Command and Control

Command and Control by Eric Schlosser Page B

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Authors: Eric Schlosser
according to J. Robert Oppenheimer, “appropriate forthe maximum demolition of light structures.” Had the bombs been aimed at industrial buildings, instead of homes, the height of the airburst would have been set lower.
    The arming and fuzing mechanisms were repeatedly tested at a bombing range in Wendover, Utah. At the end of a successful test the dummy bomb released a puff of smoke. But no amount of practice could eliminate fears that a real atomic bomb might detonate accidentally. Oppenheimer was especially concerned about the risk. “We should like to know whether the take-off can be arranged,” he wrote to a USAAF liaison officer in 1944, “at such a location that the effects of a nuclear explosion would not be disastrous for the base and the squadron.” The implosion bomb could be inadvertently set off by a fire, a bullet striking an explosive lens, a small error in assembly.
    If a B-29 carrying an implosion bomb was forced to return to its base,the president’s Target Committee decided that the crew should jettison the weapon into shallow water from a low altitude. The emergency procedure for a gun-type bomb was more problematic. The gun-type bomb was likely to detonate after a crash into the ocean. Water is a neutron moderator, and its presence inside the bomb would start a chain reaction, regardless of whether the two pieces of uranium slammed together. “No suitable jettisoning ground . . . has been found,” the committee concluded in May1945, “which is sufficiently devoid of moisture, which is sufficiently soft that the projectile is sure not to seat from the impact, and which is sufficiently remote from extremely important American installations whose damage by a nuclear explosion would seriously affect the American war effort.” The best advice that the committee could give was hardly reassuring to aircrews, whose bombing runs traversed the Pacific Ocean for thousands of miles:try to remove the cordite charges from the bomb midair and make sure to crash the plane on land.
    Captain William S. Parsons was selected to be the “bomb commander and weaponeer” for the first military use of a nuclear weapon. A naval officer who’d spent years researching bomb fuzes, Parsons was chief of the Manhattan Project’s ordnance division. At Los Alamos he’d supervised development of the gun-type bomb, which was to be dropped on the city of Hiroshima. Code-named “Little Boy,” the bomb was ten feet long and weighed about 10,000 pounds. It contained almost all the processed uranium in existence, about 141 pounds. The relative inefficiency of the design was offset by its simplicity. Although a gun-type bomb had never been tested, Oppenheimer assured Parsons that the odds of “a less than optimal performance . . . are quite small and should be ignored.”
    The bomb was assembled in an air-conditioned shed on the island of Tinian, where the Silverplate B-29s of the 509th Composite Group were based. Tinian had the largest, busiest airfield in the world, located 1,300 miles southeast of Tokyo and constructed within months of its capture from the Japanese the previous year. The four main runways were a mile and a half long. At the insistence of General Groves, the Manhattan Project’s dedication to secrecy was so rigorous that even the Army Air Forces officer who commanded Tinian was not told about the atomic bomb or the mission of the unusual B-29s stationed there. Worried that a nuclear accident might kill thousands of American servicemen and destroy an airfield crucial to the war effort, Captain Parsons decided, without informing Groves, that the final steps of assembling Little Boy would not be completed until the plane carrying it had flown a safe distance from the island.
    At three in the morning on August 6, 1945,Parsons and another weaponeer, Morris Jeppson, left the cockpit and climbed into the bomb bay of aB-29 named
Enola

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