J. Robert Oppenheimer: Report on the International Control of Atomic Energy - Milestone Documents

J. Robert Oppenheimer: Report on the International Control of Atomic Energy

( 1946 )

J. Robert Oppenheimer gained prominence as a physicist and academic because of his success in publishing research in the highly specialized language of the physical sciences and through his abilities in the seminar room, though he was a somewhat shaky lecturer. During World War II, his success at Los Alamos, where he worked to design an atomic bomb, depended on his skill at mediating among the very different worlds of the soldiers, scientists, and engineers assigned to the project and persuading them to work together in the face of personal and political suspicions and rivalries. After the war, as an important adviser to the U.S. government on nuclear issues, he had to communicate in the bureaucratic language of government work. In his Report on the International Control of Atomic Energy, he advised the secretary of state’s Committee on Atomic Energy concerning how and when to disclose nuclear information held as secret by the United States.

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Panoramic view of Hiroshima after the atomic bomb drop (Library of Congress)

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