Hiroshima: necessary?

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Also, what if it was faked?

dave q, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Not for the ending of the war in the pacfifc, which was already basically opened but to show Stalin what they had and what it could do. This brings up the whole was the cold war nesscary. Which may need its own thread.

anthony, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I'm reasonably familiar with Japanese militarism, and for all that by the time of the Hiroshima bomb their war effort was fucked, there is no way the Japanese would have surrendered without the atomic strike. That is to say, finally defeating Japan would have required an invasion which would have been a complete bloodbath, not least for the Japanese.

Frightening the Soviets was a happy coincidence.

The Dirty Vicar, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Sufficient.

Pete, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Man, we talked on and on about this in my Ethics of Science class way back when. Aside: I think every aspiring scientist should take an ethics class during their education. I also think every highschool student should take a mandatory philosophy class...

I am not sure if I remember correctly but when the Smithsonian put up a WW2 exhibit which didn't really take any sides on the necessary v. unnecessary arguement the US Veterans had hissy fits, lobbying senators, who in turn threatened to remove funding unless the Smithsonian put the usual pro-American, saved a lotta lives thing in.

I don't actually know a lot of WW2 history, and one could talk about lives saved, lives taken, bad science/scientists/research, necessity to prove to Russia that we had something, Nagasaki (spelling?), and the third bomb that was ready to fall, for years and still not come to a decision.

Personally, I live in fear of an H bomb being dropped on a city. Far far more scary than the atom bomb.

marianna, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Pete: If Hiroshima = sufficient, Nagasaki = ? "The reasoning being, 'hey, we have another bomb.'"

paul m, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

My knowledge of WW2 history is second to everyone's but one thing has always bothered me. Vast amount of worry re. is Hiroshima neccessary and I can understand the arguments on both sides - but why was it then neccessary to bomb Nagasaki too? Surely if Hiroshima was meant to be 'an example' then the example had been given? And Nagasaki gets rather forgotten, too, it seems to me.

(NB: Lame bit in Gravity's Rainbow - Ensign Morituri wants to go home and see his wife and kids in a lovely peaceful city called Hiroshima yes Hiroshima DO YOU SEE? Paging Tharg's Future Shocks.)

Tom, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Nagasaki was necessary because it occurred on 9 August, which is also my birthday

dave q, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Suddenly it all makes sense Dave...

Pete, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

(dave q's life-philosophy = based entirely on Gospel According to Peanuts Vol.2)

mark s, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Bit in GR *not lame* b/c provides proper setup for sitcom riff in the end disintegration bit. Sappy, yes, but so are many of the best bits of GR.

Sterling Clover, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I might not remeber this argument correctly, but someone told me something like Nagasaki happened because it had been ordered at the same time as Hiroshima, as a precaution in case the Hiroshima bomb was a dud. Then they mentioned something about a third bomb.. I don't know. I find the bombing of Nagasake to be 100% unethical in that I've never heard any convincing argument to prove its worth.

marianna, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Also forgot to mention my disgust at the USA's continual treatment of the Marshall Islands (Bikini etc) as a testing place for weapons, and also their effect on the natives downwind. The MIT Lincoln Lab, the premier weapons development facility, has a base there. I wonder that their little research center on the outskirts of the Boston suburbs isn't the stage for prostests against Bush's SoSW programme.

marianna, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

As far as I remember Nagasaki was bombed because the Japanese didn't surrender after the Hiroshima bomb. No, really.

DG, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

yeah, the Japanese hadn't surrendered after Hiroshima so they dropped the second bomb on Nagasaki. The Japanese then surrendered.

Ironically, the reason why the Japanese hadn't surrendered after Hiroshima was that their communications were so fucked up that the leadership was only learning about it when the Nagasaki bomb was dropped.

I'm not certain of this, but I think that after they bombed Nagasaki the Americans had no atomic bombs left and would not have any more for some months.

The Dirty Vicar, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I thought the reason they didn't surrender was that they were holding out to negotiate a peace with the Russians, rather than lose face by surrendering to the US. Even then though, they were still reluctant to give up, even though they'd lost air superiority and the USAF was just flattening their cities (esp. Tokyo, firebombed a couple of months before the atomic attack). Whilst the Jap war industry was smashed, there was no lack of enthusiasm on their part to keep fighting, which is why an invasion of the mainland would have been a bloodbath on an unprecedented scale.

DG, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Communications *was* also a major issue (tho like any fascist state, decent and accurate communication top-bottom-top.again = totally impossible): remember WE HERE NOW (attuned to atom-bomb aftermath as idea) get to see Hiroshima from the air (US plane-cam) plus in newsreel and photo footage gathered selected edited afterwards, with view to getting across scale ... japanese top brass THEN THERE probably had no similarly immediate info, re unprecedented cataclysm way beyond scale of ordinary word- reportage to cope or communicate. Some of em JUST DIDN'T GET IT: couldn't process it. TOO BIG, TOO AWFUL: their something-will- come-up-we-can-win-this chip just suddenly gone, like breath off a mirror. Can't deal: can't be true. Misheard: not as bad that.

Not knowing the ending yet (the ending WE know) is one of the many things GR is abt: Slothrop somewhere sees a pic of the Hiroshima blast in a fragment of german newspaper, doesn't understand what it is. It reminds him of a cock.

mark s, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I don't know. On the one hand, dropping atomic bombs on citizens must be horribly wrong. On the other hand, if they hadn't, the war would have gone on longer and that would be horribly wrong, too.

Aside: I think every aspiring scientist should take an ethics class during their education. I also think every highschool student should take a mandatory philosophy class...

My wonderful high school does not offer either.

Lyra, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Something else GR points out indirectly is that by this stage in the war all sides were using weapons against civilians - 'our' weapons and resources were just more efficient than theirs.

Tom, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Big book just published: forget writer will post when home = A BIG HISTORY OF BOMBING. Bombing has always been used primarily against civilians, by anyone who has bombs.

mark s, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Yes - WW2 marked the beginning of the end of the concept of non- combatant, everyone's fair game these days.

DG, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Sorry DG: not true. Colonial-imperial era sees endless examples of gunships etc off coast of [_______], lobbing shells in general direction of the bazaar/whatever, to bring local delinquent princeling to heel. WW2 brings concept home to pampered citizens of said imperialist regimes (tho not in fact US).

mark s, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

So in effect, my statement of "everyone's fair game these days" is actually TRUE and CORRECT.

DG, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Yep. Just WW2 as start of same = not so true and correct.

mark s, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

[quickly changes subject] What a lovely day it is! La-dee-da...

DG, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

In a word, eeg. The day somebody comes up with a perfect answer to this conundrum is a long way off indeed, so I refuse to even start trying to hash out an answer, as the best points have already been made. Though I will say -- um, faked? You on something, Dave Q?

Ned Raggett, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

wars have always been primarily about laying into non-combatants. the idea that this was something new in WW2 is simply not true. In the past armies smashed up civilian infrastructure and civilians as a way of making it harder for the enemy to resupply their armies. I suppose the big difference in the second world war was that people could use high technology to lay into each other at a distance.

Try reading about the Thirty Years War in 17th century Germany. The siege of Magdeburg - where a city of 36,000 people saw its population reduced overnight to a few hundred, with barely two stones left on top of each other - rivals anything twentieth century warfare throws up.

The Dirty Vicar, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Ah! Ah! But the point about WW2 is that it was the civvies who were the prime target, and not just casualties in the pursuit of another goal.

DG, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Imagine a time / When it all began In the dying days of a war / A weapon -- that would settle the score / Whoever found it first / Would be sure to do their worst -- They always had before...

Imagine a man / Where it all began A scientist pacing the floor / In each nation -- always eager to explore / To build the best big stick / To turn the winning trick -- But this was something more...

The big bang -- took and shook the world / Shot down the rising sun / The end was begun -- it would hit everyone / When the chain reaction was done / The big shots -- try to hold it back / Fools try to wish it away / The hopeful depend on a world without end / Whatever the hopeless may say /

Imagine a place / Where it all began / They gathered from across the land / To work in the secrecy of the desert sand / All of the brightest boys / To play with the biggest toys -- More than they bargained for...

Imagine a man / When it all began / The pilot of "Enola Gay" / Flying out of the shockwave / On that August day / All the powers that be / And the course of history / Would be changed for evermore...

Kris, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Two can play this game:

Enola Gay, you should have stayed at home yesterday/Oho it can't describe the feeling and the way you lied

These games you play, they're gonna end it all in tears someday/Oho Enola Gay, it shouldn't ever have to end this way

It's 8:15, that's the time that it's always been/We got your message on the radio, condition's normal and you're coming home

Enola Gay, is mother proud of little boy today/Oho, this kiss you give, it's never ever gonna fade away

Enola Gay, it shouldn't ever have to end this way/Oho Enola Gay, it should've faded our dreams away

It's 8:15, oh that's the time that it's always been/We got your message on the radio, condition's normal and you're coming home

Enola Gay, is mother proud of little boy today/Oho, this kiss you give, it's never ever gonna fade away

Ned Raggett, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Many documents unearthed since '45 point to US knowledge that Russian moves against Japan were imminent, and would have either forestalled the famously theoretical "bloodbath" (which we swapped for ion/dust/skin-goo bath) or hastened it. In any case, the "bloodbath" wd be fueled mainly by soldiers' blood, kamikazes, wave upon wave of ground troops, etc. Terrible, bloody, but carried out by men explicitly paid to fight and die for whatever cause they were told, and therefore somewhat morally salvagable, unlike the surprise annihilation of people doing the shopping. Yet the accepted history is that premeditated murder of an entire city's population = "great tactics"!

I'm always struck by how pervasive the bomb's influence is on the Japanese cultural products I consume - seems like every anime involves either hideous bio-mutations or a huge supernatural explosion or both.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Terrible, bloody, but carried out by men explicitly paid to fight and die for whatever cause they were told, and therefore somewhat morally salvagable

Conscription muddies this argument a little, does it not?

Richard Tunnicliffe, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I believe there is a moral difference between killing men in uniform in wartime and killing kids going to piano lessons. Even if the uniformed men in question had just been yanked out of their piano lessons and handed a gun. But yes Richard debating about which several thousand people ought to die is not going to lead to any satisfying moral outcome. I am just disgusted when thousands upon thousands of slow, gruelling deaths are justified by "tactics", which is how war debate usually gets framed in the US - Vietnam was "wrong", fr'instance, not because of geopolitics, morality, or motivation, but because we did not use the right tactics and failed to "win". Morality here = effective military planning. Yuck.

tracer Hand, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

A History of Bombing, Sven Lindqvist, Granta, £14.99:

Have to say it sounds v.powerful, judging by the review. (Among other things looks at SF fantasies from 1880s on, abt Euro nations subduing — exterminating — other nations by attacks from the air: such as Samuel W. Odell's novel The Last War, or the Triumph of the English Tongue (1898), in which the United States of the World has wiped out the languages of French, German and Chinese via 1500 airships full of firebombs.)

mark s, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I think that the US, ever since WWI, has used the bomb as its central war metaphor. Striking from a distance. The most cowardly act - Indiana Jones pulling his superior tech out from his pants and blasting a master swordsman. Pre-fab tech trumping traditional craft, multiplied by a fear of contact, physical/human confrontation - the latter which seems like THE reason to do battle in Europe (and maybe elsewhere) - it don't work unless I can feel the knife twist! So my banal answer is that war motivations in Europe are deep/submerged, and extremely personal, and that for the US they're purely strategic and unworthy of any proximity closer than an altitude of 30,000 feet.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Mark, I just looked up that book on Amazon, and found this:

Lindqvist has divided the book into a labyrinth of 399 short sections that can be read in any number of orders. The author has established 22 entrances into the book and to follow the different themes you have to weave your way backward and forward through the text.

Choose Your Own History Of Bombing Adventure/Bombing Fantasy books = GRATE

Graham, Monday, 20 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

the firebombing of tokyo killed more people than either atomic bomb, it just doesn't have the same impact. the civilian bombing in europe seemed to be revenge tit-for-tat oriented, in the pacific i think it was meant to weaken the morale of the japanese mainland but it didn't really work. russia had already invaded manchuria and was looking for more and probably would have taken it if the war had not ended so quickly. i think it is impossible now to consider the ethics without experiencing the emotions of the times which were obviously a considerable factor in the deliberations over using the bomb. ethics courses for scientists are alright as long as they steer away from the frightening notion that a scientist should somehow foresee all of the negative consequences from his research before even beginning it. talk about stifling progress. but then that is likely an evil word for many. also the japanese still have a serious denial problem concerning the atrocities they committed during the war so i find their morally superior stance a bit false.

keith, Tuesday, 21 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I think Dresden and Tokoyo were much greater moral evils.

anthony, Tuesday, 21 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Oh God...Dresden...now that's a real moral mess. A totally fucked up idea from the start.

DG, Tuesday, 21 August 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

eight months pass...
Let me get this straight to you...The Bombing was not necessary! If the States wanted to get back at Japan, then why didnt they just hit only their military base? Instead they go off bombing cities and killing civilians. THEN they bomb AGAIN! damn fools! Killing people who got nothign to do with this, their only crime was being in the country at the wrong period of time. TSK...but hey, this dont mean i agree with what Japan did to the States. Thats wrong too, BUT Japan tried only hitting the military base and only stuck once, cause Japan knew what they wanted and got it. The States just wanted revenge, and bomb stuff, test out their new "toy" and in doing so, kill thousands on people. <--- THAT WAS MY STATEMENT!

Aileen Sabraski, Thursday, 9 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

THE STATES HAVE ALWAYS BEEN FOOLS! 1st they say black people arent people, and they say women arent considered people, and they make all this stupid rules up. but luckily they developed into better civilized human beings. but THEN, they go and BOMB JAPAN...TWICE!!! That aint right, wasnt right. Do they regret it now? ok THEY BETTER I agree with Aileen, or whatever her name is. she has a good point

Madame, Thursday, 9 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

you are a military leader of the United States B-29 command. you are in a state of TOTAL WAR and that cant be emphasized enough. TOTAL WAR means winning at all costs, which makes the firebombing and the a- bombs acceptable. the japanese were under the bushito code: death before dishonor. how do you engrain in their minds that unconditional surrender is the only option. they were willing to fight until every soldier was dead. solution=blankets of fire!

justin heinzen, Friday, 17 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

one year passes...
justin heinzen's above post reads like the back of video game packaging.

Tracer Hand writes (on 8/20/01 no less):
I believe there is a moral difference between killing men in uniform in wartime and killing kids going to piano lessons.

I have always agreed with this logic and have never heard a vaguely convincing argument to the contrary.

gygax! (gygax!), Monday, 11 August 2003 20:06 (twenty years ago) link

Nagasaki was unforgivably unnecessary.

amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 11 August 2003 20:12 (twenty years ago) link

yeah, I totally woulda won WWII a different way - who uses bombs?

nnnh oh oh nnnh nnnh oh (James Blount), Monday, 11 August 2003 20:16 (twenty years ago) link

Blount your rhetorical skills are fearsome.

amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 11 August 2003 20:17 (twenty years ago) link

Heh heh "bushito".

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 11 August 2003 20:21 (twenty years ago) link

I haven't seen this mentioned yet, but the post-war United States Strategic Bombing Survey (1946, I think), specifically notes that Japan would have surrendered within months, with neither invasion nor Hiroshima/Nagasaki.

"Based on a detailed investigation of all the facts and supported by the testimony of the surviving Japanese leaders involved, it is the Survey's opinion that certainly prior to 31 December 1945, and in all probability prior to 1 November 1945, Japan would have surrendered even if the atomic bombs had not been dropped, even if Russia had not entered the war, and even if no invasion had been planned or contemplated.'"

miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Monday, 11 August 2003 21:33 (twenty years ago) link

ppl citing vague & exotic principles like bushido w/o proper cultural context = dud. b/c correct me if i'm wrong, it was reserved for samurai and above on the social ladder during feudal japan, so expecting the same of young sons and daughters (i.e. descendents of peasants) b/c really other cultures are homogenous enough to make quick generalisations about.

Leee (Leee), Monday, 11 August 2003 21:49 (twenty years ago) link

milo's right - it was totally wrong for the us military to value their lives over those of their enemy; this is not how you fight a war people!

nnnh oh oh nnnh nnnh oh (James Blount), Monday, 11 August 2003 21:54 (twenty years ago) link

YOU, I'm not surprised to see here. But Michael and Eli and Tom are intelligent guys.

Allyzay lives aprox. 200 feet away from a stadium (allyzay), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 18:36 (seventeen years ago) link

well c'mon. have to give it to you. it's pretty surprising to see intelligent guys here. it's certainly not intelligent to question the gvmt.

Squirrel_Police (Squirrel_Police), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 18:39 (seventeen years ago) link

If I'm so smart, what am I doing posting on ILX, Ally? ;-)

Squirrel, don't you have any huffing to do?

M. White (Miguelito), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 18:40 (seventeen years ago) link

maybe the us should have dropped winston churchill on hiroshima, provided he wasn't too busy singlehandedly winning the european war after making an amphibious landing in eastern europe

mookieproof (mookieproof), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 18:42 (seventeen years ago) link

why didn't we just send this guy over there?

http://www.bookmice.net/darkchilde/japan/japan/bonds1.jpg

J.D. (Justyn Dillingham), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 18:47 (seventeen years ago) link

By Jove, mookie, I think you've got it!

xposts

I wonder if there's was a war stamp discount on larger amounts? Maybe, 60 bullets for $1.00.

M. White (Miguelito), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 18:48 (seventeen years ago) link

that poster makes it excruciatingly obvious to me that all of WW2 was thunked up by the liquor and wine industries in cooperation with the US Treasury Department!

TOMBOT (TOMBOT), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 18:51 (seventeen years ago) link

Roosevelt did nothing to stop Pearl Harbor because he was all in cahoots with booze pushers, do you see? somebody make up a statistic about how the real targets were sake distilleries. They wanted to get Asia hooked on Johnny Walker - and it WORKED.

TOMBOT (TOMBOT), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 18:53 (seventeen years ago) link

um, if roosevelt allowed the bomb to be made in the first place why would he have forbidden it to be used against a country we were still at war with?

I would surmise that he was behind the building of the bomb because he knew he was in a race with Germany over who would accomplish it first. That doesn't mean he actually wanted to use it on a city or two. The reason Einstein is relevant to the discussion at all is because he had originally sent a letter to FDR to advise him to start the program:

In 1939 Einstein signed a letter to President Roosevelt that was drafted by the scientist Leo Szilard. Received by FDR in October of that year, the letter from Einstein called for and sparked the beginning of U.S. government support for a program to build an atomic bomb, lest the Nazis build one first.

Einstein did not speak publicly on the atomic bombing of Japan until a year afterward. A short article on the front page of the New York Times contained his view:

"Prof. Albert Einstein... said that he was sure that President Roosevelt would have forbidden the atomic bombing of Hiroshima had he been alive and that it was probably carried out to end the Pacific war before Russia could participate." -Einstein Deplores Use of Atom Bomb, New York Times, 8/19/46, pg. 1

I was in no way attempting to say that Einstein's opinions about FDR were true. I was simply adding another name to the movers and thinkers of the era who were opposed to the use of the bomb at the time.


shorty (shorty), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 19:08 (seventeen years ago) link

Well, in response to the thread title, I'd have to say that Harry apparently didn't think so.

M. White (Miguelito), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 19:15 (seventeen years ago) link

Seriously, why are you people even talking to this person? I'm completely floored.

Heh heh heh heh I missed this earlier. Ally, I can certainly see how you would see that quote from "A Beautiful Mind" would seem pretentious as hell. It seems I fergot to mention that the characters were discussing this very debate, which is why it seemed appropriate to me at the time.

shorty (shorty), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 19:45 (seventeen years ago) link

I suppose it is quibbling over words, but all one has to do to determine the necessity of dropping the atomic bomb to ending the war in Japan is to perform a simple thought experiment.

Imagine this: It is August 1, 1945. Everything about the war has occurred exactly as history indicates except for one item - the Trinity test of the first uranium bomb failed because the design was wrong, and Los Alamos determines that the design flaws will take several years to fix.

Now ask: could the war with Japan successfully be ended within that time frame, without the bomb's availability? If so, then the bomb was not (strictly speaking) necessary to end the war, but only sufficient.

It is pretty clear to me that the bomb was not necessary by that time. That is why the question in thread is probably the wrong question in my view. The answer is too obvious.

By the same token, there is no doubt whether the bomb was sufficient to end the war, as the events of history prove that it was.

I am pretty sure Truman knew this, too. He had a weapon sufficient to end the war, but not strictly necessary. Under those conditions he was ultimately responsible, as no one else was, for weighing the pros and cons of using it and deciding what approach would provide the "best" result. That is why I focus on him. It was in his hands exclusively. No one else. No one. Period.

Since Truman, like any other person, could not foretell the course of the future with any accuracy or great confidence, he simply did the best he could and selected the line of reasoning that seemed to him to be the strongest. We do not know his reasoning, only the outcome of it and the official explanantion for it.

In arguing over the merits of this decision, it seems to me that we have to grant that Truman could not have known what answer was "correct" and neither could we, in his place. We, too, would have been reduced to doing our best, choosing the strongest line of reasoning we could identify, and sticking to it.

Our basic problem now, in 2006, is that we cannot discover the actual line of reasoning Truman based his decision on and so we cannot effectively either criticize it or commend it. We are blind men feeling an elephant.

If we consider the different question of whether the bombs ought to have been dropped, then we immediately engage in speculations similar to those that limited Truman's view of the future outcome of his decision; we cannot say what would have happened with any accuracy or great confidence. We can argue from probability only.

Aimless (Aimless), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 20:43 (seventeen years ago) link

it's a fascinating issue. sometimes when i discuss this, especially with older people, i sense a percieved sanctity about "ending the war," as if esaving american GIs justifies any means. it's like somebody somewhere has a chart stating "1 american GI is worth 1,000 asian civilians" or variations on the same.

Squirrel_Police (Squirrel_Police), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 21:56 (seventeen years ago) link

If we consider the different question of whether the bombs ought to have been dropped, then we immediately engage in speculations similar to those that limited Truman's view of the future outcome of his decision; we cannot say what would have happened with any accuracy or great confidence. We can argue from probability only.

I don't doubt there are justifications in Truman's autobiography or in the records of Dean Acheson and George Marshall; but I'm not going to dip into those at the moment.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Wednesday, 27 September 2006 22:01 (seventeen years ago) link

"1 american GI is worth 1,000 asian civilians" or variations on the same.

"The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his." - General George Patton

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 28 September 2006 13:18 (seventeen years ago) link

four years pass...

interesting!

we've argued about this on other threads, but i don't think the nuclear bombing are morally special or different from, like, the plain old bombings we were doing

5ish finkel (goole), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 19:02 (twelve years ago) link

Nagasaki was necessary because it occurred on 9 August, which is also my birthday

― dave q, Monday, 20 August 2001 Bookmark

The real reason for this revival...

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 19:10 (twelve years ago) link

The important part of Hasegawa's argument is that Nagasaki was totally needless. We couldn't give them a week to surrender? And the third bomb was on its way!

But I have a lot of problems with that article:

1. Yes, Tokyo's firebombing was worse. But Tokyo was essentially a tinderbox-- a forest of paper and wood. The atomic bombs showed that one single weapon could obliterate any city. There are important psychological and practical effects to that.

2. A big reason that the Japanese likely weren't pushed to surrender by the atomic bombs is that they didn't know what the fuck happened. At that point most of Japan's military leadership was secluded in a bunker and they weren't able to get a full picture of what had really happened in Hiroshima. Indeed there was some speculation that the US was exaggerating. If they had actually known fully what the Americans had done, and what they were threatening to do again and again, who knows what their reaction would have been?

3. The worst part of the article is the idea that this somehow disproves nukes as a deterrent. My usual conception of nuclear deterrence is that nukes are an amazingly powerful weapon that can literally destroy an entire country. It isn't that one nuclear bomb is so horrible. It's that theoretically we could destroy EVERY city in a country. Complete obliteration is the "deterrence" of nuclear warfare, especially with ICBMs in play. And again, nukes are just more powerful than anything else.

Matt Armstrong, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 19:34 (twelve years ago) link

Hasegawa doesn't (and probably can't) bring up the cabinet meeting where Hirihito bascially overrode his govmt and told them a last-ditch stand was off the table. Was he more influenced by the Soviet declaration of war or the bomb? How about both? It was definitely one of the first rounds of the Cold War, regardless, and as I have increasingly come to think, Truman could not have afforded to NOT use the bombs since their existence would at some point or another have become public and mourning mothers and families would have excoriated him.

publier les (suggest) bans de (Michael White), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:10 (twelve years ago) link

The worst part of the article is the idea that this somehow disproves nukes as a deterrent. My usual conception of nuclear deterrence is that nukes are an amazingly powerful weapon that can literally destroy an entire country. It isn't that one nuclear bomb is so horrible. It's that theoretically we could destroy EVERY city in a country. Complete obliteration is the "deterrence" of nuclear warfare, especially with ICBMs in play. And again, nukes are just more powerful than anything else.

― Matt Armstrong, Tuesday, August 9, 2011 8:34 PM (36 minutes ago) Bookmark

i can't remember when 'deterrence' on that scale became the big thing. but it wasn't immediate. it may not even have been till after the worst of the cold war. either way, wasn't part of the point of dropping the bomb (and bombing dresden) to show off to the russians how hard we were?

full on... mask hysteria (history mayne), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:13 (twelve years ago) link

slight self-contradiction there but ehh

full on... mask hysteria (history mayne), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:15 (twelve years ago) link

yeah IANAH but showing the russians you have The Bomb would be a good way to get them on your side

dayo, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:21 (twelve years ago) link

The worst part of the article is the idea that this somehow disproves nukes as a deterrent.

I'm not sure that this what the article tries to do, though. Had we publicly had the bomb in Dec '41 would they have foregone Pearl Harbor? Probably. At this point, he's saying that the Japanese decision to surrender instead of fighting it out was more about the fear of their neighbor (and recent victim) getting territory off of them than about nuclear bombs. How many bombs did they or the USSR think we had then, though?

publier les (suggest) bans de (Michael White), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:24 (twelve years ago) link

as I have increasingly come to think, Truman could not have afforded to NOT use the bombs since their existence would at some point or another have become public and mourning mothers and families would have excoriated him.

just naive thinking i suppose, but i always wonder what would have been the problem with demonstrating the power of the atomic bomb OUTSIDE of a major city, as a warning shot.

future events are now current events (Z S), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:25 (twelve years ago) link

then, if we had to be bloodthirsty and all of that, we could have said "we calculate that this will murder 100,000 of your citizens. we will decimate one of your major cities in 72 hours unless you surrender."

future events are now current events (Z S), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:27 (twelve years ago) link

That sorta sounds like how India and Pakistan treat each other, i.e. Oh yeah? Watch us test THIS.

≝ (Pleasant Plains), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:29 (twelve years ago) link

*punches self in face*

"Now imagine if that hadda been YOUR FACE."

≝ (Pleasant Plains), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:30 (twelve years ago) link

hard to see the japanese high command believing it, still less surrendering on the basis of a threat, but either way the US wasn't in the business of making threats. it had already levelled tokyo.

need to go away and revise this topic though.

full on... mask hysteria (history mayne), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:32 (twelve years ago) link

Very good and classical point, ZS. It's often said they chose two sites of dubious (or middling importance) and different topography 'cause they wanted to see what kind fo mayhem their gadgets would unleash in different circumstances.

publier les (suggest) bans de (Michael White), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:39 (twelve years ago) link

My point above was that I don't think the confluence of racism and anger is well understood now. Ppl really wanted to fcuk Japan up; not just 'cause they were 'yellow', not just because of Pearl Harbor, and not just because of the atrocities that were known but because they were tenacious fighters who killed a lot of American boys.

publier les (suggest) bans de (Michael White), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:41 (twelve years ago) link

Interesting thread this.

Inevitable stupid samba mix (chap), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:43 (twelve years ago) link

i thought dresden was basically revenge

5ish finkel (goole), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:43 (twelve years ago) link

I'm not sure that this what the article tries to do, though. Had we publicly had the bomb in Dec '41 would they have foregone Pearl Harbor? Probably. At this point, he's saying that the Japanese decision to surrender instead of fighting it out was more about the fear of their neighbor (and recent victim) getting territory off of them than about nuclear bombs. How many bombs did they or the USSR think we had then, though?

― publier les (suggest) bans de (Michael White), Tuesday, August 9, 2011 8:24 PM (37 minutes ago) Bookmark

Hasegawa’s scholarship disturbs this simple logic. If the atomic bomb alone could not compel the Japanese to submit, then perhaps the nuclear deterrent is not as strong as it seems. In fact, Wilson argues, history suggests that leveling population centers, by whatever method, does not force surrender. The Allied firebombing of Dresden in February of 1945 killed many people, but the Germans did not capitulate. The long-range German bombing of London did not push Churchill towards acquiescence. And it is nearly impossible to imagine that a bomb detonated on American soil, even one that immolated a large city, would prompt the nation to bow in surrender.

If killing large numbers of civilians does not have a military impact, then what, Wilson asks, is the purpose of keeping nuclear weapons? We know they are dangerous. If they turn out not to be strategically effective, then nuclear weapons are not trump cards, but time bombs beneath our feet.

Matt Armstrong, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 21:04 (twelve years ago) link

then, if we had to be bloodthirsty and all of that, we could have said "we calculate that this will murder 100,000 of your citizens. we will decimate one of your major cities in 72 hours unless you surrender."

― future events are now current events (Z S), Tuesday, August 9, 2011 8:27 PM (36 minutes ago) Bookmark

Yeah, what about the idea of blowing the top off Mt. Fuji?

Matt Armstrong, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 21:05 (twelve years ago) link

How many bombs did they or the USSR think we had then, though?

― publier les (suggest) bans de (Michael White), Tuesday, August 9, 2011 8:24 PM (37 minutes ago) Bookmark

Good question! I think they would have to presume that we could make them fairly quickly, right? Since we'd obviously cleared all of the significant hurdles.

I think the third bomb that was ready to ship out to Japan was the last one we had ready to go.

Matt Armstrong, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 21:07 (twelve years ago) link

two years pass...
two months pass...

http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2014/oct/23/descent-hell/

Two things jump out about this big book. One is that it is unusual to read extensive personal accounts of civilians on the enemy side who suffered in large numbers during World War II. The second is that, at least to judge by the inhabitants of Okinawa, many Japanese civilians, together with their emperor, were unwilling to surrender.

The huge US offensive in Okinawa—the only part of Japan where US forces fought on the ground—lasted eighty-two days in the spring of 1945 and cost about as many lives altogether as the atom bombs themselves. The US invading force of 1,050 ships carrying 548,000 men vastly outnumbered the 110,000 Japanese soldiers defending the island. But the Japanese held out with remarkable tenacity, and 77,000 Japanese soldiers and over 140,000 civilians would be killed before the US could declare victory. On the US side, more than 14,000 troops lost their lives, including 4,900 sailors felled by Japanese kamikaze—“divine wind”—suicide pilots, of which there were 3,050. As Hanson W. Baldwin, the New York Times war correspondent, described it, “Never before had there been, probably never again will there be, such a vicious sprawling struggle.”

I was thirteen at the time and recall my feelings of pride that American soldiers were yet again beating the fiendish, barely human Japanese. This was bolstered by the press and by super-patriotic films like Wake Island, in which Americans lost but only temporarily. Later, after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, a new belief took hold among liberal and leftist Americans: that the reasons given for dropping the bombs—among them, above all, that the Japanese would never surrender unless pulverized—were self-serving and false. Because of this new book I am thinking again.

Mordy, Friday, 24 October 2014 22:27 (nine years ago) link

Per that last bit, I've noticed hearing more about the sadism and extreme brutality of the Japanese more in recent years, too. They were like a different kind of Nazi, with similar theories of superiority but slightly different means of expressing it.

One of these days I need to read a good book about World War II, one that explained how the Germans and Japanese managed to hook up in the first place.

Josh in Chicago, Friday, 24 October 2014 23:22 (nine years ago) link

marriage of convenience - Japan useful to Germany as a counterbalance to Russia and later America etc.

Οὖτις, Friday, 24 October 2014 23:25 (nine years ago) link

Yeah, but how did it even come about? How often did Germany and Japan cross paths? How did this come up? "By the way, we want to take over the world, you in?"

Josh in Chicago, Friday, 24 October 2014 23:43 (nine years ago) link

I have recently been reading Catastrophe by Max Hastings, which delivers what you are requesting, but for WW1 as an unravelling theatre of death with lots of splendid period flavour. I'd guess there is a similar WW2 type book somewhere. probably try the book thread.

xelab, Saturday, 25 October 2014 00:15 (nine years ago) link

There was a lot of debate internal to the Nazi party. Germany had a policy of siding with and sending advisors to aid the Kuomintang in their suppression of the Chinese communist party. Hitler thought the Japanese military government were more potent anti-communists, hence the Anti-comintern Pact of 1936, followed very shortly by the second Sino-Japanese War in 1937.

Its easy to forget these days that in 1937, Germany was a serious player in the far east, with the leased territory of Qingdao, trade ports at Hankou, Beihai, and Harbin, and missionaries travelling the interior. Everyone (including America) had their fingers in the Chinese pie at the time. Indeed WWII was as much created by the China grab and post-1918 anti-Communism as it was by resentment over the Versailles Treaty. Germany, or at least Hitler, thought they could get a better deal from Tokyo than Chiang Kai-shek,

TTAGGGTTAGGG (Sanpaku), Saturday, 25 October 2014 00:23 (nine years ago) link

I'm really skeptical of any "the Japanese would have fought tooth and nail for every inch of Japan" argument - some of them quickly verge into racism, but even the ones that don't seem to assume that "the Japanese," having been programmed for tenacious, relentless civilian defense, would all stay in that mode forever, regardless of whatever else developed, unless what developed was an atomic bomb, in which case they would all switch over to being okay with surrendering. It kinda doesn't compute on its face, but it also just imagines that, had the war continued, it would have been somehow ahistorical and continuous in its progress, nothing changes, the ongoing invasion and the ramping-up of the already-severe deprivations and limitations of civilian life as a result of the water have no effect on the home front.... You'd think even just the Soviets declaring war on Japan would have been a game-changer.

Doctor Casino, Saturday, 25 October 2014 01:05 (nine years ago) link

The surrender of Japan hinged entirely on the decisions of the Supreme Council for the Direction of the War and the emperor. It was never a matter of the Japanese people being programmed for tenacious, relentless civilian defense, but more a matter of disobedience to authority being so socially unacceptable as to verge on the unthinkable. The people were heartily weary of the war and dreaded being asked to make further sacrifices, but they would have obeyed.

Scapa Flow & Eddie (Aimless), Saturday, 25 October 2014 01:29 (nine years ago) link

one year passes...
three years pass...

i've always found the 'it was necessary to avoid more bloodshed' a convenient yet unconvincing excuse but i haven't done enough reading on the subject.

anything of recommendation on either side of the aisle?

sorry for butt rockin (Neanderthal), Monday, 17 February 2020 03:50 (four years ago) link

bugger "both sides", if you want to know about the bomb and how decisions on when and where to use it were made you need to check out alex wellerstein, full stop.

Kate (rushomancy), Monday, 17 February 2020 04:25 (four years ago) link

thanks

sorry for butt rockin (Neanderthal), Monday, 17 February 2020 04:26 (four years ago) link

five months pass...

a thread from last year, pretty informative:

Today is the 74th anniversary of the bombing of Nagasaki. Often overlooked, compared to Hiroshima, as merely the "second" atomic bomb, the Nagasaki attack is far more tricky, and important, in several ways. THREAD pic.twitter.com/UQYoz6ftzN

— Alex Wellerstein (@wellerstein) August 9, 2019

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 10 August 2020 00:35 (three years ago) link


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