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Feds Attempt To Censor Parts of a New Book About the Hydrogen Bomb

HughPickens.com writes: The atom bomb — leveler of Hiroshima and instant killer of some 80,000 people — is just a pale cousin compared to the hydrogen bomb, which easily packs the punch of a thousand Hiroshimas. That is why Washington has for decades done everything in its power to keep the details of its design out of the public domain. Now William J. Broad reports in the NY Times that Kenneth W. Ford has defied a federal order to cut material from his new book that the government says teems with thermonuclear secrets. Ford says he included the disputed material because it had already been disclosed elsewhere and helped him paint a fuller picture of an important chapter of American history. But after he volunteered the manuscript for a security review, federal officials told him to remove about 10 percent of the text, or roughly 5,000 words. "They wanted to eviscerate the book," says Ford. "My first thought was, 'This is so ridiculous I won't even respond.'" For instance, the federal agency wanted him to strike a reference to the size of the first hydrogen test device — its base was seven feet wide and 20 feet high. Dr. Ford responded that public photographs of the device, with men, jeeps and a forklift nearby, gave a scale of comparison that clearly revealed its overall dimensions.

Though difficult to make, hydrogen bombs are attractive to nations and militaries because their fuel is relatively cheap. Inside a thick metal casing, the weapon relies on a small atom bomb that works like a match to ignite the hydrogen fuel. Today, Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States are the only declared members of the thermonuclear club, each possessing hundreds or thousands of hydrogen bombs. Military experts suspect that Israel has dozens of hydrogen bombs. India, Pakistan and North Korea are seen as interested in acquiring the potent weapon. The big secret the book discusses is thermal equilibrium, the discovery that the temperature of the hydrogen fuel and the radiation could match each other during the explosion (PDF). World Scientific, a publisher in Singapore, recently made Dr. Ford's book public in electronic form, with print versions to follow. Ford remains convinced the book "contains nothing whatsoever whose dissemination could, by any stretch of the imagination, damage the United States or help a country that is trying to build a hydrogen bomb." "Were I to follow all — or even most — of your suggestions," says Ford, "it would destroy the book."

220 of 341 comments (clear)

  1. Asking for trouble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    That sort of censorship is just going to blow up in their face!

    1. Re:Asking for trouble by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      it's the streisand effect for h bomb technology

      so maybe if they just nuked streisand's malibu mansion, censorship backfiring would go away

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    2. Re:Asking for trouble by Dr_Terminus · · Score: 1

      With this sort of thing, you have to go for the nuclear option...

  2. it always amazes me by ganjadude · · Score: 4, Insightful

    when people try and censor stuff that is already public. We see it here, we see it with snowden (im not talking classified stuff) but if this person got the information without looking at classified materials, who do they think they are to tell him to not publish?

    --
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    1. Re:it always amazes me by Obfuscant · · Score: 3, Interesting

      ... but if this person got the information without looking at classified materials, who do they think they are to tell him to not publish?

      Without knowing the pedigree of the material he looked at, it is impossible to know whether it was classified or not. Simply releasing classified material to the public does not declassify it, especially if the release was unauthorized.

      Who do they think they are? They are the people who are paid to protect classified information doing the job they are paid to do, when asked to do that job by the author of the book. He asked, they had to tell him to cut things. They don't get the right to change the classification on material, that has to go through the classifying authority.

    2. Re:it always amazes me by plover · · Score: 1

      (sorry, Dr. Ford, not Broad)

      --
      John
    3. Re:it always amazes me by plover · · Score: 2

      There's a big difference between uranium and a working hydrogen bomb. The US won't use nukes unless someone else detonates one first.

      --
      John
    4. Re:it always amazes me by Darinbob · · Score: 2

      That's true, a lot of the information could be previously released by other while still being classified. There is a difference between someone independently collecting together the clues and facts from prior biographies and interviews, and someone who was actually inside the project with a classification level doing the same thing.

      Some of the first public information about H-bomb, now considered "previously released" material, was from a book that the government also tried to have censored. Their failure to do so made the material more popular.

    5. Re:it always amazes me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Because physicists from other nations find out how to build The Bomb not from intelligence but from "likely flawed" data "out in the public."

      Because they'd see, for example, the idea (or similar) that a flask of Hydrogen _next to_ a Plutonium core going critical would yield a thermonuclear explosion. A FLASK. Because Iranian physicists wouldn't know that for a fusion bomb, you need solid Uranium to slow neutron escape (this is the thermonuclear part).

      If I know that from writing a paper on it* in 8th grade in 1986, then they know it too.

      *It was common knowledge then too, folks. The guys in this thread who claim they were arrested for knowing the basic ingredients are brimming with doody.

    6. Re:it always amazes me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think you have been reading the Hamas propaganda that pops up on Occupy facebook groups too much.

      Lets get off the anti-Israel axe-grinding for a moment here. The US is not going to attack Iran, even if they decides to plop water poppers in the Strait again:

      1: Iran is a sovereign power, with a distinct race (Persians are not Arabs). When the mullahs took over, Iran's top generals were killed. This enticed Saddam into invading... and Iranians pushed back by strapping bombs onto their kids and having them run under Iraqi tanks. This shows a will that makes the Alamo rally pale in comparison.

      2: An attack on Iran would rally every Mecca-facing worshiper to attack the US and Israel. This is why the US did their best to keep Israel out of the first Gulf War when Saddam was sending SCUDs their way (SCUDs with chemical weapons.)

      3: Iran is pretty damn powerful. They sell plenty of oil to China and Turkey. Even with sanctions, they are the top producing car maker in the region.

      4: Iran is no "shit-o-stan". Attacking Iran would be like attacking Germany or France, with retaliation that a First World government would return with. Tehran's jubes are now fully working buried sewers.

      5: If shit hit the fan, Iran would get China to help, stationing PLA nukes and garrisons. This was considered with Russia in the past, and could be done again. China is a thirsty country, and they would be more than happy to come in.

      So, lets be real. Israel isn't going to sneak and grab territory, unlike the Hezbollah propaganda or the usual anti-Semite crap says.

    7. Re:it always amazes me by Swampash · · Score: 2

      the US runs around the world effectively promoting nuclear weapons because it is the only way to be safe from invasion by them

      deserves +5

    8. Re:it always amazes me by gweihir · · Score: 1

      They think they are powerful, and they are. What they do not know is that they are also very, very dumb and hence a force of evil and destruction. When this combinations gets widespread, it heralds the end of a culture.

      --
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    9. Re:it always amazes me by abbamouse · · Score: 4, Informative

      US doctrine has never been "no first use," unlike that of some other countries (USSR during the Cold War, China). Heck, we haven't even promised not to use them against nonnuclear states, attempting to retain their use as an option in the event of CBW attacks.

      --
      Make cheese not war 8:)
    10. Re: it always amazes me by abbamouse · · Score: 1

      That was generally considered to be the Soviet plan as well. Probably the Chinese, too. Deterrence still worked. I would prefer no Iranian bomb, but it's most likely use isn't a strike on the continental United States or even Israel, but rather use on Iranian territory if invaded.

      --
      Make cheese not war 8:)
    11. Re: it always amazes me by abbamouse · · Score: 1

      Oops -- "its" not "it's."

      --
      Make cheese not war 8:)
    12. Re:it always amazes me by firewrought · · Score: 1

      It always amazes me when people try and censor stuff that is already public.

      What's most egregious is when the US military banned their staff from viewing Wikileaks. This suggests one of several possibilities:

      1. Military leadership is completely out of touch, believing that the they can put the genie back in the bottle by burying their heads in the sand. (Not unbelievable for a hierarchical/bureaucratic/authoritarian organization helmed by senior citizens.)
      2. Military leadership plans to use NSA intelligence to detect/find future leakers, and a staff-wide ban reduces the background noise/false negative rate in making that detection. (Very believable.)
      3. Military leadership is afraid that the existing leaked materials could spur staffers to make additional leaks. (Also believable, since there's bound to be [scattered throughout the sprawling military-industrial complex] a bunch of folks who've witnessed corruption/wrongdoing/gross incompetence and then subsequently been frustrated by formal channels for redressing such wrongs [or afraid to use such channels].)
      --
      -1, Too Many Layers Of Abstraction
    13. Re: it always amazes me by MechaStreisand · · Score: 2

      It is foolish to believe that Iran would do a nuclear first strike on anyone. That would invite nuclear retaliation on themselves. If they acquire nuclear weapons, they'll likely use them for what they are good for: deterrence.

      --
      Disclaimer: IANAL. This post is, however, legal advice, and creates an attorney-client relationship.
    14. Re:it always amazes me by tigersha · · Score: 1

      You really think that the Israelis are so stupid as to get the US to engage in a proxy war for them so that they can claim Arab land?
      Really?

      I disagree with Israelis and think the US should make peace with Persian ASAP, but the Israelis are acting out of fear. They live in a rough neighbourhood.

      --
      The dangers of excessive individualism are nothing compared to the oppressiveness of excessive collectivism
    15. Re: it always amazes me by tigersha · · Score: 2

      Uhm, the US is a BIG country. The Iranians are probably capable of building maybe a 150-200kt device, if that. An EMP pulse would take out the power in mid-sized city for a few weeks at most. It would also cause major damage on the ground.

      90% of the US population would not die from starvation. Maybe 0.1% would die from the blast itself.

      Even if they had a 50's style high-yield multi-megaton thermonuclear device they could not make 90% of the US population starve.

      Even the USSR at its high point would not have been able to kill 90% of the US population with massive missile strike.

      Of course, after the Iranians made their point and killed 0.1% of US citizens they would face the music.

      --
      The dangers of excessive individualism are nothing compared to the oppressiveness of excessive collectivism
    16. Re: it always amazes me by tigersha · · Score: 2

      If the Iranians get one, I would be freaked because then the Saudis will buy a few from Pakistan.

      When it comes to fanaticism the Persians are not even close to the Saudis. I would be freaked if they get a bomb.

      --
      The dangers of excessive individualism are nothing compared to the oppressiveness of excessive collectivism
    17. Re:it always amazes me by rtb61 · · Score: 2

      Just like it did with, North Korea, Pakistan and India. They all occurred after the nuclear non-proliferation treaty. Remember this, they engineered nukes without computers, uncertain of whether or not it would work. So computers and knowledge that it is possible puts it in many countries reach. The reality is denial of nukes to Iran is all about leaving them open for invasion.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    18. Re:it always amazes me by Beck_Neard · · Score: 1

      And to counter the Fed's stupidity, here is a link to a book that basically contains all the physics you need to know to get started on building your very own hydrogen bomb (written by a former Soviet hydrogen bomb designer, no less - I have no idea how the Soviets let him publish this stuff): http://books.google.co.nz/book...

      (And if you're not sure about my claim, just ask, I'll gladly explain.)

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    19. Re: it always amazes me by rtb61 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I can not think of any one worse than North Korea having one and wait, yes they have them and nothing what so ever is happening. Now, why is this so? Easy, asshat chick hawks the world over are happy to send people to kill and die to feed those chicken hawks own pocket books and egos but when it comes to those chicken hawks risking their own precious skins, well, a great big fat fucking no, no, no, on that. The reality is, no one on this planet is safe from nuclear weapons, even the chick hawks lives would be at risk and as such, no matter how autocratic, how insane, how destructive, how psychopathic, they always protect their own precious skins and don't use nukes, well, at least as long as the other side doesn't have any, then of course it is killer babies and the need to wipe them out.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    20. Re:it always amazes me by f3rret · · Score: 1

      Remember, these guys get about one shot to get their test explosion right, because in about an hour after a successful test of an H-bomb by anyone the US considers a threat the USAF is going to be raining actual working H-bombs on their entire nuclear program

      The US isn't going to open up on anyone with nuclear weapons, don't be silly.

      --
      Admit nothing. Deny Everything. Make Counter-accusations.
    21. Re:it always amazes me by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      Correct, Iran is a hostile power and rapidly gaining control of the region. They are Shiite though and AQAP and ISIS/Dash are Suni.

      We can't fight Iran because like we decided we could not invade Japan at the end of WWII the cost in blood would be to high, and you are correct it would likely create an unstoppable backlash against Western Europe and Israel.

      The obvious solution is to let someone willing to pay in blood destroy them. Honestly we ought to let ISIS/Dash run wild, if Syria falls entirely and Iraq falls to ISIS, Iran will have two boarders to try and control against an equally tenacious enemy. They won't have time or resources to worry about Israel let alone interfering with anything we are trying to effect.

      By the same token Iran has been the more effective force is actually slowing ISIS so maybe they could keep ISIS busy for us too.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    22. Re:it always amazes me by stealth_finger · · Score: 2

      ... but if this person got the information without looking at classified materials, who do they think they are to tell him to not publish?

      Without knowing the pedigree of the material he looked at, it is impossible to know whether it was classified or not. Simply releasing classified material to the public does not declassify it, especially if the release was unauthorized.

      Who do they think they are? They are the people who are paid to protect classified information doing the job they are paid to do, when asked to do that job by the author of the book. He asked, they had to tell him to cut things. They don't get the right to change the classification on material, that has to go through the classifying authority.

      Surely there's no classified material in there, otherwise they'd be able to do more than ask him to take it out and I doubt he'd be allowed to tell them to fuck off.

      --
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    23. Re:it always amazes me by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

      Remember, these guys get about one shot to get their test explosion right, because in about an hour after a successful test of an H-bomb by anyone the US considers a threat the USAF is going to be raining actual working H-bombs on their entire nuclear program, with a few diverted to cover the presidential palace, the parliament, and essentially every researcher and civilian within a 20-km radius of the aforementioned targets. The US will not tolerate a new state of MAD with a new non-Western-approved government.

      What? so any other country the US doesn't like so much tests a bomb and you're going to immediately flatten them with nukes? Good luck with that ever happening. What will happen is whichever choad you have in charge at the time will say something like we cannot stand for this and then do fuck all. Maybe have a whinge to the UN to write a letter or something.

      --
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    24. Re:it always amazes me by gtall · · Score: 2

      Turkey is Sunni and vies for influence in the region, Erdogan won't lose any sleep over the U.S. attacking Iran. He'll wax indignant because that's what he does best, but he'll be looking for geopolitical gain out the situation. He's a whore.

      China isn't going to go to the mat for Iran either. And they certainly don't want the U.S. providing lethal arms to Taiwan. And there'll be no PLA in Iran either, with or without nukes. China will see what advantage it can make out of an attack, but putting their own people in to get clocked by the Americans isn't something they'd want; it would pop their little bubble of how effective their military is.

      That said, the U.S. isn't going to attack Iran any time soon, they have nothing the U.S. wants. And the U.S. realizes attacking the nuke sites will only delay Iran and its love affair with nuclear weapons, not stop it...well, short of nuking Iran which won't happen because the U.S. has friends downwind. It would make the Saudis happy campers though.

      My own opinion is that Iran will tiptoe up to a nuclear weapon so they can toss one together at a moment's notice...unless they think they can produce them without being noticed. They also realize Obama will be gone in two years, so the days of the Joe Biden Bunny World Foreign Policy are likely over. That won't stop Saudi Arabia from attempting to get nukes. Sooner or later, something will slip out and either a terrorist cell will get their hands on a nuke and let it off, or a crazy government will do it for them. The only question is where and how long we have until that happens. N. Korea is unstable or at least their leader is. And Iran's mullahs do not have a lock on their government, the right ideolog in Iran could easily think it a bright idea to send one Israel's way thinking that if Iran is the one to knock off Israel, all the Sunnis will switch to being Shi'ite and they'll be in Muslim shit-heaven.

    25. Re:it always amazes me by Carewolf · · Score: 2

      2: An attack on Iran would rally every Mecca-facing worshiper to attack the US and Israel.

      No, Iran are Shias. Most of the Muslim nations would love to see them gone.

      3: Iran is pretty damn powerful. They sell plenty of oil to China and Turkey. Even with sanctions, they are the top producing car maker in the region.

      4: Iran is no "shit-o-stan". Attacking Iran would be like attacking Germany or France, with retaliation that a First World government would return with.

      No. Iran is powerful and has a serious military, but so did Iraq. The two were in the same league. Somehow Iraq's one million men under arms was still not comparable to less than 100,000 western troops.

    26. Re: it always amazes me by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

      What? That's possibly the most retarded scare mongering I've ever seen! Get a clue.

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    27. Re:it always amazes me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > 2: An attack on Iran would rally every Mecca-facing worshiper to attack the US and Israel.

      Suprisingly, it wouldn't. Iran is mostly populated by ethnic persian (farsi) people, who follow the shia muslim tradition. The large majority of muslims (most arabs and east asians) are in the sunni tradition. The difference is mainly about the succession of Prophet Muhammed by either his descendants or his disciplines. Sunni and Shia hate and war each other constantly, much like early modern era Catholics and Protestants did, with usually the 20% minority shias being on the receiving end of the stick. In fact, the sunni call shia "fire-worshipper pagans" because the shia tradition involves elements of the zoroastrian dualist philosophy. Sunni also mock the shia as disguised christians, because the shia tradition pays much respects to the tombs of early muslim preachers, leaders, visionaries and other holy men, much like the relic cult of saint in catholicism.

      Anyhow, Iran's worst military and political enemy is Saudi Arabia, where the ruling al-Saud family subscribes to wahhabism, an extremist, outright feudal mindset branch of the sunni muslim faith. Because Saudi Arabia hosts Mecca and Medina, the two holiest places in islam, other sunni would need to follow suit, if the al-Sauds ever declared jihad against Iran.

      Saudi Arabia is closely allied to the Zionist Entitry in politics and military, thus the pair conspire much to crush Iran. Saud wants to exterminate the shia muslim faith wholesale, while New-York-Tel-Aviv wants to remove iranian backing from the syrian and palestinian states, so that territory could be occupied by Merkava battle tanks for the creation of a "Greater Zion" as depicted in a map on the 10 agorot fractional coin of the new-sehkel.

      On the other hand, the persian shia people of Iran are clever and they are not "lazy arabs". They are well organized, industrious and totally patriotic, not just in words (common arab trait) but also in action. It would be the start of a new world war to invade Iran. Thus, Tel-Aviv wants to outsource such job to CIA and the sunni muslims. Rest assured, after (if) Assad's Syria falls, the ISIS will immediately turn up in Iran to start a "popular uprising". Except they will be annihilated by the Iranian Republic Guard" and national militia in 3 days.

    28. Re: it always amazes me by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      It's called MAD (Mutual Assured Destruction). It remains to be seen what a theocratic regime that's been harping on the return of the 12th Imam via an apocalypse will do. The regime could quite very well see the atomic bomb as the instrument by which to bring forth this event.

      http://pjmedia.com/lifestyle/2...

      Me? Who the fuck knows. At the end of the day, man is driven by power, money, and greed. Their own Revolutionary Guard could sack top officials if push came to shove, but that's predicated on an unfounded desired outcome vs. them actually using the damn thing.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    29. Re: it always amazes me by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Starfish Prime was rated at 1.4mt and detonated 250 miles above the earth.

      "Starfish Prime caused an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) which was far larger than expected, so much larger that it drove much of the instrumentation off scale, causing great difficulty in getting accurate measurements. The Starfish Prime electromagnetic pulse also made those effects known to the public by causing electrical damage in Hawaii, about 1,445 kilometres (898 mi) away from the detonation point, knocking out about 300 streetlights, setting off numerous burglar alarms and damaging a telephone company microwave link. The EMP damage to the microwave link shut down telephone calls from Kauai to the other Hawaiian islands.[5]" - Wiki

      And that was before the IC (microchip) was in use. Inverse square law and all, depending on locality and yield, that could fry enough gates on chip to shutdown whatever it's tasked to control. In this case, the electrical grid and water pumping infrastructure.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    30. Re:it always amazes me by dywolf · · Score: 1

      government's stance is that material can be innocuous separately, but become sensitive (and require classification) if collected together.
      it's the idea that individual puzzle pieces are worthless, but if you collect all the pieces you now have a complete picture.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    31. Re: it always amazes me by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Even the USSR at its high point would not have been able to kill 90% of the US population with massive missile strike.

      France currently has around 300 warheads. If it had delivery mechanisms for all of them capable of hitting the US that could mean at least one bomb for every city with over 100,000 population.

      That's about 88 million people in the cities hit.

      The USSR had rather more that 300 warheads deliverable.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    32. Re:it always amazes me by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Devil's Advocate here, but maybe the reason is that all kinds of data is out in public, and some of it is likely flawed. Maybe there's a paper that theorized that you could set a Dewar's flask of liquid hydrogen next to an A-bomb to get an H-bomb. But Dr. Broad is a respected authority, and if he says "we did it this way" without mentioning the Dewar's flask idea, a rogue state would know what not to try.

      Remember, these guys get about one shot to get their test explosion right, because in about an hour after a successful test of an H-bomb by anyone the US considers a threat the USAF is going to be raining actual working H-bombs on their entire nuclear program, with a few diverted to cover the presidential palace, the parliament, and essentially every researcher and civilian within a 20-km radius of the aforementioned targets. The US will not tolerate a new state of MAD with a new non-Western-approved government.

      So India, Pakistan and North Korea definitely don't have any nuclear weapons then?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    33. Re:it always amazes me by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      I'm also not really sure how Israel could claim land in Iran, which is all the way across Jordan and Iraq. Some people commenting on this article could do well to acquaint themselves with a map - the only arab land they are going to claim without a formal border war is the settlements they are now building in the west bank that they took from Jordan almost 50 years ago when Jordan aligned itself with Egypt in 1967 and got their asses kicked.

      It's more likely that Israel decides that they've had enough of Syria's shit and moves north, than hopping two countries to the east.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    34. Re:it always amazes me by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Exactly. People commenting here seem to think that if you just have a shitload of hydrogen in the general vicinity of an atomic explosion, you get a yield orders of magnitude higher. Never mind that nuclear scientists are smart, and do things like "math" and "small-scale experimentation" before going all redneck and just giving it a go with a big bang.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    35. Re:it always amazes me by mr.mctibbs · · Score: 1

      Unless this guy signed up for a security clearance, he's under no obligation to keep classified material secret. There is nothing illegal whatsoever about distributing classified information unless you have sworn to protect it.

    36. Re:it always amazes me by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Yes, he had a Q level security clearance. He was a member of the project after all.

    37. Re:it always amazes me by GuB-42 · · Score: 1

      when people try and censor stuff that is already public. We see it here, we see it with snowden (im not talking classified stuff) but if this person got the information without looking at classified materials, who do they think they are to tell him to not publish?

      For an information to be out in public doesn't mean it is not classified.
      Sometimes, it leads to strange situations where people with security clearances cannot talk about things that regular people know and are free to talk about.

    38. Re:it always amazes me by Beck_Neard · · Score: 1

      I envy your overly-simplistic view on the world. The reality is that information relating to nuclear weapons has complicated and often-undefined and arbitrary secrecy policies behind it. Look at, for instance, the United States vs. The Progressive case. That was the first time that anyone had released specific information about thermonuclear weapons to the public. Government lawyers tried to censor it but the court ruled against them and allowed the magazine to publish. In a private session (the details of which aren't public), the lawyers on both sides actually shared a huge amount of highly classified information relating to bomb design. It was directly due to the results of this session that the court decided that what The Progressive was publishing was not damaging to US security, since no one seriously pursuing nuclear weapons would find anything new in the article that they didn't already know.

      By the way, the US government still does not formally acknowledge the existence of the Teller-Ulam design, even though everyone knows about it at this point. Yet, many details of the Teller-Ulam design *have* been made public (for instance, the existence of a radiation channel, something that only makes sense in that design). It's a contradictory situation.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    39. Re:it always amazes me by Beck_Neard · · Score: 1

      > Remember, these guys

      Which guys?

      > get about one shot to get their test explosion right

      Bomb design isn't just hammering a bunch of parts together. Every nation that has developed nukes has done so with the help of computer-aided design (yes, even in the 1950's). These days you can literally simulate a thermonuclear weapon on your laptop, if you have enough knowledge of the physics. And the physics knowledge you need isn't exactly secret either: http://www.amazon.com/Physics-...

      > Maybe there's a paper that theorized that you could set a Dewar's flask of liquid hydrogen next to an A-bomb to get an H-bomb.

      That's hilarious. You're *seriously* underestimating other countries if you think they'd have to rely on leaked information from US sources to build a thermonuclear bomb, and couldn't do it themselves. Russia did it themselves, and so did China. During the 80's, a number of US scientists visited China under the pretense of a 'scientific conference' on nuclear energy (their real reason was to suss out how far China was in their nuclear knowledge). The scientists reported being amazed by the level of scientific competence of the Chinese as relating to nuclear weapons. The US government had previously assumed that Chinese weapons technology was mostly a result of espionage. The results of the conferences proved otherwise.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    40. Re:it always amazes me by Beck_Neard · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't be as hard as France, but it would be much, *much* harder than Iraq. The US would win but there would be too many casualties. The only realistic option for attacking Iran would be nuclear bombardment. So the truth of the matter is that if the US decides to attack Iran, it would have to think very hard about if it wants to create another nuclear holocaust.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    41. Re:it always amazes me by Beck_Neard · · Score: 1

      Iran is about 3 times larger than Iraq in size and 2x larger in population. Plus, Iraq's army basically had zero morale by the time of the invasion (this is why the US decided that invasion would be easy, and it was). In contrast the morale of Iranian troops is high. Yet another consideration is military doctrine. Iran's military doctrine is based on a fierce defensive position. They invest more in anti-aircraft tech, not aircraft. Iraq's anti-aircraft tech was basically either non-functional or obsolete. Iraq was easy pickings and everyone knew it. They had briefly become strong under US support during the early 80's but after the Iran-Iraq war they were devastated, and then a decade of US sanctions wore them down to the point that they were ready to be invaded.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    42. Re:it always amazes me by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      I disagree, it would not take nuclear weapons...

      We invaded and defeated Nazi Germany and Japan and those were MUCH tougher enemies...

      What we CANNOT do is just go attack tomorrow without preparing.

      If we decided to prepare and gave ourselves 3 years to build up our military and produce weapons and train soldiers, we'd win hands down.

      The real trick to winning wars is not just having the best tanks and bombers, it is winning the war of supply. Amateur Generals talk battlefield tactics, professional Generals talk logistics and supply. Wars are often won or lost in the supply chain, not the actual battlefield.

    43. Re:it always amazes me by Beck_Neard · · Score: 1

      > We invaded and defeated Nazi Germany and Japan and those were MUCH tougher enemies...

      Again, at enormous cost in human life. You're not listening. Could the US defeat Iran, even without nukes? Of course, that's obvious. But the only realistic option (read: without too much bloodshed on the American side) is nukes.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    44. Re:it always amazes me by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't be as hard as France, but it would be much, *much* harder than Iraq. The US would win but there would be too many casualties. The only realistic option for attacking Iran would be nuclear bombardment. So the truth of the matter is that if the US decides to attack Iran, it would have to think very hard about if it wants to create another nuclear holocaust.

      Well since Iraq was nothing, what's your point? We set land invasion speed records in Iraq. We took it over way easier than we thought and that caused problems. Like securing schools that were packed floor to ceiling with arms and explosives. Securing the WMDs and uranium... and so on.

      Ever been to Iran? They're wondering when the US is coming back. They love us. Just some crazies there holding them back like it's the 8th century.

    45. Re:it always amazes me by Beck_Neard · · Score: 1

      Iran wants diplomatic relations with the US. Many Iranians have fond memories of the period up to 1979. There had been a lot of sharing of culture. There was an 'America-town' in the city of Abadan.

      But a military attack would change things. Despite the fact that ordinary Iranians have no animosity towards the US, if the US attacked, they'd fiercely defend their country no matter what.

      By the way, we have to keep perspective here. The US is never going to attack Iran, and Iran is never going to attack Israel. This is all just routine saber-rattling for fun and benefit. The US and Iran pretty much agree that diplomacy is the most productive way forward. And it's entirely to be expected that Israel would try to incite a US attack on Iran, since they would lose nothing and gain everything. It would be the US that would lose lives and money. And Israel will _only_ attack Iran if it knows that America would follow it into the fray.

      --
      A fool and his hard drive are soon parted.
    46. Re:it always amazes me by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Again, at enormous cost in human life. You're not listening. Could the US defeat Iran, even without nukes? Of course, that's obvious. But the only realistic option (read: without too much bloodshed on the American side) is nukes.

      I still don't agree... Our tanks sucked against Nazi Germany, the Panzer Mk V (Panther) was the best all around tank of WWII, the M-4 Sherman couldn't hold a candle to it...

      That doesn't exist today... Today we have the best tank in the world (or close to it anyway), we have a modern air force, etc.

      If we went in actually prepared (not like the crappy invasion of Iraq that was poorly done without enough planning), I think we'd walk it.

      Of course, if we decided to attack tomorrow and took the military we have today, we'd lose a lot and it would be rough.

      It is all about being prepared.

      ---

      Side note: Neither of us are professional Generals, so who really knows, we could both be out of our minds. :)

    47. Re:it always amazes me by Agripa · · Score: 1

      Utter BS, because of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. America has no credibility in nuclear weapons, especially now that US (and tis minions UK and France) failed to uphold the Budapest Memorandum of Understanding, in which they promised inviolable territorial integrity for the Ukraine, in exchange for Kiev giving up her 2,500 strong (!) stockpile of USSR-inherited nukes.

      Have you read the Budapest Memorandum? It is not long:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B...
      http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/...

      The United States of America, the Russian Federation, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, reaffirm their commitment to Ukraine, in accordance with the principles of the CSCE Final Act, to respect the Independence and Sovereignty and the existing borders of Ukraine.

      The US has not invaded Ukraine.

      The United States of America, the Russian Federation, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, reaffirm their obligation to refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of Ukraine, and that none of their weapons will ever be used against Ukraine except in self-defense or otherwise in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations.

      The US has not threatened Ukraine.

      The United States of America, the Russian Federation, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, reaffirm their commitment to Ukraine, in accordance with the principles of the CSCE Final Act, to refrain from economic coercion designed to subordinate to their own interest the exercise by Ukraine of the rights inherent in its sovereignty and thus to secure advantages of any kind.

      The US has not used economic coercion on Ukraine.

      The United States of America, the Russian Federation, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, reaffirm their commitment to seek immediate United Nations Security Council action to provide assistance to Ukraine, as a non-nuclear-weapon State Party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, if Ukraine should become a victim of an act of aggression or an object of a threat of aggression in which nuclear weapons are used.

      The US brought the invasion of Ukraine up with the UNSC:

      http://www.rferl.org/content/u...

      The United States of America, the Russian Federation, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, reaffirm, in the case of the Ukraine, their commitment not to use nuclear weapons against any non-nuclear-weapon State Party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, except in the case of an attack on themselves, their territories or dependent territories, their armed forces, or their allies, by such a state in association or alliance with a nuclear weapon state.

      The US has not used nuclear weapons against Ukraine.

      The United States of America, the Russian Federation, and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland will consult in the event a situation arises which raises a question concerning these commitments.

      I am sure the US has consulted with the other nations listed.

  3. Silly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    No Amateur is going to read a book and build a bomb.

    And actually, the Military tested this idea a while back. Interestingly, the amateurs had postgrad level education (sub doctoral), and actually succeeded.

    However.

    All the knowledge was publicly available already. No special books needed.

    1. Re:Silly by sconeu · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Years ago, I remember reading about some dude who designed an A-bomb for his senior thesis.

      His last stumbling block was the proper explosives for the implosion. So he called up the sales arm of some manufacturer, said he was a building contractor, and that he would need an explosive with $CHARACTERISTICS.... and that he was ready to buy in quantity.

      The sales guy fell all over himself providing the exact info the dude needed.

      He turned in his thesis, and then when no grade was published, he went to see his professor, who told him that DOE was considering classifying it.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    2. Re:Silly by sconeu · · Score: 5, Informative
      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    3. Re:Silly by l0n3s0m3phr34k · · Score: 1

      If the DOE was thinking about classifying it, he should get an A+ for his paper!

    4. Re: Silly by Cramer · · Score: 1

      Not to mention the ~900lbs of their fuel pellets, and the facility the size of Hanford WA to enrich it to the point it can go boom!

  4. Goddess save us from ass covering bureaucrats by Iamthecheese · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The problem isn't the bureaucrats in question, rather the culture of fear and secrecy in which our government had steeped these last several decades. This problem needs to be addressed at its cultural roots, starting with your family and friends -- Tell them fear will do infinitely more harm than the things we're, as a society, afraid of.

    --
    If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
  5. Re:How fucking tasteless by ganjadude · · Score: 3, Informative

    war is ugly

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  6. Dept of Energy? meh by turkeydance · · Score: 2, Interesting

    wait until the IRS audits your publication profits.

  7. Hmmm... by spirit_fingers · · Score: 1, Troll

    So, the take away from this is... what? Any author gets to decide what information does or does not constitute a breach of national security based on what the effect of its deletion on their book sales would be? I for one would sleep more soundly knowing that that information wasn't in his book than I would knowing he was going to get a big fat royalty check.

    1. Re:Hmmm... by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      but there is nothing in there that you cannot find on your own already. there really isnt any new information here. it would be like telling me i cant write a book on snowden because of secrets...except for the secrets are already out there

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    2. Re:Hmmm... by l0n3s0m3phr34k · · Score: 2, Informative

      then you must not be sleeping well, since this info is pretty easily found on the net already...and available from people like Abdul Qadeer Khan who also will help you build it. This genie is LONG out of the lamp...so this whole censorship thing is nothing but fear-mongering, and you totally bought into it.

    3. Re:Hmmm... by sexconker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So, the take away from this is... what? Any author gets to decide what information does or does not constitute a breach of national security based on what the effect of its deletion on their book sales would be? I for one would sleep more soundly knowing that that information wasn't in his book than I would knowing he was going to get a big fat royalty check.

      The take away is that the first amendment exists.

    4. Re:Hmmm... by Ichijo · · Score: 1

      That same logic can be used to justify data mining of social networks.

      --
      Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
    5. Re:Hmmm... by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      only government employees have that restriction

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    6. Re:Hmmm... by DRJlaw · · Score: 4, Informative

      The First Ammendment doesn't trump and never has trumped public safety.

      The U.S. Supreme Court disagrees with you. The author would have to be inciting imminent lawless action. Reporting on the history of the hydrogen bomb is neither inciting nor likely to produce imminent 'safety' effects.

    7. Re:Hmmm... by DRJlaw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Even if withholding that information only slows down a terrorist by mere days or hours, it's worth it.

      No, it's not.

      In addition, our Constitution lets the author make that decision, not the government. We have a whole theory concerning "prior restraint" that cannot simply be tossed away because "why make it any easier for a would-be terrorist bomb maker to find it and make use of it." You only get to challenge the author for allegedly disclosing critical secrets after they're published. That helpfully prevents the government from suppressing embarrasing, non-secret information by fiat.

    8. Re:Hmmm... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You're assuming that the author is being truthful about its availability and not merely lying or minimizing in order to protect his sales.

      Quite a few years back, Tom Clancy wrote a book called "Sum of All Fears" about a bunch of terrorists building an H-bomb using Pu they recovered from an Israeli bomb lost during the '73 war.
      Clancy's Afterward included this:

      BLOCKQUOTE>It is generally known that nuclear secrets are not as secret as we would like - in fact, the situation is even worse than well-informed people appreciate. what required billions of dollars in the 1940s is much less expensive today. A modern personal computer has far more power and reliability than the first Eniac, and the "hydrocodes" which enable a computer to test and validate a weapon's design are easily duplicated. The exquisite machine tools used to fabricate parts can be had for the asking. When I asked explicitly for the specifications for the very machines used at Oak Ridge and elsewhere, they arrived Federal Express the next day. Some highly specialized items designed specifically for bomb manufacture may now be found in stereo speakers. The fact of the matter is that a sufficiently wealthy individual could, over a period of from five to ten years, produce a multistage nuclear device.

      Based on what I learned about the subject as a young man, I see no particular reason to doubt him...

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    9. Re:Hmmm... by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      which can and does happen. thanks for backing my point

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    10. Re:Hmmm... by sexconker · · Score: 1

      Yes it does and it always has, retard.
      Show me where in the constitution public safety is given higher precedence than the first amendment.
      Show me where the constitution conflates speech and the right to it with culpability for the consequences of said speech.

    11. Re:Hmmm... by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 1

      ISIS is worth an estimated $2 billion and has been around since 1999 and would love to nuke any Western target but they haven't. That they haven't tells me they don't have a bomb. That they don't have a bomb tells me that it isn't that easy.

      --
      Support the First Amendment. Read at -1
    12. Re:Hmmm... by mythosaz · · Score: 1

      They could have the entire thing built...except that pesky Plutonium-239

    13. Re:Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Building a simple working atomic bomb is trivial given some expertise. The gun type design basically requires some uranium, a strong pipe and explosives. However:
      . manufacturing the right fissile material is hard, expensive and very slow using a nuclear reactor that is hard to hide
      . extracting the same material from the spent reactor fuel requires a huge amount of expertise (some of which isn't published), materials resources and time
      . learning how to handle the material will take time

      I don't think we'll have to worry about that scenario unless ISIS can maintain control of a large area for several decades.

    14. Re:Hmmm... by eljasbo · · Score: 1

      You are the retard. Stop listening to Ron Paul. The Constitution does define rights. However, it is impractical for it to define every possible circumstance for the use of these rights. That is what the Supreme Court is for, which is considered the LAW and the current interpretation of the Constitution. Yelling "FIRE!" in a theater is not protected speech. Neither is Treason, nor Inciting a Riot. Go back and study harder for your GED in law. You are an idiot. (Which that is by the way a protected form of MY speech...).

    15. Re:Hmmm... by mcswell · · Score: 2

      And they would have had that if Doc Emmet Brown hadn't hoodwinked them.

    16. Re:Hmmm... by DRJlaw · · Score: 1

      He submitted the book voluntarily for review. What did you expect the people who reviewed it to do? Declassify stuff just because he had it in his book? Why did he do that? I'm guessing Streisand Effect.

      He submitted the book for review because if the book was cleared, the government would have a very difficult time prosecuting him for anything included in the book after it was published.

      However, he was not actually obligated to follow the recommendations made in the review, nor can the government prevent initial publication of the material by his publisher regardless of whether he followed those recommendations.

      What the government can do is attempt to prosecute him after the manuscript is disclosed or published by proving that the book violated the law or the non-disclosure agreement that he signed for his pre-1953 government work. The fact that the information is already publicly known would greatly affect that. There's also very little that the government could practically do to his publisher. You should read up on the Pentagon Papers to see how this works in the real world.

    17. Re:Hmmm... by countach · · Score: 1

      I suppose they "could" do it, in the same way that I "could" build and manufacture my own Intel computer chip. There isn't any big secret preventing it, but it's nevertheless takes a lot of infrastructure and facilities and smart minds to bring it all together.

    18. Re:Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The ISIS can't make a bomb, they don't have skilled scientists. That's what you get when religion is the only knowledge they value. They may sit on some oil-money, but don't have the thousands of highly skilled workers to make all the tricky precision parts - even if they somehow got the blueprints for a good design. They only value soldier skills, other skilled people flee such countries. To make nukes, you need the support of a high-tech industry, and a much larger low-tech industry. The IS is so low on industry, they even purchase most of their conventional arms. They can't even make cars.

      And then, you need a way of delivering nukes. Making a missile is much harder than a nuke - even the US relied on bomber planes for some time. the ISIS can't make a bomber plane. Perhaps buy a truck, and create a nuclear suicide bomber :-/

    19. Re:Hmmm... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      "The Sum of All Fears" was released in 1991. Clancy's comment about using computer weapon design is even more applicable today. CnC machines are also now something geeks build in their basements out of a few hundred dollars worth of parts.

    20. Re:Hmmm... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Uranium nukes are even worse. They require strip mines to get the uranium, and then a bunch of very special purpose equipment to enrich it. If you think it's hard to hide a nuclear reactor from a spy satellite, try hiding a strip mine!

    21. Re:Hmmm... by Whorhay · · Score: 1

      I think it has less to do with how easy it is or isn't, and a lot more to do with their own stupidity and lack of motivated people. Just observe the extreme rarity of actual terrorist attacks from islamic extremists in the USA. Obtaining weapons and explosives is relatively simple here, and it is an incredibly target rich environment. Yet there is very little in the way of terrorist activity.

    22. Re:Hmmm... by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      ISIS is worth an estimated $2 billion and has been around since 1999 and would love to nuke any Western target but they haven't. That they haven't tells me they don't have a bomb. That they don't have a bomb tells me that it isn't that easy.

      They might be able to, but would we let them? Building a bomb might be easy, but building a bomb in secret is much, much harder. The infrastructure needed is large and still requires expensive equipment which is why people are all on Iran's office.

  8. Erh... what would it accomplish? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Ok. Let's say they censor it. So, what is gained?

    Terrorists can't get a hold on these "secrets"? Please. Care to take a look at the thermonuke club? Half of them doesn't have a government suffering from paranoid schizophrenia and the other half doesn't give a fuck who gets that information as long as the price is right.

    There might be some overlapping, though.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:Erh... what would it accomplish? by shadowrat · · Score: 1

      I guess if i had created some super weapon, I'd feel kind of guilty about it. Once it exists, others are going to find out how to make it, but I think I'd probably struggle to cling to my dignity by refusing to share any of my insights.

    2. Re:Erh... what would it accomplish? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Why? There is no shame in knowing how to build a weapon. Not even in building it.

      There can only be shame in using it.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:Erh... what would it accomplish? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      The thermonuclear club is a lot smaller than the nuclear club. Most aren't worried about terrorists with thermonuclear weapons because terrorists with nuclear weapons are far more likely to occur and far more within their reach. Thermonuclear weapons are used as bargaining chips between a few major nations, these are nearly too expensive to produce by rogue states, certainly out of reach of even well funded terrorist groups. Hydrogen bombs serve much better as deterrents than as actual weapons, a normal nuclear weapon is more practical for use as a weapon for the rogue states or terrorists.

    4. Re:Erh... what would it accomplish? by bigfinger76 · · Score: 1

      This is about thermonuclear weapons, not fission ones.

    5. Re:Erh... what would it accomplish? by tigersha · · Score: 2

      Let's clarify something technical here.

      Thermonuclear refers to the use of fusion to gain more energy. It can be used for two things:

      a) To make a really humongous bomb. High-yield more than 5MT.
      b) To boost a pure fission bomb to get the same amount of energy in a smaller package.

      Almost all modern nuclear weapons are of the b) sort. They are all thermonuclear but they are small. A pure fission device (Little boy, for instance) is physically large for the boom you get.

      That said, most of the weapons do not use thermonuclear energy as a main source. The thermonuclear reaction produces copious neutron which boosts the fission part. The weapon is still primary a boosted fission device.

      Type (a) high-yield weapons are scarce things. The US, for one, does not have any, the Russians not many and they have a specific bunker-busting role. They are also physically large devices and hard to steal.

      (b) type weapons are much more common. This is the threat, but they are still thermonuclear.

      --
      The dangers of excessive individualism are nothing compared to the oppressiveness of excessive collectivism
    6. Re:Erh... what would it accomplish? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Why? There is no shame in knowing how to build a weapon. Not even in building it.

      There can only be shame in using it.

      Well that conveniently lets scientists off the hook completely, as they are never going to be the ones deciding to use it are they?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    7. Re:Erh... what would it accomplish? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Technology is never good nor evil. It's application may be.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  9. Constitional Rights by Bo'Bob'O · · Score: 4, Funny

    How dare the government abridge our 2nd amendment rights. Who will join me in a Hydrogen Bomb Open Cary campaign?

    The only way to ensure our freedom and safety is that every man woman and child has the comfort of Mutually Assured Destruction.

    1. Re:Constitional Rights by Guy+From+V · · Score: 1

      An atom bomb constitutes a Destructive Device and doesn't cover the scope of the Bill of Rights.

    2. Re:Constitional Rights by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      Maybe they should starting printing them in front of state capitols...

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    3. Re:Constitional Rights by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      What about that arm bearing one?

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    4. Re:Constitional Rights by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 1

      You're joking but I feel that the 2nd Amended does guarantee the people the same weapons to which the government has access. Now of course we can't have John Q Public running around with a thermonuclear device so I believe the solution would be that the government can't have them either.

      --
      Support the First Amendment. Read at -1
    5. Re:Constitional Rights by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      If you can pick one up with a clean and jerk, you're welcome to carry it. Except for you, Doctor Banner.

    6. Re:Constitional Rights by Guy+From+V · · Score: 1

      Just get or make a personal or vehicle-mounted binary flamethrower, they are totally unrestricted for owning or carrying in all states and territories.

    7. Re:Constitional Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sigh. Americans have so much cognitive dissonance over that piece of paper. Have you ever considered that your constitution may get things wrong?

    8. Re:Constitional Rights by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      "Firearms" is a vague term. At the very least, there are multiple interpretations and usages of it, some which have it cover just about any weapon that produces fire or fire-like heat. Thus, nukes could qualify under such a reading.

      Someday a politician may promise "A chicken in every pot, and a nuke in every garage".

    9. Re:Constitional Rights by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have to be comparable. There are more non-government citizens than there are of us who are the government. And I would seriously hope that those in the armed forces would have the sense not to turn on their own people.

      You have a very odd picture of the armed forces. They will "turn on" whoever they're asked to.

      British soldiers in Northern Ireland during the Troubles were quite willing to kill fellow British citizens who were perceived as terrorists. This is not a criticism.

      All you US armchair revolutionaries need to consider how you will be pictured when you take up your precious guns and try to take on the government. Hint: you won't be called Freedom Fighters.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    10. Re:Constitional Rights by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Just get or make a personal or vehicle-mounted binary flamethrower, they are totally unrestricted for owning or carrying in all states and territories.

      Flamethrowers are great against infantry, not so good against attack helicopters and fighter jets.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  10. High School Exposure by Whiteox · · Score: 1

    I remember seeing pics and descriptions of the Hydrogen Bomb in high school. Never bothered to examine the design again.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T... has the basic design. So what's the rub?

    --
    Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
  11. Oh oh. by NMBob · · Score: 1

    "Dr. Ford hasn't been heard from for several days."

    1. Re:Oh oh. by Falos · · Score: 1

      There's no man by that name working here. There never was. You would do well to leave the matter alone, as further investigation would only reveal that there is no information or record on this fictional person. Now go back to your home.

  12. BRILLIANT by l0n3s0m3phr34k · · Score: 2

    Interesting book, and awesome FREE MARKETING courtesy of the Feds! There's really nothing in this book that countries like Iran, NK, etc don't already have. He should publish both, one censored "inside" the US, and an uncensored version outside the US. Then people might even buy both of them...

    1. Re:BRILLIANT by brit74 · · Score: 1

      I think you meant "free marketing courtesy of Slashdot".

    2. Re:BRILLIANT by recharged95 · · Score: 1

      As I always said, information doesn't want to be free....

        but wants to be exploited.

  13. No such thing by jodido · · Score: 2

    as a real secret any more, if there ever was. If the "secret" is based on scientific research, it's been published and is reproducible and all the relevant people already know about it. If it's engineering, anyone can figure it out. Probably the only thing that's "secret" any more is the Coca Cola formula.

    1. Re:No such thing by sideslash · · Score: 1

      as a real secret any more, if there ever was. If the "secret" is based on scientific research, it's been published and is reproducible and all the relevant people already know about it.

      Nope, not true. I have a friend with a Physics Ph.D. who does nuclear weapons related research at LANL. Her work is read only by fellow DoD scientists and certainly is not published in public journals.

    2. Re:No such thing by gewalker · · Score: 2

      The U.K. France and China have also openly tested hydrogen bombs. Israel is also thought to have them.

    3. Re:No such thing by amiga3D · · Score: 2

      The problem with secrets is that you can only hope to keep a minute amount of them. Trying to make things secret that everyone already knows about is not only futile but a waste of resources that could be used to keep real secrets. They continuosly waste resources on things that are either obvious, already known, or not important but just embarrasing to some official jackass. I think most official secrets fall into the last category. Wasting time and effort to keep millions of facts secret instead of maybe just a few crucial things only makes it easier for your enemies to discover things that can actually hurt you. Unfortunately the US government is largely incompetent all the way through.

    4. Re:No such thing by Kjella · · Score: 1

      No such thing as a real secret any more, if there ever was. If the "secret" is based on scientific research, it's been published

      This may come as a shock to you, but most large companies have a big R&D division that follow the scientific method while rarely or never publishing their work. Intel knows a lot about making CPUs. Boeing knows a lot about making planes. Ford knows a lot about making cars. They're going to use that to make money, not to blab away the details to their competitors. Sure, Intel's processors are based on physics... but good look making a 14nm processor from their PR slides.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    5. Re:No such thing by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      The thing is, secrets regarding physics and engineering aren't secrets. Secrets regarding politics, treaties, negotiations, trade, yes, those exist. But those don't have anything to do with laws of nature working for everyone in the same way, though.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    6. Re:No such thing by bigfinger76 · · Score: 1

      There may have been a gulf between their knowledge prior to the discovery of fission and modern understanding, but almost immediately following that discovery we had working reactors and functional weapons. Certainly fusion devices were and are a different beast, but it comes down to less about any "secrets" and much more about money. The physics is the "easy" part, but even Oppenheimer and Teller wouldn't have been able to engage in much more than esoteric navel gazing if it weren't for a LOT of money.

  14. Re:How fucking tasteless by Xenx · · Score: 2

    They're specifically making the point that Hiroshima was an atomic bomb, and stating the devastating effects of it. They're doing this to paint a mental picture of how much additional power is in a hydrogen bomb.

  15. Re:Censor it by l0n3s0m3phr34k · · Score: 3, Insightful

    they already have access to FAR better instructions than this. ISIS controls whole universities, and has chemical engineers, physics doctorates, etc in their ranks. Abu Malik may be dead, but there are many others we don't know about.

  16. I was trying to figure out what this had to do with Slashdot, then it hit me.

    Of course. Fat Man.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    1. Re:Dot by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      lol someone's in a bad mood........it is technology related.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  17. Re:How fucking tasteless by sexconker · · Score: 1, Insightful

    What kind of small, hateful person says "women, children, and other civilians" instead of "people" or "civilians"?
    How fucked do you have to be to value the life of one person more than another because of their sex or adulthood?

  18. Read Richard Rhodes by Enry · · Score: 2

    I got two of his books ("The Making of the Atomic Bomb" and "Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb") and have read them both a few times. Lots of really good information in there, but both were written pre-9/11. He's written two books since which I literally ordered a few minutes ago while reading about this.

  19. Re:How fucking tasteless by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    women, children, and other civilian

    That comment is kinda sexist

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  20. only one thing to do by Indy1 · · Score: 1

    Put a torrent up of the book, and tell fed.gov to go fuck themselves. Silly fascists seem to think that H bombs are still super secret tech.

    Hate to say it Feds, but 60+ year old tech is hardly a secret.

    --
    Lawyers, MBA's, RIAA? A jedi fears not these things!
  21. Re:How fucking tasteless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    That single act of 'murder' probably saved more American and Japanese lives than any other single thing done during the war. It took major balls to make the decision to drop the bomb and it was fucking heroic.

  22. Re:How fucking tasteless by Rei · · Score: 2, Informative

    Nonsense. The US dropped the world's first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, a military base . That was because they wished in this first attack to avoid, insofar as possible, the killing of civilians.

    --
    "TAMS shouldn't be destroyed. They should just tag us before releasing us into the wild." -- Maeglin
  23. Re:How fucking tasteless by fche · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "U.S murdered"

    No. Killing the enemy is not murder.

  24. Re:How fucking tasteless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    There is also this (much a intro sentence here is just a copy/paste job from this article anyhow).

    http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03...
    "PHILADELPHIA — For all its horrific power, the atom bomb — leveler of Hiroshima and instant killer of some 80,000 people — is but a pale cousin compared to another product of American ingenuity: the hydrogen bomb."

    Guess all the stories about the British, Canadian and German scientists contributing must be false, the USA did it single handedly?
    Way to attempt to rewrite history NY Times.

  25. The design is relatively simple by istartedi · · Score: 2

    The design of the bombs is not the problem. Getting fissile material to build the trigger is the problem. Even a large corporation could probably not enrich uranium without attracting attention. Unless the book contains some method that Joe Sixpack can use to leach highly-enriched uranium from tailings or something, it's not a threat.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    1. Re:The design is relatively simple by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      I could be wrong, but I believe what you are referring to is the typical fission bomb.

      With the hydrogen bomb, the actual design is a rather difficult engineering problem as well. Not sure his book has much that isn't available on Wikipedia, though.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:The design is relatively simple by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Well yes, in theory.......but in theory purifying the material is simple as well. It's just an engineering problem, right?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    3. Re:The design is relatively simple by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      no it isn't. you just put some of one of the many possible well documented fusion materials near the fission bomb,

      If it were that easy, there would be several countries who would have already tested them, but haven't yet.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    4. Re:The design is relatively simple by ka9dgx · · Score: 1

      Thanks to tunable lasers, it is now possible to selectively ionize by isotope and immensly simplify the process of enrichment.

    5. Re:The design is relatively simple by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      The design of the bombs is not the problem.

      Have you ever actually studied nuclear weapons design? (By which I mean the unclassified stuff that's available.) Yes, designing the bombs is a problem, especially if you want anything more than a very crude, large, and heavy device. (One that's virtually undeliverable by modern standards.) It's not an insurmountable problem, granted, but is a problem.

      And it's an even bigger problem for thermonuclear designs.

      There's two ways around the problem though... the first is to explode a lot of bombs and thus gain experience and information. The second is to "borrow" the experience and information from somebody else. The difficulty of obtaining sufficient material makes the first impractical in many cases, and what the feds are trying to do is make the second as difficult as possible as well.

    6. Re:The design is relatively simple by istartedi · · Score: 1

      A quick look and some googling on that was interesting. It still requires a state-level effort. It definitely doesn't sound "simple". There isn't any tech that will allow meth cookers to turn into uranium cookers, and that's a good thing.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  26. Re:How fucking tasteless by Rei · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually one seriously has to question how much Truman knew about what he was authorizing, and what was Groves and his ilk overstepping their bounds. Truman's diary has repeated mentions that he doesn't think it should be used against civilians, and people who he talked to at the time reported similar.

    The weapon is to be used against Japan between now and August 10th. I have told the Sec. of War, Mr. Stimson, to use it so that military objectives and soldiers and sailors are the target and not women and children. Even if the Japs are savages, ruthless, merciless and fanatic, we as the leader of the world for the common welfare cannot drop this terrible bomb on the old capital or the new [Kyoto or Tokyo].

    He [Stimson] and I are in accord. The target will be a purely military one and we will issue a warning statement [known as the Potsdam Proclamation] asking the Japs to surrender and save lives. I'm sure they will not do that, but we will have given them the chance.

    "I don't think we ought to use this thing [the A-Bomb] unless we absolutely have to. It is a terrible thing to order the use of something that (here he looked down at his desk, rather reflectively) that is so terribly destructive, destructive beyond anything we have ever had. You have got to understand that this isn't a military weapon. (I shall never forget this particular expression). It is used to wipe out women and children and unarmed people, and not for military uses."

    The world will note that the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, a military base. That was because we wished in this first attack to avoid, insofar as possible, the killing of civilians. But that attack is only a warning of things to come. If Japan does not surrender, bombs will have to be dropped on her war industries and, unfortunately, thousands of civilian lives will be lost.

    (Truman's first public statement after the bomb was dropped, said while the second bomb was being dropped on Nagasaki).

    The next day, Truman receives the first reports and photographs related to the bombings, and the scale of what was done becomes clear.

    "Truman said he had given orders to stop atomic bombing. He said the thought of wiping out another 100,000 people was too horrible. He didn't like the idea of killing, as he said, 'all those kids'."

    .

    One really has to question what sort of information Truman was given and what exactly he thought he was authorizing. Hiroshima was anything *but* a military base. It was one of the least militarized cities in Japan, which is why it had been so little touched by conventional bombings. Its war industries were on the periphery and were little damaged by the explosion. Groves' targeting committee prioritized it precisely for the reason that it would visibly kill so many people and because it was largely untouched thusfar; the committee ruled out purely military targets (what Truman actually wanted) as they didn't consider them to be showy enough as demonstrations of the weapon's power.

    Truman's underlings were mixed on the subject of the bomb as well. Bard (undersecretary of the navy), for example, was adimant that the US should not use the bomb on cities. He thought it not only morally abhorrent, but totally unnecessary, as he and many others felt Japan was already on the verge of surrender (the post war Strategic Bombing Survey would later back him up on this point).

    But, it ended as it ended.

    --
    "TAMS shouldn't be destroyed. They should just tag us before releasing us into the wild." -- Maeglin
  27. Re:How fucking tasteless by fnj · · Score: 1

    Nonsense. The US dropped the world's first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, a military base [accuracy.org]. That was because they wished in this first attack to avoid, insofar as possible, the killing of civilians.

    Oh, bullshit. Hiroshima was no more a "military base" than were any number of American cities.

    A total of some 40,000 military personnel were present in the city. The rest of the approximately 350,000 population were civilians.

    The number killed was very approximately 100,000. It is plain that not even the majority could possibly have been military personnel.

  28. Re:How fucking tasteless by Rei · · Score: 1

    ((Whoosh!!!))

    --
    "TAMS shouldn't be destroyed. They should just tag us before releasing us into the wild." -- Maeglin
  29. I'll just order one directly by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Not sure why all the fuss about this book, when instead of building a thermonuclear device you can just order one ready made... I hear Iran will be shipping them to countries around the globe any day now. Pretty sure I'm in the test market area!

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:I'll just order one directly by w_dragon · · Score: 1

      I hear their shipping tends to damage the package contents, unfortunately.

    2. Re:I'll just order one directly by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Iran is building a fission device, not a fusion device, get your rumors right.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  30. Re:Shortsighted Author by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I mean if we're going to weigh the possibility of making hydrogen bomb construction easier, thus endangering the lives of millions/billions of people in the future, versus some author having spent time putting together a book and then having it be a big waste of time, we have to side with the author.

    Oh for shit sakes.. who mods these idiots up? The secrets are OUT you idiot! Yes, be sure to scroll down to where the Chinese have one of our more advanced designs. Do you think others don't as well?

    To answer the other questions here -- Assuming the information is already available elsewhere doesn't mean anything because: (1) It's possible that the author is exaggerating (for his own 'I want to publish' reasons) how available that information is, and (2) it saves villains the work of finding and putting that information together on their own - information they might've overlooked.

    Do you honestly believe that foreign actors with the ability to get the raw materials won't have taken the time to assemble the information? Never mind.. I don't care what you believe as you're clearly an imbecile.

  31. foreign policy by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

    I'm more concerned about the effect this has on peoples' perception of our foreign policy. If people understood exactly how easy it is to build a Uranium atomic bomb (I understand we're talking about hydrogen here), they might feel very differently about being ok with Iran saying no to UN or IAEA regulator snooping.

    Hydrogen bomb knowledge is still not exactly common (like the uranium bomb knowledge is) so I can understand and even support their interest here. This isn't even about domestic consumption, anybody here could figure it out how to find the info if they really wanted, it's about foreign power

  32. Summary needs one change by just+another+AC · · Score: 1

    Attention mods- The summary should read:

    "The big secret the book discusses is...[REDACTED]"

    Regards
    Your Friendly Government Official

  33. Knowing how it works != knowing how to build it by gman003 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I know how suspension bridges work. I probably could build a small one, but any lengthy span would be well beyond me.

    I know how internal combustion engines work. It would take a year of training on the tools before I'd be able to make one that even sorta worked, and then it would be at 1900s-level functionality.

    I know how nuclear weapons work. Several types, in fact. But I cannot make them.
    1) I could build a gun-type weapon, given the material (200lbs of 90% pure U-235, a 76mm artillery barrel, and some regular explosives), but I could not create the equipment to refine uranium.
    2) I could probably build a reactor to generate plutonium, with massive effort and a significant risk of poisoning myself, but I could not build a working implosion bomb with it. It would take a year's training in explosives just to be able to build an existing design, and those designs are tightly secured.
    3) With the materials, I might be able to upgrade an unboosted fission weapon into a boosted one. Maybe.
    4) A fusion weapon is completely beyond me. You could stick me in Lawrence Livermore with all the parts in front of me, and without some Ikea-like instructions you aren't going to get anything.

    We are protected from homemade gun-type weapons by the scarcity of uranium and the immense difficulty in refining it. Remember, this is something that was beyond the capabilities of most nations a scant 70 years ago. A dedicated nation-state or perhaps certain multinational corporations could pull it off, but not without detection.

    We are protected against homemade implosion-type weapons by the complex engineering necessary, the esoteric nature of the specific engineering knowledge needed (nuclear physics and shaped explosives are not a common dual-major), and by the absolute need for testing before use. The former prevents fringe groups from succeeding; the latter prevents the non-suicidal from trying.

    We are not protected by lack of general knowledge on nukes, because no such lack of knowledge exists. I learned half of this stuff from school textbooks, and the other half from Wikipedia. Anyone driven to find more can easily do so.

  34. Re:How fucking tasteless by Zordak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Many feel the Japanese would have surrendered anyhow.

    I call BS. Before the atomic bombs, Japan's strategy was to basically arm every citizen and make the invasion of the mainland such a bloody, costly quagmire for the Allies that they would negotiate favorable peace terms. Even the Wikipedia article on Surrender of Japan has a deeper understanding of the issue than whatever you're making up. Even after Hiroshima, the Supreme Council voted against surrender. They thought that maybe the U.S. only had one bomb, or that it lacked the will power to use it again. After Nagasaki (and the Soviet invasion), the Supreme Council still didn't want to surrender, so they tortured a captured U.S. P-51 pilot, and he told them that the U.S. had at least 100 atomic bombs (he was lying). But the cabinet still split on whether to surrender. It took the emperor basically begging the cabinet, for the sake of the millions who were about to be slaughtered, to persuade them to vote in favor of surrender.

    Modern navel-gazing revisionist historians really don't appreciate how truly warlike and blood-soaked the entire Japanese culture was before 1945. They were obsessed with killing and torture. The Japanese surrender and subsequent disarmament fundamentally transformed the entire nation.

    --

    Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
  35. Re:How fucking tasteless by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    War also never changes.

  36. Re:How fucking tasteless by mbkennel · · Score: 1

    | Guess all the stories about the British, Canadian and German scientists contributing must be false, the USA did it single handedly?

    a) British & Canadian scientists contributed significantly to the fission bomb project. They did not contribute significantly to the successful fusion bomb projects in the USA and USSR.

    b) German scientists did not contribute significantly to the US nuclear weapons projects unless you count former Germans expelled or driven out because of Nazi ideology.

  37. Re:How fucking tasteless by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    women, children, and other civilians.

    Women, Children, and Adult Males. Interesting that not a single military person was killed. At least according to your re-statement.

  38. the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by TiggertheMad · · Score: 1, Interesting

    There's a big difference between uranium and a working hydrogen bomb. The US won't use nukes unless someone else detonates one first.

    That isn't how it worked out for Hiroshima.....For all our talk about how we are morally 'better' because we are a 'democracy', remember we are the only country that has use a nuclear weapon on an enemy.

    Also, this author probably doesn't have a security clearance, so pretty much all the sources of info he is going to have access to is going to be by definition declassified. Unless he was getting some of the engineers who work our current batch of nuclear weapons drunk and taking notes, it seems pretty unlikely that he has any privileged info. You can learn quite a bit about nuclear and thermonuclear devices if you know which physics papers to read. The physics for hydrogen bombs and stars are the same thing.

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
    1. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by The+Snowman · · Score: 1

      Also, this author probably doesn't have a security clearance, so pretty much all the sources of info he is going to have access to is going to be by definition declassified.

      By definition, classified information released into the world and publicly available is still classified. It still has legal protections, including being a felony for distributing it.

      In practice in 2015 this policy is ineffective, but it is still the law. Back when a leak meant photocopying secrets and giving them to the Soviets it made more sense. Now that we have the Internet, Wikileaks, Snowden, Manning, et al. it does not make a lot of sense but it does not have to as long as we are talking legal definitions.

      --
      24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
    2. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by tlambert · · Score: 1

      Also, this author probably doesn't have a security clearance, [...]

      He had one at the time he helped invent the things. Yes, it's *THAT* Dr. Kenneth W. Ford who is the author we are talking about.

    3. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by JonBoy47 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, we used the Bomb, twice, against an enemy that fought tenaciously, and far beyond any reasonable chance of victory. The death toll, while still horrific, was a tiny fraction of the alternative.

      Have you ever heard of Operation Downfall? It was the planned invasion of the Japanese homeland. The basic gist was to, ultimately, march into Tokyo and dictate surrender terms to Emperor Hirohito, personally. The planned amphibious landings were double the size of D-Day, and would have extended the war well into 1946, with casualty estimates into the millions. Additionally, the Japanese defensive plan (Operation Ketsugo) called for the all-out mobilization of the civilian population.

    4. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by JonBoy47 · · Score: 1

      It's only a crime if you were indoctrinated and signed a non-disclosure agreement wherein you agreed to be held criminally liable. Note that, while Snowden has a rich bounty on his head, no wrong-doing has been alleged on the part of the NY Times, Washington Post, or any of the other news outlets that published his leaks.

      Now the British, they have the Official Secrets Act.

    5. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by Mantrid42 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      For some perspective, in preparation for Operation Downfall, 500,000 Purple Hearts were made. They made so many that we were still using that same batch in Afghanistan and Iraq in the 2000s.

      THAT'S how many people were expected to be wounded, let alone killed, and that was just the American side of the conflict.

    6. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by number6x · · Score: 1
      Dr. Ford is a former President of New Mexico Tech, where the mythbusters go when they want to create a really big explosion.

      Maybe they can bust the myth that there is enough information in the book to build a real H-bomb!

      Dr. Ford is quite a character, and brilliant. He wasn't as colorful as the president of New Mexico Tech he repleced, Dr. Stirling Colgate, but Dr. Ford was pretty impressive.

    7. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      That's odd because Japan was on the brink of surrender anyway. It also doesn't explain why the bombs had to be used on civilians instead of purely military targets or some uninhabited place where their power could be demonstrated without killing hundreds of thousands of people.

      Surely if the concern was saving the maximum number of lives it wouldn't have made sense to then bomb civilians when there were other options. Why start with a city when there were plenty of uninhabited or low population areas?

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    8. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by DaveyJJ · · Score: 4, Interesting

      BS. Utter BS. Here is the one documented fact about the end of the PTO war that everyone in your country who spews this BS about a necessary invasion of the Japanese homeland islands wants to conveniently forget ... The Japanese had made it clear through diplomatic channels by June of 1945 that were willing to completely surrender and end the war with one condition ... the Emperor (alone) would be immune from any war crimes charges. Military generals etc were fair game, but the Emperor gets off without any war crimes charges brought against him. (Remember that until May 1947 when the Japanese Constitution was changed, Hirohito was considered by many a "living god" and remained even afterwards "a descendent of the Sun Goddess".) The United Sates refused to accept this single condition for surrender and carried on with the plans to use atomic weapons so that they could dictate the surrender terms.

      --
      DaveyJJ
    9. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 4, Informative

      Note that the atomic bombs saved the lives of millions of Japanese by removing six cities from the "bomb these places into the stone age list". Apparently, the people making the bomb wanted to get a good idea of the effects without having to take into account the effects of prior bombings. This included Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which were spared the years of bombings (and their attendant casualties) that other cities had to endure.

      Note further that the death tolls of Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined were lower than that of the firebombing of Tokyo.

      Note, finally, that when generals talk about saving lives, they're generally (if you'll excuse the pun) talking about the lives of their men, not their enemy's men. Saving the lives of the enemy is someone else's job....

      Addendum: just curious - where in Japan would you be finding "plenty of uninhabited or low population areas"?

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    10. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by MachineShedFred · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Two things:

      1. One night of fire bombing in Tokyo killed more people and did more damage than the atomic attack on Hiroshima did. The difference was it took an armada of bombers to do it, rather than just one plane with one package to drop off.

      2. Truman wasn't just looking to end this war, but prevent the next conflict that was already brewing up - one with the Soviets. By showing Stalin that he was not only incredibly vulnerable to an attack that he couldn't bog down by throwing millions of people at like he did with the Nazis, and that the person on the other side was capable of using that kind of weapon, that war never came.

      Was dropping those two bombs the right decision? Maybe, maybe not. However, it is world history, and seeing the devastation of two cities from these comparatively small weapons compared to what the 1950s and 1960s brought, it might have brought pause to anyone looking to use them later in the coldest days of the cold war.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    11. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 2

      No, the alternative was to wait.

      It should be noted that:
        - The Japanese, like the Germans, had their own nuclear weapons program in progress. (That was how they were able to recognize the nuclear bombs for what they were: Bombs were SOME of the possibilities they were pursuing.)
        - While they thought nuclear-reaction bombs were hard but doable, they were actively working on the immanent bombardment of the West Coast of the Untied States with radiological weapons - "dirty bombs" spreading fatal levels of radioactive material. (Remember that much of the US war infrastructure, including nuclear laboratories such as Livermore and the Navy's Pacific fleet construction and supply lines, were on or very near the west coast. The prevailing winds are from the west and able to carry fallout blankets to them.)
        - The primary reason for using TWO bombs, only a few days apart, was to create the impression that the US could keep this up. The Japanese had an idea that making the bombs took so much resource that the US could only have a very few. And they were right.

      As I understand it went something like this: There was enough material for no more than two or three more, then there'd have been about a year of infrastructure construction and ramp-up, after which the US could have started with monthly bombs and worked up to weekly or so. If the US could have gotten to that point unmolested, Japan was doomed. But a LOT can happen over that time in a total war - and big projects can get hamstrung when the bulk of the industrial output and manpower has to be used to fight off conventional attacks meanwhile. The idea was to give the Japanese the impression the US was ALREADY that far along.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    12. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      For some perspective, in preparation for Operation Downfall, 500,000 Purple Hearts were made. They made so many that we were still using that same batch in Afghanistan and Iraq in the 2000s. THAT'S how many people were expected to be wounded, let alone killed, and that was just the American side of the conflict.

      Alternatively, the guy in charge of procurement had a cousin in the medal-making business.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    13. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Neither of those things answer the question though. Why did the bombs have to be used on civilian targets? For that matter, why was it necessary to fire bomb Tokyo? In Europe both sides attached each other's cities because it was total war with one side standing to lose everything, but the US was never in any real danger of being invaded or losing to the Japanese.

      This is the fundamental problem with all attempts to justify the atomic bombings. There were alternatives, they were not even tried. That's why many people consider the bombings to be tests the US conducted with the expectation that in the next major conflict its own cities would be suffering the same fate, creating a need to study the effects.

      As for uninhabited and low population areas, Japan has many islands and remote areas. Just take a look at the map, there are many inland areas and points along the coast away from major population centres. Nowadays many of them have nuclear power plants precisely because they are away from major cities. Fukushima would have been a lot worse if it had been in a highly populated area. Off-shore islands would have been even easier targets and extremely effective demonstrations.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    14. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      That's odd because Japan was on the brink of surrender anyway.

      Well, Japan's idea of "surrender" was returning to previous borders, which would still include Korea and Manchuria, and then forgetting WW2 ever happened with no occuptation. They were no where near the unconditional surrender that the US was demanding. As it was, the Emperor said it was the bombs that made him to decide to surrender, and even then, there was an attempted coup by the military to keep the war going. Certainly, they could have tried using the bomb in Tokyo bay or out to sea as a demonstration attack. However, we were at war. Had Japan not surrendered and we would have invaded including dropping any more bombs we got made. I can't see any reason for a demonstration attack when they might have to just bomb those cities later.

    15. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by careysub · · Score: 1

      Nagasaki was the one area of Japan that was heavily Christian. The United States had the opportunity to bomb military or government targets. Instead they chose to bomb civilians.

      The Hiroshima bomb was dropped on the southwest corner of the Japanese Second General Army HQ, a base of over 20,000 soldiers, and which directed the defense of Kyushu, which was the site of the planned U.S. invasion in the autumn. Hiroshima was the principal port city supplying this army.

      The "Nagasaki" bomb was actually assigned to Kokura Arsenal, the largest intact purely military target in Japan. The unescorted bomber was unable to bomb Kokura Arsenal due to fighter opposition, and ended up dropping the bomb on the only target it could reach with its remaining fuel (Nagasaki was its tertiary target).

      So the U.S. actually targeted high value military targets, not just "bombing civilians".

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    16. Re:the US 'probably' wont use a nuke first.... by Agent0013 · · Score: 1

      Sure, you can believe they were talking about surrendering. But they attacked Pearl Harbor during talks of surrender also. I'm not so sure I would put much stake into what they say. And they also had the plans and exercises going for every civilian to mount violent resistance with pitchforks and whatever else they could muster.

      --

      -- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
  39. Operation Downfall by Myria · · Score: 1

    The number killed was very approximately 100,000. It is plain that not even the majority could possibly have been military personnel.

    Clearly. However, the most important thing is to compare the Bombs to the estimated casualties of Operation Downfall--a hell of a lot more Japanese people would have been killed by the Allied invasion.

    --
    "Screw Sun, cross-platform will never work. Let's move on and steal the Java language." - Visual J++ Product Manager
    1. Re:Operation Downfall by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Generally it's not an accepted defence to say "you should have seen what I would have done if I hadn't nuked them!"

  40. Re:How fucking tasteless by k8to · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Oh, the entire culture was obsessed with torture and killing. Do you realize how racist this sounds?

    --
    -josh
  41. Re:How fucking tasteless by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    A non-combatant in a country you are at war with is not an enemy, and deliberately killing them is murder. Go take a look at the massacres of Vietnam and how those were treated at the time and as history.

    Though, bombing a tank factory and killing a non-combatant janitor is not murder, as you targeted a military target and the death is collateral damage, not a murder. Dresden and the Tokyo bombings killed lots of civilians. Hiroshima was a military target, killing 20,000 Japanese troops. That there were 2 times that in dead civilians doesn't make it murder.

    But Nagasaki was a terrorist target. It was smaller, and had only a token military presence. The targets were "civilian" facilities that were making war implements. The factory that made the primary torpedo used in Pearl Harbor was destroyed, as were other factories and metal works. But almost no military were killed. The point was to terrorize the Japanese into surrender. Hiroshima "should have" caused a surrender, which was given with unconscionable conditions. It was a mass killing of the main Japanese force assembled to repel an American invasion from the south. But the Japanese wouldn't give in. So Nagasaki was proof that any place left so far (mostly) untouched would be reduced to a parking lot before an American invasion would lose American lives fighting the Japanese on home soil. It may have been necessary to end the war and killed far fewer Japanese civilians than an invasion, but it was still not a military target.

  42. Re:How fucking tasteless by Kevin+Fishburne · · Score: 1

    What kind of small, hateful person says "women, children, and other civilians" instead of "people" or "civilians"? How fucked do you have to be to value the life of one person more than another because of their sex or adulthood?

    This isn't pretty, but human life isn't equally valuable and there are nearly infinite ways this can be quantified. First, it's subjective, and second, only a handful of reasons a rational person would agree with. Some examples:

    Children generally have more time in front of them and therefore are being robbed of more when killed. If you had to choose between the death of a five year old or a 90 year old, which would you be inclined to choose?

    If you believe in justice/punishment/retribution/etc., older people are more likely to have committed acts in their life that are worthy of punishment, while younger people are less likely. Obviously that doesn't necessarily mean they deserve to die or that there's actually a connection between their sins and their death, but again if you had to choose between an aid worker and a serial killer being killed, which would you choose?

    If the Earth were about to be hit by an extinction event and only 10000 people could be saved via sci-fi-method-of-your-choice, would you select people at random or choose the best-of-the-best with respect to the successful continuity of the species?

    If someone points a gun at your head and says, "I'm going to kill you," you are legally justified in killing them in self defense, which indicates at that moment your life is more valuable than the gunman's. Were it not, you'd be expected to simply run away, try to talk them out of it, or use other non-lethal means to stop them.

    --
    Buy your next Linux PC at eightvirtues.com
  43. Re:How fucking tasteless by shentino · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Not very fucked at all actually.

    Women and children are valued more because they are worth more.

    Women can have kids in the future and may even be pregnant now, and children can grow up into adults.

  44. Re:How fucking tasteless by shentino · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately the truth doesn't have to be politically correct.

  45. Re:The reason they want an H Bomb by rubycodez · · Score: 1

    false, the "nuclear rifle" 's warhead weighed only 51 lbs. and had yield of 20 tons of TNT...that would be worth putting on missile for certain applications.

  46. Re:How fucking tasteless by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

    Children generally have more time in front of them and therefore are being robbed of more when killed.

    Also, children generally have less of a say as to their country's political actions. In democracies, adults can vote. In non-democracies, adults could decide to protest (often risking arrest, imprisonment, or death) or engage in outright rebellion. Depending on their situation, the adults might have a small say in what their country is doing, but it's still something.

    Children don't even have this. You can't expect a three year old to march on his nation's capital demanding that the President-For-Life step down because of his militaristic maneuvers. You can't think that a five year old would cast a vote for the opposition party, risking his life and pre-k education to voice his political opposition to the majority party's policies.

    The worst-case-scenario with kids is that they can be (at a certain age), taken by force and drafted into a quasi-army, but that still is the adults turning the kids into soldiers, not the kids deciding for themselves that strapping bombs to themselves would be fun to do after they are finished at the playground.

    --
    My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
  47. Re:How fucking tasteless by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 3, Informative

    It was one of the least militarized cities in Japan, which is why it had been so little touched by conventional bombings.

    Not exactly. There actually was an important military base in the city (headquarters of the Japanese 5th Division and the 2nd Army Headquarters.), as well as many industrial targets, and it was an important port city. Keep in mind that Japan had converted most private enterprises and even many homes into places of war materiel production. There was no such thing as a non-militarized city in Japan at that time. Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and several other cities had not been bombed only because they had been taken off the bombing list some time before. The idea was to keep some prime targets "pristine", so accurate bomb damage assessment could be done afterwards. Everyone was well aware there would be massive civilian casualties.

    Truman knew exactly what he was doing, incidentally. It was true he had moral qualms, but it was reported his Secretary of State told him "What will you say, Mr. President, at your impeachment proceeding, when the American people learn that you had a weapon which could have ended the war and did not use it?" The US leadership also feared the planned invasion of Japan by the Soviet Union, with the real threat of Japan being split into a communist and democratic zones similar to Germany. The bombing was seen as the quickest and surest way to end the Pacific war

    Many in the US leadership and military brass had also been wildly optimistic about the "imminent collapse of Nazi Germany", after which the fighting had gone on for half a year still. History is fairly clear that the Japanese were unlikely to surrender before the bombing. Even after the two atomic bombs were dropped and the Soviet Union joined the war, the Japanese military leadership was still evenly split about whether to continue the war. It took the emperor to make the final decision. Even after the emperor publicly surrendered (without ever using the word 'surrender' or 'defeat' in his speech), a small group of Japanese officers actually mutinied and invaded the palace, fortunately not succeeding.

    --
    Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
  48. Re:How fucking tasteless by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    You wish. If Truman wanted to avoid civilian casualties, he would have considered Japan's face-saving attempt to surrender while keeping their Emperor. Instead, he nuked them into submission....and then Japan keep Hirohito anyway, who kept his title until his death in 1989.

    But at least it's a change of imperialistic hackery for you, after spending years insisting that Sweden can't promise it wont hand Assange over to the U.S. for the "intelligence crime" of running WikiLeaks with one side of your mouth. Only to then insist that Sweden can't extradite for intelligence crimes with the other.

  49. Re:How fucking tasteless by Zordak · · Score: 2

    That their culture was steeped in something does not mean that every individual is obsessed with it. American culture is obsessed with a bunch of people named Kardashian, but all I know about them is that there are several of them, and I think one of them is named Kim or something.

    And racist or not, yes, Japanese culture was obsessed with killing and torture. It had been for a very, very long time.

    --

    Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
  50. Publicity stunt? by abbamouse · · Score: 1

    So the author submits a book which he doesn't believe is legally required to be submitted. Then when changes are suggested he cries "censorship" and ignores the changes, with apparently no legal ramifications whatsoever. That doesn't sound much like censorship to me. The case involving the Progressive was indeed censorship (and prior restraint at that), but this seems more like an attempt to garner some publicity and "authenticity" for the book. But then again maybe I'm too old and cynical about these things.

    --
    Make cheese not war 8:)
    1. Re:Publicity stunt? by tlambert · · Score: 1

      So the author submits a book which he doesn't believe is legally required to be submitted.

      You agree to some pretty draconian rules when you get a Q clearance. One of them is submitting any future publications for review, with the understanding that they will be censored of any classified material. At issue here is whether or not information which is already public should be considered classified, just because they're too lazy to declassify information which has already been disclosed.

      In this particular case, not only was the information they are upset about disclosed, a lot more information was disclosed on top of it. I remember the particular article which disclosed it, since it was in an August 1982 journal discussing how to build X-Ray lasers for SDI using exactly the technology under discussion. Instead of putting a baffle between the halves of the device and your fusion fuel at the second focus, at the second focus you put an EMP target that then uses tin and lead tubes containing wires to use the EMP to power the X-Ray lasers. I think I have a copy of it around my house (somewhere), because it's the same issue that announced energy break-even for hot fusion in Tokamak 2, which I though was a pretty cool thing.

      So the info has been out there at least 32 1/2 years.

      His problem is that he has prior restraint agreements with some pretty nasty teeth in them.

  51. Re:How fucking tasteless by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    it wasnt 80K civilians first of all, a large number of them were working towards supporting the war effort.

    If someone hit detroit in the 40s and took out GM, would you say they took out civies? no they were building the machines of war!

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  52. Re:How fucking tasteless by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    well, if you said prior to 1900 (as we are doing in the case here, but 1945) you would be correct.

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  53. Re:How fucking tasteless by chipschap · · Score: 2

    Truman had to make one of the toughest calls ever made in human history. It's easy to second guess today. But put yourself in his shoes. I believe he weighed the information that he had and made the decision that he thought best, knowing full well that history would both praise and condemn him.

    No one could possibly be happy about the deaths at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But no one is happy about all the lives that WWII claimed before that time and would have claimed had the war gone on. Paul Tibbets, the pilot of Enola Gay, famously said (rough quote) "I deeply regret the loss of life, but I do not apologize."

    This was/is not a simple issue with a simple answer.

  54. Cheese it, it's the Feds! by tlambert · · Score: 2

    Cheese it, it's the Feds!

    Everyone hide your Beryllium-Pollonium detonators and your K-alpha reflector cavities, and act natural, for God's sake!

    1. Re:Cheese it, it's the Feds! by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

      Oh, if I only had points.... Someone boost this post up where it belongs!

      --

      Lodragan Draoidh
      The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
  55. Re:How fucking tasteless by bigfinger76 · · Score: 1

    Have you ever read a single thing about World War II? Seen a History Channel show about it? Anything? I'd recommend it. It's fascinating, and you are in serious need of the education.

  56. sums it up by l0n3s0m3phr34k · · Score: 1

    SETEC ASTRONOMY

  57. Re:How fucking tasteless by Isaac-1 · · Score: 1

    Industrial infrastructure producing weapons and ammunition is also a valid military target as it goes towards depriving the enemy of the ability to wage war.

  58. Re:How fucking tasteless by G-forze · · Score: 1

    Well, children should really be "worth" less, since they have had less invested in them. An adult with an education has had hundreds of thousands of dollars invested, and is likely a contributing member of society. A child of four years has cost nowhere near as much, is a drain on society for many years still, and much more easily replaced.

    --
    "There's someone in my head but it's not me." - Pink Floyd, Dark Side of the Moon
  59. Weapons or scientific progress by dddux · · Score: 1

    If we [the world] invested the same effort and money into space exploration as we do in making weapons, we'd be already exploring the nearest galaxies.

    --
    "It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." - Jiddu Krishnamurti
  60. Oh, *seven* feet wide? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

    seven feet wide and 20 feet high

    Doh. I made mine six feet wide. No wonder it didn't work!

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  61. Re:How fucking tasteless by Rei · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "one of the least" != "no military component". You're absolutely correct that "There was no such thing as a non-militarized city in Japan at the time". Hiroshima had been a city that refugees had been fleeing to. It is simply true that for its size it was one of the least militarized cities in Japan at that time.

    In something that's rather sickening, and one *hopes* was accidental but suspects that it wasn't, the US had been leafletting Japan in the weeks leading up to the atomic bombings, warning them to evacuate "Otaru, Akita, Hachinohe, Fukushima, Urawa, Takayama, Iwakuni, Tottori, Imabari, Yawata, Miyakonojo, and Saga" There was no mention of Hiroshima or Nagasaki. Anyone who listened to the US leaflets walked into the bomb zone.

    Byrnes (claimed source of your quote) was an atomic bomb radical within the government. He wanted to threaten to bomb the Russians to get better success in the postwar negotiations too. But if you search for your quote online you'll find only half a dozen hits. It appears to be an urban legend. Claims that "The US leadership also feared the planned invasion of Japan by the Soviet Union" are somewhat true. The US had been trying for a long time to get the Soviet Union involved, but started having misgivings. Various people were concerned to varying degrees about the potential of Soviet involvement.

    You're free to disagree with the US military's own postwar analysis of the Japan situation (the Strategic Bombing Survey). But that would be what most people would call "revisionist history".

    The fact that there was a coup attempt after the emperor tried to surrender just drives home how little effect the atomic bombings had. The War Cabinet had steadily been shifting more to the side of the doves but was split down the middle, three-three on whether to accept an unconditional surrender. The emperor had been working in secret to negotiate an unconditional surrender, including making preparations to send his son to offer it, but had been delayed by Potsdam. After the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, there was literally no change in the view of any of the members of the War Cabinet, it remained a three-three split. The hawks considered it just another entry in the list of horrors that Japan was experiencing. The Potsdam declaration had been made just two weeks earlier. There hadn't been an imperial conference since the Potsdam Declaration to discuss it. The Imperial Conference on the 9th-10th. It was at this conference that the emperor made clear that he had wanted to accept the Potsdam terms. But it is clearly documented that he already had by that time supported accepting the Potsdam terms, even before the bombing.

    --
    "TAMS shouldn't be destroyed. They should just tag us before releasing us into the wild." -- Maeglin
  62. Re:How fucking tasteless by Rei · · Score: 1

    Again, ((Whoosh!!!))

    In case you're curious, that's the sound of the point flying right over your head.

    --
    "TAMS shouldn't be destroyed. They should just tag us before releasing us into the wild." -- Maeglin
  63. Re:How fucking tasteless by bluegutang · · Score: 1

    Women and children are presumed not to be combatants. Killing a combatant or potential combatant (i.e. a man) contains an element of self-defense. Killing a non-combatant is just murder.

  64. Re:How fucking tasteless by countach · · Score: 1

    "Killing the enemy is not murder."

    Debatable.

  65. Re:How fucking tasteless by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 1

    Keep in mind that the Strategic Bombing Survey's postwar analysis is not "official history". It's easy enough to find many dissenting opinions, so I don't think it's fair to call it "revisionist history" either way.

    From the Wikipedia article covering the controversy of the atomic bomb attacks:

    According to historian Richard B. Frank,

            The intercepts of Japanese Imperial Army and Navy messages disclosed without exception that Japan's armed forces were determined to fight a final Armageddon battle in the homeland against an Allied invasion. The Japanese called this strategy Ketsu Go (Operation Decisive). It was founded on the premise that American morale was brittle and could be shattered by heavy losses in the initial invasion. American politicians would then gladly negotiate an end to the war far more generous than unconditional surrender.

    The U.S. Department of Energy's history of the Manhattan Project lends some credence to these claims, saying that military leaders in Japan

            also hoped that if they could hold out until the ground invasion of Japan began, they would be able to inflict so many casualties on the Allies that Japan still might win some sort of negotiated settlement.

    And if you want to go straight to the source:

    Kichi Kido, one of Emperor Hirohito's closest advisers, stated, "We of the peace party were assisted by the atomic bomb in our endeavor to end the war." Hisatsune Sakomizu, the chief Cabinet secretary in 1945, called the bombing "a golden opportunity given by heaven for Japan to end the war."

    It also goes on to discuss the opposing viewpoints, such as the Strategic Bombing Survey that you mentioned, as well as others.

    So, in fairness I should refrain from saying that "the Japanese were unlikely to surrender before the bombing", and instead state "many of Japan's military leaders wished to continue the war". As to what would have really transpired with a different course of action, it's obviously a matter of speculation. My feeling, and that of many historians, is that it may have been extremely difficult for Emperor Hirohito to break the cabinet deadlock like he did had it not been for the two atomic attacks and the entry of Russia into the war against Japan.

    --
    Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
  66. Re:How fucking tasteless by Carewolf · · Score: 1

    I call BS. Before the atomic bombs, Japan's strategy was to basically arm every citizen and make the invasion of the mainland such a bloody

    No, they were negotiating surrender. They were just not offering unconditional surrender, and the American leadership demanded.

  67. Re:How fucking tasteless by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    Women can have kids in the future and may even be pregnant now,.

    Not on their own they can't.

    --
    Wanna buy a shirt?
    https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
  68. Re:Get out of the goddamn cave by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    Claiming that killing people saves lives is delusional to the point of insanity. Unfortunately this insanity is alive and well, though today we claim "we must kill all the Muslims to get peace" instead of those "dirty Japs".

    It's not though. The harsh facts are dropping the nukes resulted in far fewer casualties than would have been suffered through invasion and the war ending sooner than it would have had Japan been traditionally combated. The battle for Japan would have dwarfed anything previous and would likely never be topped. The invasion itself would have made D-day look like a gentle stroll in the park with more people dead in the first day than though all victims of the nukes combined. Any one who thinks Japan would have surrendered is delusional and would probably say the same about America facing invasion. What do you think would happen if America were invaded, would they surrender? I really really really doubt it.

    Also, only nutters say we should kill all Muslims. We are not at war with them nor intending a massive invasion of their lands.

    --
    Wanna buy a shirt?
    https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
  69. Re:How fucking tasteless by Major+Blud · · Score: 1

    It seems ironic that he would find the wiping out of another 100,000 people by atom bomb too horrible when the conventional bombing of Tokyo killed that many during Operation Meetinghouse on March 9-10 1945.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B...

    People sometimes get pictures of the conventional Tokyo bombings confused with those of Hiroshima.

    --
    If you post as Anonymous Coward, don't expect a reply.
  70. The real issue is.... by Sqreater · · Score: 1
    Making them small, not making them. Information about the Ulam-Teller design is all over the internet. Ford's book may help others make them small enough to put on missiles (in my untutored opinion). If you want info about the Ulam-Teller device you can get it in detail all over the internet.

    For example: http://nuclearweaponarchive.or...

    With regard to "thermal equilibrium" we have from the above, Quote: "[Note: Many descriptions in the open literature exist dating back to the late seventies claiming that energetic X-rays from the primary are absorbed by the radiation casing (or plastic foam), and are re-emitted at a lower energy - implying that some sort of energy down-shifting mechanism (like X- ray fluorescence) is at work. This is a misconception. The lining of the casing is in local thermal equilibrium with the energy flux impinging on it, and re-radiates X-rays with the same spectrum. The X-ray spectrum softens simply because the photon gas cools as it expands to fill the entire radiation channel.] In physics a closed container of radiation, like the radiation case, is called a "hohlraum". This German word for "cavity" (which has the obvious English cognates "hole" and "room") has been attached to the study of the thermodynamics of radiation since the last century in connection with blackbody radiation. German physicists early in this century used it as a theoretical model for deriving the blackbody radiation laws from quantum mechanics. Energy in a hohlraum necessarily comes into thermal equilibrium and assumes a blackbody spectrum. This is important for obtaining the necessary symmetry for an efficient implosion. Regardless of how uneven the initial energy distribution within the casing is, the radiation field will quickly establish thermal equilibrium throughout the casing - heating all parts to the same temperature."

    Hans Bethe said they made complicated bombs in those days. Hmmmm...

    --
    E Proelio Veritas.
    1. Re:The real issue is.... by Sqreater · · Score: 1

      I feel the task of creating a fusion bomb would have gone a lot faster if they had just given the job to engineers. They would not have spent years attempting to mathematically model the damned thing in excruciating detail. True engineers would have just built trial ideas until they got it. And, this radiation compression thing is a rather obvious try for an engineer in my opinion. I wonder how long mankind would have waited for the procedure to tie one's shoes if it had been given to physicists to determine. Also, for all we know, the idea came not to the physicists but from an invisible nobody, maybe even an engineer. But nobodies cannot invent the hydrogen bomb, now can they? The most important thing that comes from the pdf reference that is pointed to in the slashdot entry is that no "sparkplug" of fissile material is mentioned. I always thought that the hydrogen bomb design shown to the public was bogus. It seems to me that gross phenomenon are straightforward and cannot be finessed. It seems to me that the public design is really just the combination of two things, a design to increase the yield of fission devices and the design of a fusion device. It always seemed to me that the fission sparkplug crapped up the process. You want pure fusion fuel for a gross phenomenon. Therefore you want extreme compression to raise the temperature of the fusion fuel, and a reduction of surface area to reduce the escape of energy due to radiation which is not explicitly mentioned, but which has its analog in fission core reduction by compression. I have no expertise in this subject area and you should take that into account.

      --
      E Proelio Veritas.
  71. Re:How fucking tasteless by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

    Oh lovely cash, is there nothing you cannot lay a value upon! Wait though, the adult will have already contributed a possibly significant portion of their productivity so will have a reduced future value compared to the child, maybe you should consider the futures market?

    --
    If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
  72. Re:How fucking tasteless by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

    Like in the Twin Towers?

    --
    If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
  73. Re:How fucking tasteless by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    So is American culture. It doesn't mean all Americans are killers.

  74. Re:How fucking tasteless by fche · · Score: 1

    That's a mildly interesting corner case ... war between belligerents being declared where?

  75. Offer to be added to cart is no longer valid by quonsar · · Score: 1

    Tried to get the book for $18 unlimited access. Got this instead: "Offer to be added to cart is no longer valid, please refresh previous page."

    1. Re:Offer to be added to cart is no longer valid by Sqreater · · Score: 1

      I tried to order the "Critical Mass Summaries" in the 1980s and got my check returned. Now they are on the internet.

      --
      E Proelio Veritas.
  76. Tom Clancy strikes again by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

    Tom Clancy published 'The Sum of All Fears' in 1991. In the afterword, he mentions how it was frighteningly easy to piece together, from public domain data, how to build a multistage thermonuclear bomb. How he was couriered design specs for fabrication devices for the asking. How he felt the need to obfuscate some details, even though he knew there was no point, just to assuage his conscience.

    As he points out, it's physics, and it's engineering.

    --
    Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  77. Re:How fucking tasteless by Alopex · · Score: 1

    Not sure why this was voted down as this was exactly what I was thinking.

    A 20 or 30 year old represents a large investment of resources in society. Also, a young adult is far more productive than a child. If children as a group or adults as a group magically vanished from society, society would be come to a halt if you lost the adults, whereas losing children would be a much smaller waste of time and money.

  78. Re:How fucking tasteless by j-beda · · Score: 1

    Except facts and history do not agree with you.

    Fact is that Japan offered to surrender BEFORE the bombs were dropped. They had one condition, that their emperor would not be harmed. The US required unconditional surrender.

    The US wanted to a) test the effects of radiation on humans (primarily civilian targets were chosen), and b) the US wanted to drop the bombs as a demonstration to (their allay), the Soviet Union.

    Not a position piece, but plenty in there to support the above assertions:

    http://nsarchive.gwu.edu/NSAEB...

    I did not know about the offer to surrender with conditions. I do not see a lot of evidence for (a) being a significant factor, but can certainly believe that (b) was a consideration.

  79. Re:How fucking tasteless by Talderas · · Score: 1

    Hiroshima was 80,000 casualties of which 20,000 were soldiers.

    --
    "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  80. Re:Get out of the goddamn cave by Talderas · · Score: 1

    Hiroshima was the headquarters for three Japanese armies as well as housed significant number of combat troops, one quarter of the casualties from the bomb were soldiers, and Nagasaki was an industrial port city. Both locations had military significance.

    --
    "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  81. Re:How fucking tasteless by Talderas · · Score: 2

    Hiroshima was anything *but* a military base. It was one of the least militarized cities in Japan, which is why it had been so little touched by conventional bombings.

    One quarter of the casualties from the direct bombing were soldiers. The city served as the headquarters for second general army, the 59th army, and two divisions. Aside from the aforementioned 20,000 military casualties, the bomb also beheaded each of those commands. The city population was approximately 345,000 and there were 40,000 soldiers stationed within the city for a total of 385,000. The bomb killed 20.7% of the people inside the city, 17% of the civilian population, and 50% of the military population.

    Another militarily significant feature of Hiroshima that is often overlooked is its status as a transportation hub. Destroying facilities in Hiroshima would greatly impede Japan's ability to move soldiers and material around the mainland. This is one of the things we learned very quickly from the bombing campaign against Germany. Going after transportation targets was a very good way to take down the enemy's ability to produce war material as well as move troops around to defend against offensives and the USAAF general in charge of the atomic bombing was Carl Spaatz who was a huge supporter of transportation bombing who was transferred to the Pacific Theater after the war in Germany was concluded.

    Say what you will about the other criteria for target selection, Hiroshima had plenty of military strategic benefits to bombing and it's rivers made it unsuitable for LeMay's firebombing,

    --
    "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  82. Published in the Progressive... Dec 1979 by whitroth · · Score: 1

    Go look it up. I don't remember if that was the article that told you how to build one at home. The really hard part of that was the centrifuging, where you put the solvent and uranium in a bucket, and spun around as fast as you could in your living room for half an hour....

                    mark

  83. Re:How fucking tasteless by lucien86 · · Score: 1

    "No. Killing the enemy is not murder."

    Ah so the killing of the Jews by the German Nazis was not murder either. After all the Jews were seen as enemies by the Nazi's. Makes it all totally legitimate. It also makes everything ISIS do totally legitimate as well. And Pol Pot. And 9/11.

    Fascinating logic there. When we kill them its justified when they kill us its murder. You could use it to justify any crime anywhere...

    --
    Below the speed of light Special Relativity is one of the most accurate theories in physics - above the speed of light..
  84. Re:How fucking tasteless by lucien86 · · Score: 1

    "That's a mildly interesting corner case ... war between belligerents being declared where?"

    Mid 1980's Israeli attacks on Lebanon attacking civilian areas with bombs - bombs and planes supplied and paid for with money given by US.
    In a culture based on revenge and counter revenge 9/11 is just another marker among hundreds. We get them so they get us. They get us so we get them. There is no first shot. We'll (probably) still be fighting them in 50 years..

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    Below the speed of light Special Relativity is one of the most accurate theories in physics - above the speed of light..
  85. Re:How fucking tasteless by fche · · Score: 1

    Your first example is stretching the concept beyond the breaking point, and your others are only a little better.

  86. Re:How fucking tasteless by lucien86 · · Score: 1

    The point is that its all based on context. In the end context is more about power than right or wrong. The impartial answer is that all deliberate killing is murder or that none is..

    In the context of the US vs the Japanese, thousands of Japanese prisoners were summarily shot after being captured. In the later parts of the war many of the fights and battles became little more than one sided slaughters.
    Hiroshima was probably justifiable in pushing the Japanese towards unconditional surrender. Nagasaki was more an experiment than anything else, its military value was secondary although it actually ended the war..

    We know that the Nazis might have hit New York with a nuclear bomb, by accepting that it was justified for us to use the weapon against them we are also accepting a justification for them to have used it against us.. Its about capability not morals.

    --
    Below the speed of light Special Relativity is one of the most accurate theories in physics - above the speed of light..
  87. Re:How fucking tasteless by fche · · Score: 1

    "The impartial answer is that all deliberate killing is murder or that none is.."

    That "impartial answer" is not only not accepted in military circles, but also neither in civilian law. There is a huge spectrum. "murder" is *unlawful* deliberate killing, which for example deliberate killing in self-defence isn't.

  88. Re:How fucking tasteless by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    However, if you study the military history, you'll find the reality is that Nagasaki was a major sea port and industrial center (including the Mitsubishi Steel and Arms Works), making it unquestionably a military target.

    And it made the torpedoes used in Pearl Harbor. If it were hit in 1942, it would have undoubtedly been a military target. But hitting a civilian manufacturing town (even if the civilians were manufacturing implements of war) just days before a surrender, and after talks of surrender had started makes Nagasaki more a terrorist act than Dresden, which was thought quite poorly of at the time (by both enemies and allies).

    Hiroshima nuking killed about 20,000 troops. Nagasaki nuking killed less than 200 troops. Two orders of magnitude. The Nagasaki bomb wasn't intended to weaken the military's ability to fight, but was intended to weaken the public's will to fight. One is a military goal, the other terrorism.

  89. Re:How fucking tasteless by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    If you look into this, you'll find the rumors regarding "talks of surrender" are greatly (and cleverly) exaggerated.

    After Hiroshima, the Allies requested a surrender. Japan surrendered. The allies rejected the surrender (unacceptable terms). Nagasaki was nuked. Japan revised their terms of surrender. That one, still with terms, was accepted.

    Which of those sentences are false? If none are false and they are in chronological order, the US committed mass murder to negotiate better terms of surrender.