Posted on 11/08/2003 5:39:23 PM PST by jonatron
At least 100 people, mostly children, were wounded when a bomb rocked the al-Muhaya residential compound west of Riyadh toward midnight (2100 GMT), the compound's manager told AFP.
"There are no less than 100 wounded, most of them children," Hanadi al-Khandakli said, adding she could not immediately tell whether there were any fatalities.
Khandaqli, who was in the compound at the time of the attack, said "there was gunfire followed by a blast, and a second blast minutes later."
She said the complex comprised 200 villas, four of which are inhabited by Western families, including two German and one French.
Actually I think nuking Japan was a great idea .....
The message the rest of the world should get from our actions
Don't F$%^ with Americans ... we'll flatten your cities ...
That's kewl ... I'll just put you into the
silly-a$$ed-dreamers-that-don't-understand-how-warfare-and-reality-works column
.... fair enough
Killing people is never a moral act .... except when stopping them from killing innocents or in self-defense.
War is an ugly business but sometimes it MUST be done as a just war (see the definition for that) .... it is rarely a moral act however.
It is not that complex of an issue. Thousands were dying in very brutal fighting. And the closer we got to Japan, the more brutal the conflicts were becoming. No matter what we tried to inflict on the Japanese to get them to stop, they would not stop fighting.
Everyone deseperately wanted an end to the fighting and the misery and the personal tragedies being visited on thousands of families back home. We wanted peace and the only way to acheive that against an adversary that would not give up was to win the war.
A solution came in the form of a bomb, a very big new bomb. Not a lot was known about it except that it would be very big and would be horrible for those where it fell. And it was felt that this was the best chance for ending the war. We knew it would kill many, many people. But we also new that to get to the same conclusion - an end to the war - just as many would die in conventional bombings and fighting.
We had a decision to make. Do we drop this thing knowing it will kill many in an instant or do we continue to fight towards the same conclusion and have just as many die slowly? We made our decision.
We dropped one of two bombs. It was a very big blow to Japan. We then isssued communication to Japan asking them to surrender and stop fighting. We waited a week for their answer. Conventional fighting continued elsewhere with many thousands continuing to dye on the battlefied and the seas.
No word came from Japan so after a week we dropped a second bomb and again we waited. The answer came. Japan surrendered.
It does not seem like a complex set of circumstances to me. What is it that you find hard to sort through? I presume you do not think the bomb should have been dropped.
I don't mean to nitpick but the decision was even clearer and simpler than that. At the time we could fairly accurately predict just how many Allied soldier's deaths it would take to win using conventional warfare by looking at the battlefield reports at hand and weighing that against the known populations of the islands we were fighting on, the increasingly adverse (to us) terrain we would face and the demonstrated fact that they would fight to the last man, woman and child. We estimated an additional 100,000 Allied deaths.
What was also obvious from this was that we would have had to kill far more Japanese and Okinawans by an order of magnitude than the two bombs did (including all subsequent radiation sickness deaths.) One might naively argue 'how could we know that since we didn't know exactly what the bombs would do?'. Ignoring the fact that we did have a pretty fair idea what the bombs would do from tests, we knew for certain that one bomb could only kill all of the people in one city at best. Taking Japan and Okinawa by conventional means (hand to hand on the ground) would have meant killing virtually everyone in every city, every town and all rural areas to boot save an extremely small percentage.
How anyone can seriously question which choice was more compassionate strains my mind to know what the word compassion means.
On the contrary, I think we see this exactly the same. I just wanted to reinforce your POV by clarifying that the decision was made not on the basis of thinking that enemy losses would be equal either way and that the only justification was to save our own mens lives (which has more than enough moral reason and compassion in it for me) but that the decision makers rightly saw that this was a way to save countless enemy lives as well.
The only way it could have failed in that is if the Japanese had not surrendered in the face of atomic annihilation. It still would have saved more lives. Nagasaki and Hiroshima were strategic military targets that could not have been as effectively destroyed by conventional bombing by air or sea. We could have used the A bomb on other military targets as well and ended their ability to fight regardless of their will to. Thankfully they didn't force the issue.
As to the points of 'youthful ignorance' and leftist treason I guess my question was somewhat rhetorical in nature. Those who wish to overcome the ignorance of miseducation have vast resources they can turn to. Those who wish to hang on to it or simply want to hate this country will get no quarter from me.
They are like the Japanese of that time who would rather die than face the truth that what they believed was not true. We are fortunate that few of those come to FR and few of those stay here for long. Those who really want to know the truth stay and learn and make up their own minds about things.
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