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Dwight D. Eisenhower's signature

 

 

Atoms for Peace

President Dwight D. Eisenhower was determined to solve “the fearful atomic dilemma” by finding some way by which “the miraculous inventiveness of man” would not be dedicated to his death, but consecrated to his life. In his Atoms for Peace speech before the United Nations General Assembly on December 8, 1953, President Eisenhower sought to solve this terrible problem by suggesting a means to transform the atom from a scourge into a benefit for mankind. Although not as well known as his warning about the “military industrial complex,” voiced later in his farewell radio and television address to the American people, President Eisenhower’s Atoms for Peace speech embodied his most important nuclear initiative as President. From it sprang a panoply of peaceful atomic programs. With it President Eisenhower placed the debate over the control of nuclear science and technology, which had largely been the province of government officials and contractors, squarely before the public. Indeed, the present public controversy over nuclear technology and its role in American society can be traced back to President Eisenhower’s determination that control of nuclear science was an issue for all Americans.

The Atoms for Peace speech reflected the President’s deep concern about “Atoms for War.” The escalating nuclear arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union, which included the development of thermonuclear bombs, brought President Eisenhower to the United Nations. Since Hiroshima the destructive power of nuclear weapons had increased dramatically. Nuclear weapons technology, thus far a product of American expertise, would also eventually enter the arsenals of the Soviet Union through the normal processes of technological development. President Eisenhower felt a moral imperative to warn the American people and the world of this new reality.

Rapid strides in nuclear weapons in nuclear weapons technology had begun at the end of World War II. In 1945 the two atomic bombs dropped on Japan had killed an estimated 106,000 people and had injured approximately 110,000 others. The larger of the two, the Nagasaki bomb, had released the explosive equivalent of 23,000 tons of TNT. In 1948 the United States had tested even larger atomic bombs in the Pacific, and by 1949 the Soviet Union had achieved its own nuclear capability with the detonation of a nuclear device. In response to the Soviet atomic bomb program, the United States had embarked upon a crash program to develop an even larger weapon, the hydrogen bomb, which promised explosive power in the range of millions of tons of TNT. The United States successfully detonated a hydrogen device in November 1952; just a few days after Eisenhower won the presidency. The awesome 10-megaton blast had destroyed the test island of Elugelab, creating an underwater crater 1,500 yards in diameter. With it the United States and the world entered the thermonuclear age.

Atoms for Peace Draft [C.D. Jackson Papers, Box 25, "Atoms for Peace - Evolution (2)"]

Memorandum regarding "Operation Candor," July 22, 1953 [White House Office, National Security Council Papers, PSB Central Files Series, Box 17, PSB 091.4 U.S. (2)]

Memorandum, Charles Norberg to H.S. Craig regarding "Project Candor and the Soviet H Bomb," August 10, 1953 [White House Office, National Security Council Staff Papers, PSB Central Files Series, Box 17, PSB 091.4 U.S. (2)]

Newsclipping, Washington Post, "Eisenhower Pushes Operation Candor," September 21, 1953 [Charles Masterson Papers, Box 1, Operation Candor]

Memorandum of Conversation regarding Bermuda Meeting, December 4, 1953 [DDE's Papers as President, International Meetings Series, Box 1, Bermuda-State Dept Report-Top Secret]

Memorandum of Meeting regarding Bermuda, December 5, 1953 [DDE's Papers as President, International Meetings Series, Box 1, Bermuda-State Dept Report-Top Secret]

Press Release, "Atoms for Peace" Speech, December 8, 1953 [DDE's Papers as President, Speech Series, Box 5, United Nations Speech 12/8/53]

Press Wire, Chronology of Soviet Bloc Reaction to Eisenhower's U.N. Speech, December 14, 1953 [C.D. Jackson Papers, Box 100, Speech Texts 1953 (1)]

General Outline for Agronsky Program, December 16, 1953 [C.D. Jackson Papers, Box 100, Speech Texts 1953 (1)]

Letter, President Eisenhower to friend Swede Hazlett, December 24, 1953  (pages 4 and 5 only) [DDE's Papers as President, Name Series, Box 18, Swede Hazlett 1953 (1)]

Memorandum, President Eisenhower to C.D. Jackson, December 31, 1953 [DDE's Papers as President, DDE Diary Series, Box 4, DDE Diary December 1953 (1)]

Operations Coordinating Board Working Draft, February 4, 1954 [C.D. Jackson Papers, Box 29, Atoms for Peace-Evolution (1)]

Preliminary Proposal for an International Organization to Further the Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy, June 8, 1954 [C.D. Jackson Papers, Box 29, Atomic Industrial Forum]

Letter, Asst. Director for Legislative Reference to President Eisenhower on H.R. 9757 "To amend the Atomic Energy Act of 1946 . . ." [White House Office, Records Officer Reports to the President on Pending Legislation, Box 40, Appr. 8/30/54]

Letter, Charles Robbins to C.D. Jackson, September 15, 1954 [C.D. Jackson Papers, Box 29, Atomic Industrial Forum]

Chronology of Atoms for Peace Project, September 30, 1954 [C.D. Jackson Papers, Box 29, Atoms for Peace-Evolution (1)]

Letter, C.D. Jackson to Merlo Pusey, Washington Post, February 5, 1955 [C.D. Jackson Papers, Box 29, Atoms for Peace-Evolution (1)]

Memorandum from Theodore Repplier, Advertising Council, August 3, 1955 [DDE's Papers as President, Administration Series, Box 30, Nelson Rockefeller 1952-55 (3)]

President Eisenhower's Reaction to the Repplier Proposal, August 3, 1955 [DDE's Papers as President, Admininstration Series, Box 30, Nelson Rockefeller 1952-55 (3)]

Letter, Ann Whitman (President Eisenhower's personal secretary) to Marie McCrum (C.D. Jackson's personal secretary), January 27, 1956 [C.D. Jackson Papers, Box 29, Atoms for Peace-Evolution (1)]

Letter, President Eisenhower to Winston Churchill, April 27, 1956 [DDE's Papers as President, DDE Diary Series, Box 14, April 1956 Miscellaneous (1)]

Photographs:

President Eisenhower delivering his Atoms for Peace speech before the U.N. General Assembly, December 8, 1953

President Eisenhower receives a report from Lewis L. Strauss, Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, on the hydrogen bomb tests in the Pacific, March 30, 1954

President Eisenhower and Lewis L. Strauss face questioners at a press conference, March 31, 1954

President Eisenhower signs H.R. 9757, an act "to amend the Atomic Energy Act of 1946."  The signing was witnessed in his office by various senators, congressmen and members of the Atomic Energy Commission, August 30, 1954

President Eisenhower with five of his top advisers who he summoned to discuss his Atoms for Peace program, January 13, 1956

 

For a listing of collections at the Eisenhower Presidential Library with materials pertaining to this topic, please see: Atoms for Peace Subject Guide.



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