In 1975, historian Jack Holl alleged Wheeler's loss of a sensitive document was a factor in Oppenheimer's suspension http://bit.ly/2y7ojCT pic.twitter.com/rhpxQpxEBe
You can add location information to your Tweets, such as your city or precise location, from the web and via third-party applications. You always have the option to delete your Tweet location history. Learn more
There have been some former spy-types who claim it might have, but former Soviet spies often not reliable on such matters. No real evidence.
Additionally: the general history with Soviet post-Cold War spy stuff was intel agencies claiming credit for nuclear work.
One would imagine that if they could claim to have gotten the USSR the H-bomb — and thus devalue Sakharov's contributions — they would have.
I once asked Edward Teller the extent to which the USSR H-bomb relied on espionage. He insisted it was all Sakharov, not spies.
Sure, but would he know that? He had a definite agenda there. Teller's argument was always that H-bombs were easy for scientists to make.
Hence, in his mind, it was criminal that Oppenheimer et al. had said they shouldn't/couldn't work on them originally.
It was people in the pro-Oppenheimer camp (like Bethe) who insisted that they were difficult, that Teller (or Ulam) was a genius, etc.
Teller's insistence surprised me. "Sakharov designed it without outside help." Period. Expected more uncertainty. Hiding something?
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.