to dislodge Hitler from Europe.

  * Underhill was not told the secret for another year; Sproul probably learned sometime after that. One evening in November 1943, Underhill was summoned to LeConte by Lawrence, who made a show of locking the door and drawing the blinds. “We practically crawled under the desk,” Underhill later remembered. “Do you know what they’re doing down there?” Lawrence asked. Underhill confessed his ignorance and became an initiate. The regents’ representative was also told that he was never to divulge the secret to Sproul, who had appalled Groves by speculating in a commencement address that the Rad Lab was developing a secret “death ray.”

 

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