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Manhattan Project Legacy

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The Manhattan Project: An Everlasting Legacy
On December 7, 1941, Japanese soldiers flew over a naval base in Hawaii, known as Pearl Harbor. In the attack, more than 2,400 people were killed, including civilians and soldiers. As a result of this attack, the United States ended up in a war they had no intention of being in. The Manhattan Project was a way to retaliate against Japan for forcing them into World War II. After Japan attacked, the United States knew that they had to do something in order to make sure the Japanese did not win the war. The Manhattan Project was America’s way of forcing them to surrender.
During World War II, a war that the United States was brought into because of Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor, the Manhattan Project was created as a way to secretly create the first atomic bomb. That bomb would later be dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, demonstrating its destructive power and ability to change mankind forever. Although people think that Groves and Oppenheimer as leaders of the Manhattan Project had the most impactful legacy because of their ability to work together to create the most destructive war weapon, it was in fact the advancements in nuclear technology due to the ability to force a country out of the war as …show more content…

Even with the research and studying the energy used to make the bomb, the people working on them were at great risks. The bomb was not only harmful to scientists when it was being made, but also when it was detonated. There was no way to defend a country from an atomic bomb. The bomb itself was more than 2000 times more powerful than a bomb the British bomb, "Grand Slam". The ability the bomb had to destroy a city was so large, it was something that the world did not understand until it was dropped. Scientists feared that the US was going to be attacked by an atomic bomb and the only defense would be to retaliate with a

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