Truman’s War Crimes at Hiroshima and Nagasaki
August 5, 2020
https://www.fff.org/2020/08/05/trumans-war-crimes-at-hiroshima-and-nagasaki/
This month marks the 75h anniversary of the U.S.
atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. While proponents of the bombings
have long justified them on the basis that they shortened World War II, the
fact is that they were war crimes. The only reason why President Truman and the
pilots who dropped the bombs were not prosecuted as war criminals is that
the United States ended up winning the war.
It has long been pointed out that Japan had expressed
a willingness to surrender. The only condition was that the Japanese emperor
not be abused or executed.
President Truman refused to agree to that condition.
Like his predecessor Franklin Roosevelt, Truman demanded “unconditional
surrender.”
That was why Japan continued fighting. Japanese
officials naturally assumed that U.S. officials were going to do some very bad
things to their emperor, including torture and execution. In the minds of
Japanese officials, why else would the United States not be willing to agree to
that one condition, especially given that it would have meant the end of the
war?
The dark irony is that Truman ended up accepting the
condition anyway, only after he pulverized the people in Hiroshima and Nagasaki
with nuclear bombs.
In an excellent op-ed in the Los Angeles Times, today
entitled “U.S. Leaders Knew We Didn’t Have to Drop Atomic Bombs on Japan to Win
the War. We Did It Anyway” the authors point out:
Seven of the United States' eight five-star Army and
Navy officers in 1945 agreed with the Navy’s vitriolic assessment. Generals
Dwight Eisenhower, Douglas MacArthur, and Henry “Hap” Arnold and Admirals
William Leahy, Chester Nimitz, Ernest King, and William Halsey are on record
stating that the atomic bombs were either militarily unnecessary, morally
reprehensible, or both.
Keep in mind that there is nothing in the principles
of warfare that required Truman and Roosevelt to demand the unconditional
surrender of Japan (or Germany). Wars can be — and often are — ended with terms
of surrender. Both presidents were willing to sacrifice countless people on
both sides of the conflict to attain their demand for unconditional surrender.
But Truman’s unconditional surrender demand is not why
his action constituted a war crime. These bombings constituted war crimes
because they targeted non-combatants, including children, women, and seniors
with death as a way to bring about an unconditional surrender of the Japanese
government.
It has long been considered a rule of warfare that
armies fight armies in war. They don’t target non-combatants. The intentional
killing of non-combatants is considered a war crime.
A good example of this principle involved the case of Lt.
William Calley in the Vietnam War. Calley and his men shot and killed numerous
non-combatants in a South Vietnamese village. The victims included women and
children.
The U.S military prosecuted Calley as a war criminal —
and rightly so. While the deaths of non-combatants oftentimes occur
incidentally during wartime operations, it is a war crime to specifically target
them for death.
Truman justified his action by arguing that the
bombings shortened the war and, therefore, saved the lives of thousands of American
soldiers and Japanese people if an invasion had become necessary. It is a
justification that has been repeated ever since by proponents of the bombings.
There are two big problems with that justification,
however.
First, an invasion would not have been necessary. All
that Truman had to do was to accept Japan’s only condition for surrender, and
that would have meant the end of the war, without the deaths that would have
come with an invasion and that did come with the bombings of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki.
More important, the fact that the lives of American
soldiers would have been saved is not a moral or legal justification for
targeting non-combatants. If Calley had maintained at his trial that his
actions were intended to shorten the Vietnam War, his defense would have been
rejected. He would have still been convicted for war crimes.
Soldiers die in war. That is the nature of war. To
kill women, children, and seniors in the hopes of saving the lives of soldiers
by shortening the war is not only a war crime, but it is also an act of extreme
cowardice. If an invasion of Japan would have become necessary to win the war,
thereby resulting in the deaths of thousands of U.S. soldiers, then that’s just
the way that war works.
It’s also worth pointing out that Japan never had any
intention of invading and conquering the United States. The only reason that
Japan bombed Pearl Harbor was in the hope of knocking out the U.S. Pacific
fleet, not as a prelude to invading Hawaii or the continental United States but
simply to prevent the U.S. from interfering with Japan’s efforts to secure oil
in the Dutch East Indies.
And why was Japan so desperate for oil as to initiate
war against the United States? Because President Franklin Roosevelt imposed
a highly effective oil embargo on Japan as a way to maneuver the Japanese into
attacking the United States.
FDR’s plan, of course, succeeded, which ended up
costing the lives of hundreds of thousands of American soldiers and millions of
Japanese citizens, including those at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
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