- Acheson-Lilienthal Report
The "Report on the International Control of Atomic Energy" was written by a committee chaired by
Dean Acheson andDavid Lilienthal in1946 and is generally known as the Acheson-Lilienthal Report or Plan. The report was an importantUnited States document of the earlyCold War era, as it discussed possible methods for the international control ofnuclear weapon s and the avoidance of futurenuclear warfare .Historical context
Two schools of thought concerning nuclear weapons emerged in the United States immediately after the end of
World War II . One school, which had Secretary of WarHenry Stimson as its chief proponent, believed that the apparent secrets of the atomic bomb were scientific in nature, and could not be monopolised forever. They further felt that to hold the bomb ostentatiously in reserve, whilst negotiating with theSoviet Union not to develop one, would simply driveRussia into developing their own weapon to restore the balance of power.The other school included men like
Secretary of State James Byrnes , who felt that the US monopoly on atomic weapons had been honestly gained, and should not be surrendered. In their view, the USSR understood only power, and could only be met with nuclear weapons.U.S. president
Harry S. Truman was divided between the two positions. He was distrustful of the Soviet Union, but still did not want to lead the world down a path to destruction. He continued to solicit views from both sides. Stimson resigned in September 1945, and thereafter the task of promoting his approach fell primarily onUndersecretary , and laterSecretary of State ,Dean Acheson .A proposal to pass the responsibility for the control of atomic energy to a
United Nations Atomic Energy Commission was endorsed by both the USA and the Soviets in 1945. They had the forum, but the United States had not yet articulated a policy that it wished the new commission to adopt. To resolve the problem, Acheson was appointed to head a committee to set forth United States policy on atomic energy.The other members of the committee were scientists
James Conant andVannevar Bush , the director of theOffice of Scientific Research and Development , which controlled theManhattan Project , and John McCloy, and GeneralLeslie R. Groves , who had been the military officer in charge of the Manhattan Project. Acheson decided that the committee needed technical advice, so he appointed a board of consultants withDavid Lilienthal , the well-regarded chairman of theTennessee Valley Authority , as chairman. He also appointedJ. Robert Oppenheimer , scientific leader of the Manhattan Project, who provided influential advice. Oppenheimer’s contribution lay in an idea to police the production of atomic weapons from monitoring source mines foruranium .Overview of the report
On
March 16 ,1946 , the committee's report was presented to theState Department , which released it to the public onMarch 28 . The "Report on the International Control of Atomic Energy" soon became known as the "Acheson-Lilienthal Report". The primary message of the report was that control of atomic energy through inspections and policing operations was unlikely to succeed. Instead, the report proposed that all fissile material be owned by an international agency to be called theAtomic Development Authority , which would release small amounts to individual nations for the development of peaceful uses of atomic energy.In the first years of the atomic era, it was generally believed that the great obstacle facing a would-be developer of an atomic bomb was the acquisition of sufficient fissile material. In response, the Acheson-Lilienthal Report proposed that the complete path from the uranium and thorium mines to post production be under international ownership.
In addition, the report proposed that the United States abandon its monopoly on atomic weapons, revealing what it knew to the Soviet Union, in exchange for a mutual agreement against the development of additional atomic bombs. This was to prove too controversial. Although Truman accepted the report in general, his appointment of financier
Bernard Baruch to carry the proposal forward in theUnited Nations led to demands for punishment for violations, and that those penalties could not be vetoed by theUnited Nations Security Council , as well as unrestricted inspections within the USSR, whilst still insisting that the USSR should agree not to develop the bomb. These were modifications that neither Acheson nor Lilienthal accepted. This, combined with U.S. continued insistence on retaining the bomb until they were satisfied with the effectiveness of international control, ultimately led to the plan's rejection by the Soviet Union, to the surprise of no one.The failure of the Acheson-Lilienthal Report has often been seen as a key turning point in the
Cold War , as a failure to secure international control of nuclear weapons virtually guaranteed thenuclear arms race that followed. At the time of the report, the Soviet Union was developing their first nuclear bomb, though they would not complete it until 1949.External links
* [http://www.learnworld.com/ZNW/LWText.Acheson-Lilienthal.html full text of the Acheson-Lilienthal Report] and information about its initial release
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