РефератыИностранный языкAtAtomic Power Keeps The World O Essay

Atomic Power Keeps The World O Essay

, Research Paper


Atomic Power Keeps the World on the Brink


It was 1945 and World War II was in full swing. Bombs


were falling all over Europe, destruction was


everywhere, and Nazi death camps were running at full


speed attempting to exterminate the Jewish population


and others deemed undesirable. Japan s bombing of


Pearl Harbor, four years earlier, had forced the United


States to end its isolationist practices and join the


battle. In the secret labs of Los Alamos there lurked a


new weapon. At this lab scientists were working


feverishly to complete what would become the most


destructive and potent weapon the Earth had ever seen,


the atomic bomb. Not only would this bomb end the final


stage of World War II but it also set the world on a


dangerous path to see who could create and amass the


most powerful arsenal of weapons. The effects of this


would be far reaching and would create an uneasy aura of


anxiety that permeated through the conscience of


humanity.


It was a race against time. Whoever was first to unlock


the mysteries of the atom would inevitably win the war.


Fortunately for the preservation of humanity, God and


luck was on the side of the Allied powers, and the


United States was able to complete the puzzle first.


Ironically a German scientist who defected during the


war helped fill in some of the missing links to the


equation.


This magnificent device was able to unleash the power of


the atom creating an explosion equal to roughly 15


kilotons of TNT. After Japan s rejection of multiple


warnings to surrender and give up the war they set their


own fate in the history books to be the first to


experience the horror of this new weaponry. On August


5th, 1945, an American B-29 Superfortress dropped the


first atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. As


the plane, which was later named Enola Gaye, departed


the drop site and began its return home, a large


mushroom shaped cloud of smoke rose up from the city.


This city of nearly 300,000 people experienced enormous


devastation. Somewhere between 40,000 and 72,000 human


lives vanished in minutes from this incredible force of


atomic power. Buildings, trees, and other animals, also


vanished in the intense wave of nuclear heat the shot


outward from the drop point. An estimated 70,000 out of


76,000 buildings in the city were destroyed.


The United States again asked for Japan s surrender, and


again Japan s leadership refused. Despite the


unimaginable destruction and loss of life that had


occurred at Hiroshima the Japanese chose to insanely


fight onward. On August

9th, 1945, another atomic bomb


was dropped, this time on the city of Nagasaki. As with


the first blast, this city was also completely


devastated. The death toll here stood between 30,000 and


40,000, with 44 percent of the city destroyed. Finally,


now believing that there country really would face utter


annihilation, the Japanese announced their unconditional


surrender and the final stage of World War II had come


to an abrupt end.


This feeling of relief would not last long. With the war


over and before the new era of peace could comfortably


set in, the race to develop even more powerful weaponry


was on. The two main competitors were the United States


and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (U.S.S.R.).


These two former allies, who had radically different


governmental and political ideologies, emerged from the


war as the two lone superpowers of the world. They were


neck and neck in a major arms race that would put the


world on the edge of it s seat and send it into a period


of great anxiety and worry.


As these two superpowers continued their arms race,


increasingly powerful bombs were developed. The creation


of nuclear bombs that had the power of 500 atomic bombs,


the size of the ones dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima,


worried the international community of the fate these


weapons could inevitably bring. Weapons of this power


could wipe out an entire nation in minutes and could


lead to the complete destruction of the world.


Since the 1980 s, with the demise of the Soviet Union


and treaties designed at reducing the massive nuclear


weapons arsenals, the period that became known as the


Cold War gradually simmered and dissipated. However,


there are new dangers that lurk on the horizon for the


countries of the world. Third world countries, terrorist


groups, and other rogue states, with unstable and


sometimes quite irrational leadership are continuing


their quest to obtain nuclear secrets. The intentions of


many these groups are to inflict pain and suffering on


the peaceful countries of the world. The odds are that


sometime soon they will acquire this knowledge, ushering


in another period of great uncertainty and unyielding


anxiety.


Works Cited


Kreis, Steven, Hitler and Word War


II, http://www.pagesz.net/ stevek/europe/lecture11.html,2000.


Matthews, Roy and Platt, F. Dewitt, The Western


Humanities, Volume II: The Renaissance to the Present.


Mountain View, CA: Mayfield Publishing Company, 2001.


The History Place, World War II in the Pacific,


http://www.historyplace.com/unitedstates/pacificwar/index.html,


2001.

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: Atomic Power Keeps The World O Essay

Слов:948
Символов:6506
Размер:12.71 Кб.