Dillon, Douglas. Member of Cuban missile crisis Executive Committee (ExCom).
Djilas, Milovan (
Donovan, William. Founder and director of Office of Strategic Services (OSS).
Doolittle, James. US Air Force officer and air pioneer.
Douglas, Lewis. US ambassador to England during Berlin Airlift.
Douglas, William O. US Supreme Court Associate Justice.
Draper, William. Undersecretary of the Army during Berlin Airlift.
Dubovsky, Boris G. (
Dulles, Allen. CIA Director under Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Dulles, John Foster. US Secretary of State under Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Dyson, Freeman. British theoretical physicist; member of Institute for Advanced Study.
Eberstadt, Ferdinand. Financier; adviser to James Forrestal.
Ehrenfest, Paul. Austrian theoretical physicist.
Einstein, Albert. Theoretical physicist; formulated mass-energy equivalency (
Eisenhower, Dwight D. US Army Chief of Staff, 1945–1948; thirty-fourth President of the United States, 1953–1961.
Elitcher, Helene. Mrs. Max Elitcher.
Elitcher, Max. American engineer who testified that Julius Rosenberg solicited him for espionage.
Ellsberg, Daniel. Member of ExCom staff during Cuban missile crisis; later leaked Pentagon Papers.
Elsey, George. Assistant to Clark Clifford in Truman administration.
Eltenton, George. British petroleum engineer and Soviet espionage agent.
Erdos, Paul (
Evans, G. Foster. American theoretical physicist; contributed to Super calculations.
Evans, Ward. Member of security board that investigated Robert Oppenheimer.
Everett, Cornelius. American mathematician; calculated Super ignition with Stanislaw Ulam.
Farrell, T. F. US Army Corps of Engineers officer; assistant to General Groves.
Fedosimov, Pavel Ivanovich (
Feklisov, Alexander Semonovich (
Fermi, Enrico (
Fermi, Laura. Mrs. Enrico Fermi.
Fersman, A. Y. (
Feynman, Arlene. Mrs. Richard Feynman. Died of tuberculosis, 1945.
Feynman, Richard (
Finletter, Thomas K. Secretary of the Air Force.
Fitin, P. M. (
Flerov, Georgi (
Forrestal, James. US Secretary of the Navy during Second World War; first US Secretary of Defense, 1947–1949, under Harry S. Truman; suicide.
Frankel, Stanley. American physicist at Los Alamos.
Fraser, Elizabeth.
French, Anthony. British physicist at Los Alamos; bought Klaus Fuchs's car.
Frenkel, Yakov I. (
Frisch, Otto Robert. Austrian physicist; with Lise Meitner, first described the breakup of uranium under neutron bombardment and named the process “fission.”
Frish, Sergei E. (
Froman, Darol. American physicist; postwar Associate Director of Los Alamos.
Frowde, Chester.
Fuchs, Elizabeth. Klaus Fuchs's older sister; anti-Nazi activist; suicide.
Fuchs, Emil. Klaus Fuchs's father. German religious leader; anti-Nazi activist.
Fuchs, Gerhard. Klaus Fuchs's brother. Anti-Nazi activist; concentration-camp victim.
Fuchs, Klaus (
Fursov, V. S. (
Gamow, George (
Gardner, Meredith. Cryptanalyst at US Army Security Agency; decoded wartime NKVD documents.
Garner, John Nance. Thirty-second Vice President of the United States, 1933–1941.
Garrison, Lloyd. American attorney; chief counsel to Robert Oppenheimer during Oppenheimer security hearing.
Garwin, Richard. American theoretical physicist; protege of Enrico Fermi; worked on thermonuclear at Los Alamos.
Giles, Barney. US Air Force officer; flew B-29 nonstop trans-Pacific with Curtis LeMay in September 1945.
Ginzburg, Vitaly (
Goddard (Lord). Lord Chief Justice of England; Klaus Fuchs's judge.
Godel, Kurt (
Gold, Celia (Mrs. Samuel Gold). Harry Gold's mother.
Gold, “Essie and David.” Harry Gold's imaginary twin children.
Gold, Harry (“Raymond”). American industrial chemist; Soviet espionage courier.
Gold, Samuel (Samuel Golodnitsky). Harry Gold's father.
Gold, Yosef. Harry Gold's younger brother.
Golden, William T. American financier; aide to Lewis Strauss.
Goldstein, Max. Los Alamos physicist.
Goldstine, Herman. American mathematician; pioneered digital computer.
Golos, Jacob (
Golovin, Igor N. (
Gorbachev, Mikhail (