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The United States Overtoo... — Churchill's Bomb: How

Left out in the cold, the British government decided they could not afford to be a second-tier power. In 1947, they began their own independent program, eventually detonating their first atomic device in 1952. By then, however, the United States had already moved on to the Hydrogen Bomb, cementing its status as the world’s lone nuclear superpower for a time.

As the project neared success, the U.S. began to restrict British access to key data, fearing post-war commercial competition and Soviet espionage. The Post-War Freeze: The McMahon Act

In the early years of the war (1940–1941), the United Kingdom was actually the world leader in nuclear research. While the U.S. was still skeptical, British scientists—bolstered by refugees from Nazi Europe like Otto Frisch and Rudolf Peierls—proved that a "super-bomb" using U-235 was theoretically possible. This research was codified in the , which Churchill shared with President Roosevelt, essentially jump-starting the American effort. The Quebec Agreement and the Shift in Power Churchill's Bomb: How the United States Overtoo...

Below is an overview of the content typically covered under this theme, focusing on how the British lead in nuclear research was eventually eclipsed by American industrial might. The British Head Start: The MAUD Committee

The ultimate "overtaking" occurred in 1946 with the passage of the . This U.S. law cut off all international cooperation on nuclear energy, effectively locking Britain out of the very project it helped start. Churchill felt betrayed, as he believed the "Special Relationship" guaranteed Britain a seat at the nuclear table. The Result: An Independent Deterrent Left out in the cold, the British government

The U.S. invested billions of dollars and built entire cities (like Oak Ridge and Los Alamos), while Britain could only provide scientific "brainpower."

This title refers to the historical narrative surrounding the development of the nuclear bomb and the shifting power dynamics between Britain and the United States during World War II. As the project neared success, the U

As the war progressed, the sheer cost and vulnerability of building massive enrichment plants in the UK became prohibitive due to German bombing. In 1943, Churchill and Roosevelt signed the , which integrated British scientists into the American "Manhattan Project." However, this partnership was never truly equal:

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