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Based on previously unpublished research, noted historian D. M. Giangreco provides a concise account of President Harry S. Trumanâ s decision to drop the atom bomb during World War II, focusing on the question: What did Truman know, and when did he know it?
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Based on previously unpublished research, noted historian D. M. Giangreco provides a concise account of President Harry S. Trumanâ s decision to drop the atom bomb during World War II, focusing on the question: What did Truman know, and when did he know it?
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Potomac Books Inc
- Seitenzahl: 280
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. August 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 154mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 608g
- ISBN-13: 9781640120730
- ISBN-10: 1640120734
- Artikelnr.: 65954432
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Potomac Books Inc
- Seitenzahl: 280
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. August 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 154mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 608g
- ISBN-13: 9781640120730
- ISBN-10: 1640120734
- Artikelnr.: 65954432
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
D. M. Giangreco served as an editor of the Military Review for the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College for twenty years and then as the editor and publications director for the Foreign Military Studies Office in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. He is the award-winning author or coauthor of fourteen books on military and sociopolitical subjects, including Hell to Pay: Operation Downfall and the Invasion of Japan, 1945–1947 and Eyewitness Pacific Theater: Firsthand Accounts of the War in the Pacific from Pearl Harbor to the Atomic Bombs.
List of Illustrations
Foreword
John T. Kuehn
Prologue: The Debate
1. The Manhattan Project: What Did Truman Know and When Did He Know It?
2. Projects Milepost and Hula: America’s Hidden Role in the Soviet Invasion
of Manchuria
3. Roosevelt, Stalin, and Poland: The Tehran, Moscow, and Yalta Conferences
4. A New President: “The Storm Broke Almost at Once”
5. Truman’s White House Meeting: “My Hardest Decision”
6. “I’ve Gotten What I Came For”: Potsdam, the Bomb, and Soviet Entry into
the War
Appendixes
A. Air-Raid Casualties and Property Damage in Japan
B. Memorandum on Ending the Japanese War
C. The Historiography of Hiroshima: The Rise and Fall of Revisionism
Michael Kort
D. The Manhattan Project: A Chronology of Its Expansion and Subsequent
Congressional Investigations
E. “Between You, the Boss [Truman], and Me”
F. Secretary of War Henry Stimson to Truman on Atom Bomb Development
G. U.S. Navy Combatant Ships under Project Hula
H. Agreement regarding the Entry of the Soviet Union into the War against
Japan
I. Secretary Stimson’s Proposed Program for Japan
J. Proposal for Increasing the Scope of Casualties Studies
K. Discussion of American Casualties at President Truman’s Meeting with the
Joint Chiefs of Staff and Service Secretaries, June 18, 1945
L. General Thomas Handy’s Atomic Bomb Authorization
M. Atomic Bomb Press Release
N. Potsdam Declaration, July 26, 1945
O. Truman-Stalin Meeting at Potsdam
P. Tripartite Military Meeting of the U.S., Soviet, and British Chiefs of
Staff, July 26, 1945
Q. Planned U.S. Naval and Air Operations in Support of the Soviet Invasion
of Manchuria
R. Extract from the Log of the President’s Trip to the Berlin Conference,
July 18, 1945
Notes
Index
Foreword
John T. Kuehn
Prologue: The Debate
1. The Manhattan Project: What Did Truman Know and When Did He Know It?
2. Projects Milepost and Hula: America’s Hidden Role in the Soviet Invasion
of Manchuria
3. Roosevelt, Stalin, and Poland: The Tehran, Moscow, and Yalta Conferences
4. A New President: “The Storm Broke Almost at Once”
5. Truman’s White House Meeting: “My Hardest Decision”
6. “I’ve Gotten What I Came For”: Potsdam, the Bomb, and Soviet Entry into
the War
Appendixes
A. Air-Raid Casualties and Property Damage in Japan
B. Memorandum on Ending the Japanese War
C. The Historiography of Hiroshima: The Rise and Fall of Revisionism
Michael Kort
D. The Manhattan Project: A Chronology of Its Expansion and Subsequent
Congressional Investigations
E. “Between You, the Boss [Truman], and Me”
F. Secretary of War Henry Stimson to Truman on Atom Bomb Development
G. U.S. Navy Combatant Ships under Project Hula
H. Agreement regarding the Entry of the Soviet Union into the War against
Japan
I. Secretary Stimson’s Proposed Program for Japan
J. Proposal for Increasing the Scope of Casualties Studies
K. Discussion of American Casualties at President Truman’s Meeting with the
Joint Chiefs of Staff and Service Secretaries, June 18, 1945
L. General Thomas Handy’s Atomic Bomb Authorization
M. Atomic Bomb Press Release
N. Potsdam Declaration, July 26, 1945
O. Truman-Stalin Meeting at Potsdam
P. Tripartite Military Meeting of the U.S., Soviet, and British Chiefs of
Staff, July 26, 1945
Q. Planned U.S. Naval and Air Operations in Support of the Soviet Invasion
of Manchuria
R. Extract from the Log of the President’s Trip to the Berlin Conference,
July 18, 1945
Notes
Index
List of Illustrations
Foreword
John T. Kuehn
Prologue: The Debate
1. The Manhattan Project: What Did Truman Know and When Did He Know It?
2. Projects Milepost and Hula: America’s Hidden Role in the Soviet Invasion
of Manchuria
3. Roosevelt, Stalin, and Poland: The Tehran, Moscow, and Yalta Conferences
4. A New President: “The Storm Broke Almost at Once”
5. Truman’s White House Meeting: “My Hardest Decision”
6. “I’ve Gotten What I Came For”: Potsdam, the Bomb, and Soviet Entry into
the War
Appendixes
A. Air-Raid Casualties and Property Damage in Japan
B. Memorandum on Ending the Japanese War
C. The Historiography of Hiroshima: The Rise and Fall of Revisionism
Michael Kort
D. The Manhattan Project: A Chronology of Its Expansion and Subsequent
Congressional Investigations
E. “Between You, the Boss [Truman], and Me”
F. Secretary of War Henry Stimson to Truman on Atom Bomb Development
G. U.S. Navy Combatant Ships under Project Hula
H. Agreement regarding the Entry of the Soviet Union into the War against
Japan
I. Secretary Stimson’s Proposed Program for Japan
J. Proposal for Increasing the Scope of Casualties Studies
K. Discussion of American Casualties at President Truman’s Meeting with the
Joint Chiefs of Staff and Service Secretaries, June 18, 1945
L. General Thomas Handy’s Atomic Bomb Authorization
M. Atomic Bomb Press Release
N. Potsdam Declaration, July 26, 1945
O. Truman-Stalin Meeting at Potsdam
P. Tripartite Military Meeting of the U.S., Soviet, and British Chiefs of
Staff, July 26, 1945
Q. Planned U.S. Naval and Air Operations in Support of the Soviet Invasion
of Manchuria
R. Extract from the Log of the President’s Trip to the Berlin Conference,
July 18, 1945
Notes
Index
Foreword
John T. Kuehn
Prologue: The Debate
1. The Manhattan Project: What Did Truman Know and When Did He Know It?
2. Projects Milepost and Hula: America’s Hidden Role in the Soviet Invasion
of Manchuria
3. Roosevelt, Stalin, and Poland: The Tehran, Moscow, and Yalta Conferences
4. A New President: “The Storm Broke Almost at Once”
5. Truman’s White House Meeting: “My Hardest Decision”
6. “I’ve Gotten What I Came For”: Potsdam, the Bomb, and Soviet Entry into
the War
Appendixes
A. Air-Raid Casualties and Property Damage in Japan
B. Memorandum on Ending the Japanese War
C. The Historiography of Hiroshima: The Rise and Fall of Revisionism
Michael Kort
D. The Manhattan Project: A Chronology of Its Expansion and Subsequent
Congressional Investigations
E. “Between You, the Boss [Truman], and Me”
F. Secretary of War Henry Stimson to Truman on Atom Bomb Development
G. U.S. Navy Combatant Ships under Project Hula
H. Agreement regarding the Entry of the Soviet Union into the War against
Japan
I. Secretary Stimson’s Proposed Program for Japan
J. Proposal for Increasing the Scope of Casualties Studies
K. Discussion of American Casualties at President Truman’s Meeting with the
Joint Chiefs of Staff and Service Secretaries, June 18, 1945
L. General Thomas Handy’s Atomic Bomb Authorization
M. Atomic Bomb Press Release
N. Potsdam Declaration, July 26, 1945
O. Truman-Stalin Meeting at Potsdam
P. Tripartite Military Meeting of the U.S., Soviet, and British Chiefs of
Staff, July 26, 1945
Q. Planned U.S. Naval and Air Operations in Support of the Soviet Invasion
of Manchuria
R. Extract from the Log of the President’s Trip to the Berlin Conference,
July 18, 1945
Notes
Index