Heisenberg's War: The Secret History of the German BombOne of the Most important - and controversial - aspects of the history of the Second World War is the failure of the Germans to build an atomic bomb. Germany was the birthplace of modern physics; it possessed the raw materials and the industrial base, and although many leading scientists fled from Hitler, it still commanded key intellectual resources. Yet at the end of the war the Germans had no bomb, and their nuclear research program was found to be negligible. What happened? Until now the conventional view has been that the Germans doubted that the bomb could be built, and were thus unwilling to try. In Heisenberg's War, Thomas Powers offers a radically new and convincing explanation - and in doing so reveals for the first time the entire complex fascinating story of the interplay between science and espionage, morality aid military necessity, paranoia and cool logic, that marked the German bomb program and the Allied response to it. It is a story that revolves around some of the most famous scientists of our time: Niels Bohr, Robert Oppenheimer, Victor Weisskopf, Hans Bethe, Otto Hahn, and, most important the great Werner Heisenberg, one of the twentieth century's principal scientific minds and the only physicist of his stature to stay on in Nazi Germany. We see these men engrossed not only by the enormous challenge of understanding atomic energy; but also by the exigencies of ethics and wartime intelligence, engaging in plots and activities that would have shocked them under other circumstances. Secret messages, dangerous misunderstandings, undercover missions, increasingly panicky efforts by the Americans and the British to find out what the Germans were up to, even an Americanplan to have Heisenberg assassinated by an OSS gunman (an ex-major league baseball player) in Switzerland in 1944 - all these play a part in Powers's dramatic narrative. Pieced together after years of documentary research and dozens of interviews with surviving participants, told with style and authority, Heisenberg's War is an extraordinary combination of spy story and serious historical investigation. It will stand as the definitive account of a deeply significant chapter in modern history. |
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Alamos Allied Amaldi American April Ardenne Army asked atomic bomb August Bagge Berg Berg's Berlin Bethe Bohr's build a bomb Bush cable Copenhagen December Diebner discussed Donovan effort Eifler Farm Hall Fermi files fission Friedrich von Weizsäcker Gerlach German German Atomic Bomb German bomb program German scientists Groves Groves's Hans Bethe Haxel heavy water Hechingen Heisen Hitler Houtermans institute interview with Heisenberg Irving interview January Jensen John Lansdale Joliot-Curie June Kaiser Wilhelm Karl Wirtz knew laboratory Lansdale later London Max von Laue Meitner military months Munich Nazi neutrons never Niels Bohr November nuclear research October Oppenheimer Oppenheimer's Otto Hahn papers Pash Pauli physics Planck question reactor Reiche Rjukan Robert Furman Rosbaud Rozental Samuel Goudsmit Scherrer scientific secret senberg September Speer Switzerland Szilard talk thought told uranium Uranium Machines Uranverein Victor Weisskopf wanted wartime Washington weapon weeks Werner Heisenberg wrote Zurich