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German Scientists and Research Institutions in Allied Occupation Policy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
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The advent of sophisticated new weaponry in the Second World War brought science and technology into a prominent position in the minds of military and political planners for a postwar world. Both the Russians and the Americans perceived science in newly demanding terms, and wanted to insure that the treatment of science in defeated Germany would serve their own ends.
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- Copyright © 1982 by History of Education Society
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Primary source materials from the National Archives (NA) are denoted by the Record Group (RG) in which they are located. The following collections are cited:Google Scholar
RG 59, Assistant Secretary of State for Occupied AreasGoogle Scholar
RG 218, Combined Civil Affairs Committee Decimal File (CCAC)Google Scholar
Combined Chiefs of Staff Decimal File (CCS)Google Scholar
Joint Chiefs of Staff Decimal File (JCS)Google Scholar
RG 260, Office of Military Government (United States) (OMGUS)Google Scholar
Allied Control Authority (OMGUS HQ, ACA) RG 319, Records of Army Staff, Plans and Operations Division, ABC Decimal File (OPD)Google Scholar
RG 353, State-War-Navy Coordinating Committee/State-Army-Navy-Air Force Coordinating Committee Case Files (SWNCC/SANACC)Google Scholar
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