The Franck Report, June 11, 1945
Report of the Committee on Political
and Social Problems
Manhattan Project "Metallurgical Laboratory"
University of Chicago, June 11, 1945
(The Franck Report)
Members of the Committee:
James Franck (Chairman)
Donald J. Hughes
J. J. Nickson
Eugene Rabinowitch
Glenn T. Seaborg
J. C. Stearns
Leo Szilard
Source: U.S. National Archives, Washington D.C.: Record Group
77, Manhattan Engineer District Records, Harrison-Bundy File, folder #76.
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Political and Social Problems
I. Preamble
II. Prospectives of Armament Race
III. Prospectives of Agreement
IV. Methods of Control
V. Summary
I. Preamble
The only reason to treat nuclear power differently from all the other
developments in the field of physics is its staggering possibilities as a
means of political pressure in peace and sudden destruction in war. All
present plans for the organization of research, scientific and industrial
development, and publication in the field of nucleonics are conditioned by
the political and military climate in which one expects those plans to be
carried out. Therefore, in making suggestions for the postwar organization
of nucleonics, a discussion of political problems cannot be avoided. The
scientists on this Project do not presume to speak authoritatively on
problems of national and international policy. However, we found
ourselves, by the force of events, the last five years in the position of
a small group of citizens cognizant of a grave danger for the safety of
this country as well as for the future of all the other nations, of which
the rest of mankind is unaware. We therefore felt it our duty to urge that
the political problems, arising from the mastering of atomic power, be
recognized in all their gravity, and that appropriate steps be taken for
their study and the preparation of necessary decisions. We hope that the
creation of the Committee by the Secretary of War to deal with all aspects
of nucleonics, indicates that these implications have been recognized by
the government. We feel that our acquaintance with the scientific elements
of the situation and prolonged preoccupation with its world-wide political
implications, imposes on us the obligation to offer to the Committee some
suggestions as to the possible solution of these grave problems.
Scientists have often before been accused of providing new weapons for
the mutual destruction of nations, instead of improving their well-being.
It is undoubtedly true that the discovery of flying, for example, has so
far brought much more misery than enjoyment or profit to humanity.
However, in the past, scientists could disclaim direct responsibility for
the use to which mankind had put their disinterested discoveries. We
cannot take the same attitude now because the success which we have
achieved in the development of nuclear power is fraught with infinitely
greater dangers than were all the inventions of the past. All of us,
familiar with the present state of nucleonics, live with the vision before
our eyes of sudden destruction visited on our own country, of Pearl Harbor
disaster, repeated in thousandfold magnification, in every one of our
major cities.
In the past, science has often been able to provide adequate protection
against new weapons it has given into the hands of an agressor, but it
cannot promise such efficient protection against the destructive use of
nuclear power. This protection can only come from the political
organization of the world. Among all arguments calling for an efficient
international organization for peace, the existence of nuclear weapons is
the most compelling one. In the absence of an international authority
which would make all resort to force in international conflicts
impossible, nations could still be diverted from a path which must lead to
total mutual destruction, by a specific international agreement barring a
nuclear armaments race.
II. Prospectives of Armaments Race
It could be suggested that the danger of destruction by nuclear weapons
can be prevented - at least as far as this country is concerned - by
keeping our discoveries secret for an indefinite time, or by developing
our nucleonic armaments at such a pace that no other nations would think
of attacking us from fear of overwhelming retaliation.
The answer to the first suggestion is that although we undoubtedly are
at present ahead of the rest of the world in this field, the fundamental
facts of nuclear power are a subject of common knowledge. British
scientists know as much as we do about the basic wartime progress of
nucleonics - with the exception of specific processes used in our
engineering developments - and the background of French nuclear physicists
plus their occasional contact with our Projects, will enable them to catch
up rapidly, at least as far as basic scientific facts are concerned.
German scientists, in whose discoveries the whole development of this
field has originated, apparently did not develop it during the war to the
same extent to which this has been done in America; but to the last day of
the European war, we have been living in constant apprehension as to their
possible achievements. The knowledge that German scientists were working
on this weapon and that their government certainly had no scruples against
using it when available, was the main motivation of the initiative which
American scientists have taken in developing nuclear power on such a large
scale for military use in this country. In Russia, too, the basic facts
and implications of nuclear power were well understood in 1940, and the
experiences of Russian scientists in nuclear research is entirely
sufficient to enable them to retrace our steps within a few years, even if
we would make all attempts to conceal them. Furthermore, we should not
expect too much success from attempts to keep basic information secret in
peacetime, when scientists acquainted with the work on this and associated
Projects will be scattered to many colleges and research institutions and
many of them will continue to work on problems closely related to those on
which our developments are based. In other words, even if we can retain
our leadership in basic knowledge of nucleonics for a certain time by
maintaining the secrecy of all results achieved on this and associated
Projects, it would be foolish to hope that this can protect us for more
than a few years.
It may be asked whether we cannot achieve a monopoly on the raw
materials of nuclear power. The answer is that even though the largest now
known deposits of uranium ores are under the control of powers which
belong to the "western" group (Canada, Belgium and British Indies); the
old deposits in Czechoslovakia are outside this sphere. Russia is known to
be mining radium on its own territory; and even if we do not know the size
of the deposits discovered so far in the USSR, the probability that no
large reserves of uranium will be found in a country which covers 1/5 of
the land area of the earth (and whose sphere of influence takes in
additional territory), is too small to serve as a basis for security.
Thus, we cannot hope to avoid a nuclear armament race, either by keeping
secret from the competing nations the basic scientific facts of nuclear
power, or by cornering the raw materials required for such a race.
One could further ask whether we cannot feel ourselves safe in a race
of nuclear armaments by virtue of our greater industrial potential,
including greater diffusion of scientific and technical knowledge, greater
volume and efficiency of our skilled labor corps, and greater experience
of our management - all the factors whose importance has been so
strikingly demonstrated in the conversion of this country into an arsenal
of the Allied Nations in the present war. The answer is that all that
these advantages can give us, is the accumulation of a larger number of
bigger and better atomic bombs - and this only if we produce those bombs
at the maximum of our capacity in peace time, and do not rely on
conversion of a peace time nucleonics industry to military production
after the beginning of hostilities.
However, such a quantitative advantage in reserves of bottled
destructive power will not make us safe from sudden attack. Just because a
potential enemy will be afraid of being "outnumbered and outgunned," the
temptation for him may be overwhelming to attempt a sudden unprovoked blow
- particularly if he would suspect us of harboring agressive intentions
against his security or "sphere of influence." In no other type of warfare
does the advantage lie so heavily with the agressor. He can place his
"infernal machines" in advance in all our major cities and explode them
simultaneously, thus destroying a major part of our industry and killing a
large proportion of our population, aggregated in densely populated
metropolitan districts. Our possibilities of retaliation - even if
retaliation would be considered compensation for the loss of tens of
millions of lives and destruction of our largest cities - will be greatly
handicapped because we must rely on aerial transportation of the bombs,
particularly if we would have to deal with an enemy whose industry and
population are dispersed over a large territory.
In fact, if the race of nuclear armaments is allowed to develop, the
only apparent way in which our country could be protected from the
paralyzing effects of a sudden attack is by dispersal of industries which
are essential for our war effort and dispersal of the population of our
major metropolitan cities. As long as nuclear bombs remain scarce (this
will be the case until uranium and thorium cease to be the only basic
materials for their fabrication) efficient dispersal of our industry and
the scattering of our metropolitan population will considerably decrease
the temptation of attacking us by nuclear weapons.
Ten years hence, an atomic bomb containing perhaps 20 kg of active
material, may be detonated at 6% efficiency, and thus have an effect equal
to that of 20,000 tons of TNT. One of these may be used to destroy
something like 3 square miles of an urban area. Atomic bombs containing a
larger quantity of active material but still weighing less than one ton
may be expected to be obtainable within ten years which could destroy over
ten square miles of a city. A nation which is able to assign 10 tons of
atomic explosives for the preparation of a sneak attack on this country,
can then hope to achieve the destruction of all industry and most of the
population in an area from 500 square miles upwards. If no choice of
targets, in any area of five hundred square miles of American territory,
will contain a large enough fraction of the nation's industry and
population to make their destruction a crippling blow to the nation's war
potential and its ability to defend itself, then the attack will not pay,
and will probably not be undertaken. At present, one could easily select
in this country a hundred blocks of five square miles each whose
simultaneous destruction would be a staggering blow to the nation. (A
possible total destruction of all the nation's naval forces would be only
a small detail of such a catastrophe.) Since the area of the United States
is about six million square miles, it should be possible to scatter its
industrial and human resources in such a way as to leave no 500 square
miles important enough to serve as a target for nuclear attack.
We are fully aware of the staggering difficulties of such a radical
change in the social and economic structure of our nation. We felt,
however, that the dilemma had to be stated, to show what kind of
alternative methods of protection will have to be considered if no
successful international agreement is reached. It must be pointed out that
in this field we are in a less favorable position than nations which are
either now more diffusely populated and whose industries are more
scattered, or whose governments have unlimited power over the movement of
population and the location of industrial plants.
If no efficient international agreement is achieved, the race of
nuclear armaments will be on in earnest not later than the morning after
our first demonstration of the existence of nuclear weapons. After this,
it might take other nations three or four years to overcome our present
head start, and 8 or 10 years to draw even with us if we continue to do
intensive work in this field. This might be all the time we have to bring
about the re-groupment of our population and industry. Obviously, no time
should be lost in inaugurating a study of this problem by experts.
III. Prospectives of Agreement
The prospect of nuclear warfare and the type of measures which have to
be taken to protect a country from total destruction by nuclear bombing,
must be as abhorrent to other nations as to the United States. England,
France, and the smaller nations of the European continent, with their
congeries of people and industries, are in an entirely hopeless situation
in the face of such a threat. Russia, and China are the only great nations
which could survive a nuclear attack. However, even though these countries
value human life less than the peoples of Western Europe and America, and
even though Russia, in particular, has an immense space over which its
vital industries could be dispersed and a government which can order this
dispersion, the day it is convinced that such a measure is necessary -
there is no doubt that Russia, too, will shudder at the possibility of a
sudden disintegration of Moscow and Leningrad, almost miraculously
preserved in the present war, and of its new industrial sites in the Urals
and Siberia. Therefore, only lack of mutual trust, and not lack of
desire for agreement, can stand in the path of an efficient
agreement for the prevention of nuclear warfare.
From this point of view, the way in which nuclear weapons, now secretly
developed in this country, will first be revealed to the world appears of
great, perhaps fateful importance.
One possible way - which may particularly appeal to those who consider
the nuclear bombs primarily as a secret weapon developed to help win the
present war - is to use it without warning on an appropriately selected
object in Japan. It is doubtful whether the first available bombs, of
comparatively low efficiency and small size, will be sufficient to break
the will or ability of Japan to resist, especially given the fact that the
major cities like Tokyo, Nagoya, Osaka, and Kobe already will largely be
reduced to ashes by the slower process of ordinary aerial bombing. Certain
and perhaps important tactical results undoubtedly can be achieved, but we
nevertheless think that the question of the use of the very first
available atomic bombs in the Japanese war should be weighed very
carefully, not only by military authority, but by the highest political
leadership of this country. If we consider international agreement on
total prevention of nuclear warfare as the paramount objective, and
believe that it can be achieved, this kind of introduction of atomic
weapons to the world may easily destroy all our chances of success.
Russia, and even allied countries which bear less mistrust of our ways and
intentions, as well as neutral countries, will be deeply shocked. It will
be very difficult to persuade the world that a nation which was capable of
secretly preparing and suddenly releasing a weapon, as indiscriminate as
the rocket bomb and a thousand times more destructive, is to be trusted in
its proclaimed desire of having such weapons abolished by international
agreement. We have large accumulations of poison gas, but do not use them,
and recent polls have shown that public opinion in this country would
disapprove of such a use even if it would accelerate the winning of the
Far Eastern war. It is true, that some irrational element in mass
psychology makes gas poisoning more revolting that blasting by explosive,
even though gas warfare is in no way more "inhuman" than the war of bombs
and bullets. Nevertheless, it is not at all certain that the American
public opinion, if it could be enlightened as to the effect of atomic
explosives, would support the first introduction by our own country of
such an indiscriminate method of wholesale destruction of civilian life.
Thus, from the "optimistic" point of view - looking forward to an
international agreement on prevention of nuclear warfare - the military
advantages and the saving of American lives, achieved by the sudden use of
atomic bombs against Japan, may be outweighed by the ensuing loss of
confidence and wave of horror and repulsion, sweeping over the rest of the
world, and perhaps dividing even the public opinion at home.
From this point of view a demonstration of the new weapon may best
be made before the eyes of representatives of all United Nations, on the
desert or a barren island. The best possible atmosphere for the
achievement of an international agreement could be achieved if America
would be able to say to the world, "You see what weapon we had but did not
use. We are ready to renounce its use in the future and to join other
nations in working out adequate supervision of the use of this nuclear
weapon."
This may sound fantastic, but then in nuclear weapons we have something
entirely new in the order of magnitude of destructive power, and if we
want to capitalize fully on the advantage which its possession gives us,
we must use new and imaginative methods. After such a demonstration the
weapon could be used against Japan if a sanction of the United Nations
(and of the public opinion at home) could be obtained, perhaps after a
preliminary ultimatum to Japan to surrender or at least to evacuate a
certain region as an alternative to the total destruction of this target.
It must be stressed that if one takes a pessimistic point of view and
discounts the possibilities of an effective international control of
nuclear weapons, then the advisability of an early use of nuclear bombs
against Japan becomes even more doubtful - quite independently of any
humanitarian considerations. If no international agreement is concluded
immediately after the first demonstration, this will mean a flying start
of an unlimited armaments race. If this race is inevitable, we have all
reason to delay its beginning as long as possible in order to increase our
headstart still further. It took us three years, roughly, under forced
draft of wartime urgency, to complete the first stage of production of
nuclear explosives - that based on the separation of the rare fissionable
isotope U-235, or its utilization for the production of an equivalent
quantity of another fissionable element. This stage required large-scale,
expensive constructions and laborious procedures. We are now on the
threshold of the second stage - that of converting into fissionable
material the comparatively abundant common isotopes of thorium and
uranium. This stage requires no elaborate plans and can provide us in
about 5 - 6 years with a really substantial stockpile of atomic bombs.
Thus it is to our interest to delay the beginning of the armaments race at
least until the successful termination of this second stage. The benefit
to the nation, and the saving of American lives in the future, achieved by
renouncing an early demonstration of nuclear bombs and letting the other
nations come into the race only reluctantly, on the basis of guesswork and
without definite knowledge that the "thing does work," may far outweigh
the advantages to be gained by the immediate use of the first and
comparatively inefficient bombs in the war against Japan. At the least,
pros and cons of this use must be carefully weighed by the supreme
political and military leadership of the country, and the decision should
not be left to considerations, merely, of military tactics.
One may point out that the scientists themselves have initiated the
development of this "secret weapon" and it is therefore strange that they
should be reluctant to try it out on the enemy as soon as it is available.
The answer to this question was given above - the compelling reason for
creating this weapon with such speed was our fear that Germany had the
technical skill necessary to develop such a weapon without any moral
constraints regarding its use.
Another argument which could be quoted in favor of using atomic bombs
as soon as they are available is that so much taxpayers' money has been
invested in these Projects that the Congress and the American public will
require a return for their money. The above-mentioned attitude of the
American public opinion in the question of the use of poison gas against
Japan shows that one can expect it to understand that a weapon can
sometimes be made ready only for use in extreme emergency; and as soon as
the potentialities of nuclear weapons will be revealed to the American
people, one can be certain that it will support all attempts to make the
use of such weapons impossible.
Once this is achieved, the large installations and the accumulation of
explosive materials at present earmarked for potential military use, will
become available for important peace time developments, including power
production, large engineering undertakings, and mass production of
radioactive materials. In this way, the money spent on war time
development of nucleonics may become a boon for the peace time development
of national economy.
IV. Methods of International Control
We now consider the question of how an effective international control
of nuclear armaments can be achieved. This is a difficult problem, but we
think it to be soluble. It requires study by statesmen and international
lawyers, and we can offer only some preliminary suggestions for such a
study.
Given mutual trust and willingness on all sides to give up a certain
part of their sovereign rights, by admitting international control of
certain phases of national economy, the control could be exercised
(alternatively or simultaneously) on two different levels.
The first and perhaps simplest way is to ration the raw materials -
primarily, the uranium ores. Production of nuclear explosives begins with
processing of large quantities of uranium in large isotope separation
plants or huge production piles. The amounts of ore taken out of the
ground at different locations could be controlled by resident agents of
the international Control Board, and each nation could be allotted only an
amount which would make large scale separation of fissionable isotopes
impossible.
Such a limitation would have the drawback of making impossible also the
development of nuclear power production for peace time purposes. However,
it does not need to prevent the production of radioactive elements on a
scale which will revolutionize the industrial, scientific and technical
use of these materials, and will thus not eliminate the main benefits
which nucleonics promises to bring to mankind.
An agreement on a higher level, involving more mutual trust and
understanding, would be to allow unlimited production, but keep exact
bookkeeping on the fate of each pound of uranium mined. Certain difficulty
with this method of control will arise in the second stage of production,
when one pound of pure fissionable isotope will be used again and again to
produce additional fissionable material from thorium. These could perhaps
be overcome by extending control to the mining and use of thorium, even
though the commercial use of this metal may cause complications.
If check is kept on the conversion of uranium and thorium ore into pure
fissionable materials, the question arises how to prevent accumulation of
large quantities of such material in the hands of one or several nations.
Accumulations of this kind could be rapidly converted into atomic bombs if
a nation would break away from international control. It has been
suggested that a compulsory denaturation of pure fissionable isotopes may
be agreed upon - they should be diluted after production by suitable
isotopes to make them useless for military purposes (except if purified by
a process whose development must take two or three years), while retaining
their usefulness for power engines.
One thing is clear: any international agreement on prevention of
nuclear armaments must be backed by actual and efficient controls. No
paper agreement can be sufficient since neither this or any other nation
can stake its whole existence on trust into other nations' signatures.
Every attempt to impede the international control agencies must be
considered equivalent to denunciation of the agreement.
It hardly needs stressing that we as scientists believe that any
systems of controls envisaged should leave as much freedom for the peace
development of nucleonics as is consistent with the safety of the world.
Summary
The development of nuclear power not only constitutes an important
addition to the technological and military power of the United States, but
also creates grave political and economic problems for the future of this
country.
Nuclear bombs cannot possibly remain a "secret weapon" at the exclusive
disposal of this country, for more than a few years. The scientific facts
on which their construction is based are well known to scientists of other
countries. Unless an effective international control of nuclear explosives
is instituted, a race of nuclear armaments is certain to ensue following
the first revelation of our possession of nuclear weapons to the world.
Within ten years other countries may have nuclear bombs, each of which,
weighing less than a ton, could destroy an urban area of more than five
square miles. In the war to which such an armaments race is likely to
lead, the United States, with its agglomeration of population and industry
in comparatively few metropolitan districts, will be at a disadvantage
compared to the nations whose population and industry are scattered over
large areas.
We believe that these considerations make the use of nuclear bombs for
an early, unannounced attack against Japan inadvisable. If the United
States would be the first to release this new means of indiscriminate
destruction upon mankind, she would sacrifice public support throughout
the world, precipitate the race of armaments, and prejudice the
possibility of reaching an international agreement on the future control
of such weapons.
Much more favorable conditions for the eventual achievement of such an
agreement could be created if nuclear bombs were first revealed to the
world by a demonstration in an appropriately selected uninhabited area.
If chances for the establishment of an effective international control
of nuclear weapons will have to be considered slight at the present time,
then not only the use of these weapons against Japan, but even their early
demonstration may be contrary to the interests of this country. A
postponement of such a demonstration will have in this case the advantage
of delaying the beginning of the nuclear armaments race as long as
possible. If, during the time gained, ample support could be made
available for further development of the field in this country, the
postponement would substantially increase the lead which we have
established during the present war, and our position in an armament race
or in any later attempt at international agreement will thus be
strengthened.
On the other hand, if no adequate public support for the development of
nucleonics will be available without a demonstration, the postponement of
the latter may be deemed inadvisable, because enough information might
leak out to cause other nations to start the armament race, in which we
will then be at a disadvantage. At the same time, the distrust of other
nations may be aroused by a confirmed development under cover of secrecy,
making it more difficult eventually to reach an agreement with them.
If the government should decide in favor of an early demonstration of
nuclear weapons it will then have the possibility to take into account the
public opinion of this country and of the other nations before deciding
whether these weapons should be used in the war against Japan. In this
way, other nations may assume a share of the responsibility for such a
fateful decision.
To sum up, we urge that the use of nuclear bombs in this war be
considered as a problem of long-range national policy rather than military
expediency, and that this policy be directed primarily to the achievement
of an agreement permitting an effective international control of the means
of nuclear warfare.
The vital importance of such a control for our country is obvious from
the fact that the only effective alternative method of protecting this
country, of which we are aware, would be a dispersal of our major cities
and essential industries.
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