Posted on 07/01/2007 12:26:40 AM PDT by Jedi Master Pikachu
I may not be alive today had the US not used those bombs as my Dad was on a ship off the coast of Japan getting ready to invade Japan to end the war that THEY started.
My Dad believed until his very last breath that he and many others would probably not have survived that invasion. Therefore, it saved American lives incuding my Dad’s.
People still live in those cities. I thought that people couldn’t live where there was radioactivity and that it would be a wasteland. Just curious as to the level of that radioactivity today.
I wonder if this guy ever got all worked up over the people enslaved and slaughtered (slaughtered in such a variety of sadistically agonizing ways)by the Jap military?
And if the Soviets had come in as “backup” for us in the ‘War for Japan’, they surely, too, would’ve demanded a big piece of the action (a la Germany being partioned). Imagine a Soviet Japan. Indeed, those bombs saved countless lives and that potential political tyranny.
So many stories, so little context.
Guess he ALSO knew they would bungle the attack to the degree that it would not only fail to force The USN back to California but leave enough Naval elements and repair/refuel capability to kick the living shit out of the Japanese Navy VERY shortly thereafter?
Wow. What a prescient guy Roosevelt was
As Bill Maher would say this was a cowardly act. "
As Archie Bunker in a pro-RKBA retort, "Would it make you feel any better, little girl, if they was pushed out of windows?"
“Here’s a little secret. Roosevelt forced the Japanese to attack. By denying the Japanese their oil imports the Japanese(with no native oil reserves and got their oil from America) he had basically given the Japanese economy a death sentence unless they found another source of oil. Roosevelt *knew* the Japanese would have to attack the US in order to secure the indonesian oil fields.”
Not a secret and also not true.
The Japanese had invaded China, Korea, and most of the rest of the Pac Rim and were on their way to conquering the rest - they did it for the raw materials.
The Japanese needed the oil for their war machine, which was to say they didn’t need it at all.
Roosevelt knew the Japanese would attack US territories eventually no matter what he did.
The MSM hyped-up outrage over this Japanese minister’s remarks is just that, hype. It is far more likely that this man was overtly putting a nuclear strike on Iran squarely back on the table. The Japanese have always been astonishingly ruthless when it comes to war. Maybe they are much more amenable to this hard decision than the crybaby people around the world.
We are going to have to deal with Iran’s nuclear capabilities soon. The minister just seems to be saying, “Look at the bigger picture, look at the reasons and the consequences”. I don’t think Japan will be too surprised if we take out Iran. Bear in mind that North Korea is far more reckless and right next door to Japan.
Thousands of lives were lost at Hiroshima and Nagasaki so that millions were not.
The strange thing is, you always hear about the two atomic attacks, but hardly anything about the firebombing raids on dozens of Japanese cities in March-April of 1945, with death tolls that were in the millions. To me, that would be more horrible. A slow, inescapable death from a massive firestorm, rather than instant nuclear obliteration.
All his life he has been told how Japan's desire in the Thirties was to throw off the white colonialists and imperialists from East Asia and creat the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
You see, the Imperial Japanese and sons of Nippon were helping all those Chinese, Koreans, Indonesians and Filopinos while taking all of their resources and women for use in Japan and by the japanese Army.
The lousy Americans ruined their plans by fighting an offensive war, using every resource available to crush them and their plans for Asia.
I still believe the Japanese were lucky that the emperor had finally seen the light and turned to surrender, after Nagasaki. He and the War cabinet still thought they could negotiate terms after Hiroshima.
And in fine journalistic tradition of giving "balance" to reports, the BBC finds someone who might represent the views of a small percentage of people in Japan (notice that Mr. Tanaka is not even listed as the spokesman for any group, just some random person that the BBC managed found that trumpeted an opposite opinion --- and one that I suspect is far more in sympathy with the reporter's own position.)
As I remarked yesterday on a similar article yesterday, it's almost as if some foreign reporter decided that every time that Queen of England received some sort of press coverage in the U.S. that the report would feel compelled to find a LaRouchite to give "balance" to his reporting.
It's not illegitimate to occasionally mention minority opinions, but treating them as if they were so representative that they should be included in every journalistic endeavor I think is misleading --- and not exactly cricket when these opinions happen to be more in accord with the journalists' own biases.
日本*ピング* (kono risuto ni hairitai ka detai wo shirasete kudasai : let me know if you want on or off this list)
You’re forgetting one other thing: If the US had to invade so would have the Soviets. All of Korea would be the PROK and Hokkaido and perhaps half of Honshu would have been the People’s Republic of Japan. Imagine a DMZ running just north of Tokyo and tell me those bombs weren’t justified.
My late father was with the forces in Southeast China in 1945 and would have no doubt been part of the invasion of Japan--I may have never been born...
Use of the atomic bombs was unfortunately necessary and probably saved many lives on both sides.
It was all about saving face in China. Japan could have avoided war with the US and the West by withdrawing from China in the face of the economic embargoes. But that would have been a humiliation, so they chose war with West in order to continue their war in China. Stupid, stupid, stupid.
I don't think so. The East Asian colonial powers were in chaos due to the war in Europe. We had no treaties of mutual defense with the Dutch, or the Vichy French or even the British. I think Roosevelt's nightmare would have been what if the Japanese invaded the Dutch East Indies without attacking the US? Remember how strong the isolationist faction was in the US at that time. Do you think they would have supported going to war without an attack on us? I doubt it. If they Japanese had better understood US domestic politics they could have really screwed up FDR's "plan". Just as Hitler could have by not declaring war on the US after Pearl Harbor.
Some instances: Treaty of Portsmouth, Root-Takahire Agreement, Treaty of Versailles, Olney Corollary (of the Monroe Doctrine) comparative to Stimson Doctrine, ... etc.
Your source of FDR "knowing" Japan would attack US terriories eventually is where?
FDR instructing Hull to replace the modus vevendi with the ten-point ultimatum ... bad move.
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