The Decision to Bomb Hiroshima
by Gar Alperovitz
August 08, 2011

This article was originally published by CounterPunch.

Gar AlperovitzToday is the 66th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima. Though most Americans are unaware of the fact, increasing numbers of historians now recognize the United States did not need to use the atomic bomb to end the war against Japan in 1945. Moreover, this essential judgment was expressed by the vast majority of top American military leaders in all three services in the years after the war ended: Army, Navy and Army Air Force. Nor was this the judgment of "liberals," as is sometimes thought today. In fact, leading conservatives were far more outspoken in challenging the decision as unjustified and immoral than American liberals in the years following World War II.

By the summer of 1945 Japan was essentially defeated, its navy at the bottom of the ocean; its air force limited by fuel, equipment, and other shortages; its army facing defeat on all fronts; and its cities subjected to bombing that was all but impossible to challenge. With Germany out of the war, the United States and Britain were about to bring their full power to bear on what was left of the Japanese military. Moreover, the Soviet Union—at this point in time still neutral—was getting ready to attack on the Asian mainland: the Red Army, fresh from victory over Hitler, was poised to strike across the Manchurian border.

Long before the bombings occurred in August 1945—indeed, as early as late April 1945, more than three months before Hiroshima—U.S. intelligence advised that the Japanese were likely to surrender when the Soviet Union entered the war if they were assured that it did not imply national annihilation. An April 29 Joint Intelligence Staff document put it this way: "If at any time the U.S.S.R. should enter the war, all Japanese will realize that absolute defeat is inevitable."

For this reason—because it would drastically shorten the war—before the atomic bomb was successfully tested (on July 16, 1945) the U.S. had strongly and repeatedly urged the Soviet Union to join the battle as soon after the defeat of Hitler as possible. A target date of three months after Germany's surrender was agreed upon—which put the planned Red Army attack date at roughly August 8, the war in Europe having ended on May 8. (In late July the date was temporarily extended by a week.)

Nor was there any doubt that the Soviet Union would join the war for its own reasons. At the Potsdam Conference in July (before the successful atomic test) President Truman entered the following in his diary after meeting with Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin on July 17: "He'll be in the Jap War on August 15. Fini Japs when that comes about."

The next day, July 18, in a private letter to his wife, the President wrote: "I've gotten what I came for—Stalin goes to war August 15 with no strings on it…I'll say that we'll end the war a year sooner now…"

The President had also been urged to offer assurances that the Japanese Emperor would be allowed to remain in some form of powerless figurehead bomb garrole by many top advisers—including, importantly, Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson, the man who oversaw the development of the atomic bomb. Before the bomb was used he explicitly urged the President that in his judgment the war would end if such assurances were given—without the use of the atomic bomb.

Nor were there insuperable political obstacles to this approach: Leadings newspapers like the Washington Post, along with leaders of the opposition Republican Party were publically demanding such a course. (Moreover, the U.S. Army wanted to maintain the Emperor in some role so as to use his authority both to order surrender and to help manage Japan during the occupation period after war's end—which, of course, is what, in fact, was done: Japan still has an Emperor.)

As the President's diary entry and letter to his wife indicate, there is little doubt that he understood the advice given by the intelligence experts as to the likely impact of the upcoming Russian attack. Further evidence is also available on this central point: The American and British Joint Chiefs of Staff—the very top military leaders of the two nations—also met at Potsdam to consolidate planning for the final stages of the war in the Pacific. General Sir Hastings Ismay, Chief of Staff to the British Minister of Defence, summarized the latest (early July) combined US-UK intelligence evidence for Prime Minister Churchill this way: "[W]hen Russia came into the war against Japan, the Japanese would probably wish to get out on almost any terms short of the dethronement of the Emperor."

The July joint intelligence finding, of course, for the most part simply restated what had been the essential view of American intelligence and many of the President's top advisers throughout the spring and summer months leading up to the July meeting at Potsdam.

Among the many reasons the shock of Soviet entry was expected to be so powerful were: first, that it would directly challenge the Japanese army in what had been one of its most important strongholds, Manchuria; second, it would signal that there was literally no hope once the third of the three Great Powers was no longer neutral; and third, and perhaps even more important, with the Japanese economy in disarray Japanese leaders were extremely fearful that leftist groups might be powerfully encouraged, politically, if the Soviet Union were to play a major role in Japan's defeat.

Furthermore, U.S. intelligence had broken Japanese codes and knew Japanese leaders were frantically hoping against hope as they attempted to arrange some form of settlement with Moscow as a mediator. Since their strategy was so heavily focused on what the Russians might or might not do, this further underscored the judgment that when the Red Army attacked, the end would not be far off: the illusory hope of a negotiation through Moscow would be thoroughly dashed as Soviet tanks rolled into Manchuria.

Instead, the United States rushed to use two atomic bombs at almost exactly the time that an August 8 Soviet attack had originally been scheduled: Hiroshima on August 6 and Nagasaki on August 9. The timing itself has obviously raised questions among many historians. The available evidence, though not conclusive, strongly suggests that the atomic bombs may well have been used in part because American leaders "preferred"—as Pulitzer Prize–winning historian Martin Sherwin has put it—to end the war with the bombs rather than the Soviet attack. Impressing the Soviets during the early diplomatic sparring that ultimately became the Cold War also appears likely to have been a significant factor.

Some modern analysts have urged that Japanese military planning to thwart an invasion was much more advanced than had previously been understood, and hence more threatening to U.S. plans. Others have argued that Japanese military leaders were much more ardently committed to one or more of four proposed 'conditions' to attach to a surrender than a number of experts hold, and hence, again, would likely have fought hard to continue the war.

It is, of course, impossible to know whether the advice given by top U.S. and British intelligence that a Russian attack would likely to produce surrender was correct. We do know that the President ignored such judgments and the advice of people like Secretary of War Stimson that the war could be ended in other ways when he made his decision. This, of course, is an important fact in its own right in considering whether the decision was justified, since so many civilian lives were sacrificed in the two bombings.

Moreover, many leading historians who have studied both the U.S. and Japanese records carefully (including, among others, Barton Bernstein and Tsuyoshi Hasegawa) have concluded that Japan was indeed in such dire straits that–as U.S. and British intelligence had urged long before the bombings–the war would, in fact, have likely ended before the November invasion target date once the Russians entered.

It is also important to note that there was very little to lose by using the Russian attack to end the war. The atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6 and August 9. There were still three months to go before the first landing could take place in November. If the early August Russian attack did not work as expected, the bombs could obviously have been used anyway long before any lives were lost in the landing.

(Since use of the atomic bombs and Russia's entry into the war came at almost exactly the same time, scholars have debated at great length which factor influenced the surrender decision more. This, of course, is a very different question from whether using the atomic bomb was justified as the only way to end the war. Still, it is instructive to note that speaking privately to top Army officials on August 14 the Japanese Emperor stated bluntly: "The military situation has changed suddenly. The Soviet Union entered the war against us. Suicide attacks can't compete with the power of science. Therefore, there is no alternative…" And the Imperial Rescript the Emperor issued to officers and soldiers to make sure they would lay down their arms stated: "Now that the Soviet Union has entered the war, to continue under the present conditions at home and abroad would only result in further useless damage… Therefore…I am going to make peace.")

The most illuminating perspective, however, comes from top World War II American military leaders. The conventional wisdom that the atomic bomb saved a million lives is so widespread that (quite apart from the inaccuracy of this figure, as noted by Samuel Walker) most Americans haven't paused to ponder something rather striking to anyone seriously concerned with the issue: Not only did most top U.S. military leaders think the bombings were unnecessary and unjustified, many were morally offended by what they regarded as the unnecessary destruction of Japanese cities and what were essentially noncombat populations. Moreover, they spoke about it quite openly and publicly.

Here is how General Dwight D. Eisenhower reports he reacted when he was told by Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson that the atomic bomb would be used:

"During his recitation of the relevant facts, I had been conscious of a feeling of depression and so I voiced to him my grave misgivings, first on the basis of my belief that Japan was already defeated and that dropping the bomb was completely unnecessary, and secondly because I thought that our country should avoid shocking world opinion by the use of a weapon whose employment was, I thought, no longer mandatory as a measure to save American lives."

In another public statement the man who later became President of the United States was blunt: "It wasn't necessary to hit them with that awful thing."

General Curtis LeMay, the tough cigar-smoking Army Air Force "hawk," was also dismayed. Shortly after the bombings he stated publically: "The war would have been over in two weeks. . . . The atomic bomb had nothing to do with the end of the war at all."

Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, Commander in Chief of the Pacific Fleet, went public with this statement: "The Japanese had, in fact, already sued for peace. . . . The atomic bomb played no decisive part, from a purely military standpoint, in the defeat of Japan."

I noted above the report General Sir Hastings Ismay, Chief of Staff to the British Minister of Defence, made to Prime Minister Churchill that "when Russia came into the war against Japan, the Japanese would probably wish to get out on almost any terms short of the dethronement of the Emperor." On hearing that the atomic test was successful, Ismay's private reaction was one of "revulsion."

Shortly before his death General George C. Marshall quietly defended the decision, but for the most part he is on record as repeatedly saying that it was not a military decision, but rather a political one. Even more important, well before the atomic bombs were used, contemporary documents record show that Marshall felt "these weapons might first be used against straight military objectives such as a large naval installation and then if no complete result was derived from the effect of that, he thought we ought to designate a number of large manufacturing areas from which the people would be warned to leave–telling the Japanese that we intend to destroy such centers…."

As the document concerning Marshall's views suggests, the question of whether the use of the atomic bomb was justified turns not only on whether other options were available, and whether top leaders were advised of this. It also turns on whether the bombs had to be used against a largely civilian target rather than a strictly military target—which, in fact, was the explicit choice since although there were Japanese troops in the cities, neither Hiroshima nor Nagasaki was deemed militarily vital by U.S. planners. (This is one of the reasons neither had been heavily bombed up to this point in the war.) Moreover, targeting was aimed explicitly on non-military facilities surrounded by workers' homes. Here we can gain further insight from two additional, equally conservative military leaders.

Many years later President Richard Nixon recalled that

"[General Douglas] MacArthur once spoke to me very eloquently about it, pacing the floor of his apartment in the Waldorf. He thought it a tragedy that the Bomb was ever exploded. MacArthur believed that the same restrictions ought to apply to atomic weapons as to conventional weapons, that the military objective should always be limited damage to noncombatants. . . . MacArthur, you see, was a soldier. He believed in using force only against military targets, and that is why the nuclear thing turned him off."

Although many others could be cited, here, finally, is the statement of another conservative, a man who was a close friend of President Truman's, his Chief of Staff (as well as President Roosevelt's Chief of Staff), and the five star Admiral who presided over meetings of the Combined U.S.-U.K. Chiefs of Staff during the war—William D. Leahy:

"[T]he 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. . . . [I]n being the first to use it, we . . . adopted an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages. I was not taught to make war in that fashion, and wars cannot be won by destroying women and children."

Gar Alperovitz is Lionel R. Bauman Professor of Political Economy at the University of Maryland and co-founder of the Democracy Collaborative.

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luke magnotto09-01-2011   12:31
This is an important and well stated piece that at least raises serious questions over , if not refutes, the commonly held explanation for the bombing of 2 mostly civilian, non-military targets in rapid succession for the sake of ending the war and sparing the lives of thousands of our soldiers. Truly this act of barbarism is unprecedented in human history. One must ask, then how it happened. If so many military leaders were against the use of the Bomb, why did Truman to go for it? Who convinced him?
Dr. Alexander Cannara09-01-2011   12:32
Gar Alperovitz brings out many interesting historical facts and reminiscences of Hiroshima A-bomb contemporaries. However, he misses, apparently intentionally, that our fire bombings of Tokyo were worse in civilian effect than was each of the A-bombs. His choosing military statements decrying A-bombs on civilians fall on deaf ears of those who witnessed Dresden, Stalingrad, etc. He further oddly skips over the inconsistency in his own writing where Gen'l Marshal suggests an alternate target, yet Aplerovitz indicates the Japanese were "ready to sue for peace" before that. Which is it? Were the Japanese going to surrender, or not? We actually know from their own records they weren't and a coup related to the Emperor's eventual intent to surrender, after the 2nd A-bomb, was in fact attempted by those wishing to fight to the end. Aplerovitz might do well for himself and us to study the documentary about our "Last Bombing Raid" which was conventional and directed to petroleum installations north of Tokyo. That raid accidentally distracted the coup participants, and one of the Emperor's recorded surrender messages survived and was then broadcast. Alperovitz suggests Russian engagement would have caused surrender -- likely so. With how many Russian & Japanese deaths? Does he not recall the Battle of Kursk? The Russian Army was not noted for concerns for civilians or POWs. And, with the Russians now entering Japanese lands and northern islands long in dispute, would they have left? Their behavior in Eastern Europe suggests not. Alperovitz also avoids talking about the documented Japanese training of their civilians to fight any invasion force with even the most primitive methods, including training children how to bury themselves in beaches with pikes, so they can pop out and stab invaders. Not only did the Japanese government disregard international treaties for treatment of POWs, it disregarded its own adults & children. A technicality -- Alperovitz misstates the use of the first A-bomb (Little Boy) -- it did not require a test. We knew it would work and we didn't have 235Uranium to waste. The 2nd bomb was of Plutonium and needed testing because of the far greater difficulty in Pu ignition. Finally, Alperovitz repeatedly uses the military "the vast majority of top American military leaders" who expressed doubts at the time about using the A-bomb. Why does he not mention how often military advice to our Presidents has been wrong? Take the Russian Missile Crisis, for instance, where only through Bobby Kennedy's coolness do we avoid the nuclear war the military leaders advocated. There are many other examples of how military 'experts' and commanders have failed our civilian control decisions. Just read the news and recent books all the way back to Vietnam or even to the Korean War -- MacArthur was so wise then wasn't he? The A-bombs we sadly dropped on the Japanese were not only horrible and no more horrible than our mass napalm, cluster or phosphorous bombings, they were necessary -- for political as well as military reasons. The end-game intrigue of the Japanese Command, the goals of Russians and Americans, all led to use of what we were fortunate to control before the Germans or anyone else. And, we had only enough fissiles for 2 bombs, which we hoped the Japanese would not guess. The Japanese were in full control of what would happen to them before the Hiroshima bomb fell. They were in full control after it fell. They chose to continue. And the Russians saw we would use the superior weapon they too were working on. Sincerely, Dr. A. Cannara Menlo Park, Calif. 650-400-3071
Dr. Alexander Cannara09-01-2011   12:36
By the way, I support NAPF. And, in fact, augur for technology that will aid international efforts to preclude/destroy nuclear weapons. http://tinyurl.com/25mgqkd www.youtube.com/watch?v=a9iEWEYcA6M
Miles Mendenhall09-01-2011   12:41
It's good to see Professor Alperovitz expanding his argument from "The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb", his essay I first read in Professor Daniel Ellsberg lecture series at UCI in Spring Semester 1982, "The History and Philosophy of The Nuclear Arms Race". Admittedly, I have not read Professor Alperovitz's book. Just referred others to it online. I've made Professor Alperovitz's argument off and on over the years when the topic comes up. There is a high degree of resistance to it. For evident reasons, people do not want to accept what to them is unacceptable. Thank you for this new recitation, I had not seen the quotes from Nixon regarding MacArthur before, as well as a couple of others. Please note, there appears to be a typo on the seventh paragraph from the top, second line. "bomb garrole", as far as I can determine, is nonsensical. I googled, to no avail. No Nukes!
Dr. Alexander Cannara09-01-2011   13:03
Human nature is indeed our problem as MilesM evidences: "There is a high degree of resistance to it. For evident reasons, people do not want to accept what to them is unacceptable." Miles apparently can stand above others who might question the misstatements from folks like the author? Really? I prefer the plain logic of country folks: "People do what they want". MilesM hasn't read the book, but somehow knows it's correct? Really? This is how we add to our continuing trail of mistakes. War is hell. People are foolish, faddish & lazy. The result? War.
Miles Mendenhall09-01-2011   13:16
Dr. Cannara, You're reading far too much into my comment about people resisting the unacceptable, and you are engaging in gross presumptive overindication. I was referring to the tendency to reject the idea that dropping Little Boy and Fat Man on Hiroshima and Nagasaki was not a military necessity. Obviously you disagree with Professor Alperovitz about that, as is your right. I am not debating the issue here. While it is clear that you are. (By the way, there were no comments visible when I made mine. So nothing I wrote was in reply to anything else in these comments.) In my two decades in academia, I found this tendency, sniping at phantoms, to be endemic. One of several reasons I chose not to pursue a life of vexatious disputation. You have no idea what I think on this matter, with regard to the substance of the argument, please cease your projecting ideas and feelings on to me that do not exist, and are not in evidence here. We're not professional rivals, you have no turf I am seeking to invade, and I have no investment in any argument with you. As is typical, you only discredit yourself with your insults.
Edward Silverman09-01-2011   14:46
I can remeember WW2 and how vicious the Japanese were in subgigating other countrys, peoples and captives. To end the war without loosing thousands of our own troops in the process we had to shock the Japanese into unconditional surrender. All the writings to the contrary are complete baloney.
Dr. Alexander Cannara09-01-2011   17:50
Right on EdS. And, we even exempted the Japanese military from war crimes trials, for a number of political reasons, but also because we wanted to learn from their various experiments on Chinese victims, including atrocities executed in studying human survival in arctic climes. Guess who we felt we might fight next and likely need that data. Indeed, Japanese atrocities in WWII exceeded anything the Germans came up with. Ask any other Asian old enough to recall. Wonder if Alperovitz is donating any of his book's proceeds to Japanese victims.
luke magnotto09-01-2011   20:39
A Cannara's comments against Dr. A's article are somewhat baffling to me. Dr A never said that the Japanese were good guys during the war. He didn't try to excuse their flagrant atrocities. Nor did he say anything about later US military leaders who were pushing JFK to nuke the Russians. Certainly the fire bombings of Tokyo were immensely destructive. And Kurt Vonnegut spent many a sentence decrying the Dresden bombings. But that adds nothing to the discussion as to why we intentionally bombed 2 non-military targets containing thousands of civilians in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. As A Canara proposes, the Cold War was in its infancy and the advancing Russians played at least some part, perhaps the greater part, in Truman's decision. But, can anyone say who were the proponents of using the bomb aside from Stimson and General Groves. Where did Nitze stand? George Kennan?
Dr. Alexander Cannara09-01-2011   23:14
Luke, the points of my comments, were twofold: a) Gar provides interesting 'new' data, but excludes others just as relevant; and b) he hypothesizes on how the Japanese would have reacted to Russian attacks that are inconsistent with actual Japanese behavior ion the face of actual nuclear bombings, which are claimed to be far worse than Russian warfare. Many scientists & engineers on the Manhattan Project were ambivalent about using such a weapon, but they also were realists in interpreting Japanese behavior, for which there had been years of evidence, including Okinawa's suicides of families who were told Allied troops would kill children & rape women. It's a remarkable feature of our brains that things we didn't experience get massaged so that the realities of the times for people actually there are misapprised to serve some present argument. That's true hubris, coupled with stark ignorance, both unapologetic. I simply suggested the specific remarks about military opposition to A-bomb use were built on logical sand, given the reality in our subsequent decades of experience with such advice -- too often faulty. Gar is uncritical of that kind of advice, but critical of advice and decisions leading to the bombing -- that's disingenuous. Therefore, while many of his revelations are interesting, they don't fully address the realities of the time -- they leave out many relevant facts that would have led reasonable people of today, transported back in time, to consider using the A-bomb. Tokyo was mostly a non-military target, with more civilians killed by burning them to death with products made in the USA. To assume one can wipe all that away and focus on just our A-bomb killings, is dishonest. War is hell and a prime reason that is the rationalizations churning in the minds of those who wage it and those who critique it. Things we do know are that Japan would not be the country it has come to be if the Russians had invaded, and that likely as many civilians would have died in that event, both from the Russians and our continued fire bombing of Japan's cities. We know as well that it was only an accident of fate that the Emperor wasn't taken prisoner by the military fanatics bent on fighting to the last Japanese. These documented facts are ignored by Gar -- why? It's remarkably ironic that he quotes MacArthur opposing, post-facto, the A-bombings, yet not many years after 1945 that same general advised our President to nuke the Chinese, even beyond the Yalu River. This is a reliable source of advice? Finally, is the aim to blame Truman alone? Odd, since Truman is the very fellow who fired MaCarthur for insubordinate activities, which included repeated advocacy of A-bombing the Chinese. Hypocrisy at any time is hypocrisy forever.
luke magnotto09-02-2011   10:27
Alexander, you blame Gar for making several unfounded suppositions, yet you incorporate many suppositions in your argument. First, the designers of the bomb were told that it was to be used against the Germans who were, it was known, designing their own bomb. You are assuming that they supported the use of the bomb against the Japanese when many of those "realists" were at best conflicted and some against its use after Germany fell. Second, you cannot expect Gar to be critical of military advice based on "subsequent decades of experience with such advice". He was dealing with WWII, not Korea or Cuba or Viet Nam. And his quotes were not only the statement of MacArthur, but the statements of Leahy, LeMay, Nimitz and even Eisenhower. Finally, if the fanatics had been successful in taking the Emperor prisoner, the war might have continued to the last Japanese death whether we dropped the bombs or not. Such is the psyche of a fanatic. In which case there is no doubt that Japan would look much different today.
Dr. Alexander Cannara09-02-2011   12:50
Luke, if you were a lawyer in court, you'd lose every case... "the designers of the bomb were told that it was to be used against the Germans who were, it was known, designing their own" -- I never said that. In fact, we didn't know the Germans had thought it impossible so had dropped serious efforts early on -- we discovered that when our special team captured & interrogated German scientists, such as Pauli. You might do well to study up. "You are assuming that they supported the use of the bomb against the Japanese when many of those "realists" were at best conflicted and some against its use" -- never said all scientists were for or against the weapon. The present Bulletin of Atomic Scientists was formed, in fact, to oppose use, and one of its founders, Alvin Weinberg, wrote in his memoirs about who was for & against and who changed (as he did) as realities like Okinawa occurred. 'you cannot expect Gar to be critical of military advice based on "subsequent decades of experience with such advice"' -- really? Ok, what about the advice that got us into the Battle of the Bulge? What about the advice that killed many, many US Marines on Pacific islands that could have simply been bypassed? What about the advice to invade Italy by sea, rather than just cut off German occupation at the top of the boot? And, the advice to destroy Dresden? And so on. Gar claims full academic credentials ("credence" is the root), so why can he skip inconvenient truths? "his quotes were not only the statement of MacArthur, but the statements of Leahy, LeMay, Nimitz and even Eisenhower" -- indeed. And what about their feelings on burning more people to death in Tokyo, etc? Why is what they had to say against the A-bomb not conflicted with what they allowed against civilians that were as bad? Do you have any idea how being burned to death differs from an atomic blast? Did all those quoted names care? MacArthur plainly didn't care, even when he left his own troops in the Philippines, or advocated nuking the Chinese & N. Koreans. "if the fanatics had been successful in taking the Emperor prisoner, the war might have continued to the last Japanese death whether we dropped the bombs or not" -- if ifs & ands were pots & pans, there'd be no work for tinkers. Big if, Luke. You avoid the fact that this occurred after Hiroshima, that the emperor upon Nagasaki's bomb was ready to surrender, and that it wasn't the entire Japanese Command that was behind such a coup -- there are so many assumptions in what you suggest that it ends up meaning nothing. The facts were that we had only those two bombs ready and that after their use most of the government & military was ready to capitulate. If what you suggest had happened, then the Russian intervention would likely have been the final, bloody blow. But, none of what you suggest would have avoided the actual civilian death count, and likely have worsened it. Being anti-nuclear doesn't mean, or benefit from, being anti-factual or anti-logical.
Luke Magnotto09-02-2011   16:06
Alexander, your mind is obviously made up and nothing will change your opinion. You consider yourself an expert in this matter, the arbiter of all related facts, and the prince of logic. But what baffles me is how you could get so worked up about the fire bombings of Dresden and Tokyo, decrying the military leaders who ordered such carnage, and still argue in favor of nuking Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Being anti nuclear doesn't mean, as you say, "being anti-factual or anti-logical"[sic] But neither does it mean being selectively pro nuclear.
Dr. Alexander Cannara09-02-2011   20:40
There you go again Luke. I said nothing about being "pro nuclear" whatever that means. I said nothing except to point out errors of omission or fact-massaging in Gar's piece. If you prefer burning 100,000 Japanese to death chemically rather than via A-bombs, that's your choice. My statements simply reflect documented evidence of how Japanese were preparing a fight to the death against conventional (if firebombing is "conventional" in any humane sense) warfare. Add that to our knowledge of what Stalin was doing in Eastern Europe, and with their own nuclear program, and one can begin to understand why Truman chose such a direct response, with an unmatched weapon. Being anti-nuclear at the time would have meant continued burning of civilians' flesh -- men, women & children; invasion by sea, with horrendous casualties on all sides, whether Russian, American or Japanese; and a political result that might have been much like Korea's. This is all speculation, but there are crucial facts that Gar leaves out, apparently by choice, hopefully by simple ignorance. In any case, championing his revision of past reasoning serves no one, unless all the facts are arrayed and discussed. That's not what you appear open to do. And, that's not how nuclear weapons will ever be eliminated.


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