U.S. Nukes Hiroshima (1945)
Mon Aug 06, 1945
Image (NSFW):
Image: A lone man looking at a huge expanse of ruins left by the explosion of the atomic bomb on August 6th, 1945, in Hiroshima [buzzfeednews.com]
On this day in 1945, the U.S. military dropped a nuclear bomb on Hiroshima, instantly killing at least 80,000 people - mostly civilians - and tens of thousands more over the following weeks. The U.S. censored images of the bombing until 1952.
Eye-witness accounts of the bombing's aftermath depicted a kind of apocalyptic horror: Father Wilhelm Kleinsorge, a German Jesuit priest, encountered a group of soldiers whose "faces were wholly burned, their eye-sockets were hollow, the fluid from their melted eyes had run down their cheeks... Their mouths were mere swollen, pus-covered wounds, which they could not bear to stretch enough to admit the spout of the teapot."
Dr. Michihiko Hachiya, a survivor, spoke of "streetcars were standing and inside were dozens of bodies, blackened beyond recognition. I saw fire reservoirs filled to the brim with dead bodies who looked as they had been boiled alive".
President Harry Truman made the case to the public that the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki as a necessary and humanitarian means of forcing Japan's surrender. This view was not held, however, by military commanders or leftist American dissidents.
Once American forces had Japan under military control, they imposed censorship on many images related to the U.S. bombing campaign. Among the images banned was a picture of a partially incinerated Nagasaki child, taken by Japanese photographer Yōsuke Yamahata. These restrictions were not lifted until 1952.
Among the first Americans to denounce the bombing were socialists such as the Trotskyist James P. Cannon, who publicly denounced the use of nuclear weapons as "an unspeakable atrocity".
The dissent of military commanders was not public, however. In 1950, Admiral William Leahy, Truman's chief of staff, wrote: "The use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan". In his memoirs, President Eisenhower, then General of the Army, confessed that "dropping the bomb was completely unnecessary".
By no means do I wish to glorify or excuse the deaths of tens of thousands of civilians, but this take on what is basically the final act of WW2 omits a truly MASSIVE amount of context. As in, like, basically all of the context.
Having deep and incisive discussions on these topics is good and important, but the political commentary here isn’t terribly historically coherent. Not to mention: regardless of whether or not Ike himself thought the strikes were justified and necessary post-hoc, pretty much all of the US military leadership at the time were concerned about an absolutely massive clusterfuck quagmire of an occupation effort that would have made occupied Nazi Germany look like traipsing through the Coney Island by comparison. And that’s just a tiny, tiny fraction of the context and knowledge those people had at the time that led them to the decision to use those atomic weapons.