Timeline of strategic nuclear weapon systems of the United Kingdom
In 1952, the United Kingdom was the third country to develop and test nuclear weapons, after the United States and Soviet Union.[1] and is one of the five nuclear-weapon states under the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.[2]
The UK initiated a nuclear weapons programme, codenamed Tube Alloys, during the Second World War.[3] At the Quebec Conference in August 1943, it was merged with the American Manhattan Project.[4] The British contribution to the Manhattan Project saw British scientists participate in most of its work.[5] The British government considered nuclear weapons to be a joint discovery,[6] but the American Atomic Energy Act of 1946 (McMahon Act) restricted other countries, including the UK, from access to information about nuclear weapons.[7] Fearing the loss of Britain's great power status, the UK resumed its own project,[8] now codenamed High Explosive Research.[9] On 3 October 1952, it detonated an atomic bomb in the Monte Bello Islands in Australia in Operation Hurricane.[10] Eleven more British nuclear weapons tests in Australia were carried out over the following decade, including seven British nuclear tests at Maralinga in 1956 and 1957.[11]
The British hydrogen bomb programme demonstrated Britain's ability to produce thermonuclear weapons in the Operation Grapple nuclear tests in the Pacific,[12] and led to the amendment of the McMahon Act.[13] Since the 1958 US–UK Mutual Defence Agreement, the US and the UK have cooperated extensively on nuclear security matters. The nuclear Special Relationship between the two countries has involved the exchange of classified scientific data and fissile materials such as uranium-235 and plutonium.[14][15] After the cancellation of the Blue Streak in 1960,[16] the US supplied the UK with Polaris missiles and nuclear submarine technology.[17][18] The US also supplied the Royal Air Force and British Army of the Rhine with nuclear weapons under Project E in the form of aerial bombs, missiles, depth charges and artillery shells until 1992.[19][20] Nuclear-capable American aircraft have been based in the UK since 1949,[21] but the last US nuclear weapons were withdrawn in 2006.[22] In 1982, the Polaris Sales Agreement was amended to allow the UK to purchase Trident II missiles.[23] Since 1998, when the UK decommissioned its tactical WE.177 bombs, the Trident has been the only operational nuclear weapons system in British service.[24]
1913
[edit]H. G. Wells coins the term "atomic bomb" in his novel The World Set Free.[25]
1932
[edit]- February: The neutron discovered by James Chadwick at the Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge.[26]
- April: John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton split lithium nuclei with accelerated protons at the Cavendish Laboratory.[27]
1933
[edit]- Ernest Rutherford and Mark Oliphant discover helium-3 and tritium.[28]
1938
[edit]- December: In Germany, Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann bombard uranium with neutrons,[29] and discover that the uranium had been split.[30]
1939
[edit]- January: Lise Meitner and Otto Frisch publish a theoretical justification for the process in Nature,[31] which they call "fission".[32]
- January: Niels Bohr and John A. Wheeler apply the liquid drop model developed by Bohr and Fritz Kalckar to explain the mechanism of nuclear fission. Bohr hypothesises that uranium-235 is largely responsible.[33]
- 3 September: Great Britain and France declare war on Nazi Germany in response to its invasion of Poland, beginning World War II in Europe.[34]
1940
[edit]- March: The Frisch–Peierls memorandum estimates that a few kilograms of pure uranium-235 would explode with the energy of thousands of tons of dynamite.[35]
- April: MAUD Committee is set up to investigate.[36]
1941
[edit]- July: MAUD Committee issues its report. Endorses conclusion that a practical atomic bomb is possible.[37]
- November: Tube Alloys directorate created to coordinate the effort to develop an atomic bomb. Sir John Anderson, the Lord President of the Council, becomes the minister responsible, and Wallace Akers from Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI) is appointed its director.[3]
1943
[edit]- August 1943: Quebec Agreement merges Tube Alloys with the American Manhattan Project, and creates the Combined Policy Committee and Combined Development Trust.[38]
1944
[edit]- September: Hyde Park Aide-Mémoire extends cooperation to the post-war era.[39]
1945
[edit]- July: Field Marshal Sir Henry Maitland Wilson authorises the use of nuclear weapons against Japan as a decision of the Combined Policy Committee.[40][41]
- August: Bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.[42]
- August: Clement Attlee creates Advisory Coimmittee on Atomic Energy under the chairmanship of Sir John Anderson.[43]
- October: Chiefs of Staff Committee recommend that Britain produce atomic weapons.[43]
- November: Tube Alloys Directorate transferred to the Ministry of Supply.[44]
- November: Washington Agreement confirms post-war collaboration; replaces the Quebec Agreement's requirement for "mutual consent" before using nuclear weapons with one for "prior consultation".[45]
1946
[edit]- February: British physicist Alan Nunn May is arrested as a Soviet spy after being fingered by Soviet defector Igor Gouzenko.[46]
- March: Lord Portal becomes Controller of Production, Atomic Energy (CPAE).[47]
- August: McMahon Act prohibits the US government releasing restricted data to any foreign power, thereby ending technical cooperation with the UK.[7]
1947
[edit]- January: Cabinet subcommittee approves the manufacture of nuclear weapons.[48]
- June: Nine non-nuclear capable B-29 Superfortress bombers of the 97th Bombardment Group deploy to RAF Marham, beginning the presence of the Strategic Air Command in the United Kingdom.[49]
- December: V bombers are ordered.[50]
1948
[edit]- January: Britain gives up the right to be consulted on the use of nuclear weapons as part of the Modus Vivendi.[51]
1949
[edit]- April: North Atlantic Treaty is signed.[52]
- April: The first nuclear-capable B-29 bombers deploy to the UK.[21]
- August: Soviet Union tests Joe-1, its first nuclear weapon.[53]
1950
[edit]- April: Aldermaston taken over; becomes centre of UK atomic weapons research.[54]
- June: North Korea invades South Korea, starting the Korean War.[54]
1951
[edit]- June: Donald Maclean, who had served as a British member of the Combined Policy Committee from January 1947 to August 1948, defects to the Soviet Union.[55]
1952
[edit]- January: British-German physicist Klaus Fuchs is arrested and confesses to being a Soviet spy.[56]
- June: United States Air Force in the United Kingdom receives its own nuclear weapons.[57]
- October: First British nuclear weapon is tested in the Monte Bello Islands in Western Australia in Operation Hurricane.[58]
- November: United States tests Ivy Mike, a thermonuclear device.[59]
1953
[edit]- October: Operation Totem, the first nuclear tests on the Australian mainland, conducted at Emu Field in the Great Victoria Desert in South Australia.[11]
1954
[edit]- July: British government decides to initiate a British hydrogen bomb programme.[60]
1956
[edit]- May–June: Operation Mosaics test in the Monte Bello Islands in the Australia.[61]
- September–October: First British nuclear tests at Maralinga.[62]
- October–November: Suez Crisis: Britain is forced to abandon invasion of Egypt under US financial pressure.[63]
1957
[edit]- April: 1957 Defence White Paper emphasises nuclear weapons to replace Britain's declining conventional military capabilities.[53]
- May: First British hydrogen bomb test in Operation Grapple off Malden Island in the Pacific is a failure.[64]
- May: Memorandum of Understanding with the US regarding the loan of nuclear weapons to the UK in wartime.[65]
- September–October: Operation Antler Trials at Maralinga.[66]
- October: Sputnik crisis erupts when Soviets launch the first artificial satellite.[53]
- November: First successful British hydrogen bomb test off Christmas Island.[67]
1958
[edit]- July: MacMahon Act is amended to allow nuclear cooperation to resume and the 1958 US–UK Mutual Defence Agreement is signed, restoring the nuclear Special Relationship.[68]
- September: Britain conducts its last atmospheric nuclear test off Malden Island.[69]
1959
[edit]- January: The first Thor missiles supplied to the UK by the US become operational.[70]
1960
[edit]- March: Harold Macmillan negotiates the purchase of Skybolt from the United States after the cancellation of Blue Streak in return for permission to base the US Navy's Polaris missile-equipped ballistic missile submarines at the Holy Loch in Scotland.[71]
- October: Labour Party conference adopts a policy of unilateral nuclear disarmament.[72]
1961
[edit]- March: US Polaris submarines deploy to the Holy Loch.[73]
1962
[edit]- October: British nuclear forces on alert during the Cuban Missile Crisis.[74]
- December: When the US moves to cancel Skybolt, Macmillan meets with President John F. Kennedy, and negotiates the Nassau Agreement, under which the UK is permitted to purchase Polaris missile technology.[17][18]
1963
[edit]- April: Polaris Sales Agreement is signed.[75]
- August: The United Kingdom, along with the United States and the Soviet Union, signs the Partial Test Ban Treaty, which restricts it to underground nuclear tests by outlawing testing in the atmosphere, underwater, or in outer space.[76]
- August: Last Thor missiles leave the UK.[77]
1965
[edit]- June: US 7th Air Division discontinued, ends Strategic Air Command presence in the UK except for visits.[78]
1967
[edit]- January: UK signs the Outer Space Treaty, banning nuclear weapons from space.[2]
1968
[edit]- July: UK signs the Non-proliferation treaty.[2]
1973
[edit]- April: Heath ministry approves the Chevaline programme to upgrade Polaris.[2]
1979
[edit]- January: US President Jimmy Carter agrees to sell the Trident I missile system to Britain.[79]
1981
[edit]- August: US President Ronald Reagan offers to sell the Trident II missile system to Britain.[80]
1982
[edit]- September–October: Labour Party Conference adopts a platform calling for the scrapping of Polaris and the cancellation of Trident.[81]
- October: Trident sales agreement is signed.[23]
1984
[edit]- January: US cruise missiles are deployed to RAF Greenham Common and RAF Molesworth as a consequence of the 1979 NATO Double-Track Decision.[82]
1988
[edit]- June: Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock abandons the commitment to unilateral nuclear disarmament.[2]
1991
[edit]- November: Julin Bristol, the last British nuclear test, is conducted in the United States.[83]
1992
[edit]- March: The US Polaris submarine base at Holy Loch is closed.[84]
1996
[edit]- September: The UK signs the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, ending all nuclear testing.[85]
1998
[edit]2006
[edit]- December: Last US tactical nuclear weapons in the UK are removed.[22]
2016
[edit]- July: House of Commons votes to proceed with construction of this next generation of Trident submarines.[86][87]
Notes
[edit]- ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974b, p. 498.
- ^ a b c d e Self 2010, p. 195.
- ^ a b Gowing 1964, pp. 106–111.
- ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 277.
- ^ Gowing 1964, pp. 226–227, 250–258.
- ^ Goldberg 1964, p. 410.
- ^ a b Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 106–108.
- ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, p. 184.
- ^ Cathcart 1995, pp. 24, 48, 57.
- ^ Goldberg 1964, pp. 409–429.
- ^ a b "Key events in the UK atmospheric nuclear test programme" (PDF). UK Ministry of Defence. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 October 2012. Retrieved 27 June 2009.
- ^ Botti 1987, pp. 199–201.
- ^ Botti 1987, pp. 234–236.
- ^ Baylis 1995, pp. 75–76.
- ^ Aldrich 1998, pp. 333–339.
- ^ Moore 2010, pp. 48, 99–100.
- ^ a b Moore 2010, pp. 236–239.
- ^ a b Jones 2017, pp. 413–415.
- ^ Stoddart 2012, pp. 109, 313.
- ^ Moore 2010, pp. 132–133.
- ^ a b Young 2007, p. 130.
- ^ a b Borger, Julian (26 June 2008). "US removes its nuclear arms from Britain". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
- ^ a b Stoddart 2014, pp. 197–199.
- ^ a b "WE 177 Type B (950lb), Training". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 13 July 2018.
- ^ Farmelo 2013, pp. 15–24.
- ^ Clark 1961, p. 9.
- ^ Gowing 1964, pp. 17–18.
- ^ Cockburn & Ellyard 1981, pp. 52–55.
- ^ Clark 1961, p. 5.
- ^ Clark 1961, p. 11.
- ^ Bernstein 2011, p. 240.
- ^ Zimmerman 1995, p. 262.
- ^ Wheeler, John A. (1 November 1967). "The Discovery of Fission – Mechanism of Fission". Physics Today. 20 (11): 49–52. Bibcode:1967PhT....20k..43F. doi:10.1063/1.3034021.
- ^ Rhodes 1986, p. 310.
- ^ Gowing 1964, pp. 41–42.
- ^ Clark 1961, p. 65.
- ^ Gowing 1964, pp. 77–80.
- ^ Gowing 1964, p. 439.
- ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 327.
- ^ Gowing 1964, p. 372.
- ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 372–373.
- ^ Gowing 1964, p. 379.
- ^ a b Wynn 1997, p. 577.
- ^ Goldberg 1964, p. 417.
- ^ Paul 2000, pp. 80–83.
- ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 105–108.
- ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 40–41.
- ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 181–184.
- ^ Young 2007, pp. 120–122.
- ^ Wynn 1997, pp. 46–48.
- ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974a, pp. 248–252.
- ^ Wynn 1997, p. 587.
- ^ a b c Self 2010, p. 194.
- ^ a b Wynn 1997, p. 588.
- ^ Botti 1987, pp. 74–75.
- ^ Botti 1987, p. 61.
- ^ Grant 2011, pp. 58–62.
- ^ Cathcart 1995, p. 253.
- ^ Gowing & Arnold 1974b, pp. 497–498.
- ^ Baylis 1995, pp. 160–163, 179–185.
- ^ Arnold & Smith 2006, pp. 124–128.
- ^ Wynn 1997, p. 603.
- ^ Self 2010, pp. 50–55.
- ^ Pringle, Peter (24 March 1994). "Britain's H-bomb triumph a hoax: Patriotic scientists created an elaborate and highly secret bluff to disguise dud weapons". The Independent. Retrieved 30 May 2017.
- ^ Wynn 1997, p. 605.
- ^ Wynn 1997, p. 607.
- ^ Arnold & Pyne 2001, pp. 160–162.
- ^ Botti 1987, pp. 234–238.
- ^ Arnold & Pyne 2001, pp. 189–191.
- ^ Boyes 2015, p. 170.
- ^ Moore 2010, pp. 64–68.
- ^ Epstein 1966, p. 145.
- ^ Baldwin, Jessica (28 April 1991). "Cold War's End Chills Town in Scotland: Economy: An American submarine base will be shut down and thousands of jobs and millions of dollars will go with it". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
- ^ Baylis & Stoddart 2015, p. 221.
- ^ Middeke 2000, p. 76.
- ^ "Inventory of International Nonproliferation Organizations and Regimes" (PDF). Center for Nonproliferation Studies. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 March 2009.
- ^ Wynn 1997, p. 362.
- ^ Wynn 1997, p. 627.
- ^ Doyle 2018, p. 6.
- ^ Doyle 2018, p. 11.
- ^ "Politics 97". BBC. Retrieved 13 July 2018.
- ^ Stoddart 2014, pp. 211–217, 236.
- ^ History of the British Nuclear Arsenal, Nuclear Weapons Archive, 30 April 2002, retrieved 29 July 2018
- ^ "Last U.S. Sub Leaving Scotland for Home". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
- ^ "House of Commons Debate, Nuclear Explosions (Prohibition and Inspections) Bill, Hansard, 6 November 1997 : Column 455". Retrieved 4 June 2022.
- ^ "MPs approve Trident renewal". BBC News. 18 July 2016. Retrieved 18 July 2016.
- ^ Tom Peck (18 July 2016). "Theresa May warns threat of nuclear attack has increased ahead of Trident vote". Independent. Retrieved 18 July 2016.
References
[edit]- Aldrich, Richard J. (July 1998). "British Intelligence and the Anglo-American 'Special Relationship' during the Cold War". Review of International Studies. 24 (3): 331–351. doi:10.1017/s0260210598003313. JSTOR 20097530.
- Arnold, Lorna; Pyne, Katherine (2001). Britain and the H-bomb. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave. ISBN 978-0-230-59977-2. OCLC 753874620.
- Arnold, Lorna; Smith, Mark (2006). Britain, Australia and the Bomb: The Nuclear Tests and Their Aftermath. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-4039-2102-4. OCLC 70673342.
- Bernstein, Jeremy (2011). "A Memorandum that Changed the World" (PDF). American Journal of Physics. 79 (5): 440–446. Bibcode:2011AmJPh..79..440B. doi:10.1119/1.3533426. ISSN 0002-9505.
- Baylis, John (1995). Ambiguity and Deterrence: British Nuclear Strategy 1945–1964. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-828012-2.
- Baylis, John; Stoddart, Kristan (2015). The British Nuclear Experience: The Roles of Beliefs, Culture and Identity. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-870202-3. OCLC 900506637.
- Botti, Timothy J. (1987). The Long Wait: the Forging of the Anglo-American Nuclear Alliance, 1945–58. Contributions in Military Studies. New York: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-25902-9. OCLC 464084495.
- Boyes, John (2015). Thor Ballistic Missile: The United States and the United Kingdom in Partnership. Fonthill. ISBN 978-1-78155-481-4. OCLC 921523156.
- Cathcart, Brian (1995). Test of Greatness: Britain's Struggle for the Atom Bomb. London: John Murray. ISBN 0-7195-5225-7. OCLC 31241690.
- Clark, Ronald W. (1961). The Birth of the Bomb: Britain's Part in the Weapon that Changed the World. London: Phoenix House. OCLC 824335.
- Cockburn, Stewart; Ellyard, David (1981). Oliphant, the Life and Times of Sir Mark Oliphant. Adelaide: Axiom Books. ISBN 978-0-9594164-0-4.
- Doyle, Suzanne (2018). "Preserving the Global Nuclear Order: The Trident Agreements and the Arms Control Debate, 1977–1982" (PDF). The International History Review. 40 (5): 1–17. doi:10.1080/07075332.2018.1430047. ISSN 1949-6540.
- Epstein, L. D. (1966). "The Nuclear Deterrent and the British Election of 1964". Journal of British Studies. 5 (2): 139–163. doi:10.1086/385523. ISSN 0021-9371. JSTOR 175321.
- Farmelo, Graham (2013). Churchill's Bomb: How the United States Overtook Britain in the First Nuclear Arms Race. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-02195-6.
- Goldberg, Alfred (July 1964). "The Atomic Origins of the British Nuclear Deterrent". International Affairs. 40 (3): 409–429. doi:10.2307/2610825. ISSN 0020-5850. JSTOR 2610825.
- Gowing, Margaret (1964). Britain and Atomic Energy, 1935–1945. London: Macmillan Publishing. OCLC 3195209.
- Gowing, Margaret; Arnold, Lorna (1974a). Independence and Deterrence: Britain and Atomic Energy, 1945–1952, Volume 1, Policy Making. London: Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-15781-8. OCLC 611555258.
- Gowing, Margaret; Arnold, Lorna (1974b). Independence and Deterrence: Britain and Atomic Energy, 1945–1952, Volume 2, Policy and Execution. London: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-16695-7. OCLC 946341039.
- Grant, Rebecca (March 2011). "Victor Alert" (PDF). Air Force Magazine. pp. 58–62. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
- Hewlett, Richard G.; Anderson, Oscar E. (1962). The New World, 1939–1946 (PDF). University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 0-520-07186-7. OCLC 637004643. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
- Jones, Jeffrey (2017). Volume I: From the V-Bomber Era to the Arrival of Polaris, 1945–1964. The Official History of the UK Strategic Nuclear Deterrent. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxfordshire: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-67493-6. OCLC 1005663721.
- Moore, Richard (2010). Nuclear Illusion, Nuclear Reality: Britain, the United States and Nuclear Weapons, 1958–64. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-23067-5. OCLC 428030700.
- Paul, Septimus H. (2000). Nuclear Rivals: Anglo-American Atomic Relations, 1941–1952. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8142-0852-6. OCLC 43615254.
- Middeke, Michael (Spring 2000). "Anglo-American Nuclear Weapons Cooperation After Nassau". Journal of Cold War Studies. 2 (2): 69–96. doi:10.1162/15203970051032318. ISSN 1520-3972. Retrieved 5 November 2011.
- Rhodes, Richard (1986). The Making of the Atomic Bomb. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-44133-7. OCLC 13793436.
- Self, Robert (2010). British Foreign and Defence Policy since 1945: Challenges and Dilemmas in a Changing World. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-22080-5. OCLC 875770247.
- Stoddart, Kristan (2012). Losing an Empire and Finding a Role: Britain, the USA, NATO and Nuclear Weapons, 1964–70. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-349-33656-2. OCLC 951512907.
- Stoddart, Kristan (2014). Facing Down the Soviet Union: Britain, the USA, NATO and Nuclear Weapons, 1976–83. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-44031-0. OCLC 900698250.
- Wynn, Humphrey (1997). RAF Strategic Nuclear Deterrent Forces, Their Origins, Roles and Deployment, 1946–1969. A Documentary History. London: The Stationery Office. ISBN 0-11-772833-0. OCLC 39225127.
- Young, Ken (January 2007). "US 'Atomic Capability' and the British Forward Bases in the Early Cold War". Journal of Contemporary History. 42 (1): 117–136. doi:10.1177/0022009407071626. JSTOR 30036432.
- Zimmerman, David (1995). "The Tizard Mission and the Development of the Atomic Bomb". War in History. 2 (3): 259–273. doi:10.1177/096834459500200302.