Sunday, 28 December 2025

Today in History: Top-secret Manhattan Project quietly approved.

Extract from ABC News

Nagasaki

The atomic bombs that were dropped over the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were developed in the top secret Manhattan Project.    (Reuters)

Last year, the New York Times investigated an overlooked question — how did the Roosevelt administration pay for the $US2 billion top-secret project without Congress noticing? 

There was no debate when Congress voted to fund the bomb; in fact, only seven lawmakers in the entire Congress "had any idea that they were approving $US800 million — the equivalent of $US13.6 billion today — to create a weapon of mass destruction that would soon kill and maim more than 200,000 people".

The bomb is tested

In April 1945, Roosevelt died and was replaced by his vice president, Harry Truman, who was then briefed about the secret plan to build a powerful nuclear weapon.

The glow of a nuclear blast.

The detonation of the world's first nuclear weapon, known as the Trinity test and part of the Manhattan Project. Photo taken July 16, 1945. (US Department of Energy: Jack Aeby)

Two months later, the project culminated in a test known as Trinity — the first detonation of a nuclear weapon. 

Although the Manhattan Project was top secret, the explosion would be heard and seen for hundreds of kilometres, so the plutonium bomb, like the "Fat Man" bomb that eventually dropped on Nagasaki, was detonated in the Jornada del Muerto desert in New Mexico. 

The second type of atomic bomb developed in the program was an enriched uranium gun-type fission weapon, like the "Little Boy" dropped on the city of Hiroshima.

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