Wednesday, May 6, 2020

The Atomic Bomb Of Hiroshima Japan - 1862 Words

Dawn, August 6th 1944. A lone bomber flies over the skies of Hiroshima Japan. Seconds later it releases what will later become of the worlds most feared and dangerous weapons of all time, the Atomic Bomb. The bomb turns the city of Hiroshima into a wasteland of death and destruction. A few days later another more powerful bomb is dropped on Nagasaki Japan. This one flattens the city and kills at least Ninety thousand people. A few days later Japan surrenders ending the costliest and bloodiest war in the history of mankind. Four years later the Soviet Union has appeared to have acquired plans for an atomic bomb, in the summer of 1949 the Soviet Union detonates its first atomic bomb, opening up the Nuclear Arms Race . In 1947 two†¦show more content†¦In 1953 the Leader of the Soviet Union, Joseph Stalin, died. His successor was a powerful man call Nikita Khrushchev. Khrushchev started the buildup of nuclear weapons this was the start of the nuclear arms race in which both the USSR and the US stockpiled nuclear warheads in the event of war. The arms race created a fear of a nuclear war to the American people. In fear of this the US Military increased its defense efforts and by the late sixties the US was fully prepared nation. The US Military built places like the Greenbrier Bunker, NORAD , the fort Knox vault and many other places in the event of a nuclear war. Throughout the Cold War, these places in the US were deemed vital to national security as they were important places that were to be used in the event of a cold war. Places like these were kept top secret until very recently, this subject of the Greenbrier bunker is on that very few know of and that is not often spoken o f but if it was not for these places many of the nation’s most valuable assets along with many important officials would have been gone in the their time of need. As the Cold war escalated with the USSR exploding the Hydrogen Bomb. A wave of fear hit the US in the fifties. This caused a spark of panic in the American people, even though the fifties was known as an era of grown and urban renewal. As the fear of atomic

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