WW2 Was a Race to Develop and Use the First Atom Bomb by Germany, UK, USA, USSR and Japan

Recent research performed at the Atomic Museums of America by Florida author Bohdan O. Szuprowicz, suggests that development of the atom bomb was a race among those states since Germany already patented a plutonium atom bomb design in 1941
 
 
Cover of one of the E-Books already published on Amazon Kindle
Cover of one of the E-Books already published on Amazon Kindle
VENICE, Fla. - June 2, 2013 - PRLog -- When nuclear fission was discovered by German scientists in 1938, it was immediately brought to Hitler’s attention, and top Nazi strategists stressed the potential for the development of atom bombs.

    As soon as World War II began in September 1939, nuclear development was taken over by the German Army Ordnance Office. The most powerful and influential physicists and weapons experts were involved in what was informally known as the “Uranium Club.”  By 1941 they already patented the design for a plutonium bomb. UK and USA have been warned by German scientists about the dangers of nuclear weapons. As a result the Manhattan Project was set up in the USA to develop an atom bomb.

    There are several reasons why Germany did not develop the bomb. It now becomes clear that development of  V-1, V-2 rockets, and a transcontinental rocket plane received greater priority. The Nazis wanted to develop controllable delivery missiles and vehicles before using untested nuclear warheads.

     Nevertheless, the atom bomb was immediately perceived as a decisive and superior weapon. UK, USA, and the Soviet Union, engaged in its development and espionage about their projects. Japan was also developing an atom bomb and there are some unconfirmed reports of wartime tests in Manchuria.

     Bohdan O. Szuprowicz is now focusing on research and preparation of fiction and non-fiction E-Books on the topic of nuclear weapons geopolitics.

     "How They Stopped Hitler's Nuclear Weapons Development Program" is a fictional rendering of what could have been, which is already published on Amazon Kindle as an E-Book. He is also currently developing "Nuclear Republic of Chiapas", a visionary fiction story of what may happen in the not too distant future. Additional projects about nuclear blackmail  by  insurgents and terrorist groups around the world are also under development. Non-fiction projects in planning stages include nuclear terror and EMP survival guides for small businesses.

21st Century Research Amazon Kindle Publications

    The firm evaluates digital publishing in form of  E-Books, E-Stories, E-Reports and E-Flash Stories which can be published on Amazon Kindle and other tablets like Kobo. Bohdan O. Szuprowicz, is already testing the applicability of Kindle publishing with several E-Stories including "The Sweet Taste of Revenge", "A Cold War Love Affair", "How They Stopped Hitler's Nuclear Weapons Program", "A Sawgrass Vendetta", "A Christmas I Want to Forget" and "A Guide to Foreign Obama Cartoons". "Stop and Think  About Guns in Your Life - Childhood"  and - "Teenage Years"  are the latest two E-Books recently published on Kindle.

About 21st Century Research

     Bohdan O. Szuprowicz, President of 21st Century Research, arrived in the Unites States soon after the Russians launched the Sputnik satellite in 1957. He was recruited by Boeing in Seattle as an engineer and later he joined General Dynamics and IBM, whence he moved to the Center for Economic and Industrial Research Inc. headquartered in Washington DC. He began writing articles about progress of automation in many industries and became the editor of High Technology West, a subsidiary of the newspaper California Business in Los Angeles. This was followed by a round-the-world trip to evaluate computerization in many countries of Africa, Australasia and Europe and included a special visit to Vietnam to observe use of information technology under wartime conditions.

     He founded the 21st Century Research consultancy in 1974 and collaborated with Chase Manhattan Bank in setting up a market research operation to evaluate opportunities in China, the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. He traveled frequently to those areas and crossed Checkpoint Charlie to East Berlin on several occasions. He also toured South Africa to observe apartheid environments and met with independence fighters in Namibia. His work on network planning earned him an invitation to present it at the International Symposium on Operations Research for Developing Countries in Paris.

     As a result of his experiences and research into global geopolitics, he published “Doing Business with People’s Republic of China” and “How to Avoid Strategic Materials Shortages” with John Wiley & Sons, as well as “How to Invest in Strategic Metals” with St. Martin’s Press. He also published “Multimedia Networking” with McGraw-Hill, which included Japanese and Korean editions and “Multimedia Tools for Managers” developed for AMACOM. Szuprowicz also collaborated for several years with Computer Technology Research, and published 15 corporate reports about search engines,  multimedia, Internet marketing, and various networking technologies.
 
     He also published hundreds of articles in many countries in journals such as Les Affaires, Atlanta Constitution, Australian Financial News, Barron’s Weekly, Bull & Bear, Business South Africa, California Business, Canadian Business, China Business Review, Christian Science Monitor, Computerworld, Denver Post, Dun’s Review, Eurofinance, Financial Post, Investment Dealers Digest, IPO Reporter, Japan Economic Journal, National Investment & Finance of India, Newsday, Newsweek International, New Scientist, Oficinas, Polish Daily, Singapore Times, Skrzydlata Polska, Usine Nouvelle, Wall Street Microinvestor, Wall Street Transcript, ZeroUno and many others.

     Szuprowicz is an active member of the British Schools and Universities Club, the Schiehallion Club of Kinloch Rannoch, Republican Club of South Sarasota County, Sarasota Fiction Writers, Sarasota Authors Connection, Sarasota Writers Forum, Sarasota Camera Club, Sarasota PC Users Group, and was previously a member of the Royal Aeronautical Society.
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