The Atomic Genie Escapes
Never have scientists so fervently prayed. Slumping against a wooden post, Robert Oppenheimer reminds himself not to weaken: "I must remain conscious!"
The countdown proceeds: "five . . . .. four . . . . three . . . two . . . " Afraid it may electrocute him, the normally unflappable Sam Allison drops the microphone at the last second. At 5:29 a.m. he shouts, "Zero!"
Interminable silence. . . . then suddenly the horizon ignites and a reddish-orange fireball infinitely brighter and ten-thousand times hotter than the sun rises majestically over the desert, turning darkness to light for hundreds of miles around. On this day, even a blind woman reports that she has seen the dawn.
A New York Times reporter is reminded of Genesis: "Let there be light!" Physicist Isidor Rabi fears the fire will burn forever. Colleague Dick Feynman, momentarily blinded, turns away in pain. Oppenheimer recalls a line from the Bhagavad Gita: "I am become death, the shatterer of worlds!"
The boiling mushroom cloud swirls into the heavens, presaging catastrophe.
Under a curtain of radioactive fallout, jubilant scientists break into a jig on the desert floor.
-----Michael K. Smith, Portraits of Empire, pps. 12-13
1945: Hiroshima
A Sun Of Fire,
a
violent light never before seen in the world, rises slowly, cracks the
sky open, and collapses. Three days later a second sun of suns bursts
over Japan. Beneath remain the cinders of two cities, a desert of
rubble, tens of thousands dead and more thousands condemned to die
little by little for years to come.
The
war was nearly over, Hitler and Mussolini gone, when President Harry
Truman gave the order to drop atomic bombs on the populations of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In the United States it is the culmination of a
national clamor for the prompt annihilation of the Yellow Peril. It is
high time to finish off once and for all the imperial conceits of this
arrogant Asian country, never colonized by anyone. The only good one is a
dead one, says the press of these treacherous little monkeys.
Now
all doubt is dispelled. There is one great conqueror among the
conquerors. The United States emerges from the war intact and more
powerful than ever. It acts as if the whole world were its trophy.
------Eduardo Galeano, Memory of Fire, p. 126
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