Manhattan Project Significance

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Introduction:
“If the radiance of a thousand suns were to burst at once into the sky, that would be like the splendor of the mighty one. Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds”-J Robert Oppenheimer. Manhattan Project was a project that was brought about due to the discovery of the explosive properties of Uranium. It brought about the creation of the first atomic bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan. It wasn’t until the events that unfolded in Pearl Harbor that the US had considered something as drastic as dropping the atomic bombs.

Historical Significance:
The Manhattan Project was historically significant because it almost entirely changed how destructive war could be. The creation of atomic weaponry made it possible …show more content…

Cold revenge came with the creation of the atomic bombs through the Manhattan Project. Historians say that during the war, the Allied forces had all but won after the victories at the battles of Coral Sea and Midway. The US put the exclamation point on these victories, and effectively ended the war with the dropping of the atomic bombs. Prior to the dropping of the bombs, the Japanese forces were fighting feverishly for the Axis Powers, and caused havoc for the Allied forces. When the US dropped the atomic bombs on Japan, they smothered their forces and effectively ended the war because the Axis Powers were without the Japanese fighting force (Ramsey, …show more content…

After the bomb had been dropped no one wanted to recreate that horrific event ever again, so laws were put into place banning the creation of atomic weapons. The scientists who had partaken in the events of the Manhattan Project advocated very strongly against the use of atomic weaponry, because they had seen first hand how awesome and terrible the power of the atomic bomb could be. It killed almost 200,000 people which brought about the feelings of guilt in their hearts. They wanted to find a way to right what they had done and to make sure it never happened again, which brought about the creation of the US Atomic Energy Commission. Though there were some scientists who thought it would be a good idea to harness its power and use it in a way that could benefit millions of people, through the use of nuclear energy (Rubinson,