CommieChipmunk wrote:
Deadmonkiefart wrote:
OK I will repeat the question:
Deadmonkiefart wrote:
If you lived back then, or had any idea what it was like, you would have wanted the bomb dropped. WWII was probably the largest, most desperate war in US history. Think of the repricussions if the Allies would have lost. How was the US even supposed to know what that the Japanese were planning to surrender? The Japanese had shown no signs of wanting to surrender, even after they had lost almost their entire military months before. Even after the nukes were dropped and the Japanese government surrendered there were small groups or resistors throughout Japan. With thousands being killed every day, I imagine they wanted to end the war as soon as possible.
And when you said that Japan's treatment of POWs was bad, but that dropping nukes was worse, the point of the thread is not whether Japan's war crimes justified the A bomb or not. The point of the A bomb was to end the war; not as payback, but if you really did want to compare Japan's treatment of other nations and the US's treatment of other nations, go right on ahead. When the Japanese invaded china, they slaughtered and raped tens of thousands of chinese civillians.
Japan's an island. Without any navy or airforce to speak of.. what were they going to do? swim? I don't know it's a tough call.
But the comparison between tens of thousands being raped and killed (don't get me wrong, still disgusting in my mind), and the 100,000+ thousand vaporised doesn't work terribly well. And don't forget the firestorms we created in Tokyo. Hundreds of planes dropping napalm, phosphorous and magnesium high explosives created massive fires in the city, which was basically made of wood. It created huge wind currents that actually sucked people into the middle of the fire storms... I think it was something like 150 MPH winds.
Either way you look at it, war is a terrible thing and arguably the single greatest flaw of human nature. Maybe one day leaders will grow up and realize that there's a difference between sacrificing your little green army man when your a kid and sacrificing thousands of human lives when you control a nation. Life is so precious and there is nothing in this world worth the death of so many young kids.
Okay, you wrote a paper. Great. Did you actually pay attention or learn anything, or did you have your mind made up before you even began to study for it? Yes, Japan is an island. Which somehow managed to obtain the resources to take over a sizeable percentage of the globe. England is also an island; they founded a rather large empire as well. Do not make the size of your country a significant factor.
Now, the United States of WWII was looking at this island of millions of people, who have sworn to fight to the last man, woman, and child to keep the Americans off of the mainland. Also recall that the American marines and soldiers are very aquainted with the japanese soldiers faking surrenders to try to kill more soldiers, and fighting to the last man. And (yes, sadly) the americans were used to thinking of the japanese as less than human after years of propaganda.
Now, the japanese may have been on the verge of collapse, but that does not mean the American government knew or believed it. Experience has shown by then that the Japanese government was not to be trusted, and that the japanese were very well capable of making good on that ' last man, woman, child...' threat.
To invade Japan to force a surrender would have cost, at the very least, tens of thousands of American GIs. It would also have led to the deaths of any japanese soldier or civilian who attempted to resist. And that most likely would have led to a series of attrocities of GIs slaughtering entire villiages just to keep them from attacking there own soldiers. Recall that this is also the precise activity that japanese soldiers would have done in the same situation, and did; many times, in China and Korea. The death toll could have reached into the millions.
Now, for the atomic bomb. Yes, it was attrocious, but there were not "100,000+ vaporized" as you have hinted at. First, Hiroshima and Nagasaki were realatively small villages. They were chosen because they had SOME military function, albeit a small one, having minor factories. And, since they were so minor, they had not yet been attacked or bombed in the war. This was because the atomic drops were also a test, and any damage seen could be assumed to have been caused by the bombs. The total populations of the 2 villages were not in the hundreds of thousands, and realatively few were "vaporized." Most that immediately died would have been do to blast damage or radiation poisoning, with many more dying over the next decade. Many thousands survived the blasts.
Now, also recall that atomic research was not very advanced. Radiation and its effects on humans was not well documented then. There was no reason to expect it.
Dropping those bombs, as horrible as it was, prevented massive casualties on both sides. Yes, the total count of dead from the atomic drops may well have been in the hundreds of thousands, but an invasion could have, and was predicted to, cause 10 times as many dead.
As for firebombing Tokyo. It was the seat of power for the Japanese government, and so a legitimate target during unrestricted warfare. The choice of using firebombs was a smart descision, given the nature of the target. As to the results..... have you ever researched how many times tokyo has been burned to the ground? around a dozen, if I recall correctly. With massive deaths each time. The US caused one more. I will not say they should have known better, but surely experience has taught them the dangers of having a city made almost entirely of wood as closely cramped as tokyo was. Of course, by modern standards, looking back, the firebombing of tokyo really should be held on the same level as the german bombing of london. Although noone spoke of those being 'attrocities' then.