Nuclear War or Invasion: The False Dichotomy of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
by Brett
Wilkins Posted on August 06, 2020
Seventy-five years ago, the United States waged the
only nuclear war in history. Among the truths held self-evident by millions of
Americans is the notion that the atomic destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
saved lives, both American and Japanese. The choice, Americans are told
starting as school children and throughout their lives by largely uncritical
media, was between nuclear war and an even bloodier protracted invasion of
Japan, whose fanatical people would have fought to the death defending their
homeland and their divine emperor.
As with so many other dark chapters in US history, the
official narrative of the decision to unleash the most destructive weapon
humanity has ever known upon an utterly defeated people is deeply flawed.
‘Anxious to Terminate’
The Japanese had in fact been trying to find a way to
surrender with honor for months before the atomic bombs were dropped, and US
leaders knew it. Japan could no longer defend itself from the ruthless,
relentless US onslaught; years of ferocious firebombing had reduced most
Japanese cities, including the capital Tokyo, to ruins. General Curtis
"Bombs Away" LeMay, commander of strategic bombing, even complained that
there was nothing left to bomb there but "garbage can targets."
After years of war and privation, Japan’s people had
had enough, and so had many of its leaders. The Allies, through a secret
cryptanalysis project codenamed Magic, had intercepted and decoded secret
transmissions from Shigenori Togo, the Japanese foreign minister, to Naotaki
Sato, the ambassador in Moscow, stating a desire to end the war.
"His Majesty is extremely anxious to terminate
the war as soon as possible," Sato cabled on July 12. However, saving face
was imperative to the Japanese, which meant retaining their sacred emperor.
Unconditional surrender was, for the time being, out of the question.
In a secret memo dated
June 28, Undersecretary of the Navy Ralph A. Bard wrote that "the Japanese
government may be searching for some opportunity which they could use as a
medium of surrender." In a 1960 interview, Bard reiterated that "the
Japanese were ready for peace and had already approached the Russians"
about capitulating.
On July 26, the leaders of the US, Britain and China
issued the Potsdam Declaration,
demanding unconditional Japanese surrender and vowing "prompt and utter
destruction" – the US had successfully tested the
first atomic bomb in New Mexico 10 days earlier – if Japan refused. The
declaration was originally written so
that Emperor Hirohito would not be removed from the Chrysanthemum Throne, with
Japan to be ruled as a constitutional monarchy after the war.
However, Secretary of State James Byrnes removed that
language from the final declaration. It would be unconditional surrender or
total annihilation.
President Harry S. Truman, who only learned about the
Manhattan Project after being sworn in following Franklin D. Roosevelt’s death
on April 12, approved a plan to drop two atomic bombs on Japan. Planners sought
undamaged cities where military facilities were located near civilians, and the
decision was made to detonate the bombs hundreds of meters in the air for
maximum destructive effect.
Tokyo, which in early March suffered firebombing that
killed more people than either of the atomic bombs, was off the table as a
target. Kyoto was spared due
to its cultural significance. Kyoto’s good fortune would mean the Nagasaki’s
destruction. Hiroshima, Japan’s largest untouched target, would die first.
Widespread Opposition
Seven of the eight five-star US generals and admirals
in 1945 opposed using
the atomic bomb against Japan. One of them, General Dwight D. Eisenhower, later said that "the
Japanese were ready to surrender and it wasn’t necessary to hit them with that
awful thing."
“Japan was already defeated and dropping the bomb was
completely unnecessary," President Eisenhower wrote in 1954.
"I thought our country should avoid shocking world opinion by the use of a
weapon whose employment was no longer mandatory to save American lives. It was
my belief that Japan was, at that very moment, seeking some way to surrender
with a minimum loss of face."
Despite so much high-level misgiving, the US did
"hit them with that awful thing." The idea of giving Japanese
officials a live demonstration of an atomic bomb on a remote island, proposed
by Strategic Bombing Survey Vice Chairman Paul Nitze and supported by Navy
Secretary James Forrestal, was rejected. The US was already destroying multiple
Japanese cities every week; it was believed that such a demonstration would
likely not have moved the Japanese any more than the ongoing destruction of
their actual cities.
Throughout the spring and summer of 1945, Japanese
officials increasingly sought an honorable end to the war. Although they had no
way of knowing that the US was planning to wage nuclear war against them, they
knew that the defeat of Nazi Germany meant that a Soviet invasion, first of
Manchuria and Korea and then of Japan itself, was now imminent.
"The Japanese could not fight a two-front war,
and were more anti-communist than the Americans were," Martin Sherwin, an
historian awarded the Pulitzer Prize for co-authoring a biography of Manhattan
Project leader Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, said a recent webinar sponsored
by over two dozen international
peace organizations. "The idea of a Soviet occupation of Japan was their
worst nightmare."
Historian and professor Peter Kuznick, who with Oliver
Stone co-authored the bestselling The Untold History of the United
States, also spoke at the webinar, adding that "the Joint Chiefs of
Staff repeatedly reported that if the USSR should enter the war then Japan
would realize that defeat is inevitable." Kuznick also noted that General
George Marshall, the only five-star US officer to approve of using the atomic
bomb, said that a Soviet invasion would likely lead to Japan’s swift surrender.
Truman knew this too. On the opening day of the
Potsdam Conference, he had lunch with Joseph Stalin. Afterwards he wrote in his diary that
the USSR "will be in the Jap war by August 15. Fini Japs when that
occurs."
Regardless, Truman pressed ahead with the plan to
destroy Hiroshima and Nagasaki while attempting to convince himself that there
was some humanity in the act. "I have told Secretary of War Stimson to use
[the A-bomb] so that military objectives… are the target, not women and
children," the president wrote in his diary on
July 25.
"Even if the Japs are savages, ruthless,
merciless and fanatic, we as the leader of the world for the common welfare
cannot drop that terrible bomb on the old capital [Kyoto] or the new [Tokyo],"
he added. "The target will be a purely military one."
The First Nuclear War
At 8:15 a.m. on August 6, 1945, a Boeing B-29
Superfortress dropped "Little Boy," the first nuclear weapon ever
used in war. It exploded above Hiroshima with the force of 16 kilotons of
TNT, destroying everything and everyone within
about a 1-mile (1.62 km) radius. The heat, blast wave and ensuing inferno
killed as many as 90,000 people. Tens of thousands more were injured, many of
them mortally. Tens of thousands more people perished from radiation over the
following weeks, months and years.
Three days later, Nagasaki suffered a similar fate as
"Fat Man," the second and so far the last nuclear weapon used in
war, obliterated Nagasaki in
a 20-kiloton air burst. As many as 75,000 people died that day, with a similar
number of people wounded and tens of thousands more dying later from radiation.
Despite Truman’s attempt at self-delusion, most of the people living
in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 were women, children and old people, as most
of the men were away fighting the war, or dead from it.
The same morning that Nagasaki was destroyed, Prime
Minister Kintaro Suzuki addressed the Japanese cabinet, declaring that "under
the present circumstances I have concluded that our only alternative is to
accept the Potsdam Proclamation and terminate the war."
Why Japan Really Surrendered
Suzuki did not learn about Nagasaki until the
afternoon of August 9. But he did know that the Soviet Union had declared war
on Japan the previous day. This, Japanese officials and historians on both
sides of the Pacific agree, precipitated Japan’s surrender more than the
A-bombs, although it also slammed the door shut on attempts to negotiate a
surrender via Moscow.
"The destruction of another city was just the
destruction of another city," said Sherwin. "It was the entry of the
Soviets into the war that really threw the Japanese into a complete
panic." They knew that if they didn’t surrender soon to the US, they would
lose not only their overseas empire, but also Hokkaido.
An exhibit at the National Museum of the US Navy in
Washington, DC states that "the
vast destruction wreaked by the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the loss
of 135,000 people made little impact on the Japanese military. However, the
Soviet invasion of Manchuria changed their minds."
"The atomic bomb had nothing to do with the end
of the war at all," General LeMay stated flatly in
September 1945.
“The use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and
Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan," agreed Admiral
William Leahy, Truman’s chief of staff. "The Japanese were already
defeated and ready to surrender because of the effective sea blockade and the
successful bombing with conventional weapons."
It is probably too much to say the atomic bombings
had nothing to do with ending the war. Hirohito, after all,
spoke of "a new and most cruel bomb" that could "lead to the
total extinction of human civilization," in his surrender broadcast. It is
also important to note that the decision to capitulate was not unanimous; in
fact, a cabal of hard-line military officers attempted to stage a coup the
day before the emperor’s announcement.
Target: Moscow
Not only were Hiroshima and Nagasaki the last battles
of World War II, they were also the first battles of the Cold War. American
leaders knew very well that the Soviet Union would feature prominently in the
postwar world order. The US wanted to maximize its own position as the dominant
world power, and what better way to do this than to show the Russians that the
United States had the cold resolve necessary to unilaterally wage nuclear war,
even when it enjoyed an atomic monopoly and dropping the bomb wasn’t even
necessary?
Stimson acknowledged that
some US officials saw nuclear weapons as "a diplomatic weapon," and
that "some of the men in charge of foreign policy were eager to carry the
bomb as their ace-in-the-hole" and wanted "to browbeat the Russians
with the bomb held rather ostentatiously on our hip."
"I’ll certainly have a hammer on those
boys," Truman reportedly said,
referring to the A-bomb and Soviet leaders.
According to Manhattan
Project scientist Leo Szilard, Secretary Byrnes believed that "Russia
might be more manageable if impressed by American military might, and that a
demonstration of the bomb might impress Russia."
But instead of "managing" Russia, some US
officials admitted that waging nuclear war actually empowered it, encouraging Moscow
to rush to develop its own nuclear arsenal, which it did in 1949.
‘A Nice, Round Figure’
As for the common claim that a US invasion of Japan
would have cost a million lives, Kai Bird, who shared the Pulitzer Prize with
Sherwin for their Oppenheimer biography, said it is simply not true.
"This figure was never given to Truman or bandied
about by Stimson," Bird told the webinar audience. "I asked [Stimson
protégé] McGeorge Bundy about it, and he sheepishly admitted that he chose 1
million because it was a nice, round figure. He pulled it out of thin
air."
There is no doubt that an invasion of Japan would have
been horrific for all involved, as demonstrated by the bloody battle for
Okinawa, in which over 12,000 US invaders and six times that number of Japanese
defenders died, along with as many as half of the island’s 300,000 civilians,
many of whom committed mass suicide rather
than fall under enemy occupation. However, the probability of Japan remaining
in the war by the time the US was ready to invade was extremely low, especially
given the Soviet Union’s declaration of war.
Plus, the claim that the United States cared anything
about the lives of Japanese people, who were portrayed in wartime propaganda as
sub-human barbarians, beggars belief. US bombs and bullets had killed over a
million Japanese people by 1945, and back in the United States, Japanese
Americans and Japanese nationals – who had been banned from even immigrating to
the US since the 1920s – were still languishing in a network of concentration camps.
Being mere "dirty Japs" made
it easier for the Americans to try out their ultimate weapon, in which so much
time and treasure had been invested. The cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki would
make perfect laboratories in which to test the atomic bomb, as some US
officials later acknowledged.
“When we didn’t need to do it, and we knew we didn’t
need to do it, and they knew that we didn’t need to do it, we used [the
Japanese] as an experiment for two atomic bombs," said General
Carter Clarke, the intelligence officer in charge of intercepted Japanese
cables.
Tough Luck
Many of the very men who invented the A-bomb also had
grave misgivings, even before it was used. These Manhattan Project scientists
wrote what came to be known as the Franck Report in
May 1945. It recommended a demonstration of the bomb to the Japanese and
questioned whether using it would really bring Japan to its knees when massive
conventional bombing had failed to do so.
“If no international agreement is concluded
immediately after the first detonation, this will mean a flying start of an
unlimited armaments race," the report prophetically stated.
One notable participant in the events of August 6,
1945 had no regrets.
Paul Tibbets flew the B-29 bomber, named Enola Gay after his
mother, that let loose "Little Boy" over Hiroshima on that fateful
morning. Asked at age 87 about doing it again, Tibbets, who died in 2007, said
he "wouldn’t hesitate if I had the choice."
"I’d wipe ’em out," he said. "You’re
gonna kill innocent people at the same time, but we’ve never fought a damn war
anywhere in the world where they didn’t kill innocent people. If the newspapers
would just cut out the shit: ‘You’ve killed so many civilians.’ That’s their
tough luck for being there."
A False Choice
Seventy-five years later, a slim majority of
Americans still believe the
nuclear war against Japan was justified. Millions of Americans believe the
destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were acts of "necessary evil,"
while ignoring alternatives to the standard narrative that the only choice was
between nuclear war and invading Japan.
What if the United States had clarified its
unconditional surrender stance to assure that Hirohito would not be hanged? Or
announced that he would be allowed to remain in a position of ceremonial
leadership? After all, General Douglas MacArthur, the Supreme Allied Commander,
would ultimately allow Hirohito to remain emperor, even if only as a
figurehead.
"It is possible," wrote Stimson in
his memoir, "that an earlier exposition of American willingness to retain
the emperor could have produced an earlier ending to the war."
It is also possible, adds Sherwin, "that
unconditional surrender would have been qualified earlier" if the atomic
bomb wasn’t being developed and tested for use.
"Most historians know this, but most Americans
regurgitate the official narrative," Bird told the webinar audience.
The official US narrative blames the Soviet Union for
starting the Cold War and the nuclear arms race, which on numerous occasions over
the following decades brought the world within reach, and once to the brink, of
thermonuclear annihilation. But it was the United States that fired the first
fiery salvo, forcing the Soviets to scramble to develop their own deterrent and
launching an arms race in which there are now thousands of nuclear warheads in
the arsenals of a record number of countries, with the risk of nuclear
armageddon as real as it has ever been.
Americans must admit that the nuclear war against
Japan was one of the greatest atrocities in human history. For the first time
ever, we humans now have the power to bring about our own extinction. There is
absolutely nothing "necessary" about this evil.
"If we’d lost the war, we’d all have been tried
as war criminals," General LeMay remarked, according to Robert
McNamara, who brought maximum efficiency to B-29 bombing during the war and
maximum death and destruction to Vietnam as secretary of defense during the
Kennedy and Johnson administrations.
He added: "What makes it immoral if you lose but
not immoral if you win?"
Brett Wilkins is editor-at-large for US news at
Digital Journal. Based in San Francisco, his work covers issues of social
justice, human rights and war and peace.
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