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archived: 21 - 27 Aug, 2005 Back Next UPDATED: August 25, 2004 "SOME THOUGHTS ON THE ATOMIC BOMBING OF JAPAN" The sixtieth anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Japan by the United States has brought out much discussion of the appropriateness and the politics of the decision to bomb, on both the Right and the Left in this country. (Around the rest of the world, there are few defenders of the decision left.) The standard US defense is well known: the bombings, both of them, had to be done in order to avoid an invasion of Japan by US ground force which might have cost upwards of blank-blank-blank US casualties (you fill in the number). (There never seems to be any mention of concern for casualties in the Soviet Army, which Stalin had already committed to the conflict. But what the hey, they were only Russians and what have you.) That the standard defense of the US decision has been debunked many times over the years, with much evidence on the side of us debunkers, does not prevent the proponents of the company line from repeating it over and over again. Nor does it prevent them from engaging in name calling when what they call “evidence” in support of their position does not stand up very well under scrutiny. Having seen both some evidence debunking the standard defense of the US decision that I had not seen before, as well as a well-written repeat of that US-standard defense, accompanied by some of the usual name calling that often goes with it, I thought to revisit the issue myself.
In an email, a friend of
mine noted that “in her 1956 book [one with which I was not previously familiar]
entitled The Enemy at His Back, journalist Elizabeth Churchill Brown
supplied overwhelming evidence to counter the inaccurate views about the close
of the war. She wrote, ‘With this knowledge at hand, I quickly began to see why
the war with Japan was unprecedented in all history. Here was an enemy who had
been trying to surrender for almost a year before the conflict ended [emphasis
added].’ “For the latter statement, Brown supplied a huge stack of documentary
evidence, way back in 1956, no less. The Japanese just might have attended a demonstration bombing if invited, but we will never know that. For the above defender of the US-standard revenge is apparently an appropriate motivation for a particular tactic of war. Also in that view it would appear that one dastardly sneak attack (Pearl Harbor) justifies another (or two). That one needs to engage in character assassination of critics of the US-standard also indicates some of the problems with the US-standard that this particular friend upholds. Of course, let’s assume for the moment that character assassination is okay in this kind of argument. Would the following personages qualify as “bleeding-heart liberals?” “General Dwight D. Eisenhower said, "It wasn't necessary to hit them with that awful thing." General Curtis LeMay [he of the Tokyo fire-bomb raid of March, 1945, that killed more people than the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined] declared that the atomic bomb had nothing to do with Japan's surrender. And Admiral William D. Leahy, Chief of Staff to both Roosevelt and Truman, stated angrily that the "use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan. The Japanese were already defeated and ready to surrender ... in being the first to use it, we ... adopted an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages (‘Bush and the Bomb,’ Marjorie Cohn, t r u t h o u t | Perspective, Wednesday 10 August 2005)." I guess that it all depends upon how you define “bleeding-heart liberal,” just as exactly what Cheney meant when he described the Iraqi insurgency as being in its “last throes” depends upon how you define the words, as he took pains to tell us.
Now looking further at
the reality of the time, I happen to believe Churchill Brown's version of the
events from mid-1944 onwards, that the Japanese were trying in one way or
another to arrange for a surrender, with which I was not previously familiar.
Her version is highly sourced. One position that supporters of the US policy
take is that “unconditional surrender” was the unified demand of the Allied
Powers, and Japan wanted to negotiate. Therefore the US had no choice, they
contend. But in the end, the US did negotiate with Japan on conditions, the
principal one being the preservation of the Imperial House, de-deified to be
sure. No one less than General Macarthur thought this was necessary if for no
other reason than to assure that a US occupation, given that the Emperor
publicly accepted it, would proceed unopposed by any force on the Japanese side.
And it was. If a negotiation on conditions could take place after the atomic
bombings, why could it have taken place before? During the summer of 1945, the
highly placed Prince Konoye, who was well-known to diplomats the US side, was
desperately trying to find someone to talk with about surrender. He found only
deaf ears. ________________
Dr.
Steven Jonas is a TPJ contributing author. He is a Professor of
Preventive Medicine at Stony Brook University (NY) and
author/co-author of over twenty books. Dr. Jonas is one of America's
most perceptive Democratic political analysts. He is also the author of The 15% Solution: A Political History of American Fascism, 2001-2022, originally published in 1996 under the pseudonym “Jonathan Westminster,” and republished with a New Introduction in 2004, under the same author's name. The 2004 edition is available at www.barnesandnoble.com (search with the title) and www.xlibris.com (click on “Bookstore,” then “Search” with title). Both versions are available at www.amazon.com (go to "Books;" search with title).
Dr. Jonas is also a Contributing Editor for the
Weblog
http://planetmove.blogspot.com/, produced
by The Planetary Movement Ltd. UK (http://www.planetarymovement.org/), TPJ's
own Michael Carmichael, Founder and President,
and a
Contributing Columnist for the Project for the Old
American Century, POAC,
http://www.oldamericancentury.org/.
By invitation Dr. J's TPJ columns are posted weekly
on the website of AirAmericaRadio's new morning man
(9-12 Eastern), the redoubtable Jerry Springer (yes,
it is that Jerry Springer, a true progressive
it turns out), at
http://www.springerontheradio.com/. Aug 18, 2005
"Why God Sent Us George W.
Bush" July 28, 2005
“Iran
Nukes, Revisited" June 23, 2005
"Why
All Of This Repression Abroad?" May 26, 2005
"Pat
Buchanan's 'What If?'" April 28,
2005
"The Schiavo Case, IV:
The Definitions Of Life And Death" March 31, 2005
“John Bolton And The
Nuclear Option"
February 24, 2005
"Going Nuclear
In Iran"
Jan 27, 2005
“Comparing
George
W. Bush And Adolf Hitler”
Dec 30, 2004
“The ‘Unless’ of the ‘Coming Second
Civil War’ Series, Part I”
Oct 28, 2004
Why The Patriot Act?”
Sept 30, 2004
“Four 800 Lb. Gorillas In The
Campaign Room”
July 29, 2004
“Some Thoughts For and About The
Kerry Campaign, IV”
May 27, 2004
“On Fascism -- And The Georgites”
April 29, 2004 “On
George Bush and Religion, Part 2”
March 25, 2004
“Brief Essays” February 27, 2004 “On Doctor Dean” |
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