Acheson–Lilienthal Report

Why American culture fixates on the tragic image of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the most famous man behind the atomic bomb

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, August 1, 2023

Oppenheimer had many achievements in theoretical physics but is remembered as the so-called father of the atomic bomb.

Key Points: 
  • Oppenheimer had many achievements in theoretical physics but is remembered as the so-called father of the atomic bomb.
  • But he conveyed a sense of anguish – scripting his own tragic role, as I argue in my book about him.
  • “The physicists have known sin,” he remarked two years after the attacks, “and this is a knowledge which they cannot lose.”

‘Batter my heart’

    • As physicist Isidor Isaac Rabi later said, the bomb “treated humans as matter,” nothing more.
    • But Oppenheimer pointedly used religious language when talking about the project, as if to underscore the weight of its significance.
    • The atomic bomb was first tested in the early morning of July 16, 1945, in the arid basin of southern New Mexico.
    • Mathematician John von Neumann acerbically observed, “Some people profess guilt to claim credit for the sin.”

Describing the indescribable

    • On Aug. 6 and Aug. 9, these cities suddenly ceased to be.
    • Robert J. Lifton, an expert on the psychology of war, violence and trauma, called the Hiroshima survivors’ experience “death in life,” an encounter with the indescribable.
    • When it comes to Hiroshima and Nagasaki, however, he chooses to represent the attack without portraying it.

The bomb to end all wars?

    • After the end of the war, many of the scientists who had worked on the Manhattan Project sought to emphasize that the atomic bomb was not just another weapon.
    • Among them, Oppenheimer carried the most authority as a result of his leadership of Los Alamos and his oratorical gifts.
    • The form it ultimately took, known as the Baruch Plan, was rejected by the Soviet Union.
    • Rather than seeing the bomb as the weapon to end all wars, the U.S. military seemed to treat it as its trump card.
    • The era of mutual assured destruction, when a nuclear attack would be certain to annihilate both superpowers, had begun.