To view prices and purchase online, please login or create an account now.



Fallout: Conspiracy, Cover-Up and the Deceitful Case for the Atom Bomb

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Fallout: Conspiracy, Cover-Up and the Deceitful Case for the Atom Bomb
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Peter Watson
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:432
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 153
Category/GenreWorld history
History of specific subjects
ISBN/Barcode 9781471164491
ClassificationsDewey:355.021709
Audience
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Edition Export/Airside
Illustrations 1x 8pp plate B-W; 1x 8pp plate B-W

Publishing Details

Publisher Simon & Schuster Ltd
Imprint Simon & Schuster Ltd
Publication Date 20 September 2018
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Between December 1943 and August 1944, Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Winston Churchill ignited the Cold War, a superpower rivalry that would dominate the world over half a century, by building an atomic bomb and excluding their Russian allies. Peter Watson tells the pulse-pounding story of how two atomic physicists tried to counter this in two very different ways. While Niels Bohr sought to convince President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill to share their nuclear knowledge with Joseph Stalin, nuclear scientist Klaus Fuchs, a German Communist emigre to Britain, was leaking atomic secrets to the Soviets in a rival attempt to ensure parity between the superpowers. Neither succeeded in preventing the World War II allies from unleashing the atom bomb on the world. Fallout proves that the atomic bomb was not needed, and was made as a result of a series of flawed decisions. The Americans did not tell the UK that the atomic research was compromised by Soviet spies; the British did not tell the Americans that in 1943 they knew for sure that Germany did not have a nuclear bomb program. Neither country admitted to the scientists developing the bomb that it would never be used to counter the (non-existent) German nuclear threat. Had the scientists known, many of them would have refused to complete work on the bomb. This story shows how politicians fatally failed to understand the nature of atomic science and, in so doing, exposed the world needlessly to great danger, a danger that is still very much with us.

Author Biography

Peter Watson is an intellectual historian, journalist, and the author of thirteen books, including Convergence; Ideas: A History; The Age of Atheists; The German Genius; The Medici Conspiracy; and The Great Divide. He has written for The Sunday Times, The New York Times, the Observer, and the Spectator. He lives in London.