How China Got the Bomb

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  • čas přidán 27. 05. 2023
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Komentáře • 2,8K

  • @jjf9807
    @jjf9807 Před 10 měsíci +327

    Kennedy(1963): China will never get nuke as long as I am alive.
    Deng Jiaxian(1964): True.

  • @unclesuworld
    @unclesuworld Před 3 měsíci +137

    My father spent years of his time in the desert and mountains away from our home in Beijing. Tens of thousands scientists, engineers, workers were involved in the project. My father was one of the engineers.

  • @feliscatus5161
    @feliscatus5161 Před 11 měsíci +279

    The very definition of "fine, I'll do it myself". Same thing happened with the international space station.

    • @JP-rk6gw
      @JP-rk6gw Před 3 měsíci +52

      And now it's the chips. Believe it or not, in 5 years, China will catch up on chip making.

    • @15_muhammadkhoirurrizqi93
      @15_muhammadkhoirurrizqi93 Před 2 měsíci

      The lesson here will be dont let china do something herself if you want to conquer the world

    • @oussamaboumhaout3619
      @oussamaboumhaout3619 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Communism it issss !!

    • @ajaykumarsingh702
      @ajaykumarsingh702 Před 2 měsíci

      @@JP-rk6gw
      It already caught up.
      At least 10 years early than expected.

    • @arkyin3860
      @arkyin3860 Před 2 měsíci +19

      @@JP-rk6gw not really, as chinese. i think. back to 60 yrs ago, ppl have faith , have spirits. ppl believed in gov and hold the hope to the future . today , china is essentially grown up to be a bureaucratic capitalism country. people's mindset is different

  • @jefferyzhang1851
    @jefferyzhang1851 Před 11 měsíci +328

    The really hard part of developing atomic weapons isn't the design, it is having the industrial capacity to produce the materials necessary. If you look at the budget of the Manhattan Project, Los Alamos + R&D was only 7.5% of the entire budget. The rest was mostly the industrial infrastructure to produce the enriched uranium and plutonium. The real utility of Soviet aid was the development of the industrial infrastructure that enabled the development of nuclear weapons, and not transfers of specific knowledge about nuclear weapon design.

    • @xwqi
      @xwqi Před 11 měsíci

      日本战败后,留在东北的工业基地让苏联抢走你怎么不说?

    • @hollandoats4738
      @hollandoats4738 Před 10 měsíci +15

      The science and R&D are just as important in building those machines and infrastructure to make the bomb. The R&D and planning of building a skyscraper may also be dwarfed by the costs associated with actually building it but you can’t have one without the other. The cost does not necessarily = the importance.

    • @franke2273
      @franke2273 Před 10 měsíci +24

      @@hollandoats4738 theyare both important. But by the 60s a nuclear bomb wasn’t as cutting edge as it once was in 30s and 40s. It was just a matter of copying much more instead of figuring out the physics and engineering from scratch.

    • @Asterra2
      @Asterra2 Před 10 měsíci +10

      It's the design, bro. Recommended reading: _Plutonium, A History of the World's Most Dangerous Element._ The R&D Los Alamos financed involved the world's smartest men, full stop. There's a very conspicuous reason why Nobel prizes get awarded in a proportion that is fantastically out of whack with China's population, especially if you ignore awards that are given for accomplishments that are fundamentally engineering as opposed to invention or theory. Hindsight, such as concerning the development of the bomb, does not alter this reality. China are conspicuously aware of this discrepancy; it's part of the reason why they're so desperate to make a name in scientific papers that they willfully flood publications with tripe and outright fraud.

    • @zomi11
      @zomi11 Před 10 měsíci

      @@Asterra2 Funny.If you think China adds lies to your paper, then you should read papers written by Chinese people well, because lies cannot make DF-21

  • @PerfectInterview
    @PerfectInterview Před 11 měsíci +1010

    The fact that they were able to figure out the implosion technique in just three years is most impressive.

    • @jonnelo
      @jonnelo Před 11 měsíci

      This guy has no idea whatsoever how the Chinese got the atomic bomb.
      When the Jewish Rosenberg couple stolen the atomic bomb planes, and sold it to the Soviet Union, they also gave the patent to Israel.
      Israel had the plans how to make the atomic bomb, but not the necessary elements, or the materials.
      China had them both. Therefore Israel and China combined their possessions, and made the atomic bomb together.
      That is how Israel and China got the atomic bomb in about the same time.

    • @user-yh7zc9ke4s
      @user-yh7zc9ke4s Před 11 měsíci +150

      it was published in details by Americans

    • @the_DOS
      @the_DOS Před 11 měsíci +145

      It was...as with almost everything Chinese, there they took from America, even America's education. You should not be able to study nuclear physics and then go to a different country to help build their nuclear ambitions as China and Israel benefited.

    • @kaiwenhe5518
      @kaiwenhe5518 Před 11 měsíci +319

      @@the_DOS why didn't other countries do the same thing?

    • @elmohead
      @elmohead Před 11 měsíci +219

      ​@@the_DOSthat doesn't sound like freedom to me. Hypocritical much?

  • @mateoisgood2742
    @mateoisgood2742 Před 11 měsíci +840

    I remember my friend telling me about how his grandad, who was a party member, illegally went to see the first atomic bomb test. I wish I got to talk to him, but he was living in Chongqing while my friend and I were in Beijing at the time. Really fascinating history, glad that you made a video covering it.

    • @incelloner4465
      @incelloner4465 Před 11 měsíci +29

      I be seeing chongqing in cyberpunk tiktoks

    • @kaymanwang
      @kaymanwang Před 11 měsíci +57

      Another fun story: the factory which is part of the project, was on the edge of shut down due to lack of funding, so they use those centrifuges to make ice cream.... It was called 504 ice cream lol

    • @saulgoodman7858
      @saulgoodman7858 Před 11 měsíci +5

      ​@@kaymanwangthat's pretty epic

    • @mcxttxr7598
      @mcxttxr7598 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@kaymanwang

    • @Tethloach1
      @Tethloach1 Před 10 měsíci

      It is weird how beliefs outlive people. People who believed in national socialism in 1939 are dead yet people who love national socialism are alive today. Nukes do make a war costly, high risk, high reward. They are so powerful that earth would be destroyed forever.

  • @antonleimbach648
    @antonleimbach648 Před 11 měsíci +7

    This was a excellent video about a subject I admittedly knew nothing about. Thank you for sharing.

  • @MrHav1k
    @MrHav1k Před 11 měsíci +2

    Fascinating. Your whole channel looks very interesting. Binge worthy for sure!!

  • @obsidianjane4413
    @obsidianjane4413 Před 11 měsíci +286

    @25:34 It wasn't just the broken treaty, The USSR and PRC were in open ground battles in Manchuria during this time. So from the Chinese perspective, they were caught between 2 nuclear armed enemies (three if you count England, a former colonial invader), which was highly motivational and worth the cost even during the worst of the "Grate leap forward", from their perspective.
    I know you hit on that, but I don't think you really emphasized that context enough.

    • @ShengYu1995
      @ShengYu1995 Před 11 měsíci +13

      That was in 1969 I think, long after

    • @thebeautifulones5436
      @thebeautifulones5436 Před 11 měsíci +14

      England has Scotland and northern Ireland in a nuclear vice.

    • @nvelsen1975
      @nvelsen1975 Před 11 měsíci

      @@ShengYu1995
      It was an ongoing thing basically. Russia invaded Xinjiang in 1944, and that was, from the back of my head, Russia's 6th invasion of China.

    • @AT-AT26
      @AT-AT26 Před 11 měsíci +26

      @@ShengYu1995the sino-soviet split was in 61 with skirmishes being a problem throughout the 60s and early 70s

    • @NeostormXLMAX
      @NeostormXLMAX Před 11 měsíci +1

      This channel is a taiwanese dpp channel so he will belittle mainland china every opportunity

  • @davidz7858
    @davidz7858 Před 11 měsíci +660

    Qian Xuesen, or Hsue-shen Tsien, was a Chinese aerospace engineer and cyberneticist who made significant contributions to the field of aerodynamics and established engineering cybernetics. He moved to the US to study at MIT, from where he was recruited to join Theodore von Kármán's group at Caltech. Wikipedia, He was not a nuclear physicist

    • @nicholasmaude6906
      @nicholasmaude6906 Před 11 měsíci +300

      He in the end was driven out of the US due to blatant racial discrimination which backfired disastrously as he joined and became the head of the PRC's nascent missile programmes.

    • @DanteEhome
      @DanteEhome Před 11 měsíci

      @@nicholasmaude6906 Alot of the scientist was driven out of america due to racial issues.

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 Před 11 měsíci

      #nichilasmaude Because communists do not steal property especialy intelectual... HAHA
      The programmer who wrote the Tetris game (in his spare time) didn't get a cent until the USSR collapsed even though the West was paying for the right to use the program?
      Your comment is blatant racial discriminational lie and anyone with little will to check it can confirm it ->Chien-Shiung Wu (Chinese: 吳健雄) -> She was important scientist in Manhattan Project -> she was Chinese -> she was from China -> she was a woman -> no-one kicked her out->and i have the feeling that she helped with development of China attomic weapond even if Asianometry did not found any info about it... ->she wanted to be buried in China...

    • @glorytotheonewholookforwar6486
      @glorytotheonewholookforwar6486 Před 11 měsíci +149

      I remember he was one of the five creator of JPL.

    • @pjacobsen1000
      @pjacobsen1000 Před 11 měsíci +139

      Yes, he is mostly known in China as the 'Father of China's Space Program'. There's a big, new-ish museum dedicated to him at Shanghai's Jiaotong University. Nicely designed building, by the way.

  • @user-gh9ss2ri8m
    @user-gh9ss2ri8m Před 8 měsíci +8

    Your no-nonsense and comprehensive videos earn an instant like& subscribe from me! Bravo and keep up the stellar work friend! Regards, from TX

  • @watchman835
    @watchman835 Před 8 měsíci +13

    2018 Huawei was sanctioned.
    2023 Huawei Mate Pro 60 is born with Chinese self made 7nm chips.
    The force of will, something to think about. 😊

  • @libmananchannel
    @libmananchannel Před 11 měsíci +3

    Hello "Asianometry"! Thank you for showing us such a wonderful video! I feel so happy! I'm looking forward to your next work! Have a nice day!

    • @jonnelo
      @jonnelo Před 11 měsíci

      This guy has no idea whatsoever how the Chinese got the atomic bomb.
      When the Jewish Rosenberg couple stolen the atomic bomb planes, and sold it to the Soviet Union, they also gave the patent to Israel.
      Israel had the plans how to make the atomic bomb, but not the necessary elements, or the materials.
      China had them both. Therefore Israel and China combined their possessions, and made the atomic bomb together.
      That is how Israel and China got the atomic bomb in about the same time.

  • @ianthesiow3013
    @ianthesiow3013 Před 11 měsíci +7

    Another good research and reporting.
    Keep up the great work.

    • @jonnelo
      @jonnelo Před 11 měsíci

      This guy has no idea whatsoever how the Chinese got the atomic bomb.
      When the Jewish Rosenberg couple stolen the atomic bomb planes, and sold it to the Soviet Union, they also gave the patent to Israel.
      Israel had the plans how to make the atomic bomb, but not the necessary elements, or the materials.
      China had them both. Therefore Israel and China combined their possessions, and made the atomic bomb together.
      That is how Israel and China got the atomic bomb in about the same time.

  • @parthasur6018
    @parthasur6018 Před 11 měsíci +106

    I remember studying the Karman-Tsien compressibility correction rule in gas dynamics (aerodynamics) class in 1968 at Manchester University, UK. It was disgraceful that Prof Theodore von Karman never supported his protege Dr Hsueh-Shen Tsien during Sen. McCarthy's disgusting trials. Dr Tsien's bachelor degree in China was in railway engineering. Dr Tsien was a prolific researcher - not just in fluid mechanics. He also wrote several papers in solid mechanics (e.g. warping of solid hollow tubes etc.). A full account of his life and work can be found in the book "Thread of the Silkworm" by Iris Chang.

    • @qiyuxuan9437
      @qiyuxuan9437 Před 11 měsíci +15

      At least in China, one of the hyper sonic ballistic reentry method was named after him. Which is a key to modern hypersonic missiles. I think that method is like bouncing multiple time with atmosphere, which not only greatly increase the range, but also make the missile much harder to intercept.

    • @siroyiryuu
      @siroyiryuu Před 8 měsíci +17

      In Europe and the United States, at least among the English speaking people, deep-rooted racial discrimination and the idea of a superior ethnic group remain deeply ingrained. France, Germany, and even Iran are the same, they still feel that the Chinese are inferior. This is a cultural imprint left by the colonial era that lasted for 400 years, and it is difficult to easily remove them.

    • @siroyiryuu
      @siroyiryuu Před 8 měsíci +4

      Also, I wish you good health.

    • @davidwong325
      @davidwong325 Před 5 měsíci

      实际上在过去几千年里,欧洲(美国没有历史)远远落后于中国@@siroyiryuu

    • @user-ke6jx8ew8u
      @user-ke6jx8ew8u Před 5 měsíci +1

      Witness of history, I wish you good health.

  • @charliezha9066
    @charliezha9066 Před 9 měsíci +22

    There was a nursery rhyme in China that almost every girls in China knew during Cultural Revolution. The first line goes something like: "a little rubber ball, kick it off a structure." However, no one understood what it was about. Only a few years ago, it was revealed it was commemoration of Ma Lan Base which was in the center of Chinese nuclear program. The "little rubber ball" actually refers to the first nuclear bomb which was detonated on a structure.

    • @xinalityo
      @xinalityo Před 6 měsíci +8

      马兰开花

    • @RichardQi-up2zz
      @RichardQi-up2zz Před měsícem +2

      @@xinalityo 原来是这个意思。我们小时候经常唱这首童谣。

    • @Mujangga
      @Mujangga Před 11 dny +1

      Really, I though it was about Deng Xiaoping's son.

  • @theodoreolson8529
    @theodoreolson8529 Před 11 měsíci +65

    Good ol LeMay.....always willing to step up and make any tense situation worse.

    • @alibizzle2010
      @alibizzle2010 Před 11 měsíci

      And that is just what he was saying in public. In private he planned, in the event of war, to steal the nukes that were under the control of the civilian AEC and decide for himself who to bomb

    • @cv990a4
      @cv990a4 Před 11 měsíci +18

      Likewise MacArthur wanted to use nukes on the Chinese when they attacked in N. Korea - it was one of the issues that led to his firing by Truman. It's a good thing US military is under firm civilian control.

    • @theodoreolson8529
      @theodoreolson8529 Před 11 měsíci +13

      @@cv990a4 McArthur and LeMay...it's an F-ing miracle we never went to war with those two running loose. Luckily we've had competent civilian leadership or competent military leadership during dark times. Except for the Vietnam war when (in my opinion) civilian and military leadership was feckless.
      I was a marketing major so...I know these things.

    • @cv990a4
      @cv990a4 Před 11 měsíci +17

      @@theodoreolson8529 The low point wasn't Vietnam. That was dumb, but then Cheney said "hold my beer" and engineered the US invasion of Iraq. That was the low point. I always thought, growing up, that we'd never again be stupid enough to do another Vietnam. And I was right - we did something far worse.

    • @clown134
      @clown134 Před 11 měsíci

      and the second that ended the Democrats got us into a proxy war with Russia. I'm beginning to think the military industrial complex doesn't actually want world peace

  • @cogoid
    @cogoid Před 11 měsíci +341

    Very good video, as always.
    Just one small correction: 21:45 says: _"The key issue the Chinese bomb design needed to do was to properly synchronize the high explosives so to kickstart a series of nuclear chain reactions. A bad timing issue means stray neutrons running around - a premature neutron burst resulting in an overall unsatisfactory performance."_
    The story is a little bit more nuanced. First, multiple detonators need to fire simultaneously within about a microsecond, simply because without this the symmetrical implosion does not happen, and the material does not get compressed to a sufficiently supercritical state for a rapid chain reaction.
    Second, the chain reaction needs to start at the precise moment this supercritical state is achieved -- not sooner, not later. To prevent premature chain reaction, the compression of plutonium needs to be much more rapid than the rate at which neutrons happen spontaneously. This is the whole point why explosively driven compression is used for plutonium -- to make it quick, because in plutonium there is a high rate of spontaneous fission. For uranium this aspect is not important, because there is no such background. But using implosion for uranium allows to make a bomb from several times smaller amount of uranium. (The explosives actually compress the metal, and a smaller amount can be made supercritical.) That is why China used this method.
    To start the reaction at the moment of greatest supercriticality, a powerful source of neutrons must fire at exactly the right moment, again with the precision of a microsecond or so.
    In the first nuclear bombs the neutron source was a mechanical device in the middle of the bomb, and it was set off by the implosion itself mixing different materials in the source. This automatically guaranteed correct timing. In the later bombs, an electronic neutron generator was used instead, located outside of the fissile material. This required firing the pulse of neutrons with a carefully calculated delay after firing the detonators.

    • @kordelas2514
      @kordelas2514 Před 11 měsíci +4

      I have to correct you here. Such weapons have never been created as those reactions are pure fantasy. But it is funny that guys like you buy propaganda about them and parrot it.

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 Před 11 měsíci +11

      Wouldn't an out-of-synch detonation just destroy the fissile material?

    • @nos9784
      @nos9784 Před 11 měsíci +15

      ​​@@theotherohlourdespadua1131 it would "fizzle"- (thats the term). maybe some limited chain reaction, but mostly, an explosive disassembly of your expensive nuclear device.
      (depending on how bad your synchronization is, and i guess how optimized the design- a fat man spherical implosion or two- point explosive lens is propaply more robust than a miniaturized nuke )

    • @kordelas2514
      @kordelas2514 Před 11 měsíci

      @@nos9784 Only in fantasy world.

    • @cogoid
      @cogoid Před 11 měsíci +26

      @@theotherohlourdespadua1131 Since a few decades ago, US bombs are specifically designed for safety in accidents, such that they would not produce a nuclear explosion if only a single detonator fires. This is called "one point safe design". This requires certain amount of effort to achieve. In weapons that are not one point safe, even an asymmetrical implosion can result in a sizable nuclear yield, albeit typically much reduced compared to the full scale explosion. Older US weapons were not necessarily one point safe, and it is not known whether weapons of other countries are.

  • @EdwardRLyons
    @EdwardRLyons Před 11 měsíci +28

    Imagine my surprise to see, at 7:40, in a video about the Chinese atomic bomb, a photograph showing the Irish Taoiseach, Eamonn de Valera, sitting in the centre of the front row!
    Alongside Arthur Eddington, Paul Dirac and Erwin Schrodinger. It's remarkable that Peng Huanwu, who went on to be one of the leaders of the Chinese nuclear weapons programme, was based at the Dublin Institute of Advanced Studies in the early 1940s, and that this meeting of eminent physicists took place there in 1942, in the midst of the largest war ever to occur in Europe.

    • @EzraMerr
      @EzraMerr Před 9 měsíci

      Yeah a lot of problems in Ireland, Rental prices, lack of house development, infrastructure stagnation is caused by socialist policies ther unfortunately same goes with most of EU nations and UK as well, they had always been backstabbers to the nations of the west , even US is run by traitors

  • @mjouwbuis
    @mjouwbuis Před 11 měsíci +45

    I thought about it, and it only goes so far. Kruchev was definitely right when he adhered to the motto "beter ten halve gekeerd dan ten hele gedwaald" or whatever the Russian equivalent of that Dutch saying was. It means "better turn around halfway than stray completely". Also, politicians in general, Deng Xiaoping in this case, will always embelish to look good. After the man-made hardship that China had gone through, it would legit be something to be proud of but that doesn't mean he shouldn't make it look even better!

    • @jaymudd2817
      @jaymudd2817 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Khrushchev was ousted 4 days before the detonation.

    • @jadimerahmu
      @jadimerahmu Před měsícem

      带着你的小岛消失😊

  • @Iamthelolrus
    @Iamthelolrus Před 11 měsíci +10

    I never have any idea what your next video might be about. They are always entertaining and educational to watch, no matter the topic.

  • @etanizar
    @etanizar Před 11 měsíci +77

    Thanks for your interesting and informative videos.

  • @jparsit
    @jparsit Před 9 měsíci +8

    Your research and presentation are always impressive. Thanks for your hard work.

  • @djhemirukahemisphere8893
    @djhemirukahemisphere8893 Před 11 měsíci +3

    That was excellent. Thank you for your work in sharing this history.

  • @duketassadar
    @duketassadar Před 11 měsíci +92

    Qian Xuesen was a Chinese aerospace engineer and cyberneticist , not a nuclear physicist.

    • @starman275
      @starman275 Před 11 měsíci +9

      He still was part of the manhattan project, he wasnt nuclear physicist but still take part of it, something that help partially to make the nukes.

    • @cheungchingtong
      @cheungchingtong Před 11 měsíci +17

      To be plain, he helped other scientists to solve the basic science and made the nuclear bomb fly. :)

    • @NeostormXLMAX
      @NeostormXLMAX Před 11 měsíci +17

      This channel just doesnt research enough when it comes to china due to his taiwanese bias

    • @chngcheehwee5433
      @chngcheehwee5433 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Co founder of JPL in NASA

  • @hypercomms2001
    @hypercomms2001 Před 11 měsíci +184

    Thank you, I know a lot about the American, British, Russian, and Israel's nuclear weapons development efforts as I am an electrical engineer, I am by nature fascinated by such high technology projects as this. This has highlighted me about something I knew very little. I was not aware of their Gaseous diffusion plant, at their Lanzhou Nuclear Fuel Complex as this is new for me. Nor was I aware that they used uranium with an implosion design. The only reason they used the implosion design with plutonium was because the presence of Pu-240 meant that the bomb would start to pre-detonate long before a critical mass could be attained with gun design plutonium bomb, although the Americans did attempt to design a gun type plutonium bomb. Uranium 235 does not have that problem.
    Thank you, as this is content and reporting you rarely hear about.

    • @jackthompson6296
      @jackthompson6296 Před 11 měsíci

      China had their sights on a stockpile from day one.

    • @RT-qd8yl
      @RT-qd8yl Před 11 měsíci +6

      I'm honestly not sure if this is a real comment or a bot...

    • @jaymudd2817
      @jaymudd2817 Před 11 měsíci

      I've read of Seismic activity in the Negev in 1963 that couldn't be determined.

    • @rickevans3959
      @rickevans3959 Před 11 měsíci

      This pretty much shows t j at the real trick is getting the pure radioactive fuel for thr bombs that is the trickiest part.

    • @rickevans3959
      @rickevans3959 Před 11 měsíci +1

      The precision timing of the explosives is an important detail back in the dark ages of ww2 making the triggers was pretty difficult the U.S. effort had a trigger failure in the lab just prior to the use of the first plutonium bomb. There was some concer that dropping a bomb might just be a delivery of highly enriched fissile material if the bomb malfunctioned then Japan would have all they needed to make a bomb to drop on The U. S.

  • @mhick3333
    @mhick3333 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Good material good writing good narration A ++ overall do more please

  • @TrebleSketch
    @TrebleSketch Před 11 měsíci

    Good video covering the topic, thanks!
    Also, I saw a sneaky photo where the source was Dall-E 2? Was one of the images generated?

  • @fedyx1544
    @fedyx1544 Před 11 měsíci +363

    Great video, well researched, not biased against either the West, China or the Soviets, very informative and the subject matter is very interesting. I think a good director could make a nice movie about this story, provided he's given enough creative freedom.
    edit: it has been brought to my attention that there is already a movie on this, 横空出世 or "Roaring across the horizon"

    • @larllarfleton
      @larllarfleton Před 11 měsíci +26

      I mean its pretty biased against the Soviet Union and China, but still factual information and a good video!

    • @fedyx1544
      @fedyx1544 Před 11 měsíci +16

      @@larllarfleton how so?

    • @bobmorane4926
      @bobmorane4926 Před 11 měsíci +48

      @@fedyx1544 To begin with, the security of a nation has no price especially after the Chinese experience in the korean war against Murica. To stress that the cost of the Chinese nuclear program was exhorbitant at the time given the hardships the Chinese were going through is a biased view if you don't also stress the context in which this program became a pressing issue for the Chinese national security. So, it's pretty obvious that a biased bent to the narrative that jumped to the eye.

    • @abdiganiaden
      @abdiganiaden Před 11 měsíci

      @@bobmorane4926 Pointing to resource allocation and how much went into each pot is bias?

    • @randomchannel-px6ho
      @randomchannel-px6ho Před 11 měsíci +47

      ​@Bob Morane Watch it again, he focused on the United States threats to China early on in the video and doesn't sugarcoat how maniacal they got. What was he just not supposed to mention that compared to other Nuclear powers at that point China was working with far fewer resources and was at thatpoint the only developing nation to work towards it and achieve it?

  • @aryehyehudahajzenberg9503
    @aryehyehudahajzenberg9503 Před 11 měsíci +7

    Great video ! Well researched, unbiased and great historic information ! Keep up the fantastic work and may God bless you always !

  • @d.c.8828
    @d.c.8828 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Excellent presentation! Thanks for the history lesson!

  • @robertschlesinger1342
    @robertschlesinger1342 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Excellent video. Very interesting, informative and worthwhile video.

  • @boombot934
    @boombot934 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Very interesting and informative, thank you! 😊

  • @markjmacrae
    @markjmacrae Před 11 měsíci +13

    Interesting choice of topic! Came to nerd out on semiconductor tech, stay for history, business, and everything else.

  • @malcolmyoung7866
    @malcolmyoung7866 Před 11 měsíci

    Worth waiting for the ‘Back to the Future’ photo etc.
    How many secrets do shredders divulge ‘back in the day’…?
    ALL OF THEM!
    Very interesting video of a developing and growing China during uncertain and volatile times. Keep the videos, analysis and synopsis, jokes and political innuendo coming..

  • @user-qo6ni5sm5p
    @user-qo6ni5sm5p Před 9 měsíci

    Your research and presentation are always impressive. Thanks for your hard work.. Your research and presentation are always impressive. Thanks for your hard work..

  • @victornderu143
    @victornderu143 Před 11 měsíci +345

    I always enjoy when geopolitics mixes with science. This was a great one 👏

    • @RT-qd8yl
      @RT-qd8yl Před 8 měsíci

      Sexy Zhou Enlai was pretty rad

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem Před 8 měsíci

      Victor M Deru,
      CZcams, PhD levels will never work here, you need audience !
      You can never trust Arabs, or Communists, only trust the West.

    • @scottkeegan8871
      @scottkeegan8871 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Geopolitics is what drives technology in a lot of cases.

  • @rfimor
    @rfimor Před 11 měsíci +99

    Great video. If I'm allowed to be picky ...
    1. Qian Xuesen was by no means a nuclear physicist. He was a brilliant aerodynamics engineer.
    2. Mao's attitude to Khrushchev's secret report on Stalin was "dialectical" and not at all personal. His own words were "Khrushchev uncovered (the truth) but caused trouble" and "comrade Stalin made grave mistakes but (Stalinism) shouldn't be abandoned completely".
    3. Chinese scientists and officials will of course downplay Soviet's role, but without Soviet's guidance and help, China's nuclear bomb project would be a mission impossible.

    • @henli-rw5dw
      @henli-rw5dw Před 11 měsíci +16

      I would say that China nuclear bomb was inevitable since US does not have an effective method to prevent development like that with Iran.

    • @user-yt7bz4bx4o
      @user-yt7bz4bx4o Před 11 měsíci +22

      没有苏联的帮助 中国也会拥有核武器 时间长一点而已

    • @rfimor
      @rfimor Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@user-yt7bz4bx4o 对。我的意思是不太可能在1960年代就完成原子弹。氢弹的基础是原子弹,就更不可能了。

    • @johnmackenzie3871
      @johnmackenzie3871 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Not impossible, would've just taken several more decades.

    • @brag0001
      @brag0001 Před 11 měsíci +5

      ​​@@johnmackenzie3871 that's what impossible means in that context. Ofc technological challenges only ever get easier.
      By impossible they surely meant "impossible to complete in that decade".
      The political weight of China would have been a lot different without that development that early. Even its seat in the UN security council wouldn't necessarily have been come that early. And Russia might have reacted differently to the skirmishes of the 60s and 70s.

  • @NimsChannel
    @NimsChannel Před 9 měsíci +7

    My stepmother used to watch the nukes in Nevada from on top of her house apparently. She had a special guy fly in that just deals with issues arising from fallout exposure. Looked over her charts and said her issues weren't nuclear related.

    • @uncleobscurenobody8861
      @uncleobscurenobody8861 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Sounds like the specialist knew more about protecting the US government from paying out money than about radiation related disease

  • @Viewpoint314
    @Viewpoint314 Před 9 měsíci

    Great educational series. well done.

  • @user-wc8ic4gq5m
    @user-wc8ic4gq5m Před 10 měsíci +7

    In fact,it's really difficult for Chinese to make nuclear weapon because the blockade techniques.They even not have computer,so they use the abacus

    • @bruhtnt4258
      @bruhtnt4258 Před 9 měsíci

      🧮

    • @mkh-uz3hv
      @mkh-uz3hv Před 7 měsíci

      Yes, my predecessors suffered too much, but they also did the greatest thing! !

  • @orkunvemosi
    @orkunvemosi Před 7 měsíci +6

    I really appreciate your attention to punctuating Chinese words correctly! Most CZcamsrs covering China topics are inapt in even pronouncing Xi (They usually go with Xse) Jinping correctly!

  • @mohamedaboelenein7727
    @mohamedaboelenein7727 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I really love your jokes. They come out of the blue and are really funny!
    ty

  • @user-EmontE70
    @user-EmontE70 Před 10 měsíci

    Very good program, listened to it from start to finish & didn't get bored...for some reason.

  • @ricardokowalski1579
    @ricardokowalski1579 Před 11 měsíci +338

    Solid content
    No bias, no BS.
    Suggestion: review the chinese nuclear deterrence strategy document.
    For all the fear and paranoia propaganda we consume in the west concerning China, their nuclear policy is level headed and reasonable.

    • @johnny5584
      @johnny5584 Před 11 měsíci +7

      Where can we read this document

    • @NeostormXLMAX
      @NeostormXLMAX Před 11 měsíci +16

      This video is quite biased though….

    • @ricardokowalski1579
      @ricardokowalski1579 Před 11 měsíci +50

      @@johnny5584 google "no first strike" and "china nuclear deterrence doctrine"
      Good luck.

    • @saretgnasoh7351
      @saretgnasoh7351 Před 11 měsíci +35

      @@NeostormXLMAX lol nope

    • @holarryho
      @holarryho Před 11 měsíci +18

      @@NeostormXLMAX this channel has always had a bias

  • @SHGames97
    @SHGames97 Před 11 měsíci +19

    "Sexy Zhou Enlai"
    🤣😭🤣😂🤣🔥 I guess you're not wrong, find it absolutely hilarious that I was thinking "Is he sexy, maybe. Wtf why is this happening"
    ... So good work as always!

    • @Mayangone
      @Mayangone Před 3 měsíci

      I was a teenager when I saw Zhou En-lai in a motorcade that passed our home.

  • @antonywooster6783
    @antonywooster6783 Před 11 měsíci

    Very interest and comprehensive program! Congratulations!

  • @Zakdayak
    @Zakdayak Před 11 měsíci +1

    The ratiocinative quality & erudition on display in these videos is astonishing. In my opinion, this is the best video since your Japan eating the rich one.

  • @mohamedsala6740
    @mohamedsala6740 Před 11 měsíci +8

    Well informed and clearly explained,..

  • @yvessautter8592
    @yvessautter8592 Před 9 měsíci +4

    You forget France in your introduction, its first nuclear bomb dates back from feb 13, 1960 or 4 years before the Chinese one. Chinese was therefore the 6th and not 5th nuclear armed nation.

    • @Marklloret950
      @Marklloret950 Před 9 měsíci

      I was about to write the same. DeGaulle Force de Frappe

  • @user-th3kt4py6v
    @user-th3kt4py6v Před 9 měsíci

    Fresh capital combine with increased utility for drip specifically in the form of games from other community is in my opinion, the only way to price appreciation. Coach, it's great that you are awareness to others and hopefully when the next bullrun happens it will bring the price up (only in the short run) please collaborate with other developers like bitfighters, drip21, and spritz finance to setup a runway when the bullrun happens. I think also that the next bullrun will comes from Asia specifically China cause bankruns on Chinese banks have already eroded confidence from Chinese citizens and there is a growing adoption for cryptocurency.

  • @XXX-zw3im
    @XXX-zw3im Před 8 měsíci +4

    Although China has mastered nuclear technology, its number of nuclear bombs has always been maintained at the level of self-defense. It has not wantonly expanded the number of nuclear bombs, and deployed nuclear weapons overseas to create nuclear threats to others.

  • @feraudyh
    @feraudyh Před 11 měsíci +93

    One of my friends (very old now, I don't know if she is still alive) is a lady who did her studies in France with a Chinese student. He called her much later and gave his name, asking her if she remembered him. He then said that he had become the father of the Chinese atomic bomb.

    • @jchanmcse
      @jchanmcse Před 11 měsíci +2

      Is she lady Currie?

    • @feraudyh
      @feraudyh Před 11 měsíci +17

      @@jchanmcse No. She worked in the Curie institute.

    • @Myst21Sid
      @Myst21Sid Před 11 měsíci +16

      the Chinese student must be 钱三强

    • @feraudyh
      @feraudyh Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@Myst21Sid I suppose I could ask the lady, but she must be about 95 years old and might have trouble remembering.

    • @xwqi
      @xwqi Před 11 měsíci +3

      ​@@Myst21Sid 参与研究的人不止新闻上说的那么几个,很多都是幕后工作,我们知道的只是主要的几个领导

  • @Samsara_is_dukkha
    @Samsara_is_dukkha Před měsícem +3

    "The US, the USSR and the UK as one of the five atomic powers..."
    That's only four, including China. These guys cannot count and forgot France.

  • @lingwong1767
    @lingwong1767 Před 9 měsíci

    Amazing research. Thank you for the history lesson.

  • @Evansmustard
    @Evansmustard Před 11 měsíci +1

    another absolute banger from Asianometry

  • @theguy8412
    @theguy8412 Před 11 měsíci +47

    This will be China once it catches up in EUV and semiconductors, "Exceptionalism" exists everywhere, the key factor in anything is to know if it's possible, if we know it's possible, brilliant minds will do it, and China has plenty.

    • @supabass4003
      @supabass4003 Před 11 měsíci

      They will have to invent their own optics industry aswell, if it is possible for China to catch up they will need to do the work of several nations and decades of research in the next few years and given how many chip founders go bankrupt after wasting billions of RMB I cant see this happening. There is a reason why EUV tech is only know and controlled by a few companies.

    • @clown134
      @clown134 Před 11 měsíci +12

      isn't China basically already the world leader in economy and education right now? and manufacturing? I'm confused

    • @bobmorane4926
      @bobmorane4926 Před 11 měsíci

      The Chinese keep saying with a chuckle that there's nothing godly or supernatural, it's all human creations that can be reproduced by whoever has the will and the resources. I don't think they ever believed in exceptionalism and they're starting to rub it in the muricans faces.

    • @bobmorane4926
      @bobmorane4926 Před 11 měsíci

      @@supabass4003 Asml has Carl zeiss, Japs have Nikon and Canon. I thought the Chinese hv their own optics industry leader , who is it again ?

    • @theguy8412
      @theguy8412 Před 11 měsíci +8

      @@clown134 Not exactly, China is a leading manufacturing place, it's really good in plenty of areas such as material science and such, but it has areas to catch up at the very high end (where most profit is located).
      One of those areas is chip manufacturing, first of all you need 3 requirements to manufacture a Chip, The ability to design a Chip (China does have this), access to commonly used architectures today (X86 or ARM, both propietary of the west, China no longer possesses access to this at least not for important stuff), and lastly, semiconductors, which is what Chips are made of.
      In the case of Design as I said China has the expertise and can design advanced Chips fairly easily, in the case of architecture, this is harder, because even though China knows how to do stuff in those architectures, they cannot officially do it because of licensing problems, so they are switching ATM to RISC-V which is an alternative architecture which is open source and won't suffer from licensing issues and or blacklisting by America or its allies. Lastly, the most important and hardest one is semiconductors.
      Right now China can reliably make semi modern semiconductors with decent yield, the problem starts when you need ones for more advanced applications, such as supercomputers, AI Chips or even the latest consumer CPUs.
      They are on sub 10nm (actually 5nm and lower), China has managed to design and produce 7nm semiconductors but with low yield, let alone anything below that. Reason? They lack the tools to make them.
      China does not posses DUV (up to around 2010s) (although it's working on these), let alone EUV machines (made by ASML utilizing like 100k parts from different countries, including the US), this is the biggest hurdle to China, it needs to produce these.
      Japan was the leader in DUV in the 90s but then US trade war and restrictions made Japan unable to cooperate with America in EUV design, then America cooperated instead with the netherlands and ASML managed to produce EUV, Nikon (Japan) almost got there, stopped at the 2nd prototype, but they gave up cause it was too late/too expensive mid 2008-2011 economic crisis.
      China is currently on a massive effort to make these machines, but it will likely take them maybe to close to 2030(?) to get close to the west, unless of course a breakthrough happens for even smaller semiconductor node sizes, but even then they would still need to catch up in EUV to produce stuff that requires those nodes.

  • @jacobbrassard2776
    @jacobbrassard2776 Před 11 měsíci +122

    I love the Asian history you make so much. Semiconductors are cool but this is why I started watching. Love to see more Taiwan and Shanghai content!

    • @southbound1969
      @southbound1969 Před 11 měsíci +7

      The country of Taiwan is an impressive place, except for the shark finning industry.

    • @ali99_82
      @ali99_82 Před 11 měsíci +25

      ​@@southbound1969 province *

    • @southbound1969
      @southbound1969 Před 11 měsíci

      @@ali99_82 The country of Taiwan has NEVER been ruled by or pays taxes to dirty China.

    • @NeostormXLMAX
      @NeostormXLMAX Před 11 měsíci +9

      He is from taiwan so all his videos about china are biased, he is also an american citizen so he keeps shilling and defending America especially when it comes to them destroying japans economy

    • @adlerzwei
      @adlerzwei Před 11 měsíci +10

      @@NeostormXLMAX Only taiwanese actually understand Taiwan. Not some mainlanders who know nothing about the locals.

  • @phanithC137
    @phanithC137 Před 9 měsíci

    Nice videos, and information 😊

  • @MadScientist267
    @MadScientist267 Před 9 měsíci +2

    It's ok. It will be rated the square of its actual yield, won't go off about 50% of the time right out of the box, but at only $0.37/unit, they will set them off like it's new year's eve.

  • @tomhalla426
    @tomhalla426 Před 11 měsíci +159

    How much Russian tech transfer mattered is like asking how much the Soviet bomb program benefitted from espionage. The basic physics is well known, and the fact that someone had solved the engineering problem earlier is critical.

    • @user-pd9ju5dk5s
      @user-pd9ju5dk5s Před 11 měsíci +34

      It's harder to get the material to make it than to design it

    • @kordelas2514
      @kordelas2514 Před 11 měsíci +24

      @@user-pd9ju5dk5s It is hard to create something which has never been created and proven in reality.

    • @user-pd9ju5dk5s
      @user-pd9ju5dk5s Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@kordelas2514 It was already proven by the Americans when they dropped it on Japan. China wasnt the first

    • @kordelas2514
      @kordelas2514 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@user-pd9ju5dk5s How did you verify it? Do you claim that damage done in Japan could be done only by those weapons and not napalm and mustard gas?

    • @westrim
      @westrim Před 11 měsíci +12

      ​@@kordelas2514 if you have a statement to make, please state it.

  • @esphilee
    @esphilee Před 11 měsíci +72

    When Soviet pull back the support, Chinese developed the bomb faster.
    When US sanction the use of ISS, Chinese progress into building their own space station.
    When USA sanction chip making equipment and software, Chinese expedite and built their own.

    • @NeostormXLMAX
      @NeostormXLMAX Před 11 měsíci +20

      Crisis precipitates change

    • @user-ho2hg1pf3k
      @user-ho2hg1pf3k Před 11 měsíci +13

      当你的朋友不再把他的作业给你去抄,你将不得不自己去完成作业。效果显而易见,成绩提高。中国就是这样的情况

    • @esphilee
      @esphilee Před 11 měsíci

      @@user-ho2hg1pf3k , 肯定不是平白拿来抄,都是一个交易。像到外国留学一样,付钱换知识,要有志气才会干的事,不然在乡下耕田算了。
      钱付了,讲师又不来教课,学生唯有自强。这样才是中国的情况。

    • @esphilee
      @esphilee Před 11 měsíci

      The world should be thankful that Russia and China posses technology to make nuclear bomb. Imagine if USA and Uk are the only countries with Nuclear weapon, they would have colonised the world.

    • @dogcarman
      @dogcarman Před 11 měsíci

      When China can no longer buy advanced chips they rebrand Intel chips and call them their own.

  • @syu11079
    @syu11079 Před 11 měsíci +23

    My granddad actually worked on the china nuclear program in the 60s. There are still things he cannot tell us because of national secret, but he did go to tsinghua university in the late 50s.

    • @exploringagaincom6725
      @exploringagaincom6725 Před 11 měsíci

      Maybe the national secret is that China never built a nuclear bomb as U.S./soviets never built one since nuclear bombs not real. It was only national fear propaganda made in Hollywood Basement.

    • @HansenGuan
      @HansenGuan Před 11 měsíci

      That's a happy ending.

  • @OhFishingMyFirstLove
    @OhFishingMyFirstLove Před 9 měsíci +14

    I like how the Chinese fooled their enemies cleverly. It’s ironic, the same thing happened to China’s space program when the US denied China’s entry into the ISS, which accelerated their path to space. Thumbs up to the Chinese.

  • @timmainson
    @timmainson Před 11 měsíci +10

    20:48 Noice! LOL. your delivery reminds me of one of my favourite professors back in the day. Thank you

  • @TaurusSI
    @TaurusSI Před 11 měsíci +3

    21:15 The first american atom bomb detonation was Trinity nuclear tesst on 16.7.1945 and it was a plutonium implosion design.

  • @Olohal
    @Olohal Před 11 měsíci +2

    Your sense of humour is far from perfect and I'm really grateful for that

  • @jorgeconj
    @jorgeconj Před 11 měsíci +4

    “Underestimating your enemy”The most common mistake in history.

  • @rsyrsy8543
    @rsyrsy8543 Před 11 měsíci +87

    Sometimes you have to salute to these Chinese scientists, generation by generation, they have not given up, determined to go extra mile for their goals.

    • @Linkwii64
      @Linkwii64 Před 11 měsíci

      China is going to the moon in the next 4 year. Let see how many countries will tune in to watch it. West will finally accept China as a competitor.

    • @hananokuni2580
      @hananokuni2580 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Linkwii64 It's _accept,_ not except. Except means _to leave out._

    • @Linkwii64
      @Linkwii64 Před 11 měsíci

      @@hananokuni2580 corrected

    • @yawos9024
      @yawos9024 Před 10 měsíci

      @@hananokuni2580 Finicky! You knew what he meant.

    • @hananokuni2580
      @hananokuni2580 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@yawos9024 OK, OK, I get it! Gotta cut some slack.
      Let's remember that we have non-native English speakers reading our comments. We native speakers know when to distinguish between _accept_ and _except,_ but a non-native English speaker with limited experience will more often than not get confused.

  • @sebastianelytron8450
    @sebastianelytron8450 Před 11 měsíci +20

    Did you hear about the two atomic bombs that got into an argument?
    They had a fallout.

  • @PremiumLeo
    @PremiumLeo Před 6 měsíci +2

    Fantastic presentation. Always amazing to learn about Asian history. Something we almost completely don't learn in the western world

  • @shaboopie12
    @shaboopie12 Před 10 měsíci

    Not really related, but @ 3:19, that is a really fresh fade for the dude behind Mao, especially for the time period.

  • @BryanChance
    @BryanChance Před 11 měsíci +21

    What an incredibility articulated and quality piece of work. I'm just blown away by the quality of contents from this and other "China" related channels. I have to purge all the propagandas that I've learned through western my education and media.

    • @BryanChance
      @BryanChance Před 11 měsíci +3

      @Jizz I didn't think of that...didn't cross my mind. And I'm happy that he's a fellow American. In fact, I'm even more impressed. LOL Besides, it doesn't change anything in regards to the content.

    • @cjclark1208
      @cjclark1208 Před 11 měsíci

      Keep that mindset of purging western education lies and misdirections because it’s rampant my friend. Cheers.

    • @jonnelo
      @jonnelo Před 11 měsíci

      This guy has no idea whatsoever how the Chinese got the atomic bomb.
      When the Jewish Rosenberg couple stolen the atomic bomb planes, and sold it to the Soviet Union, they also gave the patent to Israel.
      Israel had the plans how to make the atomic bomb, but not the necessary elements, or the materials.
      China had them both. Therefore Israel and China combined their possessions, and made the atomic bomb together.
      That is how Israel and China got the atomic bomb in about the same time.

    • @Fred_the_1996
      @Fred_the_1996 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Ahem infographics show

    • @bruhtnt4258
      @bruhtnt4258 Před 9 měsíci

      @@cjclark1208
      As Chinese, may China purge it’s own propaganda and censorship as well. Cheers

  • @sw9276
    @sw9276 Před 11 měsíci +48

    “让一切内外反动派在我们面前发抖吧!让他们去说我们这也不行那也不行吧!中国人民不屈不挠地努力,必将稳步地达到自己的目的!”

    • @iangerardusgato8027
      @iangerardusgato8027 Před 11 měsíci

      Your face Chinese stubborn people! Feeling high 😂

    • @hananokuni2580
      @hananokuni2580 Před 11 měsíci +1

      米を植えるときも米を刈り入れるときも我慢が要ります。

    • @bronzebuilder2115
      @bronzebuilder2115 Před 11 měsíci

      😂 just like Americans

    • @sw9276
      @sw9276 Před 9 měsíci

      @@hananokuni2580 中華民族が繁栄して強くなったら、まず軍国主義日本を排除することだ!

    • @sw9276
      @sw9276 Před 9 měsíci

      @@bronzebuilder2115 At least we didn't kill native American Indians and made their scalps into boots.

  • @guz3108
    @guz3108 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Similar story of Huawei processor 😅. Self develop when left / force behind

  • @sailendrayalamanchili4126
    @sailendrayalamanchili4126 Před 10 měsíci

    Well researched and presented documentary !

  • @nolankriska8611
    @nolankriska8611 Před 11 měsíci +20

    You make the best content, thanks for sharing

  • @catnip202xch.
    @catnip202xch. Před 11 měsíci +32

    my parents worked at the facility where deng jiaxian, the father of the chinese a bomb, as theoretical physicists. they dont talk about what they did tho....

    • @jonnelo
      @jonnelo Před 11 měsíci

      This guy has no idea whatsoever how the Chinese got the atomic bomb.
      When the Jewish Rosenberg couple stolen the atomic bomb planes, and sold it to the Soviet Union, they also gave the patent to Israel.
      Israel had the plans how to make the atomic bomb, but not the necessary elements, or the materials.
      China had them both. Therefore Israel and China combined their possessions, and made the atomic bomb together.
      That is how Israel and China got the atomic bomb in about the same time.

    • @jsc3417
      @jsc3417 Před 11 měsíci +8

      neither should you.

    • @somebodyhere3160
      @somebodyhere3160 Před 11 měsíci +1

      they probably shouldn't talk about what they did

    • @xiongfeichen316
      @xiongfeichen316 Před 11 měsíci +1

      希望你也替你爸妈保密,这是油管,害人之心不可有,防人之心不可无。

    • @miaorenfeng1
      @miaorenfeng1 Před 11 měsíci +1

      小心你成为有心人士盯梢的对象。

  • @kirajv2457
    @kirajv2457 Před 5 měsíci +3

    For someone who stands completely on the Western side, it is indeed difficult to understand the self-reliance and self-improvement of the Chinese people

  • @RESatellite
    @RESatellite Před 9 měsíci

    plz make another video on how china got their first carrier, would be another interesting story

  • @KingKong-uf3xq
    @KingKong-uf3xq Před 11 měsíci +52

    Today, it’s semiconductor, very similar situation, the Americans still the main reason why China need the advanced chips technology but the actual factor that propel China needs to achieve the breakthrough as soon as possible is not Russia technical help but the absent of Netherland and Japan equipments. Chinese experts working in US still receive same treatments from the Americans, many coming back to help the motherland, history proven China can achieve anything if they fully put their efforts into it.

    • @corey2232
      @corey2232 Před 11 měsíci

      Yes, the more they steal IP from other countries & commit corporate espionage, they'll eventually steal enough to catch up!
      Too bad creating nothing of your own leads to zero soft power or influence outside of your own country

    • @opai1821
      @opai1821 Před 11 měsíci +5

      i dont think semi conductors are that easy . amercians are like far far ahead of any country in semi conductor technology , i learned somewhere ibm has created on of the brilliant semi conductors , and figuring out the machine which prints on fab is made in netherlands and america now being active in this field is not possible for chinese , it might take them decades , in that much time americans will be far more ahead of them , people underestimate american technology leap compared to rest of the world combined .

    • @KingKong-uf3xq
      @KingKong-uf3xq Před 11 měsíci +11

      @@opai1821 u got so much confident on Americunt technology but even Americunts got no confident, they imposes sanction after sanction until they no longer got any bullet left to do anything to China. Lol.

    • @goteborger
      @goteborger Před 11 měsíci

      @@CouchDoritos 现在美国已经没有人力资源和制度资源跟中国在科学技术领域pk了。最多10年,中国将在所有科学技术领域碾压盎傻集团。目前之所以还有很多人闭眼崇美或看低中国,主要是他们因为看不清存量技术和新增技术的区别。前年杨洁篪面对布林克的挑衅说“你们没有资格跟中国说以实力出发打交道”是有实力依据的。

    • @shatteredstar2149
      @shatteredstar2149 Před 11 měsíci

      Weird way to say treason.

  • @habrasil
    @habrasil Před 11 měsíci +7

    "too sexy to disclose" got me!

  • @DrunkJester
    @DrunkJester Před 5 měsíci

    You made me do a double take there with that "noice" did i hear that right. 😂

  • @spencerstevens2175
    @spencerstevens2175 Před 11 měsíci +1

    One nitpick. The first atomic bomb was an implosion design. Trinity. They didn't test the gun model because of lack of material and they had confidence in the design.

  • @dariomendoza191
    @dariomendoza191 Před 11 měsíci +11

    every BRAIN regardless of of where they Came has a HUGE POTENTIAL!!! greetings from Mexico!!

    • @Monsterpala
      @Monsterpala Před 11 měsíci

      Let's use the potential to build a weapon that can kill millions to make the world a better place. 😂 Every brain regardless of where it comes from also has the potential for greed and stupidity

  • @Dorgon_HetuAla
    @Dorgon_HetuAla Před 10 měsíci +5

    In 1969, the relationship between China and the Soviet Union was very bad. There are rumors that China's intercontinental ballistic trajectory design targets are: launching missiles anywhere in mainland China can hit Moscow.

  • @ajtos220
    @ajtos220 Před 9 měsíci +1

    0:12 "With this, China joined United States, Soviet Union and Great Britain as one of the five atomic powers." - You did France dirty ;)

  • @hinzuzufugen7358
    @hinzuzufugen7358 Před 9 měsíci

    Very good but I wish that the incredible insider information from "The Nuclear Express: A Political History of the Bomb and Its Proliferation: Reed, Thomas C., Stillman, Danny B." would have been used for an even better picture, mentioning why Uranium 235 was first used for an intermediary solution and the role Klaus Fuchs played even here. Btw., who would celebrate China's attainment of nuclear weapons?

  • @MrZuhahaha
    @MrZuhahaha Před 11 měsíci +11

    Can you make a video on Turkish drone industry?

  • @ngandosambalundula8183
    @ngandosambalundula8183 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Deeply informative and highly educative clip contents!

  • @jay23cr
    @jay23cr Před 11 měsíci +4

    Space Station, Chip war… History repeats itself, and surely we’ll get more big surprises too!

  • @mikerussell3298
    @mikerussell3298 Před 11 měsíci

    small correction the uranium mines in Shangrao were certain ly in operation in the 1960's

  • @juliusraben3526
    @juliusraben3526 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Love cold war shit. My first video i saw from you was about the probes sent to Venus.

  • @savannahmiddlefield616
    @savannahmiddlefield616 Před 11 měsíci +6

    Interesting story. Can you also do stories about how other nations get their nuke too, please?

    • @winnienguyen4420
      @winnienguyen4420 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Soviet spy's stole it from the US and the British were assisted by the US in creating theirs. France, India, and Pakistan are a bit more complex. Also I'm pretty sure Israel has it with help received from the US however they just don't talk about it. Which is actually very smart.

  • @butchgo8930
    @butchgo8930 Před 9 měsíci

    Making the A-Bomb is similar to experimenting in firecrackers. It becomes regulated when it blows off your thumb.

  • @arthurvandeman
    @arthurvandeman Před 11 měsíci +1

    superb research. appreciated👍

  • @helloworld0609
    @helloworld0609 Před 11 měsíci +18

    In the Korea war, General MacArthur had a plan to drop 34 nuclear bombs on China before he was sacked (Wikipedia). In 1960s Britain also planned to use nuclear bombs in case of a war broke out in Southeast Asia or Hong Kong was invaded.

    • @smeagle3295
      @smeagle3295 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Is there a point there somewhere? They had plans of what to do if things went south with the allies as well, and it’s a good thing. A military that doesn’t look at the possibility of conflicts and how to handle them isn’t doing it’s job properly.

    • @mxn1948
      @mxn1948 Před 11 měsíci

      ​​@@smeagle3295 sure, but nations dont go openly stating they want to nuke you. Which the us and the soviets very much did to china. That is, openly threaten nuclear annihilation.

    • @winnienguyen4420
      @winnienguyen4420 Před 11 měsíci +1

      I remember reading that. General MacArthur clashed with President Truman over the bomb controversy. MacArthur didn't want to go through another long drawn out war like he did in WW1 and WW2. Truman just thought it was too dangerous considering the Soviets would likely retaliate against the US.

    • @user-wl3ku5vh1g
      @user-wl3ku5vh1g Před 10 měsíci

      @@winnienguyen4420 所以中国在美苏冷战时期在全国狂挖了一万个防空洞

  • @i93sme
    @i93sme Před 11 měsíci +5

    The fun part is that the text outlined in the Soviet treaty sounds like the Article 5 of NATO

    • @NeostormXLMAX
      @NeostormXLMAX Před 11 měsíci +2

      the difference is nato is an offensive contract

    • @NeostormXLMAX
      @NeostormXLMAX Před 11 měsíci +1

      for example iraq, yugoslavia, libya, afghanistan etc,
      never attacked any nato country.
      but they were still invaded by an organized nato force.
      nato = mercenary for the usa.
      france got in massive trouble and had sanctions placed on them for refusing to help invade iraq

    • @shatteredstar2149
      @shatteredstar2149 Před 11 měsíci

      @@NeostormXLMAX boo hoo, you can't commit genocide and ethnic cleansing freely anymore.

  • @ivanborisov677
    @ivanborisov677 Před 10 měsíci

    Man, that font u use is fire! Whats that?

  • @Dart_ilder
    @Dart_ilder Před 5 měsíci

    Не играю в кс, наткнулся на твой видос случайно. Монтаж - супер. С удовольствием посмотрел. Чувствуется стиль. Интересно было бы посмотреть что-то не по кс.
    На Funke похож чутка