Explanation: It's a common historical counterfactual for amateur history enthusiasts to ask "What if Nazi Germany had [insert technology here]?" as a means of creating alternate timelines where Nazi Germany won the war.
In reality, considering that the US was deeply concerned that the Nazis may have been getting close to nuclear weapons themselves (they were actually far behind the US project), any serious reversal of Allied fortunes in Germany probably would've ended up with the nukes being used on the Nazis instead of Imperial Japan.
Was Munich considered an important enough target for a nuclear attack? I would have thought they targeted the industrial areas around the Rhine or Elbe.
I don't think the biggest effect of those bombs were the damages done to military targets, but the shock due to the sheer scale of power and destruction they showed off
What if Nazi Germany had [the Manhattan Project]?
š
...but what are the "two new suns"?
Fat Man and Little Boy, the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Explanation: It's a common historical counterfactual for amateur history enthusiasts to ask "What if Nazi Germany had [insert technology here]?" as a means of creating alternate timelines where Nazi Germany won the war.
In reality, considering that the US was deeply concerned that the Nazis may have been getting close to nuclear weapons themselves (they were actually far behind the US project), any serious reversal of Allied fortunes in Germany probably would've ended up with the nukes being used on the Nazis instead of Imperial Japan.
Was Munich considered an important enough target for a nuclear attack? I would have thought they targeted the industrial areas around the Rhine or Elbe.
I don't think the biggest effect of those bombs were the damages done to military targets, but the shock due to the sheer scale of power and destruction they showed off
What if Nazi Germany had [the Manhattan Project]?
š
...but what are the "two new suns"?
Fat Man and Little Boy, the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.