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Yeltsin Orders Publication of Atomic Bomb Papers

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From Reuters

President Boris N. Yeltsin on Saturday ordered the publication of top-secret archive documents that will shed light on the controversial history of the former Soviet Union’s early nuclear program.

Yeltsin signed a decree ordering the preparation and publication of an official collection of archive papers dating up to 1954, said a statement issued by the presidential press office.

The statement did not say when the publication would appear. Nor did it make clear whether all or only some of the documents will be disclosed.

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“The decree . . . aims at reconstructing an objective picture of the emergence of the national nuclear industry and the history of the creation of nuclear weapons in the Soviet Union,” the statement said.

The Soviet Union tested its first atomic bomb in 1949, four years after the United States. It was the first to test a hydrogen bomb in 1953. It is widely believed in the West that the Soviet Union, keen to get a nuclear bomb as a counterbalance to the U.S. arsenal, stole the technology.

A couple from the United States, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, were convicted in 1951 of plotting to give the Soviets secret information about the U.S. atomic bomb. They were sent to the electric chair in 1953.

Over decades, Kremlin authorities denied allegations about the foreign origin of their atomic and hydrogen bombs. But the dispute over the issue re-emerged after a series of revelations by a former Soviet official. Pavel Sudoplatov, a top officer in the Soviet KGB secret police, published a book last year alleging that four famous Western scientists had knowingly leaked nuclear secrets to Moscow.

His claims were roundly dismissed by Western experts.

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