joe said:
No, let’s not assume anything.
When asked for the third time a question already answered quite easily by ordinary common sense in the first place, one must assume the many earlier answers non-operational for some reason, simply to respond.
While I do understand that the apologists have a very limited repertoire of bogus claims and excuses available to them, I also feel a responsibility to make their case for them as strongly as possible simply to drive the stake in well.
joe said:
So demo it. Nothing's stopping a demo. The Japanese can't stop anything - have them pick a site and film for themselves. That would be one way.
They already had two demonstrations on Japanese soil.
We - the poster responded to and me - were discussing informing the Japanese about the Bomb when first the US was assured of it - May, 1945. A demo gun bomb, Hiroshima design, could have been detonated almost anywhere at that time. Instead, the US chose to keep the Bomb a secret while it prepared and tested a different and more sophisticated design to go with the gun bomb. The possibility of Japanese surrender to the threat of the Bomb was thereby avoided.
joe said:
How do you know failure was unlikely? You don’t. The best scientific minds of the time didn’t know if the test would be successful. - -
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Except, Japan had not tried to negotiate surrender and the Japanese had a nuclear bomb program of their own
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And you keep forgetting Japan was warned, and even after two bombs detonating on Japanese soil, it wasn’t enough to convince the emperor’s ministers to surrender.
The desperation inherent in these ludicrous inventions, logical pretzels of avoidance, and bizarre denials of the circumstances surrounding Truman's decision is noteworthy. My claim is that such psychological defense mechanisms point to serious harm done by the moral and ethical bankruptcy of Hiroshima. It's been bad for morale, this festering atrocity. Refusing to face it weakens our character as a nation and as a people.
For the record: 1) the Japanese had been sending envoys with terms, attempting to negotiate an end to what they and everyone knew was a lost war, since the Battle of Midway in 1942. It was the US, not the Japanese, who were refusing to negotiate in the months leading up to Hiroshima.
2) Japanese soldiers, and the rest of the people of Japan, were not insane and blindly fanatical, they did not independently and on their own refuse to surrender and choose to fight to the death - they were instead intensely loyal and followed orders regardless of sacrifice or personal considerations. As soon as they were commanded to surrender, they did so, completely - despite widespread preparations for exactly that, there was no guerrilla resistance after VJ day, no splinter army in the mountains of one of the islands holding out until killed. The occupying Americans did not face, in Japan, the kind of fanatical resistance the Germans faced in France, or the Japanese faced in China, for example. And this cultural factor was well known to the American command - they designed the Bombing to leave the high command intact and persuade the Emperor to end the war, rather than attempting to kill the Japanese high command and Emperor as ordinary military considerations would have recommended.
3) The Japanese had excellent physicists, fully capable of understanding what the development of the American Bomb meant for Japan, but none of the means necessary to even investigate, let alone develop and build and deliver, one of their own. The Americans knew this, of course - no one better.
4) The Japanese were not warned about the Bomb. When Hiroshima vanished, the Japanese command had no idea what had happened - it took them two days to find out.
5) The Japanese were not given full information about the US Bomb even after Hiroshima - they did not know, for example, how many the US had or could build in the near future. The generals who wanted to hold out thought the US had only one or two, and would take months to build more - that Hiroshima and Nagasaki were partly a bluff. That lack of information almost prevented quick surrender.
6) The moral and ethical issues revolve around what was possible and what was known at the time. Speculations as to what the Japanese would or would not have done given this or that do not answer the moral and ethical questions surrounding the US behaviors.
spidergoat said:
Why waste the bomb and not destroy a city too? We wanted to destroy Japanese cities.
We wanted to incinerate Japanese children, burn them alive by the thousands - anything else would have been a waste of a Bomb. Got it.
Let's carve that into the Hiroshima memorial, for future generations to ponder.