Cornell University Press
Project Plowshare
About this book
Scott Kaufman's extensive research in nearly two dozen archives in three nations shows how science, politics, and environmentalism converged to shape the lasting conflict over the use of nuclear technology.
Author / Editor information
Scott Kaufman is Professor of History and Co-Director of the Robert E. McNair Center for Government at Francis Marion University. He is the author of several books, including Plans Unraveled: The Foreign Policy of the Carter Administration and The Pig War: The United States, Britain, and the Balance of Power in the Pacific Northwest, 1846–72.
Reviews
Scott Kaufman's book on Project Plowshare is a tale of atomic bureaucracy, written in an evenhanded style, in which the AEC tried against all odds to keep the program alive...Kaufman's informative book makes clear that Project Plowshare was hindered most by the test ban. But it was a slow, expensive death marked by cost overruns, repeated failures to anticipate test effects accurately, and a massive public crisis of confidence in the AEC by the mid-1970s. Scholars will find Project Plowshare a useful guide to the national and international politics of peaceful nuclear explosions.
Jason Krupar:
Scott Kaufman's Project Plowshare: The Peaceful Use of Nuclear Explosives in Cold WarAmerica, examines the [Atomic Energy Commission]’s dogged—and costly—attempts to demonstrate the usefulness of large-scale nuclear engineering, even in the face of mounting national and international concerns....Kaufman’s narrative expands not only the history of Plowshare but also the story of nuclear weapons and arms control....He explores both the bold visions behind Plowshare and the program’s ignominious decline. The result is a book that, while sometimesoverly technical in detail, offers a well-structured critique ofthegovernment’sattempt to create an atomic utopia—and to generate the necessaryatomic utopianism.
Project Plowshare received its name from the book of Isaiah 2:4 ('beat their swords into plowshares'). Launched with enthusiasm in 1957, Plowshare attempted to utilize nuclear explosions for peaceful activities. The US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) ultimately conducted 27 underground nuclear explosions in a quest to create new elements for various purposes, build heat storage caverns, build canals, exploit minerals, and excavate roadbeds. Many projects were planned outside the Nevada test site, but opposition to all nuclear explosions was growing, and a serious effort to negotiate a nonproliferation treaty with the Soviet Union led to a moratorium on testing all nuclear bombs. Negative outcomes were replete; a gas-and-oil stimulation program attempted in New Mexico followed by a decade-long natural gas storage effort in Pennsylvania generated public concerns related to radioactive isotopes. Kaufman provides detailed accounts of sometimes misguided projects, answering questions of who, what, why, when, and where in an organized fashion. The book contains elements of a history book, a scientific thesis, and a good novel. Interested readers will return often to this book to review the complexities of underground nuclear testing. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates and above; general readers.
David A. Burke:
Kaufman's work is impressive as a narrative of the Plowshare program, and essential reading for those interested in nuclear history... he has produced an elucidating and stimulating work that is most highly recommended to all those interested in the age of atomic utopianism.
Luca Trenta:
Kaufman convincingly demonstrates that Plowshare is a valuable lens to look at the Cold War, at how policy-making was done in Washington, and at how massive funds and resources could be wasted following 'national security' dreams. The level of detail and the amount of research...are admirable.
Nicholas Evan Sarantakes, U.S. Naval War College, author of Dropping the Torch: Jimmy Carter, the Olympic Boycott, and the Cold War:
This book is the type that all scholars aspire to write, but seldom do. It is impressive in both its intellectual breadth and depth. Project Plowshare makes important contributions to the fields of diplomatic history, the history of science and technology, western history, environmental history, presidential studies, and Australian national history. Scott Kaufman connects environmental history to diplomatic history—a relationship that might not seem obvious at first glance—and challenges conventions in both. This book will clearly be the standard account of its topic for several decades to come.
Shane J. Maddock, Stonehill College, author of Nuclear Apartheid: The Quest for American Atomic Supremacy from World War II to the Present:
Scott Kaufman has written a clear and compelling account of the Plowshare program. He provides a comprehensive analysis of Plowshare with extensive archival research, especially in material that has only recently been opened to scholars. While specialists will certainly be attracted to Kaufman's work, his clear narrative style will also allow the broader public to benefit from his insights.
Jeffrey A. Engel, Director of Presidential History Projects, Southern Methodist University, author of Cold War at 30, 000 Feet: the Anglo-American Fight for Aviation Supremacy:
Historians already knew about Project Plowshare. Until this book we didn't know how little we actually knew about one of the early Cold War's most infamous and intriguing nuclear programs. Based on extensive research, Scott Kaufman's book will be the go-to work on Plowshare for years to come.
Barbara Keys, University of Melbourne, author of Globalizing Sport: National Rivalry and International Community in the 1930s:
Project Plowshare recovers a fascinating but forgotten strand of Cold War history, when the idea of nuclear explosions conjured up not only death and destruction but a future of technological achievement and progress toward peace and disarmament. In deft, fast-paced writing that draws on extraordinarily wide research, Scott Kaufman recreates the extraordinary vision of Plowshare proponents and their allies in Congress and the private sector, showing how their prospects and ultimate failure were shaped by politics and science, fear and hope, economics and Cold War competition. For anyone interested in the future of the planet, Project Plowshare's rise and fall offers salient lessons about unintended consequences, technological hubris, and balancing risk and promise.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Preface
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List of Abbreviations
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Introduction: Promoting the Peaceful Atom
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1. A Plan of Biblical Proportions
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2. Just Drop Us a Card
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3. A Program on Hold
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4. From Moratorium to Test Ban
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5. The Complexities of Canal Construction
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6. Nuclear Testing, Nonproliferation, and Plowshare
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7. Making Headway?
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8. Plowshare Goes Down Under
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9. Dead as a Doornail
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Conclusion: Back from the Dead?
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Notes
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Bibliography
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Index
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