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Project 596

Project 596 (Miss Qiu (Chinese: 邱小姐, Qiū Xiǎojiě) as the callsign,[1] Chic-1 by the US intelligence agencies[2]) was the first nuclear weapons test conducted by the People's Republic of China, detonated on 16 October 1964, at the Lop Nur test site. It was a uranium-235 implosion fission device made from weapons-grade uranium (U-235) enriched in a gaseous diffusion plant in Lanzhou.[3]

Project 596
The mushroom cloud from the test
Information
CountryPeople's Republic of China
Test siteLop Nur Test Base
Period16 October 1964
Number of tests1
Test typeAtmospheric
Device typeFission
Max. yield22 kilotons of TNT (92 TJ)
Test chronology
← None

The atomic bomb was a part of China's "Two Bombs, One Satellite" program. It had a yield of 22 kilotons, comparable to the Soviet Union's first nuclear bomb RDS-1 in 1949 and the American Fat Man bomb dropped on Nagasaki, Japan in 1945.[4] With the test, China became the fifth nuclear power in the world and the first Asian nation to possess nuclear capability. This was the first of 45 successful nuclear tests China conducted between 1964 and 1996, all of which occurred at the Lop Nur test site.[5]

Development edit

Motivation edit

The Chinese nuclear weapons program was initiated on 15 January 1955. The decision made by the Chinese leadership was prompted by confrontations with the United States in the 1950s, including the Korean War, the 1955 Taiwan Straits Crisis, nuclear blackmail, and eventually the Vietnam War as well.[6] Mao Zedong explained his decision to a gathering of the Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party in 1956:

"Now we're already stronger than we were in the past, and in the future we'll be even stronger than now. Not only are we going to have more airplanes and artillery, but also the atomic bomb. In today's world, if we don't want to be bullied, we have to have this thing."[7]

Mao was confident that nuclear weapon capabilities would allow China to assert its "national will" toward policy goals and deter threats to national security.

Design and testing edit

In 1956, the Third Ministry of Machinery Building was established, and nuclear research was conducted at the Institute of Physics and Atomic Energy in Beijing. A gaseous diffusion uranium enrichment plant was constructed in Lanzhou. In 1957, China and the USSR signed an agreement on sharing defense technology that involved an atomic bomb prototype being supplied by Moscow to Beijing, technical data, and an exchange of hundreds of Russian and Chinese scientists.[8] A joint search for uranium in China was conducted between the two countries. A location near Lake Lop Nur in Xinjiang was selected to be the test site with its headquarters at Malan. Construction of the test site began on 1 April 1960, involving tens of thousands of laborers and prisoners under tough conditions.[5] It took four years to complete. Being the sole site for nuclear testing in China for years to come, the Lop Nur test site underwent extensive expansion and is by far the world's largest nuclear weapons test site, covering around 100,000 square kilometers.[9]

Sino-Soviet relations cooled during 1958 to 1959. China was upset by the lack of Soviet assistance in quelling the Tibetan uprisings in 1959 and against the escape of the Dalai Lama to India.[10] The Soviet Union later refused support for China in the Sino-Indian War of 1962. Khrushchev was unnerved at Mao's relatively nonchalant view on nuclear war.[11] The Soviet Union was also engaged in test ban negotiations with the United States in 1959 in order to relax Soviet-American tensions, directly inhibiting the delivery of a prototype to China. Broader disagreements between Soviet and Chinese communist ideologies escalated mutual criticism. The Soviets responded by withdrawing the delivery of a prototype bomb[3] and over 1,400 Russian advisers and technicians involved in 200 scientific projects in China meant to foster cooperation between the two countries.[10]

Project 596 was named after the month of June 1959 in which it was initiated as an independent nuclear project, immediately after Nikita Khrushchev decided to stop helping the Chinese with their nuclear program on 20 June 1959, and Mao shifted toward an overall policy of self-reliance. By 14 January 1964, enough fissionable U-235 had been successfully enriched from the Lanzhou plant. On 16 October 1964, a uranium-235 fission implosion device, weighing 1550 kilograms was detonated on a 102-meter tower.[5]

Reception edit

United States edit

 
Satellite image of the Lop Nur test site taken by an American KH-4 Corona intelligence satellite on 20 October 1964, 4 days after the 596 test.

The United States government was aware of Soviet support of a Chinese nuclear program, but after the Soviets withdrew support in 1959, some U.S. officials underestimated the sole capability of China to develop a nuclear weapon, and were surprised when China's efforts proved successful. Namely, they thought there was an insufficient source for weapons-grade U-235 production and that the significance of a nuclear China was underplayed.[6] Still, President Kennedy proposed preventive action but it was decided against by the U.S. government as it was "likely to be viewed as provocative and dangerous and will play into the hands of efforts by [Beijing] to picture U.S. hostility to Communist China as the source of tensions and the principal threat to the peace in Asia."[12] By early 1964, from surveillance of activity around the Lop Nur site, it was clear that a test would be imminent.

The next step for China was to develop the mode of delivery of a nuclear payload. Just eight months after the 596 test, a deliverable nuclear bomb was successfully dropped from a bomber and detonated. A year later, medium range missiles were fitted with nuclear warheads. The Lop Nur test site was used to develop more sophisticated nuclear weapons such as the hydrogen bomb, multi-stage thermonuclear devices, and Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBM).[5] While China's nuclear arsenal was modest compared to that of the Soviet Union and the United States,[13] the presence of another nuclear power in Asia raised the issue of uncontrolled proliferation. The USA took measures to forestall the independent development of nuclear capabilities in more Asian nations, most immediately with India.[14] Top U.S. officials began open talks of non-proliferation with the Soviet Union soon after the 596 test to offset the possibility of a nuclear China propelling a larger and more unpredictable global arms race.[15]

Soviet Union edit

Chinese nuclear capacity prompted the Soviet Union to sign the 1968 Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons with the United States as well as China.[16]

Japan edit

While the 1964 Summer Olympics which opened on 10 October was already underway in Tokyo, China conducted the atomic bomb test six days into the competition, prompting hysterical and immediate concerns of radiation fallout in Japan as it is relatively close to mainland China.[17]

China returns to the United Nations Security Council edit

 
Zhou Enlai announcing the success of the test.

In response to the 596 test, the Chinese Nationalist leadership in Taiwan, including Chiang Kai-shek, called for a military response against Communist Chinese nuclear facilities and the formation of an anti-communist defense organization.[18] However, the United States would not risk strikes in China. Taiwan tried to launch its own nuclear weapons program, but failed, and the U.S. pressured Taiwan to dismantle its nuclear weapons program as it would strain US-China relations.[19] At the time of the test, the United States recognized Taiwan as the seat of the Chinese government, and Chinese membership in the United Nations, including a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council, was held by Taiwan. With a nuclear weapon in the hands of Beijing, the international community would have to shift its recognition to the mainland, which it did a decade later.[15]

Since the 596 test China has asserted its nuclear doctrine of no-first-use, with officials characterizing the Chinese nuclear arsenal as a minimal deterrent to nuclear attack.[8]

Specifics edit

  • Time: 07:00 GMT 16 October 1964
  • Location: Lop Nur Test Ground, 40°48′45″N 89°47′24″E / 40.81250°N 89.79000°E / 40.81250; 89.79000 (Lop Nur Project 596), about 70 km northwest of Lop Nor dry lake[2]
  • Test type and height : Tower, 102 meters
  • Yield: 22 kilotons

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Fravel, Taylor (23 April 2019). Active Defense: China's Military Strategy Since 1949. Princeton University Press. p. 254. ISBN 9780691152134.
  2. ^ a b Communist China's Weapons Program for Strategic Attack, NIE 13-8-71 (Top Secret, declassified June 2004), Central Intelligence Agency, Washington, D.C., 1971.
  3. ^ a b "16 October 1964 – First Chinese nuclear test: CTBTO Preparatory Commission". www.ctbto.org. Retrieved 2017-06-01.
  4. ^ Bukharin, Oleg; Podvig, Pavel Leonardovich; Hippel, Frank Von (2004). Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces. MIT Press. p. 441. ISBN 9780262661812.
  5. ^ a b c d NORRIS, ROBERT S. (1996-03-01). "French and Chinese Nuclear Weapon Testing". Security Dialogue. 27 (1): 39–54. doi:10.1177/0967010696027001006. ISSN 0967-0106.
  6. ^ a b "China's Advance toward Nuclear Status in Early 1960s Held Surprises for U.S. Analysts, Generated Conflicting Opinions about the Potential Dangers". nsarchive.gwu.edu. October 16, 2014. Retrieved 2017-06-02.
  7. ^ Archive, Wilson Center Digital. "Wilson Center Digital Archive". digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org. Retrieved 2017-06-02.
  8. ^ a b "China | Nuclear". Nuclear Threat Initiative. April 2015. Retrieved June 2, 2017.
  9. ^ "Lop Nor Nuclear Weapons Test Base | Facilities". Nuclear Threat Initiative. Retrieved 2017-06-02.
  10. ^ a b ""One Finger's Worth of Historical Events": New Russian and Chinese Evidence on the Sino-Soviet Alliance and Split, 1948–1959". Wilson Center. 2011-07-07. Retrieved 2017-06-02.
  11. ^ Lewis, John Wilson and Xue Litai. China Builds the Bomb. (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1988), 63–66.
  12. ^ Johnson, Robert (April 22, 1964). "The Bases for Direct Action Against Chinese Communist Nuclear Facilities" (PDF). The National Security Archive. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  13. ^ Wheeler, Earle (3 December 1964). "A Military Appraisal of Chinese Acquisition of Nuclear Weapons" (PDF). The National Security Archive. Retrieved June 2, 2017.
  14. ^ Johnson, Robert (October 15, 1963). "Policy Planning Statement on A Chinese Communist Nuclear Detonation and Nuclear Capability" (PDF). The National Security Archive. Retrieved June 2, 2017.
  15. ^ a b Rosen, Armin. "Here's How The US Reacted To China's First Nuclear Test 50 Years Ago". Business Insider. Retrieved 2017-06-02.
  16. ^ "China joins A-bomb club – Oct 16, 1964". HISTORY.com. Retrieved 2017-06-02.
  17. ^ "China Explodes its First Atomic Bomb During the Tokyo Games". The Olympians. 28 May 2015. Retrieved 11 March 2021.
  18. ^ "U.S. Embassy Taiwan telegram 1980 to State Department" (PDF). The National Security Archive. October 23, 1964. Retrieved June 1, 2017.
  19. ^ Albright, David; Gay, Corey (1 January 1998). . Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.

External links edit

  • Chinese Nuclear History – A collection of archival materials on the Chinese nuclear weapons program hosted at the Nuclear Proliferation International History Project
  • China's Nuclear Weapons from the Nuclear Weapon Archive
  • Chinese Nuclear Weapons Program from Atomic Forum

project, miss, chinese, 邱小姐, qiū, xiǎojiě, callsign, chic, intelligence, agencies, first, nuclear, weapons, test, conducted, people, republic, china, detonated, october, 1964, test, site, uranium, implosion, fission, device, made, from, weapons, grade, uranium. Project 596 Miss Qiu Chinese 邱小姐 Qiu Xiǎojie as the callsign 1 Chic 1 by the US intelligence agencies 2 was the first nuclear weapons test conducted by the People s Republic of China detonated on 16 October 1964 at the Lop Nur test site It was a uranium 235 implosion fission device made from weapons grade uranium U 235 enriched in a gaseous diffusion plant in Lanzhou 3 Project 596The mushroom cloud from the testInformationCountryPeople s Republic of ChinaTest siteLop Nur Test BasePeriod16 October 1964Number of tests1Test typeAtmosphericDevice typeFissionMax yield22 kilotons of TNT 92 TJ Test chronology NoneTest No 6 The atomic bomb was a part of China s Two Bombs One Satellite program It had a yield of 22 kilotons comparable to the Soviet Union s first nuclear bomb RDS 1 in 1949 and the American Fat Man bomb dropped on Nagasaki Japan in 1945 4 With the test China became the fifth nuclear power in the world and the first Asian nation to possess nuclear capability This was the first of 45 successful nuclear tests China conducted between 1964 and 1996 all of which occurred at the Lop Nur test site 5 Contents 1 Development 1 1 Motivation 1 2 Design and testing 2 Reception 2 1 United States 2 2 Soviet Union 2 3 Japan 3 China returns to the United Nations Security Council 4 Specifics 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksDevelopment editMotivation edit The Chinese nuclear weapons program was initiated on 15 January 1955 The decision made by the Chinese leadership was prompted by confrontations with the United States in the 1950s including the Korean War the 1955 Taiwan Straits Crisis nuclear blackmail and eventually the Vietnam War as well 6 Mao Zedong explained his decision to a gathering of the Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party in 1956 Now we re already stronger than we were in the past and in the future we ll be even stronger than now Not only are we going to have more airplanes and artillery but also the atomic bomb In today s world if we don t want to be bullied we have to have this thing 7 Mao was confident that nuclear weapon capabilities would allow China to assert its national will toward policy goals and deter threats to national security Design and testing edit In 1956 the Third Ministry of Machinery Building was established and nuclear research was conducted at the Institute of Physics and Atomic Energy in Beijing A gaseous diffusion uranium enrichment plant was constructed in Lanzhou In 1957 China and the USSR signed an agreement on sharing defense technology that involved an atomic bomb prototype being supplied by Moscow to Beijing technical data and an exchange of hundreds of Russian and Chinese scientists 8 A joint search for uranium in China was conducted between the two countries A location near Lake Lop Nur in Xinjiang was selected to be the test site with its headquarters at Malan Construction of the test site began on 1 April 1960 involving tens of thousands of laborers and prisoners under tough conditions 5 It took four years to complete Being the sole site for nuclear testing in China for years to come the Lop Nur test site underwent extensive expansion and is by far the world s largest nuclear weapons test site covering around 100 000 square kilometers 9 Sino Soviet relations cooled during 1958 to 1959 China was upset by the lack of Soviet assistance in quelling the Tibetan uprisings in 1959 and against the escape of the Dalai Lama to India 10 The Soviet Union later refused support for China in the Sino Indian War of 1962 Khrushchev was unnerved at Mao s relatively nonchalant view on nuclear war 11 The Soviet Union was also engaged in test ban negotiations with the United States in 1959 in order to relax Soviet American tensions directly inhibiting the delivery of a prototype to China Broader disagreements between Soviet and Chinese communist ideologies escalated mutual criticism The Soviets responded by withdrawing the delivery of a prototype bomb 3 and over 1 400 Russian advisers and technicians involved in 200 scientific projects in China meant to foster cooperation between the two countries 10 Project 596 was named after the month of June 1959 in which it was initiated as an independent nuclear project immediately after Nikita Khrushchev decided to stop helping the Chinese with their nuclear program on 20 June 1959 and Mao shifted toward an overall policy of self reliance By 14 January 1964 enough fissionable U 235 had been successfully enriched from the Lanzhou plant On 16 October 1964 a uranium 235 fission implosion device weighing 1550 kilograms was detonated on a 102 meter tower 5 Reception editUnited States edit nbsp Satellite image of the Lop Nur test site taken by an American KH 4 Corona intelligence satellite on 20 October 1964 4 days after the 596 test The United States government was aware of Soviet support of a Chinese nuclear program but after the Soviets withdrew support in 1959 some U S officials underestimated the sole capability of China to develop a nuclear weapon and were surprised when China s efforts proved successful Namely they thought there was an insufficient source for weapons grade U 235 production and that the significance of a nuclear China was underplayed 6 Still President Kennedy proposed preventive action but it was decided against by the U S government as it was likely to be viewed as provocative and dangerous and will play into the hands of efforts by Beijing to picture U S hostility to Communist China as the source of tensions and the principal threat to the peace in Asia 12 By early 1964 from surveillance of activity around the Lop Nur site it was clear that a test would be imminent The next step for China was to develop the mode of delivery of a nuclear payload Just eight months after the 596 test a deliverable nuclear bomb was successfully dropped from a bomber and detonated A year later medium range missiles were fitted with nuclear warheads The Lop Nur test site was used to develop more sophisticated nuclear weapons such as the hydrogen bomb multi stage thermonuclear devices and Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles ICBM 5 While China s nuclear arsenal was modest compared to that of the Soviet Union and the United States 13 the presence of another nuclear power in Asia raised the issue of uncontrolled proliferation The USA took measures to forestall the independent development of nuclear capabilities in more Asian nations most immediately with India 14 Top U S officials began open talks of non proliferation with the Soviet Union soon after the 596 test to offset the possibility of a nuclear China propelling a larger and more unpredictable global arms race 15 Soviet Union edit Chinese nuclear capacity prompted the Soviet Union to sign the 1968 Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons with the United States as well as China 16 Japan edit While the 1964 Summer Olympics which opened on 10 October was already underway in Tokyo China conducted the atomic bomb test six days into the competition prompting hysterical and immediate concerns of radiation fallout in Japan as it is relatively close to mainland China 17 China returns to the United Nations Security Council edit nbsp Zhou Enlai announcing the success of the test In response to the 596 test the Chinese Nationalist leadership in Taiwan including Chiang Kai shek called for a military response against Communist Chinese nuclear facilities and the formation of an anti communist defense organization 18 However the United States would not risk strikes in China Taiwan tried to launch its own nuclear weapons program but failed and the U S pressured Taiwan to dismantle its nuclear weapons program as it would strain US China relations 19 At the time of the test the United States recognized Taiwan as the seat of the Chinese government and Chinese membership in the United Nations including a permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council was held by Taiwan With a nuclear weapon in the hands of Beijing the international community would have to shift its recognition to the mainland which it did a decade later 15 Since the 596 test China has asserted its nuclear doctrine of no first use with officials characterizing the Chinese nuclear arsenal as a minimal deterrent to nuclear attack 8 Specifics editTime 07 00 GMT 16 October 1964 Location Lop Nur Test Ground 40 48 45 N 89 47 24 E 40 81250 N 89 79000 E 40 81250 89 79000 Lop Nur Project 596 about 70 km northwest of Lop Nor dry lake 2 Test type and height Tower 102 meters Yield 22 kilotonsSee also editTwo Bombs One Satellite People s Republic of China and weapons of mass destruction RDS 1 Test No 6References edit Fravel Taylor 23 April 2019 Active Defense China s Military Strategy Since 1949 Princeton University Press p 254 ISBN 9780691152134 a b Communist China s Weapons Program for Strategic Attack NIE 13 8 71 Top Secret declassified June 2004 Central Intelligence Agency Washington D C 1971 a b 16 October 1964 First Chinese nuclear test CTBTO Preparatory Commission www ctbto org Retrieved 2017 06 01 Bukharin Oleg Podvig Pavel Leonardovich Hippel Frank Von 2004 Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces MIT Press p 441 ISBN 9780262661812 a b c d NORRIS ROBERT S 1996 03 01 French and Chinese Nuclear Weapon Testing Security Dialogue 27 1 39 54 doi 10 1177 0967010696027001006 ISSN 0967 0106 a b China s Advance toward Nuclear Status in Early 1960s Held Surprises for U S Analysts Generated Conflicting Opinions about the Potential Dangers nsarchive gwu edu October 16 2014 Retrieved 2017 06 02 Archive Wilson Center Digital Wilson Center Digital Archive digitalarchive wilsoncenter org Retrieved 2017 06 02 a b China Nuclear Nuclear Threat Initiative April 2015 Retrieved June 2 2017 Lop Nor Nuclear Weapons Test Base Facilities Nuclear Threat Initiative Retrieved 2017 06 02 a b One Finger s Worth of Historical Events New Russian and Chinese Evidence on the Sino Soviet Alliance and Split 1948 1959 Wilson Center 2011 07 07 Retrieved 2017 06 02 Lewis John Wilson and Xue Litai China Builds the Bomb Stanford Stanford University Press 1988 63 66 Johnson Robert April 22 1964 The Bases for Direct Action Against Chinese Communist Nuclear Facilities PDF The National Security Archive Retrieved June 1 2017 Wheeler Earle 3 December 1964 A Military Appraisal of Chinese Acquisition of Nuclear Weapons PDF The National Security Archive Retrieved June 2 2017 Johnson Robert October 15 1963 Policy Planning Statement on A Chinese Communist Nuclear Detonation and Nuclear Capability PDF The National Security Archive Retrieved June 2 2017 a b Rosen Armin Here s How The US Reacted To China s First Nuclear Test 50 Years Ago Business Insider Retrieved 2017 06 02 China joins A bomb club Oct 16 1964 HISTORY com Retrieved 2017 06 02 China Explodes its First Atomic Bomb During the Tokyo Games The Olympians 28 May 2015 Retrieved 11 March 2021 U S Embassy Taiwan telegram 1980 to State Department PDF The National Security Archive October 23 1964 Retrieved June 1 2017 Albright David Gay Corey 1 January 1998 Taiwan Nuclear nightmare averted Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists External links editChinese Nuclear History A collection of archival materials on the Chinese nuclear weapons program hosted at the Nuclear Proliferation International History Project China s Nuclear Weapons from the Nuclear Weapon Archive Chinese Nuclear Weapons Program from Atomic Forum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Project 596 amp oldid 1211111831, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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