I have a hard time believing that Truman never had second thoughts or regret about it. There's no doubt how it helped end the war and save Anerican lives (my bombardier-in-the-Pacific grandfather among them, I suppose). And yet it also killed a LOT of civilians, so I don't know how that doesn't weigh on a man.
I have a hard time believing that Truman never had second thoughts or regret about it. There's no doubt how it helped end the war and save Anerican lives (my bombardier-in-the-Pacific grandfather among them, I suppose). And yet it also killed a LOT of civilians, so I don't know how that doesn't weigh on a man.
Edit: Well, as a politician, I doubt Truman had a soul, so maybe that explains the black-and-white perspective on it.
A recent documentary I saw theorizes that Truman didn't really make the decision- he just let the work continue. I don't buy that, really- I think he did.
As for regretting, the same show suggested that the 3rd and 4th drops where held up by him. How that would have played out, we will never know.
It's interesting to note that compared to the firebombings, the actual destruction- both for human lives and physically- were much smaller. But the impact of one bomb vs. thousands to do the same thing was much bigger.
A recent documentary I saw theorizes that Truman didn't really make the decision- he just let the work continue. I don't buy that, really- I think he did.
As for regretting, the same show suggested that the 3rd and 4th drops where held up by him. How that would have played out, we will never know.
It's interesting to note that compared to the firebombings, the actual destruction- both for human lives and physically- were much smaller. But the impact of one bomb vs. thousands to do the same thing was much bigger.
I have a hard time believing that Truman never had second thoughts or regret about it. There's no doubt how it helped end the war and save Anerican lives (my bombardier-in-the-Pacific grandfather among them, I suppose). And yet it also killed a LOT of civilians, so I don't know how that doesn't weigh on a man.
Edit: Well, as a politician, I doubt Truman had a soul, so maybe that explains the black-and-white perspective on it.
I was under the impression that we were a couple of months from having another nuke after August 9th.
That's is correct. One more would not have been available til 8/19, with 3 more in Sept and 3 more in Oct.
They had to drop the bombs, more Japanese civilians would have been killed in the invasion and subsequent battles (projected 5 to 10 million) than were in the blasts and subsequent fallout. US casualties (K/W/M) were projected of upwards of 1 million.
This assumes they had to invade the mainland. A blockade would probably have forced a surrender.
Whether or not the bombs were necessary is an ethical quandary and there is no simple answer. Add to this that the bombs were dropped for geopolitical reasons as a message to Ivan, and it becomes even more difficult.
Given the culture of the Japanese soldier at the time, the propoganda both they and their citizens were fed, they'd have gone back to 18th century living before surrendering to American invaders. Add to that, their views of Japanese being far superior to all over peoples, as shown in their treatment of POWs and occupied citizens. Either a full conquering through traditional warfare would've finally caused the emporer to submit his full surrender, or the awe and fear of more bombings like they saw. It's sad to think, but using atomic bombs was the humane option.
My (future) father survived. Its good enough for me.It blows me away that people are so sure about things like this.
There are arguments both ways, but to say it's cut and dried (either way) is IMO abnegating responsibility for a very difficult moral choice. I make the same argument to people who declare it was "absolutely" a war crime. There is no absolute either way in this case.
It blows me away that people are so sure about things like this.
There are arguments both ways, but to say it's cut and dried (either way) is IMO abnegating responsibility for a very difficult moral choice. I make the same argument to people who declare it was "absolutely" a war crime. There is no absolute either way in this case.
My (future) father survived. Its good enough for me.
Just because a decision was difficult doesn't mean it's not settled. I have thought quite a lot about this - was a War in the Pacific buff for quite a number of years - and I believe that Truman did the right thing. The fact that I came to a conclusion is not an "abnegation of responsibility."It blows me away that people are so sure about things like this.
There are arguments both ways, but to say it's cut and dried (either way) is IMO abnegating responsibility for a very difficult moral choice. I make the same argument to people who declare it was "absolutely" a war crime. There is no absolute either way in this case.