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Contents
Introduction i
Prologue 1
Part One - The Uranium Bomb
1 U-234/U235
17
2 The Two Billion Dollar Bet
31
3 Uranium
51
4 The Hidden Bomb
71
5 Oak Ridge
96
Part Two - The Plutonium Bomb
6 Timing
109
7 Hanford
122
8 Simple Math
136
Part Three - Martin Bormann
9 Maiden Voyage
153
10 A Pig Digging For A Potato
167
11 Operation Fireland
199
12 The Pig Finds A Potato
216
13 Escape and Surrender
263
14 Occam's Razor
301
[Bibliography]
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- Introduction -
This micro-history is suggested as the result of newly discovered,
very significant events that occurred during the closing weeks of World
War Two. As the story of Critical Mass unfolds, it questions the foundations
of the traditional history of the making and use of the first atomic bombs
as well as our understanding of the Nuclear Age. The facts reveal
not only important new information about the race to produce the bomb;
but the new information helps us understand how the sum of the history
of man was combined in one brief moment to create a critical mass in humanity
that shattered the old world forever and ushered in the Nuclear Age.
The previously secret (now declassified) unpublished military,
state, intelligence and Department of Energy documentation cited throughout
Critical Mass suggests that the atomic bomb was not fully developed and
built by American scientists and technicians, as the traditional and long-standing
history asserts. Instead, the evidence shows that enriched uranium
and other atomic bomb components developed by Nazi Germany were surrendered
to United States forces during the final weeks of the war - probably according
to prearranged surreptitious agreements - and were a vital part of the
materials used to create the bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The evidence indicates that without these materials the United States would
have fallen short of achieving its nuclear weapons objectives.
Interwoven into this story - in fact, integral to it - is
provocative evidence that connects Hitler's behind-the-scenes right-hand
man, Nazi Party Chief Martin Bormann, to Germany's very nearly successful
effort to create an atomic bomb; and to Germany's last-ditch efforts to
transfer that technology to Japan. Evidence also suggests that Bormann,
at the latest possible moment, turned against his Asian ally and decided
to hand the keys of world dominion - in the form of the atomic bomb - to
any Allied country that would treat with him. Thus Bormann covertly negotiated
a separate, and very secret, personal peace with the United States that
allowed him to disappear from the front page of history and slide silently
between the shadows of a murky past and a phantasmal future.
The events that initiated this story have each lead to astounding
new revelations that had the net effect of continually, and, seemingly
unendingly, expanding the scope of this book. As a private citizen
who researched and wrote the book around the demands of a full-time job
and who, with the aid of generous friends and family, financed the research
and writing, generating unlimited resources to constantly expand the book's
scope was impossible. Despite desires to throw light in every corner,
proving the premises presented in Critical Mass has, of necessity, been
circumscribed to proving the following basic assertions:
1. That the Manhattan Project was not successful producing all
of the needed enriched uranium - isotope U235 - in time to fulfill its
atomic bomb requirements, nor was it successful creating a triggering device
for the plutonium bomb without the help of captured German components.
2. While not proving conclusively that uranium was enriched in
Germany, it would be demonstrated that there was potential in Germany,
despite the traditional history that states otherwise, for the Nazi program
to successfully enrich U235. Enrichment would have been in
quantities that could have supplied the bomb-grade uranium needed by the
United States to complete its atomic bomb project. Also, that Germany successfully
developed a triggering mechanism usable for the plutonium bomb.
3. That U235 for the uranium bomb, and infrared fuses for the plutonium
bomb, were obtained by the U.S. from Germany and were transferred into
the possession of the Manhattan Project and ultimately used in the bombs
dropped on Japan.
As a matter of sufficiently authenticating the above assertions,
I have tried to obtain a minimum of two corroborating pieces of evidence
to validate the theories presented. In almost every case, as will
be seen, this has been accomplished. In many, three or more proofs
are given. In a few instances only one piece of evidence is extant;
but taken on the whole, the accumulated evidence is considerable if not
incontrovertible.
The question may be asked that, with the hundreds if not
thousands of books, articles and histories that have been written about
the making of the first atomic bombs, how can any new and unpublished information
be added to the chronicle. Remarkably, the answer, in part, is that
very few of the writers of those histories ever saw any of the original
records of the most seminal events that constituted the makings of the
bombs. As far as I can tell, I was the first to review the actual
uranium enrichment production records, the shipping and receiving records
of materials sent from Oak Ridge to Los Alamos, the metallurgical fabrication
records of the making of the bombs themselves, and the records and testimony
regarding failure to develop a viable triggering device for the plutonium
bomb. Of the 38 boxes of Oak Ridge records held in the Southeast Regional
Archives in Atlanta, Georgia I had pulled for review, only four had been
opened since their declassification in 1967 and 1978. I was the first
to open and cull through many of these boxes, and within these containers
I found many critical documents. And there are boxes that remain,
their declassification seals yet unbroken.
Apparently, the authors described above have relied on personal
accounts and the administrative, strategic and general records harbored
in the National Archives in Washington for their research. The critical
daily production records of Oak Ridge and elsewhere have been all but ignored,
though they reveal important information not previously considered in other
histories, and although they tell a different story than that presently
believed. Even if those authors had read, assimilated and interpreted
the available records, the discrepancies may have been considered anomalous
and possibly would have been ignored when compared against the overpowering
reputation of the traditional history. Most of that history can be
traced in theme and content to Manhattan Project Commanding General Leslie
Groves' book on the subject, Now It Can Be Told.
Now It Can Be Told presents the story of the making of the
atomic bomb that the United States government needed the world to hear
at the time. There was, undoubtedly, justification for this guarded
approach considering the exigencies of the era. The chronicle of
history should be corrected when opportunity allows, however - though it
all too often is not - for the understanding and benefit of generations
to come. And, frankly, for the recognition of all those who played a part,
as well as the enlightenment of those who simply desire to know the truth.
Democracies especially depend on an informed citizenry to safeguard the
proper use of power and appropriate oversight of important military and
political policy. Certainly not all information and actions of a
government at war or in conflict with another sovereignty can be reviewed
on an open basis contemporaneously with the critical events. But
as timely issues are resolved or neutralized by new events, it is incumbent
upon that democratic society to carefully review and analyze the events
and equitably judge the system and the people involved. Through this
course we ensure the nation's best interests were preserved, and make whatever
adjustments are necessary to provide a guide for future like endeavors.
Other official and semi-official accounts of the Manhattan
Project and the programs that competed against it have been written, the
best among them being Richard Rhodes' exceptional Pulitzer Prize winning
book, The Making Of The Atomic Bomb. Critical Mass attempts in no way to
re-document the otherwise reliable historical elements of a very complex
and detailed subject, other than to provide a basic understanding useful
to the reader's analysis of the scenario forwarded within these pages.
Critical Mass simply suggests that the data recently found describe some
very different events than are recounted in the presently accepted history.
As noted, many other authors' accounts are cited herein,
but all of them, ultimately, either directly or indirectly, by default
or design, have been molded by the man who presided over the project itself,
General Groves. During the very process of the making of the atomic bombs,
through compartmentalization and by mixing a high percentage of genuine
data with innuendo - as well as judicious use of the occasional untruth
- Groves was able to create a resilient and coherent self-perpetuating
myth of the birth of the atomic age.
Much of the information used to tell the story in Critical
Mass does come from the writings of Groves and other authors. David
Irving, Britain's controversial but documentation-dependant World War II
historian has recorded much of the German effort to create a bomb in his
book, The German Atomic Bomb. His account alone, though he seems
not to realize it, goes a long way toward impeaching the accepted history
that, because Germany failed to create plutonium, it therefore failed to
build an atomic bomb.
There are two ways to build an atomic bomb, one of plutonium, the
other of uranium. Irving brings to light ample information that,
when considered with other evidence newly discovered and revealed in Critical
Mass, suggests the Germans produced the material for and all but assembled
a uranium bomb.
In the traditional history of the bomb, Groves has positioned
the German plutonium effort as the only nuclear initiative Germany ever
pursued. And he has magnified this misinformation, couched in a cushion
of half-truths, to immense proportions - large enough to hide what appears
to be a huge German uranium enrichment project behind it - and thus he
has shielded the Nazi near-success from the view of the world. His motivations
for doing so will be discussed in detail later.
One of many other authors quoted in Critical Mass is former
World War Two intelligence officer Ladislas Farago, who documented Martin
Bormann's escape from Nazi Germany at the end of the war and his ensuing
life in semi-secret exile in South America in his book, Aftermath. Farago
was accused and supposedly proven, with the help of the CIA, of having
forged the documentation he used to verify his claims about Bormann. Critical
Mass reviews the subject of the CIA and its predecessor the OSS, and their
involvement in the negotiations with Bormann and eventual surrender of
German-made nuclear bomb materials during the course of the war, later
within the body text of this book. Suffice it to say here that involvement
by the CIA in a fair perusal of Farago's findings must be suspect.
Critical Mass quotes other authors, as well, who have independently
discovered similar but different documentation to that Mr.Farago cites,
and whose findings exonerate and rehabilitate Ladislas Farago's work.
Among these authors are Paul Manning, former journalist for the New York
Times and author of Martin Bormann - Nazi In Exile. Manning's credentials
as a journalist particularly are impeccable, and his reputation is unassailable.
Although he did not accept an offer immediately after the war to serve
as the civilian deputy of the United States' occupation zone of Germany,
the offer itself attests to the high regard in which he is held, as well
as to the potential military intelligence and other resources he had available
when researching his book.
Another author from whose writings I have drawn is William Stevenson,
author of the book A Man Called Intrepid, the approved biography of another
gentleman and friend of Stevenson's, a man by the same name, Sir William
Stephenson (unrelated, note spellings). Sir William is the man who
oversaw the combined intelligence efforts of the United States and England
during World War II, and who, incidentally, plays a minor role in our story
within the covers of Critical Mass. Author Stevenson's book is titled
The Bormann Brotherhood.
Many other authors are quoted, as well, to highlight and
validate the conclusions presented in Critical Mass. But the definitive
body of evidence is the actual documents cited in this book that dispassionately
record the numbers and weights and dates and times and places and people
that constitute the real events that occurred.
The silent archives, in some cases long untouched, contain
the remaining few pieces of the picture that had been painted over with
duplicitous details and fraudulent facts. Exposing those lost data
to the light of day is much like the art curator who takes a blacklight
to a painting to ascertain its origin. Under scrutiny of light tuned
only to see the original, the primary picture is exposed underneath as
well as any revisions that may later have been made. So it is with
the certifieds cited in Critical Mass. The light of day, "always
a great disinfectant" as the saying goes, reveals through newly-disclosed
documentation the true story of the Manhattan Project during the birth
of its atomic offspring - with all its flaws, foibles and unholy alliances
as well as its ultimate, although somehow twisted, success.
And even with those flaws and foibles it is, at once, a
story of genius and perseverance as well as a lesson in man's own struggle
to grow morally and spiritually at the same pace that he has grown intellectually
and technologically. For, as social beings who must share this earth,
we are all interdependent upon one another. When one such as Hitler
rises to power, the only defense against the bully who insists on blood,
when all reason has failed, is to be more the aggressor, or submit and
perish. Such course devolves to a level of behavior differentiated
from the instigator's only by the moral imperative of one's right to survive.
The sad fact is we can rise as a race only to the level
of our least enlightened. Until that time, the weight of our human
frailties and flaws will at irregular intervals compress to critical mass
and ignite a new explosion of pain and suffering until we learn once and
for all that our cumulative morality must meet or exceed our united intellects.