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5.41 Discuss the Soviet Union's and the United States' missile and rocket development after World War II.
The development of missiles did not occur overnight in either the United States or the Soviet Union. Both nations had been working on them since the end of World War II. Following the collapse of Germany in 1945, Dr. Wernher von Braun and most of his scientists surrendered to the United States. These scientists and the captured V1s and V2s formed the nucleus of America's research in rocketry following World War II. The Russians also captured German scientists and V-1s and V-2s, and this was also the Soviet Union's beginning in longrange rocketry.
| Dr. Wernher von Braun |
|
|---|
Military planners on both sides realized that missiles would
be formidable weapons. While the Soviet Union placed a
high priority on research In this area immediately after the war,
the United States did not. The United States did not believe the
Soviet Union could develop a missile for several years; and since
they did not possess any nuclear weapons, the United States did
not see much of a threat from the Russians.
Dr. von Braun and his team were taken to White Sands, New Mexico,
where, until 1950, they helped the U.S. Army
improve the V2. In 1950, they were moved to the Army's Redstone
Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama, and Von Braun became director of
guided missile development.
|
| A V-2 launch at White Sands Proving Grounds, NM. |
|---|
Because the U.S. Air Force lacked experience
in building large rockets, it concentrated on building subsonic
Snark and Matador cruise missiles (both were phased out in the
early 1960s).
Meanwhile, the Soviet Union, instead of building
and launching V2s as had the U.S. Army or cruse missiles like
the U.S. Air Force, immediately undertook the task of building
larger and more powerful missiles.
While developing the cruse missiles, the U.S. Air Force
was working on the Atlas missile at a much slower pace. By the
end of 1955, however, the Atlas program was given the United
States' highest priority. This was brought about due to the
threat from the Soviet Union developing nuclear weapons, the
smaller size of nuclear weapons (they could now be carried on
missiles), and political pressure. The Atlas pro gram moved
quickly, giving the United States its first intercontinental
Ballistic Missile (ICBM), but not without some problems.
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Updated: 12 March, 2004