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Nazi Germany And The Nuclear Weapons Program

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In early 1939, the scientific community was stunned when German scientists discovered how to split a uranium atom. The world was shocked at the possibility of Nazi Germany building an atomic weapon, capable of destruction never before seen in warfare. Luckily for the Allied Powers, scientists Albert Einstein and Enrico Fermi, worked for the United States atomic research program codenamed the Manhattan Project. Einstein and Fermi had escaped Nazi Germany and the Fascist government in Italy, respectively. Initially the worth of the project was not realized, and it proceeded slowly. Eventually, as the worth was proved, new resources and funding were allocated, totaling 120,000 employees and two billion dollars. On July 16, 1945 the United States successfully tested an atomic bomb, and won the atomic race (The Manhattan Project). While the United States was working on the Manhattan Project, Nazi Germany was working on its own nuclear weapons program, but unlike the United States, the Nazis never realized the importance of a nuclear weapon, and allocated only a fraction of the personnel, resources, and funding the United States did. The progress of the Nazi atomic weapons program was further slowed (Walker). The debate continues whether or not a Nazi atomic bomb was ever completed, but if it were, it was not ever used in combat. Had a bomb been completed a significant amount of time before the end of the war, the Nazis had advanced and sufficient planes, submarines, and rockets

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