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Giving thanks for Hiroshima
The Spectator (U.K.) ^ | 07/30/05 | Andrew Kenny

Posted on 07/28/2005 7:02:24 AM PDT by Pokey78

A dragonfly flitted in front of me and stopped on a fence. I stood up, took my cap in my hands, and was about to catch the dragonfly when...’
...when there was a flash of white light in the blue sky above Hiroshima. This was at 8.15 a.m. on 6 August 1945. Then followed a new kind of thunder and a new kind of hellfire. A minute later those who were still alive, those whose flesh was not falling off their bodies, blinked into a changed world, like a traveller waking and finding himself on a different planet. Through the glare of flames and the darkness of smoke, they saw that their city had vanished and been replaced by a blackened desert, empty of everything except fire, charcoal, corpses and the concrete skeletons of buildings. Some of the dead had become small: shrivelled lumps of charred meat sticking to pavements and bridges. Some of the living had become big: swollen red monsters with pits in their faces where their eyes and mouths had been. A man without feet walked on his ankles; a woman without a jaw stood with her tongue hanging out of her head; a naked man sat holding his eyeball in his hand. One of the crew of the bomber, describing what he had seen below, said, ‘Did you ever go to the beach and stir up the sand in shallow water and see it all billow up? That’s what it looked like to me.’ Sixty-six thousand people died instantly, 120 thousand by the end of the year.

I visited Hiroshima last month. I was in Kyoto to attend an energy conference where, somewhat ironically I suppose, I gave a talk on South Africa’s new nuclear power reactor, the Pebble Bed Modular Reactor. (It was well received.) After the conference I took the train to Hiroshima, swishing through the Japanese countryside at 180mph in a spotlessly clean and comfortable carriage. A conductor in a demure uniform bowed to us upon entering and leaving it. I looked out at the low hills of Japan with their feathery covering of light green trees and at the neat grey towns with factories and paddy fields in their midst. At Hiroshima station I took the tram to the most haunting ruin in the world and then walked through a graceful park to the ‘Peace Museum’ (the War Museum).

The museum is sombre, informative and horrifying. Models and large mural photographs show the city before and after the bomb. There are statistics of death, heat, pressure and radiation, eye-witness accounts of children watching their mothers die in front of them, anecdotes, such as the man about to catch the dragonfly, and little household relics, such as molten spoons and a wristwatch stopped at 08.15. But the most evocative remnant stands outside the museum on a riverbank. It is the ruin of the ‘Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall’, usually known as the ‘Atomic Dome’.

Hiroshima is built on a large delta consisting of seven rivers. At its centre is the T-shaped Aioi Bridge, which provides a three-way crossing where one river divides into two. This T was the target for the atomic bombardier. He was slightly out and the bomb exploded about 200 yards to the south, 600 yards above the ground. The Promotion Hall is close to the bridge. It was built in 1915, designed by a Czech architect, and consisted of cylindrical shapes joined together into a four-storey block with a small green dome on the top. It looked like half an apple on top of a jukebox. The atomic bomb vastly improved it as an aesthetic object, changing it from a mundanely ugly building into a masterpiece of stricken form. I gazed at it for a long time from every angle and then paced out the distance south to where the bomb had gone off. In an act of compulsive foolishness I stared upward to look for the spot in the air.

Was Truman right to drop it? I have no doubt he was. However I look at it, I cannot see other than that the bomb saved millions of lives, Allied and Japanese. All British combatants in the second world war that I have ever spoken to, including my parents, described the same reaction when they heard of the Hiroshima bomb: tremendous relief. A foreman, Tommy, at a factory I worked at in Lancashire in 1980, told me that in July 1945 he was in the Pacific doing exercises for the invasion of Japan. He expected to die. He thanked the bomb that he became a grandfather.

The most effective soldiers in the war were the Germans. The only way the Allies could beat them was to outnumber and outgun them. They seemed to have a limitless supply of officers with quick, flexible minds who could read a battle and make a swift and intelligent assessment of the best tactics required. For the opposite reason, the Japanese were among the most ineffective soldiers in the war. Tough, brave and stoical, they became useless as battle winners if you killed their commander. They could not think for themselves and, without orders and leaders, became a ferocious and implacable mob, hopeless for securing victory but terrifyingly dangerous in refusing defeat. They would not surrender. The casualties when the Americans invaded the outlying islands in the Pacific held by the Japanese were sickeningly high because they just would not surrender. The invasion of Japan itself would probably have been the bloodiest episode in human combat. Expecting it, Japanese Imperial Headquarters called for ‘100 million deaths with honour’.

Making things worse was the chaotic leadership of Japan. Japan’s ‘15-Year War’ had not been started by political leaders but by two mad colonels in Manchuria. We shall never know what happened at command level in Japan during the war, because documents were destroyed before the Allied occupation, but there certainly was murderous conflict between generals, admirals and politicians. The Emperor was the only one with supreme authority, even if he lacked will, and we are lucky he survived. Killing Hitler would have shortened the war; killing Emperor Hirohito would have lengthened it. He was for making peace but needed a special reason for doing so, something so overwhelming that he could face down his generals who wanted to continue the war. The threat of the Soviet Union’s joining the war against Japan was not enough. The atomic bomb was.

The first bomb was dropped on Hiroshima on 6 August. The second was dropped on Nagasaki on 9 August. Was it necessary? I’m afraid so. There was still dithering and defiance after the first bomb and the American idea was to keep on blowing until the enemy’s flame went out. I have taken some descriptions from Richard Rhodes’s superb book The Making of the Atomic Bomb. In it he quotes the historian Herbert Feis, who explains the mood of American people then. They had ‘impatience to end the strain of war blended with a zest for victory. They longed to be done with smashing, burning, killing and dying — and were angry at the defiant, crazed, useless prolongation of the ordeal.’

The Americans hurried to roll out the Nagasaki bomb, wanting to give an impression of continued, massive and irresistible destruction. The third bomb would be ready to fall by 17 August. But on 15 August the Emperor announced the surrender.

Then there was a large-scale experiment on human beings that gave spectacular confirmation of the principle that institutions and not race determine the virtues and well-being of mankind. The USA forced democracy on Japan. It worked like a charm and, with enduring peace, achieved a happy wonder. The Japanese, always industrious and inventive, became model democrats — tolerant, peaceful and considerate. The grandsons of men who abused British prisoners in PoW camps now treat their grandsons with respect and decency. There is an obvious improvement in health in Japan. One glance at a Japanese crowd shows a striking difference between generations: those over 60 are very short; those under 40 are of Western heights, with six-footers not standing out at all. Japan has reached new levels of manufacturing prowess and efficiency, improving the whole world with its marvellous products.

The casualties of Hiroshima were mainly from blast and heat. Radiation killed far fewer and these mostly suffered acute damage from the massive direct radiation that struck fast-growing cells in the gut, skin, marrow, blood and in foetuses, causing hideous deaths and abnormalities. Chronic radiation effects, the long-lasting effects, were quite small. By 1990 the total number of the survivors from both bombs who died from cancer caused by the radiation was estimated at 428 — an average of 10 a year since the bombs were dropped. The figure for genetic damage done by the radiation is more precisely known. It is zero. No increase in genetic defects in children born to survivors who conceived after the bomb has ever been seen.

The London bombs went off while I was in Japan and dominated the headlines there. With them on my mind, it was disturbing to read in the Hiroshima Museum that the amount of uranium which had exploded, i.e., actually underwent fission, was about a kilogram — a piece of uranium the size of a plum (although you need more to ensure fission). What if the London terrorists had had atomic bombs? There are two fuels for an atomic bomb: highly enriched uranium (HEU), which was used on Hiroshima, and weapons-grade plutonium, which was used on Nagasaki. Even with this plutonium, it is very difficult to make a bomb. With the HEU, it is very easy. The Americans made both in 1945 but only had to test the plutonium bomb. They knew the HEU one would work, and dropped it untested on Hiroshima. HEU is the most dangerous explosive material in existence and the prospect of its falling into the wrong hands is appalling. The only way to stop this happening is by concerted, honest, open political endeavour.

There is little connection between atomic weapons and nuclear power. Sweden, Switzerland and Japan have nuclear power but no weapons. Israel has atomic weapons but no nuclear power. The Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) came into existence to allow nuclear power and to stop the spread of atomic weapons. Technically, this is very simple to do: have an outright and worldwide ban on any uranium enrichment above 10 per cent (weapons need above 80 per cent) and the same ban on weapons-grade plutonium. The problem is political. The countries that possess the atomic weapons, including the USA, would refuse this ban. Other countries are judged not by their compliance to NPT but by political prejudice. Iran does not have atomic weapons and has a good record of compliance with NPT. India does have atomic weapons and refuses to sign it. Yet Iran is vilified by the US, and President Bush has just agreed to help India’s nuclear programme. This staggering hypocrisy endangers the world.

Among the distinguished visitors who are photographed visiting the Hiroshima Peace Museum is the last white president of South Africa, F.W. de Klerk, who went there in 1993. There is great symbolism here because the apartheid regime had made six Hiroshima-style bombs. De Klerk ordered them to be dismantled and the plant that had made the HEU to be demolished. De Klerk deserves his Nobel Peace Prize twice over, once for ending apartheid and once for showing the world what to do with atomic bombs.

In the history of human sorrow, the atomic bombs on Japan must be ranked large but by no means largest. More people were killed in the conventional bombing of Germany and Tokyo. More than twice as many were killed with machetes and clubs in Rwanda in 1994. Mao Tse-tung killed a hundred times more in a single episode simply by denying people food. A mediaeval torturer could easily match any individual horror of Hiroshima, and personally I should prefer to face an atomic bomb than a man with a red-hot poker and a pair of pincers. The only different thing about the bomb is that so much destruction can be caused so quickly from one source. This is why it ended the second world war.

We do not know what happened to that dragonfly 60 years ago. Without the bomb she might have ended that day as a decorative corpse, stuck to a board with a pin through her chest, dead before she could have children. Perhaps, like Tommy, the bomb saved her life and her descendants now flit into the future just above the gentle plains of Hiroshima.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Japan
KEYWORDS: atomicbomb; hiroshima; wwii
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To: APFel

Horishima was the headquarters of the second Japanese army group. As such it was the location for training of troops and would have directed the fight during the first part of operation Downfall which was due to start 11/1/1945. The operation started with the invasion of southern Kyushu. The two priciple ports on that island were Nagasaki and Kagoshima. Kagoshima was the target of the first pahse of operation downfall. Nagasaki was eliminated to make it harder for the japanese to reinforce there positions on the island. Yes they were both legitimate military targets.


21 posted on 07/28/2005 8:19:26 AM PDT by Fellow Traveler
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To: Tax-chick
From an old StrategyPage.com article which has scrolled off:

When A Democracy Chose Genocide

The United States government decided on June 18, 1945, to commit genocide on Japan with poison gas if its government did not surrender after the nuclear attacks approved in the same June 18 meeting. This was discovered by military historians Norman Polmar and Thomas Allen while researching a book on the end of the war in the Pacific. Their discovery came too late for inclusion in the book, so they published it instead in the Autumn 1997 issue of Military History Quarterly.

Polmar & Allen ran across references to this meeting in their research and put in a Freedom of Information Act request for related documents. Eventually they received, too late for use in their book, a copy of a document labeled "A Study of the Possible Use of Toxic Gas in Operation Olympic." The word "retaliatory" was PENCILED in between the words "possible" and "use".

Apparently there were only five of these documents circulated during World War Two. The document was requested by the Chemical Corps for historical study in 1947. In an attempt to "redact" history, another document was issued to change all the copies to emphasize retaliatory use rather than the reality of the US planning to use it offensively in support of the invasion of Japan.

The plan called for US heavy bombers to drop 56,583 tons of poison gas on Japanese cities in the 15 days before the invasion of Kyushu, then another 23,935 tons every 30 days thereafter. Tactical air support would drop more on troop concentrations.

The targets of the strategic bombing campaign were Japanese civilians in cities. Chemical Corps casualty estimates for this attack plan were five million dead with another five million injured. This was our backup to nuking Japan into surrender. If the A-bombs didn't work, we were going to gas the Japanese people from the air like bugs, and keep doing so until Japanese resistance ended or all the Japanese were dead.

Genocide is defined by treaty as the murder of a large number of people of an identifiable group, generally a nationality or religion, which number comprises an appreciable percentage of the total group. Five million dead is 6.4% of then 78 million people in the Japanese Home Islands, so this proposed gas attack would certainly have qualified as genocide.

What brought the United States government to that decision was the prospective casualties of a prolonged ground conquest of Japan against suicidal resistance, after Japanese Kamikaze attacks and suicidal ground resistance elsewhere had thoroughly dehumanized them to us.

The American people certainly would have supported such tactics at the time, especially as Japanese Imperial General Headquarters issued orders a month later, provided to us courtesy of code-breaking (MAGIC), to murder all Allied prisoners of war, all interned Allied civilians, and all other Allied civilians Japanese forces could catch in occupied China, the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia), Malaya, etc., starting with the impending British invasion of Malaya in late September 1945. The Imperial Japanese Army was every bit as evil as the Nazi SS, and more lethal. They'd probably have killed at least an additional 50 million people, more than had died in all of World War Two to that point, before Allied armies could eliminate Japanese forces overseas.

The horror would not have stopped there. An estimated ONE THIRD of the Japanese people (25-30 million) would have died of starvation, disease, poison gas and conventional weapons during a prolonged ground conquest of Japan. The Japanese Army planned on locking up the Emperor, seizing power and fighting to the bitter end once the US invasion started. Thank God for the atom bomb - killing 150,000 - 200,000 Japanese at Hiroshima and Nagasaki saved 75-80 million lives. One of whom would have been the writer's father, an infantry lieutenant who survived Okinawa.

So the United States has within living memory made a decision to commit genocide on a whole people as a matter of state policy. We didn't have to do it because the Japanese Emperor knew we'd do it.

The relative power of America's armed forces vis a vis the rest of the world has grown to the point where genocide is unlikely to be necessary to impose our will on any possible combination of enemies lacking the ability to seriously menace the American homeland. The American people might support genocide as policy if further attacked at home, but the American government will act based on its perception of American interests, and keep that demon in the bottle, absent overwhelming public demand. Nuclear weapons use is another matter - the American government has used nuclear weapons to avert greater evils and recently indicated some willingness to do so again, albeit with non-genocidal force.

Our enemies considering further attacks on us should keep these history lessons in mind.

22 posted on 07/28/2005 8:21:45 AM PDT by Thud
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To: Thud

Very interesting information, thanks!


23 posted on 07/28/2005 8:38:27 AM PDT by Tax-chick (Standing athwart history, shouting, "Turn those lights off! You think electricity grows on trees?")
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To: Prime Choice

Where'd you get THAT picture? I want that.....


24 posted on 07/28/2005 8:43:55 AM PDT by goodnesswins (Our military......the world's HEROES!)
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To: Montfort

This is why we should use a few dozen nukes on the Muslims. It is the only thing they will understand, and of course, all those worries about the Middle East being uninhabitable for 300 years is obviously nonsense, since people live just fine in both Hiroshima and Nagasaki... not to mention Las Vegas - which is very near to where the USA tested nearly 1030 nuclear weapons.


25 posted on 07/28/2005 8:46:35 AM PDT by Bon mots
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To: Thud

THANK YOU for posting that......I'm going to send it out to my email list as a "history lesson." (I keep trying to re-educate my family and friends.)


26 posted on 07/28/2005 8:47:24 AM PDT by goodnesswins (Our military......the world's HEROES!)
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To: APFel
Well, I guess I would yield to the Committee that considered potential targets. The minutes of the targeting committee on May 10-11, 1945 indicate the following:

6. Status of Targets

A. Dr. Stearns described the work he had done on target selection. He has surveyed possible targets possessing the following qualification: (1) they be important targets in a large urban area of more than three miles in diameter, (2) they be capable of being damaged effectively by a blast, and (3) they are unlikely to be attacked by next August. Dr. Stearns had a list of five targets which the Air Force would be willing to reserve for our use unless unforeseen circumstances arise. These targets are:

(1) Kyoto - This target is an urban industrial area with a population of 1,000,000. It is the former capital of Japan and many people and industries are now being moved there as other areas are being destroyed. From the psychological point of view there is the advantage that Kyoto is an intellectual center for Japan and the people there are more apt to appreciate the significance of such a weapon as the gadget. (Classified as an AA Target)


The Committee then recommended Kyoto as their number one pick.

It seems to me that the primary criteria for picking a target, "they be important targets in a large urban area of more than three miles in diameter," is essentially a directive, not to bomb factories, but to bomb people.

I'm not criticizing that decision, I think it was necessary, but the pattern of targeting civilians in WWII, by all sides of that war, is something we are living with today.
27 posted on 07/28/2005 8:48:36 AM PDT by BikerNYC
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To: Pokey78
He was for making peace but needed a special reason for doing so, something so overwhelming that he could face down his generals who wanted to continue the war.

Key point.

The samurai mentality infused into the minds of Japanese soldiers and military leaders was obsessed with duty and patient endurance of suffering while waiting for the opportunity to strike a fatal blow on the enemy. The coming invasion of the Japanese homeland was the expected opportunity to do this. The Imperial General Staff had stockpiled a lot of war material and fresh units (including several well-equipped armored divisions) specifically for this effort. Even though the outcome would have been the same, the carnage would have been horrific. There are a number of elderly men in the church I attend who were stated for first wave of the Kyushu invasion. They are absolutely certain they would have died getting onto the beaches had the bombs not ended the war.

The bombs (and both of them were needed to convince the Japanese we could destroy city after city with impunity if necessary) presented an unanswerable challenge to this mentality. Resistance was pointless if the opportunity to strike back was never going to present itself due to the absolute domination of the airspace over Japan and of the seas around Japan by the Allies. It required this shock to quiet the stock message of continued resistance from the military members of the War Cabinet and produce the question to the Emperor in council that led to acceptance of the Allied peace terms (although not without some tense moments before the surrender message was broadcast).

The emperor's surrender message pointed specifically to the the bomb, its effects, and the need to stop the fighting and "endure the unendurable" in order to prevent the destruction of the entire world (a bit of understandable Japan-centric hyperbole in that last one).
28 posted on 07/28/2005 8:49:06 AM PDT by Captain Rhino ("If you will just abandon logic, these things will make a lot more sense to you!")
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To: Pokey78
He was for making peace but needed a special reason for doing so, something so overwhelming that he could face down his generals who wanted to continue the war.

Key point.

The samurai mentality infused into the minds of Japanese soldiers and military leaders was obsessed with duty and patient endurance of suffering while waiting for the opportunity to strike a fatal blow on the enemy. The coming invasion of the Japanese homeland was the expected opportunity to do this. The Imperial General Staff had stockpiled a lot of war material and fresh units (including several well-equipped armored divisions) specifically for this effort. Even though the outcome would have been the same, the carnage would have been horrific. There are a number of elderly men in the church I attend who were stated for first wave of the Kyushu invasion. They are absolutely certain they would have died getting onto the beaches had the bombs not ended the war.

The bombs (and both of them were needed to convince the Japanese we could destroy city after city with impunity if necessary) presented an unanswerable challenge to this mentality. Resistance was pointless if the opportunity to strike back was never going to present itself due to the absolute domination of the airspace over Japan and of the seas around Japan by the Allies. It required this shock to quiet the stock message of continued resistance from the military members of the War Cabinet and produce the question to the Emperor in council that led to acceptance of the Allied peace terms (although not without some tense moments before the surrender message was broadcast).

The emperor's surrender message pointed specifically to the the bomb, its effects, and the need to stop the fighting and "endure the unendurable" in order to prevent the destruction of the entire world (a bit of understandable Japan-centric hyperbole in that last one).
29 posted on 07/28/2005 8:50:49 AM PDT by Captain Rhino ("If you will just abandon logic, these things will make a lot more sense to you!")
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To: Pokey78; cyborg

I give thanks for Hiroshima/Nagasaki. My father would very likely have been killed in OLYMPIC or CORONET, had it come to that.


30 posted on 07/28/2005 8:51:45 AM PDT by Petronski (I love Cyborg!)
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To: Captain Rhino

Pardon the double post. It didn't show up the first time I checked.


31 posted on 07/28/2005 8:52:26 AM PDT by Captain Rhino ("If you will just abandon logic, these things will make a lot more sense to you!")
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To: Pokey78
I have taken some descriptions from Richard Rhodes’s superb book The Making of the Atomic Bomb.

I cannot recommend this book too strongly. It is truly superb and completely comprehensive. After that, read "Dark Sun," Rhodes companion volume about the Super.


32 posted on 07/28/2005 8:56:41 AM PDT by Petronski (I love Cyborg!)
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To: Thud

Now that we have eliminated chemical and biological weapons from are arsenal as "inhumane," all future WMD attacks will be nuclear (probably neutron bombs if we want the infrastructure intact and relatively free of radiation).


33 posted on 07/28/2005 8:58:28 AM PDT by Captain Rhino ("If you will just abandon logic, these things will make a lot more sense to you!")
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To: Tax-chick

My father was supposed to be in the first or second, so you know my feelings about the bomb. My son probably feels that way, too....


34 posted on 07/28/2005 9:04:30 AM PDT by Cyber Liberty (© 2005, Ravin' Lunatic since 4/98)
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To: cvq3842

The japanese had its own chemical and biological weapons that they wanted to use but couldnt get close enough.


35 posted on 07/28/2005 9:09:09 AM PDT by bdfromlv (Leavenworth hard time)
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Comment #36 Removed by Moderator

To: Prime Choice

Great jpg and a true tagline


37 posted on 07/28/2005 9:56:44 AM PDT by Canedawg (modern liberalism is a communist plot)
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To: Spann_Tillman
> I love your profile page

That's the nicest thing
anyone has said to me
so far all morning!

38 posted on 07/28/2005 9:57:17 AM PDT by theFIRMbss
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To: Petronski

(Iran does not have atomic weapons and has a good record of compliance with NPT. India does have atomic weapons and refuses to sign it. Yet Iran is vilified by the US, and President Bush has just agreed to help India’s nuclear programme. This staggering hypocrisy endangers the world.)

It is a shame to have such a stupid sentence in this otherwise good article. The small unmentioned detail is that India is a full-fledged democracy unlikely to start a nuclear war, and Iran is run by bloodthirsty autocrats.


40 posted on 07/28/2005 9:58:44 AM PDT by winner3000
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