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Yes, Dropping Atomic Bombs On Japan Was A Good Thing
Townhall ^ | May 27, 2016 | Matt Vespa

Posted on 05/27/2016 10:00:33 PM PDT by detective

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To: Claud; All

Pardon me, I am coming in late to this discussion.
It may pay to ask when do Civilians/ Non-combatants become combatants. In particular Japan,in WW2.
! was born 1935 and saw the war from Miami, Fl., which became a quasi military town. I saw Blue Star Flags in neighbors windows changed to Gold Star Flags. We did many sacrifices for the war effort, as did the Japanese.
To clarify my feelings about the debate, should we have dropped the A-Bomb. To paraphrase the late Justice Anthony Scalia “ It was a long time ago, people forget…It was a 7-2 decision. It wasn’t even close,”
The reasoning and answer is here, below!

I read this at link:
http://www.fgcu.edu/events/ic/5705.asp

Erik Carlson, Florida Gulf Coast University

Two Kinds of Civilians: American Encounters with Civilians on Kerama Retto and Ie Shima

In April of 1945, the U.S. 77th Infantry Division stormed the small, satellite island of Ie Shima off the coast of Okinawa. The purpose of this amphibious assault was to capture the island to build airfields to use in the main phase of Operation ICEBERG — the invasion of Okinawa. During the fight for Ie Shima, American soldiers met fierce resistance from several thousand Japanese soldiers. After the six day battle was over, American forces found that nearly 1,500 civilians, men and women, had fought along with professional Japanese soldiers in the fight for Ie Shima.

The brief, but bitter battle for Ie Shima has been forgotten by military historians because of the deadlier battle on Okinawa, and overshadowed by the fact that well-known American war correspondent Ernie Pyle was killed on the island during the first days of the battle.

The discovery of civilian dead mixed with Japanese soldiers killed in battle sent a chilling message to American commanders preparing for Operation DOWNFALL. Would the Japanese military employ civilian paramilitary forces during the proposed November 1945 invasion of Japan? What would be the Allied response? How does this fact exemplify the determined nature of Japanese preparations for homeland defense and the nation’s unwillingness to surrender in 1945? And does this explain the use of the atomic bomb?

The author will try to fit the use of Japanese civilians as combatants into the new post-revisionist view of unconditional surrender and the use of atomic bombs based upon the release of top-secret ULTRA documents in the late 1990s. This paper will use archival sources from the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library, the National Archives and Records Administration, and the U.S. Army Center for Military History, among other primary sources.


61 posted on 05/28/2016 9:53:45 AM PDT by GOYAKLA ( Pick-up the pace, I'm eighty!)
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To: detective

Obama would have let 250,000 GIs get killed, 500,000 get wounded, and 10 million more Japanese get killed just so that he could feel morally superior. Obama said that people’s morality had to evolve as fast as technology evolved. In other words, he thinks that dropping the bombs was immoral. So he wouldn’t have done it. He would have let all of those needless deaths occur, so that he could feel superior to the GIs and everyone else. All of those lives get sacrificed for his ego.


62 posted on 05/28/2016 10:29:38 AM PDT by DeweyCA
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To: Does so

Yes, now it’s the South China sea.

China wants a choke hold on the entrance to the Indian Ocean.


63 posted on 05/28/2016 10:59:33 AM PDT by DoughtyOne (He wins & we do, our nation does, the world does. It's morning in America again. You are living it!)
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To: detective

If you want a good, detailed description in fiction of the proposed invasion the Japanese Islands and you can find a copy; read David Westheimer’s novel Death Is Lighter than a Feather.


64 posted on 05/28/2016 12:05:32 PM PDT by Pknicker (TANSTAAFL)
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To: detective

The alternative was a full attack of the starving country including nightly attacks by hundreds of B-29s carrying firebombs.


65 posted on 05/28/2016 12:42:28 PM PDT by Mike Darancette (The most vocal supporters of a good con man are the victims.)
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To: boycott

Bottom photo at night is of Yokohama, not Hiroshima.


66 posted on 05/28/2016 1:13:11 PM PDT by AmericanInTokyo (OK.... So NOW what??!!)
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To: AmericanInTokyo

‘Glad you’re here...!


67 posted on 05/28/2016 2:44:51 PM PDT by Does so (Vote for Hillary...Stay Home...==8-O)
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To: detective

Your arguments were convincing, until you got self-indulgent and accused me of wanting to wave a magic wand to win the war.

My problem is with the facile consequentialism of most “conservatives.”

Considering the state of Total War that existed, I do not consider Truman a criminal.

It is clear that FDR and his Communist-riddled administration wanted WWII from 1933 on.


68 posted on 05/28/2016 5:00:15 PM PDT by Arthur McGowan
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To: Wildbill22

If Dr. Jim Garrow is to be believed, Soetoro already tried to murder 300 million Americans with an EMP, and was thwarted by three patriots, whom he immediately purged.


69 posted on 05/28/2016 5:11:19 PM PDT by Arthur McGowan
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To: sport

That comment is beneath contempt. If a moral discussion is over your head, have the humility to remain silent.


70 posted on 05/28/2016 5:14:32 PM PDT by Arthur McGowan
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To: Claud

The best battle plan never survives the first shot, hindsight is 20/20.


71 posted on 05/28/2016 5:19:49 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: detective

There were many ways to look at the pressures to drop the bomb.

1. It was total war. You use the weapons you have.
2. The financial cost to invade Japan would have left us bankrupt.
3. If we hadn’t done it, and we invaded there would have been a revolution once the American people found out we had it, and did not use it.
4. The personnel cost to invade would have been huge.
5. The Japanese race would have been practically erased from the face of the earth if we invaded.
6. If we continued the blockade, millions of Japanese would have starved to death.
7. Had we not dropped the bomb, the war would have lasted several more months. The balance of power in the Far East would be very different. The Soviet Union would have controlled Korea, half of Japan and a good chunk of China.
8. The direct deaths of the two bombs were much smaller than the firebombing in the previous several months.

When you compare what would have happened to the Chinese, Koreans, and Japanese civilians, we did them a favor by dropping the bomb.


72 posted on 05/28/2016 5:28:31 PM PDT by Vermont Lt (Ask Bernie supporters two questions: Who is rich. Who decides. In the past, that meant who died.)
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To: detective

Yep...we have not had a world war since.


73 posted on 05/28/2016 5:29:12 PM PDT by RevelationDavid (Jesus First, no matter the cost.)
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To: sport

I could not agree more with your assessment of Soetoro. The most demoralizing part of Mitt Romney’s campaign in 2012 was his constant display of total cowardice, shown by his describing Soetoro as “a nice guy” who was “in over his head.” Romney was pretending to run for president. He had no interest in awakening anyone to the evil that put Soetoro in the White House.

My major concern about Trump is that he will sincerely try to do “good things” but does not have the spiritual depth and insight to make war on the evil that is abroad.

In an age when the Pope—THE POPE—is a sock puppet of the most evil forces in the world, we need a President equipped with more than conventional, bourgeois good intentions.


74 posted on 05/28/2016 5:29:24 PM PDT by Arthur McGowan
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To: Alberta's Child

There was no morality by that time. The firebombings were more of a “crime” than dropping the bombs.

The Japanese battles on Iwo Jima and Okinawa showed those in command what was coming.


75 posted on 05/28/2016 5:34:30 PM PDT by Vermont Lt (Ask Bernie supporters two questions: Who is rich. Who decides. In the past, that meant who died.)
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To: schurmann

Spoken like a true Nazi: “First, solve the Jewish Problem. Debate morality later.”

An attitude totally unworthy of a thinking being, let alone an American.


76 posted on 05/28/2016 5:36:34 PM PDT by Arthur McGowan
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To: Claud
I suppose then there is the definition of "civilian."

Is a farmer whose crops feed the army a civilian? Is the truck driver bringing that food to a port a civilian? Is the owner of a small machine shop in the midst of a residential neighborhood, one who performs one operation on a critical component of an important instrument of war a "civilian?"

Merchant seamen? Logistics officers? Nurses? Anyone whose efforts support the ability of the "combatants" to wage war?

And then what of those forced to fight? Those who, if it weren't for the political officer at his back, would go back to his home or desert to the other side?

77 posted on 05/28/2016 6:01:19 PM PDT by Trailerpark Badass (There should be a whole lot more going on than throwing bleach, said one woman.)
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To: amihow
"Ketsu-go" was the Japanese war plan to defend the home islands. It included every citizen, down to fighting with spears and clubs; women, children, old people, everybody. Japan was, essentially, a military dictatorship.

If they were willing or not, the experiences of Okinawa and Saipan revealed that there would be no "non-combatants" in any invasion of the home islands.

Then there is the idea of a blockade. Is starving non-combatants to the point that they overturn the military leadership to end the war attacking "civilians?"

78 posted on 05/28/2016 6:09:39 PM PDT by Trailerpark Badass (There should be a whole lot more going on than throwing bleach, said one woman.)
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To: detective

It was a good thing then and it still is today, and that fact will not ever change.
Screw Obama.


79 posted on 05/28/2016 6:19:34 PM PDT by right way right (May we remain sober over mere men, for God really is our one and only true hope.)
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To: Claud

” ... Are you listening to yourselves? Do you know what you are even saying?”

Claud, amihow, Arthur McGowan et al certainly don’t have the first notion of what their critics are saying.

I’m clear on what I’m saying, but it appears baby steps are needed:

If you are fighting a war, you must win the war first.

Why?

Because if you lose the war, all talk of morality stops. If you win the war, you may talk about anything you like. Including morality.

To reverse that sequence is not a demonstration of superior morals. It is flippancy and heedlessness of the most odious sort: if you lose the war while congratulating yourselves on your lofty moral stature, the innocents and noncombatants who perish along with you will not thank you. They will curse your memory.

Their survival means more than your sense of moral fitness.


80 posted on 05/28/2016 6:53:42 PM PDT by schurmann
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