Unlikely, to say the least.NapLajoieonSteroids wrote: ↑Sat Aug 27, 2022 11:33 pm I came across this book making the case that Japan may have exploded their first nuclear bomb a few days following Hiroshima, and this program was mainly carried out at the same sites the North Koreans would later go on to use.
Robert Wilcox's "Japan's Secret War"
podcast with WilcoxAfter years of research based on material gathered by American intelligence during the occupation of Japan as well as extensive interviews with surviving participants, Robert Wilcox gives the first detailed account of Japan's version of the Manhattan Project - from its earliest days to the possible testing of an actual weapon. The story involves Japan's leading scientists, including a future Nobel prize winner; a network of Spanish spies working in North America; and a German U-boat desperately trying to reach Japan with a cargo of uranium in the final days before the Third Reich's collapse. But perhaps the most fascinating element is the giant industrial complex in northern Korea where the final aspects of the Japanese atomic research may have taken place. When the Soviet army invaded Korea at the war's end, they had the entire complex dismantled and shipped back to the Soviet Union. We can only speculate about the information they gained from it. This new edition includes recently unearthed research showing that the Japanese spent much more time on their atomic program than previously made public.
Mr. Wilcox's website seems to have an exposé for everything.