WHAT THE ATOM BOMB WOULD DO TO US

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP64-00658A000100310002-2
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RIPPUB
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K
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4
Document Creation Date: 
November 17, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 11, 1999
Sequence Number: 
2
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Publication Date: 
May 1, 1946
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NSPR
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Approved For Release 2000/09/05 : CI - 64-00658A000100310002-2 Reader~lligest Many experts, scientific, medical and military, surveyed the damage at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Among them were 114 technicians of the U. S. Strategic Bombing Survey, who questioned, measured and took photographs bn the spot for periods up to two months. As a result of their elaborate studies, they can judge pretty accurately what such a bomb would do to cities elsewhere in the world. Unanimously, and An article a day of enduring significance, in condensed permanent booklet form 0 0 0 ~gaaa&* What the Atom Bomb By Robert Littell Would Do to US V HAT would have happened if one of the atomic bombs we dropped on Japan had been used on New York? Specifically, on the Empire State Building? I asked this question of Major General Thomas F. Farrell, who was second-in-command to Major Gen- eral Leslie R. Groves on the atomic- bomb project and officially inspected the catastrophic damage done to Hiroshima and Nagasaki. "If fused correctly," General Farrell said, "one of those bombs could blow the Em- pire State Building to hell. There might be a sort of stump left for a few floors above the ground, but it would be completely unlivable. And it's al- so quite possible, if actly where one wanted it to, that it would push the whole upper part of the Empire State Building right over." Not even one of our largest preatomic bombs could have done anything remotely comparable. often violently, the experts take issue with Major de Seversky's estimate* that, if dropped on New York or Chicago, one of these bombs would have done no more damage, and killed no more people, than a ten-ton blockbuster. And they believe 11 117 that Major de Sever- sky's article dangerously minimized the menace of atomic bombing and tended to lull people into a false sense of security at a critical time. *See "Atomic Bomb Hysteria," The Reader's Digest, February, '46. Approved For Release 2000/09/05 : CIA-RDP64-00658A000100310002-2 CPYRGHT App jpved For Release 2000/09TN: UA DP T58A000100310002-2 " Over Hiroshima and Nagasaki the bombs were purposely exploded rather high in the air, in order to subject as wide an area as possible to the crushing waves of pressure from the blast. The center of the explosion was perhaps 2ooo feet up the exact height is secret. Even at that distance from the explosion, some reinforced concrete buildings were totally destroyed, among them a prison with eight-inch walls. Other concrete buildings a little farther away had their upper stories bashed in. Multistory brick buildings were flattened out up to a mile; one-story brick buildings up to a mile and a half. At Nagasaki, factory chimneys were displaced, cracked or over- turned up to 4000 feet. Some bar- racks collapsed at four and a half miles. At seven miles, ten percent of the glass was broken. Some glass was broken up to 12 miles. When we raise our eyes to the proud towers of American city sky lines, it is easy to believe that they are far less vulnerable than the flimsy cities of the Japanese. It is easy to forget that nine tenths or more of even our greatest cities are composed of low brick, masonry or wooden buildings not much stronger than those which crumbled at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. General Farrell, now back at his former job as Chief Engineer of the New York State Department of Public Works, has been a construc- tion man for most of his distin- guished career. When I asked him to enlarge upon what would happen If a single in New York, he replied: atomic bomb were detonated at the right height above a typical New York City area, I believe that the radius of severe blast damage alone would be a mile or more." That means over three square miles of dwellings crushed or made unlivable for whatever inhabitants survived. But wouldn't our great office build- ings withstand the blast? With Dr. Philip Morrison, a physicist on the staff of the laboratory at Los Alamos, New Mexico, where the bomb was assembled, I sat gazing out on the canyon of a midtown New York street. "American skyscrapers," he said, "look stronger than they are. They are made of panel upon panel of brick and stone facing, each panel resting within a frame of steel. If an atomic bomb, Nagasaki model, went off in the air nearby, these buildings would shed their panels of facing as a tree sheds its leaves, killing or wounding the people inside, block- ing the streets with rubble. And if the bomb went off near enough the ground, the bricks and ,stone would become artillery." General Groves, in hearings be- fore Senator Brien McMahon's Spe- cial Committee on Atomic Energy, was asked what the bomb would do to Washington. "If dropped in the center of the Pentagon," he an- swered, "there wouldn't be any Pen- tagon left." And General Groves ought to know, for he supervised the Pentagon's construction. "If dropped in what would probably be the goal of any enemy," he went on, "so that Approved For Release 2000/09/05 : CIA-RDP64-00658A000100310002-2 Approved For Release Auu/ui ':` &Q- would destroy an area maybe two the offices of the Government, it miles in diameter." In other words, damage and kill enough people to make the Government of the United it would probably cause enough States put up a sign, "Closed for Re airs." "wildly exaggerated.' I-Ie was shocked Hiroshima and Nagasaki had been effects of the bombs dropped on taken place, and asserted that the In his Digest article, Major de Seversky refused to believe that a revolution in military science had by the contrast between what he set by the direct heat of the bomb. and secondary fires at that, not fires ties were caused by "fire, just fire" - ally intact"; the damage and casual- concrete buildings were "structur- could not have been "unusual," for twinkling of an eye." The blast matter had been "vaporized in the There was no "bald spot" where accounts had led him to expect. saw and what "hysterical" unofficial explode, at such a height as to flatten bomb was fused to explode, and did the result intended. The Hiroshima found so disappointing was precisely tion. The result Major de Seversky the. target and of Japanese construe- bomb was dropped after long calcu- lations based on detailed studies of reply, "So what? Fire may be no novelty, but it did the job. The To this last complaint the experts the maximum number of Japanese By exploding the bomb near the ground, such weird a ects as vapori- zation could have been produced, more concrete buildings could have been smashed, a small area could have been burned to a crisp by direct heat from the bomb. But that would have been wasteful, pointless. We were not out to create `bald spots' and other tonsorial effects on the Japanese landscape. We were out to end a war. And we did. With two bombs. If that won't impress Major de Seversky, then he's the kind of man who will find fault with dooms- day." Major de Seversky, the experts believe, viewed all too casually devas- tation which had caused an empire to surrender. They point out that apparently he did not see the long concrete school building, 2400 feet from zero point, with half of its two upper stories crushed in by the blast. Nor another building, down the con- crete walls of which diagonal zigzag cracks show how the whole structure suffered a gigantic push. He does not mention the 21 concrete build- ings close to the blast at Nagasaki, four of which were destroyed, ten of which were structurally damaged. His findings omit the fact that many Japanese buildings are more strongly built than any similar buildings in the United States, in order to with- stand frequent earthquakes. He saw flag poles, air-raid sirens and other frail objects undamaged by blast or heat, but he did not seethe 20 flag poles that were bent, or the paint, glazed by heat from the bomb's flash, on a gas tank 6500 feet from zero, Approved For Release 2000/09/05 : CIA-RDP64-00658A000100310002-2 CPYRG' M roved For Release 2000/09/0 J c - 6 4D-d&69WA0001003100. 02-2 or the scorched vegetation on hills 7000 feet from zero. Major de Seversky's opinion that if dropped on a large American city one of these bombs "would have done no more damage than a ten-ton blockbuster" seems to the experts grotesque on the face of it. Such a than five tons of TNT, while the atomic bomb released energies equal to the forces loosed by the explosion of 20,000 tons of TNT. I looked at the photograph of that ponderous Nagasaki school with in at 2400 feet, and asked General "A blockbuster," he said, "is by definition a bomb that can `bust' a whole city block. That's four acres. Let's be generous and assume that in a typical low-building area and `busted' or severely damaged 16 acres. That's one 4oth of a square mile. If detonated on the ground among the same kind of buildings, an atomic bomb - speaking conserv- atively-would do at least 8o times as much damage as a blockbuster; if exploded at the proper height in the air, at least 120 times as much." Dr. Morrison thought the atomic bomb would do at least i oo times, per- haps 300 or a thousand times, as much Bowman, a civil engineer on the staff of the USSBS, put the atomic bomb at 100 to 200 times more effective flimsy Hiroshima. aaul . i ze, vice chairman of the USSBS, con- sidered Major de Seversky's' state- ment "completely out of the realm of any reasonable relationship." In contrast with the thousands of man-hours of investigation and cal- culation by the 114 USSBS experts in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Major de Seversky admits that he made no calculations, and was in each city two days, "not time enough, of course," as he told the Senate Com- mittee, for "a detailed study." Major de Seversky's article urged us to make our decisions "without doing violence to ascertainable facts." The experts reply that Major de Seversky is himself guilty of doing violence to the facts, and that mis- information on the subject of the atomic bomb is peculiarly dangerous. For if the Hiroshima bomb would - as he said - do an American city no more harm than a blockbuster, we can afford to shrink our fears down from their nightmare size, and crawl back under the eiderdown of fatuous. complacency, and be less determined to fashion a world in which this fearful weapon will be controlled by global law. "There are men living who know how to make a single bomb as destruc- tive as a million ten-ton blockbusters. One such bomb, dropped on Washing- ton or any other major city, may be expected to destroy its buildings utterly and wipe out its population."-Dr. Ed- ward U. Condon, consultant on the bomb project and Director of the Na- tional Bureau of Standards. Printed In U.S.A. Approved-Fuse-2000109105 . Ct B~ 658A000100316602-z