CONTENTS
OF THIS SECTION
10/06/09 |
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Hiroshima - Nagasaki - Fact FileThe
Lies Of Hiroshima Are The Lies Of Today - John Pilger 6
August 2008 |
The Atomic Bombings
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by
The Manhattan Engineer District, June 29, 1946
A Penn State Electronic Classics Series Publication |
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Hiroshima Bomb |
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Nagasaki Bomb |
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Armed
Conflict & the Law |
What
is Terrorism?
"'When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said in a rather scornful
tone, 'it means just what I choose it to mean, neither more nor
less'. 'The question is,' said Alice, 'whether you can make
words mean so many different things'. 'The question is,' said
Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master - that's all'."
Alice in Wonderland, Lewis Carrol - Through the Looking
Glass, c.vi
more |
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Arthur
Koestler in
Janus: A Summing Up
" If I were asked to name the most important date in the history
and prehistory of the human race, I would answer without
hesitation 6 August 1945. The reason is simple. From the dawn of
consciousness until 6 August 1945, man had to live with the
prospect of his death as an individual; since the day when the
first atomic bomb
outshone the sun over Hiroshima, mankind as a whole has had to
live with the prospect of its extinction as a species...as the
devices of nuclear warfare become more potent and easier to
make, their spreading to young and immature as well as
old and arrogant
nations
becomes inevitable, and
global control of their manufacture impracticable. ..One might
compare the situation to a gathering of delinquent youths locked
in a room full of inflammable material who are given a box of
matches - with the pious warning not to use it.." |
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Colonel Paul W. Tibbets, Jr., pilot
of the ENOLA
GAY, the plane that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, waves
from his cockpit before the takeoff, 6 August 1945. |
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Atomic Bombs and US pilots' greatest thrill..- Audio Video |
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Photo Essay on the Bombing of Hiroshima &
Nagasaki |
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The Gita of Robert J Oppenheimer - James A Hijyah,
Professor of History, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
" an awareness of the
Gita's teachings renders comprehensible some features of the
scientist's life that would otherwise be hard to understand. J.
Robert Oppenheimer was an unlikely father of the atomic bomb.
While studying in England in 1925, he had attended a meeting of
pacifists. Soon after Hiroshima and Nagasaki were obliterated,
he became a leading critic of nuclear weapons and nuclear war.
On occasion he suggested that perhaps the United States should
have given the Japanese a less lethal demonstration of the bomb
before using it on a city. He said that when the bomb was
dropped on Hiroshima, Japan was already essentially defeated;
and that nuclear weapons were instruments of aggression, of
surprise, and of terror.." |
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"In the hurricane of annihilating material power
provided by atomic energy, the practice of non-violence is necessary
for mankind to save it from self-destruction." - Arnold Toynbee
quoted by
S. Sripal, Inspector General of Police, Tamilnadu in
Jainism and Peace |
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Hiroshima Memorial |
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The Hiroshima Bomb |
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Hiroshima After the Bomb |
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Hiroshima Radiation Victim |
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Nagasaki after the Bomb |
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War and State Terrorism: The United States, Japan, and the
Asia-Pacific in the Long Twentieth Century - Mark Selden
"Tracing the course of conflicts throughout Asia in the past
century, this groundbreaking volume is the first to explore
systematically the nexus of war and state terrorism. Challenging
states' definitions of terrorism, which routinely exclude their own
behavior, the book focuses especially on the nature of Japanese and
American wars and crimes of war. This rare comparative perspective
examines the ways in which state terror leads to civilian
casualties, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. In
counterbalance, they discuss anti-war movements and international
efforts to protect human rights. This interdisciplinary volume will
resonate with readers searching for a deeper understanding of an era
dominated by war and terror.." |
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Dr Harold Agnew - Scientist, on Observation Plane,
Hiroshima - on 60th Anniversary, 2005
"...I was part of a great undertaking. For the Hiroshima mission I
was on board The Great Artiste, a second B-29 that had tailed the
Enola Gay to the bombing zone. We'd flown alongside them all the way
up there and were about four or five miles off to one side of
Hiroshima, dropping gauges with parachutes that would measure the
yield of the bomb.....My honest feeling at the time was that they
deserved it, and as far as I am concerned that is still how I feel
today... there are no innocent civilians in war,
everyone is doing something, contributing to the war effort....
I am proud to have been part of it...After the war I returned
to the University of Chicago to continue my studies and later
rejoined Los Alamos, where I eventually became director of the
laboratory. About three-quarters of the US nuclear arsenal was
designed under my tutelage at Los Alamos. That is my legacy..." |
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Hiroshima, an awful lesson of history, Dr. Sue
Wareham, 2002 |
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Gene Dannen's Page on the Atomic Bomb: Decision
- Documents on the decision to use the atomic bomb are reproduced
here in full-text form. In most cases, the originals are in the U.S.
National Archives. Other aspects of the decision are shown from
accounts by the participants. |
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Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum |
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Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum "An atomic bomb exploded over Nagasaki
on August 9, 1945, three days after the explosion of the first atomic
bomb over Hiroshima. The bomb was assembled at Tinian Island on August
6. On August 8, Field Order No.17 issued from the 20th Air Force
Headquarters on Guam called for its use the following day on either
Kokura, the primary target, or Nagasaki, the secondary target. That same
day, the Soviet Union declared war on Japan. The B-29 bomber "Bockscar"
reached the sky over Kokura on the morning of August 9 but abandoned the
primary target because of smoke cover and changed course for Nagasaki,
the secondary target, where it dropped the atomic bomb at 11:02 a.m..." |
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The Fire Still Burns: An interview with historian Gar Alperovitz
"..The use of the atomic bomb, most experts now believe, was totally
unnecessary. Even people who support the decision for various reasons
acknowledge that almost certainly the Japanese would have surrendered
before the initial invasion planned for November. The U.S. Strategic
Bombing Survey stated that officially in 1946. We found a top-secret War
Department study that said when the Russians came in, which was August
8, the war would have ended anyway..." |
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The Decision To Use the Atomic Bomb: Gar Alperovitz &
H-NET Debate |
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Hiroshima National Peace Memorial Hall for the Atomic
Bomb Victims |
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Statements of Witnesses |
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The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima And Nagasaki -
Manhattan Engineer Project |
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The Decision To Use the Atomic Bomb |
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Hiroshima Archive - Gallery of photographs by Hiromi Tsuchida
commemorating Hiroshima and its citizens. |
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The Atomic Bombing of Nagasaki "At 11:02 a.m., August 9, 1945 an
atomic bomb exploded 500 meters above this spot. The black stone
monolith marks the hypocenter. The fierce blast wind, heat rays reaching
several thousand degrees, and deadly radiation generated by the
explosion crushed, burned and killed everything in sight and reduced
this entire area to a barren field of rubble. About one-third of
Nagasaki City was destroyed and 150,000 people killed or injured." |

Photographs of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki |
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Hiroshima: Three Witnesses, ed.
and trans. Richard H.Minear (Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1990) |
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Robert Jay Lifton,
Death in Life; Survivors of Hiroshima (New York: Random House,
1967) |
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Karl Jenkins - The Armed Man: A Mass for Peace, Audio CD, 2001 |
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Human Rights &
Humanitarian Law
Hiroshima & Nagasaki -
the Worst Terror Attacks in Human History
The Record Speaks...
Collated & Sequenced by
Nadesan Satyendra
"...If terrorism is the massacre of innocents
to break the will of rulers, were not Hiroshima and Nagasaki, terrorism on a
colossal scale?... "Hiroshima,
Nagasaki & Christian Morality - Patrick J. Buchanan, August
2005
"...The destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
was a war crime worse than any that Japanese generals were executed for in
Tokyo and Manila. If Harry Truman was not a war criminal, then no one ever
was.."
Hiroshima and Nagasaki - Ralph Raico, 2001
"The atomic bombing of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki was a criminal act on an epic scale. It was premeditated mass
murder that unleashed a weapon of intrinsic criminality "
The Lies Of
Hiroshima Are The Lies Of Today - John Pilger, 6 August 2008
“…I voiced to him [Stimson, US Secretary of
War] my grave misgivings, first on the basis of my belief that Japan was
already defeated and that dropping the [atom] bomb was completely
unnecessary, and secondly because I thought that our country should avoid
shocking world opinion by the use of such a weapon whose employment was, I
thought, no longer mandatory as a measure to save American lives. It was my
belief that Japan was, at that movement, seeking some way to surrender with
a minimum loss of 'face'.”
Dwight D. Eisenhower:The White House Years: Mandate For Change, 1953 - 1956
Doubleday & Company Inc., New York, 1963, pp. 312-313
"Throwing a bomb is bad,
Dropping a
bomb is good; Terror, no need to add, Depends on who's wearing
the hood."
R.Woddis 'Ethics for Everyman'
quoted in What is
Terrorism: Law & Practise
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On right: Hiroshima survivor with rice ball
- Photo: Yosuki Yamahata |
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Hiroshima Aftermath |
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At 8.15 am on 6 August 1945, United States dropped the
uranium atom bomb "Little
Boy" on the city of Hiroshima. It had an explosive yield
of around 15,000 tons of TNT. 90,000 were killed immediately
and 145,000 within months. Three days later on 9
August 1945 at 11.02 am, the United States
dropped the plutonium atom bomb "Fat
Man" on Nagasaki. The plutonium bomb had an
explosive yield of 21,000 tons of TNT. 45,000 were killed
immediately and 75,000 more were dead by the end of 1945.
"A single nuclear weapon contains almost ten times the
explosive force delivered by all of the allied air forces in
the Second World War". -President
John F. Kennedy - Commencement Address at American
University in Washington, 10 June 1963
"A bomb can now be manufactured which will be 25000 times as
powerful as that which destroyed Hiroshima." - Betrand
Russell
The Record Speaks...
Harry S. Truman, Diary,
July 25, 1945
"We have discovered the most terrible bomb
in the history of the world.... This weapon is to be used
against Japan between now and August 10th. I have told the
Sec. of War, Mr. Stimson, to use it so that military
objectives and soldiers and sailors are the target
and not women and children.
Even if the Japs are
savages, ruthless, merciless and fanatic, we as the
leader of the world for the common welfare cannot drop that
terrible bomb on the old capital or the new. He and I are in
accord. The target will be a purely military one"
US
President Harry S.Truman Address to the Nation, 6 August
1945
"Sixteen hours ago an American airplane
dropped one bomb on Hiroshima, an important Japanese
Army base. That bomb had more power than 20,000 tons
of TNT. It had more than 2,000 times the blast power of the
British "Grand Slam," which is the largest bomb ever yet
used in the history of warfare. The Japanese began the war
from the air at Pearl Harbor. They have been repaid
manyfold. And the end is not yet. With this bomb we have now
added a new and revolutionary increase in destruction to
supplement the growing power of our armed forces. In their
present form these bombs are now in production, and even
more powerful forms are in development."
Emperor Hirohito,
Acceptance of the Potsdam Declaration, 14 August 1945
"..the enemy has begun to employ a new
and most cruel bomb, the power of which to do damage is,
indeed, incalculable, taking the toll of many innocent
lives. Should we continue to fight, it would not only result
in an ultimate collapse and obliteration of the Japanese
nation, but also it would lead to the total extinction of
human civilization..."
To Bomb or
Not to Bomb Hiroshima and Nagasaki - a Debate on the Uses
of Terrorism? : Szilard Petition, J. R. Oppenheimer, Henry L.
Stimson - June/August 1945
"We, the undersigned scientists, have been
working in the field of atomic power for a number of years.
..The war has to be brought speedily to a successful
conclusion and the destruction of Japanese cities by means
of atomic bombs may very well be an effective method of
warfare. We feel, however, that such an attack on Japan
could not be justified in the present circumstances..."
Poems by Toge
Sankichi: Hibakusha (A-bomb survivor)
Toge Sankichi was born in Japan in 1917.
He started writing poems at the age of eighteen. He was
twenty-four when the A-bomb was dropped on Hiroshima on 6
August 1945. He died at age thirty-six, a victim of leukemia
resulting from the A-bomb. His first hand experience of the
bomb, his passion for peace and his realistic insight into
the event made him the leading Hiroshima poet in Japan.
How could I ever forget that flash of
light! In a moment thirty thousand people ceased to be
The cries of fifty thousand killed Through yellow smoke
whirling into light Buildings split, bridges collapsed
Crowded trams burnt as they rolled about Hiroshima, all
full of boundless heaps of embers
Testimony of Akiko
Takakura - A Bomb Survivor
"..The whirlpool of fire that was
covering the entire street approached us from Ote-machi. So,
everyone just tried so hard to keep away from the fire. It
was just like a living hell. After a while, it began to
rain. The fire and the smoke made us so thirsty and there
was nothing to drink, no water, and the smoke even disturbed
our eyes. As it began to rain, people opened their mouths
and turned their faces towards the sky and try to drink the
rain, but it wasn't easy to catch the rain drops in our
mouths. It was a black rain with big drops..."
Testimony of Yosaku
Mikami - A Bomb Survivor
"..We tried to open the eyes of the
injured and we found out they were still alive. We tried to
carry them by their arms and legs and to place them onto the
fire truck. But this was difficult because their skin was
peeled off as we tried to move them. They were all heavily
burned..."
Testimony of
Akihiro Takahashi - A Bomb Survivor
"I felt the city of Hiroshima had
disappeared all of a sudden. Then I looked at myself and
found my clothes had turned into rags due to the heat. I was
probably burned at the back of the head, on my back, on both
arms and both legs. My skin was peeling and hanging like
this..."
The
Atomic Bombings of Japan: A 50-Year Retrospective
by Col
Ralph J. Capio, USAF, 1995
"If 7 December 1941, a date "which will
live in infamy," conjures up a vision for Americans of
treachery, death, and destruction, then Hiroshima and
Nagasaki are two names synonymous the world over with
horrific power that, having been unleashed, still threatens
mankind's fragile grip on survival. ("Cry 'Havoc!' and let
slip the dogs of war." If we were to do the same thing
today, the consequences would likely be "as much a
punishment to the punisher as to the sufferer." Hiroshima
and Nagasaki represent an experience of multiple dimensions.
What happened? What led up to the bombings? Why was it done
at all? What does it say about the character of the nation
that did it and the nation that received it? "
Hiroshima and Nagasaki: Worst terror attacks in history,
August 2005
"August 6 and August 9 will mark the 60th
anniversaries of the US atomic-bomb attacks on the Japanese
cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. ..The 60th anniversaries
will inevitably be marked by countless mass media
commentaries and speeches repeating the 60-year-old mantra
that there was no other choice but to use A-bombs in order
to avoid a bitter, prolonged invasion of Japan. On July 21,
the British New Scientist magazine undermined this chorus
when it reported that two historians had uncovered evidence
revealing that “the US decision to drop atomic bombs on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki ... was meant to kick-start the Cold
War [against the Soviet Union, Washington's war-time ally]
rather than end the Second World War”. ..
it accords with the testimony of many central
US political and military players at the time, including
General Dwight Eisenhower, who stated bluntly in a 1963
Newsweek interview that “the Japanese were ready to
surrender and it wasn't necessary to hit them with that
awful thing”. "
Hiroshima,
Nagasaki & Christian Morality - Patrick J. Buchanan,
August 2005
"If terrorism is the massacre of
innocents to break the will of rulers, were not Hiroshima
and Nagasaki terrorism on a colossal scale?... Churchill did
not deny what the Allied air war was about. Before departing
for Yalta, he ordered Operation Thunderclap, a campaign to
"de-house" civilians to clog roads so German soldiers could
not move to stop the offensive of the Red Army. British Air
Marshal "Bomber" Harris put Dresden, a jewel of a city and
haven for hundreds of thousands of terrified refugees, on
the target list."
Hiroshima and Nagasaki by Ralph Raico
"...The
destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was a war crime worse
than any that Japanese generals were executed for in Tokyo
and Manila. If Harry Truman was not a war criminal, then no
one ever was.. Today, self-styled
conservatives slander as "anti-American" anyone who is in
the least troubled by Truman’s massacre of so many tens of
thousands of Japanese innocents from the air..."
Hiroshima to New York: a tale of terrorism - ND Jayaprakash,
Delhi Science Forum, 2001
"..It is, indeed, very unfortunate that
not one of .. the major broadcasting media - BBC, CNN, Fox
News, etc. - compared the 11th September attack to a very
similar event but of far greater magnitude, a horrendous one
that was a turning point in the history of the twentieth
century. How is that even a passing reference to that
unforgettable and earth-shaking event has not been made by
any one in the media or by any of the spokespersons of the
major governments? Even in this hour of grief there can be
no justification for resorting to selective amnesia. How
could those manning responsible posts today not remember the
dawning of the age of nuclear madness! Perhaps nobody wants
to draw attention to the fact that it was the U.S.
Administration, which was guilty of committing the biggest
and most gruesome terrorist attack ever..."
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Harry S. Truman, Diary, July 25, 1945
quoted in
Robert H. Ferrell, Off the Record: The Private Papers of Harry S. Truman
(New York: Harper and Row, 1980) pp. 55-56. Truman's writings are in the public
domain |
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"We have discovered the most terrible bomb in the history of
the world. It may be the fire destruction prophesied in the
Euphrates Valley Era, after Noah and his fabulous Ark.
Anyway we "think" we have found the way to cause a
disintegration of the atom. An experiment in the New Mexico
desert was startling - to put it mildly. Thirteen pounds of the
explosive caused the complete disintegration of a steel tower 60
feet high, created a crater 6 feet deep and 1,200 feet in
diameter, knocked over a steel tower 1/2 mile away and knocked
men down 10,000 yards away. The explosion was visible for more
than 200 miles and audible for 40 miles and more.
This weapon is to be used against Japan between now and
August 10th. I have told the Sec. of War, Mr. Stimson, to
use it so that military objectives and soldiers and sailors are
the target and not women and children. Even if the Japs are
savages, ruthless, merciless and fanatic, we as the leader of
the world for the common welfare cannot drop that terrible bomb
on the old capital or the new.
He and I are in accord. The target will be a purely
military one
and we will issue a warning statement asking the Japs to
surrender and save lives. I'm sure they will not do that,
but we will have given them the chance. It is certainly a good
thing for the world that Hitler's crowd or Stalin's did not
discover this atomic bomb. It seems to be the most terrible
thing ever discovered, but it can be made the most useful..." |
US President Harry S.Truman
Address to the Nation, 6 August 1945 |
"Sixteen hours ago an American airplane dropped one bomb on
Hiroshima, an important Japanese Army base. That
bomb had more power than 20,000 tons of TNT. It had more than
2,000 times the blast power of the British "Grand Slam," which
is the largest bomb ever yet used in the history of warfare.
The Japanese began the war from the air at Pearl Harbor. They
have been repaid many fold. And the end is not yet. With this
bomb we have now added a new and revolutionary increase in
destruction to supplement the growing power of our armed forces.
In their present form these bombs are now in production, and
even more powerful forms are in development.
It is an atomic bomb. It is a harnessing of the basic power of
the universe. The force from which the sun draws its power has
been loosed against those who brought war to the Far East.
Before 1939, it was the accepted belief of scientists that it
was theoretically possible to release atomic energy. But no one
knew any practical method of doing it. By 1942, however, we knew
that the Germans were working feverishly to find a way to add
atomic energy to the other engines of war with which they hoped
to enslave the world. But they failed. We may be grateful to
Providence that the Germans got the V-1's and V-2's late and in
limited quantities and even more grateful that they did not get
the atomic bomb at all.
The battle of the laboratories held fateful risks for us as well
as the battles of the air, land, and sea, and we have now won
the battle of the laboratories as we have won the other battles
Beginning in 1940, before Pearl Harbor, scientific knowledge
useful in war was pooled between the United States and Great
Britain, and many priceless helps to our victories have come
from that arrangement. Under that general policy the research on
the atomic bomb was begun. With American and British scientists
working together we entered the race of discovery against the
Germans
The United States had available the large number of scientists
of distinction in the many needed areas of knowledge. It had the
tremendous industrial and financial resources necessary for the
project, and they could be devoted to it without undue
impairment of other vital war work. In the United States the
laboratory work and the production plants, on which a
substantial start had already been made, would be out of reach
of enemy bombing, while at that time Britain was exposed to
constant air attack and was still threatened with the
possibility of invasion. For these reasons Prime Minister
Churchill and President Roosevelt agreed that it was wise to
carry on the project here
We now have two great plants and many lesser works devoted to
the production of atomic power. Employment during peak
construction numbered 125,000 and over 65,000 individuals are
even now engaged in operating the plants. Many have worked there
for two and a half years. Few know what they have been
producing. They see great quantities of material going in and
they see nothing coming out of these plants, for the physical
size of the explosive charge is exceedingly small. We have spent
$2 billion on the greatest scientific gamble in history--and won
But the greatest marvel is not the size of the enterprise, its
secrecy, nor its cost, but the achievement of scientific brains
in putting together infinitely complex pieces of knowledge held
by many men in different fields of science into a workable plan.
And hardly less marvelous has been the capacity of industry to
design, and of labor to operate, the machines and methods to do
things never done before so that the brainchild of many minds
came forth in physical shape and performed as it was supposed to
do. Both science and industry worked under the direction of the
United States Army, which achieved a unique success in managing
so diverse a problem in the advancement of knowledge in an
amazingly short time. It is doubtful if such another combination
could be got together in the world. What has been done is the
greatest achievement of organized science in history. It was
done under high pressure and without failure
We are now prepared to obliterate more rapidly and completely
every productive enterprise the Japanese have above ground in
any city. We shall destroy their docks, their factories, and
their communications. Let there be no mistake; we shall
completely destroy Japan's power to make war
It was to spare the Japanese people from utter destruction that
the ultimatum of July 26 was issued at Potsdam. Their leaders
promptly rejected that ultimatum. If they do not now accept our
terms they may expect a rain of ruin from the air, the like of
which has never been seen on this earth. Behind this air attack
will follow sea and land forces in such numbers and power as
they have not yet seen and with the fighting skill of which they
are already well aware.
The secretary of war, who has kept in personal touch with all
phases of the project, will immediately make public a statement
giving further details
His statement will give facts concerning the sites at Oak Ridge
near Knoxville, Tennessee, and at Richland near Pasco,
Washington, and an installation near Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Although the workers at the sites have been making materials to
be used in producing the greatest destructive force in history,
they have not themselves been in danger beyond that of many
other occupations, for the utmost care has been taken of their
safety
The fact that we can release atomic energy ushers in a new era
in man's understanding of nature's forces. Atomic energy may in
the future supplement the power that now comes from coal, oil,
and falling water, but at present it cannot be produced on a
basis to compete with them commercially. Before that comes there
must be a long period of intensive research
It has never been the habit of the scientists of this country or
the policy of this government to withhold from the world
scientific knowledge. Normally, therefore, everything about the
work with atomic energy would be made public
But under present circumstances it is not intended to divulge
the technical processes of production or all the military
applications, pending further examination of possible methods of
protecting us and the rest of the world from the danger of
sudden destruction.
I shall recommend that the Congress of the United States
consider promptly the establishment of an appropriate commission
to control the production and use of atomic power within the
United States. I shall give further consideration and make
further recommendations to the Congress as to how atomic power
can become a powerful and forceful influence towards the
maintenance of world peace." Source: Department of Energy |
Emperor Hirohito, Acceptance of
the Potsdam Declaration, Radio Broadcast, Transmitted by Domei and Recorded
by the Federal Communications Commission, 14 August 1945 |
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"To our good and loyal subjects: After pondering deeply the general trends of
the world and the actual conditions obtaining in our empire today, we have
decided to effect a settlement of the present situation by resorting to an
extraordinary measure.
We have ordered our Government to communicate to the Governments of the
United States, Great Britain, China and the Soviet Union that our empire accepts
the provisions of their joint declaration.
To strive for the common prosperity and happiness of all nations as well
as the security and well-being of our subjects is the solemn obligation which
has been handed down by our imperial ancestors and which we lay close to the
heart.
Indeed, we declared war on America and Britain out of our sincere desire
to insure Japan's self-preservation and the stabilization of East Asia, it being
far from our thought either to infringe upon the sovereignty of other nations or
to embark upon territorial aggrandizement.
But now the war has lasted for nearly four years. Despite the best that
has been done by everyone--the gallant fighting of our military and naval
forces, the diligence and assiduity of out servants of the State and the devoted
service of our 100,000,000 people--the war situation has developed not
necessarily to Japan's advantage, while the general trends of the world have all
turned against her interest.
Moreover, the enemy has begun to employ a new and most cruel bomb, the
power of which to do damage is, indeed, incalculable, taking the toll of many
innocent lives. Should we continue to fight, it would not only result in an
ultimate collapse and obliteration of the Japanese nation, but also it would
lead to the total extinction of human civilization.
Such being the case, how are we to save the millions of our subjects,
nor to atone ourselves before the hallowed spirits of our imperial ancestors?
This is the reason why we have ordered the acceptance of the provisions of the
joint declaration of the powers.
We cannot but express the deepest sense of regret to our allied nations
of East Asia, who have consistently cooperated with the Empire toward the
emancipation of East Asia.
The thought of those officers and men as well as others who have fallen
in the fields of battle, those who died at their posts of duty, or those who met
death [otherwise] and all their bereaved families, pains our heart night and
day.
The welfare of the wounded and the war sufferers and of those who lost
their homes and livelihood is the object of our profound solicitude. The
hardships and sufferings to which our nation is to be subjected hereafter will
be certainly great.
We are keenly aware of the inmost feelings of all of you, our subjects.
However, it is according to the dictates of time and fate that we have resolved
to pave the way for a grand peace for all the generations to come by enduring
the [unavoidable] and suffering what is unsufferable. Having been able to save
*** and maintain the structure of the Imperial State, we are always with you,
our good and loyal subjects, relying upon your sincerity and integrity.
Beware most strictly of any outbursts of emotion that may engender
needless complications, of any fraternal contention and strife that may create
confusion, lead you astray and cause you to lose the confidence of the world.
Let the entire nation continue as one family from generation to
generation, ever firm in its faith of the imperishableness of its divine land,
and mindful of its heavy burden of responsibilities, and the long road before
it. Unite your total strength to be devoted to the construction for the future.
Cultivate the ways of rectitude, nobility of spirit, and work with resolution so
that you may enhance the innate glory of the Imperial State and keep pace with
the progress of the world." |
To Bomb or Not to Bomb
Hiroshima and Nagasaki - a Debate on the Uses of Terrorism: Szilard
Petition, J. R. Oppenheimer, Henry L. Stimson - June/August 1945 [see
also
The Correspondence at Nuclearfiles.org on
Manhattan Project,
Decision to Drop the Bomb,
Concerns of Nuclear Capabilities,
US Nuclear Doctrine and
Diaries
] |
|
The following documents represent the debate which preceded the dropping of
two atomic bombs; one each on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima (August 6, 1945)
and Nagasaki (August 9, 1945).
1. Szilard
Petition to the President of the United States, First Version, July 3, 1945
Source: U.S. National Archives, Record Group 77, Records of the Chief of
Engineers, Manhattan Engineer District, Harrison-Bundy File, folder #76.
"Discoveries of which the people of the United States are
not aware may affect the welfare of this nation in the near future. The
liberation of atomic power which has been achieved places atomic bombs in the
hands of the Army. It places in your hands, as Commander-in-Chief, the fateful
decision whether or not to sanction the use of such bombs in the present phase
of the war against Japan.
We, the undersigned scientists, have been working in the
field of atomic power for a number of years. Until recently we have had to
reckon with the possibility that the United States might be attacked by atomic
bombs during this war and that her only defense might lie in a counterattack by
the same means. Today with this danger averted we feel impelled to say what
follows:
The war has to be brought speedily to a successful
conclusion and the destruction of Japanese cities by means of atomic bombs may
very well be an effective method of warfare. We feel, however, that such an
attack on Japan could not be justified in the present circumstances. We
believe that the United States ought not to resort to the use of atomic bombs in
the present phase of the war, at least not unless the terms which will be
imposed upon Japan after the war are publicly announced and subsequently Japan
is given an opportunity to surrender.
If such public announcement gave
assurance to the Japanese that they could look forward to a life devoted to
peaceful pursuits in their homeland and if Japan still refused to surrender, our
nation would then be faced with a situation which might require a re-examination
of her position with respect to the use of atomic bombs in the war.
Atomic bombs are primarily a means for the ruthless
annihilation of cities. Once they were introduced as an instrument of war it
would be difficult to resist for long the temptation of putting them to such
use.
The last few years show a marked tendency toward increasing
ruthlessness. At present our Air Forces, striking at the Japanese cities, are
using the same methods of warfare which were condemned by American public
opinion only a few years ago when applied by the Germans to the cities of
England. Our use of atomic bombs in this war would carry the world a long
way further on this path of ruthlessness.
Atomic power will provide the
nations with new means of destruction. The atomic bombs at our disposal
represent only the first step in this direction and there is almost no limit to
the destructive power which will become available in the course of this
development. Thus a nation which sets the precedent of using these newly
liberated forces of nature for purposes of destruction may have to bear the
responsibility of opening the door to an era of devastation on an unimaginable
scale.
In view of the foregoing, we, the undersigned, respectfully
petition that you exercise your power as Commander-in-Chief to rule that the
United States shall not, in the present phase of the war, resort to the use of
atomic bombs.
Leo Szilard and 58 co-signers
[Source for number of signers of July 3 petition: Szilard to
Frank Oppenheimer, July 23, 1945, Robert Oppenheimer Papers, Library of
Congress, Washington D.C.]
2. Szilard petition, cover letter, July 4, 1945
Source: U.S. National Archives, Record Group 77, Records of the
Chief of Engineers, Manhattan Engineer District, Harrison-Bundy
File, folder #76.
Dear
Inclosed is the text of a petition which will be
submitted to the President of the United States. As you will
see, this petition is based on purely moral considerations.
It may very well be that the decision of the President whether
or not to use atomic bombs in the war against Japan will largely
be based on considerations of expediency. On the basis of
expediency, many arguments could be put forward both for and
against our use of atomic bombs against Japan. Such arguments
could be considered only
within the framework of a thorough analysis of the situation
which will face the United States after this war and it was felt
that no useful purpose would be served by considering arguments
of expediency in a short petition.
However small the
chance might be that our petition may influence the course of
events, I personally feel that it would be a matter of
importance if a large number of scientists who have worked in
this field went clearly and unmistakably on record as to their
opposition on moral grounds to the use of these bombs in the
present phase of
the war.
Many of us are inclined to say that
individual Germans share the guilt for the acts which Germany
committed during this war because they did not raise their
voices in protest against these acts. Their defense that their
protest would have been of no avail hardly seems acceptable even
though these Germans could not have protests without running
risks to life and liberty. We are in a position to raise our
voices without incurring any such risks even though we might
incur the displeasure of some of those who are at present in
charge of controlling the work on "atomic power".
The
fact that the people of the United States are unaware of the
choice which faces us increases our responsibility in this
matter
since those who have worked on "atomic power" represent a sample
of the population and they alone are in a position to form an
opinion and declare their stand.
Anyone who might wish to
go on record by signing the petition ought to have an
opportunity to do so and, therefore, it would be appreciated if
you could give every member of your group an opportunity for
signing.
Leo Szilard
P.S.-- Anyone who
wants to sign the petition ought to sign both attached copies
and ought to read not only the petition but also this covering
letter.
3. Recommendations on the Immediate Use of Nuclear
Weapons, June 16, 1945
Recommendations on the Immediate Use of Nuclear Weapons, by the Scientific
Panel of the Interim Committee on Nuclear Power, June 16, 1945. Source: U. S.
National Archives, Record Group 77, Records of the Office of the Chief of
Engineers, Manhattan Engineer District, Harrison-Bundy File, Folder #76.
A. H. Compton E. O. Lawrence J. R. Oppenheimer E. Fermi
[signature] J. R. Oppenheimer For the Panel
You
have asked us to comment on the initial use of the new weapon. This use, in our
opinion, should be such as to promote a satisfactory adjustment of our
international relations. At the same time, we recognize our obligation to our
nation to use the weapons to help save American lives in the Japanese war.
To accomplish these ends we recommend that before the weapons are used not only
Britain, but also Russia, France, and China be advised that we have made
considerable progress in our work on atomic weapons, that these may be ready to
use during the present war, and that we would welcome suggestions as to how we
can cooperate in making this development contribute to improved international
relations.
The opinions of our scientific colleagues on the initial use of these weapons
are not unanimous: they range from the proposal of a purely technical
demonstration to that of the military application best designed to induce
surrender. Those who advocate a purely technical demonstration would wish to
outlaw the use of atomic weapons, and have feared that if we use the weapons now
our position in future negotiations will be prejudiced. Others emphasize the
opportunity of saving American lives by immediate military use, and believe that
such use will improve the international prospects, in that they are more
concerned with the prevention of war than with the elimination of this specific
weapon. We find ourselves closer to these latter views; we can propose no
technical demonstration likely to bring an end to the war; we see no acceptable
alternative to direct military use.
With regard to these general aspects of the use of atomic energy, it is clear
that we, as scientific men, have no proprietary rights. It is true that we are
among the few citizens who have had occasion to give thoughtful consideration to
these problems during the past few years. We have, however, no claim to
special competence in solving the political, social, and military problems which
are presented by the advent of atomic power.
4. Henry L. Stimson - Memorandum to the President, July 2,
1945
Proposed Program for Japan
1. The plans of operation
up to and including the first landing have been authorized and
the preparations for the operation are now actually going on.
This situation was accepted by all members of your conference on
Monday, June. 18.
2. There is reason to believe that
the operation for the occupation of Japan following the landing
may be a very long, costly, and arduous struggle on our part.
The terrain, much of which I have visited several times, has
left the impression on my memory of being one which would be
susceptible to a last ditch defense such as has been made on Iwo
Jima and Okinawa and which of course is very much larger than
either of those two areas. According to my recollection it will
be much more unfavorable with regard to tank maneuvering than
either the Philippines or Germany.
3. If we once land on
one of the main islands and begin a forceful occupation of
Japan, we shall probably have cast the die of last ditch
resistance. The Japanese are highly patriotic and certainly
susceptible to calls for fanatical resistance to repel an
invasion.
Once started in actual invasion, we shall in my opinion have to
go through with an even more bitter finish than in Germany., We
shall incur the losses incident to such a war and we shall have
to leave the Japanese islands even more thoroughly destroyed
than was the case with Germany. This would be due both the
difference in the Japanese and German personal character and the
differences in the size and character of the terrain through
which the operations will take place.
4. A question then
comes: Is there any alternative to such a forceful occupation of
Japan which will secure for us the equivalent of an
unconditional surrender of her forces and a permanent
destruction of her power again to strike and aggressive blow at
the "peace of the Pacific"? I am inclined to think that there
is enough such chance to make it well worthwhile our giving them
a warning of what is to come and a definite opportunity to
capitulate.
As above suggested, it should be tried before the actual
forceful occupation of the homeland islands is begun and
furthermore the warning should be given in ample time to permit
a national reaction to set in.
We have the following
enormously favorable factors on our side – factors much
weightier than those we had against Germany:
Japan has no
allies
Her navy is nearly destroyed and she is vulnerable to a
surface and underwater blockade which can deprive her of
sufficient food and supplies for her population.
She is
terribly vulnerable to our concentrated air attack upon her
crowded cities, industrial and food resources.
She has
against her not only the Anglo-American forces but the rising
forces of China and the ominous threat of Russia to bring to
bear against her diminishing potential.
We have great
moral superiority through being the victim of her first
sneak attack.
The problem is to translate these
advantages into prompt and economical achievement of our
objectives. I believe Japan is susceptible to reason in such a
crisis to a much greater extent than is indicated by our current
press and other current comment. Japan is not a nation
composed wholly of mad fanatics of an entirely different
mentality form ours.
On the contrary, she has within the past century shown herself to possess
extremely intelligent people, capable in an unprecedentedly short time of
adoption not only the complicated techniques of Occidental civilization but to a
substantial extent their culture and their political and social ideas. Her
advance in all these respects during the short period of sixty or seventy years
has been one of the most astounding feats of national progress in history – a
leap from the isolated feudalism of centuries into the position of one of the
six or seven great powers of the world. She has not only built up powerful
armies and navies.
She has maintained an honest and effective national finance and respected
position in many of the sciences in which we pride ourselves. Prior to the
forcible seizure of power over her government by the fanatical military group in
1931, she had for ten years lived a reasonably responsible and respectable
international life.
My own opinion is in her favor on the two points
involved in this question:
I think the Japanese nation has the mental
intelligence and versatile capacity in such a crisis to recognize the folly of a
fight to the finish and to accept the proffer of what will amount to an
unconditional surrender; and I think she has within her population enough
liberal leaders (although now submerged by the terrorists) to be depended upon
for her reconstruction as a responsible member of the family of nations. I think
she is better in this last respect than Germany was. Her liberals yielded only
at the point of the pistol and, so far as I am aware, their liberal attitude has
not been personally subverted in the way which was so general in Germany.
On the other hand, I think that the attempt to exterminate her armies and
her population by gunfire or other means will tend to produce a fusion of race
solidity and antipathy which has no analogy in the case of Germany. We have
a national interest in creating, if possible, a condition wherein the Japanese
nation may live as a peaceful and useful member of the future Pacific community.
5. It is therefore my conclusion that a carefully timed warning be given to
Japan by the chief representatives of the United States, Great Britain, China,
and, if then a belligerent, Russia by calling upon Japan to surrender, and
permit the occupation of her country in order to insure its complete
demilitarization for the sake of the future peace.
This warning should
contain the following elements:
The varied and overwhelming character of the force we are
about to bring to bear on the islands.
The inevitability and completeness of the destruction which the full
application of this force will entail.
The determination of the Allies to destroy permanently all authority and
influence of those who have deceived and misled the country into embarking on
world conquest.
The determination of the Allies to limit Japanese sovereignty to her main
islands and to render them powerless to mount and support another war.
The disavowal of any attempt to extirpate the Japanese as a race or to
destroy them as a nation.
A statement of our readiness, once her economy is purged of its militaristic
influence, to permit the Japanese to maintain such industries, particularly of a
light consumer character, which can produce a sustaining economy, and provide a
reasonable standard of living. The statement should indicate our willingness,
for this purpose, to give Japan trade access to external raw materials, but no
longer any control over the sources of supply outside her main islands. It
should also indicate our willingness, in accordance with our now established
foreign trade policy, in due course to enter into mutually advantageous trade
relations with her.
The withdrawal form their country as soon as the above objectives of the
Allies are accomplished, and as soon as there has been established a peacefully
inclined government, of a character representative of the masses of the Japanese
people. I personally think that if in saying this we should add that we do not
exclude a constitutional monarchy under her present dynasty, it would
substantially add to the chances of acceptance.
6. Success of course will depend on the potency of the warning which we give
her. She has an extremely sensitive national pride and, as we are now seeing
every day, when actually locked with the enemy will fight to the very death. For
that reason the warning must be tendered before the actual invasion has occurred
and while the impending destruction, though clear beyond peradventure, has not
yet reduced her to fanatical despair. If Russian is a part of the threat, the
Russian attack, if actual, must not have progresses too far. Our own bombing
should be confined to military objectives as far as possible. |
Poems by Toge Sankichi:
Hibakusha (A-bomb survivor)
|
|
Toge Sankichi was born in Japan in 1917. He started writing poems at the age
of eighteen. He was twenty-eight when the A-bomb was dropped on Hiroshima on 6
August 1945. He died at age thirty-six, a victim of leukemia resulting from the
A-bomb. His first hand experience of the bomb, his passion for peace and his
realistic insight into the event made him the leading Hiroshima poet in Japan.
August 6th
How could I ever forget that flash of light!
In a moment thirty thousand people ceased to be
The cries of fifty thousand killed
Through yellow smoke whirling into light
Buildings split, bridges collapsed
Crowded trams burnt as they rolled about
Hiroshima, all full of boundless heaps of embers
Soon after, skin dangling like rags
With hands on breasts
Treading upon the spilt brains
Wearing shreds of burnt cloth round their loins
There came numberless lines of the naked
all crying
Bodies on the parade ground, scattered like
jumbled stone images
Crowds in piles by the river banks
loaded upon rafts fastened to shore
Turned by and by into corpses
under the scorching sun
in the midst of flame
tossing against the evening sky
Round about the street where mother and
brother were trapped alive under the fallen house
The fire-flood shifted on
On beds of filth along the Armory floor
Heaps, God knew who they were....
Heaps of schoolgirls lying in refuse
Pot-bellied, one-eyed
with half their skin peeled off, bald
The sun shone, and nothing moved
but the buzzing flies in the metal basins
Reeking with stagnant odor
How can I forget that stillness
Prevailing over the city of three hundred thousand?
Amidst that calm
How can I forget the entreaties
Of the departed wife and child
Through their orbs of eyes
Cutting through our minds and souls?
At the First-Aid Station
You
Who weep although you have no ducts for tears
Who cry although you have no lips for words
Who wish to clasp
Although you have no skin to touch
You
Limbs twitching, oozing blood and foul secretions
Eyes all puffed-up slits of white
Tatters of underwear
Your only clothing now
Yet with no thought of shame
Ah! How fresh and lovely you all were
A flash of time ago
When you were school girls, a flash ago
Who could believe it now?
Out from the murky, quivering flames
Of burning, festering Hiroshima
You step, unrecognizable
even to yourselves
You leap and crawl, one by one
Onto this grassy plot
Wisps of hair on bronze bald heads
Into the dust of agony Why have you had to suffer this?
Why this, the cruelest of inflictions?
Was there some purpose?
Why?
You look so monstrous, but could not know
How far removed you are now from mankind
You think:
Perhaps you think
Of mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters
Could even they know you now?
Of sleeping and waking, of breakfast and home
Where the flowers in the hedge scattered in a flash
And even the ashes now have gone
Thinking, thinking, you are thinking
Trapped with friends
who ceased to move, one by one
Thinking when once you were a daughter
A daughter of humanity |
|
Testimony of
Akiko Takakura - A Bomb Survivor |
Ms. Akiko Takakura was 20 years old when the bomb fell. She was in the
Bank of Hiroshima, 300 meters away from the hypocenter. Ms. Takakura
miraculously escaped death despite over 100 lacerated wounds on her back.
She is one of the few survivors who was within 300 meters of the hypocenter.
She now runs a kindergarten and she relates her experience of the atomic
bombing to children.
Takakura: After the air-raid the alarm was called off, I walked from
Hatchobori to the Bank of Hiroshima in Kamiya-cho. I arrived at the bank some
time around 8:15 or so, and signed my name in the attendance book. When I was
doing my morning routine, dusting the desks and things like that, the A-bomb was
dropped. All I remember was that I saw something flash suddenly.
Interviewer: Can you explain the flash?
Takakura: Well, it was like a white magnesium flash. I lost
consciousness right after or almost at the same time I saw the flash. When I
regained consciousness, I found myself in the dark. I heard my friends, Ms.
Asami, crying for her mother. Soon after, I found out that we actually had been
attacked. Afraid of being caught by a fire, I told Ms. Asami to run out of the
building. Ms. Asami, however, just told me to leave her and to try to escape by
myself because she thought that she couldn't make it anywhere. She said she
couldn't move. I said to her that I couldn't leave her, but she said that she
couldn't even stand up. While we were talking, the sky started to grow lighter.
Then, I heard water running in the lavatory. Apparently the water pipes had
exploded. So I drew water with my helmet to pour over Ms. Asami's head again and
again. She finally regained consciousness fully and went out of the building
with me. We first thought to escape to the parade grounds, but we couldn't
because there was a huge sheet of fire in front of us. So instead, we squatted
down in the street next to a big water pool for fighting fires, which was about
the size of this table. Since Hiroshima was completely enveloped in flames, we
felt terribly hot and could not breathe well at all. After a while, a whirlpool
of fire approached us from the south. It was like a big tornado of fire
spreading over the full width of the street. Whenever the fire touched, wherever
the fire touched, it burned. It burned my ear and leg, I didn't realize that I
had burned myself at that moment, but I noticed it later.
Interviewer:
So the fire came towards you?
Takakura: Yes, it did. The whirlpool of fire that was covering
the entire street approached us from Ote-machi. So, everyone just tried so hard
to keep away from the fire. It was just like a living hell. After a while, it
began to rain. The fire and the smoke made us so thirsty and there was nothing
to drink, no water, and the smoke even disturbed our eyes. As it began to rain,
people opened their mouths and turned their faces towards the sky and try to
drink the rain, but it wasn't easy to catch the rain drops in our mouths. It was
a black rain with big drops.
Interviewer: How big were the rain
drops?
Takakura: They were so big that we even felt pain when they
dropped onto us. We opened our mouths just like this, as wide as possible in an
effort to quench our thirst. Everybody did the same thing. But it just wasn't
enough. Someone, someone found an empty can and held it to catch the rain.
Interviewer: I see. Did the black rain actually quench your thirst?
Takakura: No, no it didn't. Maybe I didn't catch enough rain, but I still
felt very thirsty and there was nothing I could do about it. What I felt at that
moment was that Hiroshima was entirely covered with only three colors. I
remember red, black and brown, but, but, nothing else. Many people on the street
were killed almost instantly. The fingertips of those dead bodies caught fire
and the fire gradually spread over their entire bodies from their fingers. A
light gray liquid dripped down their hands, scorching their fingers.
I, I was so shocked to know that fingers and bodies could be burned and
deformed like that. I just couldn't believe it. It was horrible. And looking at
it, it was more than painful for me to think how the fingers were burned, hands
and fingers that would hold babies or turn pages, they just, they just burned
away. For a few years after the A-bomb was dropped, I was terribly afraid of
fire. I wasn't even able to get close to fire because all my senses remembered
how fearful and horrible the fire was, how hot the blaze was, and how hard it
was to breathe the hot air. It was really hard to breathe. Maybe because the
fire burned all the oxygen, I don't know. I could not open my eyes enough
because of the smoke, which was everywhere. Not only me but everyone felt the
same. And my parts were covered with holes. |
|

Testimony of
Yosaku Mikami - A Bomb Survivor
Yosaku Mikami was 32 years old when he was exposed. When the bomb
was exploded, he was on a streetcar which was running in Sendamachi, 1.9 km
from the hypocenter. He was a fireman. On the morning of August 6, he was on
his way back from the night duty to Ujina going to his home in Sakaemachi.
The rest of his family was all evacuated one day before.
"I was stationed at Ujina fire station. Our duty was to work 24 hours
from 8 o'clock in the morning to 8 o'clock in the following morning. We
were divided into 2 groups for the shifts. On that day, August 6, I was
just about to leave work and go home at 8 o'clock in the morning.
Shortly before it, the all clear was sounded. So I started to go home to
Sakaemachi. When I reached the streetcar stop, I found out that I had
missed the car by just a few minutes. So I had to wait about ten minutes
more before I got on the next car. The car passed through Miyuki Bashi
and was approaching the train office, when I saw the blue flash from the
window.
At the same time, smoke filled the car which prevented me even from
seeing person standing directly in front of me. In about half an hour, I
went out of the car. I noticed that the fire was burning everywhere. The
sky was dull as it covered by clouds. I decided to go back to work and I
ran back to the fire station. There was nothing to drink at all. Can you
see there is a streetcar over there near the fire station? When I
reached that corner, I jumped onto the fire truck with my colleagues who
were on duty on that day. I joined them. We drove along the trouble way
but we had to return to the fire station soon because there was too much
fire and we couldn't do anything at all.
When we were on our way back to the station, and approaching the office
of the Tobacco and Salt Public Corporation, we found that the warehouse
was on fire. So we stopped there and went inside to put out the fire.
When the fire had come down, we decided to go to the main fire station
to find out what had happened. We passed by the Miyuki Bridge. It was so
hot as the result of the heat produced by the fire. The electric-light
poles burned down. All of us wore raincoats to protect us from the fire.
We also wore caps for the same purpose. Using buckets, we threw water
over ourselves when we reached the water tanks.
Finally, we reached the main fire station. I guess that about 5 or 6
of my coworkers were there already. Then we were told to take care of
the seriously injured. We drove a chief to a hospital and then we drove
towards Miyuki Bridge and Takano Bridge, where we found a lot of people
dying. There were about 4 or 5 firemen on the fire truck. The men in
good condition were clinging to the side of the car.
We heard many people swearing, screaming, shouting, asking for help.
Since our order was to help the most heavily injured, we searched for
them. We tried to open the eyes of the injured and we found out they
were still alive. We tried to carry them by their arms and legs and to
place them onto the fire truck. But this was difficult because their
skin was peeled off as we tried to move them. They were all heavily
burned.
But they never complained but they felt pain even when their skin was
peeling off. We carried the victims to the prefectural hospital. Soon
afterwards, the hospital was full, so then we carried the injured to the
Akatsuki Military Hospital. On the following day, we decided to visit
the small fire stations throughout the town. I believe there were about
20 or 30 small stations with only 7 or 8 firemen each. Those small
stations were temporary place near police stations and city halls during
war time. The workers stationed at the important places were all killed.
I visited one of the fire stations and inside the burned fire
engine, I found a man who was scorched to death. He looked as if he was
about to start the fire engine to fight the fire. Inside the broken
building, I also found several dead men. I guess they were trapped
inside the building. Many of my colleagues who survived on that day died
one month later. Some of them lost their hair before their death. Yes.
There were lots of firemen who died one or one and half months later. I
feel very sorry for them. I also feel deeply sorry for those who lost
their families. I sincerely hope that there would be no more nuclear
war. "
|
Testimony
of Akihiro Takahashi - A Bomb
Survivor |
Akihiro Takahashi was 14 years old, when the bomb was dropped. he
was standing in line with other students of his junior high school,
waiting for the morning meeting 1.4 km away from the center. He was
under medical treatment for about year and half. And even today
black nail grows at his finger tip, where a piece of glass was
stuck.
"We were about to fall in on the ground the Hiroshima Municipal Junior High
School on this spot. The position of the school building was not so different
from what it is today and the platform was not positioned, too. We were about to
form lines facing the front, we saw a B-29 approaching and about fly over us.
All of us were looking up the sky, pointing out the aircraft. Then the teachers
came out from the school building and the class leaders gave the command to fall
in. Our faces were all shifted from the direction of the sky to that of the
platform. That was the moment when the blast came. And then the tremendous noise
came and we were left in the dark.
I couldn't see anything at the moment of explosion just like in this
picture. We had been blown by the blast. Of course, I couldn't realize
this until the darkness disappeared. I was actually blown about 10 m. My
friends were all marked down on the ground by the blast just like this.
Everything collapsed for as far as I could see. I felt the city of
Hiroshima had disappeared all of a sudden. Then I looked at myself and
found my clothes had turned into rags due to the heat. I was probably
burned at the back of the head, on my back, on both arms and both legs.
My skin was peeling and hanging like this.
Automatically I began to walk heading west because that was the
direction of my home. After a while, I noticed somebody calling my name.
I looked around and found a friend of mine who lived in my town and was
studying at the same school. His name was Yamamoto. He was badly burnt
just like myself. We walked toward the river. And on the way we saw many
victims.
I saw a man whose skin was completely peeled off the upper half of
his body and a woman whose eye balls were sticking out. Her whole baby
was bleeding. A mother and her bady were lying with a skin completely
peeled off. We desperately made a way crawling. And finally we reached
the river bank.
At the same moment, a fire broke out. We made a narrow escape from
the fire. If we had been slower by even one second, we would have been
killed by the fire. Fire was blowing into the sky becoming 4 or even 5m
high. There was a small wooden bridge left, which had not been destroyed
by the blast. I went over to the other side of the river using that
bridge.
But Yamamoto was not with me any more. He was lost somewhere. I
remember I crossed the river by myself and on the other side, I purged
myself into the water three times. The heat was tremendous . And I felt
like my body was burning all over. For my burning body the cold water of
the river was as precious as the treasure. Then I left the river, and I
walked along the railroad tracks in the direction of my home.
On the way, I ran into an another friend of mine, Tokujiro Hatta. I
wondered why the soles of his feet were badly burnt. It was unthinkable
to get burned there. But it was undeniable fact the soles were peeling
and red muscle was exposed. Even I myself was terribly burnt, I could
not go home ignoring him. I made him crawl using his arms and knees.
Next, I made him stand on his heels and I supported him. We walked
heading toward my home repeating the two methods. When we were resting
because we were so exhausted, I found my grandfather's brother and his
wife, in other words, great uncle and great aunt, coming toward us. That
was quite coincidence. As you know, we have a proverb about meeting
Buddha in Hell. My encounter with my relatives at that time was just
like that. They seem to be the Buddha to me wandering in the living
hell.
Afterwards I was under medical treatment for one year and half and I
miraculously recovered. Out of sixty of junior high school classmates,
only ten of us are alive today. Yamamoto and Hatta soon died from the
acute radiation disease. The radiation corroded the bodies and killed
them. I myself am still alive on this earth suffering after-effect of
the bomb. I have to see regularly an ear doctor, an eye doctor, a
dermatologist and a surgeon. I feel uneasy about my health every day.
Further, on both of my hands, I have keloids. My injury was most
serious on my right hand and I used to have terrible keloids at right
here. I had it removed by surgery in 1954, which enabled me to move my
wrist a little bit like this. For my four fingers are fixed just like
this, and my elbow is fixed at one hundred twenty degrees and doesn't
move. The muscle and bones are attached each other.
Also the fourth finger of my right hand doesn't have a normal nail.
It has a black nail. A piece of glass which was blown by the blast stuck
here and destroyed the cells of the base of the finger now. That is why
a black nail continues to grow and from now on, too, it will continue to
be black and never become normal. Anyway I'm alive today together with
nine of my classmates for this forty years.
I've been living believing that we can never waste the depth of the
victims. I've been living on dragging my body full of sickness and from
time to time I question myself I wonder if it is worth living in such
hardship and pain and I become desperate. But it's time I manage to pull
myself together and I tell myself once my life was saved, I should
fulfill my mission as a survivor in other words it has been and it is my
belief that those who survived must continue to talk about our
experiences. The hand down the awful memories to future generations
representing the silent voices of those who had to die in misery.
Throughout my life, I would like to fulfill this mission by talking
about my experience both here in Japan and overseas. |
The Atomic Bombings of
Japan: A 50-Year Retrospective by Col Ralph J. Capio,
USAF, 1995 |
"Know then thyself, presume not God to scan;
The proper study of Mankind is Man.
Placed on this isthmus of a middle state,
A Being darkly wise, and rudely great:
With too much knowledge for the Sceptic side,
With too much weakness for the Stoic's pride,
He hangs between." . . .
Alexander Pope -
Essay on Man |
If 7 December 1941, a date "which will live in infamy,"1
conjures up a vision for Americans of treachery,2
death, and destruction, then Hiroshima and Nagasaki are two names synonymous the
world over with horrific power that, having been unleashed, still threatens
mankind's fragile grip on survival. ("Cry 'Havoc!' and let slip the dogs of
war."3)
If we were to do the same thing today, the consequences would likely be "as
much a punishment to the punisher as to the sufferer."4
Hiroshima and Nagasaki represent an experience of multiple dimensions. What
happened? What led up to the bombings? Why was it done at all? What does it say
about the character of the nation that did it and the nation that received it?
What are the implications? These issues have fascinated historians, military
scholars, and, indeed, the whole world for the past 50 years.
The events leading up to President Harry S Truman's decision to use weapons
of unprecedented mass destruction against Japan are curious and-even
now-controversial. As we approach the 50th anniversary of the bombings, a great
deal of study, debate, and global attention will be paid to the circumstances
that affected the decision. It is imperative that US military officers be aware
of the issues surrounding this singular event.
No doubt, 6 August 1945 began as any other day. Before it ended, something
dramatic occurred that would change the way nations dealt with each
other-perhaps for all time. On this day at 8:15 A.M., the Enola Gay-a B-29
Superfortress named after its pilot's mother-opened its bomb-bay doors over
Hiroshima-at the time, a military center and the seventh largest city in Japan5-and
dropped a single weapon with a destructive capacity of biblical proportions. The
crew on board and the team of scientists who developed the bomb were not sure
whether the weapon would detonate. Nor were they sure what would happen if it
did.6 In the split second in which a blinding
flash of light told the crew of its success, approximately 70,000 souls7-who,
until that fateful moment, had been going about their normal, everyday
lives-perished, and the world changed:
It was a kind of hell on earth, and those who died instantly were among
the more fortunate. Thousands died-vaporized, crushed, or burned. But there
were tens of thousands more who were still alive and those who could move
began to mill about the city, seeking relief from shock, fire, and pain.
Thousands threw themselves into the Ota River, which would be awash with
corpses by the end of the day.8
The bomb dropped that day had been in the making at top-secret laboratories,
by order of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, since December 1941-before Japan's
attack on Pearl Harbor.9 This $2 billion crash
program, code-named Manhattan Project, began in the United States at the
suggestion of physicists Albert Einstein and Leo Szilard, refugees from Nazi
Germany. The scientific community feared-rightly so-that Nazi scientists were
mastering new technology in physics necessary to manufacture such a weapon.
The single weapon ultimately dropped on Hiroshima,10
nicknamed Little Boy, produced a yield of approximately 20,000 tons of
TNT-roughly seven times greater than all of the bombs dropped by all of the
Allies on all of Germany in 1942. It produced an airburst approximately 1,000
feet above the city, creating a fireball with a diameter greater than the length
of three football fields.
The temperature at ground zero reached 5,000 degrees centigrade. The shock
wave and its reverse effect reached speeds close to the speed of sound. A
mushroom cloud rose to 20,000 feet in the air, and 60 percent of the city was
destroyed.11 Three days later, on 9 August, the
United States dropped a second atomic bomb. Its target, Nagasaki-a port city in
southern Japan-was 30 percent destroyed, and approximately 40,000 of its
citizens were killed.12
On 15 August, Japan surrendered-unconditionally-thus ending a world
conflagration in which 50 million people died.13
One of the threshold issues presented by
the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki is the nature of the target itself.
Many people have asked how it came to be that whole civilian populations
could become the proper object of direct and purposeful military action.
That is, the target at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was principally the civilian
population itself.14 There was no
"militarily" significant target to speak of beyond that, although Hiroshima
did support an army headquarters.
The answer has to do, in part, with the changing concept of modern warfare:
World War I ushered in the period of total war, a type of war consisting
of the combination of many allies, enormous cost, unlimited use of highly
destructive weapons, and unlimited war aims. Hostilities were conducted over
greater territory . . . than ever before. More troops were employed,
supported by the home front population.15
As a consequence, the age-old distinction between enemy combatants
and noncombatants began to blur.16 It became
clear that the civilian population was absolutely necessary if a nation were to
successfully prosecute a total war effort. Without economic and war-production
aid from the "civilian front," military war fighters would be less able to
continue their efforts.17 Thus, a gradual
escalation of war fighting occurred, which included a nation's war-fighting
sustainment capability and its civilian population. This trend manifested itself
in the firebombing attacks on Dresden and Tokyo, the V-weapon attacks against
London, and-eventually-the atomic attacks at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The rationale most often proffered to justify the use of such awesome weapons
is "military necessity."18
That is, dropping the bombs actually served to save lives. One must
consider that the immediate military context of the decision to use atomic
weapons was the Okinawa campaign-the last major battle of the war. Located 350
miles off the coast of mainland Japan, Okinawa "was to be used as a jumping-off
place for the long-anticipated invasion of Japan." During the Okinawa campaign,
49,151 US servicemen were killed or wounded.19
Okinawa was the first campaign in which the notorious kamikaze appeared. Over
5,000 American sailors died20 as a result of
approximately 350 kamikaze missions21-the
heaviest toll the US Navy had suffered in any episode of the war, including
Pearl Harbor.22 More than just
militarily significant, the kamikaze represented the totally committed
enemy-even to the point of fanaticism. If a full-scale invasion of the
Japanese home islands became necessary, the kamikaze was a harbinger of the
degree of military difficulty that, in all likelihood, awaited an invasion
force.
In the aftermath of the bitterly fought Okinawa campaign, the president was
clearly concerned that an invasion of the well-defended Japanese homeland could
give rise to an "Okinawa from one end of Japan to the other."23
Years later, in his memoirs, Truman cited Gen George C. Marshall's observation
that approximately 1.5 million soldiers would have been required to invade
Japan. Of this number, 250,000 would likely have been casualties, and an equal
number of Japanese would have died.24
However, some people suggest that recently declassified documents indicate
that no such "official" estimate existed and that estimations of casualties
ranged from a low of about 25,000 to a high of 46,000.25
If true, this would make the figure of 250,000 nothing more than a "postwar
creation"-an effort to justify, in some measure, the use of this weapon on the
grounds of military necessity. Truman also went on to say, perhaps
tellingly, that "the need for such a fateful decision never would have arisen
had we not been shot in the back by Japan at Pearl Harbor in December 1941."26
Moreover, it has been further suggested that American citizens
recognize that pre- and post-Hiroshima dissent was rare in 1945. Indeed,
few then asked why the United States used the atomic bomb on Japan. But had
the bomb not been used, many more, including numerous outraged American
citizens, would have bitterly asked that question of the Truman
administration.27
Was the decision militarily justifiable as a "numbers" analysis? By
this time, was the world so numbed to killing that the bombings were just one
more step in an ongoing process? Or was the decision militarily unnecessary?
Were we trying to "communicate" with the Russians for a better postwar
environment? Even worse, was it an act of vengeance,28
complicated by overtones of racism29 and fanned
by home-front propaganda?30
From our vantage point, we may now be far enough away from these events to
draw conclusions dispassionately yet still be close enough to remember them as
contemporary.31 Thus, I believe it is entirely
appropriate for us to consider these truly difficult-even painful-questions. At
the same time, we must keep in mind that this matter-like other complex
issues-is subject to different interpretations, depending upon the perceptions
and biases of the people being asked about it.
To be sure, servicemen who would have been tasked with the invasion of Japan
were relieved by the bombings. It meant, quite simply, that now they could hope
to "grow up to adulthood after all."32 The
following account, written by a British soldier in 1945, illustrates the point:
I was all set to fly to Okinawa . . . and, since the Japanese had almost
no air defenses, we were to bomb, like the Americans, in daylight.
I found this continuing slaughter of defenseless Japanese even more
sickening than the slaughter of well-defended Germans. But still I did not
quit. By that time I had been at war so long that I could hardly remember
peace. No living poet had words to describe that emptiness of soul which
allowed me to go on killing without hatred and without remorse. But
Shakespeare understood it, and he gave Macbeth the words:
. . . I am in blood
Stepp'd in so far that, should I wade
no more,
Returning were as tedious as go o'er.
I was sitting at home, eating a quiet breakfast with my mother, when the
morning paper arrived with the news of Hiroshima. I understood at once what
it meant. "Thank God for that," I said. I . . . would never have to kill
anybody again.33
The bombings meant something else to the scientists and other people
associated with the development effort.34
Originally tasked with beating Nazi Germany to the punch, they clearly achieved
this objective. However, as the war in Europe ended before Germany could develop
the bomb and before we had any need to use it there, questions began to arise
about whether or not it was necessary-or appropriate-to use the bomb in Japan:
Most of the Manhattan Project scientists, including J. Robert
Oppenheimer, director of the Los Alamos laboratory, tended to favor use of
the bomb. But as the war drew to a close, a growing minority questioned
whether Japan should be the target of the terrible weapon that had been
developed-they felt-mainly as insurance against a Nazi bomb.35
Leo Szilard was this group's most emphatic dissenter. To his credit, he
continued expressing his concerns about the morality of using such
indiscriminate weapons long after the end of the war. After Japan's surrender,
even Oppenheimer became well aware of the implications for mankind:
Today . . . pride must be tempered with a profound concern. If atomic
bombs are to be added as new weapons to the arsenals of . . . [the] world .
. . then the time will come when mankind will curse the names of Los Alamos
and Hiroshima.
The peoples of this world must unite, or they will perish. This war,
that has ravaged so much of the earth, has written these words. The atomic
bomb has spelled them out for all men to understand.36
From the perspective of US government officials who made decisions regarding
the development and use of atomic weapons, the bombings aided in bringing about
the surrender ceremony aboard the USS Missouri.37
While he was still at the Potsdam Conference with Churchill and Stalin,
President Truman found out that that the atomic bomb had been successfully
detonated at Alamogordo, New Mexico.
The conference itself was a difficult give-and-take among the Allies over the
terms upon which the war should be ended and the conditions for the postwar
peace. Buoyed by the Alamogordo success, Truman had decided upon and issued a
harsh ultimatum-the Potsdam Declaration-that called upon Japan to surrender
unconditionally or face "prompt and utter destruction."38
Japan had been subjected to overwhelming aerial bombardment, including
firebombing and carpet bombing of most of its cities and civilian population, as
well as devastating naval blockades by long-range submarines and surface
vessels. Consequently, despite opposition from the imperial army, Japan began to
realize that it had lost the war. Clearly defeated, the Japanese made peace
overtures through the Russians, who had not yet entered the Pacific war. Their
only request was that they be allowed to keep their emperor.39
The Japanese were ready to surrender. However, they hesitated in accepting
Truman's Potsdam Declaration because it was silent-or, at least, ambiguous-on
the subject of the emperor's status. Indeed, many people think that the United
States's insistence on unconditional surrender amounted to "the chief obstacle
to an early Japanese surrender,"40 which then
rose to the level of "tragedy."41
In response to the Potsdam Declaration, the Japanese government issued a
statement to its people, which led to one of history's most consequential
"failures to communicate." While posturing with the Russians, the Japanese
suggested that they were "withholding comment"42
on the Potsdam Declaration. From reports in Japanese newspapers, the United
States concluded that the Japanese believed that the declaration was of "no
great value" and was being "ignored."43 Taking
this response to be a rejection, Truman ordered that the atomic bombs be dropped
as a means of ending the war promptly (and on favorable terms) and of
"influencing" Stalin.
Was this an honest misunderstanding? Did we explore adequately the diplomatic
channels that were clearly open to us? Did we hear only what we, for some reason
or another, wanted to hear? Were we so concerned about Russia and the postwar
peace that we were willing to sacrifice thousands of Japanese men, women, and
children to this awful weapon? Was our insistence on unconditional surrender
driven only by some vague domestic notion-inherited from our own Civil War,44
perhaps-that this was the only true end to a war of this magnitude? Certainly,
these are difficult questions.
But some things seem clear: we did achieve a quick end to the war on
favorable terms; an invasion of Japan was unnecessary; President Truman never
publicly regretted45 his fateful decision;46
and the United States and the Soviet Union were thrust into what was to become
the cold war:
Never had any nation attained such immense power as had the United
States at the end of the Second World War. It had a strong battle-tested
army, a navy more powerful than all the other fleets combined, the world's
greatest air force . . . and in the atomic bomb held the secret of a weapon
capable of such vast destruction that no one had a defense against it.
Just as Americans were dismayed by Russia's politics . . . Russians were
alarmed by American politics . . . and by efforts . . . to confine the
secret of the atom bomb to themselves.47
The single most gripping characteristic of our time has been the reality of
life in the shadow of potential nuclear devastation. We learned to live with
theories of strategic "deterrence," such as mutual assured destruction (MAD).
Just as the arms race escalated, so did uncertainty:
Armed with tens of thousands of nuclear weapons capable of being
launched from land, sea, and air, the United States and the Soviet Union
became prisoners of a cold war process that neither controlled. Locked into
a nuclear arms race justified by national security, they increased their
peril, diminished their economies, and promoted an international atmosphere
of impending catastrophe.
How to prevent the nuclear system from becoming a way of death was the
question that dominated the debate over nuclear weapons from their
inception.48
Such was one of the legacies of the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
From the Japanese perspective, the bombings have had profound implications.
The entire postwar era has been driven, to a large extent, by what happened to
Japan-not only as a vanquished nation, but also as the only nation in the world
to have suffered an atomic attack:
As victims of the advent of atomic weapons, the Japanese people could
argue convincingly that wars were ever more destructive, that a new age in
international affairs was accordingly at hand, and the sovereign prerogative
to go to war must be renounced. No other nation embraced the liberal hope of
the future world order with the enthusiasm of Japan, for no other nation's
recent experiences seemed to bear out the costs of the old ways.49
Consequently, Japan developed an attitude that it could grow into a "modern
industrial nation . . . without arming itself" and, further, that its recent
past "justified devoting national energies entirely to rebuilding the national
livelihood."50 That Japan has been able to
achieve astounding postwar economic growth is clear-so much so, in fact, that
because of this success (attributable, some say, to the government's "favorable"
attitude towards its businesses), the term Japan, Inc.51
has been used, somewhat pejoratively, to describe the phenomenon. As a
corollary, some people believe that Japan has taken unfair advantage of its
attitude against rearmament in general and nuclear weapons in particular. In
fact, some of them think that Japan has had a "free ride":
Criticism grew particularly vocal around the time that Japan's economy
emerged as the third largest in the world. Some critics, in fact, attributed
Japan's economic success to the abnormally low defense burden it carried,
arguing that its remarkable growth was only made possible by US assumption
of the lion's share of the defense burden.52
As the 50th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Japan approaches, the debate
over whether or not the Japanese somehow qualify as "victims" of the war has
already begun. The Smithsonian Institute announced plans to commemorate the
event by holding a special exhibition, including the display of the Enola Gay.
Plans for the exhibition were circulated for public comment and drew an
immediate and adverse reaction, principally from US veterans groups who felt
that the Japanese, by being cast as victims, were escaping from their
responsibility for waging aggressive war and that such an exhibition amounted to
revisionist history. The Smithsonian took these comments under advisement and
cancelled its originally planned exhibit. It now intends simply to exhibit a
portion of the fuselage of the Enola Gay and write a brief explanatory
text.53
Clearly, the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki has had a profound effect-not
only on Japan, but on mankind. Although it stands as historic testament to our
intellectual capacity to discover and harness immense power, it also
demonstrates the fragility of life. We can no longer be certain that such forces
could never destroy us. In exhibiting our willingness to use such power in war,
we have shown a capacity towards self-destruction that bears constant vigilance.
Thus, the advent of the nuclear age forever changed the relationship among
nation-states.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki have shown us that there is, ostensibly, a point
beyond which we will not allow ourselves to be pushed without exhausting all
military resources available to us and that, no matter how costly the
consequences, we are prepared to justify those actions accordingly. Therefore,
we now have "no more important challenge . . . than how to prevent the
unprecedented catastrophe of nuclear war."54 It
is critically important that US military officers carefully consider the lessons
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.&127
Notes
1. President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
address to a joint session of Congress, 7 December 1941.
2. On 22 November 1994, the government of
Japan (GOJ) acknowledged, for the first time, that its
surprise attack on Pearl Harbor was conducted while the
negotiations process was still technically ongoing. Without
actually apologizing, the GOJ indicated that it had
instructed its ministers in Washington to deliver a
diplomatic note indicating that the talks then being
conducted between the US and Japan were terminated. The note
was not delivered until after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
The GOJ's recent statement seemed to offer as an explanation
that their ministers did not recognize the urgent need to
deliver the note. Cable News Network television report, 22
November 1994.
3. Julius Caesar, act 3, sc. 1, line 273.
4. Adrienne Koch and William Peden, eds.,
The Life and Selected Writings of Thomas Jefferson (New
York: The Modern Library, 1944), 529.
5. Kodansha Encyclopedia of Japan, vol. 3
(Tokyo: Kodansha, Ltd., 1983), 149.
6. Some scientists feared that a nuclear
chain reaction, once set in motion, might ignite the earth's
atmosphere or crack the earth's crust at the point of the
bomb's detonation. Peter Wyden, Day One: Before Hiroshima
and After (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1984), 51.
7. "The Effects of Atomic Bombs on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki," in The United States Strategic
Bombing Survey, vol. 7, ed. David MacIsaac (New York:
Garland Publishing, Inc., 1976), 3.
8. William Sweet, The Nuclear Age: Power,
Proliferation and the Arms Race (Washington, D.C.:
Congressional Quarterly, Inc., 1984), 10.
9. For an excellent rendition of the facts
and circumstances leading up to the making and use of the
atomic bombs on Japan, see Wyden.
10. The Outline of Atomic Bomb Damage in
Hiroshima (Hiroshima: The Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum,
March 1990), 4.
11. Wyden, 9-10.
12. The New American Desk Encyclopedia
(New York: Signet Books, 1984), 808.
13. Chronicle of the 20th Century, ed.
Clifton Daniel (Mount Kisco, N.Y.: Chronicle Publications,
1987), 598.
14. Certain Japanese cities had been
"exempted" from bombing and "reserved" for a nuclear weapon.
Hiroshima had been selected as one of these for several
reasons (e.g., its size ["a large part of the city would be
destroyed"] and its adjacent hills [to "focus" the blast
effect]). Wyden, 197.
15. Headquarters, Department of the Army,
International Law, vol. 1 (Washington, D.C.: Government
Printing Office, 1962), 11.
16. Barton J. Bernstein, "The Atomic Bombs
Reconsidered," Foreign Affairs 74, no. 1 (January-February
1995): 135. Some people will contend that Professor
Bernstein argues with a revisionist's logic. Nevertheless,
it is important that military officers be aware of the
issues and their presentation.
17. Hiroshima had "home factories" that
produced artillery, aircraft parts, and machine tools.
Wyden, 197.
18. William Lanouette, "Why We Dropped the
Bomb," Civilization 2, no. 1 (January-February 1995): 28.
19. "Outlook: Database," U.S. News & World
Report, 3 April 1995, 12.
20. John Keegan, The Second World War (New
York: Penguin Books, 1989), 572.
21. "Outlook: Database," 12.
22. Keegan, 561.
23. Ronald H. Spector, Eagle against the
Sun: The American War with Japan (New York: Free Press,
1985), 543.
24. Keegan, 574.
25. Eric Foner and John A. Garraty, eds.,
The Reader's Companion to American History (Boston:
Houghton-Mifflin Co., 1991), 799.
26. Chronicle of the 20th Century, 811.
27. Bernstein, 152.
28. Soon after the Hiroshima bomb was
dropped, President Truman received a number of entreaties
that such weapons not be used again. In response to one such
request by the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in
America, President Truman articulated what was quite
probably the existing sentiment among most Western nations
at the time, when he said, "Nobody is more disturbed over
the use of the atomic bomb than I am, but I was greatly
disturbed over the unwarranted attack by the Japanese on
Pearl Harbor and their murder of our prisoners of war. The
only language they seem to understand is the one we have
been using to bombard them. When you have to deal with a
beast, you have to treat him as a beast." Wyden, 294.
29. The internment of Japanese-Americans
at the outbreak of hostilities is, of course, a well-known
event in American history. Additionally, American attitudes
during the war have been described as follows: "The
Americans never seemed to be as morally sensitive about
bombing Japan as they were about attacking Germany. The
attacks on Japan were ferocious and indiscriminate. There
were several reasons for this. In the first place, in the
war with Germany, the Americans distinguished between the
Nazis, who were the real enemy, and the German people, who
were at least partly victims. No such distinction was made
when considering the Japanese; the entire population of
Japan was perceived as the enemy. Further, there was a
racial prejudice against the Japanese that the Americans did
not feel towards the Germans." Louis A. Manzo, "Morality in
War Fighting and Strategic Bombing in World War II," Air
Power History 39, no. 3 (Fall 1992): 35-50.
30. In commemoration of the 50th
anniversary of the United States's participation in World
War II, the National Archives conducted a spectacular
exhibit entitled "Powers of Persuasion," from February 1994
to February 1995. It was an exhibition of poster art from
World War II advocating bond drives, scrap drives, ration
plans, and patriotism. This latter concept sometimes took
the form of very aggressive posters sensationally depicting
the "evils" of Japan and Germany. One such poster
characterized the Japanese and Germans as vermin, the clear
implication being that they should be "exterminated."
Archibald MacLeish-at the time, director of the forerunner
of the Office of War Information-described the power and
purpose of such World War II "information" campaigns as
follows: "The principal battleground of this war is not the
South Pacific. It is not the Middle East. It is not England,
or Norway, or the Russian Steppes. It is American opinion."
Stacy Bredhoff, Powers of Persuasion (Washington, D.C.:
Government Printing Office, 1994), i.
31. Indeed, the timing of such an inquiry
is important. As Thucydides instructs us, it is difficult
"because of its remoteness in time, to acquire a really
precise knowledge of the distant past or even of the history
preceding our own period." Thucydides, History of the
Peloponnesian War, trans. Rex Warner (Baltimore, Md.:
Penguin Books, 1954), 13.
32. Spector, 559.
33. Freeman Dyson, Weapons and Hope (New
York: Harper & Row, 1984), 121.
34. For a complete and current description
of Dr Oppenheimer's role in the Manhattan Project and the
attitudes he and his fellow scientists developed towards the
atom bomb and its use, see "Oppenheimer Investigated," The
Wilson Quarterly 18, no. 4 (Autumn 1994): 34.
35. Sweet, 14.
36. Dyson, 16.
37. Alexander DeConde, A History of
American Foreign Policy, 3d ed., vol. 2, Global Power: 1900
to the Present (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1978),
200-203.
38. Wyden, 226.
39. Charles Strozier, "The Tragedy of
Unconditional Surrender," in Experience of War: An Anthology
of Articles from MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military
History, ed. Robert Cowley (New York: W. W. Norton & Co.,
1992), 505-10.
40. Spector, 545.
41. Strozier, 505.
42. The Japanese word mokusatu was used by
Prime Minister Suzuki to describe his government's reaction
to the declaration. This word could be interpreted to mean
anything from "ignore" to "treat with contempt." Wyden, 233.
43. Spector, 549.
44. For an interesting discussion of the
importance of unconditional surrender, see Garry Wills,
Lincoln at Gettysburg: The Words That Remade America (New
York: Simon & Schuster, 1992), 135.
45. Spector, 554.
46. Cabell B. H. Phillips, The Truman
Presidency: The History of a Triumphant Succession (New
York: Macmillan Co., 1966), 57.
47. DeConde, 204.
48. Foner and Garraty, 798.
49. Daniel Okimoto and Thomas P. Rohlen,
eds., Inside the Japanese System (Palo Alto, Calif.:
Stanford University Press, 1988), 236.
50. Ibid.
51. Ibid., 172, 217.
52. "The Common Security Interests of
Japan, the United States, and NATO," in Joint Working Group
of the Atlantic Council of the U.S. and the Research
Institute for Peace and Security (Cambridge, Mass.:
Ballinger Publishing Co., 1981), 109.
53. David Umansky, director, Office of
Public Affairs, Smithsonian Institute, Washington, D.C.,
telephone interview with author, 4 May 1995. Umansky
distinguishes between a "commemorative" exhibit and an
"informational" exhibit. He states that the institute's
original plans impermissibly blended the two and, upon
reflection, the exhibit was cancelled and a new
commemorative-only exhibit will be conducted.
54. National Academy of Sciences,
Committee on International Security and Arms Control,
Nuclear Arms Control: Background and Issues (Washington,
D.C.: National Academy Press, 1985), ix.
Disclaimer
The conclusions and opinions expressed in
this document are those of the author cultivated in the
freedom of expression, academic environment of Air
University. They do not reflect the official position of the
US Government, Department of Defense, the United States Air
Force or the Air University.
|
Hiroshima and Nagasaki: Worst terror attacks in history
Green Left Weekly, 3 August 2005 |
August 6 and August 9 will mark the 60th anniversaries of the US
atomic-bomb attacks on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki. In Hiroshima, an estimated 80,000 people were
killed in a split second. Some 13 square kilometres of the
city was obliterated. By December, at least another 70,000
people had died from radiation and injuries.
Three days after Hiroshima's destruction, the US dropped an
A-bomb on Nagasaki, resulting in the deaths of at least
70,000
people before the year was out.
Since 1945, tens of thousands more residents of the two cities
have continued to suffer and die from radiation-induced cancers,
birth defects and still births.
A tiny group of US rulers met secretly in Washington and
callously ordered this indiscriminate annihilation of civilian
populations. They gave no explicit warnings. They
rejected all alternatives, preferring to inflict the most
extreme human carnage possible. They ordered and had carried
out the two worst terror acts in human history.
The 60th anniversaries will inevitably be marked by countless
mass media commentaries and speeches repeating the 60-year-old
mantra that there was no other choice but to use A-bombs in
order to avoid a bitter, prolonged invasion of Japan.
On July 21, the British New Scientist magazine undermined this
chorus when it reported that two historians had uncovered
evidence revealing that “the US decision to drop atomic bombs on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki ... was meant to kick-start the Cold War
[against the Soviet Union, Washington's war-time ally] rather
than end the Second World War”. Peter Kuznick, director of the
Nuclear Studies Institute at the American University in
Washington stated that US President Harry Truman's decision to
blast the cities “was not just a war crime, it was a crime
against humanity”.
With Mark Selden, a historian from Cornell University in New
York, Kuznick studied the diplomatic archives of the US, Japan
and the USSR. They found that three days before Hiroshima,
Truman agreed at a meeting that Japan was “looking for peace”.
His senior generals and political advisers told him there was no
need to use the A-bomb. But the bombs were dropped anyway.
“Impressing Russia was more important than ending the war”,
Selden told the New Scientist.
While the ...media immediately dubbed the historians' “theory”
“controversial”, it accords with the testimony of many central
US political and military players at the time, including General
Dwight Eisenhower, who stated bluntly in a 1963 Newsweek
interview that “the Japanese were ready to surrender and it
wasn't necessary to hit them with that awful thing”.
Truman's chief of staff, Admiral William Leahy, stated in his
memoirs that “the use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and
Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan.
The Japanese were already defeated and ready to surrender.”
At the time though, Washington cold-bloodedly decided to
obliterate the lives of hundreds of thousands of men, women and
children to show off the terrible power of its new super weapon
and underline the US rulers' ruthless preparedness to use it.
These terrible acts were intended to warn the leaders of the
Soviet Union that their cities would suffer the same fate if the
USSR attempted to stand in the way of Washington's plans to
create an “American Century” of US global domination. Nuclear
scientist Leo Szilard recounted to his biographers how Truman's
secretary of state, James Byrnes, told him before the Hiroshima
attack that “Russia might be more manageable if impressed by
American military might and that a demonstration of the bomb may
impress Russia”...
Washington's policy of nuclear terror remains intact. The US
refuses to rule out the first use of nuclear weapons in a
conflict. Its latest Nuclear Posture Review envisages the use of
nuclear weapons against non-nuclear “rogue states” and it is
developing a new generation of ‘battlefield” nuclear weapons.
Fear of the political backlash that would be caused in the US
and around the globe by the use of nuclear weapons remains the
main restraint upon ...Washington. On this 60th anniversary year
of history's worst acts of terror, the most effective thing that
peace-loving people around the world can do to keep that fear
alive in the minds of the US rulers is to recommit ourselves to
defeating Washington's current “local” wars of terror in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
|
Hiroshima,
Nagasaki & Christian Morality
- Patrick J. Buchanan -
WorldNet Daily. August 10, 2005 "If terrorism is the massacre of innocents
to break the will of rulers, were not Hiroshima and Nagasaki terrorism on a
colossal scale?" |
On the 40th, 50th and 60th anniversaries of D-Day, Presidents Reagan, Clinton
and George W. Bush traveled to Normandy to lead us in tribute to the bravery of
the Greatest Generation of Americans, who had liberated Europe. Always a deeply
moving occasion.
The 40th, 50th and 60th anniversaries of the dropping of the atom bombs on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, however, were not times of celebration or warm
remembrance. Angry arguments for and against the dropping of the bombs roil the
airwaves and fill the press.
And the reason is obvious. While World War II was a just war against enemies
whose crimes, from Nanking to Auschwitz, will live in infamy, the means we used
must trouble any Christian conscience.
That good came out of Hiroshima and Nagasaki is undeniable. In a week, Japan
surrendered, World War II ended and, across the Japanese empire, soldiers laid
down their arms. Thousands of U.S. soldiers and hundreds of thousands of
Japanese who would have perished in an invasion of Japan survived, as did Allied
POWs who might have been executed on the orders of Japanese commanders when we
landed.
But were the means used – the destruction in seconds of two cities, inflicting
instant death on 120,000 men, women and children, and an agonizing death from
burns and radiation on scores of thousands more – moral?
Truman's defenders argue that by using the bomb, he saved more lives than were
lost in those cities. Only the atom bombs, they contend, could have shocked
Japan's warlords into surrender.
But if terrorism is the massacre of innocents to break the will of rulers, were
not Hiroshima and Nagasaki terrorism on a colossal scale?
Churchill did not deny what the Allied air war was about. Before departing for
Yalta, he ordered Operation Thunderclap, a campaign to "de-house" civilians to
clog roads so German soldiers could not move to stop the offensive of the Red
Army. British Air Marshal "Bomber" Harris put Dresden, a jewel of a city and
haven for hundreds of thousands of terrified refugees, on the target list.
On the first night, 770 Lancasters arrived around 10:00. In two waves, 650,000
incendiary bombs rained down, along with 1,474 tons of high explosives. The next
morning, 500 B-17s arrived in two waves, with 300 fighter escorts to strafe
fleeing survivors.
Estimates of the dead in the Dresden firestorm range from 35,000 to 250,000.
Wrote the Associated Press, "Allied war chiefs have made the long-awaited
decision to adopt deliberate terror bombing of German populated centers as a
ruthless expedient to hasten Hitler's doom."
In a memo to his air chiefs, Churchill revealed what Dresden had been about, "It
seems to me that the moment has come when the question of bombing of German
cities simply for the sake of increasing the terror, though under other
pretexts, should be reviewed."
Gens. MacArthur, Eisenhower, "Hap" Arnold and Curtis LeMay reportedly felt the
atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was unnecessary. But recent documents
have surfaced to show the Japanese warlords were far more determined to fight on
to a bloody finish in the home islands than previously known.
Yet, whatever the mindset of Japan's warlords in August 1945, the moral question
remains. In a just war against an evil enemy, is the deliberate slaughter of his
women and children in the thousands justified to break his will to fight?
Traditionally, the Christian's answer has been no.
Truman's defenders argue that the number of U.S. dead in any invasion would have
been not 46,000, as one military estimate predicted, but 500,000. Others contend
the cities were military targets.
But with Japan naked to our B-29s, her surface navy at the bottom of the
Pacific, the home islands blockaded, what was the need to invade at all? On his
island-hopping campaign back to the Philippines, MacArthur routinely bypassed
Japanese strongholds like Rabaul, cut them off and left them to "rot on the
vine."
And if Truman considered Hiroshima and Nagasaki military targets, why, in the
Cabinet meeting of Aug. 10, as historian Ralph Raico relates, did he explain his
reluctance to drop a third bomb thus: "The thought of wiping out another 100,000
people was too horrible," he said. He didn't like the idea of killing "all those
kids."
Of Truman's decision, his own chief of staff, Adm. William Leahy, wrote: "This
use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no material
assistance in our war against Japan. My own feeling was that in being the first
to use it, we had adopted an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the
Dark Ages. I was not taught to make wars in that fashion.."
|
Hiroshima and
Nagasaki by Ralph Raico in "Harry S. Truman: Advancing the Revolution"
in
John V. Denson, ed., Reassessing the Presidency: The Rise of the Executive State
and the Decline of Freedom, 2001
The most spectacular episode of
Truman’s presidency will never be forgotten, but will be forever linked to his
name: the atomic bombings of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, and of Nagasaki three
days later. Probably around two hundred thousand persons were killed in the
attacks and through radiation poisoning; the vast majority were civilians,
including several thousand Korean workers. Twelve U.S. Navy fliers incarcerated
in a Hiroshima jail were also among the dead.87
Great controversy has
always surrounded the bombings. One thing Truman insisted on from the start: The
decision to use the bombs, and the responsibility it entailed, was his. Over the
years, he gave different, and contradictory, grounds for his decision. Sometimes
he implied that he had acted simply out of revenge. To a clergyman who
criticized him, Truman responded, testily:
Nobody is more disturbed over
the use of Atomic bombs than I am but I was greatly disturbed over the
unwarranted attack by the Japanese on Pearl Harbor and their murder of our
prisoners of war. The only language they seem to understand is the one we have
been using to bombard them.88
Such reasoning will not impress anyone who
fails to see how the brutality of the Japanese military could justify deadly
retaliation against innocent men, women, and children. Truman doubtless was
aware of this, so from time to time he advanced other pretexts. On August 9,
1945, he stated: "The world will note that the first atomic bomb was dropped on
Hiroshima, a military base. That was because we wished in this first attack to
avoid, insofar as possible, the killing of civilians."89
This, however,
is absurd. Pearl Harbor was a military base. Hiroshima was a city, inhabited by
some three hundred thousand people, which contained military elements. In any
case, since the harbor was mined and the U.S. Navy and Air Force were in control
of the waters around Japan, whatever troops were stationed in Hiroshima had been
effectively neutralized.
On other occasions, Truman claimed that
Hiroshima was bombed because it was an industrial center. But, as noted in the
U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey, "all major factories in Hiroshima were on the
periphery of the city – and escaped serious damage."90 The target was the center
of the city. That Truman realized the kind of victims the bombs consumed is
evident from his comment to his cabinet on August 10, explaining his reluctance
to drop a third bomb: "The thought of wiping out another 100,000 people was too
horrible," he said; he didn’t like the idea of killing "all those kids."91
Wiping out another one hundred thousand people . . . all those kids.
Moreover, the notion that Hiroshima was a major military or industrial center is
implausible on the face of it. The city had remained untouched through years of
devastating air attacks on the Japanese home islands, and never figured in
Bomber Command’s list of the 33 primary targets.92
Thus, the rationale
for the atomic bombings has come to rest on a single colossal fabrication, which
has gained surprising currency: that they were necessary in order to save a
half-million or more American lives. These, supposedly, are the lives that would
have been lost in the planned invasion of Kyushu in December, then in the
all-out invasion of Honshu the next year, if that was needed.
But the worst-case scenario for a full-scale invasion of the Japanese home
islands was forty-six thousand American lives lost.93
The ridiculously inflated figure of a half-million for the potential death
toll – nearly twice the total of U.S. dead in all theaters in the Second World
War – is now routinely repeated in high-school and college textbooks and bandied
about by ignorant commentators. Unsurprisingly, the prize for sheer fatuousness
on this score goes to President George H.W. Bush, who claimed in 1991 that
dropping the bomb "spared millions of American lives."94
Still, Truman’s
multiple deceptions and self-deceptions are understandable, considering the
horror he unleashed. It is equally understandable that the U.S. occupation
authorities censored reports from the shattered cities and did not permit films
and photographs of the thousands of corpses and the frightfully mutilated
survivors to reach the public.95 Otherwise, Americans – and the rest of the
world – might have drawn disturbing comparisons to scenes then coming to light
from the Nazi concentration camps.
The bombings were condemned as
barbaric and unnecessary by high American military officers, including
Eisenhower and MacArthur.96 The view of Admiral William D. Leahy, Truman’s own
chief of staff, was typical:
the use of this barbarous weapon at
Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan. .
. . My own feeling was that in being the first to use it, we had adopted an
ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages. I was not taught to
make wars in that fashion, and wars cannot be won by destroying women and
children.97
The political elite implicated in the atomic bombings feared
a backlash that would aid and abet the rebirth of horrid prewar "isolationism."
Apologias were rushed into print, lest public disgust at the sickening war crime
result in erosion of enthusiasm for the globalist project.98 No need to worry. A
sea-change had taken place in the attitudes of the American people. Then and
ever after, all surveys have shown that the great majority supported Truman,
believing that the bombs were required to end the war and save hundreds of
thousands of American lives, or more likely, not really caring one way or the
other.
Those who may still be troubled by such a grisly exercise in
cost-benefit analysis – innocent Japanese lives balanced against the lives of
Allied servicemen – might reflect on the judgment of the Catholic philosopher
G.E.M. Anscombe, who insisted on the supremacy of moral rules.99 When, in June
1956, Truman was awarded an honorary degree by her university, Oxford, Anscombe
protested.100 Truman was a war criminal, she contended, for what is the
difference between the U.S. government massacring civilians from the air, as at
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the Nazis wiping out the inhabitants of some Czech
or Polish village?
Anscombe’s point is worth following up. Suppose that,
when we invaded Germany in early 1945, our leaders had believed that executing
all the inhabitants of Aachen, or Trier, or some other Rhineland city would
finally break the will of the Germans and lead them to surrender. In this way,
the war might have ended quickly, saving the lives of many Allied soldiers.
Would that then have justified shooting tens of thousands of German civilians,
including women and children? Yet how is that different from the atomic
bombings?
By early summer 1945, the Japanese fully realized that they
were beaten. Why did they nonetheless fight on? As Anscombe wrote: "It was the
insistence on unconditional surrender that was the root of all evil."101
That mad formula was coined by Roosevelt at the Casablanca conference, and, with
Churchill’s enthusiastic concurrence, it became the Allied shibboleth. After
prolonging the war in Europe, it did its work in the Pacific. At the Potsdam
conference, in July 1945, Truman issued a proclamation to the Japanese,
threatening them with the "utter devastation" of their homeland unless they
surrendered unconditionally. Among the Allied terms, to which "there are no
alternatives," was that there be "eliminated for all time the authority and
influence of those who have deceived and misled the people of Japan into
embarking on world conquest [sic]." "Stern justice," the proclamation warned,
"would be meted out to all war criminals."102
To the Japanese, this
meant that the emperor – regarded by them to be divine, the direct descendent of
the goddess of the sun – would certainly be dethroned and probably put on trial
as a war criminal and hanged, perhaps in front of his palace.103 It was not, in
fact, the U.S. intention to dethrone or punish the emperor. But this implicit
modification of unconditional surrender was never communicated to the Japanese.
In the end, after Nagasaki, Washington acceded to the Japanese desire to keep
the dynasty and even to retain Hirohito as emperor.
For months before, Truman had been pressed to clarify the U.S. position
by many high officials within the administration, and outside of it, as well. In
May 1945, at the president’s request, Herbert Hoover prepared a memorandum
stressing the urgent need to end the war as soon as possible. The Japanese
should be informed that we would in no way interfere with the emperor or their
chosen form of government. He even raised the possibility that, as part of the
terms, Japan might be allowed to hold on to Formosa (Taiwan) and Korea. After
meeting with Truman, Hoover dined with Taft and other Republican leaders, and
outlined his proposals.104
Establishment writers on World War II often
like to deal in lurid speculations. For instance: if the United States had not
entered the war, then Hitler would have "conquered the world" (a sad
undervaluation of the Red Army, it would appear; moreover, wasn’t it Japan that
was trying to "conquer the world"?) and killed untold millions.
Now, applying conjectural history in this case: assume that the Pacific war
had ended in the way wars customarily do – through negotiation of the terms of
surrender. And assume the worst – that the Japanese had adamantly insisted on
preserving part of their empire, say, Korea and Formosa, even Manchuria. In that
event, it is quite possible that Japan would have been in a position to prevent
the Communists from coming to power in China. And that could have meant that the
thirty or forty million deaths now attributed to the Maoist regime would not
have occurred.
But even remaining within the limits of feasible
diplomacy in 1945, it is clear that Truman in no way exhausted the possibilities
of ending the war without recourse to the atomic bomb. The Japanese were not
informed that they would be the victims of by far the most lethal weapon ever
invented (one with "more than two thousand times the blast power of the British
‘Grand Slam,’ which is the largest bomb ever yet used in the history of
warfare," as Truman boasted in his announcement of the Hiroshima attack). Nor
were they told that the Soviet Union was set to declare war on Japan, an event
that shocked some in Tokyo more than the bombings.105 Pleas by some of the
scientists involved in the project to demonstrate the power of the bomb in some
uninhabited or evacuated area were rebuffed. All that mattered was to formally
preserve the unconditional surrender formula and save the servicemen’s lives
that might have been lost in the effort to enforce it. Yet, as Major General
J.F.C. Fuller, one of the century’s great military historians, wrote in
connection with the atomic bombings:
Though to save life is laudable, it
in no way justifies the employment of means which run counter to every precept
of humanity and the customs of war. Should it do so, then, on the pretext of
shortening a war and of saving lives, every imaginable atrocity can be
justified.106
Isn’t this obviously true? And isn’t this the reason that
rational and humane men, over generations, developed rules of warfare in the
first place?
While the mass media parroted the government line in
praising the atomic incinerations, prominent conservatives denounced them as
unspeakable war crimes. Felix Morley, constitutional scholar and one of the
founders of Human Events, drew attention to the horror of Hiroshima, including
the "thousands of children trapped in the thirty-three schools that were
destroyed." He called on his compatriots to atone for what had been done in
their name, and proposed that groups of Americans be sent to Hiroshima, as
Germans were sent to witness what had been done in the Nazi camps. The Paulist
priest, Father James Gillis, editor of The Catholic World and another stalwart
of the Old Right, castigated the bombings as "the most powerful blow ever
delivered against Christian civilization and the moral law." David Lawrence,
conservative owner of U.S. News and World Report, continued to denounce them for
years.107 The distinguished conservative philosopher Richard Weaver was revolted
by the spectacle of young boys fresh out of Kansas and Texas turning nonmilitary
Dresden into a holocaust . . . pulverizing ancient shrines like Monte Cassino
and Nuremberg, and bringing atomic annihilation to Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Weaver considered such atrocities as deeply "inimical to the foundations on
which civilization is built."108
Today, self-styled conservatives slander
as "anti-American" anyone who is in the least troubled by Truman’s massacre of
so many tens of thousands of Japanese innocents from the air. This shows as well
as anything the difference between today’s "conservatives" and those who once
deserved the name.
Leo Szilard was the world-renowned physicist who drafted the original
letter to Roosevelt that Einstein signed, instigating the Manhattan Project. In
1960, shortly before his death, Szilard stated another obvious truth:
If
the Germans had dropped atomic bombs on cities instead of us, we would have
defined the dropping of atomic bombs on cities as a war crime, and we would have
sentenced the Germans who were guilty of this crime to death at Nuremberg and
hanged them.109
The destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was a war crime
worse than any that Japanese generals were executed for in Tokyo and Manila. If
Harry Truman was not a war criminal, then no one ever was.
Notes
- On the atomic
bombings, see Gar Alperovitz,
The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb and the Architecture of an American
Myth
(New York: Knopf, 1995); and idem, "Was Harry Truman a Revisionist on
Hiroshima?" Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations
Newsletter 29, no. 2 (June 1998); also Martin J. Sherwin,
A World Destroyed: The Atomic Bomb and the Grand Alliance (New
York: Vintage, 1977); and Dennis D. Wainstock,
The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb (Westport, Conn.: Praeger,
1996).
- Alperovitz,
Decision, p. 563. Truman added: "When you deal with a beast you have
to treat him as a beast. It is most regrettable but nevertheless true."
For similar statements by Truman, see ibid., p. 564. Alperovitz’s
monumental work is the end-product of four decades of study of the
atomic bombings and is indispensable for comprehending the often complex
argumentation on the issue.
- Ibid., p. 521.
- Ibid., p. 523.
- Barton J.
Bernstein, "Understanding the Atomic Bomb and the Japanese Surrender:
Missed Opportunities, Little-Known Near Disasters, and Modern Memory,"
Diplomatic History 19, no. 2 (Spring 1995): 257. General Carl
Spaatz, commander of U.S. strategic bombing operations in the Pacific,
was so shaken by the destruction at Hiroshima that he telephoned his
superiors in Washington, proposing that the next bomb be dropped on a
less populated area, so that it "would not be as devastating to the city
and the people." His suggestion was rejected. Ronald Schaffer,
Wings of Judgment: American Bombing in World War II (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1985), pp. 147–48.
- This is true
also of Nagasaki.
- See Barton J.
Bernstein, "A Post-War Myth: 500,000 U.S. Lives Saved," Bulletin of
the Atomic Scientists 42, no. 6 (June–July 1986): 38–40; and idem,
"Wrong Numbers," The Independent Monthly (July 1995): 41–44.
- J. Samuel
Walker, "History, Collective Memory, and the Decision to Use the Bomb,"
Diplomatic History 19, no. 2 (Spring 1995): 320, 323–25. Walker
details the frantic evasions of Truman’s biographer, David McCullough,
when confronted with the unambiguous record.
- Paul Boyer,
"Exotic Resonances: Hiroshima in American Memory," Diplomatic History
19, no. 2 (Spring 1995): 299. On the fate of the bombings’ victims and
the public’s restricted knowledge of them, see John W. Dower, "The
Bombed: Hiroshimas and Nagasakis in Japanese Memory," in ibid., pp.
275–95.
- Alperovitz,
Decision, pp. 320–65. On MacArthur and Eisenhower, see ibid., pp.
352 and 355–56.
- William D.
Leahy,
I Was There (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1950), p. 441. Leahy
compared the use of the atomic bomb to the treatment of civilians by
Genghis Khan, and termed it "not worthy of Christian man." Ibid., p.
442. Curiously, Truman himself supplied the foreword to Leahy’s book. In
a private letter written just before he left the White House, Truman
referred to the use of the atomic bomb as "murder," stating that the
bomb "is far worse than gas and biological warfare because it affects
the civilian population and murders them wholesale." Barton J.
Bernstein, "Origins of the U.S. Biological Warfare Program,"
Preventing a Biological Arms Race, Susan Wright, ed. (Cambridge,
Mass.: MIT Press, 1990), p. 9.
- Barton J.
Bernstein, "Seizing the Contested Terrain of Early Nuclear History:
Stimson, Conant, and Their Allies Explain the Decision to Use the Bomb,"
Diplomatic History 17, no. 1 (Winter 1993): 35–72.
- One writer in no
way troubled by the sacrifice of innocent Japanese to save Allied
servicemen – indeed, just to save him – is Paul Fussell; see his
Thank God for the Atom Bomb and Other Essays (New York: Summit,
1988). The reason for Fussell’s little Te Deum is, as he states,
that he was among those scheduled to take part in the invasion of Japan,
and might very well have been killed. It is a mystery why Fussell takes
out his easily understandable terror, rather unchivalrously, on Japanese
women and children instead of on the men in Washington who conscripted
him to fight in the Pacific in the first place.
- G.E.M. Anscombe,
"Mr. Truman’s Degree," in idem,
Collected Philosophical Papers, vol. 3,
Ethics, Religion and Politics (Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press, 1981), pp. 62–71.
- Anscombe, "Mr.
Truman’s Degree," p. 62.
- Hans Adolf
Jacobsen and Arthur S. Smith, Jr., eds.,
World War II: Policy and Strategy. Selected Documents with Commentary
(Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-Clio, 1979), pp. 345–46.
- For some
Japanese leaders, another reason for keeping the emperor was as a
bulwark against a possible postwar communist takeover. See also Sherwin,
A World Destroyed,
p. 236: "the [Potsdam] proclamation offered the military die-hards in
the Japanese government more ammunition to continue the war than it
offered their opponents to end it."
- Alperovitz,
Decision, pp. 44–45.
- Cf. Bernstein,
"Understanding the Atomic Bomb," p. 254: "it does seem very likely,
though certainly not definite, that a synergistic combination of
guaranteeing the emperor, awaiting Soviet entry, and continuing the
siege strategy would have ended the war in time to avoid the November
invasion." Bernstein, an excellent and scrupulously objective scholar,
nonetheless disagrees with Alperovitz and the revisionist school on
several key points.
- J.F.C. Fuller,
The Second World War, 1939–45: A Strategical and Tactical History
(London: Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1948), p. 392. Fuller, who was similarly
scathing on the terror-bombing of the German cities, characterized the
attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki as "a type of war that would have
disgraced Tamerlane." Cf. Barton J. Bernstein, who concludes, in
"Understanding the Atomic Bomb," p. 235:
In 1945, American
leaders were not seeking to avoid the use of the A-bomb. Its use did not
create ethical or political problems for them. Thus, they easily
rejected or never considered most of the so-called alternatives to the
bomb.
- Felix Morley,
"The Return to Nothingness," Human Events (August 29, 1945)
reprinted in
Hiroshima’s Shadow,
Kai Bird and Lawrence Lifschultz, eds. (Stony Creek, Conn.:
Pamphleteer’s Press, 1998), pp. 272–74; James Martin Gillis, "Nothing
But Nihilism," The Catholic World, September 1945, reprinted in
ibid., pp. 278–80; Alperovitz, Decision, pp. 438–40.
- Richard M.
Weaver, "A Dialectic on Total War," in idem,
Visions of Order: The Cultural Crisis of Our Time (Baton Rouge:
Louisiana State University Press, 1964), pp. 98–99.
- Wainstock,
Decision, p. 122.
|
Hiroshima
to New York: a tale of terrorism - ND Jayaprakash, Delhi Science Forum,
2001 |
|
The terrorist assault on various targets in the United States of America on 11th
September 2001 is an extremely cowardly act that deserves to be condemned in no
uncertain terms. The tragic loss of life resulting from the dastardly act is a
reminder of the fact that it is invariably innocent people who get slaughtered
in the vicious games which contending political interests in the world keep
playing.
The premeditated attack was apparently in retaliation for the repressive and
wayward policies pursued by the U.S. Administration across the globe, which have
had adverse impact on a sizeable section of humanity. In the recent past it is
mostly people in West Asia who have had to bear the brunt of such policies.
However, under no circumstances can there be any justification for wreaking the
wrath generated against the U.S. Administration on ordinary citizens of the
United States, who do not play any direct role in the formulation of the
policies in question.
The death toll in the gruesome tragedy is estimated to be over 6500. Thousands
of people, not only in the United States but also from a number of other
countries including India, have suddenly lost their near and dear ones. The pain
and agony left by the tragedy was very palpable everywhere. The harrowing trauma
that the passengers and crew of the hijacked airplanes underwent before they
crashed can be well imagined.
The sight of scores of people helplessly looking out from windows on the
upper floors of the World Trade Center's burning 110-storey twin towers in New
York was an extremely poignant sight to watch. What followed was even more
chilling. While some jumped into the air in a desperate bid to escape from the
advancing fire, others just got engulfed in it. The fate of those who jumped
from that height to the ground several hundred feet below was predictable.
The nightmarish experience could not have been any better for those who were
trapped in the crumbling twin towers till they were crushed to death by the
falling debris. The ghastly images and heart-rending scenes that were flashed on
all television channels is a grim reminder of what terrorism has done and what
terrorism can do.
Selective Amnesia
Most of the news-broadcasters compared the shocking event to the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor. Some others called it the biggest terrorist attack of
all time, an attack that was directed not only against the United States but
also against all humanity. They continue to say so. It is, indeed, very
unfortunate that not one of them from the major broadcasting media - BBC, CNN,
Fox News, etc. - compared the 11th September attack to a very similar event but
of far greater magnitude, a horrendous one that was a turning point in the
history of the twentieth century. How is that even a passing reference to that
unforgettable and earth-shaking event has not been made by any one in the media
or by any of the spokespersons of the major governments?
Even in this hour of grief there can be no justification for resorting to
selective amnesia. How could those manning responsible posts today not remember
the dawning of the age of nuclear madness! Perhaps nobody wants to draw
attention to the fact that it was the U.S. Administration, which was guilty of
committing the biggest and most gruesome terrorist attack ever. By their
decision to use atomic bombs, the U.S. leadership had wiped out more than
two-thirds of the population of two Japanese cities. In that cold-blooded and
unprovoked terrorist attack on the Japanese civilian population, the death toll
was seventy times more than the lives lost in the U.S. on 11th September and the
area of destruction was far greater. One terrorist attack certainly cannot
justify another. However, the concerted attempt to conceal the U.S.
Administration's unsavoury legacy is very glaring.
Cause for Celebration?
All reports show that, after the terrorist attack of 11th September, a pall of
gloom has descended over the United States and across much of the world. But the
major media networks also flashed the shocking news that in certain Palestinian
camps in Lebanon and elsewhere the terrible event was a cause for much
celebration. (The same news channels later clarified that the celebration was
confined to a few isolated pockets only.) If these news reports are true, it is
a matter of great shame that some people did celebrate the misfortune that had
befallen others. How could people be so heartless and insensitive in this age?
As a matter of fact, there was much celebration too on the streets of New York -
yes, in Manhattan - and elsewhere in the United States and especially on a ship
sailing back from Europe to the United States bringing back the U.S. President
from Potsdam, Germany.
The date was 6th August 1945. The cause for celebration was the utterly
senseless atomic bombing of Hiroshima by the United States. The then U.S.
President, Harry S. Truman, who was leading the celebrations without an iota of
guilt, had just announced to the world the successful strike on Hiroshima by the
U.S. airforce.
The U.S. President had been informed over the wireless that the atomic bomb
had achieved the desired results. The Japanese' city of Hiroshima, which had
been deliberately left untouched by "conventional" bombing, had been obliterated
by a single atomic bomb. (When the truth began to sink in, those concerned U.S.
citizens who were better informed quickly distanced themselves from the
celebrations and started expressing their outrage at the senseless act. Later
reports showed that over 200,000 of Hiroshima's population of 350,000 had been
wiped out.)
Soon after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, information that
trickled in from official briefings and from accounts sent by war correspondents
about the death and destruction that was unleashed there were horrifying enough
to prick the conscience of concerned people across the globe. Strong reactions
of revulsion against the atomic bombings were evident even in the United States
and Britain. One of the publications dealing with these developments and one
that was brought out later shows that:
"All over the country [the United States], people wrote letters to the
editors of their newspapers, protesting the killing of non-combatant
civilians in Japan, calling it inhuman, and protesting our disregard for
moral values. In Britain, too, where the news of the atom bomb topped all
other news, the letter columns were full of such expressions such as 'In the
name of humanity, let us stop and ask ourselves where we are marching'." [The
Atomic Age Opens
ed. by Donald Porter, Geddes, The World Publishing Company, New York, 1945,
p.41]
Cold Blooded Act
The entire gruesome event was carefully filmed and the physical effects of the
attack accurately measured from airplanes accompanying the bomber that had
dropped the atom bomb. The blinding flash, the reverberating blast, the mushroom
cloud, the flattening of almost all standing structures (according to later
estimates over 92 per cent of the 76,000 buildings that lay within four
kilometers of ground zero in Hiroshima had been destroyed), and the entire city
being engulfed in a devastating fire in a short time must have all been a
terrific sight to watch from the airplanes. However, it is not clear whether
the audio system with the film crew on the accompanying aircraft was powerful
enough to pick up the agonizing cries of those trapped in the falling debris and
about to be devoured by the advancing fire.
Also the rising smoke from the raging fire must have hid from view the
thousands of screaming men, women and children - many with deep burns sustained
from direct exposure to the scorching flash - jumping into the various rivers
running through the city in order to escape from the searing heat.
Few of them may have managed to get back on to the banks for most of them
surely met a watery death. But for the smoke the happenings on the riverside
would have been yet another spectacle to watch!
Of course, effects of ionizing radiation were not yet apparent but the smell
of burning human flesh was certainly in the air. Unfortunately, television and
cable networks were not in vogue at that time; otherwise the entire world could
have watched the "spectacular" event live! Terrorism had never tasted such
success before or after! With the U.S. President in the lead, the destruction of
Hiroshima and its people was a great occasion to celebrate with gay abandon. The
"civilized" conduct of the U.S. President must have put even the worst
barbarians to shame. No, that was not the end. Three days later on 9th August
1945, an identical exercise - film crew et al included - was re-enacted over the
city of Nagasaki. This time a more powerful atomic bomb was used. But, thanks to
the hilly terrain, the fate of only 140,000 of the city's total population of
270,000 was sealed. Meanwhile the city of Kyoto with a population of over
1,000,000 had a providential escape. Kyoto had been replaced with the ill-fated
Nagasaki at the last minute after the intervention of the then U.S. Secretary of
War, Henry Stimson. (It is not clear why Stimson did not prevent the attack
altogether.) Despite strong opposition from Lt. Gen. Leslie Groves, Chief of
the Manhattan (atomic bomb) Project, Stimson was able to strike Kyoto off from
the list of atomic targets and, thus, succeeded in miraculously saving no less
than 800,000 Japanese lives. However, Gen. Groves, who was clearly disappointed,
later wrote in his memoirs thus:
"…I particularly wanted Kyoto as a target because, as I have said, it was
large enough an area for us to gain complete knowledge of the effects of an
atom bomb. Hiroshima was not nearly so satisfactory in this respect." [
US General Leslie Groves: Now It Can Be Told (Story of the Manhattan
Project), Andre Deutsch, London, 1963, p.275]
Mark his words: "large enough an area for us to gain complete knowledge of
the effects of an atom bomb". In other words, the United States had used atomic
bombs on Japan to gain complete knowledge of the effects of an atom bomb.
Slaughtering 200,000 human beings at one go in Hiroshima was not satisfactory
enough! Kyoto with its population of over 1,000,000 could have provided far
better results. This is the assessment of none other than the very person who
was heading the U.S. atomic bomb project then. Such crass views are definitely
indicative of the "civilized" nature of the U.S. establishment.
Height of Inhumanity
What most people do not know is that the after effects of the atomic bombings
are taking its toll to this day. In general, in the early stages most A-bomb
casualties were due to the combined effects of burn, blast and radiation
injuries. In later stages, deaths and diseases arose solely due to the delayed
effects of nuclear radiation - a property which is unique to nuclear weapons. A
large number of the 300,000 A-bomb survivors were exposed to ionizing radiation.
So separate A-bomb hospitals were built in Hiroshima and Nagasaki to treat
them. These hospitals, which have been providing treatment and monitoring the
effects of radiation, have never been short of patients. The truth is, since the
atomic bombings, debilitating diseases resulting from exposure to nuclear
radiation have continued to kill hundreds of A-bomb victims each year. The
perpetrators of the crime were well aware of the effects of radiation on living
beings. Therefore, they wanted to target not only inanimate objects in the
targeted areas but animate objects as well. But there was one problem. The
normal practice as far as 'conventional' bombing was concerned was to take
certain precautions to minimize loss of life. This was done by dropping leaflets
in advance announcing which cities and towns were to be bombed on certain nights
urging the inhabitants to evacuate the target areas so as to give every chance
to the civilian population to save themselves.
Records show that the U.S. airforce followed this normal practice even during
the period between 17th June to 5th August 1945 while carrying out its last
major bombing raids over 58 Japanese cities with 'conventional' bombs.
Strangely enough, the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were not given any
such warnings before they were attacked with atom bombs.
In fact, Dr. Arthur Compton, the then Director of the Metallurgical Project
(a unit of the Manhattan Project) later confessed that: "…Hiroshima had not been
given any specific warning. The people were caught unprepared…. Men and women
were accordingly in the streets, going about their normal business." [Arthur
Compton: Atomic Quest, Oxford University Press, London, 1956, pp254-255]
While the population of towns subjected to 'conventional' bombing were given
advance warning to evacuate, why was it that no such warning was given to the
population of the two cities subjected to atomic bombings? Does it not prove
that it was not only to maximize the loss of life but also to expose the maximum
number of people to ionizing radiation that the inhabitants of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki were denied a chance to evacuate the cities prior to the atomic
bombings?
Is it not the height of inhumanity to have had such utter contempt for human
lives? Another morbid factor is that in order to measure the destructive power
of the atomic bombs with accuracy, the five cities selected as potential A-bomb
targets were left completely untouched by 'conventional' bombing for eight long
months. During that period they were spared the disastrous fate that befell 66
other Japanese cities, which were blasted and burned with 'conventional' bombs
including incendiary ones. However, the fate of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
ultimately turned out to be far worse!
Therefore, would it not be fair enough to conclude that the magnitude of the
latest horrendous crime, for which the "barbarian" Bin Laden is the prime
suspect, seemingly pales into insignificance as compared to the campaign of
calculated terror that the "civilized" U.S. leadership indulged in 56 years ago?
Despite protests the "civilized" terror campaigns of the U.S. have continued
unabated to this day on a different scale.
Bitter Taste
The objective of the above argument is only to drive home the point that one
terrorist attack on the people of the United States should not erase the memory
of the countless acts of state terrorism perpetrated by successive U.S.
Administrations over the years.
The victims of U.S. state terrorism have also undergone or are still undergoing
the same pain, trauma and agony that the victims of the 11th September terrorist
attack are now experiencing.
In a very unfortunate way, the people of the United States for the first time
have had a bitter taste of what their own Government has been doing to people
across the world for years in different forms.
The atomic bombing on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the massive and indiscriminate
bombing of Vietnam (including use of thousands of tons of incendiary napalm
bombs), the innumerable My Lai* type massacres, the use of chemical weapons such
as the highly toxic defoliant Agent Orange** over Vietnam, the massive and
indiscriminate bombing of Iraq and Yugoslavia, etc., are just a few examples of
acts of U.S. state terrorism that people of other nations have had to endure.
* On 16 March 1968, 80 soldiers of Charlie Company, First
Battalion, 11th Light Infantry Brigade of the U.S. Army, under the command
of Lt. William Calley, went on a 'search and destroy' mission to the village
of My Lai in the South Vietnamese district of Son My. In the process over
300 unarmed civilians, mostly women, children and the elderly, were
massacred.
Ronald Haeberle who had accompanied the soldiers
photographed the entire killings, which were published much later in the
U.S. magazine Life on 5th December 1969. This was one instance where there
was irrefutable proof and when several Vietnam War veterans in the U.S. came
forward to testify about the perpetration of that mindless terrorist act.
** 11 million gallons of Agent Orange were sprayed over South Vietnam
between 1961 and 1970 covering 10 % of the country' land area and exposing
millions of Vietnamese to its toxic effects. It has reportedly killed or
seriously injured over 400,000 people and has already contributed to birth
defects in over 500,000 children. The international reaction to the human
tragedy resulting from this U.S. chemical warfare has been appalling. For
details see the article by Robert Dreyfuss titled
'Apocalypse Still' in the U.S. magazine Mother Jones, January 2000.
What rational explanation can the U.S. terrorists offer for targeting Iraqi
civilian population with precision-guided and earth-penetrating cruise missiles
while they were taking refuge in air-raid shelters to escape U.S. aerial
bombings?
Is not the U.S. Administration squarely responsible for the death of over
500,000 children in Iraq due to the untold suffering that the Iraqi people are
forced to undergo as a result of the strict economic sanctions imposed on that
country?
Is not the U.S. Administration aiding and abetting the Zionists in
systematically carrying out terrorist attacks on the people of Palestine in
order to deprive them of their homeland? Is it not the CIA (Central Intelligence
Agency of the United States) along with the ISI (Inter Services Intelligence of
Pakistan) that encouraged, armed and funded "Islamic" terrorists in the 1980s to
overthrow the then government in Afghanistan?
Are they not the same terrorists who have been wreaking havoc in Kashmir with
the same arms and funds? (Interestingly, while the Government of India
repeatedly blames the ISI for aiding and abetting terrorism in Kashmir, it
maintains total silence about the treacherous role of the CIA.
Similarly, the Government of Pakistan blames RAW [Research and Analysis Wing
of India] for the numerous acts of terrorism in Pakistan, while the CIA's
devious role there is kept under wraps.)
It should not be forgotten that the pain and suffering inflicted on the
people of the other affected countries by acts of terrorism are also as real as
that which is being experienced by people in the United States now. Therefore,
retribution cannot be a one-way process. All acts of terrorism should be
condemned and all those responsible for terrorist acts should be brought to book
and punished irrespective of creed or nationality.
Untenable Justification
As to who planned the attack on 11th September is still not very clearly evident
but the "barbarian" Osama Bin Laden continues to be the prime suspect. However,
there is no doubt that it was the "civilized" U.S. President and his ilk that
had ordered the wanton destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Strange as it
may seem, while there is world-wide hunt for the perpetrators of the heinous
crime in New York and Washington-DC, neither President Truman nor anyone else in
the U.S. Administration ever had to face any such threat for their dastardly
act.
They managed to get away scot-free on the spacious plea that the use of
atomic bombs were necessary in order to end World War II and, as President
Truman put it, "save American lives". The fact is there was not a grain of truth
in the justification that the U.S. President had offered. [For details see ND
Jayaprakash, The Meaning of Hiroshima Nagasaki, Delhi Science Forum and Kerala
Sastra Sahitya Parishad, 1990.] But how many people across the world know
the real facts even today? Do they know that several contemporary U.S. and
British statesmen totally disagreed with President Truman's lame justification?
Fleet Admiral W.D. Leahy, Chief of Staff to Presidents Roosevelt and Truman
successively and the top ranking officer in the entire military hierarchy then,
was quite blunt in his criticism. According to him:
"The use of this barbaric weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no
material assistance in our war against Japan. The Japanese were already
defeated and ready to surrender because of the effective sea blockade and
the successful bombing with conventional weapons.”
He went on to add:
"My own feeling is that in being the first to use it we had adopted an
ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages." [W.D.
Leahy: I Was There: The Personal History of the Chief of Staff to Presidents
Roosevelt and Truman, Victor Gollencz Ltd., London, 1950, p.429 and
p.514]
Interestingly, Winston Churchill, Prime Minister of Britain during the major
part of World War II and a willing accomplice to the crime, has nevertheless
made a frank admission. In his voluminous work on the history of the War, he has
stated:
“It would be a mistake to suppose that the fate of Japan was settled by
the atomic bombs. Her defeat was certain before the first bomb fell and was
brought about by overwhelming maritime power.” [Winston S. Churchill: The
Second World War, Vol. VI: Triumph and Tragedy, Houghton Miffin Company,
Boston, 1953, p. 646]
What is intriguing is the fact that Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Supreme Commander
of the Allied Forces in South West Pacific Area during World War II, was not
even consulted about the decision to use atom bombs although the selected
targets fell within the area of his command. Gen. MacArthur was no pacifist. He
was an arch right-winger. Yet he admitted during a press conference years later
that:
"We did not need the atomic Bomb…against Japan." [New York Times, 21
August 1963, p. 30]
Gen. MacArthur subsequently went on to add that by June 1945:
“My staff was unanimous in believing Japan was on the point of collapse
and surrender. I even directed that plans be drawn 'for a peaceful
occupation of Japan' without further military operations.” [Douglas
MacArthur: Reminiscences, McGraw Hill Book Company, New York. 1964, p. 60]
Another critical voice was that of Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, Supreme Commander
of the U.S. forces in Europe during World War II and later President of the
United States from 1953 to 1960. Recounting his reactions, Gen. Eisenhower wrote
in his memoirs that at the Potsdam Conference of Heads of Governments of USA, UK
and USSR in July 1945:
“…I voiced to him [Stimson] my grave misgivings, first on the basis of my
belief that Japan was already defeated and that dropping the [atom] bomb was
completely unnecessary, and secondly because I thought that our country
should avoid shocking world opinion by the use of such a weapon whose
employment was, I thought, no longer mandatory as a measure to save American
lives. It was my belief that Japan was, at that movement, seeking some way
to surrender with a minimum loss of 'face'.” [Dwight
D. Eisenhower:The White House Years: Mandate For Change, 1953 - 1956
Doubleday & Company Inc., New York, 1963, pp. 312-313]
Disinformation Campaign
In order to quell the rising criticism against the atomic bombing and to hide
the real facts from becoming public, the U.S. Administration carried out a
massive disinformation campaign widely and repeatedly disseminating the
untenable justification that President Truman had offered. (The brazen defense
of the atomic bombing has continued without any let up.)
At the same time the U.S. Administration kept doing everything in its power
to suppress the real facts relating to the effects of the atomic bombing. The
misinformation campaign is conducted in a very systematic way. After the
surrender of Japan, U.S. armed forces occupied Japan on 2nd September 1945.
Once the U.S. occupation got underway, they began to propagate that 'the atom
bomb was dropped in order to end the Pacific War'. Accordingly, the idea that
the atom bomb damages were 'a sacrifice that Japan simply had to accept' was
spread and began to gain currency even among the Japanese.
Simultaneously, the U.S. authorities stuck to the policy of strict secrecy on
all aspects concerning the atom bomb. They went to the extent of issuing a press
code in Japan on 19th September 1945 in order to suppress and play down the full
story of the atom bomb damages. The press code imposed prior censorship on all
radio broadcast and on newspapers and other print media. Therefore, except for a
brief period before the press code was imposed, all accounts of atom bomb
damages disappeared from newspapers, magazines and academic journals.
In the process the Japanese people themselves remained largely ignorant of
the extent of the atom bomb damages and about the condition of the 300,000
atomic bomb survivors - the hibakusha. This lack of awareness also prevented
adequate voluntary help being extended to the hibukusha even within Japan.
It appears that it was only in 1952, after Japan regained its independence,
that a few photographs of the atomic bombings were published for the first time
in Japan.
If people within Japan were so ill-informed about the happenings in Hiroshima
and Nagasaki because of strict censorship imposed by the U.S. occupation forces,
how could people elsewhere, especially in the vast areas then under U.S. and
British influence, be better informed? (Moreover, the untold atrocities [such as
the blood-curdling Nanking massacre of 1937] committed by the Japanese Imperial
Army on people in China, Korea, and the Philippines and elsewhere in South East
Asia would have initially made people indifferent to the happenings on the
Japanese mainland.) Earlier in November 1945, the U.S. occupation authorities
went to the extent of confiscating a documentary entitled "The Effects of Atomic
Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki" that was produced by the Japanese Film
Corporation during September-October 1945. They also prohibited further
documentary filming by the Japanese. It was only after strong public pressure
that in 1968 the U.S. Administration returned a 16-mm print of this documentary
to Japan. However, because of restrictions imposed by the Japanese Government,
no one in Japan, save a few medical personnel, has ever viewed the film in its
entirety. The Japanese Government's attitude in this regard, to say the least,
is rather perplexing. Is it not absolutely intriguing that the government of a
country, which has been a victim of atomic bombing, should try to hide the
bitter truth about the deadly effects of the atomic bombing from its own
citizens and from people elsewhere? In fact since 1952, successive Japanese
governments have been colluding with successive U.S. administrations to do
precisely that. It has been the practice of the Japanese Government, which is
intent on downplaying the effects of the atomic bombings, to send its
representatives regularly to the Yasukuni Shrine, which venerates all of Japan's
war dead including convicted war criminals.
The shrine has attracted a lot of attention because it houses the remains of
wartime Prime Minister General Hedeki Tojo and six others who were executed
after being convicted as World War II criminals.
The present Prime Minister, Junichiro Koizumi, visited the Shrine on 13th
August 2001 to pay obeisance to their memory. The irony is that the same war
criminals were tried and executed by the War Crimes Tribunal set up by the
United States for crimes committed before and during World War II, including
crimes committed against the U.S. prisoners of war. But successive U.S.
administrations have not raised a murmur of protest against the Japanese
governments' gesture of paying obeisance to the very Japanese war criminals
prosecuted by the U.S..
The truth of the matter is that the same right-wing forces, which led Japan
into its imperialistic adventure, are still very much in control of the Japanese
government. On their part, the U.S. authorities had actually prosecuted very few
of the war criminals; most of them - especially the big industrialists who had
backed the bloody Japanese Imperialist adventure to the hilt - were
clandestinely rehabilitated. The most shocking incident is the case concerning
Unit 731, a Japanese army unit, which was engaged in research on germ warfare
during 1930-45 using human beings, including U.S. prisoners of war, as guinea
pigs. According to a report in a prominent U.S. magazine, during the occupation:
"…U.S. officials granted the Japanese unit members immunity from prosecution as
war criminals in exchange for their laboratory records on germ warfare."
[Newsweek 19
April 1982, p.21] So much for the concern and eagerness being shown by the
U.S. Administration to render retributive justice for violation of human rights.
Had the horrors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki received better global coverage - even
if it was only on a fraction of the scale that the coverage of the horrors in
New York and Washington-DC are receiving today - perhaps the resulting revulsion
against nuclear weapons may have made the world a far safer place to live.
Although there may have been some relaxation in the news censorship after the
U.S. granted independence to Japan in 1952, the entire truth about the effects
of the atomic bombings have never been made public to date. On the other hand,
the misleading official justification for the atomic attack has been repeatedly
spread far and wide.
The imposition of censorship by the U.S. Administration, particularly during
the period of occupation, on all news relating to the effects of the atomic
bombings was undoubtedly a calculated ploy on its part to give as little
exposure as possible to the gruesome acts of terror in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
It was also a devious attempt on its part to conceal from the world's public the
consequences of unleashing nuclear war in future.
It is primarily due to the unrelenting struggle of the survivors of the
atomic bombing and the groups and organisations supporting them that the facts
about the horrors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki started slowly getting disseminated.
It is that sustained effort that is influencing concerned people across the
world to join the global movement for elimination of nuclear weapons. The
Japanese Government while reacting to the macabre events of 11th September has
completely desisted from making even a passing reference to the hideous way in
which the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were subjected to a terrorist attack
by the U.S. Administration. In fact the Japanese Prime Minister, Junichiro
Koizumi, has maintained a studied silence on the matter. Reports show that even
during his visit to the United States on 24th September 2001 no mention of the
atomic bombings were ever made. Under the circumstances, Prime Minister
Koizumi's silence on this vital issue itself speaks volumes.
Drawing the Correct Lessons
The wanton destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was also the first salvo of the
U.S. Administration in the unfolding Cold War with the Soviet Union. Aiding and
abetting all kinds of rogue elements across the globe to serve its ends was an
integral part of that anti-Communist agenda. The self-appointed defenders of
'democracy, freedom and liberty' had no compunctions in funding and arming
self-seeking disparate groups- which defended anything but democracy, freedom
and liberty - to act as its bulwarks to suppress anti-fascist and anti-colonial
national liberation movements that became widespread at the end of the Second
World War.
The U.S. Administration gave no thought to the recoiling (or what is now
termed as "blow-back") effect of that questionable strategy which served its
short-term goal. At worst, in the long run, such carefully nurtured Frankenstein
forces was expected to serve as permanent "enemies" or "whipping boys" for the
burgeoning military-industrial complex. Although the probability of such forces
striking at the U.S. mainland was not altogether discounted, the chances of such
a strike ever taking place was thought to be beyond the realm of possibility.
The people in the United States and elsewhere who have supported such a bizarre
strategy are now forced to learn the hard way. It is hoped that they draw the
correct lessons. The several trillions of dollars misspent in the last fifty
years on the vast global "defense" network to fight its "enemies" could not
protect the U.S. from a simple strategy devised by a thoughtless suicide squad.
If, instead of creating and fighting "enemies", the U.S. Administration had gone
about making friends, the history of the world would have been very different.
Successive U.S. Administrations have had ample opportunity to spend the vast
human and material resources at its disposal in far more useful ways than on
militarism. But it never chose to do so.
In this context it would be
worthwhile to recall the fervent hope expressed by the former U.S. President
General Eisenhower during a speech before the American Society of Newspaper
Editors on 16th April 1953 soon after he had assumed the presidency. He said:
"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired
signifies in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and not fed,
those who are cold and not clothed.
"This world in arms is not
spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its labourers, the genius
of its scientists, the hopes of its children."
He further added:
"This Government is ready to ask its people to join with all nations in
devoting a substantial percentage of the savings achieved by disarmament to
a fund for world aid and reconstruction. "The monuments to this new kind
of war would be these: roads and schools, hospitals and homes, food and
health. "We are ready, in short, to dedicate our strength to serving the
needs, rather than the fears of the world." Dwight Eisenhower: Mandate for
Change, Signet, New York, 1965, pp.189-192]
As to who prevented the hopes expressed by President Eisenhower from being
fulfilled is something that the people of the United States will have to deeply
ponder over. Democracy, liberty and freedom have to be defended in deed not
with words or swords. Integral to lasting democracy, liberty and freedom is
banishment of poverty, ill-health, illiteracy, superstitious beliefs and
backwardness on the one hand, and facilitating the creation of institutions that
defend those laudable values on the other. Criminals and terrorists in today's
world cannot prosper or become a major threat to democracy, liberty and freedom
unless one or more States or influential sections within those States directly
or indirectly sponsors them. Those who have sowed the poisonous seeds cannot
disown responsibility for the bitter fruits. Why the U.S. Administration has
always chosen to
encourage and support the most retrograde forces in countries where it has
chosen to intervene is something that needs to be examined more thoroughly. |
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