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E-grāmata: First Atomic Bomb: An Alternate History of the Ending of WW2

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  • Formāts: 248 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 20-Jun-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Frontline Books
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781399009843
  • Formāts - PDF+DRM
  • Cena: 10,63 €*
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  • Formāts: 248 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 20-Jun-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Frontline Books
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781399009843

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While German and Japanese scientists also labored unsuccessfully to create an atomic bomb, by the summer of 1945, the American-led team was ready to test its first weapon.

While German and Japanese scientists also labored unsuccessfully to create an atomic bomb, by the summer of 1945, the American-led team was ready to test its first weapon. As the clock ticked down to the detonation time of 05.30 hours on 16 July 1945, the nervous team of technicians and scientists waited ten miles away from ‘Ground Zero’ deep in the New Mexico desert. No one knew how powerful the explosion would be or whether even at such a distance they would be safe from the blast. Even so, some chose to observe the detonation from a point four miles nearer at the control bunker; but then no one was even sure that the bomb would work.What if that is actually what happened? Under schedule pressure from the White House, the scientists assembled the device in part with tape and tissue paper, knowing some components were flawed. These are verifiable facts. It means that, as many of those who gathered in the New Mexico desert feared at the time, the bomb might not have worked during that first test.In The First Atomic Bomb, Jim Mangi explores what might happened in the event that the world’s first atomic bomb had not been ready for use when it was. How would this have affected the end of the war in the Pacific, and indeed the Second World War as a whole? Would Emperor Hirohito’s armed forces have battled on? When might Colonel Paul W. Tibbets, at the controls of his Boeing B-24 Superfortress Enola Gay have then made his historic flight over Hiroshima – and would that city even have remained the target? How would Stalin and the Soviets have reacted to such developments, and how would this have played out in the post-war world?
List of Illustrations
vii
List of Maps
xi
Preface xv
PART I THE END OF THE PACIFIC WAR
Chapter 1 The Long Drive, 16 July 1945
3(14)
Chapter 2 Wartime Nuclear Geopolitics
17(6)
Chapter 3 The Trinity Test, 16 July 1945
23(6)
Chapter 4 Potsdam, 16-19 July
29(2)
Chapter 5 Los Alamos, 17-23 July
31(6)
Chapter 6 Washington, 17-25 July
37(8)
Chapter 7 Potsdam, 24-26 July
45(14)
Chapter 8 Los Alamos, Late July-Early August
59(6)
Chapter 9 The Japanese Empire, Mid-August
65(12)
Chapter 10 Japan, Mid-August
77(4)
Chapter 11 Japan, Late August
81(6)
Chapter 12 Washington, Late August
87(4)
Chapter 13 Soviet Far Eastern Command, Late August
91(6)
Chapter 14 Washington - Occupation Planning
97(4)
Chapter IS Tokyo - Last Resistance
101(10)
Chapter 16 Asian Mainland, August-September
111(8)
PART II PACIFIC WAR AFTERMATH: NORTHEAST ASIA
Chapter 17 Occupied Japan
119(6)
Chapter 18 Hokkaido, 1945-1946
125(4)
Chapter 19 US-Occupied Japan, 1945-1946
129(8)
Chapter 20 Hokkaido, 1947
137(4)
Chapter 21 South Japan From 1948
141(6)
Chapter 22 Korea From 1945
147(6)
Chapter 23 China
153(4)
Chapter 24 Revisiting Stalin's Far Eastern Actions
157(4)
Chapter 25 The United States, 1948
161(6)
PART III PACIFIC WAR AFTERMATH: SOUTHEAST ASIA
Chapter 26 Vietnam, 1945-1946
167(10)
Chapter 27 Vietnam and the French, 1947-1948
177(10)
Chapter 28 Vietnam and China, 1949
187(10)
Chapter 29 Vietnam and the UN, 1950
197(10)
Chapter 30 Vietnam and the US, 1950-1952
207(4)
Chapter 31 The Indochina Python, 1950-1952
211(14)
Chapter 32 Declaring Victory, 1952-1953
225(4)
Chapter 33 Presidential Transition, 1952-1953
229(4)
Chapter 34 Settlement, 1953-1956
233(8)
Chapter 35 Retrospective Speculation
241(10)
What Really Happened 251(10)
References Cited 261(14)
Index 275
After somewhat accidentally volunteering for, and serving in Vietnam, JIM MANGI earned a PhD in ecology and spent 40 years in the professional What If? business. The consulting firm he built traced the effects of planned projects on the environment and communities. Besides civil projects like power plants and factories, he worked on military projects ranging from battle tanks, to combat aircraft, to ICBM's and space vehicles, some of which he can talk about. Jim now lives in Michigan, USA where he chairs Dementia Friendly Saline and is a caregiver for his wife.