1954, in the miserable and totalitarian USSR, Soviet scientists created the world's first installation for controlled thermonuclear fusion and reached a plasma temperature of 10 million degrees
1958, Belgium, in advanced and civilized Europe, there were still human zoos.
Luckily for the Bolsheviks, FDR provided them with the technology and the materials.
LoneVoiceAgainstTreason
1. Major George Racey Jordan was in charge of seeing to it that requisitioned materials be sent on to the Soviet Union. He was known as the 'expediter.' As such, he was, nearly, the only witness to Harry Hopkins's treason on behalf of Moscow.
a. "..he [ Jordan] was instructed by the White House and State Department to deliver parts for the atomic bomb to the Soviets – at the same time the nation was worried about Russia stealing A-bomb secrets. At first, Congress did not believe him, but his diary filled with dates, shipping manifestos, and names of pilots who flew the missions,..."
Major George Jordan
2. Because the truth was noncontroversial until Jordan testified to Hopkins's involvement, in fact, large segments of the Roosevelt administration, in shipping atomic secrets and atomic materials to the Soviet Union as part of the plot code-named "Enormous."
a. " Soviet scientists evened the balance of terror thanks to an enormous shortcut delivered by espionage agents engaged in Operation ENORMOUS-the complete Soviet penetration of
The Manhattan Project."
KGB Investigative Assets: Insights
b.
4. In Jordan's book is a near-complete list of Soviet Lend-Lease material
a. According to Jordan, shipments to the USSR via Lend-Lease continued until 1949.
Victory in Europe Day—known as
V-E Day or
VE Day—was the public holiday celebrated on 8 May 1945 (in
Commonwealth countries, 7 May 1945) to mark the date when the
World War II Allies formally accepted the
unconditional surrender of the armed forces of
Nazi Germany
5. ATOMIC MATERIALS
Beryllium Metals 9,681 lbs. -- $ 10,874.
Cadmium alloys 72,535 lbs. -- $70,029.
Cadmium metals 834,989 lbs. - $71,466.
Cobalt ore & concentrate 33,600 lbs. -- $49,782.
Cobalt metal & cobalt-bearing scrap 806,941 lbs. -- $1,190,774.
Uranium metal 2.2 lbs. -
Aluminum Tubes 13,766,472 lbs. -- $13,041,152.
Graphite, natural, flake, lump or chip 7,384,282 lbs. -- $812,437.
Beryllium salts & compounds 228 lbs. -- $775.
Cadmium oxide 2,100 lbs. -- $3,080.
Cadmium salts & compounds, n.e.s. * 2 lbs. -- $19.
Cadmium sulfate 2,170 lbs. -- $1,374.
Cadmium sulfide 16,823 lbs. -- $17,380.
Cobalt nitrate 51 lbs. -- $48.
Cobalt oxide 17,800 lbs. -- $34,832.
Cobalt salts & compounds n.e.s. 11,475 lbs. -- $7,112.
Cobaltic & cobaltous sulfate 22 lbs. -- $25.
Deuterium oxide (heavy water) -- $1,100 grs. -
http://seawaves.us/na/web4/diaries.html#CHAPTER_NINE_