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Old 03-13-2004, 12:57 PM   #41 (permalink)
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Old 03-13-2004, 12:59 PM   #42 (permalink)
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I'm not going to take a side but some points to consider:

Japan had never been invaded before -- lucky chance kept the Mongols away and many believed that supernatural forces would protect the islands from any invader.

Had the bombs not been dropped Russia would have invaded, with ugly results. (eg. lots of deaths on both sides, a post-war divided Japan, etc.)

For good or for bad, one of the purposes of dropping the bombs was probably to intimidate the Russians.

It is possible that the Japanese would have been willing to negotiate a surrender with conditions, but American insistence on "unconditional surrender" made ending the war without further casualties more difficult. The primary condition desired by Japan, retention of the Emperor, was in the end granted by MacArthur anyway.

In its pre-atomic bombing state, Japan's military was hardly a threat to anyone (although parts of China were still occupied).

America did not make much of an effort to make clear the power of their new arsenal before using it.

Quote:
Originally posted by Lebell
Just fyi, another bomb was being assembled as the Japanese surrendered. I *think* it was targeted for Kyoto or Tokyo, but I can't remember exactly.
I remember reading about plans to put together regular atomic bomb production for late-1945, with 9 or more bombs ready and possibly dropped by the end of the year on both industrial targets and civilian ones.
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Old 03-13-2004, 01:28 PM   #43 (permalink)
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there are additional things to consider when considering about the bomb:
japan is a series of islands, we all know how bitter island fighting in the pacific was, and if you imagine every person on that island, including women and children raising arms, then everyone would have suffered alot more.

japan was an incrediably powerful nation in it's hayday, like lord jeebus said, the fact that the americans demanded an unconditional surrender really didn't help the japanese save face. it's like france demanding that britain hand over it's crown (and it has done several times), we won't have it, and the people would fight bitterly to make sure it didn't happen.
basically, america pushed themselves into further bloodshed by not giving some leway.

to further clarify my point earlier about how the japanese would react if they knew the americans didn't have another bomb ready (originally they thought that the next target would be tokyo, so to avoid more death, they surrendered, FSOA):
you've just had over 100,000 of your fellow countrymen murdered in cold blood in the blink of an eye by an evil invading power intent on destorying your way of life. you find out that they don't have anymore, and their soldiers are on your doorstep.
so, you break out the bolt action rifle, and charge at these god forsaken animals in the name of those that died.

remember, history is written by the victors.
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Old 03-13-2004, 01:40 PM   #44 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by lordjeebus
I remember reading about plans to put together regular atomic bomb production for late-1945, with 9 or more bombs ready and possibly dropped by the end of the year on both industrial targets and civilian ones.

I can't recall about that.

I'm talking about the implosion type weapons that were being assembled in August. (Which I read about in "The Making of the Atomic Bomb" by Richard Rhodes.)
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Old 03-13-2004, 02:09 PM   #45 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by Lebell
I can't recall about that.

I'm talking about the implosion type weapons that were being assembled in August. (Which I read about in "The Making of the Atomic Bomb" by Richard Rhodes.)
Here's what I was thinking about (Thanks to LexisNexis -- all I remembered was that I read this in the summer of 1995):

Quote:
The Washington Post
July 16, 1995
A SECTION; Pg. A01
HEADLINE: Truman Didn't Hesitate to Drop Atomic Bomb on Japan

BYLINE: Walter Pincus, Washington Post Staff Writer

BODY:
Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Blasted by U.S. atomic bombs 50 years ago, the Japanese cities today instantly call to mind images of terrible devastation and the unique horror of history's only nuclear attacks.

In 1945, though, they were merely the first two targets in a series of atomic bombings approved by President Harry S. Truman and his advisers in a calculated effort to use the extraordinary new weapon to drive Tokyo to surrender unconditionally.

On July 24 of that year, Truman enthusiastically approved a schedule drawn up by military and scientific advisers to drop two atomic bombs on Japan in August, three per month in September, October and November, and possibly seven in December.

At the same time, assuming the bombs alone might not be sufficient to end the war, the military was going forward with a plan, approved by Truman in June, for a November invasion of Japan's southernmost island of Kyushu using more than 765,000 U.S. troops. A big concern in Washington was that the new weapons, never tested under wartime conditions, might prove to be duds.

As the 50th anniversary approaches of the atomic bombings, a debate has revived over whether Truman was justified in using the bomb. Some historians have said he erred and set a dangerous precedent because Japan would have surrendered even had the bomb not been dropped.

Others have charged that Truman used the bomb less to end the war with Japan than to intimidate the Soviet Union at the Cold War's outset. Another suggestion is that a "warning" bomb should have been exploded somewhere as a demonstration, to give Japan a chance to surrender. There is a theory that Truman's advisers insisted on using the bombs to justify the $ 2 billion spent to develop them.

But the issues that concerned Truman and his advisers at the time, and the debates within the administration, point to motives and judgments that are very different from some ascribed by subsequent critics, according to a three-month study of archival records and the published literature on the subject.

While historians with benefit of hindsight long will ponder what else besides the bomb might have forced Japan's surrender, the evidence is abundant that Truman used the weapon at the time because his paramount goal was to win World War II as quickly as possible on U.S. terms.

A key factor in White House thinking was that the public was weary of fighting, in the wake of Allied victory in Europe in May 1945 and following more than 3 1/2 years of bloodshed. By early July, total U.S. losses in the Army and Navy were more than 1 million, including 290,000 killed, 630,000 wounded, and the remainder either missing or prisoners of war.

Top officials were worried about growing domestic discontent highlighted by strikes and other labor unrest. At a May 22, 1945, meeting of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Fred M. Vinson, then head of domestic mobilization and later a Supreme Court justice, said he was "afraid of unrest in the country. He never saw the people in their present frame of mind before," according to notes of the session.

Vinson talked of widespread concerns about food rationing and shortages. People were angry that older men were being pulled out of nonmilitary jobs and drafted, and that some soldiers who had already served in Europe were being transferred to the Pacific theater for the expected invasion of Japan.

Truman recorded in his diary, and said in a radio address after Nagasaki, that he hoped the atomic bombings would make the invasion unnecessary. It seemed certain to cost high American casualties, judging by the toll of 18,000 dead in the recent U.S. conquests of the islands of Iwo Jima and Okinawa.

Against that background, the dropping of the two atomic bombs in three days achieved the goal of a rapid surrender on acceptable terms. In the Aug. 15 announcement in Japan, six days after the Nagasaki bombing, Emperor Hirohito cited America's "outrageous bomb," which "slaughtered untold numbers of innocent people" and created "incalculable" damage.

Critics of Truman, including some at the time, have asked whether the bombings were moral. The blasts killed a total of 100,000 or more civilians in two instants at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Days afterward, thousands of people who appeared to have survived began to fall ill from radiation sickness and later died. While the final figure remains uncertain, the eventual death toll from both blasts is generally believed to exceed 200,000.

However, numbers that seem appalling by today's standards were not disturbing at the time to most Americans. They saw the Japanese as hated, cruel enemies who had brought the United States into the war with a sneak attack on the U.S. naval fleet in Pearl Harbor and slaughtered Chinese, Filipinos and others in their years of conquest.

When the Truman administration was preparing to use nuclear weapons, the United States already had been heavily bombing enemy cities with large civilian populations. On March 9, 1945, for instance, 334 B-29s dropped firebombs over Tokyo, wiping out nearly 16 square miles of the city and killing more than 100,000 Japanese. Army Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Henry A. "Hap" Arnold sent congratulations to Gen. Curtis LeMay, who ordered the raid, and over the next nine days additional B-29 raids burned out an additional 32 square miles in Japan's four largest cities, leaving 150,000 more fatalities.

On April 12, when he became president after Franklin D. Roosevelt died, Truman inherited the bombing policy. Months later, in the speech broadcast to the nation after Nagasaki, Truman provided a typically blunt account of why he used the new nuclear weapons.

"Having found the bomb we have used it . . . ," Truman said. "We have used it in order to shorten the agony of war, in order to save the lives of thousands and thousands of young Americans. We shall continue to use it until we completely destroy Japan's power to make war."

(there's a lot more article but I'll stop here)

Last edited by lordjeebus; 03-13-2004 at 02:13 PM..
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Old 03-13-2004, 02:38 PM   #46 (permalink)
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Originally posted by The_Dunedan
. You say you attended University; either you flunked out on account of routinely making fallacious arguements like this, or the state of the British University system s more degraded than I realized.
Actually, although it is off topic, I got a first,
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Old 03-13-2004, 03:27 PM   #47 (permalink)
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Old 03-13-2004, 10:21 PM   #48 (permalink)
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no telling what would have happend if it wasnt droped but it was no way to change it so in my mind there is no reason to question it...
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Old 03-13-2004, 11:22 PM   #49 (permalink)
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Think about this? Would you drop two Nuke bombs today if you though it would put an end to terrorism?

I think the bomb was the best thing that happened. Massive of people who all do the same thing in the name of religion will cause more harm then two bombs. We Americans need to realize the price of freedom is not free. I spent 23 years in the military to speak my peace of mind. Many of my friends died so I may type this so YES we did right.
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Old 03-13-2004, 11:40 PM   #50 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by FishKing
Would you drop two Nuke bombs today if you though it would put an end to terrorism?
No.

http://www.hup.harvard.edu/features/steult/numbers.html states that worldwide, terrorism killed 88000 people between 1970 and 1996, worldwide.

Two nuclear bombs of WWII scale would kill in the hundreds of thousands of innocents. It would make me worse than all terrorists of the past generation combined.
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