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![]() "Chuck Gould" wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 3, 8:05?pm, JR North wrote: ? Remember Pearl Harbor. And Nanking. And Battan. JR So, yes, RIP Paul Tibbets. He was a brave and Chuck Gould wrote: Of course. There was no excuse for many of the Japanese actions during WWII. Once hostilities end, each side has to deal with the aftermath of its own decisions. It's not my place to judge whether the atomic bombs dropped on Japan were "right" or "wrong". I'm simply pointing out that my research into the subject indicates we had more options than some revisionist militarists would prefer to have us believe. Whether any of the other options would have been "better" or "worse" is useless conjecture. About a year after the war ended, the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey report concluded that "certainly prior to 31 December 1945, and in all probability prior to 1 November 1945, Japan would have surrendered even if the atomic bombs had not been dropped, even if Russia had not entered the war, and even if no invasion had been planned or contemplated." Yes, the conclusion in that report could have been wrong, but I would have to give the Strategic Bombing Survey report at least equal credibility with the opinions of talk show hosts and historians 60 years after the fact. I can't think of any major national issue or decision in which there hasn't been a difference of opinion. In the interest of establishing the best possible insight into the past, it is useful to know that many people at that time- including some very responsible, patriotic, loyal Americans in positions of military authority, disagreed with Truman's decision to nuke the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Once it's done, it's done- so questions about good, bad, better, or worse are simply academic. What we can profit from the experience is a lesson in evaluating options and dealing with the aftermath of choices. I can't say that if I were in Truman's shoes at the time I would have decided any differently- nor can anybody else who wasn't there (or even born) at the time. My uncle spent the war as a shooter in the South Pacific. He left SF on a troop ship to Guadalcanal during the first blackout of WWII. He woke up in a hospital in the Philippines the day the Japanese surrendered. He figured the bomb saved his life! He would have gone to Japan invasion after recovering from the handgrenade damage. The worst fear was to be a prisoner of the Japanese. So most battles were fought to the extreme. When he arrived in Guadalcanal, there were still marines hung on stakes that the Japanese used for bayonet practice. When he woke up in the hospital, there was a Philippine nurse in the room who he mistook for Japanese and he shook so bad they said he moved the bed across the room. And still shook for 3 days afterwards when the doctor finally convinced him he was in an American hospital. Yes the bomb was horrific, but the whole war was horrific, and the Pacific / Asian theater was just a lot worse than the European action. **** happens in war, and the payback for the Japanese extracted a terrible penalty. But we were still correct in the bombings. They dropped the first bomb and the Japanese thought it was a fluke. Nagasaki, happened to be secondary target as the primary was cloud covered. The 2nd got the attention the first should have gotten by those in control. |
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