More than any conflict in history, World War II was a “war of technology; a war of science,” says John Curatola, senior historian at the National WWII Museum.
“In the Second World War, all sides were looking for new and innovative ways to get at the enemy. Some of them flowered and of course some didn’t.”
Victory in World War II required an unprecedented mobilization of brainpower, human power and resources, exemplified by the Manhattan Project in the United States.