REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

70 Years Since Hiroshima

POSTED BY: MAGONSDAUGHTER
UPDATED: Friday, May 12, 2023 14:30
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Wednesday, August 5, 2015 5:20 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Decisive act that stopped the deaths of millions, or biggest act of terror ever.....?

____________________________________________________________________
Tens of thousands of people will gather in Hiroshima to mark 70 years to the day since the city was destroyed by an atomic bomb.

Representatives of more than 100 countries, including the US ambassador to Japan, Caroline Kennedy, will be among those marking the anniversary in the city’s peace memorial park on Thursday morning.

Standing in the shadow of the shell of what was then the prefectural industrial promotion hall – now known simply as the atomic bomb dome – they will hear messages from survivors, local children and the city’s mayor. Japan’s prime minister, Shinzo Abe, will also attend.
Hiroshima and the nuclear age - a visual guide
Read more

Seven decades ago, the countdown to the first nuclear attack in history began in the early hours of 6 August 1945, when a US B-29 Superfortress bomber, escorted by two surveillance planes, took off from an airfield on the Pacific island of Tinian.

The Enola Gay, named after the mother of the plane’s pilot, Brig Gen Paul Tibbets, was carrying a 16 kiloton atomic bomb, nicknamed Little Boy; its target was Hiroshima, a port and major army base in western Japan, six hours’ flying time away.

As dawn broke in Hiroshima, its 340,000 residents were recovering from another sleepless night of false alarms after radar picked up a succession of US bombers flying overhead on missions further south.

Soon after 7am local time, a US weather surveillance aircraft escorting the Enola Gay triggered yet another air raid alert. The plane left the area and the all clear was sounded at 7.31am. Its message to the Enola Gay’s crew: “Weather good, possible to drop bomb.”
The explosion as the bomb hits Hiroshima
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A photograph taken by the US military shows the explosion as the bomb, nicknamed Little Boy, hits Hiroshima. Photograph: Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum/EPA

Forty-four minutes later, the Enola Gay released its payload. Below, people were preparing for an ordinary day at work, while young children set out for school, and older ones to factories to help Japan’s faltering war effort.

The city, the site of a large military headquarters, had so far been spared the heavy conventional bombing that had destroyed much of Tokyo and Osaka. Hiroshima residents were beginning to suspect that their city was next.
Brazilian Hiroshima survivors campaign against new push for nuclear power
Read more

The bomb exploded 580 metres (2,000ft) above a T-shaped bridge at the junction of the Honkawa and Motoyasu rivers, unleashing a blinding flash followed by a deafening boom.

About 70,000 people died instantly in the blast or from the firestorms that raged moments later. The death toll would rise to about 140,000 by the end of 1945. The explosion, equal to 12,000 to 15,000 tonnes of TNT, destroyed more than two-thirds of Hiroshima’s buildings across five sq miles.
Hiroshima three months after the atomic bomb was dropped
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Hiroshima, including the prefectural industrial promotion hall, seen three months after the atomic bomb was dropped. Photograph: Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum/AFP/Getty Images

Within 45 minutes of the attack, nuclear fallout mixed with ash and smoke from the firestorms to create a radioactive black rain that soaked survivors and did not abate until the fires began to burn themselves out in the evening.

As people staggered among the dead and dying in search of water and medical treatment, news began to spread to the capital, Tokyo, that something unspeakable had occurred in Hiroshima.

But wartime leaders did not receive confirmation that the city had been destroyed by a nuclear weapon until the following day, when the US president, Harry S Truman, said: “Sixteen hours ago an American airplane dropped one bomb on Hiroshima. It is an atomic bomb.”
Hiroshima’s fate, 70 years ago this week, must not be forgotten
Read more

At 8.15am on Thursday, Hiroshima will fall silent as it remembers its dead. A temple bell will toll and doves will be released into the same skies from which tragedy had been visited on the city seven decades earlier.

And this year, as on every other anniversary, the names of survivors – the hibakusha – who died in the previous 12 months will be added to the peace park’s cenotaph. On the eve of the 70th anniversary, the total stood at 292,325.


http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/05/hiroshima-prepares-to-rem
ember-the-day-the-bomb-dropped


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Wednesday, August 5, 2015 6:40 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
Decisive act that stopped the deaths of millions, or biggest act of terror ever.....?

___________________________________________________________
Tens of thousands of people will gather in Hiroshima to mark 70 years to the day since the city was destroyed by an atomic bomb.

Representatives of more than 100 countries, including the US ambassador to Japan, Caroline Kennedy, will be among those marking the anniversary in the city’s peace memorial park on Thursday morning.

Standing in the shadow of the shell of what was then the prefectural industrial promotion hall – now known simply as the atomic bomb dome – they will hear messages from survivors, local children and the city’s mayor. Japan’s prime minister, Shinzo Abe, will also attend.
Hiroshima and the nuclear age - a visual guide
Read more

Seven decades ago, the countdown to the first nuclear attack in history began in the early hours of 6 August 1945, when a US B-29 Superfortress bomber, escorted by two surveillance planes, took off from an airfield on the Pacific island of Tinian.

The Enola Gay, named after the mother of the plane’s pilot, Brig Gen Paul Tibbets, was carrying a 16 kiloton atomic bomb, nicknamed Little Boy; its target was Hiroshima, a port and major army base in western Japan, six hours’ flying time away.

As dawn broke in Hiroshima, its 340,000 residents were recovering from another sleepless night of false alarms after radar picked up a succession of US bombers flying overhead on missions further south.

Soon after 7am local time, a US weather surveillance aircraft escorting the Enola Gay triggered yet another air raid alert. The plane left the area and the all clear was sounded at 7.31am. Its message to the Enola Gay’s crew: “Weather good, possible to drop bomb.”
The explosion as the bomb hits Hiroshima
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
A photograph taken by the US military shows the explosion as the bomb, nicknamed Little Boy, hits Hiroshima. Photograph: Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum/EPA

Forty-four minutes later, the Enola Gay released its payload. Below, people were preparing for an ordinary day at work, while young children set out for school, and older ones to factories to help Japan’s faltering war effort.

The city, the site of a large military headquarters, had so far been spared the heavy conventional bombing that had destroyed much of Tokyo and Osaka. Hiroshima residents were beginning to suspect that their city was next.
Brazilian Hiroshima survivors campaign against new push for nuclear power
Read more

The bomb exploded 580 metres (2,000ft) above a T-shaped bridge at the junction of the Honkawa and Motoyasu rivers, unleashing a blinding flash followed by a deafening boom.

About 70,000 people died instantly in the blast or from the firestorms that raged moments later. The death toll would rise to about 140,000 by the end of 1945. The explosion, equal to 12,000 to 15,000 tonnes of TNT, destroyed more than two-thirds of Hiroshima’s buildings across five sq miles.
Hiroshima three months after the atomic bomb was dropped
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
Hiroshima, including the prefectural industrial promotion hall, seen three months after the atomic bomb was dropped. Photograph: Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum/AFP/Getty Images

Within 45 minutes of the attack, nuclear fallout mixed with ash and smoke from the firestorms to create a radioactive black rain that soaked survivors and did not abate until the fires began to burn themselves out in the evening.

As people staggered among the dead and dying in search of water and medical treatment, news began to spread to the capital, Tokyo, that something unspeakable had occurred in Hiroshima.

But wartime leaders did not receive confirmation that the city had been destroyed by a nuclear weapon until the following day, when the US president, Harry S Truman, said: “Sixteen hours ago an American airplane dropped one bomb on Hiroshima. It is an atomic bomb.”
Hiroshima’s fate, 70 years ago this week, must not be forgotten
Read more

At 8.15am on Thursday, Hiroshima will fall silent as it remembers its dead. A temple bell will toll and doves will be released into the same skies from which tragedy had been visited on the city seven decades earlier.

And this year, as on every other anniversary, the names of survivors – the hibakusha – who died in the previous 12 months will be added to the peace park’s cenotaph. On the eve of the 70th anniversary, the total stood at 292,325.


http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/05/hiroshima-prepares-to-rem
ember-the-day-the-bomb-dropped



It's Thursday for you already?

Answer: saved many lives.

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Wednesday, August 5, 2015 8:22 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Decisive act that stopped the deaths of millions, or biggest act of terror ever.....?

Hmm, maybe both.

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Thursday, August 6, 2015 7:35 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
Quote:

Decisive act that stopped the deaths of millions, or biggest act of terror ever.....?

Hmm, maybe both.


No.
Terrorism is aimed at civilians.
Not an entire Empire which has foisted War upon the world. The definition fails epically.

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Friday, August 7, 2015 8:47 AM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


'Act of terror' can be interpreted two ways - as a 'terrorist' act, or more simply and literally, an act that inspires terror.

The Hiroshima bombing was not a terrorist act, but it's hard to argue that it doesn't fit the second definition. The whole point of it was to terrorise the Japanese government and nation into surrender.

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Friday, August 7, 2015 9:00 AM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


The Allies waged acts of terror against civilians in world war 2, the bombing of Nagasaki,Hiroshima, Dresden...the unpaletable side of war is that at times the aim is to kill as many civilians as possible in order to demoralise.

I suppose it depends upon whether you think the means justifies the ends in these matters.

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Friday, August 7, 2015 5:23 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Originally posted by Brenda:
Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
The Allies waged acts of terror against civilians in world war 2, the bombing of Nagasaki,Hiroshima, Dresden...the unpaletable side of war is that at times the aim is to kill as many civilians as possible in order to demoralise.

I suppose it depends upon whether you think the means justifies the ends in these matters.



I have to agree with you magon. The Allies did as much damage to Germany as the 2 A-bombs did in Japan. Both with the same goals. Break the enemy and get them to surrender.


The point of the allied bombing campaigns was generally to degrade the enemy's ability to wage war. Destroy its factories, munitions stores, transport hubs, military facilities etc. Bombing targets were always chosen with these things in mind.

The allied bombing campaigns might seem cold-blooded and vindictive, and to an extent they probably were. But that doesn't mean they were pointless slaughter. They undoubtedly shortened the war and thereby saved lives, possibly even more than they killed. Here is a passage from the Wiki page on the bombing of Hamburg (1943), which describes the destructiveness, but also the effectiveness:

Quote:

Operation Gomorrah killed 42,600 people, left 37,000 wounded and caused some one million German civilians to flee the city.[3] The city's labour force was reduced permanently by ten percent.[3] Approximately 3,000 aircraft were deployed, 9,000 tons of bombs were dropped and over 250,000 homes and houses were destroyed. No subsequent city raid shook Germany as did that on Hamburg; documents show that German officials were thoroughly alarmed and there is some indication from later Allied interrogations of Nazi officials that Hitler stated that further raids of similar weight would force Germany out of the war.


Other things that need to be considered when looking back at this controversial aspect of history:

1. WWII was total war - countries throwing everything they had at each other in a life or death struggle (particularly in the case of Britain which faced down Nazi Germany almost alone at one point). You don't sweat too much about enemy civilian casualties when your entire nation, and way of life, is on the edge of the precipice.

2. For several years after the fall of France and before the Allied invasion of Italy there was no 'Western front' - only limited campaigns in North Africa, Greece, the Balkans etc. Consequently for a long time there was no direct way for Britain and later America, to wage land war against the Nazis. Thus, the only way to fight the Nazis and degrade their ability to wage war, besides supplying the Soviets with massive amounts of war material, was to bomb German industrial cities.

3. Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan had shown no regard for civilian life in their actions - think of the Japanese' sadistic slaughter of hundreds of thousands in Nanking, or the Nazis' starvation of a million people in the siege of Leningrad.

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Friday, August 7, 2015 6:21 PM

WHOZIT


There's a MAZDA Plant there now, thought I'd throw that in....boom.

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Friday, August 7, 2015 6:30 PM

WHOZIT



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Friday, August 7, 2015 6:49 PM

JONGSSTRAW


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:

Other things that need to be considered when looking back at this controversial aspect of history:

1. WWII was total war - countries throwing everything they had at each other in a life or death struggle (particularly in the case of Britain which faced down Nazi Germany almost alone at one point). You don't sweat too much about enemy civilian casualties when your entire nation, and way of life, is on the edge of the precipice.

2. For several years after the fall of France and before the Allied invasion of Italy there was no 'Western front' - only limited campaigns in North Africa, Greece, the Balkans etc. Consequently for a long time there was no direct way for Britain and later America, to wage land war against the Nazis. Thus, the only way to fight the Nazis and degrade their ability to wage war, besides supplying the Soviets with massive amounts of war material, was to bomb German industrial cities.

3. Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan had shown no regard for civilian life in their actions - think of the Japanese' sadistic slaughter of hundreds of thousands in Nanking, or the Nazis' starvation of a million people in the siege of Leningrad.


That's well stated. You clearly have a better-than-average knowledge of WWII. I guess you've read a lot of books and/or watched a lot of History Channel shows. It's too bad most people know nothing about it today.

My grandfather landed with the Army in Oran, Algeria in November, 1942 as part of Operation Torch. He fought the Nazis in Tunisia, Sicily, and Italy. He was 18 years old. I've always had a hard time coming to terms with that because I know what I was like when I was 18.

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Friday, August 7, 2015 7:20 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:

The point of the allied bombing campaigns was generally to degrade the enemy's ability to wage war. Destroy its factories, munitions stores, transport hubs, military facilities etc. Bombing targets were always chosen with these things in mind.

The allied bombing campaigns might seem cold-blooded and vindictive, and to an extent they probably were. But that doesn't mean they were pointless slaughter. They undoubtedly shortened the war and thereby saved lives, possibly even more than they killed.



Yes, that's how slaughter is usually justified. I'm sure that 9/11 was carefully and strategically planned with a particular outcome in mind, but because Americans were the target, the loss of thousands of civilian lives is regarded as an abhorence rather than a necessity.

Acts of military violence/terrorism generally serve a purpose. Whether you can justify them or not, depends on which side you are on.

Dresden was a controversial exercise in use of military force - because the idea was to cause choas due to civilian evacuation, but also because the city had "100,000 and 200,000 refugees fleeing westwards from advancing Soviet forces were in the city at the time of the bombing."

Also evidence that strafing of fleeing civilians was part of the stragegy ordered " British historian Alexander McKee in Dresden 1945 (1982) quotes eyewitnesses who state that strafing did occur.[65] According to an RAF webpage on the history of RAF Bomber Command, "[p]art of the American Mustang-fighter escort was ordered to strafe traffic on the roads around Dresden to increase the chaos and disruption to the important transportation network in the region". "

Although there is a later claim that Dresden was chosen due to its military and industrial targets, the method of incendiary bombing meant that the whole city was turned into a firestorm and destroyed. There is little doubt that vengence also played a part in this strategy.

I guess its hard to look down the years of history and second guess decisions made in the light of the desperation, fear and hatred experienced by those involved, but I think we need to be careful, more careful, to avoid seeing it in a black and white manner, ie that all Allied actions were justified, even the purposeful mass slaughter of innocents, because in the end that what tyrannies everywhere always do....justify the abhorrent.



Quote:

Operation Gomorrah killed 42,600 people, left 37,000 wounded and caused some one million German civilians to flee the city.[3] The city's labour force was reduced permanently by ten percent.[3] Approximately 3,000 aircraft were deployed, 9,000 tons of bombs were dropped and over 250,000 homes and houses were destroyed. No subsequent city raid shook Germany as did that on Hamburg; documents show that German officials were thoroughly alarmed and there is some indication from later Allied interrogations of Nazi officials that Hitler stated that further raids of similar weight would force Germany out of the war.


Other things that need to be considered when looking back at this controversial aspect of history:

1. WWII was total war - countries throwing everything they had at each other in a life or death struggle (particularly in the case of Britain which faced down Nazi Germany almost alone at one point). You don't sweat too much about enemy civilian casualties when your entire nation, and way of life, is on the edge of the precipice.

2. For several years after the fall of France and before the Allied invasion of Italy there was no 'Western front' - only limited campaigns in North Africa, Greece, the Balkans etc. Consequently for a long time there was no direct way for Britain and later America, to wage land war against the Nazis. Thus, the only way to fight the Nazis and degrade their ability to wage war, besides supplying the Soviets with massive amounts of war material, was to bomb German industrial cities.

3. Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan had shown no regard for civilian life in their actions - think of the Japanese' sadistic slaughter of hundreds of thousands in Nanking, or the Nazis' starvation of a million people in the siege of Leningrad.

It's not personal. It's just war.


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Friday, August 7, 2015 8:17 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Dresden was a controversial exercise in use of military force

Definitely. It definitely aided the Soviet advance and shortened the war, but the cost was too high, considering victory was already inevitable at that point. Dresden was the point where the Allies themselves began to re-examine the strategy of firebombing German cities. I think most people would agree that the Allies went too far here. If you want a more interesting moral conundrum consider one of the many bombing raids against the city of Hamburg - a large port and industrial city home to munitions factories, oil refineries, U-boat pens...

Consider the stranglehold Germany had over Britain for years in the Atlantic with its U-boat campaign: its indiscriminate targeting of merchant shipping aimed at starving Britain into submission. Churchill said after the war that the U-boat threat was 'the only thing that ever really frightened me'. Was Britain therefore morally justified in launching desperate, all out attacks at German port cities like Hamburg, from which the U-boats were launched?

Quote:

but I think we need to be careful, more careful, to avoid seeing it in a black and white manner, ie that all Allied actions were justified, even the purposeful mass slaughter of innocents, because in the end that what tyrannies everywhere always do....justify the abhorrent.

I agree, let's judge everything on its merits, not on whether it was done by the 'bad guys' or the 'good guys'. But the morality is complex. I think if the Allies had fought the Nazis with a determination not to do anything 'abhorrent' they likely would have lost.

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Friday, August 7, 2015 9:04 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:

Other things that need to be considered when looking back at this controversial aspect of history:

What did these bombs cost?

5.5 trillion dollars was the price calculated by the Nuclear Weapons Cost Study Project Committee in 1995 dollars. That is 8.6 trillion dollars in 2015. The national debt is 18.1 trillion dollars. www.brillig.com/debt_clock/

In September 1951, Senator Brien McMahon laid out the argument for investing heavily in nuclear weapons. "The cost of military firepower based on atomic bombs is hundreds of times cheaper, dollar for dollar, than conventional explosives," he explained.

Senator McMahon, then the chairman of the Joint Congressional Committee on Atomic Energy, was right that a one-megaton nuclear weapon cost less than conventional bombs containing two billion pounds of TNT. But in giving short shrift to the expense of delivering the nukes, the Connecticut Democrat missed the forest for the merest of saplings.

www.brookings.edu/about/projects/archive/nucweapons/weapons

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Friday, August 7, 2015 9:57 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


$5.5 trillion seems to be the figure for the cost of the entire US nuclear weapons program from 1940 to 1996. When you consider that one of the major powers was going to develop these weapons at some point, it's just as well that the USA did it first (before the Soviet Union).

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Friday, August 7, 2015 11:04 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
$5.5 trillion seems to be the figure for the cost of the entire US nuclear weapons program from 1940 to 1996. When you consider that one of the major powers was going to develop these weapons at some point, it's just as well that the USA did it first (before the Soviet Union).

France also has the H-bomb. America could surely have used either France or Russia as an excuse for America's over-sized nuclear stockpile in 1995. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/France_and_weapons_of_mass_destruction

But the French did not get swept up in America's mania & rationalizations for Hiroshima and Nagasaki. France stopped building nukes after a total of 210 tests and a peak stockpile of 540 (in 1992). The USA could have shown good sense and built fewer bombs and saved trillions of dollars, but it was so committed to the idea that the A-bomb won the war that it couldn't stop until it had built 100 times too many bombs and bomb delivery systems.

There were (and are) certain American politicians who swallowed the idea that North Korea, North Vietnam and Iran could be defeated exactly the same as Japan, with A-bombs. Do you really think that only Russian diplomacy and nukes kept America from using the Bomb again? America would have tried it again and again if they truthfully believed A-bombs won WWII, Russia or not. It's obvious that people in the White House for the last 70 years don't believe the myths about Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But if Ted Cruz or Trump get elected President, maybe those myths will get tested for truthfulness.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 4:23 AM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Seriously scary who could get into the White House.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 8:11 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
Seriously scary who could get into the White House.

Do any of those Republican fatheads, all claiming that carbon dioxide does not change climate, believe in Nuclear Winter? http://science.howstuffworks.com/nuclear-winter.htm We only have scientists' words and calculations for belief in Nuclear Winter and Republicans don't believe scientists. Because the Bomb won the war with Japan, there really is no reason NOT to nuke Iran. Then President Trump can nuke Gaza for Israel. According to myth, fire in the sky was a sign from Heaven, so the Japs surrendered. So will ISIS, if the mushroom cloud myth is true.

And don't forget the Neutron Bomb, a cleaner/safer/humane bomb. Trump can use it on Detroit to clear it of pests and the poor. http://io9.com/though-it-seems-crazy-now-the-neutron-bomb-was-intende-
1636604514
Quote:

The neutron bomb would be designed for tactical use to offset the Warsaw Pact's three-to-one advantage in tank forces. The army requested neutron warheads for its Lance short-to-medium-range tactical missile and its 8-inch and 155 mm artillery pieces.

But, it was President Jimmy Carter who would inherit the program and make the final decision about deployment. There was just one small problem: nobody had bothered to tell Carter that the weapon was being built. The president found out about it the same way as the rest of the world ….he read about it in the Washington Post.




The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 1:19 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

The point of the allied bombing campaigns was generally to degrade the enemy's ability to wage war. Destroy its factories, munitions stores, transport hubs, military facilities etc. Bombing targets were always chosen with these things in mind.
Bullshit. The bombing of Dresden was a pure act of terror. There were no factories, no rail hubs, no military encampments, or fuel facilities.

Allied bombers (British, primarily) would bomb the buildings in one run, and then ... when people had fled to the parks, zoos, and other open spaces, would bomb and strafe those in a second and third run. The effort was clearly ... clearly... to kill as many civilians as possible.

I know this was discussed, but you need to see this for yourself.



It was the same thing with Nagasaki. Part of the selection process of the target cities was that they be relatively intact (because what's the point of bombing a rubble field?) and of sentimental value to the Japanese. Oh, and it would be nice if it had some military value. Hiroshima fit all three criteria, but Nagasaki was not a military target.

http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2015/08/hiroshima-nag
asaki-atomic-bomb-anniversary/400448
/

-------

There is a lot of information out there about how many [American] lives were "saved" by atomic-bombing Japan ... not once, but twice in succession!

The Emperor, it is bruited, was on the verge of surrender. Japan's army was spent. There are questions about using the second bomb - wouldn't the first have been enough to demonstrate its power?

The only explanation that makes sense to me is that the USA used the atomic bombs to warn off RUSSIA. By agreement with the west, Russian forces were invading Manchuria. However, they were also storming down the Kamchatka, and had made landfall on the Kuril Islands.

Despite what people think now, it was the Russians who won the European-theater war. In the end, the Germans were forced to retreat across a 1000-mile front as fast at their tanks and trucks -and men - could run (or walk, or hobble). Again, unlike today, the military command of the USA took a realistic assessment of the situation. Russia had come out of the European theater better-equipped to fight than when it went in, able to churn out tanks and planes and trucks and troops faster than they were being consumed in war. Russia's army had a huge numeric advantage over the Japanese, and once ensconced on the Japanese islands they would have been very difficult to dislodge. The USA would have once again been negotiating for a piece of the pie (as in Yalta) instead of occupying the whole empire (kingdom) of Japan.

The concept was that an American demonstration of sheer brutality and willingness to kill would stop the Russians in their tracks. The second bomb was to induce a question in Russian minds as to HOW MANY atomic bombs the USA had.

--------------
You can't build a nation with bombs. You can't create a society with guns.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 2:34 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
'Act of terror' can be interpreted two ways - as a 'terrorist' act, or more simply and literally, an act that inspires terror.

The Hiroshima bombing was not a terrorist act, but it's hard to argue that it doesn't fit the second definition. The whole point of it was to terrorise the Japanese government and nation into surrender.


Still no.
It was not an act of terror, nor terrorism. Which are both the a=same thing, by the way.

It was not an act of terror. It was an act of negotiation. Japan had refused to make any negotiations, other than to make clear that they would fight and kill to the end, no matter their own casualties. They insisted upon suicidal strategy. The first bomb helped them see the error of their ways and plans, yet they still insisted upon their suicidal strategy. They still refused to make any negotiations. The second bomb on the 9th (70 years ago now in Japan) helped them see the futility of their plans, that they really would just continue to decimate themselves with little or no casualties to us.

That isd not an act of terror. That is an act of education. A demonstration of a promise that perhaps they had not believed or understood clearly until we made good on our promise to defeat them.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 2:48 PM

JEWELSTAITEFAN


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
The Allies waged acts of terror against civilians in world war 2, the bombing of Dresden...the unpaletable side of war is that at times the aim is to kill as many civilians as possible in order to demoralise.

I suppose it depends upon whether you think the means justifies the ends in these matters.


Your logic fails completely. Trying to imagine strategy and causes to fit your pre-ordained effects and conclusions does not serve your argument well.
Dresden was filled with factories producing weapons and military equipment to wage war upon the world. It had a rail distribution which served to disperse combat troops to wage war upon the world - a logistical sweet target. Trying to hide these military targets amidst "civilians" who are waging war against the world is a poor argument from you, but might be why you would support Hamas firing missiles from schoolyards amid children so you can blame the defenders for children dying when the combat launchers were eliminated.
Targeting valid and critical sweet juicy military targets in wartime is not the same as targeting "civilians" at war with the world, and for you to not understand that simple concept speaks poorly of you and your mental ability.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 3:05 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:

The concept was that an American demonstration of sheer brutality and willingness to kill would stop the Russians in their tracks. The second bomb was to induce a question in Russian minds as to HOW MANY atomic bombs the USA had.

This mind trick only works until the Russians also have the Bomb.

But after WWII, America spent 8 trillion dollars building nukes and rockets, hoping to intimidate Stalin, Khrushchev, Brezhnev and Gorbachev. I claim spending to put a permanent American colony on Mars would have been more intimidating to the Russians, cheaper for the Americans, and less hazardous to life on Earth.

Russia built the Bomb to show they were not intimidated. For every bomb America built, Russia built one, which was a waste for both sides. When America landed on the Moon, the Russians had their own Moon program to show they would not be intimidated. If America landed on Mars, the Russians would have been intimidated.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 3:21 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by JEWELSTAITEFAN:
Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
The Allies waged acts of terror against civilians in world war 2, the bombing of Dresden...the unpaletable side of war is that at times the aim is to kill as many civilians as possible in order to demoralise.

I suppose it depends upon whether you think the means justifies the ends in these matters.


Your logic fails completely. Trying to imagine strategy and causes to fit your pre-ordained effects and conclusions does not serve your argument well.
Dresden was filled with factories producing weapons and military equipment to wage war upon the world. It had a rail distribution which served to disperse combat troops to wage war upon the world - a logistical sweet target. Trying to hide these military targets amidst "civilians" who are waging war against the world is a poor argument from you, but might be why you would support Hamas firing missiles from schoolyards amid children so you can blame the defenders for children dying when the combat launchers were eliminated.
Targeting valid and critical sweet juicy military targets in wartime is not the same as targeting "civilians" at war with the world, and for you to not understand that simple concept speaks poorly of you and your mental ability.

In the Dresden raid, major industrial areas in the suburbs, which stretched for miles, were not targeted. According to Donald Miller "the economic disruption would have been far greater had Bomber Command targeted the suburban areas where most of Dresden's manufacturing might was concentrated". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Dresden_in_World_War_II#Milit
ary_and_industrial_profile


Let Winston Churchill explain Dresden:

Churchill subsequently distanced himself from the bombing.[97][103][104] On 28 March, in a memo sent by telegram to General Ismay for the British Chiefs of Staff and the Chief of the Air Staff, he wrote:

It seems to me that the moment has come when the question of bombing of German cities simply for the sake of increasing the terror, though under other pretexts, should be reviewed. Otherwise we shall come into control of an utterly ruined land… The destruction of Dresden remains a serious query against the conduct of Allied bombing. I am of the opinion that military objectives must henceforward be more strictly studied in our own interests than that of the enemy.

The Foreign Secretary has spoken to me on this subject, and I feel the need for more precise concentration upon military objectives such as oil and communications behind the immediate battle-zone, rather than on mere acts of terror and wanton destruction, however impressive.[105][106]



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Saturday, August 8, 2015 4:00 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:

The concept was that an American demonstration of sheer brutality and willingness to kill would stop the Russians in their tracks. The second bomb was to induce a question in Russian minds as to HOW MANY atomic bombs the USA had.

This mind trick only works until the Russians also have the Bomb.

But after WWII, America spent 8 trillion dollars building nukes and rockets, hoping to intimidate Stalin, Khrushchev, Brezhnev and Gorbachev. I claim spending to put a permanent American colony on Mars would have been more intimidating to the Russians, cheaper for the Americans, and less hazardous to life on Earth.

Russia built the Bomb to show they were not intimidated. For every bomb America built, Russia built one, which was a waste for both sides. When America landed on the Moon, the Russians had their own Moon program to show they would not be intimidated. If America landed on Mars, the Russians would have been intimidated.


OK lets's play the counter-factual game.

If America didn't have the Bomb the USSR would have steamrollered Western Europe at some point post 1945. And without the cost of a nuclear arms race with America, perhaps that regime would still be standing. I think 8 trillion is a small price to pay when you're talking about the freedom and prosperity of an entire continent, for 100 years or more.

There's also the matter of Japan as well, of course. Japan is now a prosperous, mature democracy. Can anyone explain how that could have come about without the USA dropping bombs on it?

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 5:15 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


conjectures - not facts

First of all - it was Russia that won WWII in Europe. Without the eastern front sapping resources Germany would have been in a much stronger position vis-a-vis the allies. But Russia sustained phenomenal losses in soldiers, civilians, equipment and infrastructure:



http://www.eisenhowerinstitute.org/about/living_history/wwii_soviet_ex
perience.dot


What separates the battle histories of the war east of Berlin from the war west of it is the level of savagery. In the major western battles, such as Falaise and The Bulge, the Anglo-American generals used tactics designed to encircle and capture their adversary. In the eastern battles there was mainly direct frontal attack with brute force that didn't stop short of annihilation. Even the numbers reflect the difference. In the west, the 3,000,000 man Allied army killed 834,314 German soldiers and, through the strategic bombing campaigns, about 250,000 civilians. In the east, where neither side had a strategic bombing force, less than six million Germans killed eleven million Soviet soldiers and at least seven million civilians ... all of it face-to-face and on the ground. Even General Eisenhower, no stranger to war-damaged towns and cities, was appalled by the extent of depopulation and wrote in his memoir:

"When we flew into Russia, in 1945, I did not see a house standing between the western borders of the country and the area around Moscow. Through this overrun region, Marshal Zhukov told me, so many numbers of women, children and old men had been killed that the Russian Government would never be able to estimate the total."




Russia wasn't in a position to immediately launch an offensive against the west.

And then, a mere 4 years after the US used nuclear weapons on Japan, Russia tested its own nuclear bomb.



http://www.coldwar.org/articles/40s/soviet_atomic_bomb_test.asp

On August 29, 1949, the Soviet Union exploded its first atomic bomb. It came as a great shock to the United States because they were not expecting the Soviet Union to possess nuclear weapon knowledge so soon.



That 'deterrence' against an attack on Europe lasted all of 4 years.

There's good evidence that it was ultimately Afghanistan that broke Russia, not the cold war. After all, the Russian economy grew from a primitive agrarian medieval economy into a world-class industrial one during the time it was supposedly crippled by the cold war. I'd say that's not very good evidence for your supposition.





Japan is now a prosperous*, mature democracy. Can anyone explain how that could have come about without the USA dropping bombs on it?

Germany is also a prosperous, mature democracy. And yet, it didn't have atomic bombs dropped on it. Golly gee, how did that happen?


Could it possibly be due to the post-war reconstruction programs that were implemented in those two countries?

* The Japanese economy has been stagnating for 20 years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lost_Decade_%28Japan%29 - the whole period of the 1990s to the present is referred to as the Lost Two Decades or the Lost 20 Years





SAGAN: We are releasing vast quantities of carbon dioxide, increasing the greenhouse effect. It may not take much to destabilize the Earth's climate, to convert this heaven, our only home in the cosmos, into a kind of hell.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 5:32 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


What I find interesting about WWII is that the leaders of Axis powers Germany, Japan and Italy, and minor axis player Spain, all personally knew, admired, emulated and supported each other. (In Japan's case the leader was Hideki Tojo, not Hirohito. OTOH the racist hatreds against all 'inferior' races - non-Japanese and presumably non-German that Japan displayed by phenomenally brutal massacres of soldiers and civilians alike - that Tojo also espoused after his rise to power - had Hirohito's enthusiastic support.)

(You'll see perverse echoes of the idea of Japanese racial superiority today - for example against the victims of Fukushima fallout, who are shunned. The idea is that they're insufficiently 'Japanese' and so unable to resist its effects.)




SAGAN: We are releasing vast quantities of carbon dioxide, increasing the greenhouse effect. It may not take much to destabilize the Earth's climate, to convert this heaven, our only home in the cosmos, into a kind of hell.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 6:15 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Dresden_in_World_War_II

An RAF memo issued to airmen on the night of the attack said:
Dresden, the seventh largest city in Germany and not much smaller than Manchester is also the largest unbombed builtup area the enemy has got. In the midst of winter with refugees pouring westward and troops to be rested, roofs are at a premium, not only to give shelter to workers, refugees, and troops alike, but to house the administrative services displaced from other areas. At one time well known for its china, Dresden has developed into an industrial city of first-class importance.... The intentions of the attack are to hit the enemy where he will feel it most, behind an already partially collapsed front... and incidentally to show the Russians when they arrive what Bomber Command can do.[39][31]


In the raid, major industrial areas in the suburbs, which stretched for miles, were not targeted.[8] According to Donald Miller "the economic disruption would have been far greater had Bomber Command targeted the suburban areas where most of Dresden's manufacturing might was concentrated."





SAGAN: We are releasing vast quantities of carbon dioxide, increasing the greenhouse effect. It may not take much to destabilize the Earth's climate, to convert this heaven, our only home in the cosmos, into a kind of hell.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 7:06 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

It was not an act of terror. It was an act of negotiation. Japan had refused to make any negotiations, other than to make clear that they would fight and kill to the end, no matter their own casualties. They insisted upon suicidal strategy. The first bomb helped them see the error of their ways and plans, yet they still insisted upon their suicidal strategy. They still refused to make any negotiations. The second bomb on the 9th (70 years ago now in Japan) helped them see the futility of their plans, that they really would just continue to decimate themselves with little or no casualties to us.

That is not an act of terror. That is an act of education. A demonstration of a promise that perhaps they had not believed or understood clearly until we made good on our promise to defeat them.- JSF



Not only is this a sheer historic-fact-fail, it's a sheer LOGIC fail.

Russia was there, ready and willing to take on the Japanese. Why didn't we just let them do the job? To be pellucidly clear, the only two options available to the USA (and Japan) WEREN'T just "surrender or be bombed". There were any number of coordinated invasion plans which the USA could have particpated in whatever percentage it chose.

This is from Foreign Policy Magazine, a pro-western, pro-CFR publication if there ever was one. It disputes the notion that "the bombs" played a role in the surrender of the Japanese. Instead, it points to the role of the Russian invasion, which began between the first bomb and the second, and changed Russia's role from official neutral to official belligerent. I think the author makes a good case for that viewpoint.

http://foreignpolicy.com/2013/05/30/the-bomb-didnt-beat-japan-stalin-d
id
/

Quote:

The U.S. use of nuclear weapons against Japan during World War II has long been a subject of emotional debate. Initially, few questioned President Truman’s decision to drop two atomic bombs, on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But, in 1965, historian Gar Alperovitz argued that, although the bombs did force an immediate end to the war, Japan’s leaders had wanted to surrender anyway and likely would have done so before the American invasion planned for November 1. Their use was, therefore, unnecessary. Obviously, if the bombings weren’t necessary to win the war, then bombing Hiroshima and Nagasaki was wrong. In the 48 years since, many others have joined the fray: some echoing Alperovitz and denouncing the bombings, others rejoining hotly that the bombings were moral, necessary, and life-saving.

Both schools of thought, however, assume that the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with new, more powerful weapons did coerce Japan into surrendering on August 9. They fail to question the utility of the bombing in the first place — to ask, in essence, did it work? The orthodox view is that, yes, of course, it worked. The United States bombed Hiroshima on August 6 and Nagasaki on August 9, when the Japanese finally succumbed to the threat of further nuclear bombardment and surrendered. The support for this narrative runs deep. But there are three major problems with it, and, taken together, they significantly undermine the traditional interpretation of the Japanese surrender.

Timing

The first problem with the traditional interpretation is timing. And it is a serious problem...

The traditional interpretation has a simple timeline: The U.S. Army Air Force bombs Hiroshima with a nuclear weapon on August 6, three days later they bomb Nagasaki with another, and on the next day the Japanese signal their intention to surrender.* One can hardly blame American newspapers for running headlines like: "Peace in the Pacific: Our Bomb Did It!"

When the story of Hiroshima is told in most American histories, the day of the bombing — August 6 — serves as the narrative climax. All the elements of the story point forward to that moment: the decision to build a bomb, the secret research at Los Alamos, the first impressive test, and the final culmination at Hiroshima. It is told, in other words, as a story about the Bomb. But you can’t analyze Japan’s decision to surrender objectively in the context of the story of the Bomb. Casting it as "the story of the Bomb" already presumes that the Bomb’s role is central.

Viewed from the Japanese perspective, the most important day in that second week of August wasn’t August 6 but August 9. That was the day that the Supreme Council met — for the first time in the war — to discuss unconditional surrender. The Supreme Council was a group of six top members of the government — a sort of inner cabinet — that effectively ruled Japan in 1945. Japan’s leaders had not seriously considered surrendering prior to that day. Unconditional surrender (what the Allies were demanding) was a bitter pill to swallow. The United States and Great Britain were already convening war crimes trials in Europe. What if they decided to put the emperor — who was believed to be divine — on trial? What if they got rid of the emperor and changed the form of government entirely? Even though the situation was bad in the summer of 1945, the leaders of Japan were not willing to consider giving up their traditions, their beliefs, or their way of life. Until August 9. What could have happened that caused them to so suddenly and decisively change their minds? What made them sit down to seriously discuss surrender for the first time after 14 years of war?

It could not have been Nagasaki. The bombing of Nagasaki occurred in the late morning of August 9, after the Supreme Council had already begun meeting to discuss surrender, and word of the bombing only reached Japan’s leaders in the early afternoon — after the meeting of the Supreme Council had been adjourned in deadlock and the full cabinet had been called to take up the discussion. Based on timing alone, Nagasaki can’t have been what motivated them.

Hiroshima isn’t a very good candidate either. It came 74 hours — more than three days — earlier. What kind of crisis takes three days to unfold? ...

[...examples of reaction times to crises in times of war, which are within hours of the event...]

These leaders responded — as leaders in any country would — to the imperative call that a crisis creates. They each took decisive steps in a short period of time. How can we square this sort of behavior with the actions of Japan’s leaders? If Hiroshima really touched off a crisis that eventually forced the Japanese to surrender after fighting for 14 years, why did it take them three days to sit down to discuss it?

One might argue that the delay is perfectly logical. Perhaps they only came to realize the importance of the bombing slowly. Perhaps they didn’t know it was a nuclear weapon and when they did realize it and understood the terrible effects such a weapon could have, they naturally concluded they had to surrender. Unfortunately, this explanation doesn’t square with the evidence.

First, Hiroshima’s governor reported to Tokyo on the very day Hiroshima was bombed that about a third of the population had been killed in the attack and that two thirds of the city had been destroyed. This information didn’t change over the next several days. So the outcome — the end result of the bombing — was clear from the beginning. Japan’s leaders knew roughly the outcome of the attack on the first day, yet they still did not act.

Second, the preliminary report prepared by the Army team that investigated the Hiroshima bombing, the one that gave details about what had happened there, was not delivered until August 10. It didn’t reach Tokyo, in other words, until after the decision to surrender had already been taken. Although their verbal report was delivered (to the military) on August 8, the details of the bombing were not available until two days later. The decision to surrender was therefore not based on a deep appreciation of the horror at Hiroshima.

Third, the Japanese military understood, at least in a rough way, what nuclear weapons were. Japan had a nuclear weapons program. Several of the military men mention the fact that it was a nuclear weapon that destroyed Hiroshima in their diaries. General Anami Korechika, minster of war, even went to consult with the head of the Japanese nuclear weapons program on the night of August 7. The idea that Japan’s leaders didn’t know about nuclear weapons doesn’t hold up.

Finally, one other fact about timing creates a striking problem. On August 8, Foreign Minister Togo Shigenori went to Premier Suzuki Kantaro and asked that the Supreme Council be convened to discuss the bombing of Hiroshima, but its members declined. So the crisis didn’t grow day by day until it finally burst into full bloom on August 9. Any explanation of the actions of Japan’s leaders that relies on the "shock" of the bombing of Hiroshima has to account for the fact that they considered a meeting to discuss the bombing on August 8, made a judgment that it was too unimportant, and then suddenly decided to meet to discuss surrender the very next day. Either they succumbed to some sort of group schizophrenia, or some other event was the real motivation to discuss surrender.

Scale

Historically, the use of the Bomb may seem like the most important discrete event of the war. From the contemporary Japanese perspective, however, it might not have been so easy to distinguish the Bomb from other events. It is, after all, difficult to distinguish a single drop of rain in the midst of a hurricane.

In the summer of 1945, the U.S. Army Air Force carried out one of the most intense campaigns of city destruction in the history of the world. [SEVERAL OF THESE BOMBING CAMPAIGNS WERE INCENDIARY, OF THE SAME KIND OF BOMBING THAT LEVELED DRESDEN- SIGNY http://www.wired.com/2011/03/0309incendiary-bombs-kill-100000-tokyo/]

Sixty-eight cities in Japan were attacked and all of them were either partially or completely destroyed. An estimated 1.7 million people were made homeless, 300,000 were killed, and 750,000 were wounded. Sixty-six of these raids were carried out with conventional [and incendiary] bombs, two with atomic bombs. The destruction caused by conventional attacks was huge. Night after night, all summer long, cities would go up in smoke. In the midst of this cascade of destruction, it would not be surprising if this or that individual attack failed to make much of an impression — even if it was carried out with a remarkable new type of weapon.

A B-29 bomber flying from the Mariana Islands could carry — depending on the location of the target and the altitude of attack — somewhere between 16,000 and 20,000 pounds of bombs. A typical raid consisted of 500 bombers. This means that the typical conventional raid was dropping 4 to 5 kilotons of bombs on each city. (A kiloton is a thousand tons and is the standard measure of the explosive power of a nuclear weapon. The Hiroshima bomb measured 16.5 kilotons, the Nagasaki bomb 20 kilotons.) Given that many bombs spread the destruction evenly (and therefore more effectively), while a single, more powerful bomb wastes much of its power at the center of the explosion — re-bouncing the rubble, as it were — it could be argued that some of the conventional raids approached the destruction of the two atomic bombings.

The first of the conventional raids, a night attack on Tokyo on March 9-10, 1945, remains the single most destructive attack on a city in the history of war. Something like 16 square miles of the city were burned out. An estimated 120,000 Japanese lost their lives — the single highest death toll of any bombing attack on a city.

We often imagine, because of the way the story is told, that the bombing of Hiroshima was far worse. We imagine that the number of people killed was off the charts. But if you graph the number of people killed in all 68 cities bombed in the summer of 1945, you find that Hiroshima was second in terms of civilian deaths. If you chart the number of square miles destroyed, you find that Hiroshima was fourth. If you chart the percentage of the city destroyed, Hiroshima was 17th. Hiroshima was clearly within the parameters of the conventional attacks carried out that summer.

From our perspective, Hiroshima seems singular, extraordinary. But if you put yourself in the shoes of Japan’s leaders in the three weeks leading up to the attack on Hiroshima, the picture is considerably different. If you were one of the key members of Japan’s government in late July and early August, your experience of city bombing would have been something like this: On the morning of July 17, you would have been greeted by reports that during the night four cities had been attacked: Oita, Hiratsuka, Numazu, and Kuwana. Of these, Oita and Hiratsuka were more than 50 percent destroyed. Kuwana was more than 75 percent destroyed and Numazu was hit even more severely, with something like 90 percent of the city burned to the ground.

Three days later you have woken to find that three more cities had been attacked. Fukui was more than 80 percent destroyed. A week later and three more cities have been attacked during the night. Two days later and six more cities were attacked in one night, including Ichinomiya, which was 75 percent destroyed. On August 2, you would have arrived at the office to reports that four more cities have been attacked. And the reports would have included the information that Toyama (roughly the size of Chattanooga, Tennessee in 1945), had been 99.5 percent destroyed. Virtually the entire city had been leveled. Four days later and four more cities have been attacked. On August 6, only one city, Hiroshima, was attacked but reports say that the damage was great and a new type bomb was used. How much would this one new attack have stood out against the background of city destruction that had been going on for weeks?

In the three weeks prior to Hiroshima, 26 cities were attacked by the U.S. Army Air Force. Of these, eight — or almost a third — were as completely or more completely destroyed than Hiroshima (in terms of the percentage of the city destroyed). The fact that Japan had 68 cities destroyed in the summer of 1945 poses a serious challenge for people who want to make the bombing of Hiroshima the cause of Japan’s surrender. The question is: If they surrendered because a city was destroyed, why didn’t they surrender when those other 66 cities were destroyed?

If Japan’s leaders were going to surrender because of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, you would expect to find that they cared about the bombing of cities in general, that the city attacks put pressure on them to surrender. But this doesn’t appear to be so. Two days after the bombing of Tokyo, retired Foreign Minister Shidehara Kijuro expressed a sentiment that was apparently widely held among Japanese high-ranking officials at the time. Shidehara opined that "the people would gradually get used to being bombed daily. In time their unity and resolve would grow stronger." In a letter to a friend he said it was important for citizens to endure the suffering because "even if hundreds of thousands of noncombatants are killed, injured, or starved, even if millions of buildings are destroyed or burned," additional time was needed for diplomacy. It is worth remembering that Shidehara was a moderate.

At the highest levels of government — in the Supreme Council — attitudes were apparently the same. Although the Supreme Council discussed the importance of the Soviet Union remaining neutral, they didn’t have a full-dress discussion about the impact of city bombing. In the records that have been preserved, city bombing doesn’t even get mentioned during Supreme Council discussions except on two occasions: once in passing in May 1945 and once during the wide-ranging discussion on the night of August 9. Based on the evidence, it is difficult to make a case that Japan’s leaders thought that city bombing — compared to the other pressing matters involved in running a war — had much significance at all.

General Anami on August 13 remarked that the atomic bombings were no more menacing than the fire-bombing that Japan had endured for months. If Hiroshima and Nagasaki were no worse than the fire bombings, and if Japan’s leaders did not consider them important enough to discuss in depth, how can Hiroshima and Nagasaki have coerced them to surrender?

Strategic Significance

If the Japanese were not concerned with city bombing in general or the atomic bombing of Hiroshima in particular, what were they concerned with?

The answer is simple: the Soviet Union.


The Japanese were in a relatively difficult strategic situation. They were nearing the end of a war they were losing. Conditions were bad. The Army, however, was still strong and well-supplied. Nearly 4 million men were under arms and 1.2 million of those were guarding Japan’s home islands.

Even the most hardline leaders in Japan’s government knew that the war could not go on. The question was not whether to continue, but how to bring the war to a close under the best terms possible. The Allies (the United States, Great Britain, and others — the Soviet Union, remember, was still neutral) were demanding "unconditional surrender." Japan’s leaders hoped that they might be able to figure out a way to avoid war crimes trials, keep their form of government, and keep some of the territories they’d conquered: Korea, Vietnam, Burma, parts of Malaysia and Indonesia, a large portion of eastern China, and numerous islands in the Pacific.

They had two plans for getting better surrender terms; they had, in other words, two strategic options. The first was diplomatic. Japan had signed a five-year neutrality pact with the Soviets in April of 1941, which would expire in 1946.

A group consisting mostly of civilian leaders and led by Foreign Minister Togo Shigenori hoped that Stalin might be convinced to mediate a settlement between the United States and its allies on the one hand, and Japan on the other. Even though this plan was a long shot, it reflected sound strategic thinking. After all, it would be in the Soviet Union’s interest to make sure that the terms of the settlement were not too favorable to the United States: any increase in U.S. influence and power in Asia would mean a decrease in Russian power and influence.

The second plan was military, and most of its proponents, led by the Army Minister Anami Korechika, were military men. They hoped to use Imperial Army ground troops to inflict high casualties on U.S. forces when they invaded. If they succeeded, they felt, they might be able to get the United States to offer better terms. This strategy was also a long shot. The United States seemed deeply committed to unconditional surrender. But since there was, in fact, concern in U.S. military circles that the casualties in an invasion would be prohibitive, the Japanese high command’s strategy was not entirely off the mark.

One way to gauge whether it was the bombing of Hiroshima or the invasion and declaration of war by the Soviet Union that caused Japan’s surrender is to compare the way in which these two events affected the strategic situation. After Hiroshima was bombed on August 8, both options were still alive. It would still have been possible to ask Stalin to mediate (and Takagi’s diary entries from August 8 show that at least some of Japan’s leaders were still thinking about the effort to get Stalin involved). It would also still have been possible to try to fight one last decisive battle and inflict heavy casualties. The destruction of Hiroshima had done nothing to reduce the preparedness of the troops dug in on the beaches of Japan’s home islands. There was now one fewer city behind them, but they were still dug in, they still had ammunition, and their military strength had not been diminished in any important way. Bombing Hiroshima did not foreclose either of Japan’s strategic options.

The impact of the Soviet declaration of war and invasion of Manchuria and Sakhalin Island was quite different, however. Once the Soviet Union had declared war, Stalin could no longer act as a mediator — he was now a belligerent. So the diplomatic option was wiped out by the Soviet move. The effect on the military situation was equally dramatic. Most of Japan’s best troops had been shifted to the southern part of the home islands. Japan’s military had correctly guessed that the likely first target of an American invasion would be the southernmost island of Kyushu. The once proud Kwangtung army in Manchuria, for example, was a shell of its former self because its best units had been shifted away to defend Japan itself. When the Russians invaded Manchuria, they sliced through what had once been an elite army and many Russian units only stopped when they ran out of gas. The Soviet 16th Army — 100,000 strong — launched an invasion of the southern half of Sakhalin Island. Their orders were to mop up Japanese resistance there, and then — within 10 to 14 days — be prepared to invade Hokkaido, the northernmost of Japan’s home islands. The Japanese force tasked with defending Hokkaido, the 5th Area Army, was under strength at two divisions and two brigades, and was in fortified positions on the east side of the island. The Soviet plan of attack called for an invasion of Hokkaido from the west.

It didn’t take a military genius to see that, while it might be possible to fight a decisive battle against one great power invading from one direction, it would not be possible to fight off two great powers attacking from two different directions. The Soviet invasion invalidated the military’s decisive battle strategy, just as it invalidated the diplomatic strategy. At a single stroke, all of Japan’s options evaporated. The Soviet invasion was strategically decisive — it foreclosed both of Japan’s options — while the bombing of Hiroshima (which foreclosed neither) was not.

The Soviet declaration of war also changed the calculation of how much time was left for maneuver. Japanese intelligence was predicting that U.S. forces might not invade for months. Soviet forces, on the other hand, could be in Japan proper in as little as 10 days. The Soviet invasion made a decision on ending the war extremely time sensitive. ...

It is troubling to consider, given the questions raised here, that the evidence of Hiroshima and Nagasaki is at the heart of everything we think about nuclear weapons. This event is the bedrock of the case for the importance of nuclear weapons. It is crucial to their unique status, the notion that the normal rules do not apply to nuclear weapons. It is an important measure of nuclear threats: Truman’s threat to visit a "rain of ruin" on Japan was the first explicit nuclear threat. It is key to the aura of enormous power that surrounds the weapons and makes them so important in international relations.

But what are we to make of all those conclusions if the traditional story of Hiroshima is called into doubt? Hiroshima is the center, the point from which all other claims and assertions radiate out. Yet the story we have been telling ourselves seems pretty far removed from the facts. What are we to think about nuclear weapons if this enormous first accomplishment — the miracle of Japan’s sudden surrender — turns out to be a myth?





--------------
You can't build a nation with bombs. You can't create a society with guns.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 7:16 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Targeting valid and critical sweet juicy military targets in wartime is not the same as targeting "civilians" at war with the world, and for you to not understand that simple concept speaks poorly of you and your mental ability.
To repeat what was written previously, IF they had targeted military targets, that might have made more sense, but they didn't. They targeted the opera, and apartment buildings, and shops, and other CIVILIAN economic and cultural structures, not the military.

And then, when the CIVILIANS sought refuge from the fires and destruction in open spaces, the planes came through and bombed and strafed the CIVILIANS again.

Please watch the documentary. It's quite an eye-opener. I've provided a convenient link, and it will explain all of this in far better detail than I can.

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You can't build a nation with bombs. You can't create a society with guns.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 7:22 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Finally, as to whether or not A-bombs were vital on the Japanese war front - I've come across many different analyses over the years, from the idea that it was done as a threat to Russia, and Japan was merely the unfortunate example, to the idea it was vital to ending the war quickly, and ultimately saving lives.

As losses mounted, Tojo suggested - and Hirohito implemented - Bushido among military and civilians alike. Death - either in battle or by suicide - was far better than capture or, worse, surrender. This ethic was inculcated for many years.

The result was that soldiers fought fanatically to the death,

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2014/07/05/national/history/battle-sa
ipan-brutal-invasion-claimed-55000-lives/#.VcaFinZXais

Out of the entire Japanese garrison of 30,000 troops, only 921 prisoners were captured; the rest died. The Japanese commanders, and some 5,000 others committed suicide rather than surrender.


and civilians committed mass suicide.

(In Okinawa alone) 42,000–150,000 local civilians were killed or committed suicide ...

All during this time Gen Curtis LeMay was running high volume conventional air-strikes against the main Japanese islands in the hope of reducing their will to fight - which failed completely.

Another statistic I've run across is that for every Japanese soldier killed in battle - and many were killed in pointless charges at unobtainable and meaningless targets - at least 10 died of starvation or disease. That you would wantonly kill your soldiers or let them die OF STARVATION and disease through a simple failure to consider adequately providing them, is inconceivable to me. But also, the soldiers themselves went mutely along with it, rather than revolt, surrender, or desert.

So the experience in the Pacific was that a ground invasion of the large Japanese islands themselves looked to be bloody and perhaps impossible, and conventional air-strikes didn't work.

Against this is the fact that by this time Tojo had already resigned in disgrace, and Hirohito was discussing surrender on certain conditions.

But the US wanted unconditional surrender. And there was concern that even IF Hirohito ordered it, the Bushido ethic that had been drilled so deeply into the Japanese military and civilians by the Military Secret Police, Tojo, and Hirohito himself, might be irreversible.

The whole question for me falls into the nebulous 'what might have been if ...' territory, and I'm not sure I know enough to recognize a conclusive answer, even it it was n front of me.






SAGAN: We are releasing vast quantities of carbon dioxide, increasing the greenhouse effect. It may not take much to destabilize the Earth's climate, to convert this heaven, our only home in the cosmos, into a kind of hell.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 7:41 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


The man who saved Kyoto from the atomic bomb
www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-33755182

In early June 1945, Secretary of War Henry Stimson ordered Kyoto to be removed from the target list.

"The military didn't want it removed so it kept putting Kyoto back on the list until late July but Stimson went directly to President Truman," says Prof Wellerstein.

Stimson argued that it was of cultural importance and that it was not a military target. Kyoto, which is home to more than 2,000 Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines, including 17 World Heritage Sites, was at the top of the list. The scientists on the Target Committee preferred Kyoto because it was home to many universities and they thought the people there would be able to understand that an atomic bomb was not just another weapon - that it was almost a turning point in human history.

After holding a discussion with the President, Mr Stimson wrote in his diary on 24 July 1945 that "he was particularly emphatic in agreeing with my suggestion that if elimination was not done, the bitterness which would be caused by such a wanton act might make it impossible during the long post-war period to reconcile the Japanese to us in that area rather than to the Russians".

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 7:58 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


Signy

Thanks for your post. It is conclusive for me. It analyzes all the information I already have, and decisively includes additional new information.




SAGAN: We are releasing vast quantities of carbon dioxide, increasing the greenhouse effect. It may not take much to destabilize the Earth's climate, to convert this heaven, our only home in the cosmos, into a kind of hell.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 8:27 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

conjectures - not facts

Well spotted kiki, but we're dealing with alternative realities here so that kind of goes without saying.

Quote:

That 'deterrence' against an attack on Europe lasted all of 4 years.

Actually the USA enjoyed heavy nuclear superiority over the USSR into the late 50s: http://www.atomicarchive.com/History/coldwar/page15.shtml

Quote:

After all, the Russian economy grew from a primitive agrarian medieval economy into a world-class industrial

The Soviet economy was world class, that's a good one.

Quote:

Germany is also a prosperous, mature democracy. And yet, it didn't have atomic bombs dropped on it. Golly gee, how did that happen?

Err, it got massively invaded with conventional military forces. Is that your answer?

Quote:

The Japanese economy has been stagnating for 20 years.

You're saying Japan is not prosperous?? The 'world class' Soviet economy went through an entire 'era of stagnation': https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Era_of_Stagnation

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 8:40 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:

And then, when the CIVILIANS sought refuge from the fires and destruction in open spaces, the planes came through and bombed and strafed the CIVILIANS again.

Please watch the documentary. It's quite an eye-opener. I've provided a convenient link, and it will explain all of this in far better detail than I can.


Do you have any evidence for this, other than a propaganda video from a pro Nazi website?

Another Hellstorm 'documentary', which sums up the website quite well:



It's not personal. It's just war.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 8:54 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


KPO-

So, let's see... you concede that Dresden wasn't a military site. You concede that the British bombed civilians, created a firestorm, and then bombed open areas like the parks, the zoos, and the banks of the Elbe. You concede that this was purely an act of terror- a terrorist act- designed specifically to annihilate a civilian population and terrorize the survivors.

You concede that the USAF bombed and firebombed much of Japan. You concede that the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki did not serve to "shorten the war", but was instead a warning shot across the Russian bow.

And you quibble about strafing.

OK!



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You can't build a nation with bombs. You can't create a society with guns.

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Saturday, August 8, 2015 10:13 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


that could be delivered on the territory of the United States and Western Europe

Here the author conflates three items: the presence or absence of nuclear bombs (by 1949 Russia has successfully exploded a nuclear bomb), nuclear bomb numbers, and delivery capability. He also makes no mention of how many cities the US was prepared to lose to a nuclear attack, and how many cities Europe was prepared to lose to a nuclear attack. If the number is zero, than any nuclear bomb by Russia is a complete stalemate. And again, it's a theoretical supposition. How many cities were western countries prepared to lose? How many were Russia prepared to lose?

By 1950 Russia had 5 nuclear bombs. Would the loss of 5 western cities be acceptable? By 1955 Russia had 200. Surely the loss of 200 cities from whatever position - offensive or defensive - gave pause. Otherwise the US would have launched its nuclear arsenal.

Looking at the expansion numbers, I'm guessing the Russian arsenal hit a significant number pretty soon after 1950 - something that military people would deeply consider (even if you wouldn't). At most, the US advantage lasted 6 or 7 years after 1945.


The Soviet economy was world class, that's a good one.
It's an accurate one.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/22/Historic_world_GDP
_per_capita.svg



Err, it got massively invaded with conventional military forces. Is that your answer?
So did Italy, for all the good it did them.
http://en.metapedia.org/wiki/Aerial_bombings_in_Italy_during_WWII


You're saying Japan is not prosperous??

I suppose it depends on your definition of prosperity, how much poverty is acceptable in prosperity, and if you're using a comparative scale.

http://www.nippon.com/en/features/h00072/
The report noted that Japan's relative poverty rate—the proportion of people with net income below a defined threshold—was 16.1% in 2012.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poverty_in_the_United_States
In November 2012 the U.S. Census Bureau said more than 16% of the population lived in poverty,
http://www.ifs.org.uk/comms/comm124.pdf
English poverty 2010–11 (UK) 21.1%

But Japan's greater than 20 year economic slump is indisputable. Or, if you want to dispute it, you should take it up with the economists who say so.


You go off the rails here with pure conjecture and jingoism:

If America didn't have the Bomb the USSR would have steamrollered Western Europe at some point post 1945. And without the cost of a nuclear arms race with America, perhaps that regime would still be standing. I think 8 trillion is a small price to pay when you're talking about the freedom and prosperity of an entire continent, for 100 years or more.

There's also the matter of Japan as well, of course. Japan is now a prosperous, mature democracy. Can anyone explain how that could have come about without the USA dropping bombs on it?


I've already shown how these arguments are speculation at best and specious at worst, and you've failed to muster salient countering facts.





SAGAN: We are releasing vast quantities of carbon dioxide, increasing the greenhouse effect. It may not take much to destabilize the Earth's climate, to convert this heaven, our only home in the cosmos, into a kind of hell.

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 5:58 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:

If America didn't have the Bomb the USSR would have steamrollered Western Europe at some point post 1945. And without the cost of a nuclear arms race with America, perhaps that regime would still be standing. I think 8 trillion is a small price to pay when you're talking about the freedom and prosperity of an entire continent, for 100 years or more.

There is the same amount of Russian deterrent with 3,000 Nukes as with 30,000, but the cost in trillions of US dollars is different. Also different are the opportunities for generals to be paid bribes within the military–industrial complex. The reasons why too much money was spent on the US nuclear weapon stockpile are only hard to understand if you don't want to understand.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_nuclear_weapons_stockpiles_an
d_nuclear_tests_by_country




Air Chief Marshal Arthur Harris, the bomber of Dresden and commonly known as "Bomber" Harris by the press, and often within the RAF as "Butcher" Harris, wrote when he was mildly criticized by Churchill: “I do not personally regard the whole of the remaining cities of Germany as worth the bones of one British Grenadier.” That is not as catchy as “The only good German baby is a dead German baby” but the Air Chief Marshal's moral calculus is the same. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Arthur_Harris,_1st_Baronet


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Sunday, August 9, 2015 10:15 AM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

So, let's see... you concede that Dresden wasn't a military site.

No...?

Quote:

You concede that the British bombed civilians, created a firestorm, and then bombed open areas like the parks, the zoos, and the banks of the Elbe. You concede that this was purely an act of terror- a terrorist act- designed specifically to annihilate a civilian population and terrorize the survivors.

You concede that the USAF bombed and firebombed much of Japan. You concede that the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki did not serve to "shorten the war", but was instead a warning shot across the Russian bow.


What was it you said about putting words into other people's mouths? That it was the mark of an 'authoritarian'? Funny how it's such a mainstay of your debating strategy.

Go back to your Nazi website.

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 10:28 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I note that - as usual - rather than addressing the CONTENT of a discussion, you argue about "where it came from".

And I figured you'd say something like that in response.

But since you're such a stickler for historic accuracy (HAHAHAHA!) I'd assumed that you'd want to do a point-by-point, starting with the most salient points first, and continuing to the least.

Since you didn't object to those points, and apparently still don't care to dispute them, I guess you have nothing to say on the following points.

Dresden - not a military site
Bombing of Dresden - aimed at annihilating civilians (look at targets and timing)
Russia - won WWII in Europe
Russia - close to invading Japan post European theater
USA Carpet bombing/ incendiary bombing of Japan - aimed at total destruction
USA Atomic bombing Japan- did not force the Japanese to surrender
USA Atomic bombing Japan- aimed a stopping the Russians, not the Japanese

Act of terror = terrorist act = terrorism = inducing terror in a population to achieve political or military goals, whether done by individuals with suicide vests or nations with bombs

Most of these are historic facts. You can try arguing about them, but we both know you won't get anywhere. The goal of atomic-bombing Japan is closely-reasoned (see the article in Foreign Policy). You can try arguing that too and might get farther, but somehow I don't think you will.

The last point is simply definitional. We have been so brainwashed into thinking that terrorism is done by small groups of individuals, mostly on the ground with suicide vests or small arms, that it never occurs to us to include larger or more formal groups. The US State Dept has been forced to gradually expand its definition to include larger groups with some political legitimacy (eg Hezbollah, IRA) and groups which gained considerable territory with tanks, howitzers, and other conventional large weapons (ISIS) and even groups which are supplied by nations ( ie "state-sponsored terrorism" ... altho why Saudi Arabia and Turkey never make it onto that list with their sponsorship of al Qaida, al Nusrah, etc is beyond me) but we would NEVER think to include nations with advanced fighter-bombers, such as the USA. But really, what's the difference between killing civilians from 10 feet or from 10,000 feet, except effectiveness?

I would appreciate your response to that question, but I doubt you'll address that either.




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You can't build a nation with bombs. You can't create a society with guns.

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 10:45 AM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

He also makes no mention of how many cities the US was prepared to lose to a nuclear attack, and how many cities Europe was prepared to lose to a nuclear attack. If the number is zero, than any nuclear bomb by Russia is a complete stalemate. And again, it's a theoretical supposition. How many cities were western countries prepared to lose? How many were Russia prepared to lose?

By 1950 Russia had 5 nuclear bombs. Would the loss of 5 western cities be acceptable?


What you are either ignoring or missing is the idea of nuclear primacy. Yes Russia had a small number of nukes, and delivery systems, but the USA had the ability to wipe out this nuclear capability pre-emptively, before the Soviets could use it, in response to Russian aggression. So the small number of soviet nukes were to a large extent nullified, until the USSR developed second strike capability, in the late 50s and early 60s (some reading on the subject here - https://www.globalpolicy.org/component/content/article/153/26263.html )

Quote:

The Soviet economy was world class, that's a good one.
It's an accurate one.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/22/Historic_world_GDP
_per_capita.svg


Accurate? Your own graph shows the 'world class' Soviet economy lagged behind Latin America, and the global average. Lol, Kiki you are just too good to be true.

Quote:

Err, it got massively invaded with conventional military forces. Is that your answer?
So did Italy, for all the good it did them.


So you can't answer my question. That's exactly my point.

Quote:

You're saying Japan is not prosperous??

I suppose it depends on your definition of prosperity,


It depends on how much you are willing to bend the meaning of words to serve your own argument.

Quote:

I've already shown how these arguments are speculation at best

Lol that you're still criticising my counter-factual for being 'speculative' and 'conjecture'. Do you understand what a counter-factual is?

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 11:16 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


KPO- For your response
Quote:

Originally posted by SIGNYM:
I note that - as usual - rather than addressing the CONTENT of a discussion, you argue about "where it came from".

And I figured you'd say something like that in response.

But since you're such a stickler for historic accuracy (HAHAHAHA!) I'd assumed that you'd want to do a point-by-point, starting with the most salient points first, and continuing to the least.

Since you didn't object to those points, and apparently still don't care to dispute them, I guess you have nothing to say on the following points.

Dresden - not a military site
Bombing of Dresden - aimed at annihilating civilians (look at targets and timing)
Russia - won WWII in Europe
Russia - close to invading Japan post European theater
USA Carpet bombing/ incendiary bombing of Japan - aimed at total destruction
USA Atomic bombing Japan- did not force the Japanese to surrender
USA Atomic bombing Japan- aimed a stopping the Russians, not the Japanese

Act of terror = terrorist act = terrorism = inducing terror in a population to achieve political or military goals, whether done by individuals with suicide vests or nations with bombs

Most of these are historic facts. You can try arguing about them, but we both know you won't get anywhere. The goal of atomic-bombing Japan is closely-reasoned (see the article in Foreign Policy). You can try arguing that too and might get farther, but somehow I don't think you will.

The last point is simply definitional. We have been so brainwashed into thinking that terrorism is done by small groups of individuals, mostly on the ground with suicide vests or small arms, that it never occurs to us to include larger or more formal groups. The US State Dept has been forced to gradually expand its definition to include larger groups with some political legitimacy (eg Hezbollah, IRA) and groups which gained considerable territory with tanks, howitzers, and other conventional large weapons (ISIS) and even groups which are supplied by nations ( ie "state-sponsored terrorism" ... altho why Saudi Arabia and Turkey never make it onto that list with their sponsorship of al Qaida, al Nusrah, etc is beyond me) but we would NEVER think to include nations with advanced fighter-bombers, such as the USA. But really, what's the difference between killing civilians from 10 feet or from 10,000 feet, except effectiveness?

I would appreciate your response to that question, but I doubt you'll address that either.




--------------
You can't build a nation with bombs. You can't create a society with guns.


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Sunday, August 9, 2015 11:19 AM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Signy, I have nothing to say in response to Nazi propaganda - I just ignore it.

As for some of your other arguments:

- Your suggestion that the atomic bombs 'did not serve to shorten the war' is laughable
- You claim that the bomb was used to stop the Russians in their attack on Japan and deny them 'a share of the pie, but as far back as 1943 the Allies were asking Russia to join the war against Japan, and terms were agreed that allowed the USSR to keep new territory in the Far East.

It's not personal. It's just war.

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 11:38 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Yes, I noticed that if it's something you want to read, no matter HOW specious or ill-founded, you assume it's legitimate, but if it's something you disagree with you call it "propaganda" (in this case, NAZI propaganda!) despite the fact that it's well-founded in historic fact. Basically, you're a propagandist.

And you still haven't addressed the definition of "terrorism" and whether it includes bombing wide swaths of civilian populations from 10,000 ft.

The agreement between Russia and the USA, from the Office of the Historian


Quote:

The Soviets, who had long been pushing the Allies to open a second front, agreed to launch another major offensive on the Eastern Front that would divert German troops away from the Allied campaign in northern France. Stalin also agreed in principle that the Soviet Union would declare war against Japan following an Allied victory over Germany. In exchange for a Soviet declaration of war against Japan, Roosevelt conceded to Stalin’s demands for the Kurile Islands and the southern half of Sakhalin, and access to the ice-free ports of Dairen (Dalian) and Port Arthur (Lüshun Port) located on the Liaodong Peninsula in northern China. The exact details concerning this deal were not finalized, however, until the Yalta Conference of 1945.



https://history.state.gov/milestones/1937-1945/tehran-conf

So, the Russian were promised the (small) Kuril Islands and southern Sakhalin, and a couple of ports IN CHINA. First of all, talk about reneging on a deal! The Japanese are STILL arguing about the Kurils. The Russians took Sakhalin anyway. And gee, it was mighty white [slight intended] of America to give away a couple of pieces of China to Russia. That's almost like Britain giving Palestine to the Jews!

The fear wasn't that Russia would obtain a few ports here and there, the fear was that the Russians would take the whole damn thing. It was widely thought that in early August, the Russians were within days of invading Japan (and it turns out that the timetable was right) but that US forces wouldn't invade until November.

Now, it just occurred to me that there is ONE argument you can make about why the USA atom-bombed Japan, and it might even be the decisive one. It's certainly worth researching. I'll give you a chance to think about that before I tell you what it might be.

As an aside, did you read the interview with Tatyana Montoyan? It's long, critical of both Kiev and Russia, but overall seems sharp-eyed and insightful. You can find it here
http://www.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?tid=59642

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 12:52 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Okay, I have other things to do, here is the idea:

The main point of the argument, that the atom bombs were set off to keep the Russians at bay, are based on the idea that the Russians were ready to invade (clearly, they were) but the Americans weren't.

A point could be made- and research could be done- to decide whether or not American troops really were in a position to invade in early August. If they were, that would tend to support the notion that the atomic bombs were adjunct to an invasion. If not, it would tend to support the notion that the bombs were in response to the Russian invasion.

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 2:24 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Air Chief Marshal Arthur Harris, the bomber of Dresden and commonly known as "Bomber" Harris by the press, and often within the RAF as "Butcher" Harris, wrote when he was mildly criticized by Churchill: “I do not personally regard the whole of the remaining cities of Germany as worth the bones of one British Grenadier.” That is not as catchy as “The only good German baby is a dead German baby” but the Air Chief Marshal's moral calculus is the same.

No - and this is important. Harris's argument and the context for that quote was that by laying waste to German cities with the RAF it would cripple the German war effort, shorten the war, and thereby save the lives of Allied servicemen. This backs up my assertion that the Allies were principally concerned with military objectives. The morality of Harris's quote is, of course, very questionable, but it is very different to the sadistic extermination of German babies.


It's not personal. It's just war.

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 4:41 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.



nuclear primacy

Maybe in your fantasy, but not in fact.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intercontinental_ballistic_missile

Early ICBMs had limited accuracy (circular error probable) that allowed them to be used only against the largest targets such as cities. They were seen as a "safe" basing option, one that would keep the deterrent force close to home where it would be difficult to attack. ... Second- and third-generation designs (e.g. the LGM-118 Peacekeeper) dramatically improved accuracy to the point where even the smallest point targets (missile bases) can be successfully attacked.

... The first successful (ICBM) test (BY RUSSIA) followed on 21 August 1957; the R-7 flew over 6,000 km (3,700 mi) and became the world's first ICBM.[4] The first strategic-missile unit became operational on 9 February 1959 at Plesetsk in north-west Russia.[5]

... The first successful (US) flight of an Atlas missile to full range occurred 28 November 1958.[6] The first armed version ... test flight was carried out on 9 July 1959,[7][8] and the missile was accepted for service on 1 September.





So Russia had a slim lead in early (imprecise) ICBM development and deployment. If the US tried to use early ICBMs - which Russia also had - it certainly was not with enough accuracy to take out nukes. At that point the only way the US could bomb Russia and take out nukes was the old-fashioned way - by bomber. Are you claiming the Russians wouldn't see that coming on their radar and deploy their own bombs? Or that if Russian cities were hit by missiles Russia wouldn't launch its own nuclear missiles at European cities?

I have to say, the more fantasy you spew (that the US was capable of launching a first-strike nuclear attack against Russia and disabling its nuclear response) - the deeper you end up in bullshit.




SAGAN: We are releasing vast quantities of carbon dioxide, increasing the greenhouse effect. It may not take much to destabilize the Earth's climate, to convert this heaven, our only home in the cosmos, into a kind of hell.

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 5:16 PM

SHINYGOODGUY


The lessons learned from Hiroshima are quite simple, without all the historical rhetoric of who bombed whom for what, the dropping of the Bomb is, for me, quite clearly both - decisive act and biggest act of terror.

Decisive that it stopped the madness of war, act of terror because it struck fear in the hearts of men. Millions died, yet countless millions were saved. It was a horrifying use of force that stopped everyone in their tracks. I remember the class drills of hiding under our school desks. Scary stuff, little did we know.

The Hiroshima Anniversary should serve as a constant reminder of the horror of War and of what a nuclear bomb could do. I hope that Congress takes the Iran Deal seriously and carefully consider the alternative to mass genocide.


SGG


Quote:

Originally posted by Magonsdaughter:
Decisive act that stopped the deaths of millions, or biggest act of terror ever.....?

____________________________________________________________________
Tens of thousands of people will gather in Hiroshima to mark 70 years to the day since the city was destroyed by an atomic bomb.

Representatives of more than 100 countries, including the US ambassador to Japan, Caroline Kennedy, will be among those marking the anniversary in the city’s peace memorial park on Thursday morning.

Standing in the shadow of the shell of what was then the prefectural industrial promotion hall – now known simply as the atomic bomb dome – they will hear messages from survivors, local children and the city’s mayor. Japan’s prime minister, Shinzo Abe, will also attend.
Hiroshima and the nuclear age - a visual guide
Read more

Seven decades ago, the countdown to the first nuclear attack in history began in the early hours of 6 August 1945, when a US B-29 Superfortress bomber, escorted by two surveillance planes, took off from an airfield on the Pacific island of Tinian.

The Enola Gay, named after the mother of the plane’s pilot, Brig Gen Paul Tibbets, was carrying a 16 kiloton atomic bomb, nicknamed Little Boy; its target was Hiroshima, a port and major army base in western Japan, six hours’ flying time away.

As dawn broke in Hiroshima, its 340,000 residents were recovering from another sleepless night of false alarms after radar picked up a succession of US bombers flying overhead on missions further south.

Soon after 7am local time, a US weather surveillance aircraft escorting the Enola Gay triggered yet another air raid alert. The plane left the area and the all clear was sounded at 7.31am. Its message to the Enola Gay’s crew: “Weather good, possible to drop bomb.”
The explosion as the bomb hits Hiroshima
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A photograph taken by the US military shows the explosion as the bomb, nicknamed Little Boy, hits Hiroshima. Photograph: Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum/EPA

Forty-four minutes later, the Enola Gay released its payload. Below, people were preparing for an ordinary day at work, while young children set out for school, and older ones to factories to help Japan’s faltering war effort.

The city, the site of a large military headquarters, had so far been spared the heavy conventional bombing that had destroyed much of Tokyo and Osaka. Hiroshima residents were beginning to suspect that their city was next.
Brazilian Hiroshima survivors campaign against new push for nuclear power
Read more

The bomb exploded 580 metres (2,000ft) above a T-shaped bridge at the junction of the Honkawa and Motoyasu rivers, unleashing a blinding flash followed by a deafening boom.

About 70,000 people died instantly in the blast or from the firestorms that raged moments later. The death toll would rise to about 140,000 by the end of 1945. The explosion, equal to 12,000 to 15,000 tonnes of TNT, destroyed more than two-thirds of Hiroshima’s buildings across five sq miles.
Hiroshima three months after the atomic bomb was dropped
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Hiroshima, including the prefectural industrial promotion hall, seen three months after the atomic bomb was dropped. Photograph: Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum/AFP/Getty Images

Within 45 minutes of the attack, nuclear fallout mixed with ash and smoke from the firestorms to create a radioactive black rain that soaked survivors and did not abate until the fires began to burn themselves out in the evening.

As people staggered among the dead and dying in search of water and medical treatment, news began to spread to the capital, Tokyo, that something unspeakable had occurred in Hiroshima.

But wartime leaders did not receive confirmation that the city had been destroyed by a nuclear weapon until the following day, when the US president, Harry S Truman, said: “Sixteen hours ago an American airplane dropped one bomb on Hiroshima. It is an atomic bomb.”
Hiroshima’s fate, 70 years ago this week, must not be forgotten
Read more

At 8.15am on Thursday, Hiroshima will fall silent as it remembers its dead. A temple bell will toll and doves will be released into the same skies from which tragedy had been visited on the city seven decades earlier.

And this year, as on every other anniversary, the names of survivors – the hibakusha – who died in the previous 12 months will be added to the peace park’s cenotaph. On the eve of the 70th anniversary, the total stood at 292,325.


http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/05/hiroshima-prepares-to-rem
ember-the-day-the-bomb-dropped




Buckle up Dorothy, because Kansas is going Bye-Bye!

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 8:04 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
Quote:

Air Chief Marshal Arthur Harris, the bomber of Dresden and commonly known as "Bomber" Harris by the press, and often within the RAF as "Butcher" Harris, wrote when he was mildly criticized by Churchill: “I do not personally regard the whole of the remaining cities of Germany as worth the bones of one British Grenadier.” That is not as catchy as “The only good German baby is a dead German baby” but the Air Chief Marshal's moral calculus is the same.

No - and this is important. Harris's argument and the context for that quote was that by laying waste to German cities with the RAF it would cripple the German war effort, shorten the war, and thereby save the lives of Allied servicemen. This backs up my assertion that the Allies were principally concerned with military objectives. The morality of Harris's quote is, of course, very questionable, but it is very different to the sadistic extermination of German babies.

It's not personal. It's just war.

I'm really impressed with your commitment to misleading statements. You have the knack. In the Dresden raid, major industrial areas in the suburbs, which stretched for miles, were not targeted. According to Donald Miller "the economic disruption would have been far greater had Bomber Command targeted the suburban areas where most of Dresden's manufacturing might was concentrated". https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Dresden_in_World_War_II#Milit
ary_and_industrial_profile


What really counts is what Air Chief Marshal "Bomber" Harris said at the time he was planning the raid. What counts for absolutely nothing is what "Bomber" Harris said after the raid to justify what he did. He was protecting himself and he would say anything, and I mean anything, to deflect responsibility. For the next 40 years he could not shut the fuck up.

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 8:38 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

So Russia had a slim lead in early (imprecise) ICBM development and deployment.

From your own link, Russia didn't test an ICBM until 1957 - 12 years after WWII. This backs up what I said about the US having nuclear primacy up until the late 50s.

Here I'll post the passage from the article I linked to before, which you obviously neglected to read:

Quote:


The ability to destroy all of an adversary's nuclear forces, eliminating the possibility of a retaliatory strike, is known as a first-strike capability, or nuclear primacy.

The United States derived immense strategic benefits from its nuclear primacy during the early years of the Cold War, in terms of both crisis-bargaining advantages vis-í -vis the Soviet Union (for example, in the case of Berlin in the late 1950s and early 1960s) and planning for war against the Red Army in Europe. If the Soviets had invaded Western Europe in the 1950s, the United States intended to win World War III by immediately launching a massive nuclear strike on the Soviet Union, its Eastern European clients, and its Chinese ally. These plans were not the concoctions of midlevel Pentagon bureaucrats; they were approved by the highest level of the U.S. government.

U.S. nuclear primacy waned in the early 1960s, as the Soviets developed the capability to carry out a retaliatory second strike. With this development came the onset of MAD...




Quote:

Are you claiming the Russians wouldn't see that coming on their radar and deploy their own bombs?

Radar at this time was quite primitive. For large parts of the 50s the US had high altitude bombers that the Soviets could not reliably track on radar, intercept or shoot down. There were also tactics of flying with low altitude terrain masking flight profiles - from which we get the expression 'flying under the radar' - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrain_mask

And even if the Soviets did spot blips on their radar - how would they know what they were, and what they were carrying? Remember this whole 'first strike' strategy was reserved for the scenario where the USSR invades Western Europe, so by this point there would already be lots of planes in the air and blips on the radar. And even if the USSR did make the call to scramble their small fleet of nuclear bombers, NATO would be expecting them, and be in a much better position to track them and shoot them down. Whichever way you look at it the US had a huge nuclear advantage in this period, and an effective deterrent against Soviet aggression.


It's not personal. It's just war.

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 10:28 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_level_bombing

Prior to the modern age of precision-guided munitions (PGMs), high level bombing was primarily used for strategic bombing—inflicting mass damage on the enemy's economy and population—not for attacks on specific military targets.


In other words, the US did NOT have the ability to target Russian nuclear launch sites with high-altitude bombers: the bombers simply didn't have the accuracy. (And to reiterate, it couldn't target Russian nuclear launch sites with ICBMs either, as they were also too inaccurate.) In addition, the US didn't have military facilities from which it could deploy low altitude short-range precision bombers that could reach Russian territory.

I have to say, the more fantasy you spew - in this case that the US was capable of launching a first-strike nuclear attack against Russia and disabling its nuclear response - the more you elaborate on it, the farther you extend it -- the deeper you end up in bullshit.


Remember this whole 'first strike' strategy was reserved for the scenario where the USSR invades Western Europe ...

Which means it's NOT a 'first strike', it's a defensive response. Jeeze - can't you understand the simplest words you use?




SAGAN: We are releasing vast quantities of carbon dioxide, increasing the greenhouse effect. It may not take much to destabilize the Earth's climate, to convert this heaven, our only home in the cosmos, into a kind of hell.



You've made many, many claims, which have proven untrue. I'm not going to waste my time discussing anything with you anymore until you come up with something worth discussing.

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Sunday, August 9, 2015 10:43 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

but if it's something you disagree with you call it "propaganda" (in this case, NAZI propaganda!)

If it's Nazi propaganda, like what you posted, I won't even bother watching to see if I disagree. Why would I bother watching any propaganda? That's the difference between you and me Sig. It's funny how communists used to really pride themselves on standing up to Nazis and fascists. But now whether it's Putin, Le Pen, or just random neo-Nazi websites, you don't think twice about cosying up to them - so long as they carry that anti-Western message you want to hear.

Quote:

And you still haven't addressed the definition of "terrorism"

THE definition of terrorism? Do you mean YOUR definition of terrorism? The one that hopelessly blurs concepts together so that any repressive dictator from Stalin to Assad to Putin is labelled a 'terrorist'? No, I do not consider Stalin, Assad and Putin to be terrorists, as they would be by your definition.

Quote:

The only explanation that makes sense to me is that the USA used the atomic bombs to warn off RUSSIA. By agreement with the west, Russian forces were invading Manchuria. However, they were also storming down the Kamchatka, and had made landfall on the Kuril Islands.

The US dropped the bomb on Hiroshima three days before the Russians started invading Japanese territory. How then can the atomic bombs have been to 'stop the Russians in their tracks' when the first one was dropped before Russia even joined in the war?

Quote:

As an aside, did you read the interview with Tatyana Montoyan?

If you liked it, I probably won't.

It's not personal. It's just war.

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