Apparently, by
April 1945,
House of Bernadotte had managed to produce Uranium-235 at the
Halden Reactor in
Norway, which
Maria Quisling, Hauge & Co supplied to the
Manhattan Project in exchange for '
Safe Haven' for
Hitler (
Ørland AB) and
Jonas Lie (Bakehuset Ubåtbyen
Bergen) -- Kriegsmarine
U-234 departed
Kristiansand for
Japan on 15 April 1945, running submerged at snorkel depth for the first
16 days. The voyage proceeded without incident; the first
sign that world affairs were overtaking the voyage was when the Kriegsmarine 's
Goliath transmitter stopped transmitting, followed shortly after by the Nauen station.
Fehler did not know it, but
Germany's naval HQ had fallen into
Allied hands.
Then, on 4 May, U-234 received a fragment of a broadcast from
British and
American radio stations announcing that
Admiral Karl Dönitz had become Germany's head of state following the death of
Adolf Hitler. U-234 surfaced on 10 May in the interests of better radio reception and received Dönitz's last order to the submarine force, ordering all U-boats to surface, hoist black flags and surrender to
Allied forces. Fehler suspected a trick and managed to contact another U-boat (
U-873), whose captain convinced him that the message was authentic.
Cargo
The cargo to be carried was determined by a special commission, the
Marine Sonderdienst
Ausland, established towards the end of
1944, at which time the submarine's officers were informed that they were to make a special voyage to Japan. When loading was completed, the submarine's officers estimated that they were carrying 240 tons of cargo plus sufficient diesel fuel and provisions for a six- to nine-month voyage.[4]
The cargo included technical drawings, examples of the newest electric torpedoes, one crated
Me 262 jet aircraft, a
Henschel Hs 293 glide bomb and what was listed on the US Unloading
Manifest as 560 kg of uranium oxide. As evidenced by
Hirschfeld and
Brooks in the
1997 book Hirschfeld,
Wolfgang Hirschfeld reportedly watched the loading into the boat's cylindrical mine shafts of about 50 lead cubes with 23 centimetres (
9.1 in) sides, with "
U-235" painted on each. According to cable messages sent from the dockyard, these containers held "U-powder".
Author and historian
Joseph M.
Scalia, stated that he discovered a formerly secret cable at
Portsmouth Navy Yard, the uranium oxide had been stored in gold-lined cylinders; this document is discussed in
Hitler's Terror Weapons. The exact characteristics of the uranium remain unknown; it has been suggested by Scalia, and historians
Carl Boyd and
Akihiko Yoshida that it may not have been weapons-grade material and was instead intended for use as a catalyst in the production of synthetic methanol for aviation fuel.[5][6] When the cargo had been loaded, U-234 carried out additional trials near
Kiel, then returned to the northern
German city where her passengers came aboard.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_submarine_U-234
The Little Boy gun type atomic bomb dropped on
Hiroshima on
August 6, 1945 was made of highly enriched uranium with a large tamper.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranium-235
The experimental apparatus with which
Otto Hahn and
Fritz Strassmann discovered nuclear fission in
1938
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_fission
Otto Hahn,
OBE, ForMemRS[1] (8 March 1879 – 28 July
1968) was a German chemist and pioneer in the fields of radioactivity and radiochemistry[2] who won the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1944 for the discovery of nuclear fission.[3] He is regarded as one of the most significant chemists of all time and especially as "the father of nuclear chemistry".[4]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto_Hahn
Otto Robert Frisch FRS[
1] (1 October 1904 –
22 September 1979) was an Austrian-British physicist. With his German-British collaborator
Rudolf Peierls[1] he designed the first theoretical mechanism for the detonation of an atomic bomb in
1940.[2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto_Robert_Frisch
Lise Meitner (
7 November 1878 –
27 October 1968) was an
Austrian physicist who worked on radioactivity and nuclear physics.[3]
Meitner was part of the team that discovered nuclear fission, an achievement for which her colleague Otto Hahn was awarded the
Nobel Prize.[4]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lise_Meitner
The
Swedish Plans to Acquire
Nuclear Weapons,
1945–1968
http://scienceandglobalsecurity.org/archive/sgs18jonter
.pdf
by T Jonter -
2010 -
Department of
Economic History,
Stockholm University,
Stockholm, Sweden .... that plutonium would be preferable to uranium-235 for use as nuclear material.
Princess Märtha of Sweden (Märtha
Sofia Lovisa
Dagmar Thyra; 28
March 1901 – 5
April 1954) was
Crown Princess of Norway as the spouse of the future
King Olav V. The presently reigning
King Harald V is her son.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princess_M%C3%A4rtha_of_Sweden
Ubåtbyen Bergen
http://www.nuav.net/ubaatbyen
.html
fair use
- published: 07 Apr 2015
- views: 497