http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/01/washington/01missing.htmlThe office in charge of protecting American technical secrets about nuclear weapons from foreign spies is missing 20 desktop computers........
http://www.inklingmagazine.com/articles/secret-nuke-reactor-papers-opened-for-first-time-since-wwii/.........a laundry list of sensitive atomic science, which include directions on how to safely conduct a nuclear chain reaction and how to get plutonium from uranium.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200506/s1382497.htmMr Karlsch stirred controversy earlier this year when he published a book in Germany, Hitlers Bombe, in which he claimed that the Nazis had successfully tested a primitive nuclear device in the last days of World War II as Allied troops were closing in on both sides.
The book says the device, which was tested in Thuringia, eastern Germany, killed several hundred prisoners of war and concentration camp inmates.........................................
Unlike the US-led Manhattan Project, which harnessed thousands of people and several billion dollars to devise the bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945, the German effort amounted to no more than a few dozen scattered scientists.
http://www.cccoe.k12.ca.us/abomb/physics.htmThe volume of U-235 used in the first atomic bombs could be held in your hands.
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The Manhatan Project was needed to get the first successfull and dpendable bomb together , but you don't need the brains of the Wright Brothers to build an Airplane nowadays , nor do you need to be Henry Ford to assemble a car. The knoledge is discovered ad the materiel is created , only one element is really difficult to get.
Unless you run a reactor , then you can produce a little bit constantly.
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http://ftp.fas.org/sgp/crs/nuke/RS22542.pdfReprocessing refers to the chemical separation of fissionable uranium and plutonium
from irradiated nuclear fuel. The World War II-era Manhattan Project developed
reprocessing technology in the effort to build the first atomic bomb. With the
development of commercial nuclear power after the war, reprocessing was considered
necessary because of a perceived scarcity of uranium. Breeder reactor technology, which
transmutes non-fissionable uranium into fissionable plutonium and thus produces more
fuel than consumed, was envisioned as a promising solution to extending the nuclear fuel
supply. Commercial reprocessing attempts, however, encountered technical, economic,
and regulatory problems. In response to concern that reprocessing contributed to the
proliferation of nuclear weapons, President Carter terminated federal support for
commercial reprocessing.