E' stato il padre della bomba H e dello "scudo stellare" di
Reagan, progetto che era rimasto bloccato ma che
Bush ha prontamente riattivato. Era, a mio avviso, uno degli
uomini peggiori del mondo e sicuramente il peggiore degli
"scienziati".
Di lui il rettore della University of California, Richard C.
Atkinson, ha detto che "e' stato uno delle menti
scientifiche piu' influenti del 20esimo secolo, e ha dato un
contributo fondamentale alla sicurezza della nostra nazione
e alla pace nel mondo". Sua figlia ha ricevuto in sua vece,
il 23 luglio, la "Medaglia della Liberta'", direttamente
dalle mani del presidente Bush.

----

By Andrea Orr

STANFORD, Calif. (Reuters) - Edward Teller, a pioneer in
molecular physics dubbed the "father of the H-bomb" for his
role in the early development of nuclear weapons, died on
Tuesday, a Stanford University spokeswoman said.  He was 95.

Elaine Ray, a spokeswoman for the Stanford University news
service, said Teller had suffered a stroke earlier this week
and died at his home on the university campus on Tuesday.

A naturalized U.S. citizen born in Hungary, Teller was a key
member of a group of top scientists who fled Hitler's
Germany and ended up working on the Manhattan Project, the
secret program that developed the atomic bomb.

After the war, Teller pressed the case for a continued
strong national defense, persuading President Harry Truman
of the need for the far more powerful hydrogen bomb.

The United States detonated the first H-bomb on the Pacific
atoll of Eniwetok in November 1952. It was 2,500 times more
powerful than the atomic weapons dropped on Hiroshima and
Nagasaki in 1945, which prompted Japan's surrender and
brought World War II to a close.

"It wasn't a choice. Nuclear energy existed," Teller told a
newspaper interviewer shortly before his 80th birthday. "We
would have found it no matter what we did. It's sheer
arrogance to say we created the bomb."

Earlier in his career Teller also taught physics and helped
set up a graduate department in applied sciences at the
University of California.

"Edward Teller was one of the world's leading scientific
minds of the 20th century, and he made a major contribution
to the security of our nation and world peace," University
of California President Richard C.  Atkinson said in a
statement.

At the time of his death, Teller was a senior research
fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford, specializing
in defense and energy policy.

Although he had retired from his post as director emeritus
of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, a major U.S.
nuclear weapons labs, he continued up until his death to
come into his office there, about an hour away from his
home, three or four times a week, a spokeswoman for the lab
said.

Born in Budapest in 1908, Teller completed his Ph.D. in
physics under Werner Heisenberg in 1930 at the University of
Leipzig and did post-graduate work in Copenhagen with
pioneering Danish nuclear physicist Niels Bohr.

Teller was director of the Livermore lab from 1958 to 1960
and professor of physics at the University of California
from that time until his retirement in 1975.

The H-bomb, never used in warfare, was the linchpin of the
"MAD" (mutually assured destruction) defense doctrine that
kept the United States and Soviet Union at bay during the
Cold War.

Teller said he regretted Truman's decision to drop the
A-bomb on Japanese cities, saying he felt the weapon should
have been tried first in a demonstration in hopes Japan's
leaders would have been impressed enough to end the war.

Considered too hawkish by many of his colleagues, Teller
argued that the absence of defense can bring disastrous
results, citing Hitler's takeover of Hungary as evidence.

He came under fire in the 1980s when he helped convince
President Ronald Reagan the United States should spend
billions of dollars on a space-based defense umbrella that
came to be know as "Star Wars."

Critics said the system, based partly on laser-equipped
satellites designed to shoot down enemy missiles, was
unfeasible and too expensive. Teller won the day, but the
ambitious defense umbrella remains a work in progress.

Teller is survived by a son and a daughter, four
grandchildren and one great grandchild.

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