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  2. History of nuclear weapons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_nuclear_weapons

    France had been heavily involved in nuclear research before World War II through the work of the Joliot-Curies. This was discontinued after the war because of the instability of the Fourth Republic and lack of finances. [76] However, in the 1950s, France launched a civil nuclear research program, which produced plutonium as a byproduct.

  3. Historical nuclear weapons stockpiles and nuclear tests by ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_nuclear_weapons...

    South Africa successfully built six nuclear weapons in the 1980s, but dismantled all of them in the early 1990s, shortly before the fall of the apartheid system. [23] So far it is the only nuclear-capable country to give up nuclear weapons, although several members of the Soviet Union did so during the collapse of the Soviet regime. North Korea ...

  4. Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_bombings_of...

    Most Japanese military units fought fiercely, ensuring that the Allied victory would come at an enormous cost. The 1.25 million battle casualties incurred in total by the United States in World War II included both military personnel killed in action and wounded in action. Nearly one million of the casualties occurred during the last year of ...

  5. List of states with nuclear weapons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_states_with...

    US and USSR/Russian nuclear weapons stockpiles, 1945–2014. The Soviet Union tested its first nuclear weapon ("RDS-1") in 1949. This crash project was developed partially with information obtained via the atomic spies at the United States' Manhattan Project during and after World War II. The Soviet Union was the second nation to have developed ...

  6. German nuclear program during World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_nuclear_program...

    When it was apparent that the nuclear weapon project would not make a decisive contribution to ending the war in the near term, control of the KWIP was returned in January 1942 to its umbrella organization, the Kaiser-Wilhelm Gesellschaft (KWG, Kaiser Wilhelm Society, after World War II the Max-Planck Gesellschaft). HWA control of the project ...

  7. Factbox-Nuclear testing: Why did it stop, and when? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/factbox-nuclear-testing-why-did...

    The United States opened the nuclear era in July 1945 with the test of a 20-kiloton atomic bomb at Alamogordo, New Mexico, in July 1945, and then dropped atomic bombs on the Japanese c

  8. World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_II

    The British historian Antony Beevor views the beginning of World War II as the Battles of Khalkhin Gol fought between Japan and the forces of Mongolia and the Soviet Union from May to September 1939. [9] Others view the Spanish Civil War as the start or prelude to World War II. [10] [11] The exact date of the war's end also is not universally ...

  9. Nuclear warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_warfare

    The first, a limited nuclear war [22] (sometimes attack or exchange), refers to the controlled use of nuclear weapons, whereby the implicit threat exists that a nation can still escalate their use of nuclear weapons. For example, using a small number of nuclear weapons against strictly military targets could be escalated through increasing the ...