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Operation Big

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Allied scientific intelligence operation during World War II
U.S. and British engineers dismantle thenuclear pile that German scientists had built up under theUranprojekt program inHaigerloch in April 1945

Operation Big was an operation of theAlsos Mission, the Allied seizure of facilities, materiel, and personnel related to theGerman nuclear weapon project duringWorld War II.[note 1] It was tasked with sweeping several targeted towns in the area of southwest Germany designated to theFrench First Army, includingHechingen,Bisingen,Haigerloch, andTailfingen.

Operating behind German lines the U.S. task force successfully carried out its mission of seizing or destroying all project related assets and capturing its top scientists in the last week of April and first week of May, 1945.

History

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Shortly after the liberation of Paris it was decided to bomb German nuclear facilities wherever they lay in order to deprive the Soviet Union of their technology and personnel, unless American troops could get to them first.[1] Worried that French forces might beat the US toWerner Heisenberg's laboratory inHechingen, Alsos chief Lt-ColBoris Pash hastily organized a flying column ofcombat engineers from the1269th Engineer Combat Battalion, theU.S. Sixth Army Group'sT-Force intelligence assault force ("Task Force A"). His team reachedHorb three days later and headed forHaigerloch while the French forward troops occupied themselves with looking for members of theVichy Government twenty miles deeper into Württemberg in theSigmaringen enclave.

Pash and his engineers, accompanied by the Sixth Army Group's Chief of Intelligence, General Eugene Harrison, overran Haigerloch on 23 April 1945.

Here the elated scientists made their first big discovery. As the engineer troops consolidated the group’s position in the town, the ALSOS team shot open a bolted door sealing the entrance to a cave in the side of a cliff. Inside, the team found a large chamber and several smaller rooms crammed with instruments, control boxes, and an array of cylinders described by a frightened German technician as a uranium machine. Though missing itsuranium element, the device was an operatingatomic pile, captured undamaged.[2]

With help from engineers, the scientists spent two days dismantling the equipment.[2] Three large drums ofheavy water, used to control the reaction in the pile, were later found in the laboratory's main chamber[3] and a German scientist told Pash that the reactor's uranium cubes had been concealed beneath hay in a nearby barn.[note 2]

The task force then proceeded to Hechingen where they found and detainedErich Bagge,Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker,Max von Laue, andKarl Wirtz, then went on to Tailfingen (today part ofAlbstadt) where they arrestedOtto Hahn. Heisenberg, who had left Hechingen on 19 April, was captured by Pash and a small force at his home inUrfeld am Walchensee, on 3 May 1945.[4]

See also

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Notes

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Footnotes

  1. ^There appears to be some overlap or confusion withOperation Harborage, as the same cities are targeted and same basic narratives attached
  2. ^Note there are detailed alternative accounts of what and whom was found where, including: Beck, Alfred M, et al,United States Army in World War II: The Technical Services – The Corps of Engineers: The War Against Germany, 1985Chapter 24,Into the Heart of Germany, p. 556-559 and Atomic Heritage Foundation:The Alsos Mission

External links

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References

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  1. ^Die Bombe, a documentary by Klaus H. Hein (c)NDR/arte 1996 (accessed 2014-10-24)
  2. ^abBeck, Alfred M, et al,United States Army in World War II: The Technical Services – The Corps of Engineers: The War Against Germany, 1985Chapter 24,Into the Heart of Germany
  3. ^Dahl, Per F. (1999).Heavy Water and the Wartime Race for Nuclear Energy. CRC Press. p. 261.ISBN 0-7503-0633-5.
  4. ^Rotter, Andrew J. (2008).Hiroshima: The World's Bomb. Oxford University Press. p. 80.ISBN 978-0-19-280437-2.
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