It's World War II. I have a nation deep in the South Pacific. By the 1930s, it was the first to develop nuclear weapons entirely from its domestic resources, human capital, copious amounts of good luck, and extensive espionage. At the same time, the Empire of Japan was trying to invade the nation. The nation tested out its nukes by using them on the invading ships. Overall, the Empire of Japan attempted invasion three times before giving up.
The nation still held some skepticism towards nuclear weapons, so it deliberately refrained from revealing them to the world. Because of this, the nation deliberately allowed the invading ships to penetrate deep into its maritime boundaries. It would congregate the ships, drop the nukes, kill any survivors (if any), clean up the wreckage, and then collect any irradiated material. Everyone involved in this conspiracy was given generous benefits (or bullets) to keep quiet. When interrogated about its methods, the nation used the excuse of extensive naval mines, clever military tactics, and conventional non-nuclear means.
When America nuked Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the nation decided not to reveal its weapons immediately, believing that it should wait for others (like the USSR) to catch up before "officially joining" the nuclear club. By 1960, it finally revealed its first "successful" nuclear test to the world.
The nation has a simple goal: To hide the fact that it used nukes during WWII. It wants the world to assume it only gained nukes in 1960, not in the 1930s. Ideally, the world neither knows nor suspects the truth. Assume the nation's counter-intelligence works in keeping this event internally top secret and that everyone involved doesn't reveal anything.
Could the nation feasibly pull this off or is there something fundamental that prevents it?




