[Hiroshima had been nuked on August 6 1945. The following conversation took
place two days thereafter.]

http://minaev.blogspot.com/2010/08/what-stalin-said-about-hiroshima.html

<http://minaev.blogspot.com/2010/08/what-stalin-said-about-hiroshima.html>What
Stalin said about
Hiroshima<http://minaev.blogspot.com/2010/08/what-stalin-said-about-hiroshima.html>

The text below is taken from the record of the meeting of Stalin and W.
Averell Harriman, the U.S. Ambassador to the USSR. Full declassified
document is available
here<http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB162/57.pdf>.
The text was published in Russian by Sergey Oboguev in his
blog<http://oboguev.livejournal.com/2238853.html>.
Thanks to Sergey for the interesting find.

*Conversation*. 8:20, Moscow, August 8, 1945.
*TOP SECRET*

Present: W. A. Harriman, American Ambassador

        George F. Kennan, Minister Counselor

        Generalissimus Stalin

        V. M. Molotov, People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs

        Mr. Pavlov, Soviet interpreter

...

The Ambassador asked what he thought of the effects of the news of the
atomic bomb would have on the Japanese.

The Generalissimus replied that he thought the Japanese were at present
looking for a pretext to replace the present government with one which would
be qualified to undertake a surrender. The atomic bomb might give them this
pretext.

The Ambassador observed that it was a good thing we had invented this and
not the Germans. For long, he said, no one had dared think it would be a
success. It was only a few days before the President had told Stalin about
it in Berlin that we had learned definitely that it would work succesfully.

The Generalissimus replied that Soviet scientists said that it was a very
difficult problem to work out.

The Ambassador said that if the Allies could keep it and apply it for
peaceful purposes it would be a great thing.

The Generalissimus agreed and said that would mean the end of the war and
aggressors. But the secret would have to be well kept.

The Ambassador said that it could have great importance for peaceful
purposes.

The Generalissimus replied, "unquestionably". He added that Soviet
scientists had also tried to do it but had not succeeded. They had found one
laboratory in Germany where the Germans had evidently been working on the
same problem but Russians could not find that they had come to any results.
If they had found it, Hitler would never have surrendered. England, too, had
gotten nowhere with these researches although they had excellent physicists.

The Ambassador explained that the English had pooled their knowledge with us
since 1941. But it had taken enormous installations to conduct the
experiments and to achieve final results.

The Generalissimus remarked that this had been very expensive.

...


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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