Fifty-seven years after they were believed to have been destroyed, papers describing plans for a Japanese nuclear bomb have been returned to the Institute of Physical and Chemical Research (RIKEN) outside Tokyo. At the close of World War II, and despite orders to destroy it, the 23-page document was secretly entrusted to Kazuo Kuroda, a research assistant who worked on the project with Yoshio Nishina, the scientist who headed the atomic bomb development team. The papers, written by a military officer who interviewed Nishina, include details and diagrams of a weak atomic bomb. In 1949, Kuroda emigrated to the US and eventually became a professor at the University of Arkansas. After his death in April last year, RIKEN personnel asked his widow to return the papers.
This is not the first time fresh evidence has come to light about Japan’s nuclear weapons program. In 1997, newly declassified documents revealed that,...