Although the US government became aware of science’s importance in warfare following the First World War, officials had to scramble to assemble the country’s scientific resources in time for the Second World War. After the power of the Atomic Bomb shown to the world, military and government officials would not underestimate the power of science in conflict again. “The impact of Allied scientists on the conduct and outcome of the war – from radar, operations research and communications intelligence to the Manhattan project – had been indelibly pressed on the military mind,” said scholar Alan Bayerchen.
While scenes of US troops liberating concentration camps and the Red Army overtaking Berlin, raising the hammer and sickle over the Reichstag, are well known to the public, one aspect of the end of the war that remained in shadows for years was the mad race by all of the Allied nations to capture Nazi Germany’s scientists, research materials, and equipment. The US, UK and USSR started to assess the sciences in Germany and how they could benefit their countries before the war ended. Covert allied units were operating in Germany before capitulation to determine if Germany had the capability to produce an Atomic Bomb, and other units were rushed in as soon as troops discovered rocket launch sites or production centers.
Major General Kenneth Strong, Eisenhower’s Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence said the Allies should control Germany’s sciences to secure “the major, and perhaps only, material reward of victory, namely the advancement of science and the improvement of production and standards of living in the United Nations by the proper exoloitation of German methods in these fields.”
In 2006, the UK's National Archives released documents revealing that the Ministry of Supply - which coordinated military technology - sought to hold German scientists immediately after the war to prevent the USSR from creating a superior long range bomber force and other advanced weapons. The ministry initially drew up a list of 1,500 leading German scientists to approach in 1946, indicating that they should extricate scientists "as soon as possible from Germany, whether they are willing to go or not." Only100 or so actually ended up in the UK from 1946 to 1947, and many others were handed over to American authorities.
The Soviets were particularly active at capturing Germany’s scientific resources, viewing it as a form of reparations. American intelligence officers in Berlin who tracked the number of scientists leaving for the USSR in 1945 noted high numbers in the years immediately after the war. While many were captured or forced to move to the USSR, others – from younger scientists to a Nobel Prize winner – were enticed by higher pay and the promise of better living and working environments. While Soviet and Russian historians say that scientists from Germany came to the USSR as “volunteers,” Western scholars have written that these scientists, forced with the prospect of leaving “willingly” or being arrested, left Germany under duress, and often for much longer terms than initially thought.
Instead of using science to promote their respective ideologies, in the immediate post-war era, Bayerchen posits, that the US and USSR sought to harness the powers of science for their economic and war-making potential. “The Russians could have claimed science was an antidote to Nazi irrationalism…it would have been a powerful influence supporting the ‘Scientific Socialism’ of Marxist ideology. The Americans…could have used a popular view of the time…that science was inherently liberalizing,” said Bayerchen.







