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Censored Nagasaki Bomb Story Found

EccentricAnomaly writes "In 1945 journalist George Weller snuck past the American occupying forces and became the first American Journalist to see the devastation left by the atomic bomb that fell on Nagasaki. His story infuriated MacArthur, who had it quashed. The Japanese paper, Mainichi, has now published Weller's account. CNN has a story discussing how it was found." From the Mainichi article: "As one whittles away at embroidery and checks the stories, the impression grows that the atomic bomb is a tremendous, but not a peculiar weapon. The Japanese have heard the legend from American radio that the ground preserves deadly irradiation. But hours of walking amid the ruins where the odor of decaying flesh is still strong produces in this writer nausea, but no sign or burns or debilitation."

1,246 comments

  1. So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by leko · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Certainly he didn't walk away from that place perfectly healthy.

  2. Wow. by de+Bois-Guilbert · · Score: 1

    Scary stuff...

    1. Re:Wow. by ColaMan · · Score: 1

      Whilst we're off read bomb stories, check out
      The Eyewitness account of P. Siemes, a german priest who was on the outskirts of hiroshima when the bomb was dropped.

      Perhaps if all these accounts were put together and taught to 15 year olds, there'd be a lot less warmongering in the world in another 20 years.

      --

      You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
      There is a lot of hype here.
    2. Re:Wow. by ColaMan · · Score: 1

      For those of you who dont RTFA a small excerpt :
      It should be pointed out that this is the effect of a 15-kiloton air-burst nuke. Consider the effects of a 50-megaton hydrogen bomb such as what the russians tested.

      As a result of the explosion of the bomb at 8:15, almost the entire city was destroyed by a single blow. Only small outlying districts in the southern and eastern parts of the town excaped complete destruction. The bomb exploded over the center of the city. As a result of the blast, all the small Japanese houses in a diameter of five kilometers, which encompassed 99% of the city, collapsed or were blown up. Those who were in the houses were buried in the ruins. Those who were in the open sustained burns resulting from contact with the substance or rays omitted by the bomb. Where the substance struck in quantity, fires sprung up. these spread rapidly. The heat which rose from the center created a whirlwind which was effective in spreading fire throughout the whole city

      On second thought, maybe we shouldn't get kids to read this - it'd give them nightmares for the rest of their lives.

      --

      You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
      There is a lot of hype here.
    3. Re:Wow. by frgough · · Score: 1

      Probably not. You see, Hiroshima is a booming and bustling city today. Hundreds of thousands of people live there. I was friends with a lady who was born and grew up there.

      --
      You can tell the character of a man by observing those who hate him.
    4. Re:Wow. by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1
      None of us in those days heard a single outburst against the Americans on the part of the Japanese, nor was there any evidence of a vengeful spirit*. The Japanese suffered this terrible blow as part of the fortunes of war...something to be borne without complaint. During this war, I have noted relatively little hatred toward the Allies on the part of the people themselves, although the press has taken occasion to stir up such feelings.


      I've always admired most traditional Japanese culture but this was on a whole new level. I really do admire this point of view given the circumstances. If this happened anywhere today there would be nothing even close to this form of thinking. Even someone who gases more of their own civilians than was claimed by the recent tsunami gets world sympathy these days when they are forcibly removed from power. People complain when one laser guided bomb out of thousands strays by about 10 feet and completely forget it wasn't that long ago when carpet bombing was the only way to make sure you hit a target. I just don't get the mentality of people these days.

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    5. Re:Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you avoid facing the truth saying so, you won't go any foward. It's truth, and this country has been avoiding to tell it for over 60 years. If you count, US has killed people the most with the scarest way, and get most scared of what it has done around the world.

      You must face it. Taste it.

    6. Re:Wow. by arkanes · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The Japanese culture of the time had acclimated pretty well to war. Atrocities were normal - read up just a bit for someone justifying the use of the bomb based on what the Japanese did to prisoners. If your moral code is fine with end justifies the means , then so be it, but I think it makes you a lesser human. I know perfectly well that we could carbet bomb instead of precision bomb, and I don't think that *either* of them are okay.

      And just to correct this stupid goddamn "own civilians" thing, it doesn't matter, okay? They weren't "his" civilians any more than the Native Americans were "our" civilians or the Palestinians are Israels civilians. He gassed a bunch of people, and thats bad, and you don't need to try to make it "more bad".

      By the way, according to your own logic here, there's no reason we should be upset about 9/11, OR the gassing of the Kurds - they aren't any more (or less) deserving of sympathy than civilian deaths in Nagasaki, or Dresden, or London.

    7. Re:Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's an amazing article. Thank you.

    8. Re:Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, a 50 megaton bomb would be a nightmare..

      But shortly after we had fun in the race to make the biggest bomb, we realized that such big bombs weren't practical for many reasons... The biggest being that a big bomb in one spot mostly created a fireball that went straight up. Many smaller bombs, (less than 1 MT) would do more damage, and were much easier to transport. Hence the MIRV.

      After the early 60's not many huge bombs were built.

    9. Re:Wow. by cicho · · Score: 1

      "On second thought, maybe we shouldn't get kids to read this - it'd give them nightmares for the rest of their lives."

      Right, so when *they* get to decide whether to drop a nuke, it's best that they don't know the consequences, right?

      --
      "Only the small secrets need to be protected. The big ones are kept secret by public incredulity." - Marshall McLuhan
  3. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I believe the article said he died in his 90s. If that's that radiation does to you, bring it on.

  4. Nuclear myths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A lot of people go "OMG! teh nukes!" like Fallout is what would happen after a nuclear war :)

    Nuclear myths

    ---

    European zine. Guns, hacking, survival

    1. Re:Nuclear myths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      all thats based on theory nothings gone nuclear other then tests since WWII

    2. Re:Nuclear myths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's not that bad, why did USA attack Iraq? Oh it's was the oil...

    3. Re:Nuclear myths by szo · · Score: 1, Funny

      you mean the UN said it didn't find any.

      --
      Red Leader Standing By!
    4. Re:Nuclear myths by frgough · · Score: 1

      Finish the quote: Which really bothered them because they knew Saddam had them, and they knew he wasn't giving full disclosure on what he did with them.

      I think the actual truth is, Saddam was bluffing. He did have them in the early 90s (what do you think he used on the Kurds, harsh language?). I think he lost the ability to manufacture them, but wanted everyone to THINK he had them so they'd continue to fear him.

      We also know that he was bribing the crap out of France, Germany and Russia to get the sanctions lifted, and that he had biological and chemical weapons programs in place and ready to roll the moment the sanctions were lifted. The estimates were about 6 months to ramp up to full production.

      Repeating the mantra: We didn't find WMD, just shows how effectviely you swallowed the propaganda, probably because it already agreed with your preconceptions about Republicans in general and Bush in particular.

      In other words, you believed it so easily because you WANTED it to be true so badly.

      --
      You can tell the character of a man by observing those who hate him.
    5. Re:Nuclear myths by smchris · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Nuclear myths

      "Always look on the bright side of life."

      That link says some pretty bizarre things. Instead of one 20 megaton warhead, we are supposed to take comfort that MIRVs carry a dozen warheads of "only" 300 kilotons and "therefore" the cities wouldn't really be destroyed. According to Wikipedia, the Nagasaki bomb was a whole whopping TWENTY kilotons. So call me crazy but I figure a MIRV would effectively destroy a metropolis.

      Remember, nothing will work. CARS newer than the early seventies won't work. The EMF will take out everything solid-state. In WWII electronics meant tubes and cars were mechanical. Without an intrastructure, will offshore oil rigs have a port to unload in? Will there be oil refining? How will it get transported and distributed? Even if you have a nuke plant outside of town and can string some distribution back up, will even a nuke plant run forever without lubrication or is beef tallow adequate?

      A person better hope oil gets distributed because, even with the die-off, those cans in the grocery store won't last long. And plows and combines don't run on hay. How many farmers _have_ work horses (did you know there are differences between riding horses and plow horses?), much less have the equipment and knowledge and two-bottom plow to hitch them up to?

      It is tempting to say that we would only slip back to the Romans without oil and electricity but we would still have to relearn how to create the intense fire in a primitive iron foundry.

      And there would still be the sticky little problem of overpopulation. Tribes _are_ a social organization. Tribes are not a post-war state of anarchy. And according to my old anthropology book even in established hunter and gather societies:

      "Equipped with knowledge of virtually every edible plant and with effective means of exploiting most vegetables and animals, population density varied according to the abundance of resources. It ranged from one person per square mile--and rarely more than this--to one person per 50 to 100 square miles." (Anthropology Today, CRM, 1971)

      Do the math of what the first few years of a post-nuke world would be like without an infrastructure for gas and electricity.

      In the main, it really needs to be said that survivalists are losers. They are so often people who are marginalized and fantasize that if society were only shattered, they would have the opportunity to rise to the top. Because society hasn't valued them, they dismiss the importance of society. But instead of some noble savage fantasy, a post-nuke world would more likely offer them the opportunity to club a widow to steal the last can of spaghettios from her children.

    6. Re:Nuclear myths by arkanes · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Don't be a retard - the UN investigators were able to certify the destruction of the weapons Saddam used in the 90s (which he aquired from the US - not especially relevent, but a still ignored point by people eager to inflate our world-saving hero image).

      If you think there wasn't any lying and overstating of facts about his weapons programs, you're the one who's delusional - his nuclear capacity was grossly overstated. His chemical capacity was stated as *current* and *real*, not some hypothetical program he might have managed to bring up in 6 months. It's hard to objectively fault his treatment of the UN inspectors, who were overall satisfied with the access they had (and who's analysis of Saddams capabilities has been repeatedly confirmed post invasion), and Saddams reaction to the (factual) claim that CIA agents were attempting to infiltrate the weapons inspection teams was actually fairly measured, especially considering that we've tried to assassinate him before. If on the off chance that the US *ever* allowed US inspection of it's arsenal, we'd arrest and probably execute Iraqi spies that were discovered.

      Repeating the mantra "We didn't find WMD" is fucking *important*, because Saddam was claimed to be a clear, present and current threat to the US, with current, actual, NBC capability. It should be obvious to anyone who's not brain damaged that if Saddam needed the sanctions lifted to start his WMD programs, then the sanctions were working and the correct response isn't to invade him, but to maintain the sanctions programs. And thats granting you your 6 months estimate, which is from the exact same sources that claimed he had them already - not exactly a proven source of reliable information on Saddams weapons programs.

      So who exactly is swallowing what propaganda here? The pre-invasion hype about his WMD, from Colin Powell's UN presentation to Bush's State of the Union address, has been proven in hindsight to be grossly misinformed. Upon further inspection, it seems very likely that it wasn't a simple case of poor analysis combined with paranoia, but that there was intentional selection and interpertation done to create a false impression. I tend to grant the benefit of the doubt to everyone, so I'm not jumping right on the "OMG they lied for the invasion" line, but the reasons given, to the US people, to the international community, and the Congress about our reasons for invasion were *wrong*. That demands a little bit more respect and addressing than the sort of frantic backpedalling and spin thats the standard Bush adminstration party line.

    7. Re:Nuclear myths by eyeye · · Score: 1

      OMG he may have had programs in place! lol thats a great reason to kill 100,000 civilians.

      The coalition has probably killed more kurds than saddam did.

      WMD and terrorism were two totally fake reasons made up to go to war in iraq. There were actually (stupid) soldiers in iraq saying "this is pay back for 9/11". I guess they swallowed whatever the "neo conservatives" said just as you have.

      --
      Bush and Blair ate my sig!
    8. Re:Nuclear myths by lb746 · · Score: 0

      OMGWTFNUKEBBQ!!!! Mmmmmm nuclear BBQ....

    9. Re:Nuclear myths by pyat · · Score: 2, Insightful
      For a site trying to dispel myths, it has some rather sketchy ideas regarding physics. Take this explanation of the different types of radiation:

      There are three types of radiation that are found in fallout. Alpha particles, beta particles, and gamma rays. As the first two names indicate, they are particles. They are minute (too small to be seen) pieces of atomic matter that attach themselves to the fallout (bits of dust that may or may not be large enough to be seen).

      In any case, these particles may be simply washed off many types of foods that have a natural covering, such as eggs, bananas, potatoes, oranges, etc., or off well sealed foods such as those in vacuum packed cans. Foods such as grains (rice, dry cereals, etc.) that are in partially used packages that have been opened should be viewed with suspicion. Fallout dust may have crept in.

      I can hear the concerned mother scolding
      "don't eat that, Billy, it's probably covered with helium nuclei"

      I also like the way he quotes from a political journal regarding the danger of post-apocalypse nuclear winter. Not saying the findings are wrong, just it's an interesting source to rely on.
    10. Re:Nuclear myths by rjh · · Score: 2, Interesting
      So call me crazy but I figure a MIRV would effectively destroy a metropolis.
      The science industry which models nuclear weapon damage--a complex blend of physics, economics, engineering and political science--is called The Business by people who are in The Business. They're really interesting people to know; the vast majority of them have the hacker spirit. They specialize in asking hard questions, looking at the empirical data, and following it through to its most absurdist conclusions.

      For instance, a 300 Kt strategic nuclear weapon needs to be placed within about 800m of its target, otherwise don't even bother with it. (Seriously. Most strategic targets are incredibly resistant to damage. The firebombing of Dresden was done to destroy the rail lines, but three days later the rails were going at full capacity.) Drop a strategic nuclear weapon more than 800m from a submarine pen, a railyard, a C3 bunker, and you're better off not dropping it at all and saving it for later.

      Then, a few years ago, The Business looked into the effects of a 1 Mt citykiller dropped on London. It turns out you'd kill 20% of the population, but only destroy 5% of the economic value of London... meaning that immediately following a nuclear strike, the survivors would find themselves 18% wealthier. (They'd need it, too, thanks to the rampant inflation which would soon hit.)

      Moral of the story: nuclear weapons do not have the effects people believe. Most people wildly exaggerate their destructive powers. I've read reports from The Business about what's likely to happen in the aftermath of a nuclear war, and let me tell you, it churned my stomach. The things I was expecting to happen never happened. The things I never imagined could happen would happen, and would have consequences far beyond what I could foresee.
    11. Re:Nuclear myths by DLWormwood · · Score: 1
      Moral of the story: nuclear weapons do not have the effects people believe. Most people wildly exaggerate their destructive powers. I've read reports from The Business about what's likely to happen in the aftermath of a nuclear war, and let me tell you, it churned my stomach. The things I was expecting to happen never happened. The things I never imagined could happen would happen, and would have consequences far beyond what I could foresee.

      You've piqued my curiosity. Besided the non-intuitive economic absurdity of "wealth creation" via population reduction, can you point me to any other essays or discussions regarding other "absurdist conclusions?" Assuming they're not classified, of course...

      If you're concerned about grossing me out, I just saw the German "plastination" touring exhibit here in Chicago. I handed that just fine...

      --
      Those who complain about affect & effect on /. should be disemvoweled
    12. Re:Nuclear myths by rjh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The first absurdist conclusion I saw, which was impeccably backed up, I found in high school. I no longer remember the source, unfortunately. In the aftermath of a strategic nuclear exchange between the US and the Soviet Union, the per-capita cancer rates would actually go down because the same nukes which would take out the CIA headquarters in Virginia would also take out essential infrastructure for the tobacco industry. Whatever upswing in cancer rates due to fallout would quickly be overtaken by the downswing of the entire nation quitting smoking.

      Stuart Slade, a veteran of The Business who's now a defense industry analyst, wrote a good (unclassified) view from The Business of nuclear warfare. It's written up in three parts: here, here and here.

      Slade mentions wealth creation by nuclear annihilation, but it's also covered other places. That and the cancer rate downturn are the two most widely-known absurdisms from The Business.

    13. Re:Nuclear myths by m50d · · Score: 1

      There will be people who know who survive. I have only the basic ideas of how to make charcoal and use it to forge iron - but I know one person just in my village who knows it in enough detail to do it. As long as people still listen to each other, we can get things back up and running.

      --
      I am trolling
    14. Re:Nuclear myths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember, nothing will work. CARS newer than the early seventies won't work. The EMF will take out everything solid-state.

      Probably not. This sort of thing is more relevant to exoatmospheric explosions. If you are dropping a bomb on a city, the things in the area effected by an EMP will probably get hit by a lot worse.

    15. Re:Nuclear myths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      frgough, why do you hate America?

    16. Re:Nuclear myths by demonbug · · Score: 2, Informative
      Upon further inspection, it seems very likely that it wasn't a simple case of poor analysis combined with paranoia, but that there was intentional selection and interpertation done to create a false impression.


      Hmmm...

    17. Re:Nuclear myths by Senkrad · · Score: 1

      How did this get a flamebait moderation?

    18. Re:Nuclear myths by jthayden · · Score: 1

      Libraries are where it is at. As long as some people still know how to read, we can put stuff back together. I'm not saying we won't fall behind a few decades, mostly because the real cutting edge research will churn to a halt while we rebuilt the mundane stuff. There is no way that all of the books in the world would be destroyed even if every city center was entirely destroyed, you still have all of the libraries and books in small towns and rural universities would still be intact. There are also plenty of factories around the world not located in cities that would be able to run once local power issues were solved. I'm not saying I would want to live in that timeline, and investing in some shotguns and rifiles would be intelligent if you did, but I don't think we'd be blown back to Roman times.

    19. Re:Nuclear myths by RayBender · · Score: 2, Insightful
      For instance, a 300 Kt strategic nuclear weapon needs to be placed within about 800m of its target, otherwise don't even bother with it. [..] Drop a strategic nuclear weapon more than 800m from a submarine pen, a railyard, a C3 bunker, and you're better off not dropping it at all and saving it for later.

      Well, only if you believe the most pessimistic assumptions of planners, add 50% margin, then add another bit of margin to account for worst-case weapon performance, neglect the effects of firestorms etc. etc. You say it has to hit within 800m to destroy the target (which is easy these days) - an uninformed reader might think that implies that if you're 800m away you'll be fine. Far, far from the truth... Check out this link to see for yourself.

      A while back I took a course on nuclear warfare at a major institute of technology on the East Coast taught by a former targeting specialist for (I think) the Navy. Very macabre, but interesting. We had one homework set where we were to place ourselves in the shoes of a Soviet planner tasked with "eliminating the economic potential of Boston", specifically by cutting road and rail links to the city. To do this you had to take out a couple of bridges. Now, it turns out that by standard planning assumptions bridges need something like 1000 psi overpressure to be destroyed - which means you have to be within a few hundred yards with a medium-sized nuke. I'm fuzzy on the details, but I think you eneded up havin to lob something like four 150 kiloton warheads at the damned thing to have a 90% assurance of destruction. This somes from the fact that planners assume that anything short of vaporization can be repaired on short notice. You mention Dresden - the only way they got rail links working in a few days was because the stockpiled rails, and basically laid new track. None of these calculations take into account the effects of EMP and other attacks utteryly destroying essentially all industry and manufacturing.

      Then he had us calculate what this would do to Boston itself. This is where you discover that cities are fragile. The city would be destroyed by fire, mostly. For reference to those who live there, a 5 Mt airburst over the MIT dome would cause firestorms as far away as Natick. Dangerous fallout, if the wind blew inland (unusual) would reach upstate New York; the dose rate in Worcester could be 500 rads/hour (lethal in one to two hours).

      Then, a few years ago, The Business looked into the effects of a 1 Mt citykiller dropped on London. It turns out you'd kill 20% of the population, but only destroy 5% of the economic value of London... meaning that immediately following a nuclear strike, the survivors would find themselves 18% wealthier. (They'd need it, too, thanks to the rampant inflation which would soon hit.)

      Bullshit. I don't care which psychotic group of thinktank warriors came up with that crap, but it ain't gonna happen. 20% of the poulation is close to 20% of the economic value of the city, at least in terms of wartime value. Never mind the fact that if you nuked London, the survivors would hardly brush off the fallout and go down and start investing in the stock market, or go shopping. Look at what 9/11 did in the US - 3000 casualties in one city, and something like 200 billion dollars of economic damage. Now imagine killing 2 million people outright, not to mention annihilating everything in a 5-mile radius around Buckingham Palace. The survivors get richer?

      Did you notice the references to radiation sickness in the article?

      --
      Human genome = 3 billion base pairs = 6 GBit. Windows + Office = 20 Gbit. Which is more impressive?
    20. Re:Nuclear myths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Allow me to be the first to welcome our widow-clubbing, post-apocalypitc, spaghettio eating overlords.

    21. Re:Nuclear myths by smchris · · Score: 1

      Did you notice the references to radiation sickness in the article?

      Yup. And if one city gets nuked, the rest of the country can send in the Red Cross. If a whole country gets nuked, lots of luck on farmer Brown coming to town with his veterinary supplies to make things better.

      Any guesses on the second wave of death after radiation and before starvation? I vote cholera. Americans can hardly imagine water born death but I have two direct ancestors who died of cholera: one in the civil war (remember its disease that kills the most people in a war) and one two years before a (now) major metropolitan area put in a water system in 1870.

    22. Re:Nuclear myths by JavaLord · · Score: 1

      The things I was expecting to happen never happened. The things I never imagined could happen would happen, and would have consequences far beyond what I could foresee. This sounds juicy! Fill us in! Or at least give us some good reading material on the things you "Never imagined could happen".

  5. Censored again... by cyberkahn · · Score: 4, Funny


    by the Slashdot effect.

  6. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by syylk · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, no.

    He died in 2002, a whopping 57 years after his "walk in the atomic park".

  7. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 4, Informative

    Actually, he died 3 years ago having lived probably longer than you or me: he was 95.

  8. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Marlor · · Score: 1

    Certainly he didn't walk away from that place perfectly healthy.

    He lived until he was 95, passing away a few years ago. Frankly I think that it is amazing that he survived the aftermath of Nagasaki unscathed.

  9. MacArthur by FidelCatsro · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If They didn't think the people could cope with hearing about the devastation of the weapon , and did not think it appropriate to report the after effects, then the weapon should never have been used.
    It certainly should never have been used on a civilian target , At-least this quash shows that perhaps they had a little shame about it

    --
    The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
    1. Re:MacArthur by Capt+James+McCarthy · · Score: 1

      You mean like when the Japanese dropped the Bubonic Plague on the shores of China killing millions?

      --
      There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
    2. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a shame when I go out to see the history off-base in Tokyo and most everything was "destroyed in 1945" and rebuilt a few years later.

      I can't wait to hit up Kyoto sometime to check out an area even richer in history.

    3. Re:MacArthur by Inda · · Score: 1

      Hitting civilian targets was a Nazi idea. When we copied their idea we made sure we did a better job; the Dresden bombings were truly catastrophic.

      If we'd bombed Japan in the normal way there would have been many more casualties.

      Not that I'm trying to excuse the a-bombs. Life would be better without them.

      --
      This post contains benzene, nitrosamines, formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide.
    4. Re:MacArthur by Analogy+Man · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And like today people are prepared to measure moral conduct on a relative scale. Sure we torture people...but they are bad people and we are good so that makes it OK. This story shows that the world is a better place with full disclosure. How can one make intelligent policy decisions if with an awareness of conscequences.

      --
      When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
    5. Re:MacArthur by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 5, Insightful

      While slightly OT, the Dresden bombings was the biggest _blind and useless_ destruction during WWII, Hiroshima and Nagasaki included.

      Why? Simple. While the japan A-bomb attacks can be justified in some twisted way by the reasoning that it forced Japan to capitulate, the Dresden bombings' target was to destroy the railway infrastructure nearby. The bombings killed a lot of people there and the railway was operating at full capacity just 3 days after the attack.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    6. Re:MacArthur by FidelCatsro · · Score: 1

      Yes exactly like that ,Two wrongs rarely make a right

      --
      The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
    7. Re:MacArthur by PakProtector · · Score: 1

      It was the lesser of two evils. On one hand you had destruction of two cities. On the other hand you had the destruction of the virtually the entire japanese people.

      I'm glad they dropped the bombs. I like Japan.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    8. Re:MacArthur by RichDice · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If we'd bombed Japan in the normal way there would have been many more casualties.

      If? The United States "conventionally" bombed Japan mercilessly during WW2. Read up on the bio of Curtis LeMay to get a sense of what that was all about. (He was the Strategic Air Command General who ordered and executed the firebombing of Tokyo, which destroyed about half of Tokyo, a city the size of New York, in one night.)

      Cheers,
      Richard

    9. Re:MacArthur by Yazeran · · Score: 1

      In an ideal worl you would likely be right, but in the real world people have been quite proficient in killing / mutilating one another with or without nukes (think european part of WW I + II).

      The exiistance of nukes likely prevented WWIII from breaking out globally as both sides knew that a global WWIII would be lost by both sides (due to MAD). We only saw local 'hot zones' in the form of Korea several african south american nations and to a lesser exstent Vietnam. In the final analysis i think that nyklear weapons have resulted in fewer deaths during the last 60 years than we would have seen without them.

      That said, i still do not like such weapons, as they guarentee sivilian casualties in the extreme, but radiation is desipte the 'bad press' an easy poison to detect (anyone with a $50 geigercounter can do his own 'threat analysis' in any given area) as opposed to biological / chemical poisons which requires sophisticated equipment to detect.

      Yours yazeran

      Plan: to go to Mars one day with a hammer.

    10. Re:MacArthur by RedWizzard · · Score: 1
      It certainly should never have been used on a civilian target
      According to TFA, Nagasaki was decidely not a civilian target. Upwards of 50,000 people in that city were working on war materiel. It was one of Japan's major ship building centers.
    11. Re:MacArthur by Dogtanian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It certainly should never have been used on a civilian target , At-least this quash shows that perhaps they had a little shame about it

      I don't know that 'shame' enters into it when dealing with the military. My best guess is that they figured they had a job to do, realised the tactical advantage atomic weapons would bring, and realised that an adverse public reaction would possibly rob them of this advantage.

      Quite frankly, I'd assume that the high-ups in the US military saw the general public as little more than a hindrance to their objectives; at best, viewed in a patronising, paternalistic manner.

      That having been said, was the target bombed because it was civilian, or was it bombed because of its manufacturing facilities?

      Of course, the irony is that, whilst the US military may have been zealous in concealing unpalatable information, the Japanese regime were 100 times worse, and continue to deny or obfuscate their actions during WWII to this day.

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    12. Re:MacArthur by FidelCatsro · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What they call a civilian target and what i would call a civilian target are very different things apparently.
      Fair enough wipe out factories with bombing raid , but taking out the entire city , Men , women , children etc. is a little beyond just a military target.

      --
      The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
    13. Re:MacArthur by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      Hitting civilian targets was a Nazi idea. When we copied their idea we made sure we did a better job; the Dresden bombings were truly catastrophic.

      It should be pointed out that, as far as I know, there was nothing particularly 'special' about the bombing of Dresden, compared to the bombing of other German cities- it was the conditions (either weather or due to the layout/position of the city) that whipped the resultant fires up into a firestorm.

      Anyway, *would* life have been better without the atomic bomb? If we only consider its effect from 1945-2005, I think not. On the other hand, it's a very high risk; especially now that they are more likely to fall into the hands of fanatics and less self-preserving regimes.

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    14. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There is a difference between media making us aware of something we should know about, and media making us obssessed with something that is going to make it money.

      Too often media focusses on the latter, and we wring our hands about the deaths of 5 in location X, while ignoring the deaths of 5 million in location Y.

      When it comes to the deaths of people, Math Matters. Just because something pulls at our heart strings does not make it a a significant effect. Yes, Nagasaki and Hiroshima were bad and the victims suffered terribly, but they were a drop in a huge bucket of human misery that resulted from that war. And there were far larger atrocities that were glossed over completely.

      Starvation, for example, is probably a worse way to go than radiation sickness. And when things go bad, it often happens by the 10's of millions, not 10's of thousands.

    15. Re:MacArthur by benzapp · · Score: 1

      You apparently don't know what an incendiary bomb is. It is intended specifically to create a firestorm. They were not the first choice of the British, since they really were not particularly effective against anything other than civilian targets such as wood framed houses.

      These weapons were also never utilized by Germany.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    16. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It certainly should never have been used on a civilian target"

      This is the hippy bullshit that always gets me pissed off.

      *ALL* targets should always be civilian...you only target military to destry infrastructure...targetting military is like targetting an electrical plant -- it secures an objective but doesn't get to the root of the matter.

      Always target civilians -- they are the ones that either could have stopped the fighting before it started or can stop the fighting after it starts. Either way, civilians are the ones that are guilty -- and not the military (who are just a tool of the civilians).

      Maybe we need to have a little more shame about 'surgical' strikes and realize war is a dirty game...when my country went to war with Iraq, I realized that even though I didn't vote for the guy that went, I was as much a part of the problem as anyone else -- and if we were counter attacked, I could have been an acceptable loss.

      So fuck this hippy notion of shame of attacking civilians...if anyone is guilty of war crimes, its each and every citizen that allows their politicians and military to do as they pleased unchecked. The military only has one purpose, killing things. Politicians only have one purpose, accumulating power. And civilians have to keep this in check and thus are responsible when something shitting like this happens.

      This is one bombing I agree my country should have done...

    17. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 1

      The UK was not under serious threat when Dresden was bombed. Those days had long passed.

      There is no good excuse.

    18. Re:MacArthur by torpor · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Quite frankly, I'd assume that the high-ups in the US military saw the general public as little more than a hindrance to their objectives; at best, viewed in a patronising, paternalistic manner.

      Nothing has changed, the US is still governed by its Cop Masters.

      The observation of this phenomenon is what prompted FDR to warn of the impending techno-militaristic-fascist state currently dominating the US economy and society .. the 'we will protect you, do as we say' personality pervades US society today.

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    19. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 1

      To be fair to the high-ups in the US military, the general public knows jack and shit about how to successfully conduct a war.

    20. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      These weapons were also never utilized by Germany.

      Without commenting w.r.t. Dresden, this statement certainly isn't true.

    21. Re: MacArthur by gidds · · Score: 1
      Quite frankly, I'd assume that the high-ups in the US military saw the general public as little more than a hindrance to their objectives; at best, viewed in a patronising, paternalistic manner.

      I'd like to think that was very wrong, but I can't bring myself to. For some reason, I keep thinking of the high-ups as a very patronising, sarcastic and self-satisfied Jack Nicholson, saying "I have neither the time nor the inclination to explain myself to a man who rises and sleeps under the blanket of the very freedom I provide, then questions the manner in which I provide it. I'd prefer you said thank you, and went on your way."

      --

      Ceterum censeo subscriptionem esse delendam.

    22. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looking at the last few Wars the US military has been in ,I would say that the top brass don't have much of a clue either

    23. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The Top Brass have a clue.

      The Administration doesn't.

      The army gets their orders from untrained civilians (in this case). They knew Iraq was a bad idea and being poorly planned, but they took their orders and executed them like good soldiers ought to.

      And before you blame them for following stupid orders blindly, the people who are truly at fault are the US citizens for willfully putting such incompetence in charge of such a powerful weapon.

    24. Re:MacArthur by aamcf · · Score: 1

      These weapons were also never utilized by Germany.

      Incendiary bombs were used by Germany. At least someone dropped a lot on Belfast in 1941. I don't think we were at war with anyone else at the time.

    25. Re:MacArthur by mogglestein · · Score: 1

      Please, we were at war with Germany, our forces were fighting and dying in France and later Germany. The Germans at the time were quite happy to launch V2 rockets at southern england and allied held territory. Dresden was a legitimate target hit with the appropriate level of force required to destroy the target. Before you continue, you should remember that Dresden was a rail link hub to the eastern front with two raillines coming in, plus the city served as a communications hub for the eastern forces. Which is why it was attacked. The fact that so many civilians died and a historical city destroyed is an often and unfortunate fact of war, in those days precision bombing usually meant a 50+ % loss suffered by the attacking bomber fleet, completely unacceptable from both RAF Bomber command and 8th USAAF POV (precision bombing by heavy bombers had been tried in the early stages of the air war, 1941 and '42 by the RAF but high losses forced bomber command to switch to area bombing instead). Would it have been better for the allied forces to have held off? Dresden would have been over run by the Russians, had the Germans made a stand the city would have been flattened anyway. Frankly, both Germany and Japan started their wars, and they both paid the price, a tragic and often horrific price. Nowadays both nations are fairly prosperous democracies.

    26. Re:MacArthur by Iago515 · · Score: 1

      By that fantastic leap of morality, the Germans should all have been rounded up, put into concentration camps and gassed.

      --
      Take note, take note, O world,

      To be direct and honest is not safe.

    27. Re:MacArthur by fabs64 · · Score: 1

      christ almighty, I'm just guessing here but I get the feeling you don't really have any freakin idea what Japan was like in 1945.. They were led by an EMPEROR ffs! They didn't have much say in the matter.
      Do you blame civillian iraqi's for the gassing of the kurds? Is it the cambodians fault that pol pot slaughtered them? Hey, obviously neither stood up enough to stop it.

    28. Re:MacArthur by tgd · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Anyone who thinks the nuclear weapons used in Japan were the horrors of that war need to spend a bit more time reading history and a bit less time trying to get themselves read on Slashdot.

      Go read up on the firebombing of Japanese cities, or European cities.

      The attack on Tokyo killed far more people, destroyed far more of the city than both of the nuclear weapons. There's little evidence to suggest that radioactivity has caused any more deaths in the last 60 years than the release of toxins in normal fires did in other cities. Cancer clusters just are easier to track.

      Even ignoring the fact that it stopped the war early, the use of the nuclear weapons both saved American lives, and saved the lives of countless Japanese civilians who would've been killed in the firestorm that followed a mass bombing of those cities.

      War is ugly. Spend a little time learning about weapons systems over the last 500 years, learn about their effects, both immediate and long term before passing judgement. Don't mistakenly assume efficiency at killing equates to the level of inhumanity. And definitely don't base your idea of what these wars were like on a few individual-oriented movies like Saving Private Ryan. Wars for the last hundred years were based on the concept of impersonal massive destruction, most of it far more horrifying than a nuclear blast.

    29. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Dresden would have been over run by the Russians,

      There's the truth of it, by the time time Dresden happened, Germany had become a political football. The focus had shifted from winning the war, to beating the Russians. Under this time pressure, some slighly unethical decisions were made.

      Inflicting unnecessary harm on another country always comes back to bite you in the ass, even when they are "paying the price".

      Germany paid the price after WWI, and that basically led to WWII.

    30. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *ALL* targets should always be civilian

      So, if some nut blows up your family while shopping at the local mall, that's ok, because it's their fault anyway.

      Do you honestly think there's a solution to any serious problem that makes everyone happy?

      The middle east is a perfect example.

      With the possible exception of saturation hyrdogen bombing until the entire area consists of nothing but fused glass; there's no solution that will make every group stop fighting.

    31. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I am reminded of a famous quote.
      "After listening to both sides of a car accident report I have my doubts about history."

    32. Re:MacArthur by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Actually Japan was already trying to surrender at the time.. To the Russians. As the cold war was already brewing this was totally unacceptable.

    33. Re:MacArthur by drunkahol · · Score: 1

      Just to correct ignorance.

      Britain actually declared war on Germany. One of the only (if not the only) country to do so during WWII.

    34. Re:MacArthur by FidelCatsro · · Score: 1

      I didn't say it was the only horror, but it was certainly one of them.
      killing that many people is a horror , Perhaps not the worst horror but a horror non the less.
      It may have saved lives we do not know that for sure . That does not mean it was not a hideous act.
      A lesser horror is still a horror , War is a vile evil thing .

      --
      The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
    35. Re:MacArthur by blackpaw · · Score: 1

      I guess your're fine with the suicide bombings in Israel then, or the IRA bombings of Britain - everyones the enemy after all.

    36. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      by that time the japanese were already willing to capitulate. why throw the bomb? +2 bln usd invested in the development +deter russians from entering japan +try it out in a life situation thats about it. the rest is just to justify the un-justifiable.

    37. Re:MacArthur by BJH · · Score: 1

      Well maybe if you tried looking at sources other than TFA, you'd know that Nagasaki was a city like most others in wartime, with some military facilities and a bunch of civilians who worked at them along with their grandparents, parents, children, etc.

      Of course it was a civilian target, just the same as any other city would be. If somebody wiped out Washington D.C. with a nuclear weapon and said that it being the location of the CinC of the US military justified it as a military target, how would you take it?

    38. Re:MacArthur by FidelCatsro · · Score: 1

      I thought i had read that somewhere , I was not sure though So i didn't mention it.
      If that is true ,then the strike on the city to me then seems to be one of the greatest atrocities of the war .Unless the US top brass knew nothing of this , which is highly doubtful.

      --
      The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
    39. Re:MacArthur by Lord+Ender · · Score: 0

      Modern war is won or lost by production. A city that produces war machines is more important than what you would call a 'military' target. The factories that made the weapons (and the people that ran them) were the most important military targets in WWII.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    40. Re:MacArthur by BJH · · Score: 1

      Nice if it were true, but it's not. You're probably thinking of the Unit 731 experiments, which while brutal and unjustified certainly didn't "kill millions".

    41. Re:MacArthur by Bio+Steel · · Score: 1

      How can one make intelligent policy decisions if with an awareness of conscequences.

      Here, Here

      They tell her that she's uncool, cuz she's still preoccupied with 19, 19, "1984"...?

      --
      The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
    42. Re:MacArthur by imnotbutyouare · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Er, useless. The allied bombing campign hastened the end of the war in Europe. I'm sorry but when it comes down to it, a war is not a nice clinical thing. Human beings make mistakes, and Hitlers mistake was to think that he could stroll into Poland and everyone would think it was OK. If the German people didn't want to be bombed, why stand up and salute Hitler and cheer when he announced he was going to bomb London. As far as the intended target of the rail network being up and running after 3 days, that a complete podge. The campaign vs rail and road networks was pretty successful and amazingly accurate for the technology available. You had one man staring down a viewfinder with his finger of a button, and the rest of the crew holding on to their bollocks whilst the pilot tried to fly as straight as possible through blankets of flak. Ask my Grandad, who just happened to be a Lancaster pilot. He doesn't loose any sleep at night over it, thats all I can say.

    43. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The question is, are you willing to sacrifice yourself for some distant future advantage, that might never come? (revolting against the Emperor)

      In a society, you are a small local entity, that makes local decisions. There is no such option for a single person as to "throw over the government".
      The option is to try, and probably die.

      In the "western" world protesting is safe, but not on the rest of planet earth.

      If I had to choose between my family and me shot to death, or helping to building a prison camp (therefore being guilty in what was to come in that camp) I surely would choose the latter.

      That is the problem. On one hand there is the risk of loosing your life, on the other hand there is a small contribution, to "evil", that is not known to be definitely evil at the time you have to make your decision.

      It is human nature, to do everything to survive. I have talked to people coming from western europe and america, who said, they would never live in slavery, and rather live dead poor in misery, than under opression.

      Theese people obviously never had to choose between the two.

    44. Re:MacArthur by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1
      If They didn't think the people could cope with hearing about the devastation of the weapon , and did not think it appropriate to report the after effects, then the weapon should never have been used.


      In a perfect world..yes. But when it dropped it on their city, rather than surrender they made propaganda claims that they were going to drop an equally devastating bomb on the US (knowing full well they did not have the capability yet...all pride). It took more than one drop on civilian targets to get them to surrender. Do you honestly think just telling them about it or dropping it in a desert and letting them watch would have been different? Do you think either the Japanese or the Germans would have done differently if they beat the Americans in the nuclear race? Germany was openly working on nuclear weapons and using gas on Jews like it was going out of style.

      I honestly wish what you said was true but things just don't work that way.

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    45. Re:MacArthur by TheoMurpse · · Score: 2, Informative

      the Japanese regime were 100 times worse, and continue to deny or obfuscate their actions during WWII to this day.

      I actually talked about this in a section of one of my latest blog entries. It's not a great scholarly piece, but for anyone a bit curious about the recent protests in China about the Japanese government, there's at least a modicum of insight in my writings, I hope. I had a professor lecture about US-China-Japan relations, and he covered this in part. I was shocked to know that many of my fellow Japanese classmates at university were not aware of the cause of the tensions. In any case, if you are curious or want to criticize it, it's maybe 1/2 way down the entry I've linked.

      That being said, I'm going to go out and try to find a copy of this bomb story here in Japan.

    46. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...even today they act as if their buzzbombs were in some way 'retaliation' for a war they started with the UK.

      No they don't. Please stop reading the Sun.

    47. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is this comment +4 insightful? This has nothing to do with the article whatsover.

    48. Re:MacArthur by JudgeFurious · · Score: 2, Interesting

      While of course that is true I feel it's important to point out that trying to get better terms from the Russians when the country you're (primarily) at war with is waiting to hear those special words "unconditional surrender" doesn't really count as "trying to surrender".

      In so far as the Pacific theater was concerned there were two main combatants. The United States and Japan. Other nations took part but the Russians at that time were very late to the show and played almost no part in the conflict. Nice land grab there at the end of course but aside from that they were a non-factor and Japan knew it. Japan trying to surrender to the Russians would be like Germany trying to surrender to Argentina or Honduras instead of the USSR, Britain, and the USA in hopes of getting a better deal.

      And Japan knew it.

      --
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
    49. Re:MacArthur by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 1

      Living in Osaka, I can tell you how the WW2 bombings have permanently affected Japan's urban design. Compared to the clean lines of Kyoto's streets, Osaka is an unmanageable warren of narrow, twisting alleyways. Finding your way around requires either a very large book of very detailed maps, or in-car GPS navigation (I'm not kidding; that's what most people rely on.)

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
    50. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone who doesn't think the use of nuclear weapons in Japan was horrific has a warped view.
      Japan was going to surrender to Russia , all this was done so the commies didn't gain another foothold , it was cold blooded murder

    51. Re:MacArthur by JudgeFurious · · Score: 1

      I think today we tend to lack appreciation for the type of war that WWII was. For all of my lifetime (and I'm 39 years old) every war the United States has been involved in has been in some fashion a limited war.

      By WWII standard the use of atomic weapons against Hiroshima and Nagasaki was pretty much par for the course just as it would have been if Nazi Germany had reached those weapons first and dropped one on Washington D.C.

      Today we just can't relate to "total war". I like to think that's an improvement in some way.

      --
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
    52. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i need to kill filter your ass.

      time after time you pipe up. who doesn't know that war is a nasty and evil business?

      what exactly are you trying to convey by stating the obvious?

      "A lesser horror is still a horror , War is a vile evil thing ."

      how about you cool it for a while, fideo castor oil.

    53. Re:MacArthur by mogglestein · · Score: 1

      It seems largely true that near the end of the war the allies were racing to try and capture as much of German territory as they could before the Soviets grabbed it. It still doesn't lessen Dresden as a legitimate miltiary target. Whilst we may have been trying to prevent the Soviets from taking all of Germany we were still allied with them and still had to support them. Also, german troops trapped against Dresden and unable to be moved out means less possible troops to be thrown against a western force (to be honest though I dont think this was a concern for us

    54. Re:MacArthur by tenchiken · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm sorry this is a urban legend. There were elements of the Japanese government that were trying to surrender, as they were not so inclined to go down with the island, but that did not include anyone in the central ring of power.

      Disorganization marked most of Japan's governmental affairs from 1933-1945. This was also one of them.

      Even after the Emperor had finally woken up to the suicidal nature of the war, once he decided to surrender after both Hiroshima and Nagasaki, he was almost replaced in a coup.

      These people did not want to surrender, and only another starvation blockade (if you don't know what that is, go look it up) would have stopped them.

    55. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 1

      I'm sure there are all sorts of strategic justifications that can be, but the simple truth is that a city and many of her civilian inhabitants were destroyed to expedite a war that was already won.

      Near the end of a war, attitudes change rapidly and bad decisions are made. Soldiers start obssessing with a fear of death. Generals start thinking about "what next" including what can be done to ensure their career is successful.

    56. Re:MacArthur by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      Nagasaki was not a civillian target. It was home to both millitary units, and a large portion of the industrial complex that drove the Japanese navy.

      (BTW, that is something the article also got wrong. The reason that Nagasaki was relativly untouched prior to the atomic bombing was not because the American B-29's were inept, it was because they knew that the atomic bomb was coming and left two such cities pretty much untouched).

      MacArthur btw is not a particullar good person to hang around in general. He had a facination with the atomic weapons (he was one of the last to be let in on that little secret) and was the only general in history to open fire on American civillian while not in a time of war. That he overreacted is not a surprise.

    57. Re:MacArthur by FidelCatsro · · Score: 1

      oh dear , Yes stating the obvious was the point .
      Post as yourself next time , Maybe i will take you a little more seriously.

      --
      The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
    58. Re:MacArthur by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      You have to remember that a huge chunk of the civilian leadership was in the millitary at this point. While certain people (ie, MacArthur) clearly were a few shots short of a clip, the major decisions in the war (and in fact, in ever war in American history) were pretty much made by the civilian leadership then implemented by the millitary. Note the pacific first doctrine, washington's correspondence with the CC, etc.

    59. Re:MacArthur by mogglestein · · Score: 1

      A war is won when the enemy surrenders. Until that point happens, operations should continue as normal

    60. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 1

      A war is won when the enemy surrenders. Until that point happens, operations should continue as normal

      Yes, they should.

      But they don't and that's a fact. Forgive my assumption, but you sound like the sort who gets too much of your input about the conduct of wars from war afficianados who are often obssessed with presenting the conduct of military as that of clockwork machinery.

      The reality is always far different.

    61. Re:MacArthur by Stone+Pony · · Score: 1
      "These weapons were also never utilized by Germany"

      This is just factually incorrect. Incendiary bombs were widely used during the blitz in 1940-41. They were also used by the Germans during the Spanish Civil War, most famously in the bombing of Guernica in 1937.

    62. Re:MacArthur by SetupWeasel · · Score: 1

      I've always considered myself a child of the bomb.

      Let me explain what I mean. My grandfather was one of the first Allied troops to enter Japan after the war. By the time he had reached the island's shores it was peacetime, but had we still been at war, he would have been one of the first troops in the invasion force. In all likelyhood, he would have died on the beach. He said that the landing had been much tougher and slower than they had expected, and he would likely have been a sitting duck in plain view of enemy fire.

      Because of my grandfather's stories, I've always considered myself one of the people the bomb saved. There are countless others like my grandfather, both American and Japanese, that were saved by the timely end of the war.

      We have a president now that sold our country on the promise of a surgical, victimless war. We can all see how that turned out. Even with all of today's modern technology, innocent lives are lost. People die horribly, painfully on both sides of the fight.

      If a war is worth fighting, it is worth winning. Unlike wars like the Iraq war, World War 2 was a war we needed to fight. A country attacked us. They sunk our boats and killed our soldiers. It was not a vague future threat that may or may not ever come to fruition. The Japanese caused us mass destruction with their weapons. We didn't have to look for the weapons, because they brought their weapons to our doorstep and gave us a demonstration.

      So we fought, and we fought for complete victory. We wanted unconditional surrender, and we did not stop until we got it. When we did get unconditional surrender, we stopped. Our methods did cause some civillian deaths, but any method would have just as any method does today. No death, civillian or military, Japanese or American, is good.

      I believe that the bomb was used to end the war quickly, and many more lives were saved than were lost by its use. We Americans do have much to be ashamed of such as the Japanese internment camps, but I don't include the atomic bomb as one of these things. I think the use of the atomic bomb could only be fully appreciated if we could see the events that resulted if it hadn't been used.

    63. Re:MacArthur by Fyz · · Score: 1

      Say what you want, but 35,000 civilian casualties is pretty fucking far from minimal collateral damage.

      If the German people didn't want to be bombed, why stand up and salute Hitler and cheer when he announced he was going to bomb London.

      Give me a break. That's the exact same rhetoric islamist fanatics use to justify murdering civilian targets in terrorist attacks: "They are not innocent, because they're not revolutionary, and thus we are fully justified in killing them."
      Now, I recognize that WWII was a hard time and that it called for hard measures. But the Dresden bombings are a spot of shame on the otherwise (mostly) chivalrous reputation of the allies.

    64. Re:MacArthur by phayes · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not so: My references are in a number of books at home (Biography of Bomber Harris, Official History Of the 8th AF), but there were three main objectives in the Dresden Raid:
      - Destroying the rail centers.
      - Depriving the War factories near Dresden from their workforce by dehousing them.
      - Degrade the german workforce in nearby cities through shock.

      While many current day revisionists try to relabel the latter two objectives as "non-military", they were almost universally accepted at the time. To those who had lived through the blitz & given the inaccuracy of WW2 bomb strikes, the bombing of city centers was a legitimate objective.

      --
      Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
    65. Re:MacArthur by mogglestein · · Score: 1

      "Forgive my assumption, but you sound like the sort who gets too much of your input about the conduct of wars from war afficianados who are often obssessed with presenting the conduct of military as that of clockwork machinery." You mean from people who have been part of the system, have studied the history? Yes, partly I have, after all they do have expertise in this area, a few of them claiming to have first hand experience in the decision making process that went behind the task to draw up targets. You think I should listen to a well meaning but unknowledgeable bleeding heart indivudal who's thoughts at the end of the day would most likely lengthen a war?

    66. Re:MacArthur by KH · · Score: 1

      Wrong. Japan was trying to surrender to Americans before the Soviets enter the war. Note that Japan and the Soviet Union had a pact not to invade each other. Only after Hiroshima did the Soviets break the pact and declared war against Japan. The participation of the Soviets to the war is considered one of the deciding factors for Japan to unconditionally surrender, in addition to the two atomic bombs.

    67. Re:MacArthur by slavemowgli · · Score: 1

      "Slightly unethical"? Wow, you should be working for the pentagon, if you aren't already. I'm sure they'd love to have someone who's able to say things like that and keep a straight face.

      --
      quidquid latine dictum sit altum videtur.
    68. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And who says Islamist fanatics are wrong! Anyhoo, I think that is complete rot. This was an entire nation of millions of 'free' democratic people, not a few thousand ragheads. And 35,000 civillian casualties still doesn't add up to the millions of jews gassed or starved to death. Germans still whine about Dresden today sixty years on, I say they bloody deserved everything they got. And to the mostly chivalrous reputation of the allies. I hope you aren't including the Russians, who raped most of Eastern Europe and would have raped the rest of it given the chance.

    69. Re:MacArthur by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      I have no idea where you are getting your information from, but it's wrong. London was still getting blitzed by V-1 and V-2's during the Dresden raid. More to the point, Brits were still dying by troops moved on that rail, or they would not have hit it.

    70. Re:MacArthur by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1
      What goes around comes around.
      Aye, especially when you get to meet the Almighty.
      Stand by for when the judgment you mete out against others is used on you.
      Mercy is something we all crave.
      --
      Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    71. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't shuffle blame onto the citizens for this one. No fucking way. Before the war, Bush claimed that it was not the role of the United States to "police around the world telling people this is the way it has to be."

      Now, he said that during the election campaign, about a year before September 11th, but the citizens of the country didn't know he would start a war in Iraq. He did, he was just looking for a catalyst, and the irrational fear from September 11th was it.

    72. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is hard to know where to start when responding to such an ill-informed comment which is wrong in almost every particular and implication. If you are fighting a war, you continue until either you or your enemy represents no threat to the other.

      However, if your comment means that you think that British cities were not being attacked by Germans at this time, so it was inappropriate to attack German cities, you should note that the Dresden attack took place while the V2 rockets were being launched at England.

    73. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 1

      Lengthen a war to save a city? It depends on the situation.

      In the case of Dresden probably.

      There are other people with good perspectives on history than war afficianados. That you would classify them all as unknowledgeable bleeding hearts speaks volumes as to your attitude. I'm pleased to disagree with you.

    74. Re:MacArthur by ManUMan · · Score: 1

      So killing 25,000 (a consevative estimate) for little military effacy is only "slightly unethical?" Or is it only "slightly unethical" since Germany had it coming?

      Forgive me for being so crass, but it seems to me that we are a bit cavalier about the death of civilians.

      --
      If you are never moderated, do you really exist?
    75. Re:MacArthur by rogerzilla · · Score: 1
      And the bombing of Tokyo was glorified in the gratuitous we-need-to-make-this-a-bit-longer-so-it's-an-epic ending to that execrable movie "Pearl Harbor".

      Do yourself a favour - watch "Tora! Tora! Tora!" instead.

    76. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 1

      Neither V-1's or V-2's were a serious threat to the sanctity of the British Empire. You cannot invade and destroy a country with rockets alone.

    77. Re:MacArthur by MikeHunt69 · · Score: 1

      Dresden was bombed because it was a staging point for Germans to attack the Russian front. The Russians requested the allies to bomb Dresden, which they did.

      They heavily bombed it. But only as heavily as any other "heavy bombings" at the time - ie. they didn't put any extra effort into bombing it. The effect of the Dresden bombings was so bad was because most of the buildings were made of wood and burned very easily. Additionally, there were no air raid sirens or procedures in place in the city, since it had never been bombed most of the population didn't know what to do.

    78. Re:MacArthur by ManUMan · · Score: 1

      Perhaps a better question is even though there were manufacturing facilities, should they have been bombed in a different way to avoid civilian casulties?

      Furthermore, I think that the use of the atomic weapons was calculated to create enormous psychological impact on Japan. If your goals were strictly military, why not drop a smaller bomb (nuclear or non-nuclear) on the tactical target? It seems to me that the obvious answer is that those things don't have the psychological impact that the larger weapons have on the "enemy".

      --
      If you are never moderated, do you really exist?
    79. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "When it comes to the deaths of people, Math Matters."

      May I recommend the movie 'Failsafe' for your viewing pleasure? American policy in the Sixties was driven by the kind of mathematics you would like.

    80. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 1

      Boy I've really put my foot in the beehive of war-nuts haven't I?

    81. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 1

      You can't shuffle blame onto the citizens for this one. No fucking way. Before the war, Bush claimed that it was not the role of the United States to "police around the world telling people this is the way it has to be."

      Bit testy aren't you? Voted for him and now feeling some guilt perhaps?

      Those of us who didn't vote for him in 2000 knew that he was incompetent. We weren't aware exactly how far the depths of his useless extended, but we knew it wouldn't be good.

    82. Re:MacArthur by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      With all due respect, you are wrong here. While there was a number of American's who beleived that they would have to fight the soviets soon, the vast majority of thinking was that the Soviets could be worked with like WW2. It wasn't until Stalin closed off Berlin (well after the war) that things started to go downhill.

      The US and it's allies offered to share atomic power under strict guidelines. This would have been a impressive gift, had Stalin not already stolen the plans.

    83. Re:MacArthur by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      No, but you can kill a lot of people (which they did). My other point stands as well. Thoose rail lines were being used to move troops and war supplies around.

    84. Re:MacArthur by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      I wish I had mods for ya. I'm only 28 myself, but I can see a *big* difference between the "total war" of WWI/WWII and the minor skirmishes since. Vietnam and Korea don't quite even approach the world wars. In WWI/WWII there was no "peace keeping" or trying not to offend neighboring nations. The solitary goal was total surrender of the enemy through whatever means necessary.

      Frightening really...

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    85. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 1

      No, it is you who are wrong, we were in quite a rush to beat the russkies. FDR & Churchill and realized full well that the glory of being the first to Berlin would translate directly to how Europe would be shaped afterwards.

    86. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The general view of historians is that the Emperor had very limited power in the run-up to WW2, and tended towards avoiding war.

      The ruling clique was made up of neo-cons and the military wing. They effectively made war inevitable. The parallel with the US over Iraq is quite striking. I notice that lots of US citizens stood up to stop war, but it still happened.

    87. Re:MacArthur by dogbowl · · Score: 1

      Need to mod parent up please.

      You simply cannot judge yesterdays wars by todays standards.

      --

      These pretzels are making me thirsty.
    88. Re:MacArthur by anoiniminious+cowher · · Score: 1

      So you're the one who's been sending me all that "Dresden" Spam!

    89. Re:MacArthur by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 0

      Some of the bombing (conventional) raids in germany that created firestorms kill 2 or 3 times the number of people the nukes killed.

      --
      Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!

      http://financialpetition.org/
    90. Re:MacArthur by quarkscat · · Score: 1

      "Too often media focusses on the latter, and we wring our hands about the deaths of 5 in location X, while ignoring the deaths of 5 million in location Y."

      I am not sure who said it better, but there is a
      quote that rings true "The death of an individual
      is a tragedy, but the death of thousands is a
      statistic."

      President Truman undoubtedly saved many Allied
      soldiers lives that would have been lost in an
      invasion of Japan's home islands. Gen. MacArthur
      was always concerned about his place in history.
      His decision to censor this story was influenced
      by the knowledge that it might effect his ability
      to govern Japan during US occupation.

    91. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He squashed the report because by reporting the facts on the ground, it reduced the psychological effect of "utter devastation" that we wanted the Japanese (and the Soviets) to take away from the event. Feeling bad about the destruction is laughable. More people died in the conventional bombardments of Dresden and Tokyo than in either Nagasaki or Hiroshima.

      It was a long and brutal war. A lot of folks here in the US have all sorts of moralistic views on how we should have done things and how we should be doing things now. Such views are easy to have when there's no draft and thus, for a large number of these people, no direct personal consequences to be felt by allowing a war to go on longer by forgoing extremely violent acts rather than pursuing a quick end to the war in question by executing it in the most efficient (violent) manner possible.

    92. Re:MacArthur by mogglestein · · Score: 1

      You're dismissing one group of people, "war afficianados" on one point , their conclusion disagrees with yours and as far as you are concerned you have to be right, after all the mass killing of large numbers of civilians is morally reprehensible and the war was almost over. Therefore the decision to attack Dresden MUST have been wrong.

      Not a very objective view.

      https://www.airforcehistory.hq.af.mil/PopTopics/dr esden.htm

      This runs through the basic questions. Yes it's a USAF web site, no it's not from an "unbiased" site.

      Basic run down is,

      We have a city that is a main communication center for German forces

      Is a focal point of three main railway lines
      aiding German logistics against the approaching allied armies, ( 1) Berlin-Prague-Vienna, (2) Munich-Breslau, and (3) Hamburg-Leipzig)

      Plus 110 or so factories and companies that were involved in supplying the German military with material.

      We have a russian force 70 miles from the city in such a position that an organised counterattack by german forces potentially being brought into the region via the rail lines could have cut off and surrounded.

      Thats 4 reasons why Dresden was a valid target.

      Had the Germans counter-attacked and succesfully managed to hold down or destroy Marshal Koniev's forces then most likely the war would have been prolonged.

      Now, I wouldnt agree to the destruction of a city nowadays, since modern weaponry allows our forces to be far more selective, instead of having to bomb an entire city block to destroy a factory they can hit the factory with the knowledge that most ordanance will fall on target. This simply wasn't the case in 1945.

      That I describe those that wish to believe Dresden was a war crime as "unknowledgeable bleeding hearts" is a direct reflection on my belief that they are determining "Dresden was a warcrime" then presenting the facts to prove a pre-concluded belief based on humanitarian concerns.

    93. Re:MacArthur by metamatic · · Score: 1

      Your argument might be a bit more convincing if the US hadn't decided to elect Bush in 2004, *after* he started a gratuitous war leading to the deaths of over a thousand Americans and untold Iraqi civilians, and *after* he signed off on the paperwork approving the use of torture on *suspected* (not convicted, innocent) terrorists. The fact that he was elected shows that Americans are, in fact, fine with what he has done.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    94. Re:MacArthur by SpacePunk · · Score: 1

      Dresden was carpet bombed. Then it was bombed a 2nd time when the allies knew that emergency crews and civilians were exposed. It wasn't a 'surgical strike' to remove the ability of that city to support a war. It was an attempt to murder every last man, woman, and child. The timed 2nd strike certainly was extra effort.

      If another country had done the same to the U.S., we'd be screaming bloody murder.

    95. Re:MacArthur by HooliganIntellectual · · Score: 1

      "Even ignoring the fact that it stopped the war early, the use of the nuclear weapons both saved American lives, and saved the lives of countless Japanese civilians who would've been killed in the firestorm that followed a mass bombing of those cities." Ah yes, the standard propaganda line supporting the discredited argument that the destruction of these two cities were necessary to "end the war." Japan was on the ropes by the time the atomic bombs were dropped. These bombs were dropped to threaten the Soviet Union and the rest of the world. These bombs were the first shots of the Cold War and the subsequent war to build U.S. empire. The dropping of the atomic bombs were war crimes, as were the attacks on Tokyo and other Japanese cities. It's a shame that Truman and other U.S. leaders never saw jail time for thier war crimes.

    96. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While living in Japan many years ago, I was surprised at the outcome of a casual discussion of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The debate was whether a second bomb was really necessary. One Japanese youth defended the Nagasaki bombing. He claimed that the point of that bomb was to make the surrender immediate--absolutely immediate. Why? According to the history he had learned, Russia was within days of invading Japan from the north. The U.S. was already caught in a political mess in Germany. They didn't want to share Japan, too. For the U.S., it was imperitive to force the surrender before the Russians could have a seat in the negotiations.

    97. Re:MacArthur by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      From the blurb, it sounds like the problem wasn't that the story was too graphic, but not graphic enough. Notice the mention that the irradiation problem didn't seem to be as bad to the reporter as the US radio propoganda broadcasts were saying.

      What's the point of building a new terror weapon if it doesn't cause lots of terror?

    98. Re:MacArthur by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      You present no evidence other then saying "you are wrong", you use a cold war term "ruskies" before the cold war started, and you still have not addressed the points above. (Here is a hint, subst /FDR/Truman and look at how FDR and Churchill got along. Then realize that Churchill wasn't even in power when the decision was made to use the bomb.

    99. Re:MacArthur by Illserve · · Score: 1

      We're talking about Dresden.

      And what I'm talking about regarding the race to Berlin is common knowledge.

    100. Re:MacArthur by m50d · · Score: 1

      They stood up and cheered for the same reason all the guy up there whose grandmother's baby was starved in a POW camp is here defending the nukes. The British had bombed German cities, in fact it was us who made the change to attacking infrastructure rather than direct military targets (not saying it wouldn't have happened anyway, but as it is the British are responsible). They probably knew people who had been killed in their houses or working in the factory. People will justify anything in terms of "the enemy was worse". Many of the people here defending the nukes are not very different from those people cheering.

      --
      I am trolling
    101. Re:MacArthur by Dr.+Noooo · · Score: 1

      *All Americans* are certainly *not* "fine" with what has been done in their name, with their children, and their tax dollars. Remember, nearly 50% of those that participated in the last election voted against Mr. Bush. The net result, unfortunately, is that the killing continues in the name of all Americans.There has been a noticeable shift in popularity against both the war and the Bush administration as of late. Possibly the fog of deceit is finally burning away, but more likely personal economic realities have become too painful to ignore. In direct response to your post, however, I think that the election would have turned out differently had the media been investigating and reporting instead of echoing what it was fed from the White House. Fact of the matter is that the American people were lied to, and they voted accordingly. While the media outside of the US was reporting on the questions regarding the march to war, in the US, the media's relative silence was deafening. People are the same everywhere. They will respond emotionally to those issues that are close to their heart. Tell them that there is a direct link to the disaster of September 11th and Iraq .. over and over .. without anyone in the media doing any fact checking .. what do you expect would be the result? People voted against their own economic interests in large part to support a president they believed was protecting them from the murderers who masterminded 9/11. The American people are not warmongers. They were made to feel very vulnerable by the attacks of 9/11, and subsequently their government used that emotional vulnerability to march the country off to war war which was and is unjustifiable morally. That never would have happened had the truth been told from the beginning. Read "Brave New World Revisited". It's Carl Rove's playbook.

    102. Re:MacArthur by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      Please refer to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Dresden_in _World_War_II for further information.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    103. Re:MacArthur by m50d · · Score: 1

      Of course it wasn't bombed _because_ it was civilian. That doesn't change the facts that it was civilian and it was bombed.

      --
      I am trolling
    104. Re:MacArthur by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      Make that half of the US citizens. About half of us voted against him. On more than one occasion too. :(

    105. Re:MacArthur by Triskele · · Score: 0, Troll
      Well as we keep on having to point out to you - you live in a democracy and must bear the responsibility whether you like it or not.

      And just to pick on one point: you say "The American people are not warmongers. " and I say FUCKING BULLSHIT. The US has been continuously at war for 60 odd years now and shows no sign of ending its aggression. Particularly since it invariably picks on little, weak, underarmed and undertrained nations to attack and subsequently loot. All in the name of FREEDOM and DEMOCRACY.

      --

      --
      USA: home of the world's largest terrorist training camp.

    106. Re:MacArthur by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You can't shuffle blame onto the citizens for this one. No fucking way. Before the war, Bush claimed that it was not the role of the United States to "police around the world telling people this is the way it has to be."

      When politicians claim something, they usually mean the opposite... "Read my lips, no new taxes" was followed by new taxes when he was elected. If you claim "but he said he wouldn't" is a defense, you are too stupid to vote. There are records of these people out there. Bush was involved with many shady and a few explicitly unethical business transactions in Texas before becoming governor. The Constitution prevents the Pres and VP being from the same state, so Dick changed his residency to the most politicaly convenient location, without actually moving, something that Hillary has been bashed for many times. If the Republicans find convenient residency so reprehensible, why did they condone it with a vote for Bush?

      No, I think they knew exactly what they got, and everyone that voted for Bush should expect the increase in spending, the massive invasions based on lies and ignorance, and the purposeful sabotage of social security, public schools, and support infrastructure that followed. That's all the Republican party has been good for since Nixon was in office.

      I'm not saying that the Democrats are any better, but that anyone that thinks the Republicans are for a passive hand in world military affairs (regardless of campain trail rhetoric) is a complete moron.

    107. Re:MacArthur by arose · · Score: 1

      Dresden was FIREbombed. Carpet bombing almost pales against those flames.

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    108. Re:MacArthur by jepe · · Score: 1

      "If the German people didn't want to be bombed, why stand up and salute Hitler and cheer when he announced he was going to bomb London."

      They cheered because not doing so would get them killed... That is what happened to the husband of my girlfriend grand-mother (hum... not sure about the english here: mother of her mother)...

      Political dissent was a good way to loose your life back then.

    109. Re:MacArthur by arose · · Score: 1

      Thats 4 reasons that don't matter when you drop firesticks.

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    110. Re:MacArthur by sum.zero · · Score: 1

      "- Depriving the War factories near Dresden from their workforce by dehousing them.
      - Degrade the german workforce in nearby cities through shock."

      considering that the shock and dehousing consisted of burning them to death i guess it was pretty effective.

      however, we usually call this targeting civilians.

      sum.zero

    111. Re:MacArthur by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      It was prefectly on-topic in the context of the discussion in which it was posted. Perhaps one of the parents who brought up the topic was off-topic.

      Besides - the relevance is clear to anybody following the thread...

    112. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, to confuse Doolittle's raid on Tokyo with LeMay's firebombing attacks three years later shows a clear lack of historical knowledge.

    113. Re:MacArthur by Dr.+Noooo · · Score: 1

      It doesn't appear that you desire rational discourse on this subject. You need blanket conclusions. You take half truths and mix them in with emotional rhetoric. If you want to point something out to me, do so with facts, not half truths and rhetoric. Hatred is the most powerful weapon in the human arsenal. Without it there can be no war. You seem to harbor sufficient hatred to know what I am saying. Do you maintain continuity in your rhetoric? Tell me, which population was responsible for World War I? Who were the war mongers? Was it governments or populations?

    114. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, he said that during the election campaign, about a year before September 11th

      In October 2000 I was moving between states and didn't vote, but if I had I would have voted then for Bush. I knew Bush was an idiot, I knew that he would be ineffective as a leader. I hoped that with Bush in office very little would change and gridlock would continue. Maybe he would even resemble the politics of his father. (Little did I know that the Democrats would be trounced in Congress and the people behind Bush would prove to be exceptionally competent at destroying this country.) I couldn't understand why anyone would vote Gore in 2000. His predecessor had gutted welfare, rolled over on gay rights and women's rights, "reformed" bankruptcy, deregulated the stock markets, and passed NAFTA. Gore and Clinton together were trying to expand the NSA into everyone's lives. (Does *anyone* remember Clipper? Geez.) A vote for Gore in 2000 was Patriot Act before 9-11.

      In 2004, I voted against Bush for the obvious reasons, but it still seems a pointless distinction. We had two white Skull and Bones men duking it out and disagreeing only in the "how" they would handle Iraq, not the "why". The only candidate the Dems fielded that had any concern for regular Americans was Dennis Kucinich, and he was silenced immediately as "unelectable".

      If anything, 2004 showed me that the Democrats are simply the other half of the Mercantilist Party.

    115. Re:MacArthur by geekee · · Score: 1

      "Quite frankly, I'd assume that the high-ups in the US military saw the general public as little more than a hindrance to their objectives; at best, viewed in a patronising, paternalistic manner."

      I doubt the general public would have been resistant to dropping an atomic bomb at the time. Pearl Harbor was their 9/11, and the Japanese were the enemy.

      --
      Vote for Pedro
    116. Re:MacArthur by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      The army gets their orders from untrained civilians (in this case). They knew Iraq was a bad idea and being poorly planned, but they took their orders and executed them like good soldiers ought to.

      I think that was clear to everyone who was paying attention. The army knew this before us civies did, but enough information came out before the war began that it was clear it would be a cluster fuck.

      And before you blame them for following stupid orders blindly, the people who are truly at fault are the US citizens for willfully putting such incompetence in charge of such a powerful weapon.

      Not just putting it in charge, but when review time came around and the physical evidence of how badly our leaders had and were continuing to use that weapon was clear, the people decided to let them continue. If there had been even the slightest amount of reproach, such as "we will vote you back in if you agree to fire that idiot you have put in charge of the military", I would have some hope, but that would have been too much like admitting to a mistake. And of course I'm to blame for not doing more to make a difference.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    117. Re:MacArthur by jimi+the+hippie · · Score: 1

      And Gore was "competent"?

    118. Re:MacArthur by Strontium-90 · · Score: 1

      About 14 years ago my family hosted two Japanese college students. This was part of an exchange program between Oak Ridge and a town in Japan. When we asked the students about their knowledge of World War II, they were completely unaware that there had been a war, let alone a war in which the US had used atomic bombs on Japan. I've always found it frightening that such a major event in history is (or at least was) essentially ignored by the Japanese educational system.

    119. Re:MacArthur by PatientZero · · Score: 1
      it wasn't bombed _because_ it was civilian.

      The two cities were chosen because they would produce high civilian casualties in a short time, sending a very clear message. This was done to push Japan -- which had already asked to surrender -- into accepting the U.S.'s terms.

      For a parallel, look into the fire-bombing of Japanese cities, done so because they were densely packed with wooden houses. The fires that raged through the cities were extremely difficult to contain and put out, resulting in large numbers of deaths. These bombings killed far more civilians than the two atomic bombs.

      All of these bombings match the U.S.'s own definition of terrorism, except that the U.S. committed them.

      --
      Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
      I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
    120. Re:MacArthur by metamatic · · Score: 1

      Not that I disagree that the guy you're replying to was pretty much trolling, but...

      I happen to have a list which illustrates that the USA is a warmongering nation.

      Countries the US has bombed since WW II

      China 1945-46
      Korea 1950-53
      China 1950-53
      Guatemala 1954
      Indonesia 1958
      Cuba 1959-60
      Guatemala 1960
      Belgian Congo 1964
      Guatemala 1964
      Dominican Republic 1965-66
      Peru 1965
      Laos 1964-73
      Vietnam 1961-73
      Cambodia 1969-70
      Guatemala 1967-69
      Lebanon 1982-84
      Grenada 1983-84
      Libya 1986
      El Salvador 1981-92
      Nicaragua 1981-90
      Libya 1986
      Iran 1987-88
      Libya 1989
      Panama 1989-90
      Iraq 1991-2005
      Kuwait 1991
      Somalia 1992-94
      Croatia 1994 (of Serbs at Krajina)
      Bosnia 1995
      Iran 1998 (airliner)
      Sudan 1998
      Afghanistan 1998
      Yugoslavia 1999
      Afghanistan 2001-02, 2004-2005

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    121. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The mother of your girlfriend's mother is her grandmother. The mother of your girlfriend's father is also her grandmother. =)

    122. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'll never know.

    123. Re:MacArthur by SpacePunk · · Score: 1

      OK, carpet bombed with firebombs. One is technique, the other is an ordinance.

    124. Re:MacArthur by SpacePunk · · Score: 1

      No, what goes around does not come around. The bombing of Dresden just brought the allies down to the level of Hitler and his ilk. Whenever 'we' commit the atrocities that the enemy commits then 'we' become no better than they.

    125. Re:MacArthur by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Obviously you've never wronged another person in your life. Good for you.

      Fucker.

    126. Re:MacArthur by imnotbutyouare · · Score: 1

      Well your girlfriends grandfather was a hero and she should be proud. My girlfreinds family are Norweigan, her Uncles were both tortured by the Nazis for nothing more than being men between the ages of 15 and 55. However much people try to tell me that the Germans didn't deserve Dresden, the more reasons I find to say they did. Just as the Japanese deserved Horisima and Nagasaki. Just like Saddam deserved Baghdad. People should know, that if you support a despotic and murderous government that chokes democracy and starves its citizens to buy weapons, then they are going to get it in the ass from Blair and Bush. If you don't like what your government are doing, stand up and fight (and die) for your rights, and the rights of the guy next to you!

    127. Re:MacArthur by Netssansfrontieres · · Score: 1

      The fire-bombing of Dresden was vengeance. Partially, I believe, it was prompted by the fire-bombing of Coventry, an English medieval city.

    128. Re:MacArthur by cold+fjord · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      And before you blame them for following stupid orders blindly, the people who are truly at fault are the US citizens for willfully putting such incompetence in charge of such a powerful weapon.


      Ya, look at the results:

      - Taliban out of power in Afghanistan, Democracy taking root, country rebuilding, NATO in action, girls in school, Al Qaeda training camps destroyed
      - Saddam out of power in Iraq and waiting for trial, no more mass graves being filled yearly, country is rebuilding, Democracy taking root, Islamists desperate and failing
      - Libya sees firm action in Iraq and hands over WMD program to US/Europe and seeks rapprochement
      - Lebanese see Iraqi vote, kick out Syrians, work on reforms
      - Dear Leader in N. Korea goes into hiding when Saddam bombed, emerges to grudgingly take part in 6 country talks to resolve nuclear crisis

      Yow! Can you imagine how much better off everyone would be if we had elected a President who was too smart to get involved in those messes and left sleeping dictators lie?

      I guess we should learn our lesson about that whole "democracy" thing in the US.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    129. Re:MacArthur by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

      Where did you get this list. This is an outstanding post. If I had mod points, I'd give you all 5.

    130. Re:MacArthur by metamatic · · Score: 1

      I got it from Slashdot, in fact. Did some basic fact-checking, and it looked good.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    131. Re:MacArthur by metamatic · · Score: 1

      Now on Wikipedia with additional linkage (and the obligatory bashing from wingnuts)

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    132. Re:MacArthur by Fyz · · Score: 1

      Yes, all those evil nine-year old girls that were killed certainly got what they deserved.

    133. Re:MacArthur by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      When some Saudi detonates a truck at your daughter's high school, I suppose that *you* will have deserved it, for backing Bush and Blair in Iraq. But your neighbor, who voted for Dean, won't have deserved it, right?

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      make install -not war

    134. Re:MacArthur by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      The "normal way" of bombing did not include atomic bombs. You are making a distinction without a difference. The post to which you replied did not imply that the US did not conventionally bomb Japan, only that the US bombed it unconventionally. Your inference is false, and further implies a false logic. Even the heinous destruction of Tokyo in that "conventional" bombing didn't stop the Japanese from pursuing the war.

      I agree with the analysis that Japan's leaders surrendered only when the US dropped *multiple* atomic bombs on them. Which demonstrated that the US could sustain such an attack, making Japan's chances of victory, even survival, effectively zero. Which was the strategic analysis at the time. However, I do think that the US could have bombed an uninhabited Japanese island first, and bombed a populated area a couple of days later, if the Japanese did not surrender. Which clearly would have been a more merciful way to end the war. Whether those would have been the last bombs dropped to date on an enemy, without such a drastic demonstration of urban devastation, is an unanswerable question.

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      make install -not war

    135. Re:MacArthur by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      It's not the same thing.

      Whatever the effects of the Iraq war, the ideas behind it - liberating people from crypto Fascist dicator where more noble than the ideas behind Nazi or Imperial Japanese expansionism.

      Not that I agree with area bombing like Dresden or Nagasaki, no matter how the people being bombed voted.

      Interestingly enough, I worked in Germany for a while and I met a *German* guy who tried to defend what the Russians did in East Prussia to me when I worked there on the grounds that the people deserved it because they voted for Hitler. We actually had quite a serious argument about it. Pretty chilling experience.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    136. Re:MacArthur by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      There's something about the effects of your daughter dying, screaming and buring, that just flattens the differences between the "ideas behind it". The difference between those ideas, for the people living (and dying, and enslaved, and tortured) under the tyranny, is zero - because the ideas are just a means to the end, propaganda. Like the propaganda now revealed to be lies now that it's safe for the invaders to let that one go. Or like "democracy", the propaganda devised after the war was committed (remember, "Mission Accomplished"?), which will be revealed to be exactly the same as the foreign democracy we established by 1967, with US Encouraged by Vietnam Vote. A con game of fake ideas to justify US corporate welfare and foreign invasions.

      As for Germany, the worst I've ever felt about my country, America, was when I could finally sympathize with 1930s Germans, who backed Hitler, though I wouldn't have. Because I sympathize with Americans who voted for Bush, though I didn't. I've got a lot of unfair advantages in decisionmaking: like diversity of job opportunities and media sources. I just hope I'm not forced to talk over our parallels in some kind of afterlife beer garden.

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      make install -not war

    137. Re:MacArthur by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Well if was your daughter getting blown to bits, then a lack of perspective is pretty forgiveable. On second thoughts, bugger that. My hometown in England got bombed by the IRA. It didn't change the way I felt about the IRA then, or the peace process when it happened.

      Because once you lose track of the big picture and start making political decisons based on emotion, you'll turn into one of the dipshits who cheer on mass murder and absolute power for barking mad leaders. And that is a lot more dangerous for the people you care about.

      And Bush != Hitler. Hitler was evil and he had a plan. I find it pretty hard to believe either about Bush. If you're lucky enough to end up chatting in a beergarden in the afterlife, I think you'll find there are few parallels between Hitler's Germany and Bush's America. Actually, you could probably figure it out now.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    138. Re:MacArthur by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Well, my hometown in NYC got bombed by the Qaeda. It didn't change the way I "feel" about the Qaeda, but it changed my priorities. I want the few people irrevocably committed to the Qaeda to be killed, the rest of their leaders jailed and interrogated for life, and the rest of them put into some kind of other life where they won't do anyone, especially me and my neighbors, any harm. Either in jail, or rebuilding their own country in peace - as long as we ensure that's how it stays. The emotion is important, because we're human, but the decision is rational. Its importance, not its direction or details, is the only aspect influenced by the emotion. To act otherwise is to pretend an inhumanity that probably only demands we kill them all.

      How does the Qaeda, or the Iraq "insurgency" that got us into this subthread relate to atombombing Japan? Well, you and I both seem to agree that the militants who bombed the people of any country are responsible, though the people they subjugated first are not. Or at least don't "deserve to be bombed" in return, because there is no validity to such a justification. And we seem to disagree with the post that got us started.

      "!=" is a boolean operator. It's a ridiculous and unacceptable way to compare two complex phenomena, and the people at their centers, like Bush and Hitler. But there are more than a few parallels between them, and some crossovers. Sure, Bush's grandfather backed Hitler's financial underpinnings in Germany, even getting busted during the war for violating the Trading with the Enemy laws. But I'm talking more about "catapulting the propaganda", which was the Goering dictum. Or burning the Reichstag. Persecuting homosexuals. Hypocritical warfare wrapped in mystical religious imagery. Demonizing "communists", while putting the people into $45T of debt, spent on corporate welfare. Developing WMD for "defense" from contrived enemies. Massive counter-socialist propaganda covering pacts with a giant Asian communist government. The merger of state and corporate power. All the fascism for which Hitler is so well known. It doesn't take dying in a world war to learn a lesson that survivors can tell us so clearly.

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      make install -not war

    139. Re:MacArthur by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Actually, given this is the internet we agree on quite a lot.

      I still don't buy the Bush/Hitler comparisons though, because they ignore the fact that Bush is basically trying to make a few rogue states a bit more like America. Whereas Hitler was trying to turn the world into Nazi Germany. And you can always vote against Bush's foreign policy, which you couldn't do with Hitler. And Hitler believed in rule by an tiny elite, and Bush is still a democrat.

      Fair enough, the Republicans have their faults - like the fact that they seem to be corrupt and economically incompetent, like the British Tories, but comparing them to Hitler is over the top.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    140. Re:MacArthur by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Bush, or more precisely his Party faction fronted by Karl Rove, is trying to convert the US to something of a theocracy. Which invades states around the world for global hegemony. Which is different from a Thousand Year Reich, but not for the hundreds of thousands or millions who will be killed by it. Mostly poor people in resource countries, but also thousands of Americans. And of course these Bush people are playing with fire, in Iran, Syria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia - which could easily turn out the way it did for Hitler, or Emperor Franz Josef.

      As for voting against Bush's foreign policy, at least 25% of the people in Ohio did that last November, who were denied voting rights due to tiny voting machine allotments. Standing for over 5 hours in literally freezing rain to vote. Which was enough for Bush to get the 65K people he needed to get the state, which was enough to get reelected. On top of all the other rigging, including Nevada, Florida, Georgia, and all the Red States where we'll never know, because the Republicans control them thoroughly. As well as the corporate media. If you're thinking that those obstacles shouldn't prevent voting him out, remember that Hitler gamed the system himself. Working within it to become the dictator, supported by laws, politicians, and the weakness of a propagandized, greedy, scared populace demanding it's comeuppance from a perceived foreign humiliation.

      Faltering in comparing fascists, with the same tricks, is a deification of them and their victims. Hitler was just a man, the Germans were just a nation. We are not only just as human as them, but our particular criminals have learned from their mistakes, and our own. Read some of the vast criminal conspiracies proven in the Watergate investigation. They included assassinations, sabotage, spying, blackmail, extortion, all kinds of abuse of federal power, intelligence/police services, military might. Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld worked for Nixon and Ford: Rumsfeld was the Sect'y of Defense who "lost Vietnam". And who cultivated the canard that "Nixon's only crime was getting caught". They're not going to make those mistakes again. So their biggest differences with Hitler, and Stalin, and even Mao, was learning from the mistakes in execution. Mainly not to rush things, not to organize their enemies into an alliance, to maintain control and a semblance of order. While torturing, killing, warring, deposing governments, rigging elections, smuggling drugs and guns. Don't let Hitler's success in appearing superhuman mask just how monstrous humans can be when they can.

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      make install -not war

  10. 'merciful' atomic bomb !? by tuxpert · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "The atomic bomb may be classified as a weapon capable of being used indiscriminately, but its use in Nagasaki was selective and proper and as merciful as such a gigantic force could be expected to be."

    Certainly disagree with the choice of words here. Selective and proper ? Maybe. Merciful ? definitely not !

    --
    -- Ravi
    1. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by PakProtector · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I've said it before and I've said it again. It saved lives.

      It saved the lives of approximately One Million US Service Personnel, and it saved the lives of Millions of Japanese Civilians and Soliders -- you see, atleast during WWII, alot of people really took that "Death before Dishonor" thing seriously, and could not be made to surrender. So the only way to force an unconditional surrender was a rather raw display of power. The Bombs were a way of saying, "We don't need to use people to decimate you -- we can do it in a manner that you cannot possibly defend against. Now, will you give up?"

      Go here and learn.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    2. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by 10Ghz · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Merciful ? definitely not !


      when is war "merciful"? Was firebombiong of Tokyo "merciful"? Was firebombing of Dresden "Merciful"? Was Battle of Stalingrad "merciful"?

      Bombing of Nagasaki was as merciful as other major operation in the war was.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    3. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by skaffen42 · · Score: 1

      Ok... but I've always wondered why they had to bomb a city. Why not just take out Mount Fuji or something? Or go after a military target to make their point?

      Not that anywbody was blameless in WW2. Broadly the Allies were the "good guys", but a lot of times they were just as bad if not worse than their enemies. But once you hear about the bombing of Dresden you start realizing that the "good guys" were a truly relative term in WW2. Or any war for that matter.

      --
      People couldn't type. We realized: Death would eventually take care of this.
    4. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by EvilMonkeySlayer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think perhaps you're missing a point here, it's not about whether it saved lives.

      It's about whether using a nuclear weapon is ever a sane thing to use, if not a war crime.
      Is victory worth the price of mass murder?

      Whether it would have saved lives or not in the long term is purely hypothetical, is the use of a nuclear weapon ever justifiable?

      I think the fact that no nuclear weapons have been used since the end of world war 2 perhaps answers that question.

      No doubt dropping chemical/biological weapons on Japan and wiping out large swathes of population centres would have won the second world war also, but would such a thing be morally justifiable? (Which can be equally applied to nuclear weapons)

    5. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by PakProtector · · Score: 1

      It was neccessary to attack population centers to prove to the Nation we were at war with that we really did mean business. It's one thing to destroy a mountain -- it's another thing to destroy a city. Killing people tends to make a bigger point than turning rocks into glass.

      On the subject of good and evil, my grandfather was a grunt in Korea and Vietnam. In war, both sides do horrible things. That is the nature of the beast. As a soldier, it is your job to do everything that you can to keep yourself alive, and the easiest and most effective way to do that is to kill people who want to kill you. Nihilism, my friend. The Negation of Negation. Make kaputt what makes you kapput.

      I am not saying it was not a great tragedy. I am not saying I feel nothing for the people who died. But it was the only way to get the job done with a minimum number of casualties. And when dropping two atomic weapons on population centers is the 'minimum of casualties,' think about the other end of the spectrum.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    6. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by PakProtector · · Score: 1, Insightful

      <annoyed>I'm sorry. You seem to me to be labouring under the misconception that war is moral, noble, and just. There is no such thing as a moral war. There is no such thing as a noble war. There is no such thing as a just war. There is only war, and war is killing, and killing is not moral, or noble, or just. There is only killing the other guy before he can kill you. There is only panic, and fear, and you don't think about anything but making them die. That's all.</annoyed>

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    7. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by EvilMonkeySlayer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Where did I mention war is moral, noble and just?

      Please, do elaborate how you came to this conclusion?

      So, what you're saying is that anything is okay when it's done in war?

      Well, I guess that means stuff like the geneva convention are a waste of time!
      Hell, lets send the enemies people into death camps so the better our war machine!
      Let us also get the captured enemy soldiers into labour camps too! Get those scum building our railways and what not!

      You're totally misunderstanding the points made, and seeing arguments where there is none in your own little world. Yes, war is nasty but does that mean everyone should also be as nasty as they can possibly be?

      Which is the point about the use of Nuclear, chemical & biological weapons. Are they ever justifiable in their use? And the answer is a most resounding, no.

    8. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by PakProtector · · Score: 1

      No. I am not saying the Geneva convention is worthless. I am saying that War is Waged by Humans, and Humans are Imperfect, and therefore they make Mistakes, and shit happens. And when 'shit happens' around 'weapons' and 'soft squishy things,' it's generally not 'fun for the whole family.'

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    9. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by seti · · Score: 1

      Thankfully Wikipedia wasn't predominantly written by prejudiced Westerners. Don't rely on it for anything that might have a slight political connotation.

      --
      Coca-Cola, sometimes War.
    10. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Illserve · · Score: 1

      People are so obsessed with the concept of nuclear that it throws all rational thought out the window.

      Millions of small weapons are still as deadly as one big one.

      Would you be as upset over a firebombing of Nagasaki that resulted in exactly as many deaths (and make no mistake, slowly dying from burn wounds without sufficient medical attention is probably as painful as radiation sickness, if such things can be measured)?

    11. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go read your J.F.C. Fuller - he had it figured out 40 years ago. Japan was ready to give up _prior_ to the bombings. But since the US was keen on an unconditional surrender, they didn't - because they feared that their Emperor would be persecuted as a war criminal.

    12. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      It's one thing to destroy a mountain -- it's another thing to destroy a city.

      But destroying the mountain may actually have made a bigger impression. The city is man-made, and has grown over time, even within a person's lifetime. What man can make, man can destroy. The mountain, in contrast, would seem to be eternal; I think you underestimate the impression such an act would have made.

      You also seem to be forgetting that even if it *didn't* have the desired effect, you still have the destruction of the cities to fall back on.

      And when dropping two atomic weapons on population centers is the 'minimum of casualties,' think about the other end of the spectrum.

      I think part of the problem is that even if not dropping the bombs resulted in more casualties, they would (presumably) have been mostly *military* casualties. While I deplore all killing, at least the armed forces should expect it, given their line of work*. They also have more of a chance to defend themselves; pitting armed men (and women) against each other seems a little more sporting than pitting them against unarmed civillians.

      (* I realise that this breaks down in the face of compulsory service, but I didn't say it was ok, just less bad - the lesser of two evils is still evil)

    13. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by the_raptor · · Score: 1

      The allies where attacking civilian populations through out most of the war. Look at what they did to cities like Dresden. Nuclear bombs just made it easier to do that sort of destruction. But more civilians died due to conventional weapons then nuclear ones. And the use of nuclear weapons was not some moral quandry given the circumstances. I am sure many of Japens oceanic neighbours at the time felt the Japanese had gotten off lightly.

      And the reason nuclear weapons haven't been used since WWII has to do with a little thing called the Cold War, and the paranoia of all things nuclear that it instilled in the west.

      --

      ========
      CINC, 4th Penguin Legion
    14. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      The allies where attacking civilian populations through out most of the war. Look at what they did to cities like Dresden.

      Take a walk through the right parts of London, and you'll see buildings that still have bomb damage from the Blitz. *Both* sides acted reprehensively, but that doesn't make it right.

      Of course, talking of right and wrong when discussing war is generally redundant.

    15. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by VP · · Score: 3, Informative

      I think one of the main reasons was to make sure the Soviets did not take over Japan. The Red Army had just defeated the main Japanese army in Manchuria [sp?], and after demonstrating that losing 20 million people in the war against Germany did not prevent them from marching to Belrin, it would have been very likely that they would have taken over Japan in due time.

    16. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by the_raptor · · Score: 1

      Yes, I know that. But the only thing that most people seem to learn about WWII is "Nazi bad". The allies weren't knights in shining armour, they were just the side that one. Given the deliberate bombing of German civilians for years, the nuclear attacks on Japen aren't some singular blemish on the allies shining moral record.

      About the only moral high ground we had over the axis was that we didn't have death camps.

      --

      ========
      CINC, 4th Penguin Legion
    17. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by torpor · · Score: 1


      But destroying the mountain may actually have made a bigger impression. The city is man-made, and has grown over time, even within a person's lifetime. What man can make, man can destroy. The mountain, in contrast, would seem to be eternal; I think you underestimate the impression such an act would have made.


      yeah, not to mention the fact that destroying a mountain instead of a population, as a demonstration to that population would've proved the compassion of the 'good guys' versus the insanity of the bad guys...

      seems to me an opportunity was missed here. compare the Americans nuking Mt. Fuji with the Japanese raping China, and it would've/could've resulted in not just a military victory, but a moral one too.

      But then, as has been pointed out, Militarists rarely value Morality over Mortality.

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    18. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Dogtanian · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It was neccessary to attack population centers to prove to the Nation we were at war with that we really did mean business. It's one thing to destroy a mountain -- it's another thing to destroy a city. Killing people tends to make a bigger point than turning rocks into glass.

      The irony is that Japan did not even surrender after Hiroshima; IIRC they did not believe the Allies had more then one atomic weapon, and it took the bombing of Nagasaki to prove that the allies Meant Business.

      Ironically again, it could also be argued that Japan's unwillingness to surrender after the dropping of the first bomb proved their stubbornness and justified the use of atomic weapons against them.

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    19. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by the_raptor · · Score: 1

      Gah, please forgive my terrible spelling. Its late.

      Grammar Nazi's bad.

      --

      ========
      CINC, 4th Penguin Legion
    20. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by PakProtector · · Score: 1

      Thank you. By all the Gods, thank you. It is so damn refreshing to find someone who understands the way the world works.

      I'm sick of all these whiny people talking about how we bombed 'cities' that were 'full of civilians' when both of the cities in question were also military targets, Hiroshima being 'the headquarters of the Fifth Division and Field Marshal Hata's 2nd General Army Headquarters, which commanded the defense of all of southern Japan', 'mobilized for "all-out" war, with thousands of conscripted women, children and Koreans working in military offices, military factories and building demolition and with women and children training to resist any invading force', and Nagasaki 'one of the largest sea ports in southern Japan and was of great wartime importance because of its wide-ranging industrial activity, including the production of ordnance, ships, military equipment, and other war materials.'

      The fact that we even skipped over certain targets that were ahead of the two, such as Kyoto, the 'city of temples' shows that we were going for what would get the Japanese to surrender, not what would outrage and incense them into fighting longer.

      And yes, most sane people, as you apparently are, all the Gods and Goddesses Bless You, would realise that if we dropped one bomb, and they didn't surrender, that they weren't going to surrender before we dropped the bomb.

      Bless you, sir/madam. Bless you.

      You, afew other sane posters, and some intelligent people in real life, along with the duct tape wrapped around my head, are all that keep it from 'sploding at all the stupidity in the world.

      May your code never SEGFAULT.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    21. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by arivanov · · Score: 1

      Seconded.

      How the f*** could it be selective and proper if the two idiots who dropped it misread the landmarks and dropped it more then 2 miles off target. It was in fact intended to hit the naval yards 5 km downstream from where it was dropped.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    22. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by telecsan · · Score: 1

      It's a large assumption to think that *not* dropping the bombs would've resulted in less non-military casualties. Civilian deaths, much as they are to be avoided, are an inevitable part of war, especially when fighting an enemy that makes a point of placing military facilities near civilian ones. Note from the article, that the author stated no-one could have placed the nuke by hand in such a way to further minimize civilian casualties without missing the primary targets of the military factories.

    23. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by PakProtector · · Score: 1

      Thank you. You are a sane individual. For some reason, people don't get anywhere near as outraged if you do it with tens of hundreds of tons of convential explosive, but as soon as you're doing it with one bomb, or, heaven forbid, something with 'nucular' infront of it, they go into a tizzy.

      I had to goto the ER last year because I had a siezure, and I made a point of it (after I regained my senses) to call it an NMRI. The doctors and nurses there did, too.

      The biggest problem is, people are frightened of what they do not understand, and people react violently to what frightens them. Most lay people don't understand 'nuclear' anything, hence the reaction to reactors, weapons, medical techniques.

      Sigh. I must say. Bless you, Illserve. May your Code never SEGFAULT.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    24. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Pecisk · · Score: 1

      Hmmmm my pick is...
      When you kill someone while defending yourself, I guess your decision could be somehow understandable. But kill 'some several ten thousand people' for the sake of 'war psyhology' is similar to terrorist who has pointed gun at your child's head and ask you to surrender.

      I simply can't follow your cold logic here. Because no human death can be justified in the way you do.

      --
      user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
    25. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Moses_Gunn · · Score: 1

      While I'll agree that both sides did questionable things during WWII, I take issue that the Allies were nearly morally equivalent to the Axis. This is simply not true. The fundamental difference between the Axis and the Allies was that the Axis was the INITIATOR of violence. Germany invaded and subjugated most of continental Europe. They tried to take Britain and the Soviet Union as well. Japan invaded and enslaved China. Italy...well, Italy conquered Ethiopia. The role of the Allies was a RESPONSE to this aggression. As another basis of comparison, ask the locals of any of these invaded countries who treated them better: their Axis overlords or their Allied liberators? If your position is that violence is NEVER justified, even in self-defense or in response to agression, that is another debate. My personal rule of thumb is that I will meet agression with any level of response necessary to protect me and mine.

    26. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by brpr · · Score: 1

      I am saying that War is Waged by Humans, and Humans are Imperfect, and therefore they make Mistakes, and shit happens. And when 'shit happens' around 'weapons' and 'soft squishy things,' it's generally not 'fun for the whole family.'

      You're missing the point. The fact that bad things happen in war is not a justification for doing bad things, any more than the fact that people get murdered is a justification for being a murderer. The military should try to minimize the number of bad things that happen, for example by not commiting war crimes.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    27. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      it saved the lives of Millions of Japanese Civilians and Soliders -- you see, atleast during WWII, alot of people really took that "Death before Dishonor" thing seriously, and could not be made to surrender. So the only way to force an unconditional surrender was a rather raw display of power.
      And truce or ceasefire with subsequent choking with naval blockade was of course, an unthinkable option?

      You see, after Vietnamies deterred your forces from their shores, they didn't find it feasible nor nescecary to escort your forces with fire back to the West Coast and then invade US, didn't they?

      Even moreso, after couple of decades of having it their way, the "winners" are back on their knees, begging for "exploitation"(investments).

      It was obvious that Japan war machine is broken never to rise again as long as their material import is under strict control, so there was no real need to chop their head off. In a matter of years, they would have been back in middle ages (or some "Mad Max" of 40's kind of society).

      But, that of course would have been loss of golden opportunity. Japan, Germany and even United Kingdom - a winner camp buddy, displayed great vitality and resourcefulness under great pressure and were not to be let alone just like that. And that is the point in timeline where US becomes almost omniruler impery. Soviets escaped debt or hostile capture and who knows, perhaps they would had made better deal to unoccupied Japan then America. That was not tollerable, leading to solution of hitting two birds with one stone: seize Japan and awe Soviets (and remind them of their east teritories), so that they don't try something funny with all that manpower in the middle of 1945. Europe.

      So, like so many times in history before, we see that "mercy" and "humanitarian" are just smokescreens in war. Even presumably objective TFA shows that "civilians are just faking it, while our boys (armed forces personel) where really thru hell" attitude.
    28. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by PakProtector · · Score: 1

      War is terrorism.

      Are you a fan of Star Trek? Remember in the second movie where Spock said, "The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few?" The persons in charge at the time weighed 200,000 human lives against the 1/+ (more life 4) million that would have been lost in invading. And those were just the projected casualties on the American side.

      So yes, it saved lives. If I was forced to choose between having 2 people killed or having killing 10, I would choose the 2, since that would be the least ammount of bloodshed.

      Every life is precious. Every life is sacred. But one must accept that there are times when people will die, when they will be killed. And that is when you try to make sure as few die as possible.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    29. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by pHatidic · · Score: 1

      Except for that if we were trying to make them surrender, why would we censor stories about the bomb? If we were trying to make them surrender then we would want as many people to know about it as possible. I always believed your point of view, but this new story published today is definitely evidence that that point of view may be revisionist history.

    30. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by HomerJayS · · Score: 1
      I think part of the problem is that even if not dropping the bombs resulted in more casualties, they would (presumably) have been mostly *military* casualties.

      In WWII, Germany sustained roughly 3.25 million military and 2.5 million civilian casualties. About 550,000 of the civilian casualties were attributed to air raids. Meaning 2 million Germans died in the crossfire or starvation during the Allied invasion of Germany.

      An invasion of the Japanese mainland almost certainly would have produced a silimar ratio of civilian to military casualties. In the end, more civilians likely would have died as a result of a more civilized invasion than by using the Bombs.

    31. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by the_raptor · · Score: 1

      The Allies where certainly justified, but some people have a white washed view of WWII. And you see it in films about the conflict. The evil Nazi's bombing women and children, and then the valiant RAF flying off to bomb purely military targets. That is simply rubbish. The allies deliberately bombed civilians knowing that it had only a questionable effect on enemy morale. It became simply a matter of retaliation. Personally I feel it was justified, I just can't stand white washing of the truth.

      And by the way, I think a fair few people in eastern Europe actually preferred the Nazi's to the Soviets. Most people at the time didn't actually like the Jews, they where persecueted for hundreds of years in Europe. And nearly everyone loathed the communists.

      --

      ========
      CINC, 4th Penguin Legion
    32. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by jackbird · · Score: 1

      But that invasion that's thrown up as the alternative never would have happened, especially after the first bomb. Nagasaki was about ending the war before the Soviets could get involved, to avoid in Tokyo what was happening in Berlin. Something the citizens of Nagasaki really couldn't be less involved in.

    33. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by PakProtector · · Score: 1

      Which is exactly what they did. On one side of the scales they put the lives that would be taken by dropping the bombs (about 200,000). On the other side they put the lives that would be lost in invading ( 400,000 to 800,000 fatalities out of 1.7 to 4 million total casualties, and that's just the US Military Casualties) and found that the lesser evil was to drop the bombs.

      I'd say they did the best thing they could.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    34. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by brpr · · Score: 1

      Which is exactly what they did. On one side of the scales they put the lives that would be taken by dropping the bombs (about 200,000). On the other side they put the lives that would be lost in invading ( 400,000 to 800,000 fatalities out of 1.7 to 4 million total casualties, and that's just the US Military Casualties) and found that the lesser evil was to drop the bombs.

      What about the third alternative, negotiating a conditional surrender? And the casualty figures for a land invasion are clearly very, very worst case. I'm pretty sure that's more casualties than the US military had sufffered in the Pacific theatre to date.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    35. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by PakProtector · · Score: 1

      They knew about it a few short hours after it happened. They sent a plane with officers there, and the officers made a full report about it. Considering the fact that the Mushroom Cloud was still visible, and the city was still burning (what was left of it) when they got there, I'd say they knew the scorecard. The most probable reason they did not surrender after the first bomb is, as others have said, the Japanese Military did not believe the United States possessed another such weapon.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    36. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by BJH · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Oh for fuck's sake, if you're going to be a reactionary redneck at least get your facts straight.

      What part of "women and children" did you miss in those passages you quoted? Or was everybody in Japan classified as a combatant in your eyes?

      Kyoto was skipped over purely because a couple of people in the US Administration (and one of the general's wives, apparently) couldn't bear the thought of not being able to go sightseeing there after the war.

      The second bomb was dropped before the Japanese government had actually made any official response to the first bombing (it took quite a while for the full extent of the damage to reach other areas, for one thing). How did the US Government "know" Japan wouldn't surrender? Perhaps they were psychic? Or perhaps, just maybe, they wanted to try out their shiny new plutonium weapon that's never been tested (seeing as how both Trinity and the Hiroshima bomb were uranium-based weapons)?

      Now go fuck off, you idiot. In case you hadn't noticed, history isn't always as simple as it appears in the excuses for textbooks that you apparently used in school.

    37. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by chrysrobyn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I've said it before and I've said it again. It saved lives.

      Educate me.

      Fix Wikipedia.

      I won't say you're wrong. I will say that I can't be as certain as you are without knowing a lot of facts modern historians don't know the answers to. The fact is, I don't know the truth and I believe nobody ever will. I don't think the Japanese, Americans or Soviets knew everything that was going on. Nuclear war certainly wasn't on the table when Japan decided to make its move. How do you evaluate a risk like that when scientists haven't even proven it works?

      It saved the lives of approximately One Million US Service Personnel, and it saved the lives of Millions of Japanese Civilians and Soliders

      The bombings claimed 70,000+ lives in Nagasaki (they recently released the list of names) about 130,000 in Hiroshima, an additional 65,000 are estimated to have died from fallout. How many US lives would not dropping the bombs cost? Japanese lives? How many Soviet lives would it have cost, if they had finished up getting over China to Kyushu where, by modern theory, the Soviets would have accepted a conditional surrender of the Japanese, ending the war only two weeks after the atomic bombs were dropped? (57M/8 years /52 weeks in a year = 137,000 per week, 270,000 in 2 weeks and that's a severe overestimate because the Mediterranian and European theaters were over by then). Please cite some sources for killing 3 million people inside of two weeks.

      How many generations does a life cost? The murdered children? The pregnant women? The women still yet to get pregnant? (Men are easy to count.) The bad will the US earned from the rest of the world by being the only nation to use atomic weapons in war?

      Maybe the atomic bombs saved lives in the short term. Heck, maybe Japan would have been communist otherwise and the cold war would have not been so cold because someone would need to use the weapons in wartime to prove their effectiveness.

      We're just guessing here. There are no clear cut answers. The fact of the matter is, the US had two reasons, one was saving US servicemen lives (accomplished) and two was saving Japan (and the rest of the world) from them falling to the communists (accomplished). The rest of it is retrospective optimism.

      Next time you state that the atomic bombs saved lives -- without any room for question or flexibility, I'll meet you at the Peace Park in Nagasaki. We'll walk across the street together to the Atomic Bomb Museum. You just hold your head high knowing the US made the right decision. Watch how the Japanese react to your confidence. Cast aside everything inside as propaganda, because that's what it'll take not to put your American / European education into perspective.

      So the only way to force an unconditional surrender was a rather raw display of power. The Bombs were a way of saying, "We don't need to use people to decimate you -- we can do it in a manner that you cannot possibly defend against. Now, will you give up?"

      I agree with everything you just said. Now how many lives did it cost by dragging the war out an extra month by demanding an unconditional surrender, as suggested by then-Secretary of War Henry Stimson? (By the way, if we're going to discuss "intent to save lives", let's discuss the plan to nuke all the defenses on Kyushu before sending servicemen in to prevent another Normandy, shall we? At least

    38. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Sithgunner · · Score: 1

      You or no one obviously seen the situation when the bomb didn't fell. Now stop writing in BOLD that it SAVED lives, geez.

      For one apparent fact, it KILLED amount of life you can't possibly imagine.

    39. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by PakProtector · · Score: 1

      There were over 100,000 US Casualties in the Pacific Theatre by the time the first Bomb was dropped. There were not OVER 200,000, but I can't find the exact statistic at the moment. So I probably shouldn't be spitting the number out.

      And there was no choice to have conditional surrender. It had already been rejected. The Japanese had to know that they had been defeated, utterly and completely.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    40. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by brpr · · Score: 1

      And there was no choice to have conditional surrender. It had already been rejected. The Japanese had to know that they had been defeated, utterly and completely.

      Your casualty figures prove my point: that the casualty figures for a land invasion seem extremely pessimistic. It was well known at the time that there was a significant amount of support within the Japanese government (not so much the military) for a conditional surrender. It was not necessary for the Japanese to know that they had been defeated "utterly and completely". It was only necessary to end the war with terms favorable to the Americans and with the minimal loss of life. This was very likely possible without the use of atomic weapons. And in fact, the use of atomic weapons did not bring about an unconditional surrender anyway.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    41. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by BJH · · Score: 1

      You're not likely to get a sensible reply out of him, but I'd just like to thank you for a truly well-reasoned, well-argued post, which is a rare thing here.

    42. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by deimtee · · Score: 1

      Do you have any idea how little damage an A-bomb would do to a mountain?
      If you could bury a 50 MT H-bomb half a mile inside you might make a noticable difference, but an A-bomb on the surface would scorch a few rocks.

      --
      I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
    43. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Flower · · Score: 1
      Why not? We already know that the firebombing of Tokyo killed as many civilians as Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined. Do you think we would have killed less over the months it would have taken to win the war with conventional weapons? Do you think we would have only hit military targets if we didn't have the Bomb? Have you considered how the equation changes for the reconstruction of Japan? How many more people die as basic serivces are being rebuilt across an entire country whose industrial capacity has been eradicated during the course of conventional bombing? What about allocating medical personnel and other relief aid?

      Would we have reconstructed Japan? There's a scary thought. If we had paid the higher cost and lost a million more men to take Japan conventionally how would that have affected our efforts? I'd like to say it wouldn't but I look back at Germany after WWI and I'm not sure. If we failed to pick up the burden would countries like China and Korea have picked up the slack? What price would Japan have had to pay under those circumstances?

      I'm not saying that what happened wasn't terrible. I wish it hadn't happened. But I will say that I can see alternate scenerios to the ending of WWII in which Japan suffers orders of magnitudes more than if we hadn't dropped the bomb. Taken in that light, I think the GP's statement can be said to have merit.

      --
      I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
    44. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The irony is that Japan did not even surrender after Hiroshima; IIRC they did not believe the Allies had more then one atomic weapon, and it took the bombing of Nagasaki to prove that the allies Meant Business.

      Please stop talking out of your ass. You haven't got a clue.

    45. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by dr_dank · · Score: 1

      For some reason, people don't get anywhere near as outraged if you do it with tens of hundreds of tons of convential explosive, but as soon as you're doing it with one bomb, [wikipedia.org] or, heaven forbid, something with 'nucular' infront of it, they go into a tizzy.

      Conventional bombs don't cause radioactive fallout, decimate cities in one fell swoop, make soil unusable, and poison millions with radiation.

      Don't get me wrong, an equivalent number of bombs can be just as destructive, but the radiation left behind by a nuke can kill more than originally killed by the blast itself.

      --
      Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
    46. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Moses_Gunn · · Score: 1

      I can't disagree that we get a somewhat rosier picture of what the Allies did than what is probably reality. Although, some movies tend to be a bit more honest. Saving Private Ryan had some pretty telling moments ("Don't shoot them...let them burn!" comes to mind). One of the principles of total war is that EVERYONE is a target...civilians can work in bomb factories. That makes them the enemy, too.

      True also what you said about the Soviets. They were incredibly brutal. I tend to remove them from being our allies immediately after the end of the war...it was pretty clear by then that we were going to have to fight them sooner or later. Not to mention the fact that they too came as conquerers...once they moved over a territory they never left it.

      At any rate, I think the bottom line is that war is a horrible, ugly thing that should be avoided at all costs. But when it is staring you in the face, my belief is that you should do whatever is in your power to end it as quickly as possible. This isn't meant as a justification of vicious acts of pure malevolence, however...as we are seeing today, that only serves to fuel future wars that you will have to fight with even more destructive weapons.

    47. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by rjh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      First, thank you for a reasoned and thoughtful response.

      Secondly, I believe you're wrong.

      What I often see from those who condemn The Bomb's use at Hiroshima and Nagasaki is revisionist morality. We know today, thanks to the experiences at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, how terrible are the consequences of nuclear warfare. We didn't know then; we'd had precisely one successful nuclear test. Our knowledge was--as it still is today--sadly limited.

      Likewise, if our knowledge of the political situation of WW2 Japan today is so sketchy, how can we expect people of the day to have had any better knowledge? Yes, it's true we insisted on unconditional surrender. Yes, it's true the Japanese were making noises about less-than-unconditional surrender, but the peace factions of the Japanese Cabinet were never able to decide what "less-than-unconditional" meant. And even after the two Bombs were dropped, the war-at-any-price faction of the Cabinet tried to stage a military coup in order to prevent the Emperor from being able to surrender at all. What I read from history is the Japanese government was disintegrating and the militarists were still running things: the peace faction had no unity, but the militarists were quite united in their desire to see the nation burn to a cinder before any surrender would take place.

      Regarding a "plan to nuke all the defenses on Kyushu before sending servicemen in", you should know as well as anybody else that's what militaries do: they plan. Right now, the United States Government has SIOPs--nuclear warfare plans--which cover every conceivable contingency: limited exchange, strategic exchange, population attacks, strategic resource attacks, infrastructure attacks... militaries make far, far more plans than they will ever use. Militaries make these plans so that, in the event the world takes a direction they weren't expecting, they can have a game plan. If we had a plan to nuke all the defenses on Kyushu, that by itself is no evidence at all unless you also have General MacArthur--himself an opponent of nuclear warfare--advocating the use of that plan.

      What I see from history is this. We didn't know what was going on inside the Japanese political machine. (We still don't know today.) We didn't know how the Japanese political machine would react to The Bomb. We didn't know how the Japanese political machinery would react if we didn't drop The Bomb. We. Didn't. Know.

      What we did know is we were against a foe which practiced total war, one in which even schoolchildren were forcibly conscripted into helping the war effort. We were against a foe which had commited countless atrocities in China and in the Pacific. We knew from the Battle of Okinawa that they would fight to the last man. All right, so we drop The Bomb and we pray history will be forgiving. It'd be nice to do a demonstration, but... we only have two of these things, and future devices will not be immediately forthcoming.

      (Do you know what the Soviet response time was to a nuclear strike in the 1950s and 1960s? Six weeks. Know what our response time was like? Four weeks. Prior to modern nuke design and ICBMs, these things were extraordinarily difficult to maintain. They couldn't be built and put into storage for later use; they had to be built when they were needed. If in the 1950s our nuclear response time was 30 days, what was it like in 1945?)

      So if we only have two of these devices, and they must be used within days of final assembly or else the bombs are useless, and we're not going to get more bombs anytime soon... can we really afford to not go after strategic targets?

      Hiroshima. Gone.

      It wasn't the right choice to make. When dealing in war, atomic or conventional, the only right choice is not to start. But Hiroshima was the least-wrong of a whole passel of bad options. In hindsight, should we have conducted things differently? Of course. But we can't judge Truman based on what we know in hindsight. We can only judge him based on what he knew when he gave the order.

    48. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by rtb144 · · Score: 1

      Give me your address, so I can come punch you in the mouth and rape your significant other. If you shoot me or injure me beyond what others think is necessary to defend yourself, you are the bad guy too. Do you really believe this crap? You are a moron.

      --
      Sie ist tunbar!
    49. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Johnny+Mnemonic · · Score: 1

      Nuclear war certainly wasn't on the table when Japan decided to make its move...

      EVERYTHING is on the table. Anyone that tells you that war has rules and boundaries have more faith in diplomacy than is warranted.

      Here's the lesson that we should come away with: if you start something, you'd better be prepared to end it (*). Discounting technological advancements of your opponent (**), or indeed any other surprise maneuvers, is to give a predictability to warfare that has simply never existed.

      Ask the Spanish Armada. Think they were innocent of aggression because they weren't supposed to lose?

      (*) A lesson that our own administration seems to have forgotten. Both sides can read a force chart; if you're on the losing side, do you fight bravely and die? Or do you change the rules of the engagement to your advantage as much as possible?

      (**) Indeed, a great many, even majority, of technological advancements have been spurred by the desire to outmaneuver an opponent. That this occurred in World War II as well should surprise no one. That it surprised the Japanese is a testament to their arrogance.

      --

      --
      $tar -xvf .sig.tar
    50. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by rikkus-x · · Score: 1

      You seem remarkably keen to provide justification for these atrocities. I submit that you find yourself unable to deal with the guilt felt by any normal human on having any association, however slight, with the perpetrators of these crimes against humankind.

    51. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      First of all, American's always demand unconditional surrender. It's been that way since the Civil War, and is neccessary to ensure political control at war's end. Second, even though American's publically demanded it, they did not privatly demand it. Hence the emperor stayed on after Japan's defeat.

      BTW, the conditions that a _minority position_ in the Japanese government were asking for prior to the atomic bombings included keeping China. That's not surrender.

      As for the atomic bombs, the alternative war plans are now public information, so I suggest that you educate yourself. Troops were already being transitioned to the pacific for the "big jump" on Japan.

      There internal projections were for anything from 300,000 to 1 millon American casulties in such a invasion. Using the european ratio of 3:1 casulties between armies that translates to a millon to 3 millon Japanese dead. This view is massivly pollyanna. During the pacific island hopping phases they had seen almost 100% civilian and millitary casulties. The Japanese forced their own populations to commit suicide rather then surrender to the Americans on the islands) and less then 1% of the japanese forces surrendered.

      Now imagine what it would be like if we actually invaded their homes.

      This is why the Navy was calling for another starvation blockade rather then a invasion. Macarthur was pushing for a invasion, and it would have left both Japan and the United States devistated.

      How could you not use the bomb knowing only what they knew then? How could you use the bomb know knowing what we know now? It's a horrible paradox.

    52. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by KlomDark · · Score: 1

      As anti-war as I am, that still rings with me as "Hey, they had it coming...". They attacked us, sneaky-style even, in Pearl Harbor.

      No Bush-like bullshit like we get today about "Well, a bunch of Saudi's attacked us, led by an ex-Saudi in Afghanistan, so let's go attack Iraq based on several lines of bullshit."

      No, instead it was 'respectable', no shady bullshit, no pack of lies, instead the straight-out truth - They just fucked with us and killed a bunch of us for no good reason (We weren't in the war at the time, and weren't playing 'Empire' back then either, all this global police force bullshit we pull all over the place these days.) So we did normal, justifiable, CavemanLogic(TM) and hit them right back. And instead of the Cavemen with the sticks and stones that they expected, we instead brought out the attack mammoths that they didn't know we had.

      Straight out "we love you too!" warfare, non of the sneaky shit we pull today. So dropping the bombs was a good thing, sorry to the civilians who got taken out, but a population has the responsibility to keep it's government under control, and they failed at that, as we are failing today. A lesson we need to learn.

      Also, while going to the theoretical - how many small skirmishs would have taken place from other places if someone didn't just finish it with the big +4 magic Vorpal bomb? After that, people chilled out a bit. Still minor wars, but no world wars for nearly 55 years.

      We'll see what we're getting into now. We are fucking with everyone, China's starting to fuck with us. It's going to get really nasty soon, regardless of all the propaganda we're being shovelled. Trying the "Defeat them with Capitalism" trick (that worked with the USSR) a second time doesn't seem to be working so well this time. US v China will be WWIII, and the stage is getting set around us now. Watch what's going on behind the scenes, and ignore the current lies you are being fed by the big media.

    53. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by $lashdot · · Score: 1
      Please cite some sources for killing 3 million people inside of two weeks.

      This is a red herring. If the atomic bombs saved even one American life more than conventional warfare would have cost, then they were worthwhile. War is not about accounting for the other side's losses--the Japanese certainly recognized that, or they wouldn't have attacked everyone.

      Next time you state that the atomic bombs saved lives -- without any room for question or flexibility, I'll meet you at the Peace Park in Nagasaki. We'll walk across the street together to the Atomic Bomb Museum. You just hold your head high knowing the US made the right decision. Watch how the Japanese react to your confidence. Cast aside everything inside as propaganda, because that's what it'll take not to put your American / European education into perspective.

      I'm sure that they'll understand my point of view when I show up with my Rape of Nanking t-shirt. I bet the Japanese really respect your self-loathing.

      Now how many lives did it cost by dragging the war out an extra month by demanding an unconditional surrender, as suggested by then-Secretary of War Henry Stimson?

      What a dumb move that turned out to be, what with all the wars Japan has fought with its neighbors since 1945. You know, we demanded an unconditional surrender from the European members of the Axis, too, or do you only make Sino-Euro equivalency arguments when you want to make the USA look mean?

    54. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by cgenman · · Score: 1

      And I'm sure if Germany got the bomb first and nuked New York City it would be seen as merciful and saving lives.

      Whether or not you're statistically correct that nuking Japan saved lives, to those of us who lost family in Hiroshima and Nagasaki the argument is in pretty fucking poor taste.

    55. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      Because even complete destruction of two cities plus the firebombing of Tokyo plus the majority destruction of almost every other city was not enough to convience most of the leadership to surrender. Even after Hirohito overruled the cabinet and forced a surrender he was almost deposed.

      Don't put a 2005 mentality on it. Look at the actual historical record. These guys were already convienced that they were going to die, and it was going to be honarable and glorious.

    56. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by drMental · · Score: 1

      Actually it would probably melt the ice caps pretty effectively and cause mass flooding with thousands of casualties. But at least it would show the Japanese we are humane people, willing to drown civilians like rats.

    57. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > For one apparent fact, it KILLED amount of life you can't possibly imagine.

      "I dunno about you, but I can imagine quite a bit."

      50,000,000 people died in WW2. The casualties from the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were drops in the proverbial bucket.

      Hitler racked up about 10,000,000 domestic casualties. Stalin and Mao both pwned him by racking up domestic scores in the 20,000,000-50,000,000 each, and Mao got most of his points during peacetime. (Pol Pot, retired from the game with a comparatively measly 2,000,000, beat all three of 'em if you score on percentage-of-population)

      Bottom line: If 200-300K dead is a body count "you can't possibly imagine", you need to expand your imagination, my friend.

    58. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We got into the war because we were bombed by the Japanese at Perl Harbor.

      Later the Japanese would take Midway and kill all of the civilians on the island. They also took our Marines hostage, subsiquently killing many of them as POWs.

      While we're talking about bloody hands, let's not forget who did what first.

    59. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Next time you state that the atomic bombs saved lives -- without any room for question or flexibility, I'll meet you at the Peace Park in Nagasaki. We'll walk across the street together to the Atomic Bomb Museum. You just hold your head high knowing the US made the right decision. Watch how the Japanese react to your confidence.

      I'll meet you there after we first meet at the USS Arizona Memorial in Pearl Harbor.

    60. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      Please stop talking out of your ass. You haven't got a clue.

      I know you're modest, but why not log in and get the credit for such a comprehensive, well thought-out argument?

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    61. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1
      It's one thing to destroy a mountain -- it's another thing to destroy a city.
      But destroying the mountain may actually have made a bigger impression.
      The only problem being that the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs weren't anyware near powerful enough to "destroy a mountain".
      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    62. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by argStyopa · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I won't say you're wrong. I will say that I can't be as certain as you are without knowing a lot of facts modern historians don't know the answers to. The fact is, I don't know the truth and I believe nobody ever will. I don't think the Japanese, Americans or Soviets knew everything that was going on. Nuclear war certainly wasn't on the table when Japan decided to make its move. How do you evaluate a risk like that when scientists haven't even proven it works?

      While I agree with your doubt about ever knowing the truth of the matter, I disagree with your assessment of the OP's interpretation (or more accurately, their certainty) as being ethnocentrist. I think you are similarly 'filtering' the data in this case.

      In August of 1945, it's naive to suggest that the US was intent on saving lives. The focus of the US government was to win the war. Win it, not end it: the Relativist world of 2005 has seen the distinction severely blurred.

      If the war could be won and American lives saved in the process, great. But in a real war where national survival is at stake, the butcher's bill (even of your own soldiers) is merely an item in the cost-benefit calculation that needs to be made. Japanese lives lost were, given the context, utterly disregarded.

      The retrospective condemnation of the atomic bombings (and the probably more credible but less newsworthy criticism of LeMay's firebombing campaigns) only makes sense if one fails to regard that the decisions were not being made in the comfortable hindsight of 2005 but in the grim reality of 1945.

      Japanese civilians unfortunately paid the price for the heinous conduct of the IJA for the prevoius 4 years. To suggest there was any reasonable way for the American government to spare the innocent and punish the guilty is a luxury not available in 1945, nor even today.

      I would take your offer to walk in the Peace Park, and through the museum because I have. I've also walked through Dachau, been to Pearl Harbor, and spoken to many survivors of Japanese PoW camps.

      I have absolutely no problem with the idea that what the US did to Hiroshima and Nagasaki was necessary. This does not mean it wasn't horrific, tragic, and terrible. And they likewise do not cancel out the necessity.

      As for your further points, one could easily argue that the catastrophic power unleashed over those two Japanese cities, and the subsequent nuclear and thermonuclear buildup that followed was the ONLY thing that kept the two world superpowers from getting into a direct war with each other. Acknowledging the dubious value of a sample size of ONE, it's still possible to point to the MAD doctrine and say "it worked". What would have been the cost of a conventional war between the US and Russia immediately following WW2?

      Again, I have no problem saying with absolute certainy that the US dropping the bombs on Japan was necessary and ultimately saved more lives.

      --
      -Styopa
    63. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by DemiKnute · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Next time you state that the atomic bombs saved lives -- without any room for question or flexibility, I'll meet you at the Peace Park in Nagasaki. We'll walk across the street together to the Atomic Bomb Museum. You just hold your head high knowing the US made the right decision. Watch how the Japanese react to your confidence. Cast aside everything inside as propaganda, because that's what it'll take not to put your American / European education into perspective.


      So? My American/European education is hopelessly biased by propaganda, but the Japanese, a nation with a long history of authoritarian government and absolute obediance by the populace is perfectly neutral? The same government that still portrays the war as a war of American aggression?

      Baatan Death March. Rape of Nanking (or as the Japanese call it, the "Nanking incident"). The vivisection and forced cannibalism of American POWs. Sex slaves.

      You're going to have to go a long way to make me feel bad about what happened to the Japanese, regardless of how justifiable the bombings were.
      --
      .
    64. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Illserve · · Score: 1

      So can the fire, starvation and disease of a normal bomb.

      Stop kidding yourself that radiation sickness is special in some way. Dying from the aftermath of war really sucks. Surviving isn't a picnic either.

    65. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Flower · · Score: 1
      It's about whether using a nuclear weapon is ever a sane thing to use, if not a war crime.

      It took years afterwards to fully understand the impact of what happened when you dropped an atomic bomb. Before the first test detonation there were theories that one bomb would wipe out the atmosphere.

      Is victory worth the price of mass murder?

      Would it have not been mass murder if we had just bombed all of Japan with conventional bombs? Does the fact that one bomb used U-232 outweigh the use of a million bombs that used TNT? Are you really naive enough to think that Hiroshima and Nagasaki would have been passed by in a conventional scenerio? How about Kyoto? etc. etc.

      I think the fact that no nuclear weapons have been used since the end of world war 2 perhaps answers that question.

      No. More like it proves the adage "Hindsight is 20/20."

      No doubt dropping chemical/biological weapons on Japan and wiping out large swathes of population centres would have won the second world war also, but would such a thing be morally justifiable? (Which can be equally applied to nuclear weapons)

      WWI taught us the horrors of biological and chemical agents along with the pitfalls in their use since they were indiscriminate weapons when it came to friend v foe. Remember hindsight? 20/20? Why mess with them when we just could have used conventional bombs that we were churning out on well established production lines?

      --
      I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
    66. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by TGK · · Score: 1

      I'm not disagreeing that Peral Harbor sucked and was an escalation that the United States wasn't expecting.

      I'm not disagreeing that Japan did carry out a sneak attack (though on accident, they did try to deliver notice of the attack).

      What I am disagreeing with is that it was unprovoked. The US had cut off Japanese oil supplies. Japan's military machine had a few short months in which to move before it was paralized by the oil embargo. Japan knew that any attempts to seize oil producing resources in S.E. Asia would meet with stiff resistance from the US and that war was coming. They sought to strike at Peral, paralizing our fleet long enough to establish an oil supply in the Pacific. Once established, and without Peral as a refuling depot, the Japanese fleet would be able to keep the American fleet at arms length, eliminating the possibilty of a Pacific front.

      In short, the Japanse strike on Peral was actualy a great deal like the US bombings of Hiroshima and Nagisaki -- though preemptive. Knock the opponent out of the game, doing minimal damage and risking minimal losses.

      Unfortunately for Japan, the 3rd wave of planes never flew from the carrier strike force. Those planes were to target US fuel depots on Peral which housed roughly a years worth of oil for the fleet. Without that oil, US forces would have been forced to return to San Fransisco to refuel, severely curtailing effectiveness in the Pacific.

      Yommomoto chose not to send the 3rd wave because the resistance on Peral was becoming too severe, particulary from US fighters defending the harbor.

      In may historian's eyes, that decision cost Japan the war.

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    67. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by pizen · · Score: 1

      The other interesting thing is that Fat Man (the bomb dropped on Nagasaki) was the last atomic device the US had. If Japan hadn't surrendered there was no third atomic option.

    68. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I often see from those who condemn The Bomb's use at Hiroshima and Nagasaki is revisionist morality. (etc.)

      So, you think people have the right to "kill now" if they think that this will "save lives later"?

      People are free to do what they want for the reasons they want, but murder is still murder.

      If it's not then maybe I'll go murder a few SUV owners. Hey, I'm helping the environment, giving the planet a few more centuries lifetime... how many lives does THAT buy, huh?

    69. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Bender0x7D1 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I'm not sure what you mean by "nuclear response time", but I recently read a book called "Day of Trinity", which was a history of the months before, and weeks after, the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In response to your "What was the nuclear response time" question, there was enough nuclear material available that there was a serious discussion on dropping a third bomb before the surrender was signed.

      Sure, the US wasn't capable of reducing Japan to a nuclear wasteland at that time, but even 2 or 3 more bombs would have had a devastating effect.

      Also remember that at this time the US was still horrified at the "unfair" bombing of Pearl Harbor, and the nation had finished the war in Europe so huge amounts of resources were becoming available for the war in the Pacific. If someone had blind-sided you with a bat, giving you a concussion, and a few years later you had a shotgun aimed at them, (with no chance of being convicted for murder - it is war after all), there would be a lot of temptation to pull the trigger. It might not be morally right, but we are human and, historically, morally right usually takes a back seat to the fight or flight instinct.

      --
      Reading code is like reading the dictionary - you have to read half of it before you can go back and understand it.
    70. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      How long would it have taken to build another one or more atomic bombs?

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    71. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      It's crap like this (both absolutist views of this argument that is) that will lead to us repeating the same mistakes of the past.

      You did it.
      No, you did it.
      You're at fault.
      No, you're at fault.
      You did horrible things.
      No, you did horrible things.

      War sucks. It's all pain and misery. All sides in WWII did horrible things. It's better that we remember that than try to prove one side was better than another in retrospect.

      Remember this if nothing else: WWII is history. It cannot be changed, it can only be learned from.

      I strongly suggest learning about WWII over fighting about WWII, lest we condemn ourselves to repeat our past mistakes.

      --
      No Comment.
    72. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by metamatic · · Score: 1
      Well, I guess that means stuff like the geneva convention are a waste of time! Hell, lets send the enemies people into death camps so the better our war machine! Let us also get the captured enemy soldiers into labour camps too! Get those scum building our railways and what not!

      Cut it out, Mr President.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    73. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by TGK · · Score: 1

      You're engaging in a falacy historians call Anacronism. Namely, you're judging the actions and decisions of the past by the standards of the present.

      Consider the decisions made at the time in light of what was known at the time. Atomic Weapons were considered to be just really socking great explosive devices. The concept of radiation or radiation sickness was totaly unknown. Moreover, the idea that, after fission, these weapons could create this affect was beyond imagining.

      Consider this -- the use of large quantities of high explosive devices and the use of large high explosive devices (MOABs) meet with little or no objection in modern warfare. Given that 1940's science did not distinguish between these weapons in terms of effect, why should 1940's morality distinguish between them?

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    74. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by TGK · · Score: 1

      And in the 1940s no one had any idea that the after affects of a nuclear weapon would be anything like that. It would be one thing if Truman was told this and ignored it, but no one knew at the time.

      How can we draw a moral distinction and judge Truman based upon it if that moral distinction is based on scientific information that wasn't available 60 years ago

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    75. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by 0see3 · · Score: 1

      The dropping of the bombs didn't save any lives. This simple idea comes from the many facts hindsight gave us after the war. Japan was readily on the verge of surrender for months before the bombs were dropped, yet no diplomatic routes were taken leading up to the bomb's use. I'm not saying that more personel would have been killed, but the facts are this. The bombs were dropped on CIVILIAN populations. War factories or not, they were manned by civilians, much like the cities in the US at that time of the war, and killing civilians was against the terms of war the US prided itself on then, and even now. Also, the dropping of the TWO bombs was specifically aimed at the Russians. We dropped 1 to make Japan surrender perhaps, but the day after the 1st bomb was dropped, the Soviet Union started attacking and pushing back Japanese forces in Manchuria and China, hoping to gain a foothold in Asia like it had in Eastern Europe. The US didn't want this, and dropped a 2nd bomb days later to prove to the USSR what power it had, and they didn't have. The bombs cost more Japanese civilian lives than it could have possibly saved had the US taken much better routes, none of which would have involved wholescale invasion of the Japanese islands. But hey, let's keep teaching this BS to our kids in school. If they hear it enough, maybe someone will rewrite the history books so it looks like the US never made any mistakes, or hell, commited mass war crimes (that we were never put on trial for).

      --
      "I lost my genitals in a fire"
    76. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by pizen · · Score: 1

      I don't know. Three devices were originally built. Trinity ("The Gadget") was the original device that was tested but was attached to a rig in the desert and not a deployable bomb of any kind. Little Boy and Fat Man were built but that was it for atomic bombs at the time (and were not the same bomb design). There were two different designs because there were two research paths in the Manhattan Project. Little Boy was a uranium-235 bomb and Fat Man was plutonium-239. Given the pace of the Manhattan Project they probably only had enough uranium-235 and plutonium-239 prepared for the three bombs. The US made more Fat Man bombs after the war (but not too many due to it's delicate nature) but probably couldn't have produced a third deployable bomb in the time frame necessary for the Japan bombings (Hiroshima and Nagasaki were three days apart).

      References:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Project
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fat_Man

    77. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by skaffen42 · · Score: 1

      Uhm. I think your argument isn't very well thought out. I'd say this would be more a case of me going over and burning down your house in self-defence, partly because I wanted to see how my new flame thrower works on inhabited buildings.

      Oh, and fuck you, you clueless asshole.

      --
      People couldn't type. We realized: Death would eventually take care of this.
    78. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1
      By the way, if we're going to discuss "intent to save lives", let's discuss the plan to nuke all the defenses on Kyushu before sending servicemen in to prevent another Normandy, shall we? At least 7 bombs would have been ready by 1 November.
      No. After Fat Man was dropped on Nagasaki, weapons productions was about 1 every 2-3 weeks.

      Furthermore, Kyushu wasn't defended by forts that could be bombed individually. It was defended by dozens of airfields and thousands of individuals strong points.

      Furthermore, there was no co-ordinated planning between the 509th (or any other atomic command) and the other commanders in theatre.

      Next time you state that the atomic bombs saved lives -- without any room for question or flexibility, I'll meet you at the Peace Park in Nagasaki. We'll walk across the street together to the Atomic Bomb Museum. You just hold your head high knowing the US made the right decision. Watch how the Japanese react to your confidence.
      I will proudly do so - because I am swayed by history and facts, not by the reactions of a few.
      Cast aside everything inside as propaganda, because that's what it'll take not to put your American / European education into perspective.
      Everything inside can be pure fact - but that won't change the truth.
    79. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      Shit man, what side in a war is going to go: "Well, we could beat our enemy by using these technologies, but they aren't nice enough so we won't use them and will have our asses handed to us on a platter, served up using the same technologies we decided not to use."

      Sounds great!

      Don't parallel something like using the bomb to the attrocities that the nazi's did in Germany. The bomb was used in a battle against our enemy that we did not create. The nazi's were committing genocide against their own people. The people the bomb was dropped on were actively involved in waging war against the US. The people that were killed by the Nazi's were captives, prisoners etc etc. They were most certainly not actively supporting the Allies when they were gassed or whatever else. The entire nation of Japan on the other hand was.

      This is not exactly a grey area, save for the moral elite whom have never been anywhere near a real war and feel free to write off their current freedom, stepping on the backs of their ancestors that had to make the hard decisions to do so no less, and attempt to condemn the history that got them to where they are today.

      I've read stories about the bombs being dropped on Japan from the point of view of the Japanese that basically state that they were glad that it happened because otherwise they would have had no way to exit the war while saving face. Note that culturally, it was not even an option to do something that wouldn't save face. They could not just surrender unconditionally. Americans just don't get this point.

      Also, it's well advised to look into how the Japanese remember what happened, and what they take from it now. I fully believe that the Japanese have learned one HELL of a lot more from WWII than the US has. They will NOT make the same mistakes again. Unfortunately, the US has made numerous mistakes over and over again since then that they wouldn't have if they had actually learned anything from that war.

      --
      No Comment.
    80. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      Or it could be thought of as, "See how stupid the Americans are. They missed us completely they deserve to be dominated."

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    81. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if we only have two of these devices, and they must be used within days of final assembly or else the bombs are useless, and we're not going to get more bombs anytime soon... can we really afford to not go after strategic targets?

      Are a couple of nukes worth more than a couple of hundred thousand lives of innocent civilians?

    82. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      JESUS F'ING CHRIST PEOPLE!

      Real nice to condemn our past actions based on an impossible statement isn't it?

      Look, Japan entered the war unprovoked. It would not have been acceptable to just let Japan 'withdraw' from the war. (The only 'conditional' surrender situation ever put forth by Japan)

      On the other side, Japan's culture made it IMPOSSIBLE for Japan to ever surrender unconditionally. Not unlikely. Impossible.

      The only ways to end the war with Japan were:
      a) Decisively beat Japan.
      b) Let Japan walk away from the war. (Remembering they were the agressor here)
      or c) Be beaten by Japan.

      Care to account for the facts in your revisionist argument?

      --
      No Comment.
    83. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by rjh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I usually don't respond to ACs, but I'm going to assume your question is sincere.

      Of the 200,000 people who died at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, most historians estimate about 180,000 of them were part of the Imperial Japanese Army's war machine. IJA conscripted the population into being part of the war machine, to the point where schools stopped teaching math and literature and history and started teaching how to stick American GIs with bamboo spears--some of the classes being taught with American POWs.

      Women were forced to work in factories building war materiel, as were men unfit for military duty. Of the population of Japan, only a small fraction--ten percent or so--could truly be considered noncombatants.

      It's true that most of the 180,000 military personnel killed in Hiroshima and Nagasaki were unwilling personnel, but that doesn't make them any different from IJA troops who were drafted and sent against American GIs.

      So, are a couple of nukes worth more than a couple of hundred thousand innocent civilians? Of course not. Are they worth more than several factories building war materials and 180,000 people working in the furtherance of IJA goals? Absolutely.

    84. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by nortcele · · Score: 1

      Sir, you're wasting your breath and effort on folks here that don't understand human nature. In any confrontation with people (whether as an individual or as a country), one must present more than "just enough" force. Otherwise the other will not feel overwhelmed and will not give up. Ask a policeman how much applied force is necessary to obtain surrender. Obviously the amount of force required for surrender varies between individuals as much as it does between countries. Hindsight in this case is not 20/20. We know that the bombing obtained surrender. Would less have been necessary? Perhaps, but that is unknown. For one to make a statement that the bombing of Japan was unnecessary cannot back up the statement... unless they have their time machine tuned up real well. As PakProtector has stated in many posts, war is evil for everyone involved.

    85. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by AK+Marc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So, you think people have the right to "kill now" if they think that this will "save lives later"?

      So, you think that a cop, faced with a suicide bomber in a public place, shouldn't shoot him. Instead, he should wait for the suicide bomber to kill himself and a bunch of other people because it isn't right to kill now to save lives later.

    86. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by bheading · · Score: 1

      If this was the true objective, then why didn't the USA drop the bomb somewhere desolate, such as a desert or other deserted area, and say to the Japanese "if you don't surrender then we'll drop this on your cities until you do" ?

    87. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Brutulf · · Score: 0

      "Not to mention the fact that they too came as conquerers...once they moved over a territory they never left it."

      Not true. Example: Russian liberation of Norwegian northern areas (Finnmark).

    88. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      So, you think that rather than take a single life, we should've just rolled over and let the Japanese and Germans have their way rather than kill anybody? It's war, and the sad fact is, in war, you kill people. You start having to make moral decisions that you generally find horribly repugnant. That's how it is, and that's why war is ugly.

    89. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Duhavid · · Score: 1
      I'm not disagreeing that Peral Harbor sucked and was an escalation that the United States wasn't expecting.


      Technical note. The US did not expect that the Japanese *could* retaliate. I think they expected full well that the Japanes would not feel well pleased.

      I'm not disagreeing that Japan did carry out a sneak attack (though on accident, they did try to deliver notice of the attack).


      True, they did try to deliver notice. They tried to time that notice to be given about 30 minutes before the attack was to happen. Its still a sucker punch.

      What I am disagreeing with is that it was unprovoked. ...


      Quite. But that oil embargo was due to the US being most unhappy about Japanese actions in China.


      Unfortunately for Japan, the 3rd wave of planes never flew from the carrier strike force. Those planes were to target US fuel depots on Peral which housed roughly a years worth of oil for the fleet. Without that oil, US forces would have been forced to return to San Fransisco to refuel, severely curtailing effectiveness in the Pacific.


      True enough.

      Yommomoto chose not to send the 3rd wave because the resistance on Peral was becoming too severe, particulary from US fighters defending the harbor.


      Its "Yamamoto". Except that it wasnt him who made the decision. It was Admiral Nagumo, the strike force commander who decided that. He was rightly worried about an American response. The carriers were not in Pearl, and, therefore, could be anywhere, including launching a strike *right now* against his forces. With most of his force gone. In point of fact, the USS Enterprise ( commanded by William "Bull" Halsey ) was close, and coming closer. Planes from the Enterprise were shot at trying to land at Pearl a short time after the attack.

      In may historian's eyes, that decision cost Japan the war.


      The aformentioned Yamamoto is down as saying that he did not think that Japan could win a war against the US. The industrial strength of American would, in his opinion, overwhelm Japan. It is my belief that starting the war ended up costing Japan the war. The opinion of the times differed, and many were afraid of a Japanese invasion of the US, but I believe that that was overreaction. Japan had just done what was considered undoable ( the raid on Pearl ). The logistics of getting the carriers in position was thought undoable. The Japanese figured out how to refuel their carriers at sea. Torpedos were thought unusable at Pearl, as the harbor was only 40 feet deep. The Japanese modified their torpedos such that they did not require the usual 75 feet of depth, in order to make this attack. Dive bombing is a futile exersize against battleships ( carriers and cruisers were a different story, but at that time, battleships where the force projection ship ). The Japanese modified naval shells ( the ones used by battleships to penetrate the armour of other battleships ), *and* figured out that by bombing from 11k meters, those shells would have the KE to penetrate the relatively ( relatively ) thin top decks of battleships ( One of those is what took out the Arizona, btw..., not a dive bomber. ). They did the unexpected, and got away with it, for a time.
      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    90. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by ZiggyM · · Score: 1

      Even if your argument is true, it applies to the Hiroshima bomb, and NOT the Nagasaki one. It is well known that both bombs used different methods and materials (Hiroshima's used uranium, and Nagasaki's used plutonium) to cause the explosion, and that the US wanted to try both methods. The US didnt even give enough time to the Japanese to go on-site to the Hiroshima disaster area, assess the situation and surrender.

    91. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by oldCoder · · Score: 1
      The atom bomb was new -- the US could not have known what a big step it was taking. They'd already bombed the heck out of the Axis and the new bomb just made it cheaper and easier. No apparant moral difference could have been seen, then.

      Japan was hard to understand, anyway, so better be safe than sorry (!). When you have more than one reason to make a choice it becomes impossible to sort out later which reasons were the most important.

      Even if Stimson and Truman simply believed the Bomb saved lives, that doesn't guarantee they were right. And Eisenhower's demurral doesn't mean he was right, either.

      And you can't run history over again to check.

      --

      I18N == Intergalacticization
    92. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by WGR · · Score: 1

      The bomb on Hiroshima may have saved lives. The one on Nagasaki certainly did not and was completely unneccessary. The U.S. should have waited longer than one day for Japan to surrender before attacking Nagasaki. The main reason that Nagasaki seems to have been attacked was that it was the "American" city, the place where the Americans had first settled in the 19th century and the city in Japan with the longest historic ties to the United States. Bombing it said to Japan that the U.S. was willing to do anything to defeat it, even destroy the most American city in Japan.

    93. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      On the decision for unconditional surrender...

      There were several meetings of the policial leadership of the allied powers ( mainly Roosevelt, Churchhill and Stalin ), and it was decided at these conferences that both Japan and Germany would be subject to unconditional surrender.

      I think you did an excellent job of making the very points I would have liked to have made. I think that unconditional surrender was probably the right idea. No gamesmanship about "can I keep this, can I have that instead"...

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    94. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by egarland · · Score: 1

      War is death. War is slaughter, but governments and militaries had an easy time convincing people that war was noble and patriotic and good. And easy time, that is, until those two bombs got dropped.

      War was easy to paint as an epic struggle for what is or should be yours where soldiers die heroically for the cause. An aggressive leader had little to lose by attacking when they could clearly win. Offensive wars were fought in other people's countries, your population didn't care much. Men who went to war were heroes, soldiers battling for the benefit of the people at home and were easily recruited. The cycle of countries attacking because they could was getting faster and more deadly every decade. The use of nuclear weapons utterly shattered that cycle by shattering the image.

      One could argue that it was the existence and threat of the bomb that caused this to happen. There will always be debate about that but just like it's easy for Pat Robinson to convince people to give him money, it's easy for a leader to convince his soldiers that there is no such thing as a nuclear weapon as long as there are no smoking holes in the ground that used to be a city. It would have had to be used eventually and if there was ever a more appropriate enemy to use it on, it would truly be a horrible, horrible thing.

      --
      set softtabstop=4 shiftwidth=4 expandtab nocp worlddomination
    95. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      You ever launched bombs from an aircraft?

      Next time you are in an aircraft, coming in for a landing in your home town, look out the windows and see if you can really recognize the landmarks. Not quite the same as what the bombardier has to do, but it might give you some perspective.

      Then, factor in that the enemy will often try to confuse the landmarks on you, and obscure them to keep you from bombing accurately.

      That and mistakes are made. Information is incomplete. Easy to armchair QB it 60+ years later.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    96. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      Germany after WWI wasnt as much our baby.

      The US and GB were Ok with forgiving the debt owed by Germany when the German economy was tanking, but the French would have none of it. Not to mention that the French were the main pushers of the "Germany is completely and without reservation at fault for the war", and the burdensome level of the reparations required.

      In that the Americans ( as I understand it anyway ) had authored the debt relief plan, I think you can see that the US was not the vindictive sort.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    97. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by brpr · · Score: 1

      Look, Japan entered the war unprovoked. It would not have been acceptable to just let Japan 'withdraw' from the war. (The only 'conditional' surrender situation ever put forth by Japan)

      Why not? Is pride worth more than human life?

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    98. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

      The day I start believing I know How The World Works is the day my critical faculties are permanently screwed up.

      I used the words "it could be argued that" for a reason; the argument was a fairly obvious extrapolation of existing arguments, and I'm sure someone somewhere has already made it.

      And there's probably a lot of truth in it; but my knowledge of history isn't good enough to say how much. For that reason, I'd want to hear someone argue against it before I nailed my colours to the mast in support of it.

      What people claim their motives are, and what they actually are never usually match up exactly; even if that argument was a good justification for dropping the bomb on Japan, it's not necessarily the one that was going through people's heads when they were making the decision.

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    99. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go talk to the families of the Pearl Harbor servicemen, or the thousands of raped and butchered Chinese, and then come back and talk about poor taste. War sucks, everyone does crappy stuff, no one can really take the high ground in the end.

    100. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by SmellMyTeenSpirit · · Score: 1

      "If the atomic bombs saved even one American life more than conventional warfare would have cost, then they were worthwhile. War is not about accounting for the other side's losses"

      "A captain got up, a young captain said: "Goddammit, I'd like to know who the son of a bitch was that took this magnificent airplane, designed to bomb from 23,000 feet and he took it down to 5,000 feet and I lost my wingman. He was shot and killed. . .

      He stood up. "Why are we here? Why are we here? You lost your wingman; it hurts me as much as it does you. I sent him there. And I've been there, I know what it is. But, you lost one wingman, and we destroyed Tokyo.""

      Robert McNamara in The Fog of War.

      Do you honestly think that wingman's life was worth 100,000 Japanese civilian lives? It is a horrible situation, and the most humane thing to do is to -equate- human life, not tilt the balance one way or another. Each of those deaths was a tragedy, and the more we distance ourselves from that fact, the more we enable ourselves to destroy. It is a disgusting, blinding cycle. Instead, war should be treated as it is: appalling and wrong. It -should- be psychologically hard to kill thousands of people. If we did not make war so easy for ourselves, perhaps we would not go so overboard when it comes to killing.

      --
      "Cornflakes are not the innocent critters they seem"- Sterling Morrison
    101. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      What? That has nothing to do with it. You cannot win a war decisively against an aggressor by simply letting them go home. History has shown time and time again that while they may go home, they will most certainly come back and stronger than the last time.

      This has nothing to do with pride.

      --
      No Comment.
    102. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by brpr · · Score: 1

      This has nothing to do with pride.

      Really? Then why did the US refuse to consider a conditional surrender whose only condition was that the emperor would retain his position (which was purely symbolic).

      History has shown that hammering an enemy into the dust can be just as damaging in the long term as "letting them go home" (otherwise known as negotiating a reasonable settlement with the preservation of human life in mind). That's the best way for a war to end, with everyone going home. Victory in war is hollow. And the suggestion that Japan would have come back stronger...Japan was devastated well before the end of the war. The US secured peace in the long term by reconstructing Japan, not by defeating it.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    103. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Gangalino · · Score: 1

      "...sorry to the civilians who got taken out, but a population has the responsibility to keep it's government under control, and they failed at that, as we are failing today. A lesson we need to learn." A lesson I think we know about, but how does one learn to deal with George W.? Am I to be blamed for his actions even if I didn't vote for him, or he stole the election? Assasinate him to keep bin Laden happy? People get real brave and stuff when typing...

    104. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      Uhm. I think your argument isn't very well thought out. I'd say this would be more a case of me going over and burning down your house in self-defence, partly because I wanted to see how my new flame thrower works on inhabited buildings.

      Your lame analogy only works if you add the following:

      "P.S. I am at war with my neighbor"

      The US and Japan were both busy trying to kill as many of each other as possible. This is frequently how war works.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    105. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Omestes · · Score: 1

      God I wish I hadn't posted here, so I could mod you up.

      Very nice. Clear. Conscise!

      People keep on saying we shouldn't have done it because A, B, or C were better options. I keep wanting to scream, what if NONE of them are options?

      Though my main beef is with the word WERE. We're not there, we are not the the culture that was then, we are not making the decision. We have no right or ability to judge, just to say it happened. And wether we personally agree by our modern standards. Not whether it was right or wrong, in the big sense.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    106. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      So few people are pointing out the atrocities and genocide the Japanese were waging. The Japanese were as bad as the Nazis. They had to be stopped.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    107. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      Do you really think that the US would have, no, _could_ have reconstructed Japan if the US hadn't won decisively? Don't let the way it did turn out influence this decision.

      Think about Japanese culture at the time.
      Actually, think about it now. It's the same, it's just been redirected. That's really what the US did.

      It could not have turned out the same otherwise. I've heard this statement from Japanese people themselves.

      Also, you are SERIOUSLY confused as to what was offered by the Japanese. Japan never offered the conditional surrender you describe to the US. That is essentially what the US gave Japan after their defeat.

      If you are mistakenly bringing up the offer Japan had to Russia, it's details are disputed and short of that it was NOT up for offer to the US. Again, due to Japan's culture, they could not offer that to the US because _they_ had attacked the US.

      --
      No Comment.
    108. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " So dropping the bombs was a good thing, sorry to the civilians who got taken out, but a population has the responsibility to keep it's government under control, and they failed at that, as we are failing today. A lesson we need to learn. "

      Congratulations Klom, you win the prize of "Most boneheaded comment on /."

      So I suppose you and your family should be killed cuz of the mistakes made by the Bush Administration? In times of war, do you think the government bases their decisions based on what the population "feels" or "thinks"......

      Your ignorance is appalling......at the best of times, governments MAY be swayed by the population, but governments are never ordered/dictated to by the population.

      You clearly have no idea about U.S Foreign Policy, International Relations and realistic Democracy (not the kind u read in textbooks). You're just some trigger happy nutjob who thinks that not one innocent person ever died in a war.

      Following your theory, I guess the Iraqis can come and kill you and your family since you are directly responsible for killing civilians in Iraq.

      This has nothing to do with WWII, USA, Iraq or Japan.....its ur one stupid sentence I am flaming, not the rest of your comment/beliefs.

    109. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by brpr · · Score: 1

      Do you really think that the US would have, no, _could_ have reconstructed Japan if the US hadn't won decisively? Yes. Clearly an offer of economic reconstruction would have sweetened any negotiated settlement.

      Also, you are SERIOUSLY confused as to what was offered by the Japanese. Japan never offered the conditional surrender you describe to the US.

      AFAIK, it was not offered formally, but it was well known within the US government that a significant faction within Japan were prepared to accept those terms, and certainly many senior ppl within or close to the government are on the record as thinking that a negotiated settlement was possible.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    110. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      You know it wasn't offered formally? And yet you've been using that argument all over this thread insinuating that it was fact?

      And you have personal insight into the inner workings and thoughts of both the US government and the significant faction within Japan?

      I've only been countering you because you've been spouting so much bullshit. I'm done discussing this with you. Either learn something or don't.

      --
      No Comment.
    111. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by brpr · · Score: 1

      You know it wasn't offered formally? And yet you've been using that argument all over this thread insinuating that it was fact?

      How does its informality prevent it from being a fact?

      And you have personal insight into the inner workings and thoughts of both the US government and the significant faction within Japan?

      As much as you do.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    112. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
      Following your theory, I guess the Iraqis can come and kill you and your family since you are directly responsible for killing civilians in Iraq.

      They could try, but they and their arab allies are busy attacking our strength not our soft underbelly.

      On that count I'll be the first to say well done to the Bush administration.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    113. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
      You lost. Good. If that is in poor taste so be it.

      Would they have been any less dead if we had starved out the Japanese islands?

      We should not have accepted any peace offer that had one more condition on it then the one we ultimately did.

      The emperor should have hung! In his case we should have let the chinese tie the noose, like we let the russians tie the nooses for the Germans. Slow stangulation was too good for him but was the best civilized people would have come up with.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    114. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      It wasn't the right choice to make. When dealing in war, atomic or conventional, the only right choice is not to start.

      Wrong. Choosing not to fight, and letting an evil group conqueror you, is wrong.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    115. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by scotty777 · · Score: 1
      let's discuss the plan to nuke all the defenses on Kyushu before sending servicemen in to prevent another Normandy, shall we? At least 7 bombs would have been ready by 1 November.

      Ok, let's discuss the Japanese defences. Okinawa and Iwo Jima were defended primarily from underground fortifications. Japanese home island defenses were similar, but stronger. Nothing that suggests that seven A-bombs would have been enough to allow an unopposed or easy landing by US forces. New evidence shows that Japanese military strength in the Kyushu landing zones was five times the strength planned for by US invasion planners. It is quite conceivable that 200,000 would have died in the first days of an invasion, with or without A-bombs. And after that, what then?

      What about retribution killings of POW's for which the Japanese were famous? What about Japanese reprisals against the populations of China and Korea? And let's not forget both chemical and biological WMD. Japanese military units in Korea and Manchuria (China) were experimenting with those on POWs and civilians, and preparing to deploy them both against soldiers and civilians.

      I don't notice that you acknowleged any of those facts, let alone discussed them in a cogent manner.

      IMHO the only thing that saved non-Japanese Asian civilians from mass bio-weapon and chem-weapon deaths was the shock in Tokyo at their own people's vulnerability. They only caved in when they faced their own demise.

      I wish you would choose to consider the realities with the same cold eye that they were forced to use. War is an ugly, ugly thing.

      The pre-war Japanese military-industrial foces took over Korea, and then Manchuria for coal and ron ore. They took over Malaya for rubber, and for oil the grabbed Java and Sumatra. They were blunt about intentions to form an empire, and they thought war was OK, because it was not going to be in Japan itself. Bad guess on their part. Long before they attacked Pearl Harbor, they knew that war is ugly. They just didn't expect to get a taste of the same.

      War is ugly, ugly, ugly. The Germans, Italians, and Japanese miscalculated, and paid an ugly, ugly price.

    116. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sometimes i wish Bin Laden had an atomic bomb..when i hear redneck fucks like you.The people in the united states of islam would be giving reasons why it was necessary to nuke US. i know i got carried away but ...WTF

    117. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Trinity was a "shiny new" plutonium bomb. We knew it worked. The uranium design used on Hiroshima was so simple it didn't need to be tested.

      2) We had their codes broken. So, yeah, in a way, we were psychic. Enough to know they still weren't giving up.

      3) Yeah, I guess it would have been hard to know that a nuclear bomb had been used on Hiroshima. It would have involved turning on the friggin' radio and listening to Truman.

    118. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by geekee · · Score: 1

      "No doubt dropping chemical/biological weapons on Japan and wiping out large swathes of population centres would have won the second world war also, but would such a thing be morally justifiable?"

      Actually, the US did firebombed Tokyo to rubble before atomic weapons were used.

      --
      Vote for Pedro
    119. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Luminary+Crush · · Score: 1

      I seriously doubt any conditional surrender would have been accepted by the Soviets. The Germans attempted to conditionally surrender to the US/Britain, and that was refused because it must be a conditional surrender to all allied powers (including the Soviets). The Germans new darn well that they had behaved much better to the enemies of the West than to the enemies of the East.

      Similarly, I do not think surrendering to the Soviet Union conditionally, a nation which sustained almost no casualties or attrocities by the Japanese, would be acceptable to the Allies.

      Should we have accepted the conditional German surrender and prevented weeks of war? Likely if we did, we'd have been at war with the Soviets soon thereafter. And, there was some interest in that in some circles. Luckily for the world, sanity prevailed.

      Regardless of the rhetoric, it's fairly obvious that an invasion of the Japanese islands would have sustained horrendous casualties simply based upon the Japanese 'no surrender' mentality demonstrated throughout the island-hopping campaigns. Add to this a mobilized civilian population and the ensuing guerilla war, and Iraq looks like a walk in the park.

      I think people underestimate the effect of the fact that the Japanese islands had not been invaded in hundreds of years, and the Japanese were quite fanatical about defending it.

      Also, the Japanese might have well resorted to their own WMDs - they had the most advanced biological weapons technology in the world at the time, and may have begun using it against an invader on their soil.

    120. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by cgenman · · Score: 1

      War sucks, everyone does crappy stuff, no one can really take the high ground in the end.

      Exactly. I'm not saying bombing Hiroshima was wrong. I'm saying that it was a tremendous loss of life. You might kill less people by killing people, but you certainly don't "save lives" by killing them.

    121. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by sr180 · · Score: 1
      alot of people really took that "Death before Dishonor" thing seriously

      That is exactly why the Japanese treated their prisoners of war so badly. Because In the Japanese eyes at the time, Prisoners of War were dishonourable and unworthy of humane treatment.

      --
      In Soviet Russia the insensitive clod is YOU!
    122. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by marko123 · · Score: 1

      I read about a similar theory in "Total War", a one volume history of WWII. There was apparently a mobilization of Russian troups around Vladivostok waiting for the signal to start a top to bottom invasion/wipeout of Japan, and this may have tipped the Japanese surrender- especially considering that more damage was being done DAILY by bombing raids than that done by the atomic bombs.

      --
      http://pcblues.com - Digits and Wood
    123. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by Sithgunner · · Score: 1

      This is why I hate seeing things from only facts perspective.

      Of course, the numbers, you can compare to other casualties...If that's what you mean by imagining...

      Have you been in a city where that amount of people dead? Have you even seen a man killed in front of you? Perhaps not.

      Now that's what I'm talking about. You are not even imagining about the death in real. Only by numbers, like if it's some kind of games in history.

      On, if the lives are actually saved or not, no one knows.

    124. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1
      In August of 1945, it's naive to suggest that the US was intent on saving lives.
      It's not a suggestion or naivety, it's stone cold well documented historical fact.
      The focus of the US government was to win the war.
      Certainly. But being focused on winning a war doesn't mean one throws away lives heedlessly. Now, it's true that such decisions were not made on humanitarian grounds, but on mostly fiscal and logistical principles. A soldier on the ground represented many dollars of training and transport - and they were not an unlimited resource. In addition there was considerable political fallout from 'squandering the youth of America'.

      Thus, the Armed Forces and the Goverment *were* concerned with 'saving lives', but the terms meant something slightly different in 1945 than they do here in 2005.

    125. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by HomerJayS · · Score: 1

      Given the stellar record the Soviets had in managing their share of 'liberated' Europe post-WWII, it can still be argued that fewer Japanese civilians died as a result of Nagasaki than had the SU been involved in the 'peace'.

    126. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by KlomDark · · Score: 1

      Um, did you just hear that Wooshing sound?

      You really missed my point there. I don't think my family SHOULD be killed by Bush's mistakes. But I do find it a greater possibility the way Bush is pissing off the rest of the world by arrogantly fucking with everyone out there.

      No, the goverment typically does not base their decisions on what the population thinks. However, our government seems really out of control right now, and I think it's up to people to start using their voting power to pull them back in line before it gets even worse.

      Um, the US is supposed to be a democratic republic, so yes, our stile over government was designed to be ordered/dictated by the population. Sure, most pussies are out whining but not voting, so we're getting a shitty deal.

      No idea where you get off thinking that I don't think one innocent person ever died in a war. (I'm sitting here trying to figure that one out. Doesn't make any sense where you got that I thought that...)

    127. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by mikeg22 · · Score: 1

      Ok, and tell me why we had to drop it on two heaviliy populated cities to show them that we had the power?

    128. Re:'merciful' atomic bomb !? by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
      Wow, what a lot of lies and prejudice there.

      Amazing how this anonymous moron can stand there and blame us americans for things our grandfathers did.

      Numbers were made up because they had no facts. That does not change the basic fact that one bomb clearly was NOT enough to end the war and therefore dropping two can not in any way be considered worse than starting the war by a surprise attack, even if it was on a military site. Read about Japan and the rape of Nanking. Or how they starved and worked to death all the american soldiers they captured.

      America has lots of faults. What we did to Native Americans was no better than what any one else did to the minority, oriinal settlers of their land.

      But in WWII, we were by FAR the Good Guys. In no way can any reasonable person claim that we were evil "killers" or have more blood on our hand than others.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
  11. Damn yanks,, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... and you lot are worried about Pakistan having the bomb.

    1. Re:Damn yanks,, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is seriously different... i dont like what the Americans did, but keep in mind that;
      a) This was WW2 ... not just WW1 .. WW2!@!
      b) Japan was the agressor, and was not an innocent target.
      c) The bombs were used to bring an end to the war, there are plenty of conspiracy theories about this, but the simple fact is that america could not afford to sustain the losses involved with an invasion and needed an exit.
      d) In comparison to todays nukes, these were useless.
      d) IT WAS TOTAL WAR!! The world has not seen, and probably never will see, a war that has distruction on this level.

      Pakistan did not acquire the bomb because they were involved in total war, they acquired it to threaten someone else. Lets face it, thats what nukes are good for.

      This was also in an age where america was the only nation WITH nukes so no one could retaliate - or did you forget the whole 'Cold War' period? Pakistan was relatively unstable when it acquired the nukes and threatend to unbalance the situation. America was not affraid of Pakistan directly, but more affraid of what would happen if they tipped the scales (hence the non-proliferation treaty). Literally its a domino effect, and Pakistan was possibly dumb enough to knock the first one over..

  12. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by jnf · · Score: 1

    Which is somewhat ironic, I didn't read the entire thing-- however I did read the first 2 articles (or 2 pages?) and the most prevelant theme I saw in it was doubt that the radiation was really as bad as stated by the Americans, or as its phrased there 'American Radio'.

    When thats added to the idea that he was at ground zero for a while it really makes one wonder if the effects of radiation from 'those' atom bombs were overstated.

    The other thing I thought interesting was that we dropped it within a mile of a prisoner of war camp, although I suppose it makes sense when combined with the knowledge that the pow camp existed so close to many manufacturing plants. Sense that it may make, I still wouldn't want to be the guy to decide to drop an atom bomb within a mile of an allied pow camp.

  13. A quiz! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Only one country has used atomic bombs against an other, which one? (hint it's not Iraq).

    1. Re:A quiz! by Chainsaw · · Score: 0

      I was under the impression that the Wright brothers developed the flying machine in the US. And don't you think it's kinda ironic that an airplane was used to drop the two atomic bombs on Japan?

      --
      War is one of the most horrible things a human can be exposed to. And one of the worlds largest industries.
    2. Re:A quiz! by xtracto · · Score: 1

      haha...
      The Conutry Of Freedom
      The Land of the Free

      My country tis of thee,
      Sweet land of liberty,
      Of thee I sing.
      Land where my fathers died!
      Land of the Pilgrim's pride!
      From every mountain side,
      Let freedom ring!

      My native country, thee,
      Land of the noble free,
      Thy name I love.
      I love thy rocks and rills,
      Thy woods and templed hills;
      My heart with rapture fills
      Like that above. My country, sweet land of liberty

      Let music swell the breeze,
      And ring from all the trees
      Sweet freedom's song.
      Let mortal tongues awake;
      Let all that breathe partake;
      Let rocks their silence break,
      The sound prolong.

      Our father's God to, Thee,
      Author of liberty,
      To Thee we sing.
      Long may our land be bright
      With freedom's holy light;
      Protect us by Thy might,
      Great God, our King!

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    3. Re:A quiz! by PakProtector · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Don't you think it's Ironic that a Hammer was used to bang something?

      It's not Ironic. A bomb that is designed to be dropped from altitude being dropped from an Airplane is... logical.

      I know Irony is a hard thing to grasp, but let's put forth some effort, shall we?

      Irony would be something like, "They spent years designing their plane for safety during takeoff, but never thought to do something to stop it from crashing during landing."

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    4. Re:A quiz! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The flying machine is not the single greatest killer. Bombs delivered by planes have always, and continue to be, mainly used to destroy buildings and the like, not take humans life.

      Clearly you didn't read the hint.

    5. Re:A quiz! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and I also remeber what happend to that country after ww2. That's a good idea, lets do the same to usa...

    6. Re:A quiz! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The Flying Machine" was being developed in lots of countries by lots of people. The Wright brothers were probably the first people to make a motorised flying machine that successfully started from the ground. Though some people say that like Edison they were just good at publicity and taking credit for the works of others.

    7. Re:A quiz! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Wright brothers did produce a controlled, manned, self-powered aircraft. While others may have claimed various levels of "flight" before they achieved their aim, I do think it quite clear that the Wright flyer was the first practical plane.

    8. Re:A quiz! by ciroknight · · Score: 1

      I would probably respond to this as Germany (if you hadn't said WW1), with the invention of the modern missile. Aerodynamic, indescriminate, capable of delivering hundreds and thousands of lbs of explosives while not being in range of a counter attack.

      Aircraft are a valid answer, but aircraft also have peacetime value. I can't honestly think of any peace time value of a missile.

      --
      "Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is." G.W.Bush
    9. Re:A quiz! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Um... the same country that invented them?

      How was the parent comment interesting in any way? Any 10 year old would know the answer. What's your point here? The nukes the US dropped ended the war, and saved many more lives. Oh, and the fact it was war because Japan 'Pearl Harbored' us means nothing, right?

    10. Re:A quiz! by Capt+James+McCarthy · · Score: 0

      Why is this 3+ interesting?

      --
      There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
    11. Re:A quiz! by I_Human · · Score: 1

      Peacetime value of a missile:
      deterrence

      --
      -JP
    12. Re:A quiz! by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      I can't honestly think of any peace time value of a missile.

      Communication satellite launch?

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    13. Re:A quiz! by PakProtector · · Score: 1

      Irony is the most difficult concept I have found in my linguistic studies. I only know one actual, in bona fide, pro certe example of Irony:

      "Two very proud countries had been involved in a long and drawn out war, neither side able to win. When at last the war ended, they both declared themselves the victors."

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    14. Re:A quiz! by ciroknight · · Score: 1

      Perhaps I should have made myself more clear.

      I see no peacetime use for a ballistics missile. Besides, I have a personal disfavor to using missiles to launch satellites; while they may be cheap, they also waste a great deal of their mass in doing so.

      --
      "Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is." G.W.Bush
    15. Re:A quiz! by ciroknight · · Score: 1

      The belief that one can use a weapon as a deterrence is what leads to arms races. We may be one of the few nations with nuclear arms, but I bet with the option, I know hundreds of little countries that wouldn't mind having nuclear weapons, of course, only for "deterrence" use.

      Besides, isn't it a bit cowardly to fling stuff at people from long distances? Why not flaunt our skills at training personel instead of our skills as engineers on who can build the better mouse trap?

      --
      "Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is." G.W.Bush
    16. Re:A quiz! by ettlz · · Score: 1
      I can't honestly think of any peace time value of a missile.

      Many acts of terrorism occur at peacetime. Peaceful uses of missiles could include: deploying rescue equiment or aid to otherwise unreachable areas; blowing up asteroids (although the feasilibity of this is controversial); deploying high-altitude instrumentation; and widespread distribution of propag^H^H^Hmotional material.

    17. Re:A quiz! by adlj · · Score: 0

      what the heck are you talking about? there's no such thing such as an un-ballistic missile...

      and there's plenty of peaceful uses for them oustide warfare...

      by the way, which other immediatley feasible way of putting things into orbit do you have in mind?

    18. Re:A quiz! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would think the answers has to be the machine gun. Though, I honestly couldn't tell you which country it orginated in.

    19. Re:A quiz! by Kazuma-san · · Score: 1

      Actually The plane was invented by Otto Lilienthal in Germany. Though it was not motorized, it was able to fly. Real irony is that Lilienthal was a Jew, so Hitler could not use his invention for his propaganda

    20. Re:A quiz! by Stauf · · Score: 1

      "Two very proud countries had been involved in a long and drawn out war, neither side able to win. When at last the war ended, they both declared themselves the victors."

      The irony here is in the countries declaring themselves the victors when in reality they both lost. It is only ironic if you believe they both lost, if you think they both reached a compromise or that they reached some no-win no-lose middle ground, it isn't ironic. In that case, it would be simple allegory.

      Irony is actually a lot simpler then most people think - strictly, it is a subset of allegory in which you are saying one thing and meaning its opposite. So, "Nice weather." during a hailstorm is irony.

      The confusion comes, largely, when people try to decide wether an event was 'ironic'. If you put special snow tires on your car to prevent it skidding, but they turned out to skid worse then your old tires - that would be ironic. However, if you put special snow tires on your car to prevent it skidding, but one of them burst running over a bit of ice - that wouldn't qualify.

      Hope that sorta cleared things up.

      (The U of Cambridge English Department has a definition.)

    21. Re:A quiz! by I_Human · · Score: 1

      I was making an attempt at being facetious ;)

      However as a member of the US armed services I appreciate our long range abilities. I don't think it's cowardly to protect the lives of our servicemen and women by using our superior mouse trap.

      --
      -JP
    22. Re:A quiz! by dick+johnson · · Score: 1

      >>ballistics missile

      All missiles are ballistic missiles.

      Perhaps you mean ICBM? (Intercontinental Ballistic Missile).

      --
      - dj
    23. Re:A quiz! by Saltine · · Score: 1

      Or Ironic like rain on your wedding day. No, wait.

    24. Re:A quiz! by Kazuma-san · · Score: 1

      The leading rocket scientist of that time, Wernher von Braun, always thaught about the peace time value of this technology. The reason for him to colaborate with the nazi regime and later with the USA, was space exploration. Before World War Two and I think even before the Third Reich, von Braun and his crew were experimenting in using missiles for delivering post to small islands in the northern sea. The idea was that a missile could fly when the wheather prohibts a boat from swiming. This idea never worked out realy well and today it is obsolete of course

    25. Re:A quiz! by mbessey · · Score: 1

      "All missiles are ballistic missiles."

      I wouldn't think that would be the case - otherwise, why make the distinction at all?. The dictionary definition of ballistic looks something like this:
      1 of or relating to projectiles or their flight.
      2 moving under the force of gravity only.

      I think sense 2 is what's meant here. A missile that, at the end of it's flight, is coasting, affected only by gravity (and drag) is a ballistic missile. Any missile that either steers itself actively, or is still accelerating when it hits its target, is not a ballistic missile.

      So the distinction is then between "guided" missiles, and "ballistic" missiles, both of which are terms I've heard used before.

      -Mark

    26. Re:A quiz! by RatBastard · · Score: 1

      And guess what, Sparky? We never did it again. Someone had to be the first, and as the first nation to build one, it fell to us to do so. The telling thing is that they were never used in war again. Everyone saw what The Bomb could do and decided against using them. We could have, we have plenty of enemies and we had plenty of rabid war hawks in Congress who were clamoring for us toi bomb the snot out of Korea and Vietnam. We would be as vile as you seem to think we are if we continued to use them.

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    27. Re:A quiz! by Thu25245 · · Score: 1

      What's the point of a Doomsday Machine if you don't tell anyone about it?

    28. Re:A quiz! by sanity_slipping · · Score: 1

      Two more possibilities:

      A) The submachine gun, specifically the AK-47 developed in Russia. The submachine gun has allowed guerrila militaries to turn children into effective warriors: small, nimble, controllable, and able to kill large numbers of people.

      B) The tank, developed by the British during World War I.

      --
      I can feel my sanity, beyond my reach and slipping...
    29. Re:A quiz! by dick+johnson · · Score: 1

      Nope.

      I served in the military. (famous for odd speech). All missiles are ballistic missiles. Yes it's redundant, but it's just the way it is.

      --
      - dj
  14. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nah, he just returned home. MIB just staged his death so that he can finally rejoin Elvis on their home planet. In real life, he was Mr George Weller, at night, he was Mutationz, the radioactive waste eating superhero. One of his lifes had a future.

    Excuse me, i need to tighten my old korean tinfoil hat, or I will take the black helicopters in soviet russia to pour hot grit on the beowulf clustered netcraft certified profit making opportunities in other news.

  15. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by mindstormpt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Oh sure, killing japanese civilians is fine but allied soldiers never!

  16. So many questions... by ndogg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This isn't meant to be flamebait, and only meant to be a serious question.

    Why did MacArthur give Japan only three days to respond after Hiroshima? Why not at least a week?

    --
    // file: mice.h
    #include "frickin_lasers.h"
    1. Re:So many questions... by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Why did MacArthur give Japan only three days to respond after Hiroshima? Why not at least a week?

      I think a better question would be "Why didn't the Japanese surrender immediately after Hiroshima?"

      --
      Support the First Amendment. Read at -1
    2. Re:So many questions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They didn't surrender to America after the first bomb because they were already in talks to surrender, but with Russia not America. That was something the Mcarthur couldn't accept, hence the second bomb.

    3. Re:So many questions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some aspects of the Japanese government at that time weren't convinced Allied forces had more than the one bomb available.
      (Sorry for the anonymous post; new gig doesn't allow public commentary. Sigh; just when my karma maxes out too...).

    4. Re:So many questions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The only explanation I have heard is that the Hiroshima bomb was too effective. Unlike the hilly Nagasaki hiroshima left relatively few witness's or infrastructure to allow the message out. Many of the witnesses to a "single bomb" that destroyed the city simply weren't believed and most were too busy with there own problems to make themselves heard.
      If this explanation is wrong please tell me as its always bothered me.
      The best explanation as to why bomb cities that I've heard is that war with Russia seemed certain and only by proving both technology and resolve could the Russians be scared off. This belief may have been innaccurate but the behaviour of Patton etc suggests it was widespread.

    5. Re:So many questions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      They tried, but the US wouldn't 'let them'. In fact, they tried surrendering to the soviets before the first one was even dropped...

    6. Re:So many questions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that the Americans were about to drop an atomic bomb on Japan in August was not a secret to the Japanese. The Americans had repeatedly informed the Japanese government and dropped leaflets (a number of bomber crews were shot down during thiese missions) over targetted Japanese cities in the preceeding weeks stating that the U.S. had successfully developed and tested a nuclear device and was prepared to use it. (The leaflets, written in Japanese, urged people to get the hell out; most citizens ignored them, as reading American propaganda might have gotten you in trouble with the local constabulary). The US didn't give Japan more time because there were elements of the Japanese military who weren't conviced that more than one atomic bomb had been created and were prepared to resist otherwise. (Apolgies for the anonmous post; new gig does not allow for public commentary. All that karma wasted :-)).

    7. Re:So many questions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      An even better question: Why does so few know that Japan practically begged to surrender a long time before the bombings?

    8. Re:So many questions... by Yazeran · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And not that far from the truth. The USSR had the largest land army in the world in 1945 and America could not sustain (internally) not to start sending troops back to the US after ther germans surrendered. Therefore, without the atom bomb, the USSR would likely have invaded Western Europe by 1946/47 and there would have been nothing the europeans or the americans could have done to stop them from taking the continental part of Europe. England would likely have been spared, as the soviets did not have great emphasis or experience in naval operations / amphibious landings on a scale like D-Day.

      Therefore the demonstration of the atom bomb and it's effects for the USSR was also a part of the desission for Truman when he ordered the use of the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

      Yours yazeran

      Plan: to go to Mars one day with a hammer.

    9. Re:So many questions... by insert+cool+name · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Why did MacArthur give Japan only three days to respond after Hiroshima? Why not at least a week?

      The explaination I've heard floating around is that they wanted to do a "live" test of their plutonium bomb (the bomb dropped on Hiroshima was a Uranium one).

      A bit of random googling turned this up

      http://www.libertyhaven.com/politicsandcurrentev en ts/warpeacediplomacyorforeignaid/ethicswar.shtml

      Belatedly it has been discovered that seven months before it [the atomic bomb] was dropped, in January 1945, President Roosevelt received via General Mac Arthur's headquarters an offer by the Japanese Government to surrender on terms virtually identical to those accepted by the United States after the dropping of the bomb: In July 1945, as we know, Roosevelt's successor, President Truman, discussed with Stalin at Bebelsburg the Japanese offer to surrender.

      I'm no historian so I've no idea what eveidence there is to support this, but if it's true then I don't see how anyone can view Nagasaki as anything but a war crime.

      --
      Never trust anyone with an id greater than 889388
    10. Re:So many questions... by HyperChicken · · Score: 1

      Mmhmm... And who is this "we" you speak of?

      *dials 9-1 and waits for your reply*

      --
      Free of Flash! Free of Flash!
    11. Re:So many questions... by ndogg · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I made a mistake. It was Truman who ordered the bombs to be dropped, not MacArthur.

      --
      // file: mice.h
      #include "frickin_lasers.h"
    12. Re:So many questions... by dances+with+elks · · Score: 0

      There is an interesting discussion about this on the skeptic society forums http://www.skepticforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=263 which raises many valid points that i'm too nice to just copy and paste here

      --
      Will wash cars for karma
    13. Re:So many questions... by ndogg · · Score: 1

      Personally, I do not believe that three days is time enough to allow the magnitude of such a calamity to sink into one's conscience.

      Psychological shock is just as paralyzing as physiological shock.

      --
      // file: mice.h
      #include "frickin_lasers.h"
    14. Re:So many questions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why only three days? Because Americans were dying every day and the military only wanted to stop the deaths of AMERICAN soldiers as soon as possible.

      Why didn't Truman accept the earlier offers for surrender?

      Because those offers weren't unconditional; they left intact enough of the existing Japanese governmental structure it was feared the nationalism that lead to the war could resurface some years/decades later.

      In simple words, by forcing a complete restructuring of Japanese society, a repeat of what happened in Germany after WWI was avoided.

      I happen to think this is a good thing.

      For all the 2nd guessing that takes place today, the leaders of the time had amazing foresight regarding handling the future of Germany and Japan.

    15. Re:So many questions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, they could just have sent an e-mail... Oh, they didn't have that. Then put a guy on a plane with the message - and get mistaken for a kamikaze and shot down. Then they could have sent a ship. To cross the pacific in three days, that would probably have to be a pretty fast millitary ship. No small fisherboat would have made it in three days. But the millitary ship would get sunk as soon as the americans discovered it...

    16. Re:So many questions... by indiechild · · Score: 1

      Well said.

      To paraphrase Private David Kenyon Webster from Easy Company, 506 PIR... you have to take the fight into their cities, you have to destroy their houses, slaughter their cattle, bomb their roads. You have to visit destruction upon them.

      Basically, if you don't crush them and their spirit, and their civilians don't taste the carnage and horror that their country has been visiting upon others, then their nation will forever be ready to pounce and strike back, full of bitterness and hatred, much like Germany after WWI.

      For more proof, look at how unapologetic Japan is even today. Even today, many Japanese feel that they did nothing wrong in WWII. Now imagine how bad it would be if they were granted conditional surrender on their own terms!

      Human nature is exceptionally ugly.

    17. Re:So many questions... by DG · · Score: 2, Informative

      Keep in mind though that the Americans were not entirely without their own ambitions to destroy the USSR. Patton, in particular, wanted to see an all-out invasion of Russia to take them out while they still had a massive army on the scene.

      The display of the atomic bomb on Japan *might* (historical hypotheticals are slippery fish indeed) have prevented a Soviet invasion of Western Europe. Personally, I suspect a Soviet Army that had borne most of the heavy lifting involved with beating the Nazis and had suffered horrendous losses in so doing was just as eager to lay down their arms as anyone else... but with Uncle Joe in charge, that's hard to know for sure.

      But I *also* think that the USSR's very rapid acquisition of nuclear weapons and the delivery system to employ them stopped a potential American -led invasion of the USSR.

      And I think that the evidence provided by Hiroshima and Nagasaki as to just how horrible a nuclear war would be is what kept *both* sides, once so armed, from risking it anyway.

      I totally do not buy into the theory that the atomic bomb saved lives in WW2; I think Japan would have found a way to surrender without requiring the oft-touted monsterous casulties associated with an invasion.

      But I *do* think that the evidence of just how bad the destruction associated with even small atomic bombs was acted as deterrent through the 50's all the way to the present day. I think that without Hiroshima and Nakasaki we have no MAD, and it was MAD that prevented (and continues to prevent) WW3.

      DG

      --
      Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
    18. Re:So many questions... by rjh · · Score: 1

      He wanted to light a fire under the ass of the (factionalized, fragmented, disharmonious) peace faction in the Imperial Cabinet. For months they'd been saying they'd surrender, but they could never agree--even amidst themselves--on under what terms they'd surrender. Congratulations: Hiroshima's gone. Here are our surrender terms. Feel free to come back with your own. You've got three days.

      The United States believed--rightly or wrongly--that if it took the peace faction more than three days to get a surrender proposal put together, one which the entire peace faction could agree upon, that no surrender proposal would be forthcoming. At that point, you hammer the Japanese again and tell them "you've got another three days".

      And then you hope and you pray that they give you a response by the end of that next three-day period, because you don't have any more nukes and it'll take some while to get more in theater.

    19. Re:So many questions... by rogergregory · · Score: 2


      Stalin had set an invasion date for Japan, after this announcement.
      London, Aug., 8, 1945 - Foreign Commissar Molotoff's (sic) announcement of the declaration of war, as broadcast by Moscow, follows:

      On Aug. 8, People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the U.S.S.R. Molotoff received the Japanese Ambassador, Mr. Sato, and gave him, on behalf of the Soviet Government, the following for transmission to the Japanese Government:

      "After the defeat and capitulation of Hitlerite Germany, Japan became the only great power that sill stood for the continuation of the war.

      "The demand of the three powers, the United States, Great Britain and China, on July 26 for the unconditional surrender of the Japanese armed forces was rejected by Japan, and thus the proposal of the Japanese Government to the Soviet Union on mediation in the war in the Far East loses all basis.

      "Taking into consideration the refusal of Japan to capitulate, the Allies submitted to the Soviet Government a proposal to join the war against Japanese aggression and thus shorten the duration of the war, reduce the number of victims and facilitate the speedy restoration of universal peace.

      "Loyal to its Allied duty, the Soviet Government has accepted the proposals of the Allies and has joined in the declaration of the Allied powers of July 26.

      "The Soviet Government considers that this policy is the only means able to bring peace nearer, free the people from further sacrifice and suffering and give the Japanese people the possibility of avoiding the dangers and destruction suffered by Germany after her refusal to capitulate unconditionally.

      "In view of the above, the Soviet Government declares that from tomorrow, that is from Aug. 9, the Soviet Government will consider itself to be at war with Japan."
      Here is the cronology.
      Potsdam Conference--Truman, Churchill, Atlee (after July 28), Stalin establish council of foreign ministers to prepare peace treaties; plan German postwar government and reparations (July 17-Aug. 2). A-bomb dropped on Hiroshima by U.S. (Aug. 6). USSR declares war on Japan (Aug. 8). Nagasaki hit by A-bomb (Aug. 9). Japan agrees to surrender (Aug. 14). V-J Day--Japanese sign surrender terms aboard battleship Missouri (Sept. 2).

      I haven't been able to find the reference to the planned Russion invasion date, in time to put into this post, but I've read it somewhere. There is no doubt that keeping Russia out of Japan was a if not the major factor in the timing of the decision to drop the bomb.

    20. Re:So many questions... by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      Japanese torture camps didn't shut down after the Hiroshima bombing. In some cases they didn't end after the Nagasaki bombing. Japan continued to make war on Chinese (et al) civillians until right on up until the very, absolute end.

      Remember that the entire point of "island hopping" is not going through the Pacific, meticulously liberating each and every island taken by the Japanese, instead spending the least amount of resources to get within reach of the Japanese home islands as quickly as possible. Until the signing of the treaty, Japan still had most of what they had taken in the Pacific and mainland Asia, except for those few islands the US had taken in the Pacific and the land-grab the Soviets made in Asia after the Nagasaki bombing.

      And as for what they were still doing in the lands they held...

    21. Re:So many questions... by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      "but if it's true then I don't see how anyone can view Nagasaki as anything but a war crime."

      I don't see how anyone can view use of nuclear weapons against any civilian population as anything but a war crime.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    22. Re:So many questions... by elrous0 · · Score: 1
      Why did MacArthur give Japan only three days to respond after Hiroshima? Why not at least a week?

      Because the intention of dropping the bombs wasn't to encourage Japan's surrender. It was to make as devestating a showing as possible for the Russians.

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    23. Re:So many questions... by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      A: Patton was censured for this statements on this subject. And he was hardly setting policy. It's kinda like saying that what Tim McViegh said is important to US policy ( a bit of an exageration, I will grant you, but I think I made my point.. )

      I think you have a good point about the message that the bomb sent to Russia, but I dont think it was "the reason", but one of many ( personally, I dont think it was the most important, but that is certainly a subject for debate.. )

      On a Japanese surrender, all my reading leads me to the conclusion that as a nation, Japan was not ready to surrender. Sure, there were factions driving for it, but as I understand it, they had no real power. Japan would have had to have sunk a lot lower before that was a reality, I think.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    24. Re:So many questions... by erikdalen · · Score: 1
      It wasn't just planned. They invaded Japan owned Manchuria (and gave control of it to Koumintang afterwards). Read all about it here:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_August_Stor m

      --
      Erik Dalén
    25. Re:So many questions... by KlausBreuer · · Score: 1

      Very simple.

      The USA had developed two nuclear weapons, operating on different principles. They wanted to test them both.

      Japan was already contacting the USA, looking for a way to surrender without loosing too much face. This form of contact was completely ignored.

      Interesting link: http://members.aol.com/essays6/abomb.htm

      Do not trust the USA what it has to say about its reasons to use any weapon in any of the many many circumstances where it did.

      --
      Free PC version of ChipWits at http://www.breueronline.de/klaus/chipwits/
  17. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by multipart · · Score: 2, Informative

    The answer is in the text, from this doctor Nakashima, who appeared to be the only one around who was familiar with the symptoms of radiation disease.

    The article says this (in part 4):

    Nakashima differed with general physicians who have asked the regiment to close off a bombed area claiming that returned refugees are infected from the ground by lethal rays. "I believe that any after effect out there is negligible. I mean to make tests soon with an electrometer," said the specialist.
  18. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by eclectro · · Score: 1

    I believe the article said he died in his 90s. If that's that radiation does to you, bring it on.

    That's a simplistic view. It could have been uneven distribution of the fallout or the wind or how much becomes dust instead of absorbed in the ground.

    FTA;
    Men, woman and children with no outward marks of injury are dying daily in hospitals, some after having walked around three or four weeks thinking they have escaped.

    I would say that walking around in a heavy fallout zone is an extremely unhealthy activity, and if things ever came to that I hope that I am in my own bunker in another region altogether.

    --
    Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
  19. Re:hypocrisy? by HyperChicken · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A Slashdot story mentioning the US. I knew I should have prepared for the fallout by avoiding the comments altogether.

    Logical, thoughtful discussion of the actual article? Never. Not here.

    --
    Free of Flash! Free of Flash!
  20. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by leko · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah, I saw that, but it doesn't mean he didn't get cancer at some point and survive it. If he walked away with no ill-effects at all, it's certainly interesting.

  21. Re:hypocrisy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the message above deserves a score of 5

    if US can have WMD, why can't everyone else? are the americans the chosen ones or what? why does this nation believes they have rights that other nations don't have?

    also they have proven that having WMD is the way to go, North Korea has them and nobody touches them, Sadam actually stopped producing them and got invaded, what message does it send? if i was a country in some of those US black lists I'd be developing WMD like mad!

  22. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by braindigitalis · · Score: 1

    It seems most of the victims to suffer radiation poisoning and radiation burns were those cought in the initial blast, most of whom died two weeks to a month later (see page 4 of the article) -- being as the reporter was not actually in the initial blast maybe his exposure and risk of poisoning was factors of hundreds less? (IANA nuclear physicist). At other times where there have been nuclear disasters (think chenobyl) most of the people to die were those cought in the blast, and even then, the probability of survival was seemingly random (e.g. radiation is not a gauranteed killer, varying very much upon the type, duration and strength of exposure and sometimes, even the direction in which the wind is blowing to move radioactive materials/dusts around).

    --
    http://www.inspircd.org - Modular C++ IRC Daemon
  23. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by jnf · · Score: 1

    I never implied either way, but because the common consensous, at least officially is that it was done to save american lives and that 'they got what the deserved', it makes it interesting when you realize just how close to americans they dropped it.

    At any rate, I would hate to be the one to give the order regardless of who I was dropping it on, I was just stating that I think it would compound the problem when you know that it very well could be your neighbors son that you could be dropping 'the bomb' on.

  24. YRO??!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    What the hell does this story have to do with rights or online?

    Seriously, it was wartime, and a bunch of stories didn't get published. Big whooping deal.

    But its slashbait for a flamewar...so it's on the front page. This isn't news for nerds, but it sure fits with the leftism on this site.

    1. Re:YRO??!! by NitsujTPU · · Score: 0

      I concur.

      This is only news for nerds in 2 senses:
      1) There was an atomic bomb involved
      2) It's history

      This has nothing to do with our rights in this day.
      This has nothing to do with our rights online.

      It was a war, some things get censored. None of this is stuff we haven't heard before in our history books. This article is of historic importance.

      Interestingly, if the article had been posted differently, the reaction would be different as well.

    2. Re:YRO??!! by hahiss · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because there's NO war going on, and certainly NO censorship of the facts on the ground in Iraq. . . .

      You're right, there's absolutely no lesson to be learned from major events in the past.

      But I guess this is just ``leftism".

      --
      "Every decent man is ashamed of the government he lives under." - H.L. Mencken
    3. Re:YRO??!! by torpor · · Score: 1

      Ummm... no, clueless plebian, the reason this is important to Your Rights Online is that it was a HIGHLY CENSORED report, which has now been found again, and is soon to be published.

      Thus, you can decide for yourself, under terms of Freedom, not censorship, what the facts of this report were.

      Should the Allies have censored the report? Should The American War Machine Have Such Rights to Censorship?

      That is the point, and that is the reason it is in fact, news for nerds. Stuff that matters.

      You may not find America's current passion for hiding the effects of its War Machine from the general public to be much of a big deal, but this story highlights why, in fact, it might behoove you to reconsider ...

      Clueless plebians, tsch tsch, ...

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    4. Re:YRO??!! by grunherz · · Score: 1

      This isn't news for nerds, but it sure fits with the leftism on this site.

      Well, considering most of the properly modded commentary here seems to actually take this issue and place it fairly in the appropriate historical context for discussion and hasn't mostly broken down into the whole "teh nuke is teh sux0r" with 20/20 hindsight ... this point is ridiculous.

      "If you see things all the way from the right, everyone is left."

      "If you see everything from the left, everyone is right."

      Therefor the truth must be somewhere in the middle.

      --
      Four weeks, Twenty papers, that's two dollars ... plus tip.
    5. Re:YRO??!! by gothrus · · Score: 1

      I find it funny that intelligent, well-argued debates are now called "leftist".

    6. Re:YRO??!! by Capt+James+McCarthy · · Score: 1

      'I find it funny that intelligent, well-argued debates are now called "leftist".' You give it too much credit.

      --
      There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
    7. Re:YRO??!! by be-fan · · Score: 1

      These days, debate period is leftist. The conservatives seem to have headed off this deep end where they don't even feel they need to argue their points anymore, they just wave their hands and grunt a lot. To be fair, there are a few conservatives that still represent the intellectual brand of conservatism, but their numbers are dwindling.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    8. Re:YRO??!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If you see things all the way from the right, everyone is left."

      "If you see everything from the left, everyone is right."

      Therefor the truth must be somewhere in the middle.


      If you see every thing as a point in an unidimensional classification scale, everyone is either left or right or center.

      Therefore, the truth must be in another of several dimensions.

    9. Re:YRO??!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >I find it funny that intelligent, well-argued debates are now called "leftist".'

      If /. is your idea of "intelligent, well-argued debates", I weep for you.

    10. Re:YRO??!! by arose · · Score: 1

      Which part of the word "Censored" in the story do you find difficult to relate to your rights online?

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    11. Re:YRO??!! by NitsujTPU · · Score: 1

      It was censored from a newspaper before the creation of the Internet.

      What part of online did you not understand?

    12. Re:YRO??!! by NitsujTPU · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but this is Slashdot.

      It was never intended to be a general purpose political forum. It was supposed to be about technology and nerdy stuff.

      I guess that you didn't see the "News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters." graphic on the left.

      Actually, the way I figure it, the staff saw that it was way more profitable to cater to left wing nuts, politically, than to publish articles about technology, after 9/11 and all.

  25. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Yazeran · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Which makes sense as the bomb was a small one (for a nuke) with a yield of approx 15 kiloton and was detonated at an altitude of 500 meters. This would have prevented the fireball from actually touching the ground and contaminate the ground. Thus only neutron activation would have created any lasting radioactivity on the ground below the bomb, and that was also reduced due to the distance.
    The only permanent radioactivity would be trapped in the fireball and would have been deposited downwind by the 'black rain' (which would be dangerous).

    Yours Yazeran

    Plan: to go to Mars one day with a hammer.

  26. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Dogtanian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    we dropped it within a mile of a prisoner of war camp, although I suppose it makes sense when combined with the knowledge that the pow camp existed so close to many manufacturing plants. Sense that it may make, I still wouldn't want to be the guy to decide to drop an atom bomb within a mile of an allied pow camp.

    Has to be asked- was it entirely a coincidence that the camp was situated near the manufacturing facilities?

    I doubt it; it seems a logical tactic to discourage bombing of the most likely targets. If so, the Japanese were likely not the first, and certainly not the last to use prisoners as hostages in this manner.

    --
    "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  27. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sense that it may make, I still wouldn't want to be the guy to decide to drop an atom bomb within a mile of an allied pow camp.

    It's really easier than you think - it's all about dilution of responsibility. During the Vietnam War someone noted that while in theory nobody would accept burning children alive, some children are being burnt alive due to decisions made in a long chain of command where everyone is responsible for just a tiny bit of the whole process - from workers in plant making napalm bombs, to the pilot who is "just following orders", to Robert McNamara, who deals just with abstract figures, maps, tables etc. So you would be just the guy who draws an arrow on the map. Or the guy who is just pressing the button. In your own conscience, you would feel 100% innocent.

  28. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by jnf · · Score: 1

    Has to be asked- was it entirely a coincidence that the camp was situated near the manufacturing facilities? I would be incredibly surprised to find out that it was a coincidence. I would have loved to been a fly on the wall when the American's were first planning this out and realized they were going to be dropping a bomb pretty much on the pow camp.

  29. Censored pictures... by ndogg · · Score: 5, Interesting

    One thing I remember from history classes is that pictures of survivors of the atomic blasts were censored.

    Makes me wonder what else has been censored within the last century, particular for historically significant events. Was there anything censored that could have been historically significant had it not been censored?

    --
    // file: mice.h
    #include "frickin_lasers.h"
    1. Re:Censored pictures... by famebait · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They're taking the effort to censor right now reports and imagery from Iraq right, of death, injuries and suffering to locals and americans alike, even coffins returning to America, so clearly someone fears that allowing this full publicity in the US would have some significant effects...

      --
      sudo ergo sum
    2. Re:Censored pictures... by weave · · Score: 2, Insightful
      There's different reasons for censorship, like during an active military campaign you just can't let the press report a lot of what's going on since it will tip off the enemy.

      Then there's the censorship to move or alter public opinion. Is that what is happening in Iraq today? There are way too many conflicting reports about what's really happening there.

      For example, one can read Iraqi blogs like Baghdad Burning to get an insider view, but there's been claims she exaggerates stuff as well, and I've never seen her write an opinion or thought on Saddam himself.

    3. Re:Censored pictures... by zakkie · · Score: 1

      Quick answer: *everything* is censored to a degree or another, and this is always due to agendas being pushed.

    4. Re:Censored pictures... by will_die · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not allowing the photos taken of the coffins before returned to the families is done for respect of the families.
      If the families wanted the pictures to be seen they are free to have as many people as they want to photograph them.

    5. Re:Censored pictures... by dustmite · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, the reason is that publishing photos of hundreds of coffins containing dead American soldiers will make the reality of what is happening 'hit home' to the America public --- death of thousands of Americans will no longer be just some abstract number, it will suddenly seem much more real, and it won't seem so much like the US is "kicking ass" over there, as is currently the perception. So there is absolutely no doubt that publishing pictures of hundreds of coffins would cause support for the war to plummet quickly (and almost certainly would have cost Bush his re-election).

    6. Re:Censored pictures... by will_die · · Score: 2, Informative

      and almost certainly would have cost Bush his re-election
      Well if you want to get into that, President Bush wrongfully removed the restriction in early 2004(FYI the election was in late 2004).
      The restriction had been put in place in late 1980 and in place during the 1990 except for small incidents and primarily used for Kosovo, Bosnia and a few places.

    7. Re:Censored pictures... by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      Actually, there are a ton of Iraqi's who say just exactly that. She is also in a extreme Minority of english speaking bloggers. Check out Iraq the model.

    8. Re:Censored pictures... by scotty777 · · Score: 1
      Read eyewitness accounts like "Nine Who Survived Hiroshima and Nagasaki" by Trumbull [1957], and you won't need pictures. Well-written eyewitness accounts are plenty sobering. Try it, and see if you don't agree.

      I read the book back in the 60's and still find the images gut-wrenching.

    9. Re:Censored pictures... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Might that be the same reason we don't see pictures or videos of 9/11, or Beslan, the Bali bombings, the Madrid bombings, or the beheadings that Muslims fanatics enjoy administering?

      It might make the reality of what is happening 'hit home' to the American public.

      Unfortunately, you seem to live in an different reality...

    10. Re:Censored pictures... by dustmite · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, you seem to live in an different reality

      WTF? I did not make any statements either for or against the war, yet you seem to have magically deduced, and totally assumed, what you believe is my opinion on that matter? I merely stated the fact that the US government (also) deliberately controls and filters what is displayed in the media in order to control public opinion, and that that censorship does have an effect on the degree to which the public supports their leaders and policies. This is just a fact. Both sides do it, of course, but that is tangential to the discussion. Unless you are actually making the claim that the US doesn't, and only "the enemy" does? I'd like to hear if that is what you honestly believe.

    11. Re:Censored pictures... by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Oh, nonsense.

      Right now, Washington, DC has a higher crime-related death rate than our soldiers in Iraq do.

      We are, by every definition of the word, kicking ass. The media is deadset on making this another Vietnam, however, so you'll get as little of ass kicking from them as they can possibly give you.

      The mainstream media didn't even report upon the almost obscene battle casualty ratios of some of the initial confrontations during Gulf War II... Hundreds killed and only several US troops injured - after being ambushed.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    12. Re:Censored pictures... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Crime related, maybe. However, our troops are serving now in a policing role. How many cops died in DC this past month? How many U.S. troops died in Iraq this past month?

    13. Re:Censored pictures... by barryvoeten · · Score: 1

      Everything you did read, was not censored.

      That's I can do for you....

    14. Re:Censored pictures... by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Images of the returning coffins are not hurtful to the families as they are unnamed in photos; nobody knows who's kids they are, but they're *somebody's*. Seeing that many dead bodies coming back destroys the home front's resolve.

      To keep the people resolved, disinformation is produced by the GOP. Its the way things are done ... it may be wrong, but it works.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    15. Re:Censored pictures... by Sarcasmooo! · · Score: 1

      Actually, families are not permitted to photograph the return of their son or daughter's coffin.

    16. Re:Censored pictures... by Pasc · · Score: 1

      While I agree with your point, your numbers don't quite add up.

      The year with the worst murder rate in DC was 1991, where about 80 of every 100,000 residents was murdered. There are about 110,000 US troops in Iraq but they are getting killed at an annualized rate of about 600 per year. So it is roughly seven times more dangerous to be a US soldier Iraq than to live in DC in 1991.

      All in all, though, I agree with you. US troop losses in Iraq have been minimal considering the difficulty of their task.

      For comparison, during the Vietnam war, US soldiers were dying at a rate of over 500 a month for almost five years straight. During a couple perilous months the rate was over 2000 a month.

      (My numbers are all coming from the "anti-Bush" site lies.com.)

    17. Re:Censored pictures... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could you be a little more irrelevant, fucktard?

    18. Re:Censored pictures... by Dr+Kool,+PhD · · Score: 1

      Like these pictures??

      http://www.pbase.com/kburch/the_picture_from_iraq_ you_wont_see_in_the_news

      You can thank the liberal media for not showing these.

    19. Re:Censored pictures... by famebait · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and you can find pictures on the net too. And maybe noone would go to jail if a major newspaper printed more than token imagery from the war zone, but the goverment has plenty of other ways to influence major media outlets than "censorship" in a strict techincal legal sense. It is still censorship, though, by virtue of simply borking, no matter what exact means are used.

      --
      sudo ergo sum
    20. Re:Censored pictures... by mikeg22 · · Score: 1

      Primarily used for Kosovo and Bosnia? That's strange, there were no US military fatalities in Bosnia, and I believe there were only 2 fatalities in Kosovo, both of which were non-combat related accidents.

    21. Re:Censored pictures... by dukeblue219 · · Score: 1

      I don't really feel a need to argue with you here, but I should point out that while at any one time there are ~110,000 troops, they are being continually rotated home. I have no idea what the total number is... but I would *guess* that 300,000 to 400,000 different soldiers and marines have been deployed. That brings the number down to only a few times the crime rate in DC. Obviously not a safe place to be... but still deaths are really few and far between as a whole.

      --
      -Ted http://www.freemathhelp.com/
  30. Utter and total bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    No matter how often you say it, it still doesn't make it true.

    The argument that it save a million lives has been refuted time and time again. First of all the casualty figures are far from certain and it's far from certain that these were indeed that casulty figures the US had to expect had an invasion taken place.
    Further, there are rather strong arguments for the assumption that Japane would have surrendered without an invasion and without the use of atomic bombs.
    Finally, you discard all the eveidence that has been brougth to light by historians that suggests that the US did indeed have at least some additional reasons for using the atomic bombs, namely the begining confrontation with the Soviet Union.

    Just one quote for you:

    ""...in [July] 1945... Secretary of War Stimson, visiting my headquarters in Germany, informed me that our government was preparing to drop an atomic bomb on Japan. I was one of those who felt that there were a number of cogent reasons to question the wisdom of such an act. ...the Secretary, upon giving me the news of the successful bomb test in New Mexico, and of the plan for using it, asked for my reaction, apparently expecting a vigorous assent.

    "During his recitation of the relevant facts, I had been conscious of a feeling of depression and so I voiced to him my grave misgivings, first on the basis of my belief that Japan was already defeated and that dropping the bomb was completely unnecessary, and secondly because I thought that our country should avoid shocking world opinion by the use of a weapon whose employment was, I thought, no longer mandatory as a measure 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'. The Secretary was deeply perturbed by my attitude..."

    - Dwight Eisenhower, Mandate For Change, pg. 380

    In a Newsweek interview, Eisenhower again recalled the meeting with Stimson:

    "...the Japanese were ready to surrender and it wasn't necessary to hit them with that awful thing."

    - Ike on Ike, Newsweek, 11/11/63 "
    http://www.doug-long.com/quotes.htm

    Finally:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_bombings_of_Hi roshima_and_Nagasaki
    How about going there and learn yourself...

    1. Re:Utter and total bullshit by PakProtector · · Score: 1, Insightful

      there are rather strong arguments for the assumption that Japane would have surrendered without an invasion and without the use of atomic bombs.

      And there was a hell of alot more evidence, a great deal of it cultural, that said they wouldn't.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    2. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They would'nt have agreed to an unconditionnal surrender without the bomb.

      They would, however, have agreed to a conditional surrender, which included, for example, keeping their emperor as head of state.

      Funny thing, they got to have their conditions in the end anyway. Therefore the bomb was really useless as far as Japan is concerned. It was dropped for other reasons.

    3. Re:Utter and total bullshit by jimi+the+hippie · · Score: 0

      The fact is, without the atomic bomb more AMERICANS would have died. It is the government's duty to protect its people above all others. Seems like the bomb was a great tool in that mission.

    4. Re:Utter and total bullshit by PakProtector · · Score: 0

      The Point is, no matter what concessions we were going to make, we wanted unconditional surrender to get the point fully across that they had been defeated.

      Part of war is psychology, you know.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    5. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well, more Japanese civilians died from the atomic bombs than US servicemen in the whole of the pacific theatre. Both numbers are of the order of 50000 IIRC.

      I find it hard to accept the figure of 1 million US casualties for an invasion of mainland Japan.

    6. Re:Utter and total bullshit by cynical+kane · · Score: 1

      Oh, for Pete's sake. Your own frickin source deliniates that the only "terms of surrender" the Japanese could agree on was mere withdrawl. That's not a surrender.

      Whether or not the U.S. should have accepted that is debatable, but don't pollute this comments section with your baseless "facts".

    7. Re:Utter and total bullshit by brpr · · Score: 1, Insightful

      he Point is, no matter what concessions we were going to make, we wanted unconditional surrender to get the point fully across that they had been defeated. Part of war is psychology, you know.

      That's sick. It's not worth killing that number of people just to make some petty psychological point. Look what happened when we took the "unconditional surrender" idea to extremes after WW1.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    8. Re:Utter and total bullshit by PakProtector · · Score: 0

      It may be sick, but it's life. Them's the breaks, as they say. It's how things work. Sometimes it doesn't work, but in the case of Japan it did, and it did more good than harm.

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    9. Re:Utter and total bullshit by brpr · · Score: 1

      Sometimes it doesn't work, but in the case of Japan it did, and it did more good than harm.

      It did not do more good than harm. It would have been far better to negotiate a conditional surrender in the first place, instead of dropping two atomic bombs and then getting a conditional surrender anyway.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    10. Re:Utter and total bullshit by BJH · · Score: 1

      I'm sure the ex-residents of Hiroshima and Nagasaki are overjoyed to hear that you think their deaths were justified, moron.

    11. Re:Utter and total bullshit by DarkEdgeX · · Score: 1

      The morons here are the ones not understanding that they would not have surrendered how they did without the atomic bomb. The morons here are the ones who would have let the war drag on for another year or more before said surrender made. Fact is, those bombs saved lives; more than they took.

      --
      All I know about Bush is I had a good job when Clinton was president.
    12. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell us whose ass you pulled your "facts" from, will you?

      The Russians were coming down from the north. The Americans were coming up from the south. The Japanese government had already indicated they'd be willing to surrender if the Emperor was not charged with war crimes, but noooo, that wasn't good enough for the US government, was it? They had to kill a couple of hundred thousand people to make a point with the Russians.

    13. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "And there was a hell of alot more evidence"
      Actually, no there wasn't.
      Did you even read the quote by Eisenhower? And he wasn't the only one who thought so and believe it or not, at the time before the atomic bomb was droped, Japan did try to get into contact with the US about a surrender.

      So please, show me the evidence you are talking about.

      Finally, even if the people making the decision to drop the bombs, made that decision because they were convinced that it was the only way to end the war (and again, as I already wrote, the available documents show that this wasn't the only reason by far), it still doesn't mean that they had to attack Japanes' cities.

    14. Re:Utter and total bullshit by grimJester · · Score: 1

      I find it hard to accept the figure of 1 million US casualties for an invasion of mainland Japan.

      "Years after the war, Secretary of State James Byrnes claimed that 500,000 American lives would have been lost - and that number has since been repeated "authoritatively", but in the summer of 1945 US military planners projected 20,000-110,000 combat deaths from the initial November 1945 invasion, with about three to four times that number wounded."

      from here

    15. Re:Utter and total bullshit by rjh · · Score: 1
      Funny thing, they got to have their conditions in the end anyway.
      You've got an incorrect understanding here. The U.S. demanded Hirohito renounce his godhood as a condition of surrender, and that the imperial family be removed as head of government.

      The U.S. never demanded Japan remove their royal family as head of state.

      Most Americans (I'm one myself) don't understand the difference between head of government and head of state. In America, the President serves both roles. In constitutional monarchies, the monarch is the head of state (the public face put on the government) and some other official is the head of government (the person really making the decisions).
    16. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Finally, even if the people making the decision to drop the bombs, made that decision because they were convinced that it was the only way to end the war..., it still doesn't mean that they had to attack Japanes' cities.

      And here the idiocy of your intellect comes to light. What would they have attacked then, the ocean? Maybe and empty field?

      Please continue to enlighten us.

    17. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      But the surrender was not conditional. They got part of what they wanted by our grace, not by their actions.

      There is, I think, another point to unconditional surrender. The Japanese, until recently, had a constitution ( imagine that, would that have happened with a conditional surrender? ) that gave up on the idea of going to war. If the surrender was conditional, would that have happened? I dont think so.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    18. Re:Utter and total bullshit by brpr · · Score: 1

      But the surrender was not conditional. They got part of what they wanted by our grace, not by their actions.

      I'm sure American politicians tried to make out that this was because of their "grace", but I doubt it.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    19. Re:Utter and total bullshit by irix · · Score: 1

      They would, however, have agreed to a conditional surrender, which included, for example, keeping their emperor as head of state. Funny thing, they got to have their conditions in the end anyway.

      No they didn't. Hirohito was (despite what revisionists like to claim) personally responsible for starting, the conduct of, and the end of the war. He was removed as head of state, but he was allowed to remain in a figurehead role by the American administration becuase they felt that Japan would be easier to govern if he was left in place.

      Therefore the bomb was really useless as far as Japan is concerned.

      Revisionist BS. The end of the war could have gone down one of two ways - 1) a conditional surrender or 2) forcing an unconditional surrender via bombing or invasion. The Allies weren't intertested in option #1, and they took the route of option #2 that they felt would cause the least number of casualites and that would keep the Russians out of Japan.

      It was dropped for other reasons.

      Such as? I don't suppose you can offer a credible source.

      --

      Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
    20. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      Define "we".

      Also, it was the negotiating and political stupidities *after* the surrender that caused the problems after WWI. The French insisted that Germany bear the full and entire blame for the war, and assume a huge debt for it. Later, when economic conditions were very poor world wide, and worse in Germany, the French would not relax or relieve the debt in any way, adding to the discontent and suffering in Germany.

      Also, a point of the unconditinal surrender, I think, was to make it plain that the kinds gamesmanship over borders as in World War I, and the possibility of the beligerents ( Germany and Japan, in the main ) being allowed to keep any occupied territories was not going to happen.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    21. Re:Utter and total bullshit by serutan · · Score: 1

      The atom bombs killed no more people than other massive bombings of major cities, they just did it using fewer bombs, men and planes. Arguing that they shouldn't have been used is like arguing that you shouldn't fight as hard when you're winning. Condemning the decisions made by people during a war is very easy to do from a nice safe distance, just as being a critic is a lot easier than being an actor.

    22. Re:Utter and total bullshit by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      That's sick? Dude, that's war.

      Did you forget how Japan came into the war in the first place?

      Again, it was war. Nothing in war is as simple as your statement makes it out to be. If you really think that the only reason that the bomb was dropped, and not only one, but 2, is just to 'make some petty psychological point', well shit...I strongly suggest you dig into some history of the past few hundred years, especially the parts involving conflict and warfare.

      And do NOT assume I'm picking sides in any of this. It wasn't my war. Chances are it wasn't your war either. What it is for us is an opportunity to learn from past mistakes so we don't do it again. Ignoring the truth about war won't help.

      Also, I notice you've come very very close to a bit of an epiphany, and unfortunately let it whiz right past. It is well known that the Allies knew all too well what problems the 'unconditional surrender' idea caused after WWI. Those mistakes were not repeated at the end of WWII. Those mistakes were most certainly taken into concideration when looking for ways to end WWII.

      --
      No Comment.
    23. Re:Utter and total bullshit by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      Thank you. I can't believe how many people today focus entirely on how the US ended the war with Japan, while completely ignoring how Japan came to be in the war in the first place.

      Japan entered the war of their own accord, remember? A little thing called Pearl Harbor? Ring any bells everyone?

      But we should have been content with letting Japan 'withdraw' from the war instead of surrendering unconditionally? How could that have been an acceptable solution?

      'Thanks for agreeing to stop killing us, here's a cookie, please don't do it again.'

      Japan's actions in WWII ensured that a definitive outcome would be required to end hostilities, one way or the other. We can argue the merits of how that came about all you want but it doesn't change shit.

      People would be well advised to remember things that parallel this but are a lot closer to home history wise. We are already repeating past mistakes.

      How's about Osama or Sadam? Good parallels here. Known baddies that did attrocious things, that we had opportunities to decisively squash and chose not to. That worked out real well didn't it?
      (Note, motivations for why this came to be, and how it's been dealt with have NO bearing on this argument)

      --
      No Comment.
    24. Re:Utter and total bullshit by p3d0 · · Score: 1

      How does any of that apply to the Eisenhower quote from the gransparent article?

      --
      Patrick Doyle
      I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
    25. Re:Utter and total bullshit by GeckoX · · Score: 1
      I find it hard to accept the figure of 1 million US casualties for an invasion of mainland Japan.
      Of course you do, because it didn't happen. Similar has happened since then though that should allow you to reduce your absolutist judgement: Vietnam War North Korean War Afghanistan Iraq The first being the most obvious and probably the closest parallel to what could have come of invading Japan.
      --
      No Comment.
    26. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      I think it important to note that it was not a case of "the available documents", but of "some available documents".

      Just as there is not a hive mind here at slashdot, the people involved in making the decision were not all of one mind. And the reasons why were not the same for each and every person.

      So, in my mind, having studied the issue to some degree, I find it plausible that some thougth that the main objective was to end the war faster and save ( mostly American, but some Japanese ) lives, and some thought that the objective was to scare the Russians. I also think that those that thought that Japan was defeated in all but name were technically correct, but that was only important when either Japan recognized it, or when Japan was so unable to marshall an effort that it would have made the Black Knight in Monty Python's movie seem a credible threat. Neither of which had happened yet. Recall that Japan was still praying for the divine wind to come and save them, and they still seemed to think that their martial spirit would save the day and turn things around.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    27. Re:Utter and total bullshit by panda · · Score: 1

      Makes me recall what Patton said about Eisenhower:

      He was the best clerk I ever had.

      --
      Just be sure to wear the gold uniform when you beam down -- you know what happens when you wear the red one.
    28. Re:Utter and total bullshit by VAXcat · · Score: 1

      Love your sig. My favorite EMT is 376.

      --
      There is no God, and Dirac is his prophet.
    29. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      Are you trying to say that Americans are without Grace, or that the Japanese forced the issue? Or just what point are you trying to make?

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    30. Re:Utter and total bullshit by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      They were going to surrender were they? Is that why even after we dropped two atomic bombs on them, some in the military were planning on a kamikaze attack on the signing of the surrender papers? They did not want to surrender. One faction might have been for it, but they had a large faction against it as well. Got any hard numbers to prove one faction would have won? Thought not.

    31. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      Thanks.

      I have to confess that that is the half remembered leftover from high school ( Gompers secondary, in San Diego ).

      If I recall correctly, program exit was emt 377 then emt 4. I could be wrong ( and would like to know if I am. ... )

      What is emt 376? I found a reference that talked about it being a system call, but no real details...

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    32. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Watts+Martin · · Score: 1

      The question that seems to be lost in the noise here is whether civilians represent valid targets in war. Yes, I know there were military targets within those cities, but the nature of the weapons meant that the vast majority of deaths would be non-combatants.

      And frankly, "the Japanese military did awful things" isn't an answer to that question, because that's not in dispute. Is there some line past which a country's leadership can go, beyond which it's okay to attack the civilian population? These are very uncomfortable questions, because the basic truth is that massive attacks on a civilian population to make the leaders acquiesce is a reasonable definition of a terrorist attack. We don't like having to face the implications. "Oh, it's only terrorism when the bad people do it, not when we do it."

      That Japan might not have surrendered "as well" may indeed be true. But that doesn't fundamentally address the ethics of the situation. If America really does stand for a certain set of moral values and ethical principles, then sometimes we'll have to choose to stand by those principles even when doing so does not produce the optimal outcome.

      So with all due respect, don't lecture me when I ask aloud whether those tens of thousands of Japanese civilian lives were worth ending the war, let alone--as many have argued here--simply getting better terms of surrender for ending it. Maybe the answer is "yes." But no one should dare suggest that asking the question shows ignorance or naivete. Asking the question is fundamental to what kind of country we want to be.

    33. Re:Utter and total bullshit by bobobobo · · Score: 1
      It was dropped for other reasons.

      Such as? I don't suppose you can offer a credible source.

      It was done to intimidate the Russians, who were already starting to renege on their pledges to pull out of areas of Eastern Europe(such as Poland) that they liberated from the Nazis, and were already being seen as a threat.

    34. Re:Utter and total bullshit by brpr · · Score: 1

      The Americans knew that harsh surrender terms were actually against their interests, since they didn't want Japan to align with the Soviets (one or other of the superpowers was going to reconstruct Japan, and the US wanted it to be them). The initial demand for uncoditional surrender was just posturing, and posturing that cost a lot of human lives.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    35. Re:Utter and total bullshit by irix · · Score: 1

      It was done to intimidate the Russians

      Can you quote a reliable source for that? I've read some books that suggest that one of the reasons it was done to get the war over before the Russians invaded Japan. I think that makes sense.

      It doesn't make sense that the decision would be taken to "intimidate the Russians". They could have detonated the weapon somewhere uninhabited and still intimidate. That and the fact that it was already very clear at the Yalta/Potsdam conferences that the Russians wouldn't be leaving Eastern Europe any time soon.

      --

      Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
    36. Re:Utter and total bullshit by brpr · · Score: 1

      Did you forget how Japan came into the war in the first place?

      Yes, two wrongs make a right. The first principle of American foreign policy ;)

      If you really think that the only reason that the bomb was dropped, and not only one, but 2, is just to 'make some petty psychological point', well shit...I strongly suggest you dig into some history of the past few hundred years, especially the parts involving conflict and warfare.

      When I look into history, I see a whole lot of stupid and immoral things done for stupid and immoral reasons. To require an enemy to humiliate themselves before you end a war is insane. If you've won the war, stop it as soon as you can, even if that means making some concessions to the other side. It's often forgotten, I think, that human life ought to be worth more than any political or military objective.

      Those mistakes were not repeated at the end of WWII. Those mistakes were most certainly taken into concideration when looking for ways to end WWII.

      Indeed. Which rather suggests that the American requirement of unconditional Japanese surrender was not entirely sincere, and in fact rather foolish.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    37. Re:Utter and total bullshit by brpr · · Score: 1

      Well, those arguing that something ought to have been done differently from the way it was actually done always have the problem that their arguments rest on hypotheticals. Of course no-one can prove that there was a better alternative to dropping an atom bomb on a city, but why should they have to? You know, personally I'd be willing to give the people who weren't in favour of a small nuclear holocaust the benefit of the doubt.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    38. Re:Utter and total bullshit by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Look.

      Either the US was justified in its actions, or we were not.

      If we were, you need to just shut the hell up.

      If we weren't, then we need to hold those responsible for this 'war crime' responsible - in part, Einstein and FDR, two icons for the self-centered semi-intellectual socialists here on Slashdot.

      We need to pull them from their altars, and decry their names as those of infamy... or not, and shut the fuck up.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    39. Re:Utter and total bullshit by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1
      If they were really ready to surrender before the first nuke was dropped, wouldn't they have surrendered right away afterwords? How about right after the second bomb was dropped instead of waiting another 3 days?

      That lends a lot of evidence to the theory that they were not in fact ready to surrender beforehand. There is much less actual evidence that a controlling faction was ready to surrender.

      You can only work with the facts as we know them, and there just isn't that much evidence on your side. And that's with '20/20' hindsight, being able to read documentation, etc, after the war. With the much more limited knowledge they had at the time, I'd say they made the right call. Especially since one bomb apparently wasn't enough to convince them to surrender.

    40. Re:Utter and total bullshit by brpr · · Score: 1

      If they were really ready to surrender before the first nuke was dropped, wouldn't they have surrendered right away afterwords?

      They would probably have surrendered much earlier if the US had accepted a conditional surrender. A conditional surrender in a purely technical sense -- they just wanted to keep the emperor, who had no real political power.

      With the much more limited knowledge they had at the time, I'd say they made the right call. Especially since one bomb apparently wasn't enough to convince them to surrender.

      It was the right call not to make a serious effort to negotiate a peace with Japan? Hardly. Sure, a serious peace effort might have failed, but it should have been tried.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    41. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      So, are you saying the the Americans came up with an arbitrary policy in unconditional surrender?

      As I understand it, unconditional surrender was a policy decided in joint planning sessions by the allied leadership, and imposed on both Germany and Japan. Also as I understand it, this was decided to keep negotiations about "I must keep this territory", " I cant live without that territory" ( Japan's reasons for deciding on war with the US in the first place ) from happening.

      If the US had just surrendered to the Japanese right after Pearl Harbor, a tremendous number of lives on both side would have been saved. Should that have been policy, then?

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    42. Re:Utter and total bullshit by LurkerXXX · · Score: 2, Insightful
      They would probably have surrendered much earlier if the US had accepted a conditional surrender. A conditional surrender in a purely technical sense -- they just wanted to keep the emperor, who had no real political power.

      And unconditional surrender was not an option. How do you know exactly what powers they would really have agreed to? The Allies wanted to make sure Japan didn't rise again in a few years like Germany had done. To insure a new goverment was in place that met that criteria, they had to have unconditional control.

      Seeing as how Japan has not gone back into Empire mode, trying to take over the world, but has instead become a major economic and tech power, I think it worked out well.

      If they had been allowed to keep more of their previous government intact would that be true? I don't know, but I doubt your guess is any better than mine.

      It was the right call not to make a serious effort to negotiate a peace with Japan? Hardly. Sure, a serious peace effort might have failed, but it should have been tried.

      The war wasn't 'halted' during negotiations. People were dying every day. How long would negotiations have taken? How many more people on both sides would have died? More than died in the two bombings? How much could have failed peace talks cost the families on both sides?

      If the had a cease fire during peace talks, then the talks failed, that would have given Japan time to somewhat recover and be more ready to fight. That would have ment more lives lost on our side later.

    43. Re:Utter and total bullshit by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      By all means, ask away, never suggested otherwise.

      However, I have to disagree somewhat in your reasoning. I simply do not agree that what the US did in Japan can even remotely be compared to an act of terrorism in the modern deffinition. (If one wishes to be pedantic, we could of course argue all day on the deffinition of terrorism, lets not.)

      Japan, the sovereign nation, wilfully and unprovoked chose to attack the US. Just about the entire nation of Japan was involved in it's war machine. Japan was the agressor, NOT some small fringe group of well-armed terrorists. Japan and Osama cannot be compared. They are not the same thing. While it is obvious how nuking big chunks of the mideast would be more than uncalled for when dealing with the likes of Osama, (and to most, obvious how even occupying through conventional means is as well), Japan was not the same thing.

      Think about it. What's Osama got? A (relative) bit of money and a small group of devout followers.

      What did Japan have?
      A history of warfare.
      A recent history of aggressiveness.
      A massive military force including full blown navy, air force, army.
      A culture that has to retain face, creating a civilian population that was a lot closer tied to it's military, and when provoked would pretty much have to pick up and fight. Not to mention a culture that bred the concept of suicide missions.

      Need I go on?
      Lets just call a spade a spade shall we?

      Now, to make you feel better, as I believe I understand the motive behind sentiments like yours. My motives are the same. War sucks. I'd rather there was never another war. Not likely, however I believe the only way we have a chance to eventually get there is to learn from our past.

      I believe we do ourselves a HUGE disservice when we begin trying to pick apart parts of a war and draw lines as to what is right and what is wrong.

      It's ALL wrong. That part should be painfully obvious, however it's not. Rather it has become diluted to the point where it hardly even registers.

      I hope that helps explain why I'd rather call a spade a spade than compare apples to oranges.

      --
      No Comment.
    44. Re:Utter and total bullshit by GeckoX · · Score: 1
      What the hell are you on about? Dude, you need to quit applying the current world political view onto history. Things are NOT the same. The US as you know it may have grown from WWII, but it did NOT exist at that time. You seriously need to take some history lessons and adjust your viewpoint to be a wee bit less biased. It's really showing through. To your points then: I didn't ask you to recall how Japan entered the war to show how dropping the bomb was justified. I brought that up to remind you that Japan was the AGGRESSOR here. Whether you agree with how they did it or not, the US had to do something to end things decisively. They had to ensure it wouldn't happen again. They chose the bomb. It worked. War ended, hasn't happened again. Also, if you hadn't noticed, Japan's doing pretty good these days and isn't exactly expected to invade the US any time soon or vice versa. Next: If you really think the US dropped the bomb to humiliate Japan, wow...You've got a big chip on your shoulder buddy. I'm starting to think that you have some pretty serious hatred of the US for some reason that has nothing to do with this. The US most certainly had NOT won the war at that point. It was ascertained that they most likely would, but it was also going to cost a HUGE amount in American lives to do so. They not only had to invade and occupy Japan proper, they also would have had to clear out the Japan occupation in the indo-pacific islands which would have had as many or more casualties incurred. (As an interesting tidbit: Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicron covers this aspect quite a bit I believe.)
      Indeed. Which rather suggests that the American requirement of unconditional Japanese surrender was not entirely sincere, and in fact rather foolish.
      You quite obviously do not understand how either WWI or WWII ended if you can make that statement. The US wasn't looking for unconditional surrender, the problem was the Japanese couldn't give _conditional_ surrender. All the Japanese offered as surrender was a statement that they would withdraw and cease hostilities. Not exactly reassuring at the time.
      --
      No Comment.
    45. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Omestes · · Score: 1

      War is about winning, and mitigating your losses. If you can be moral within that framework, DO SO. But sometime you need to UTTERLY crush someone to protect yourself. But then again I've always valued my family and friends well being above all others, call me sick.

      The problem I have with this debate, is the we're trying to use some of our modern liberal morals to JUDGE a decision in the past. I disagree with 90% of the modern liberal morality, but even if I did it has NO APPLICATION to past events that were not made under that implication. Those events enter into history, and judgement is impossible in history. All it becomes possible to say is "by my personal, contemporary standards, this is wrong". But it is impossible to inflict your morality on people of different times, to judge.

      Of course by modern 'ethical' standards America was wrong is WWII. The modern view is America is always wrong, egotistical, anyone they act against is a victim dersevring my sympathy. This is a view I find silly, dogmatic, and ultimatly unhelpful.

      A helpful judgement should be formed as "IF we were in this circumstance today, AND we do not find the previous solution valid, THEN what ought we to do?" Not, they were wrong! They did what they felt was right, which is all any of us can do.

      Your little rant on terrorism exemplifies this problem. Your putting a modern ethic onto a past dillema. 9-11, Afganistan, Iraq have NOTHING to do with Hiroshima/Nagisaki. The inferance does not exist. It's not that the Japanese were BAD PEOPLE, as you quaintly put it, they were GENOCIDAL, SUICIDAL, and generally PSYCHOTIC. They attacked an undeserving victim (yes, the US as a victim!), they raped and murdered hundreds of innocents. Not bad people. It's like calling Hitler a Naughty Boy, or Jefery Daumer a Problem Child.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    46. Re:Utter and total bullshit by brpr · · Score: 1

      How do you know exactly what powers they would really have agreed to?

      Obviously I don't, not being a prophet. However there was a significant faction in Japan who were prepared to surreder totally so long as the emperor remained. That option was more or less on the table, but the US ignored it.

      The Allies wanted to make sure Japan didn't rise again in a few years like Germany had done. To insure a new goverment was in place that met that criteria, they had to have unconditional control.

      As I said, the allies did not ensure that Japan didn't rise again by defeating them. Instead they did so by making sure that Japan was reconstructed by the West. They could have done this after a negotiated settlement just as well, if not better.

      [pesimistic discussion of negotiations]

      Negotiations are never certain to work, but at some point you have to negotiate, right? Otherwise you'd have perpetual war.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    47. Re:Utter and total bullshit by brpr · · Score: 1

      Whether you agree with how they did it or not, the US had to do something to end things decisively. They had to ensure it wouldn't happen again. They chose the bomb. It worked.

      The US ensured it didn't happen again by reconstructing Japan and becoming their economic allies, not by defeating them. They could have done this just as well after a negotiated settlement.

      Next: If you really think the US dropped the bomb to humiliate Japan, wow...You've got a big chip on your shoulder buddy.

      Well, you said that Japan had to be shown that it had been utterly defeated, etc. etc. In other words, it had to be humiliated. Why mince words?

      the problem was the Japanese couldn't give _conditional_ surrender. All the Japanese offered as surrender was a statement that they would withdraw and cease hostilities.

      Not true. It was well known that a signficant faction in Japan was willing to surrender, with the only condition being that the safety of the emperor was assured (and his power was only symbolic). In any case, withdrawing and ceasing hostilities would have amounted to a conditional surrender, given that Japan was devastated and in no position to demand any concessions from the US.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    48. Re:Utter and total bullshit by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1
      Negotiations are never certain to work, but at some point you have to negotiate, right? Otherwise you'd have perpetual war.

      Or you can do exactly as we did in WWII and say "Surrender. No negotiations, no conditions. Surrender or we will destroy you". It seems it sometimes works. There has been no perpetual war with Japan since that I've heard of.

    49. Re:Utter and total bullshit by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      The US ensured it didn't happen again by reconstructing Japan and becoming their economic allies, not by defeating them. They could have done this just as well after a negotiated settlement.


      Dude, here's a cluestick for the fact that you're STILL missing:

      It was NOT OPEN FOR NEGOTIATION.

      I am sorry, but wake the fuck up man. You can argue this all you want, but IT WASN'T AN OPTION. Japan WAS NOT OPEN TO DISCUSSING THIS WITH THE US.

      Them's the facts. Please oh PLEASE quit changing them to fit your current view of the world.

      --
      No Comment.
    50. Re:Utter and total bullshit by brpr · · Score: 1

      am sorry, but wake the fuck up man. You can argue this all you want, but IT WASN'T AN OPTION. Japan WAS NOT OPEN TO DISCUSSING THIS WITH THE US.

      The Japanese were pretty much split down the middle on whether or not they should surrender, and disagreed over exactly what the terms should be. Some of the military wanted to fight a battle somewhere or other (I forget where), and then negotiate a surrender. It's entirely false to suggest that Japan was not open to discussing surrender in any way, shape or form. A reasonable offer from the US might have met with some success.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    51. Re:Utter and total bullshit by brpr · · Score: 1

      So, are you saying the the Americans came up with an arbitrary policy in unconditional surrender?

      Not arbitrary, just stupid. Sure, the surrender should have been unconditional in terms of territory, but I thought the Japanese actually offered to withdraw (without actually technically surrendering). Requiring absolute unconditional surrender was just asking for trouble when dealing with Japan.

      If the US had just surrendered to the Japanese right after Pearl Harbor, a tremendous number of lives on both side would have been saved. Should that have been policy, then?

      No, nations have a right to continue wars in order to preserve their soverignty.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    52. Re:Utter and total bullshit by that+_evil+_gleek · · Score: 1

      Okinawa : American losses were over 72,000 casualties, and Japanese Civilian personel were fighting along side.
      Consider, also that Ike may have been already aiming for President at the point, makes for good party politics to take the opposing view, and Ike is in Germany, not the Pacific, so isn't his opinion kinda of second-hand?

      Basically the concept of Total War started in the Civil War, Otto von Bismark studied it and brought to Europe for the Crimean War, and then WWI, and the concept stuck. Go after supply, destroy the economy and the ability for the enemy to make war. If want someone to blame, blame Grant, of course if that strategy was never exploited, Lee might flanked and finessed his way to a stalemate, the North may have tired of losing so many young men, with no real progress , and we could have slavery and the Confederacy today. Actually, Rome practiced a form of it when the destroyed crops, and salted the earth of its enemies -- soldiers got to eat, and an army travels on its stomach... Really nukes are just an extension of Total War, and like they said of nukes, that you can't put the [nuclear] genie back in the bottle again, was true of Total War, once out, it can't really be put back.

      And generally, war sucks.

    53. Re:Utter and total bullshit by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
      No doubt intimidating the Russians was another good reason for dropping the bomb.

      But it was a bonus. The bombs would have dropped untill the japanese actually surrendured. Not untill a minority within their government started talking about it.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    54. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Duhavid · · Score: 1
      but I thought the Japanese actually offered to withdraw (without actually technically surrendering)


      A: My understanding is that a faction within the Japanese Govt was attempting to negotiate this. My understanding is that that faction did not have the power to make this happen, I think, at best, it was wishful thinking.

      B: This does not answer the issue of gamesmanship with terms. It does not cover the issue of the political makeup of the not unconditonally surrendered Japan. Would you want to leave the people that thought that making war for the reasons they had, and in the way they had in power? I dont think I would have been excited about that prospect.
      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    55. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      rise again like Germany had done?

      man are you mislead. Probably not a European though. Germany's rise was because of the draconic peace-therms imposed after WWI. There was so many hatred because of this that it drove many people in the hand of the nazi's.

      WWII handled the situation much better. The Allies pumped a massive amount of money in Germany. And that seems to have worked.

    56. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Watts+Martin · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't actually have a problem with "modern conservative morality" except to the degree that anyone who disagrees with it must, apparently, be treated in a patronizing fashion. And you performed the hat trick of accusing me of wishy-washy liberal relativism, at the same time you berated me for applying absolute moral standards. Then, of course, you went on to make gross generalizations about the Japanese people based on their leaders.

      And I never even mentioned Iraq and Afghanistan, beyond observing that terrorism boils down to acts of war committed against non-combatants. This is your idea of a rant? Silly me. I thought a rant would be something like putting words in someone's mouth and writing in ALL CAPITALS to show how much I want to FROTH at the STUPIDITY of anyone who could POSSIBLY question my viewpoint.

      But, not belittling those who disagree with you is one of those crazy modern liberal notions, too, isn't it? Thanks for setting me straight on that.

    57. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Either the US was justified in its actions, or we were not.

      Yeah, because all moral decisions can only be either 100% justified or 100% unjustified.

      Morality is more complicated than that. That's the whole idea behind the "moral dilemna".

      You know, I actually agree with the decision to bomb. But it is the desire to paint the issue as a black and white "nuke or spend millions of lives invading" false dichotomy of stupidly simplistic proportions so we can slap ourselves with the "100% justified" label that pisses me off. The issue is not simple and the moral outcome is not clear and trying to force it to be is foolish.

      So we can either idolize Einstein or hate him. We can't accept the moral grey areas that surround practically every difficult decision ever made. It must be black or white. And since we don't want to revile Einstein, we must accept that the bombing was 100% justified. This is exactly the kind of moral non-reasoning that is crippling our ability to make useful decisions.

      It must stop.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    58. Re:Utter and total bullshit by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1
      WWII handled the situation much better. The Allies pumped a massive amount of money in Germany. And that seems to have worked.

      Well, that and the fact that Germany was split in half by the East/West. It's a bit harder to expand and try to take over the world when your country is cut in half with pretty much zero traffic between the halves.

    59. Re:Utter and total bullshit by jimi+the+hippie · · Score: 1

      So??? That was my point, the US government's job is to protect US citizens. If more Japanese die than Americans WOULD HAVE, but didnt have to, then it was the right move. Should we just sacrifice our soldiers to protect those monsters? (if you disagree with the use of "monster" then you need to do more research into the actions of the Japanese during WWII)

    60. Re:Utter and total bullshit by myth_of_sisyphus · · Score: 1
      You should check out the documentary "Fog of War." Robert MacNamara, who served under Curtis LeMay in WWII, fully admitted that, if the US had lost they would have been tried and convicted for war crimes.

      They planned the firebombing of Tokyo which killed over 100,000 people. To create a firestorm is a deliberate thing, with incendiary bombs dropped in special patterns to create an inferno which will feed on itself and destroy everything. As was done in Dresden and Hamburg.

      If the bombs hadn't been created, they probably would have planned more firebombings. What's worse, getting killed with one bomb or thousands?

    61. Re:Utter and total bullshit by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      My painting of the issue either black or white is merely an attempt to try and get those that are able to see things in only shades of grey to see that one choice has to be right, or, at least, less evil.

      Yeah, part of the reason for the post was an excessive amount of dealing with people that only see things in relativistic shades of grey; sorry. Wasn't the best written post in the world.

      Where in the world do I know your name from? "Chris Burke" just won't stop wrattling around in my head, as I'm sure I know it from somewhere.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    62. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      I'm not a moral relativist. I believe there is a right and wrong answer. I do not believe that the correct answer is obvious to us flawed humans. I believe that The Bomb is one of these areas where it is not obvious, and never will be. I do not believe that it should be obvious; the dropping of the bomb is a moral dilemna, and I fear for the soul of anyone for whom it is not.

      The point is to strive for that correct answer, not to tell your children that you found it with complete assurance.

      Maybe you remember an actor with Down's Syndrome and my name? Anyone who actually knows me has recognized me by my style. I went to Michigan if that helps.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    63. Re:Utter and total bullshit by DarkEdgeX · · Score: 1

      I'm confused: what part of "unconditional surrender" didn't you grasp? Keeping their emperor, in case you hadn't figured it out, was a condition. One cannot surrender unconditionally if one has conditions.

      As for the rest, I think LurkerXXX covered that quite nicely.

      --
      All I know about Bush is I had a good job when Clinton was president.
    64. Re:Utter and total bullshit by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
      No matter how often you say that The argument that it save a million lives has been refuted time and time again", does not make it true.

      The facts are clear.

      1) We dropped the bomb.

      2) The people that dropped it had been told it would save millions of lives. Whether it was 10,000 or 1,000,000 is mostly irrelevant. They THOUGHT it would save those lives. Maybe that number was a wild ass guess, but no one really knows. It could have been accurate - the Japanese had soldiers refusing to surrender DECADES after the war was over. It could very well have ended up like Iraq is now - with occupying soldiers being hit by kamikzae's with grenades every day, killing 1 american soldier and 20 japanese civilians.

      3) No one KNOWS how many lives would have been saved.

      4) The US government had cracked Japan's codes and KNEW that the Japanese military government was NOT going to surrender.

      5) Some amount of american soldiers would have died if we did not drop the bomb.

      6) We were at war with a nation that clearly started it with a surprise attack. We were under no ethical obligation to not go all out. We asked them to surrender, they said no. We stroke once and asked again. They still said no. Now you blaim us for stiking again? The Japanese government had the ability to stop the 2nd bomb. If they had used that power, those lives would have been saved. They have SOME responsibility, however small, for not quitting early.

      7)Eisenhower's views, while interesting, was not particularly more relevant than those of any other US general.

      9) Nuclear bombs were not thought of as weapons of HORROR back then, in part because they were still relatively small. A nuke of today is FAR more powerfull and more evil (radiation is often higher), and many people falsely think of those ancient bombs as just as horrifiying. That is bullcrap. Those first nukes were just baby horrors, not full grown ones, and the fact that we had to use two is proof of that.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    65. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some tips for debate

      Don't address people as dude

      Don't use the term "cluestick"

      Don't use the term "wake the fuck up"

      Do provide supporting sources

      Don't use the term US among simmilarly capitilized letters

      Do use proper english

      Well I'm a bit fuzzy on all of them, after having read a couple hundred posts in this dissucsion I must say I do believe you seem to be the most incompetent debater so far, you offer absolutely nothing to support your views.

    66. Re:Utter and total bullshit by Rick+BigNail · · Score: 1
      "Then, of course, you went on to make gross generalizations about the Japanese people based on their leaders"

      Based on some of their soldiers.

  31. The (illegible) truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I find the illegible bits occasionally quite interestingly placed. For example:

    The atomic bomb landed between and totally destroyed both with half (illegible) living persons in them.

    One tiny family board their platforms in Nagasaki's two largest (illegible) hospitals...

    ...the drug (illegible), which increased white corpuscles, be tried... [commas added]

    ...but the congestion is mainly in (illegible) down passages.

    Yes, it's a bit gruesome, but that's the article(s) for you.

  32. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by jellomizer · · Score: 3, Funny

    Don't you read Comic Books Man! Radiation only has positive effects on people. I am sure the reporter had super powers after that and lived to a rip old age of 95.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  33. Re:hypocrisy? by Capt+James+McCarthy · · Score: 1

    I love it when people paint the US as the bad guys in this whole thing. It's easy to arm-chair/monday morning quarterback a war long after it's over.

    Try asking a person who was alive during WWII and they will tell you that it was the right thing to do based upon the stituation at that time. Japan was knocking it out all over the place. They were good at what they did. They were brutal and in times of war, it does pay to be brutal. (check the Romans, Egypians, Ottoman Empire, Germans, Mongols etc...).

    Was dropping those bombs on Japan the right thing to do. I don't know I wasn't alive. It did end the war and potentially saved more lives then if the war had been allowed to go on. Yes it killed many innocent folks, but those cities were centers for military production of equipment (just like any city in the US with a large material support is a target, ask the Russians).

    Do you think that if hitler would have developed the Atomic Bomb he would have hesitated to use it?

    This of course is worthless to argue, since folks who think it was wrong will never accept any justification, and those who think it wasn't the wrong action for the time, will look like 'war-happy' goofballs.

    --
    There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
  34. Why the second bomb? by cablepokerface · · Score: 0, Troll

    I never really got that. Was Japan gonna think; "Well one nuclear descruction we can handle! What? Another?? Ow then we surrender."

    Such awful descruction. Never really knew as well if the US in those days really needed to end the war that way or did they just wanna see what happend. Maybe a bit of both.

    1. Re:Why the second bomb? by Dunbal · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Well one nuclear descruction we can handle! What? Another?? Ow then we surrender."

      While it is beyond me to argue for or against the use of the bombs, I think the point was the following. If you drop one bomb - what with all the confusion that ensues, none of the politicians can make up their mind - was this just a huge conventional attack, like Dresden? Are the witnesses lying? Was this just a fluke? Remember we're talking about politicians here. Politicians are human and suffer the same defense mechanisms like denial, for example.

      But when you drop a second bomb, the message you are sending is "We can do this every day from now on". The "enemy" has no idea HOW many bombs you have, but now they know you have MORE than one. Also when they start getting the same reports from Nagasaki as from Hiroshima they realize that this wasn't a fluke. There is no longer any way of "explaining away" the evidence.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:Why the second bomb? by HyperChicken · · Score: 0

      I think so they knew the US had more than one. Seriously.

      --
      Free of Flash! Free of Flash!
    3. Re:Why the second bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After the Hiroshima atomic attack (and before the Nagasaki atomic attack), President Truman issued the following statement:

      It was to spare the Japanese people from utter destruction that the ultimatum of July 26 was issued at Potsdam. Their leaders promptly rejected that ultimatum. If they do not now accept our terms, they may expect a rain of ruin from the air the likes of which has never been seen on this earth.

    4. Re:Why the second bomb? by ciroknight · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Besides the reasons "because two's better than one" and "two proves it wasn't a fluke attack", the two bombs were of different designs, "Little boy" and "Fat man".

      Outside of using it to stop war, we also used it as a weapons test, among other things. We hadn't set off too many of these massively powerful devices yet, and we wanted to know which would be the better war-time design.

      Now, we know a lot more about the weapons; enough to know that either design wasn't so good, and that newer weapons are massively more powerful in different configurations.

      --
      "Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is." G.W.Bush
    5. Re:Why the second bomb? by Johan+Veenstra · · Score: 4, Insightful

      To know why Japan surrendered to the US, you have to know the following things:

      - How many Japanse soldier were situated in China: hundreds of thousends.
      - How many Russian divisions were about to engage the Japanse army in China: 3
      - Was the *smallest* russian division bigger or smaller than the complete Japanese presence in China: Bigger
      - Didn't the Russian have far better equipment than the Japanese: Yes, the Russians had just fought a war against Germany, the Japanese had fought against peasants.
      - What would Russia have done after they would have annihilated the Japanese forces in China: Figure that one out for yourself.

    6. Re:Why the second bomb? by yesheh · · Score: 1

      Slightly OT: It's not like Japan didn't deserve it there, they (the Russians) were looking for revenge after their major, major losses during the Russio-Japan war of 1905, where Russia lost pretty much all of her pacific fleet, Port Arthur (What's it's modern name?) and also a large portion of her baltic fleet which was brought all the way over to help out... In short, the Russians were probably very, very eager to fight the Japanese.

    7. Re:Why the second bomb? by ebvwfbw · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I never really got that. Was Japan gonna think; "Well one nuclear descruction we can handle! What? Another?? Ow then we surrender."

      My mother understood from the papers at the time that the Japs thought it was a fluke. The Americans must have hit a gas pocket or something that cause that destruction, not a secret weapon. There was also the military that didn't want to surrender until the last person was dead. Even after the second bomb, the military still resisted and some in the military even tried to take over the government to stop the surrender. They were put down by the army. The bombs saved Japan from certain death.

      Just think if they bombed Tokyo instead of where they did. I think Tokyo was on the list but I'm not sure if it was next or not.

      Such awful descruction. Never really knew as well if the US in those days really needed to end the war that way or did they just wanna see what happend. Maybe a bit of both.

      Roosevelt did his successor Harry Truman a huge dis-service. He left him out of the loop on the development of the Manhattan project (atomic bombs). Roosevelt died, Truman became president and very quickly had to make the decision to use them or not. He looked at it as a numbers game most historians think. What did they think would happen if they used it and what did they think would happen if they didn't. It seemed clear that the war would continue without using it and based on every campaign up to that point, the Japs faught down to the last man as a matter of honor. So Truman felt that dropping the bomb would shorten the already long war and ultimately save thousands, perhaps millions of lives and perhaps the Japanese people. So it was a no brainer. Even so I understand he thought long and hard about it before turning it over to the military to use. Lets hope none of us have to make such a decision.

    8. Re:Why the second bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FWIW, the reason they didn't bomb Tokyo is because it had been so heavily bombed already. As the atmoic bomb was a new weapon, they wanted to test its destructive power in a "virgin" spot, one that hadn't already been carpet bombed by comventional explosives.

    9. Re:Why the second bomb? by Luminary+Crush · · Score: 1

      I am not sure you mean 'division'. A division (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Division_(military)% 5Ddivision has 10,000-20,000 soldiers. I believe you meant "army" or "army group".

    10. Re:Why the second bomb? by adrianmonk · · Score: 1
      I think the point was the following. If you drop one bomb - what with all the confusion that ensues, none of the politicians can make up their mind - was this just a huge conventional attack, like Dresden? Are the witnesses lying? Was this just a fluke? [ ... ] But when you drop a second bomb, the message you are sending is "We can do this every day from now on".

      I think there is a lot of validity to that. On Sept. 11th, 2001, they targeted more than one site. They got the World Trade Center towers and the Pentagon. Because they hit more than one target, a lot of people including myself were a bit panicked. My sister was very worried about my father because he works in a tall building in Dallas. Realistically, it's unlikely they were going to try to hit Dallas (not exactly filled with world-famous landmarks, unless you want to fly a plane into Southfork Ranch and try to hit JR Ewing), but one attack is an incident, and two or more is a pattern. You hit a whole new level of worry when you are trying to figure out the next item in the sequence. The uncertainty is huge -- what if your city is the next one?

      Anyway, part of the point of the nuclear bombs was to change the attitude of the Japanese leadership. Destroying someone's factories and thereby reducing their ability to fight doesn't necessarily provoke them to surrender. Making them choose to surrender happens in psychological realm. You're trying to produce desperation, so that they'll consider an alternative they have been telling themselves is not an option. With one nuclear bomb, they might look at it as the loss of a city and some war production capacity -- as a setback, but something that could potentially be overcome. They might think the US doesn't have the resolve to use such a weapon except to use it once as a demonstration. When the second hits, the doubt goes out of control. They seriously question whether they'll ever be able to win the war. But more than that, they question whether they'll continue to exist as a nation or even continue to exist personally.

      Basically, the psychological effect of two nuclear bombs on the leadership is much more than twice the effect of one nuclear bomb. And, obvious as this is, if one is not enough to convince them to surrender, then something else is needed. If two will have a much, much greater effect than one, then dropping a second is a reasonable strategy.

    11. Re:Why the second bomb? by dcam · · Score: 1

      - Didn't the Russian have far better equipment than the Japanese: Yes, the Russians had just fought a war against Germany, the Japanese had fought against peasants.

      Just to add a little comment to this. During the invasion of Manchuria, the Japanese twice deliberately crossed into Russian territory and were soundly beaten. We already had a display of what might happend if the two armies met.

      --
      meh
    12. Re:Why the second bomb? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Everyone expects casualties in war. Many times strategic bombing was thought to weaken morale but actually it hardens resolve. Both the British and the Germans (and the Japanese islands and the US in Indonesia) were bombed quite often, but people just got on with their work. None of these countries surrendered because of bombing. Yes it was scary, and you went into the air raid shelter, and sat it out. And if you were a survivor (and face it, most people were) you simply worked harder to do your bit to end the war.

      Now destroy a whole city in one shot. OK, we adapt, we divert resources. We do damage control, and squash rumours. Then destroy another city. Now see it from the politician's point of view. Uh oh. You have almost everyone in your contry carrying a gun - you gave it to them and told them "go kill the enemy". How long until someone figures out that it would be MUCH easier to kill YOU and sue for peace than have more cities destroyed... how do you explain to your people that the enemy killed tens or hundreds of thousands of civillians (depending which numbers you choose to believe) in one WEEK but go with your .303 and keep patrolling the beaches.

      This, apart from the fact that such disasters by definition overwhelm a country's ability to cope with them logistically. "Yes I need you to keep manning your tank despite the fact that your family are probably starving to death in the ruins of Nagasaki IF they happened to survive. Oh and yes we are still are close winning the war and we're making good progress like I told you last week."

      The leadership took a long dark look at the abyss that lay ahead of them and decided surrender to the allies was probably the lesser of two evils for themselves, and also for their country. It's very sad that so many people had to die pointlessly, but what's worse is that we humans don't seem to learn from our mistakes.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    13. Re:Why the second bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After hearing about the capture of the German submarine U-234 (May 1945), it seems to me that Truman would have been forced to use nuclear weapons as soon as they were available. It was bringing over a half-ton of uranium-oxide along with other advanced technology to Japan (including two disassembled M-262 jet fighters). He would have had no way of knowing how much more Uranium the Germans had sent the Japanese, or how long they had been sending it. There are lots of sites about U-234 and at least one History Channel program with interviews of some surviving German officers that was shown several years ago. The story was classified until 1997, so Truman never used it when explaining his decision, but I can't imagine him not knowing about this submarine's capture once the contents were known to our Navy.

  35. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by jnf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If i had any mod points and hadn't already commented I would have totally modded you up for that comment.

    very well put and it is a thought that perhaps more americans charging off to war in hopes of financing college should think of .. for that matter anyone charging off to war or helping 'the machine' should give a long hard thought to that statement.

  36. Re:hypocrisy? by PakProtector · · Score: 1

    I also suggest you, the Parent, read this, and look at the expected casualties to take the Islands of Japan. 1.7 to 4 Million US Service Personnel expected as Casualties, including 400,000 to 800,000 fatalities.

    And that's just Americans. You are also looking at the fact that civilians were being organised to mount suicide attacks and to provide extra backup for the army, and everyone was expected to fight to the death -- "Death before Dishonor."

    If we had not dropped those bombs, there very well might not be a Japan today.

    --

    Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
    man: no entry for woman in the manual.
    "Qua!?"

  37. Re:hypocrisy? by kisak · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Teddy Rosevelt once said, "Walk softly and carry a Big Stick."

    While today Bush swaggers with a small stick.

    --

    --- guns don't kill people, people with guns kill people ---

  38. *Speak* softly. by frostman · · Score: 4, Informative

    I believe the actual quote is Speak softly and carry a big stick.

    http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents/tr26. html

    --

    This Like That - fun with words!

    1. Re:*Speak* softly. by PakProtector · · Score: 1

      Thank you for correcting my error. I was going off of memory, and well, time makes fools of us al- Oh, hey, my hand just started blinking red! Hey, guys, look at this, it's cool, my hand is bli$235^@#%$Y@W$%^UY236h54@#^%$NO CARRIER

      --

      Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
      man: no entry for woman in the manual.
      "Qua!?"

    2. Re:*Speak* softly. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BTW, WTF?

  39. Re:hypocrisy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Try asking a person who was alive during WWII and they will tell you that it was the right thing to do based upon the stituation at that time."

    Like Ike Eisenhower, who was against using the bombs because it was unnecessary?

    "Was dropping those bombs on Japan the right thing to do. I don't know I wasn't alive."
    What does being alive have to do with anything? Seriously, was the holocaust good or bad, I don't know I wasn't alive, what kind of logic is that?

    "It did end the war and potentially saved more lives then if the war had been allowed to go on."
    Did it? That's what the people responsible for dropping it did later claim, however that does neither mean that it did, nor that it really was why they did it.

    "Yes it killed many innocent folks, but those cities were centers for military production of equipment"
    No they weren't. Get your facts streight. The only reason why the cities were realtivly intact before the atomic bombs were droped was the fact that they didn't have military significant targets and hadn't been attacked because of that fact.

    "Do you think that if hitler would have developed the Atomic Bomb he would have hesitated to use it?"
    No, probably not, so?

    "This of course is worthless to argue, since folks who think it was wrong will never accept any justification, and those who think it wasn't the wrong action for the time, will look like 'war-happy' goofballs."
    No, it's not worthless at all. People might come to different conclusions, but that doesn't mean that a serious discussion (not some stupid rambling like yours) is worthless.

  40. Re:hypocrisy? by RedWizzard · · Score: 1
    I find it quite intresting that the US always takes such an agressive attitude against weapons of mass destruction at the same time as they have this on their conscious: The biggest use of mass destruction weapons ever.
    Perhaps their use of the weapons is why they have such an aggressive attitude against weapons of mass destruction?
  41. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by smchris · · Score: 0

    Isn't that a well-known Air Force recruiting point? Press the button and back to base by dinner time.

  42. Reporter meant well but didnt know: by Ancient_Hacker · · Score: 5, Interesting
    One big problem with his report is he didnt know that:
    • It wasnt a deliberate, precise and selective strike.

      Nagasaki wasnt the primary intended target. The intended target was Kokura, but the spotter planes that went ahead found it to be completely socked in with clouds, so the bomb plane diverted to their secondary target, Nagasaki.

    • Nagasaki too was almost completely clouded over, but of course they were anxious to drop the bomb, so they aimed by using radar, which was very poor in those days, and they were WAY OFF, like miles from the intended aiming point. A lot of the blast was lost in the hills.
    • Not a red-letter day for the USAF. Most of this info was casually surpressed at the time.
    1. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by SuperDuG · · Score: 2, Insightful
      A lot of the blast was lost in the hills.

      I'm not sure I would consider the explosion and later fallout going into an unpopulated area to be a "loss".

      Not trying to nit-pick your comment, but thousands of people died and generations are still seeing the adverse reprocussions of the radiation poisoning. I guess I just wanted to make sure that a respectful sympathy is honored, most all of those killed by the blast were civilians.

      --
      Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
    2. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by Phanatic1a · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Nagasaki wasnt the primary intended target. The intended target was Kokura, but the spotter planes that went ahead found it to be completely socked in with clouds, so the bomb plane diverted to their secondary target, Nagasaki.

      How does that make it not deliberate? Having secondary targets was standard practice for conventional bombing raids as well. They were planned just like the primary targets were, it's not like they decided to just drop the bomb on some random city just because their primary was visually obscured.

      , so they aimed by using radar, which was very poor in those days, and they were WAY OFF, like miles from the intended aiming point.

      What? The bomb detonated pretty much right between the two principal targets in the city, both Mitsubishi armaments factories. That's about the best place they could have hoped to put it. And the bomb was placed visually, through a break in the clouds, not with radar.

      Most of this info was casually surpressed at the time.

      Misinformation should be suppressed, yes.

    3. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by AviN456 · · Score: 1
      One big problem with your reply is you didn't know that:
      • The atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki on August 9, 1945.
      • The United States Air Force was not established until September 18, 1947 by the National Security Act.
      • Not a red-letter day for Ancient Hacker
      --
      - Just because we CAN do a thing, does not mean we SHOULD do that thing.
    4. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by arivanov · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      What? The bomb detonated pretty much right between the two principal targets in the city, both Mitsubishi armaments factories.

      And its target being the Mitsubishi naval yard which was 5 miles off. To add to that it also landed smack on top of a residential district with more then 50% of the ground 0 being a civilian target.

      It was a war crime. Same as Dresden and same as Hiroshima.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    5. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by Phanatic1a · · Score: 3, Informative
      From Cary Sublette's Nuclear Weapons Archive:

      * Upon arriving at Nagasaki, Bock's Car has enough fuel for only one pass over the city even with an emergency landing at Okinawa. Nagasaki is covered with clouds, but one gap allows a drop several miles from the intended aimpoint.
      * 11:02 (Nagasaki time) Fat Man explodes at 1650 +/- 33 feet (503 m) near the perimeter of the city with a yield of 22+/-2 kt. Due to the hilly terrain around ground zero, five shock waves were felt in the aircraft (the initial shock, and four reflections).

      Although Fat Man fell on the border of an uninhabited area, the eventual casualties still exceeded 70,000. Also ground zero turned out to be the Mitsubishi Arms Manufacturing Plant, the major military target in Nagasaki. It was utterly destroyed.
    6. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by Darth_brooks · · Score: 1

      -Nagaskaki was a deliberate strike. The aircraft lifted off with three targets, Nagasaki was second. They didn't just go picking a city at random.

      -The bombs weren't aimed by radar. They were aimed by hand. The detonator that caused the air burst was a primative radar device. The bomb was on target.

      -Nagasaki was a secondary target because of it's hilly terrain. the terrain cut down on some of the civilian casuaulties, since it contained most of the blast.

      -The US Army Air Force supressed a lot of information. The Air Force still does this when testing new weapons.

      Look at the first use of the F-117's in Panama as an example. Their bombs were horribly off target, but were reported initially as being dead on.

      --
      There are some people that if they don't know, you can't tell 'em.
    7. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by arivanov · · Score: 1

      RTFA.

      The reporter reports ground zero being exactly on the railway line between the Mitsubishi plant and a residential district.

      The fact that it was censored in all military reports is another matter.

      In btw, I suspect that this is the exact reason why McArthur had it squashed.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    8. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by Ancient_Hacker · · Score: 1
      Thank you all nitpickers. Guess I shouldnt write in haste that early in the AM. Some clarifications:
      • I knew full well it wasnt the USAF at the time, but considered most SD readers would get confused by the facts.
      • What we DO know is:
      • That the plane had 800 gallons of fuel it could neither dump not use, due to a bad fuel pump.
      • They had just enough gas to make ONE pass over Nagasaki and divert to a landing at Okinawa.
      • One blind pass is mighty unlikely to
        • (a) Go right over the target.
        • (b) line up with a hole in the clouds.
        • (c) Both happen to be over the target.
      • I'd too claim there was a "hole in the clouds", just to avoid the court-martials.

      Regards, A_H

    9. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by DerekLyons · · Score: 1
      One big problem with his report is he didnt know that:
      • It wasnt a deliberate, precise and selective strike.

        Nagasaki wasnt the primary intended target. The intended target was Kokura, but the spotter planes that went ahead found it to be completely socked in with clouds, so the bomb plane diverted to their secondary target, Nagasaki.

      Nonsense. Secondary targets were selected with the same care as primary targets - Nagasaki wasn't put on the list or chosen from the list at random.
      • Nagasaki too was almost completely clouded over, but of course they were anxious to drop the bomb, so they aimed by using radar, which was very poor in those days, and they were WAY OFF, like miles from the intended aiming point. A lot of the blast was lost in the hills.
      Not 'they' - 'he', the pilot of Bock's Car. He alone made the decsion to drop based on a single (albiet brief) optical sighting through a hole in the clouds followed up by radar tracking. (Rightly or wrongly, he was the mission commander - and had the authority to make that decision. He was also a man quite angry that he had been bumped from what turned out to be the first atomic mission.)
    10. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I knew full well it wasnt the USAF at the time, but considered most SD readers would get confused by the facts.

      Yeah, ummm, ok.

      Screwing up facts, then lying to try to save face. You have no right to complain about anything.

      The only difference between people like you and some of our slimy leadership is that they are in charge. I guess leaders should be a reflection of the people though, so it kinda makes sense.

    11. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      Most all of those 'civilians' were employed fueling the Japanese war machine.

      You know, building the bombs and guns that were used to aggressively confront our side unprovoked?

      You want to sympathize, go right ahead. Don't mind me if I less than agree though.

      Bleeding hearts need not apply to a war you don't understand that was probably over before your parents were even born.

      --
      No Comment.
    12. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are wrong. Not just slightly wrong. Very, very wrong. And if you don't trust Wikipedia, there are a dozen references at the end of that article. You need to talk to the person who fed you this information and set him or her straight!

    13. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by SuperDuG · · Score: 1
      Usually I don't bait the trolls, but in your case ... let's make an exception.

      During World War II, the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, were destroyed by atomic bombs dropped by the United States military on August 6 and August 9, 1945, respectively, killing at least 100,000 civilians outright and many more over time.

      And what of the children of the children? Were they part of the 'war machine' as well? Japan was the enemy to America in WWII, they attacked Pearl Harbor, and many Allied troops lost their lives taking Japan.

      You call me a bleeding heart who can't understand, when it appears that you don't understand a damned thing. This bomb was dropped and destroyed an entire city. Read the article that was mentioned here, read about the doctors trying to figure out what to do about radiation poisoning, and go read about what happens to the generations of children who were born from parents exposed to said radiation. Then tell me that those INNOCENT CIVILIANS were the enemy. In fact, how about you take a trip over to Japan right now and tell them that "It's all your fault because you were part of the war machine!". What's next?? You going to tell me that the Jewish Concentration camps were the Jews fault?

      Thanks.

      --
      Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
    14. Re:Reporter meant well but didnt know: by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      Dude, you're an idiot.

      How can you even remotely compare the Jewish situation with the Japanese situation. The Jews were persecuted by their own country. The Japanese supported their own country.

      Now, you're making another assumption too. You are assuming that an aggressive country that is actively waging war, and whose entire nation and infrastructure is devoted to waging said war is even capable of having INNOCENT CIVILIANS.

      That's a big assumption.

      That would have been an even bigger assumption to make at the time.

      "Oh, don't hurt Japan, leave them alone, there are innocent people there so we can't blame Japan for Japan's actions"

      I'm sorry but FUCK OFF. It was WAR asshole.

      Yes, it sucks that there are some people still affected by that war. But you know what? It's not all negative to say the very least. And I think they learned a lesson as well.

      Do you really think it makes sense that a country intent on taking over the world should be able to expect to continue to exist if they fail? That's what you're arguing here.

      Next time you try to take over the world, a word of advice: You and your kind just might be wiped out entirely. That would be the risk one takes when trying to take over the world.

      (And yet here you are condemning the actions that avioded that and brought the world to where it is today)

      --
      No Comment.
  43. Hiroshima by sodaquad · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you found this interesting you might want to read John Hersey's account of the Hiroshima bomb. Published in 1946 and still in print, it's pretty much the definitive version.

    It's written in an extraordinarily calm style, almost without emotion, but is strangly fascinating and moving.

    Try a search for 'Hiroshima John Hersey'.

    1. Re:Hiroshima by deanoaz · · Score: 1

      "If you found this interesting you might want to read John Hersey's account of the Hiroshima bomb. Published in 1946 and still in print, it's pretty much the definitive version."

      I read that 30 years ago. I still remember the descriptions of anti-air gunners who were looking up at the time and had their eyes melted out of their faces.

      --
      If 'the people' in Amendment 2 are 'the state' then Amendments 1, 2, 4, 9, and 10 benefit the state, not you.
  44. Indeed... by Ritz_Just_Ritz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's very easy to go back 60 years into the past and play armchair quarterback using your own "modern" moral compass.

    The fact of the matter is that Japan was fully prepared to fight an invasion of Japan to the last man/woman/child. The people who decided to pull the trigger on the atomic bomb had just seen firsthand what that kind of scenario was like in Germany.

    Do I like the fact that those bombs were dropped on cities? No. Do I think it saved millions of Allied soldiers' (and Japanese soldiers/civilians) lives? Absolutely.

    Does the military censor news? Absolutely.

    1. Re:Indeed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It's very easy to go back 60 years into the past and play armchair quarterback using your own "modern" moral compass.


      It's very easy to go back 60 years into the past and play armchair quarterback using your own "modern" moral compass. ...Don't say stupid shit like this especially if you are going to play armchair quaterback yourself.

      The fact of the matter is that Japan was fully prepared to fight an invasion of Japan to the last man/woman/child. The people who decided to pull the trigger on the atomic bomb had just seen firsthand what that kind of scenario was like in Germany.

      While the atomic bombs finished things off quickly, you would be an atomic bomb apologist to believe that we wouldn't have (rather efficiently) beat the Japanese without dropping the bombs. The Japanese wouldn't have fought to the last child and perhaps part of the problem was the hardlined stance of demands the American military and government insisted on having on the Japanese surrender.

      I bet you also believe the arms race was what ended the cold war by bankrupting the Soviet Union. Sure is sounds good, but its really a load of crap.

    2. Re:Indeed... by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      Funny you mention the Soviet Union because they would have invaded Japan in August had the US not dropped the bomb. You think Nagasaki was bad, it would have been a cakewalk compared to what the Soviets would have done. Look what they did in East Germany. Stallin would have killed whoever he god damned pleased and wouldn't have minded causing even more famine in the country than existed post war. Would you have liked for there to have been a Tokyo air lift as well as a Berlin Air lift? How about the Yokohama wall? You apologists don't think of the consequences of not dropping the bomb, all you can say is "Boo US!"

    3. Re:Indeed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny you mention the Soviet Union because they would have invaded Japan in August had the US not dropped the bomb. You think Nagasaki was bad, it would have been a cakewalk compared to what the Soviets would have done. Look what they did in East Germany. Stallin would have killed whoever he god damned pleased and wouldn't have minded causing even more famine in the country than existed post war. Would you have liked for there to have been a Tokyo air lift as well as a Berlin Air lift? How about the Yokohama wall? You apologists don't think of the consequences of not dropping the bomb, all you can say is "Boo US!"

      You defend the US by saying there are countries worse than the US? Would you like to defend internment camps in the United States as well? The United States had a hardlined, chest-beating stance with Japan and it had little to do with the desire to end the war as much as a desire to end the war with crushing superiority. Sure Pearl Harbor pissed many people off and rightly so, but is that a reason to make up a bunch of bullshit to defend vengence? Maybe someday the United States will be bombed on a short ultimatum that requires us to surrender the president. Hopefully someone else can make up excuses as to why it was just after the fact as well.

    4. Re:Indeed... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      you would be an atomic bomb apologist to believe that we wouldn't have (rather efficiently) beat the Japanese without dropping the bombs.

      Really? Which island did we take that was quite efficient? Iwo Jima? Was that an example of use taking things efficiently? Our experience was that they dug in and faught to the last man. They publicly pledged the same for the mainland. So why would you think that it takes some kind of apologist to think that the invasion of the maninland would be a bloody affair?

    5. Re:Indeed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The Japanese wouldn't have fought to the last child and perhaps part of the problem was the hardlined stance of demands the American military and government insisted on having on the Japanese surrender."

      Since our less then total surrender demands of Germany in WWI worked so well, I guess we should have used them in Japan too...

  45. My Father by bullgoose · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Arrived in Nagasaki two weeks after the bomb was dropped; he was a Marine assigned to the Occupation force, he died of advanced arterial disease in 1972; I firmly believe that his time walking a perimeter around the blast area as a guard caused his problems; he actually died of kidney failure after his vascular system broke down; he had both legs amputated, several strokes and several heart attacks; he was an extremely old man at his death, aged 52; I'm 58, with several of the same problems, but I was concieved in 1946.

  46. misleading by cahiha · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The link is misleading because it tries to dispell myths that few people seem to have. If you look at the portrayal of post-nuclear war environments in recent film and fiction, radiation and fallout are generally not the biggest issues, but destruction of infrastructure, manufacturing capacity, public health services, and government are.

    Nevertheless, while nuclear fallout and radiation would not be the main problems a post-nuclear war society would face, that doesn't mean that they are harmless. Fallout and radiation are serious problems, with long-term effects on the environment.

    1. Re:misleading by the_raptor · · Score: 1

      Could that be because the link seems to be an extract from a very early 90's book? ;)

      But you are right the major problem really is the collapse of infrastructure. Most people would starve if the trucks stopped filling up their local supermarkets.

      --

      ========
      CINC, 4th Penguin Legion
    2. Re:misleading by Evil+Pete · · Score: 1

      If the attack includes multiple ground bursts on each missile silo (as expected). Then there is going to be a lot of short term radioactive fallout. If as a strategy of attack the enemy ground bursts a nuke on a nuclear power plant the amount of fallout will be immense causing probably more deaths than the blast would have. Scientific American did an analysis of this many years ago, creepy.

      Just as a reminder. When people talk about modern nuclear war they think of one bomb hitting a city, which is of course very far from the truth. A large city may be targetted with half a dozen thermonuclear warheads with possible backup attacks coming later. The attacker may decide that some ground bursts in amongst those will prevent rebuilding any nearby infrastructure by adding lethal levels of radiation to the mix.

      --
      Bitter and proud of it.
    3. Re:misleading by bani · · Score: 1

      Other serious problems would be the climate change from the smoke from the massive fires.

      Even relatively small grassland fires on the west coast here blot out the sun and lower the temperature considerably. Now imagine what happens when the entire west coast is ablaze -- entire forests and cities.

  47. In Soviet Russia.... by redwards · · Score: 0

    57 megatons gets you very little fallout http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsar_Bomba

    1. Re:In Soviet Russia.... by DrPizza · · Score: 0

      It only gives you very little fallout because the bomb was deliberately crippled to give very little fallout.

      With a fissile tamper and a ground burst there'd be lots of fission products and lots of irradiated dirt thrown into the atmosphere.

  48. I'm only gonna say this once by Dance_Dance_Karnov · · Score: 1

    The use of atomic weapons in 1945, was a demonstration for the benefit of the Soviet Union. It was us saying to them "Don't fuck with us, look what we can do" and then 3 days later doing it again to say "we can do this as many times as it takes".

    1. Re:I'm only gonna say this once by Mithrandir86 · · Score: 1
      Something that I've always believed as well. It was clear that from the beginning, Washington viewed Moscow as little more than an enemy of an enemy. As early as 1941 Rooselvelt was talking about "winning the peace."

      If the US had not developed the Atomic bomb, the USSR would not have stopped at Germany.

      However, the real reason that these bombs proliferate is not for defense, as misguided as that sounds. No nation that keeps a stock of bombs has ever been directly attacked by an identifable enemy.

    2. Re:I'm only gonna say this once by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are right of course. As much as I detest them I do sit happily most days here in the UK knowing that we have nukes.

      What bothers me though is the mentality of suicide bombers, they defy the rational just like the Japanese preferred death to surrender. A suicide bomber, or a nation who doesn't care about its populace, will quite happily nuke someone once they have the capability.

      I really believe we are heading for a demonstration of this quite soon.

    3. Re:I'm only gonna say this once by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      However, the real reason that these bombs proliferate is for defense, as misguided as that sounds. No nation that keeps a stock of bombs has ever been directly attacked by an identifable enemy.

      I think you're wrong:

      Argentina invaded the Falklands/Malvinas which the UK believed it owned. Iraq sent missiles into Israel in the first Gulf War. Al Qaeda sent airliners into buildings in the USA.

      In all of these cases a nuclear nation was attacked by a non-nuclear aggressor.

    4. Re:I'm only gonna say this once by Mithrandir86 · · Score: 1
      Identifable is key here. Al Qaeda is not a soveriegn entity that can be directly attacked.

      As for Israel, there are several things that need to be pointed out. In 1981, Israel attacked what it believed to a nuclear weapons facility. In 1990, Iraq stated repeatitly that if attacked, it would fire missles into Israel.

      Iraq fired 39 scud missles into Tel Aviv and Haifa, which blew up a bunch of apartment buildings. 75 people died, 4 from suffocation, and the rest from heart attacks. Ultimately, the 'attack' was a poorly executed retribution.

      The Falkland War was contentious, just as ownership of the Islands has been contended. The French settled the islands first, then the Spanish expelled them, who were subsequently expelled by the British, who then abandoned it. In 1820 the Argentians set up a colony, that was subsequently blown up by the Americans for harboring Pirates (as in Arrr!). The British didn't colonise it until 1833, when they set up a Naval base.

      In 1982, there were many papers in the UK that did not support the idea of war at all, and didn't believe that Britain had a right to those islands anyway. It was largely believed, in Argentina at least, that UK valued the Falklands very little. Had the Argentinian forces attacked Plymouth instead, that would have largely different. It is important to differentiate between what a country views as an overseas asset and home soil.

      A few extremists representing no country hijacked four airplanes. Afghanistan did not decide to invade New York. Iraq sent 39 Scud missles into Tel Aviv and Haifa as retaliation. They did not send troops into Israel. Argentina claimed islands it probably had a right to, as it has owned those islands in the past. Britain, as the international community saw it, was not 'attacked' in any threatening way.

    5. Re:I'm only gonna say this once by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      Sorry, your arguments don't convince me. Al Qaeda was directly attacked in Afghanistan, quite successfully. Trying to say that the Scuds in Israel or the Argentinians in the Falklands weren't an attack because there was some prior history is like saying there has never been an attack. There's always prior history.

      Now, if you had said "no nation that keeps a stock of bombs has ever been directly attacked by an identifable enemy that expected nuclear retaliation", I think you'd be right. The first part of your claim, that nuclear weapons are defensive, that's right too.

  49. Re:hypocrisy? by Moridineas · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Realistically speaking, what other options did the US have in the Pacific theater in WW2?

    Japan had attacked us first. Japan indeed had brought us into the war. The fighting in the Pacific had been extremely bloody, with countless islands and other places won with much bloodshed and cost--and we weren't even to the Japanese mainland yet.

    Kamikaze--divine wind--took a pretty rough toll. On the Japanese too for sure, but us as well. It's rather indicative of the extreme lengths to which some Japanese soldiers and commanders were willing to go to win.

    Would you have rather we performed a manned ground invasion of the Japanese islands and subdued the entire place by force? The Japanese leaders PROVED by ignoring the nuclear bomb not only before it was detonated but more to the point, AFTER it was detonated, that they would not easily surrender.

    Estimates I've read (and common sense as well) have point casualties and destruction on both sides from a ground invasion much higher than the nuclear bombings.

    No side can be completely innocent in war. Dresden, Nagasaki, Hiroshima, and Tokyo for that matter were horrible. So too was the rape of Nanking, and the Japanese push throughout the Asia Pacific.

    What choice did we have? This was not a war of our choice, or one that would end without a decisive victory or defeat. What better outcome could there have been?

    General Patton once said something like 'no dumb bastard ever won a war by dying for his country--the trick is to make the other dumb bastard die for his.' Somewhat egalitarian if you really think about it.

  50. Re:hypocrisy? by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1
    We force our will on other people by force, toppling democratically elected governments and installing dictators who we then have to remove years later, or they end up fucking us over.


    Or, sometimes, when the US doesn't move quite fast enough, the country in question handles the removal for them, and the successor regime screws them over instead.

    (Think Iran.)
    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  51. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by wpiman · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Civilians who make the weapons of war are not civilians.....

    Welcome to war-- it is never pretty.

  52. All weapons and wars are terrible by putaro · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Showing the effects of just about any weapon of war will sicken a normal person. And yet, somehow, we keep on managing to figure out ways to dehumanize opponents enough to justify in our minds waging war on them.

    Japan got what they had coming to them. Looking at the effects of the atomic bombings in isolation and going "Oh, how awful" is worthless. You have to look at the whole war and take actions like the atomic bombings in the context of the time.

    I live in Japan currently, my wife is Japanese and my children are half-Japanese (I am American). I enjoy Japan and I like the Japanese people. It's hard to imagine now how a war like WWII could have been fought by them.

    My landlord, at 80+, was in the Army and served during WWII. He's a nice old man who likes to garden and play with my kids. I've never had a conversation with him about what he did during the war though it wouldn't surprise me if he had been running around with a bayonet through Nanking or poking POWs along the Bataan trail. It was what you did at that time and somehow there is a collective insanity that sweeps men up and gives them license to run amok.

    My grandfather drove landing boats in the Pacific during WWII. He never talked much about it, but my grandmother told me he used to wake up in cold sweats in the middle of the night after he got back. I knew other men from his generation who had been to war and must have been through and done terrible things. Yet they came back and went back to normal lives and did normal things and we sat and ate dinner with them. And we, as a society, condoned what they had done and dreamed up ways to kill more people faster and easier while still being concerned about what kind of car to drive and what kind of school the kids should go to.

    Death comes to us one at a time. Each life lost is a tragedy. Atomic weapons changes these tragedies into statistics but make no mistake, each death is still a tragedy. And each life lost to a bullet is just as much a tragedy as one lost to a nuke. War is terrible and destructive and to be avoided. Let's not pretend that some ways of making war are better than others.

    1. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by torpor · · Score: 1

      Showing the effects of just about any weapon of war will sicken a normal person. And yet, somehow, we keep on managing to figure out ways to dehumanize opponents enough to justify in our minds waging war on them.

      Indeed. Show the population the TRUTH about their war machine, and they'll soon stop feeding dollars into it. This is just a plain fact. Censorship of the Products of War doesn't protect anyone but the perpetrators...

      "National Security" usually means "keeping the population ignorant enough to not give a damn", you know ..

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    2. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by Tim+C · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Let's not pretend that some ways of making war are better than others.

      While I agree with you in principle, speaking as a civillian, I would be tempted to argue that ways of making war that seek to keep civillian casualties to a minimum are better than those that pay such things little or no heed.

    3. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by Himring · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Let's not pretend that some ways of making war are better than others.

      "It is well that war is so terrible -- lest we should grow too fond of it." -R.E. Lee

      --
      "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
    4. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by lseltzer · · Score: 1

      Well put. There were several conventional bombing raids in WWII that were more devastating than the A-bombings. Somehow the A-bombings have been comdemned as immoral while the massive conventional bombings aren't. Go figure. In fact, we basically know now that strategic bombing doesn't cause anyone to surrender and is in that sense a failure.

      And yet Japan, having launched a brutal war of conquest, enslaving their neighbors, had to be stopped, and had we not beaten the living snot out of them they would not have surrendered until we invaded and conquered every single island. Their resistance in Okinawa and elsewhere makes this clear. In this light, I have no doubt that the A-bombings saved lives. (John Hershey argues that the Soviet declaration of war around the same time was also devastating to the morale of the Japanese high command.)

      When it was all over and once both the US and USSR had nuclear weapons the moral calculation changed substantially and will never change back. But in August 1945 the world was different than it is now.

    5. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by redhog · · Score: 1

      That depends. One of the most interresting things is that some countries force all (yung) men to join the army. How then is attacking that country and sparing civilians (while killing all soldiers) in any way more humane than killing soldiers and "civilians" alike?

      I am a man and live in a country where this is true (sweden), though we haven't been involved in a real war in quite some time. As many people here, I'm fighting to create a society where men and women are more equal. But we'l never get real equality as long as men are expected to die to defend the women when it all comes to its edge.

      --
      --The knowledge that you are an idiot, is what distinguishes you from one.
    6. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by Lovesquid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly. Imagine if we had never dropped the bombs on Japan. There would never have been a demonstration of how horrible and devastating these weapons could be in a real war -- they would have been unproven, theoretical weapons that had never been demonstrated effective in wartime use. We may not have been as hesitant to use them in the later Cold War as we were. Both the Soviets and the Americans were well aware of the bombs' horrors and effectiveness, and hence, less inclined to actually use them over the next 50 years.

      I like to think that the horrors of the bombs' effects on Japan in the 40s helped to prevent an even greater catastrophe in later year. We were close enough to pushing "the button" on the Soviets as it was, without having the "let's see if they really work" mentality and lack of understanding of the truly awful devastation they leave behind. And considering that their effectiveness increased a hundredfold as the technology developed, I'm saddened for the Japanese, but grateful that we did not save the "first time" for later on.

    7. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever thought of "WHY HAWAII A IS PART OF US"? or "WHY U.S. SOLDIOR WAS LIVED IN FILLIPHINE"?
      You sound so moronic to talk about only other side is brutal.

    8. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by darkmeridian · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just because the Japanese got their asses handed to them in a spectacular fashion via nuke does not mean they were innocent and completely undeserving of what they got. Read "Flyboys". Japanese troops were executing American prisoners of war and then eating them. Yes. The Japanese were cannibals. American troops reported finding bodies of their fallen stripped of meat and finding human body parts in Japanese stewing pots. Really. And that's ignoring what they did to China and during the Bataan Death March. And that's also ignoring Pearl Harbor: a surprise attack conducted during peace talks.

      In summary: the nuke was bad, but so were the Japanese during that time. How does the cookie crumble? Not as clearly as some would think.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    9. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by Evro · · Score: 1

      War is terrible, I agree, but you seem to be leaving out the fact that the Empire of Japan attacked the United States, essentially unprovoked. There are wars that are fought for flippant reasons, the second World War was not one of them. The Allies in World War II literally saved the world. While any war is a horror, you seem to be implying, by stating that we "condoned" what our troops had done, that what the US did during WWII was wrong. It was not. While the atomic bombs dropped on Japan may have been unnecessary, defending the world from madmen in the process of world domination was not only necessary, but probably the greatest achievement of the past 500-1000 years.

      I'm not saying the US was a perfectly noble opponent in the war, and I'm sure some soldiers on both sides did things that fell outside the Geneva convention, but frankly your attitude toward WW2 vets seems insulting. Maybe I'm biased due to having lived in the US my entire life, but you certainly seem just as biased against the US. You seem to be placing the "blame" for the war squarely on the US. As I said above, Japan is the one who attacked us, and WW2 vets' actions don't need to be "condoned" but rather commended.

      --
      rooooar
    10. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by putaro · · Score: 1

      Do you know how to read? Here's my second paragraph:

      Japan got what they had coming to them. Looking at the effects of the atomic bombings in isolation and going "Oh, how awful" is worthless. You have to look at the whole war and take actions like the atomic bombings in the context of the time.

      Now how is this blaming the U.S. for the war?

      As far as vets from WWII or any conflict I have a lot of respect for them and I don't denigrate them for what they did, it was necessary. However what they did and what was done to them by the war was horrible, within the bounds of the Geneva Convention or not. War is sometimes necessary and the results are sometimes noble but the process is always brutal.

    11. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny you should say this.

      People can only go by what they know at the time, and between WW1 and WW2 the standard belief was that 'modern' wars would be fought by air bombardment of each side's capital cities, while the army and navy just fought holding actions.

      This was expected to MINIMISE casulties - the belief was that civilians would soon sue for peace under such treatment, so the war would stop before the awful trench warfare got going.

      So plans for bombing cities were considered the most humane proposal for war when the WW2 generals were being trained. We may know better with hindsight, but Harris certainly thought his approach would shorten the war at the time.

    12. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by dogbowl · · Score: 1

      Not only should you not have any doubt that the A-bombings saved lives, the Japanese government themsleves have said the same thing. (sorry, no links)

      --

      These pretzels are making me thirsty.
    13. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      learn to talk american if you want anyone to listen to you

    14. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by Illserve · · Score: 1

      Some people spend all day waiting for someone to post something that will allow them to launch into a diatribe about their favorite subject.

      If it's been a slow day, they can get trigger happy.

    15. Re:All weapons and wars are terrible by PatientZero · · Score: 1
      Maybe Sweden is different, but here in the U.S. not all civilians are young men. Put aside the fact that the atomic bombs were dropped on civilian centers with little manufacturing capacity (meaning civilians were the target, not collateral damage), there are rules to war.

      Yes, something as ugly as war actually has rules that civilized (sic) nations agree to follow even when beating the crap out of each other. Most countries consider the targeting of civilians to be terrorism -- Europe and the U.S. included. Hell, the U.S. claims to be fighting a war against it.

      The importance of stories like this one that investigate the results of the bombs is to show that yes, indeed, they were acts of terrorism.

      More to your point, the war may end before the young men (and women) can be drafted into the military, so targeting them is wasteful. But in the end, the rules exist so that enemy nations won't do the same thing back to us.

      The U.S. was incredibly lucky that the Japanese and Germans were unable to launch attacks on our soil during the war. England had its cities pounded by Germans bombs and rockets, creating a horrible fear among the civilians. The Germans government didn't do this believing they were killing future soldiers. They did it hoping the English civilians would force the government to exit the war. This is terrorism.

      The U.S. fire-bombed Japanese cities, causing long-burning fires among the densely packed houses that killed more people than the two atomic bombs. They weren't killing future soldiers -- they were hoping to break their will. Again, terrorism.

      If you feel that we need to have all options open to us when fighting a war, then fight to get the Geneva Conventions overturned. But don't cry foul when your soldiers are tortured as prisoners of war or when your dams are bombed to flood your farmlands, causing mass starvation.

      --
      Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
      I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
  53. "just following orders" by ajs318 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Bullshit. There is no such thing as "just following orders". You always have the option to disobey. If someone orders you to do something which you know is wrong, and you do it anyway, you are every bit as bad as them.

    --
    Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    1. Re:"just following orders" by mtenhagen · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Disobeying orders in war time can get you shot. If I where to be ordered to kill someone else (an enemy) or get shot myself I know what I would choose.

      --
      200GB/2TB $7.95 Coupon: SAVE90DOLLAR
    2. Re:"just following orders" by Ellis+D.+Tripp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But the topic at hand isn't killing an ENEMY, but knowingly killing innocent civilians by following orders blindly. Or do you automatically consider all citizens of an opposing country in wartime to be "The Enemy"?

      Following orders to kill civilians is a war crime, as is giving those orders in the first place.

      --
      Remember "News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters"? Help make it a reality again! http://soylentnews.org
    3. Re:"just following orders" by DarkSarin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It is MUCH stickier than that.

      Folks, war is not a simple thing, and trying to make it sound simple is foolish. In war, there are things that happen that undeniably should not--I won't justify that. But there are too many people that question things that a) can't be changed and b) try to make all war seem evil.

      A) is not so bad, as we can learn from past mistakes--and I think that the military would avoid using nuclear weapons (talking about US military, as well as European militaries) at all costs. There can be, however, a point beyond which it is no use to travel in your inspection of the past.

      B) is foolish in the extreme. I had a coworker who, at one point, stated that she felt ALL war was wrong, and there was no point at which it would be justified to fight a war. This is foolish. At some point (and what point that is is debatable) there comes a time where if you do not fight, you allow innocent civilians to be slaughtered by an enemy who will torture and rape and abuse, just because the enemy has the ability to do so (I don't think that the majority of us would have liked it if Nazi Germany had won). In the case of WWII, if no one had opposed Hitler, then we still would have had concentration camps and the Holocaust. I don't think that appeals to most of us.

      Does that justify, then, the use of nuclear weapons? I don't know. I do know, however, that there is NO way that you can ever be certain that if we hadn't done that that the Japanese (at that time) wouldn't have ended up winning the war. Maybe we would have had to use the nuclear bomb, but instead of hitting Japan, an enemy-occupied US city (possible). From a military standpoint, you always stop the enemy before they take your land. Especially when it is a war across oceans, where if Japan had taken and held Hawaii, it would have given them a major advantage.

      So, "just following orders" is more complicated than you seem to think. That's why we aren't in the military (or I assume you are not). I, at the very least, would want to know why I should storm a particular hill or destroy a particular area. Sometimes an action may seem odd, or even wrong, but in the interest of winning a war, it may be absolutely essential. Without knowing the entire picture, however, you can't always be certain that an action is not the best thing. I'm not talking about rape or abuse or defying the Geneva conventions (those are always wrong, and then the soldier should take the moral ground and refuse, knowing that the senior officer might just have him severely punished (and in some cases killed), but defying the orders all the same), but about taking a village or bombing a particular target. So while I agree that there are some situations and actions that are extremely hard to justify (rape is never justified in my mind), don't be quick to judge a soldier's defense that he was just following orders. If the Milgram studies taught us anything it was that authority is more powerful than we tend to think, and that most people will obey orders when asked to do something the would never do on their own (shocking someone with a supposedly lethal charge)--just because they were told to do it by someone with authority (experimenter). Think about it a little more before you discount that particular defense!

      --
      "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
    4. Re:"just following orders" by Kadmos · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Does that justify, then, the use of nuclear weapons? I don't know.

      I would find it hard to believe that there was much talk about "justification" at the time.

      My grandmother was in a Japanese prison camp. She was there simply because she wasn't Japanese. She was "different" from them and perhaps that's while they raped and tortured her every day for months. Apparently it didn't matter to the Japanese that she was pregnant at the time. Later her son was born, but babies can't work so they don't get fed. One of the other prisoners (I don't even know his name) smuggled in some food & medicine to try and keep the kid alive. Unfortunately they found him out. The Japanese assembled all the prisoners in the camp to make an example of him. They shoved a fire hose down his throat and pumped water into him at high pressure, his stomach exploded and his internal organs flew all over the place. The prisoners could only watch as he died in agony, trying to pick up all his bits and put them back in.

      This is not a unique story and not a particularly bad one when it comes down to it compared to a lot of the stuff that went on. A lot of really awful shit went on in that war.

      Dropping atomic bomb(s) on a (comparative) handful of people (compared to the millions dying and in danger) to end the war with Japan is a no brainer. It only seem "wrong" to a lot of people today because they aren't having their internal organs removed and fashioned as a hat.

    5. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are no civilians in war.

      Nobody is innocent in war.

      That is all.

    6. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you an armchair military analyst?
      Yes, you can do anything you want at that exact time and not follow an order. Problem is you will be physically removed within seconds and someone else will do it. What you consider "wrong" may not be wrong by someone eles account. If you choose to do this during a battle operation, you might get killed or shot yourself.

    7. Re:"just following orders" by Skye16 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't necessarily see how "all war is evil" necessarily equates to "we must never go to war." I'm sorry, but all war is evil. But sometimes, if there are no other viable alternatives, we have to deal with that necessary evil. Try to avoid war at almost all costs...but sometimes it is necessary to step up to the plate. But there's no use in glorifying war or trying to make it sound better than it is; war is hell. People die. Civilians and soldiers. Teenagers will be screaming for their mother as they try to keep their guts from spilling out. Civilians will be burnt alive or killed by shrapnel. Children will see their parents cut down in front of their eyes. War is an evil act. Period. But in very specific instances, it does do some good. Sometimes evil acts have that effect. That doesn't make them less evil.

    8. Re:"just following orders" by arkanes · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It's easy to pick examples of atrocities and justify whatever you want from them. It's not like there no Japanese people totured by US troops, either. And, of course, the people torturing your grandmother weren't the ones who got the bomb dropped on them.

      This, of course, is why people decided that full-blown pacifism is the only way - because once a cycle of violence starts ever step simply escalates and becomes "justified" by the previous atrocities.

      Now, granted, the Japanese culture of war was *extremely* harsh and the atrocities commited were extreme. But that doesn't make other atrocities okay.

      War is about the demonization of the enemy - the psychology that makes a Japanese soldier feel okay about (horribly) torturing someone to death to maintain order in a camp is exactly the same as the one that lets someone feel okay about killing (horribly) tens of thousand of civilians in an attempt to force an opponent into surrender. War is a nasty, violent, terrible thing and glorifying it only leads to more atrocities - no matter how bad your enemy is.

    9. Re:"just following orders" by acadia11 · · Score: 1

      Well, then by that ideology then 9/11 was justified. After all Osama Bin Laden declared war on the U.S. back in 1993. Conversely, the U.S. was fighting "terrorism and Osama". i've never understood this word, terrorism. It's actually a really silly word when you think of it, as all wars are fought through the terrorizing or use of fear of complete destruction of the enemy. So, if there are no innocents in war, then every person who died in the WTC were simply casualties of war. As everyone of those WTC casualties were aiding the American governments cause by living in the U.S. and paying taxes to help fund the Governments war actions, and therefore, target for destruction. So, I'm just making sure I understand your statement when you say, there are no innocents in war.

    10. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a Japanese, I'm interested in this story.
      I feel sorry my grandfathers might have killed innocent people.
      And I doubt that Christianity has affected the comments like "no one is guilty"
      or "these crimes were inevitable." I think Christians shouldn't become soldiers.

      ("Whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also."
      "And fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul:
      but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.")

    11. Re:"just following orders" by thuh+Freak · · Score: 1

      wrt glorifying war
      MANOWAR ROOLZ.

      --
      I wish that I was a catfish.
    12. Re:"just following orders" by say · · Score: 1
      At some point (and what point that is is debatable) there comes a time where if you do not fight, you allow innocent civilians to be slaughtered by an enemy who will torture and rape and abuse, just because the enemy has the ability to do so

      So war is right because there always exists someone who is the aggressor? That's just saying everyone should defend themselves instead of being killed. Wow, that position is just so controversial.

      The interesting question is whether the aggressor could be right at any time. I think not. The Bush administration seem to think otherwise. This is the question worth debating, not whether a country should defend itself or not.

      --
      Roses are #FF0000, violets are #0000FF, all my base are belong to you
    13. Re:"just following orders" by rollingrock · · Score: 1

      umm... no. Hitler was involved in WWII. The leader of Germany in WWI was Kaiser Wilhelm II. Hitler was only a soldier in WWI.

    14. Re:"just following orders" by pizzaman100 · · Score: 1

      It was both Sherlock. That's whay they called them the Axis (Germany + Japan).

    15. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      moidib posting as anonymous.

      I think you are missing the point. In the example given the defending force need not be the contry under attack.
      It is not enough to defend yourself and leave innocent people to suffer at an agressors hands.

    16. Re:"just following orders" by rjh · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There were hardly any civilians in Japan during World War Two.

      Seriously. Read up on the war. The Japanese imperial government forced elementary-school children to drill with bamboo spears and take on military rank as preparations to 'defend the homefront'. Men unfit for military duty, as well as most women, were forced to work in factories making war materiel. The entire civilian population had been forcibly mobilized by the government into joining a military war effort. The entire population of Japan over age twelve were essentially military draftees. This is called "total war". Today, total war is considered by political thinkers to be a crime against one's own populace, because it makes the entire population a legitimate military target.

      I agree that following orders specifically intended to result in civilian deaths is a war crime. I agree that giving orders specifically intended to result in civilian deaths is a war crime.

      I just don't see there were very many civilians in Japan.

    17. Re:"just following orders" by Nilatir · · Score: 1

      Please, please tell me you are actually 8 years old and haven't even had history yet...

      --

      "We were half way to Rivendell when the drugs began to take hold."
      -- Hunter S. Tolkien
    18. Re:"just following orders" by ManUMan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The moral calculus that makes civilian deaths a "necessary evil" is the scariest part, to me at least, of warfare in this day and age. Certainly from the beginning of human history we have dealt with the evils of humanity killing each other. I am not so naïve to believe that civilians were not killed in wars. I am sure that the raping and pillaging that accompanied victory included immeasurable harm to civilians.

      The interesting (or scary) part to me is that in a day and era where war is (at least to some degree) governed by the Geneva conventions we still don't bat an eye at civilian deaths. Those who die (like those killed in the firebombing of Dresden, or when Sherman burned Atlanta, or as a result of nuclear weapons in Hiroshima and Nagasaki) are simply swept up into the category of "necessary evil." There deaths, we tell ourselves, are necessary so that our goals in warfare are to be achieved.

      So my question is, when we start applying this kind of moral calculus to our decisions what is a human life worth? What are the lives of our children, our wives or husbands, our mothers and fathers or anyone else worth? Do we care if those who have no part in the combat die? Would "necessary evil" be a satisfying explanation to you if persons you love had to die?

      Perhaps I am to soft, but "necessary evil" is not an explanation that I would accept, nor is it an explanation that I would be prepared to think some one else who may or may not be my "enemy" should accept.

      --
      If you are never moderated, do you really exist?
    19. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What! Get your facts straight!

      World War II (1939-1945)

      Axis powers (Germany, Italy, Japan, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria) versus Allies (U.S., Britain, France, USSR, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China, Denmark, Greece, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, South Africa, Yugoslavia).

      Excerpt from the History Channel:
      "When he came to power in Germany in 1933, Nazi leader Adolf Hitler assured his followers that the Third Reich would last 1,000 years. In the opening years of World War II, Hitler's war machine won a series of stunning victories, conquering the greater part of continental Europe, and many feared his prophecy was coming true. However, the tide turned in 1942 during Germany's disastrous invasion of the USSR. By early 1945, the British and Americans were closing in on Germany from the west, the Soviets from the east, and Hitler was holed up in a bunker under the chancellery in Berlin awaiting defeat. Around midnight on April 30, with the Soviets less than a mile from his headquarters, Hitler committed suicide with Eva Braun, his mistress whom he married the night before. Red Amy soldiers found charred remains believed to be their bodies in a bomb crater two days later. Hitler's Third Reich lasted just 12 years, but the harm it inflicted on mankind was unmatched by empires that lasted 100 times as long. Nearly six millions Jews and an estimated 250,000 Gypsies were exterminated in the Holocaust, and an indeterminable number of Slavs, political dissidents, disabled persons, homosexuals, and others deemed unacceptable by the Nazi regime were systematically eliminated. The war Hitler unleashed upon Europe took even more lives--close to 20 million people were killed in the USSR alone."

    20. Re:"just following orders" by brsmith4 · · Score: 1

      WTF!!!! Dude, go take a 3rd grade history class! Hitler wasn't put into power until 1933, almost 15 years after the end of WW1. God, I hope you were kidding.

    21. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This, of course, is why people decided that full-blown pacifism is the only way - because once a cycle of violence starts ever step simply escalates and becomes "justified" by the previous atrocities.

      And I think that lasted for about ... oh maybe 3 months between 6th and 7th grade.

      The first culture that goes completely "pacifist" will be run over by one that doesn't believe in their ideals. While that might seem harsh, that's reality.

    22. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      moidib posting as anonymous.

      You are arguing semantics.
      The poster is identifying acts that cannot be justified as "evil" such as rape, or killing for pleasure.

      You both see where there are "necessary evils" you just call them different things.

    23. Re:"just following orders" by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      I've heard of the Milgram experiment. Nobody would ever allow that sort of thing to be repeated nowadays, unfortunately {except maybe for a reality TV show}.

      Still, I maintain my position: Not only is obedience not a virtue in and of itself, but there are times when is is wrong to obey an order.

      Not disobeying an order to shoot somebody who refused to obey an order to do something wrong is also wrong. So I would say let them threaten to kill me, if I saved that many lives ..... someone else will undoubtedly be given the order I refused, but perhaps my own actions might just have rekindled something that had been smouldering in my replacement ..... and my would-be executioners .....

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    24. Re:"just following orders" by swillden · · Score: 1

      try to make all war seem evil.

      ALL war is ALWAYS evil. Make no mistake about that.

      It's just that, sometimes, it's the lesser evil.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    25. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I so did NOT need to read that at 10 am.... Thanks.

    26. Re:"just following orders" by Phroggy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And, of course, the people torturing your grandmother weren't the ones who got the bomb dropped on them.

      Not the point - dropping the bomb led to Japan's surrender, which is why (presumably) the people torturing his grandmother stopped doing so, and released her. Otherwise, the torture would have continued.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    27. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      and b) try to make all war seem evil.

      I don't know about "evil" (which is way too relative, for instance war is OK as a population growth deterrent; what is evil on getting rid of a few million humans that are depleting the place?) but all wars are a huge display of stupididy and incapacity of humans to work out differences and work together to solve problems. Like, instead of relying on war to do population growth control, we could ignore the popes and use contraceptives instead.

    28. Re:"just following orders" by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      If I where to be ordered to kill someone else (an enemy) or get shot myself I know what I would choose.

      In Soviet America, Uncle Sam wants YOU! (pathetic, isn't it? :(

    29. Re:"just following orders" by naasking · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think this is a silly perception of 'evil'. When faced with two choices, choosing the option that causes the greatest good, or the least harm is not evil. As you said, sometimes war is that option. Thus, war is not always "evil".

      Trumpeting the blanket statement "war is evil" is just plain wrong. Saying it's the "lesser evil" is simply acknowledging that you are uncomfortable with the idea of taking a firm stance on what delineates good and evil choices.

      War is harsh, war often contains atrocious acts, war is sometimes necessary, but it is not itself evil.

    30. Re:"just following orders" by naasking · · Score: 1

      The interesting question is whether the aggressor could be right at any time. I think not. The Bush administration seem to think otherwise. This is the question worth debating, not whether a country should defend itself or not.

      The aggressor is always wrong. No, the really interesting question is: at what point is a threat sufficient to warrant a response? A threat is an act of aggression, but there are credible threats, and non-credible ones. I think we know where Saddam falls on this scale. The question is, where is that line beyond which we are justified in acting?

    31. Re:"just following orders" by Steve525 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Terrorism" isn't really about the method; it's about who's doing it. Yes, when a country is in a declared state of war, civilians might be considered targets. There are some attempts at rules (such as Geneva Conventions), but it seems in an all out war these get thrown out the window. (As long as you win the war, it really doesn't matter how. Your enemies won't be in a position to complain).

      But, OBL does not represent any country, and therefore he has no authority to declare war. His actions, therefore, quite simply, make him a criminal. This particular crime is called terrorism.

      This is very important distinction, since a nation has to consider the protection of it's own citizens. It can't go off bombing anyone it has a grudge against for fear of retaliation. Someone like OBL can, (as long as he has someplace to hide).

    32. Re:"just following orders" by compro01 · · Score: 1

      you are either

      a) stupid,
      b) ignorant, or
      c) trolling

      take a fracking history class. in WWI, hitler was a corprol in the german army. in WWII, he was the guy-in-charge. japan was germany's ally in WWII, they didn't have anything to do with WWI (AFAIK)

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    33. Re:"just following orders" by Skye16 · · Score: 1

      I disagree to the highest degree imaginable. I'm basically saying that the end justifies the means. You're saying that the end vindicates the means. They are completely different concepts, and frankly, I find yours to be infinitely more silly than my own. Obviously, these are opinions. But I would never be able to accept yours. Sorry.

    34. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, BS. I'd rather die in war, for a cause, than die in bed of cancer. Serious.

    35. Re:"just following orders" by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      You have a man in your rifle sights. He is holding a knife to your wife. You have reason to believe he will stab or cut your wife with intent to kill. Would you shoot the man?

      If you can live with yourself for not preventing someone from murdering your wife because killing is an evil act, then so be it. I would not consider you to be a man though.

      Japan pre 1950 is a very different culture from post 1950. The atrocities that Japan committed in WWII, and prior to that, were as bad the holocaust in Nazi Germany or the Genocide under Stalin in the Ukraine. Some evil is so bad that you do what you have to, to put a stop to it.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    36. Re:"just following orders" by orcus · · Score: 3, Interesting

      i've never understood this word, terrorism.

      I'll bet back in the 1770s, England would have agreed that one man's terrorist is another man's patriot.

      It's all a matter of perspective - which side you are on.

      --
      First they burn books, then they burn people.
    37. Re:"just following orders" by naasking · · Score: 1

      They are completely different concepts, and frankly, I find yours to be infinitely more silly than my own.

      That's because you haven't thought about it carefully enough. They are certainly different concepts, but "the ends justifies the means" as a moral theory is corrupt. What kind of ethics requires you to violate them to achieve a desirable outcome? An inconsistent or incomplete one.

      If you support true consequentialism as a basis for ethics (as your "ends justifies the means" suggests), then it is never evil to go to war if the alternative is worse. That you would still believe yourself committing evil when you are choosing the best possible outcome is the height of silliness. Going to war would totally suck, would have horrible consequences, but in that context it is not evil.

    38. Re:"just following orders" by tabrnaker · · Score: 1

      Two wrongs don't make a right.

    39. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are an idiot. You don't think everybody in Europe was working in military factories also? Why the fuck do you think they call it the 'home front'? Any national army has a huge civilian infrastructure which supports it. This is because civilians have a vested interest in having the war effort succeed, now don't they?

    40. Re:"just following orders" by compro01 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The interesting question is whether the aggressor could be right at any time. I think not. The Bush administration seem to think otherwise. This is the question worth debating, not whether a country should defend itself or not.

      interesting point. though, basically, all the US's problems right now are being caused by the cold war, which ended about 15 years ago.

      brief history of bin laden

      in 1979 the USSR occupied afganistan. the afganies didn't like it and the US, with it's "policy of containment" didn't either. there was a small milita, namey the mujahideen, who really didn't like the russians. take a guess who the leader of this litle band was. anyway, the US though "hey, these guys wanna fight. we want them out, and we can't get out hands in it though. they'll probabley get stomped in a few months, but it'll annoy the russians." so, they sent in CIA people to train the guys. they also gave them money, weapons, and inteligence. and they didn't phenominal. the US never expected them to do so well. they were kicking butt with hit and run attacks. ride in, blow up some stuff, run like hell back to the caves. then. the soviet union came apart. they pulled out of afganistan. and they just wasted the country on the way out. pour gas, toss match, run away. the country was devistated. and the US basically went "well, thanks for killing the russians. bye now." and left. bin laden (being of the saudi arabia royalty) had a lot of money, and help to rebuild. so, people there generaly like him and that's likely why he hasn't been found. the basic thinking (AFAIK) is "well, i don't like that he's blowing up buildings, but he did help us, so i won't help him, but i won't help the US either."

      i'm not saying that 9/11 was justified, but i can see where the hatred of america comes from.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    41. Re:"just following orders" by tabrnaker · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Just like the british ran over gandhi right?

      Those who live in fear like scared little children are the one's who believe such lies as you just said.

    42. Re:"just following orders" by naasking · · Score: 1

      ALL war is ALWAYS evil. Make no mistake about that.

      It's just that, sometimes, it's the lesser evil.


      I think the "lesser evil" is a silly argument. If it truly is the "lesser evil" then choosing it over the alternative is not evil. You are assigning a moral character to something that has no character. Good or evil is a characteristic of our choice given the circumstances.

    43. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      This, of course, is why people decided that full-blown pacifism is the only way - because once a cycle of violence starts ever step simply escalates and becomes "justified" by the previous atrocities.


      Yeah, that's right. That's why we're still fighting WW2.

      Idiot.

    44. Re:"just following orders" by rsklnkv · · Score: 1

      I didn't read past this :
      "b) try to make all war seem evil."

      I was hoping you could explain to us what war it is exactly that is 'Good(TM)'?

      --
      _____ "If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear." -- Orwell
    45. Re:"just following orders" by Guppy06 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "This, of course, is why people decided that full-blown pacifism is the only way"

      Um... how? In the example specified, how would "full-blown pacifism" have stopped the torture mentioned in the parent post?

      This wasn't a one-time event, people were being put through this on a daily basis both within Japan as well as in Japanese holdings in China, before, during, and even after both atomic bombings. This is one of the reasons why Nagasaki was only three days after Hiroshima, to put a stop to the continual torture.

      Of course, if no bombs were dropped and insteaed of forcing surrender out of Japan the US went "full-blown pacifist" and simply stopped prosecuting the war, things wouldn't have changed. There'd be no reason for Japan to release all its Chinese and Western prisoners (they were spoils of war gained "fair and square" as far as the IJA were concerned), they would have continued to be abused until their deaths, at which point they'd be replaced by even more Chinese slaves (and probably more Westerners, too, once Japan decided they needed even more natural resources). The violence wouldn't have ended, in many ways it would have gotten worse, the only difference is that, in your version, Pilate would have been able to wash his hands of it.

      They had to be nuked. Sure, that's not something to be happy about, but simpy disliking something doesn't make it less necessary. Contrary to popular belief, violence does solve things, and this is a shining example of it.

      And as for the civillian deaths, there was little (if any) difference between "civillian" and "soldier" in the eyes of Japan, both for their enemies as well as their own people. Many (if not most) of those civillians in Hiroshima and Nagasaki were drafted by the government to work in factories making war materiel. With Japan prosecuting "total war" like that, it's very difficult to say who was really a civillian and who wasn't.

    46. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hardly, but perhaps it would be like how the Kashmiri's would run over India if it weren't for the fact that India has abaondoned pacifistic ideals...

    47. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "try to make all war seem evil"

      Yes. In fact it is all the peaceniks that are to blame for all the wars and bloodshed throughout human history.

      If we got rid of them all. Then the warlords could finally live in peace and harmony.

    48. Re:"just following orders" by robocrop · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "This, of course, is why people decided that full-blown pacifism is the only way - because once a cycle of violence starts ever step simply escalates and becomes 'justified' by the previous atrocities."

      What bothers me about this position is that it is purely self-serving. Much like the smug vegan or self-assured decrier of the death penalty, the entire position of 'pacifism' is one of putting your own moral/mental comfort above the physical well-being and reality of others.

      Pacifists rarely think through their position enough to find alternatives to the actions they dislike. They simply separate themselves to absolve themselves of responsibility - to make themselves feel good. And I find that reprehensible.

      It is the easiest thing in the world to be against something, or to judge it with all the knowledge of history. And it is no better to be blindly 'against' something than to be blindly 'for' it.

    49. Re:"just following orders" by Deathprong · · Score: 1

      How you can be certain that the Japanese would not have won the war if the US hadn't nuked them: The Japanese already sued for surrender twice before the nukes dropped.

      Another thing for you students of the Jengiz Khan school of warfare: I do not regard attacks on civilians as worthy of true warriors. If anyone had any doubt over the extreme dishonor of the American military up until the nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, there are none now.

      Attempts at comparing the American military favorably with others that our educators want us to consider evil (Soviets, Nazis, Maoists, Mongols) simply do not interest me. By sanctioning attacks on civilians, the United States has placed itself in the exact same category as all the other murderers.

    50. Re:"just following orders" by swillden · · Score: 1

      Good or evil is a characteristic of our choice given the circumstances.

      If you define good and evil as you have chosen to define them, then yes. I neither agree nor disagree with your definitions; the words we use are fuzzy and ambiguous, and these words have both the meanings which you've chosen, and the ones that I was using implicitly.

      However, I think that "the lesser evil" is a *better* way to think about it. If we always keep in mind that the horrific things we do are "evil", even though it's for the best that we do them, then we're less likely to be accepting of horrors that are only claimed to be for the good.

      I would prefer to be the man who cries himself to sleep after killing the enemy in righteous battle than the one who glories in the goodness of my horrific, though necessary, act.

      In this case, I think it's a good thing that people continue to question the rightness of the horrors of WWII. Not because they were wrong, but because they might have been wrong. I actually believe Truman was right to bomb Nagasaki and Hiroshima, and I hope that had I been in his shoes I would have had the guts to do the same -- that had to be a damned hard decision to make, and to live with. But I think the questions should be asked and answered, all over again, by each and every generation, because that's the best way to make sure that if it happens again, it's because it was the best option there was after deep and heart-wrenching consideration of all known facts.

      You can choose definitions of "good" and "evil" so that the notion of the lesser evil makes no sense, but I don't think those definitions serve the greater good as well as definitions that force us to agonize over fine differences in shades of gray.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    51. Re:"just following orders" by m50d · · Score: 1

      The people working in the factories were civilians, plain and simple. If people are actually carrying weapons then they aren't, but making parts in a factory doesn't make you non-civilian, and it sure as hell doesn't make you a legitimate military target. If people are part of the actual armed forces, or part of some unit having the properties " that of being commanded by a person responsible for his subordinates; that of having a fixed distinctive sign recognizable at a distance; that of carrying arms openly;", are legitimate military targets. People working in factories aren't.

      --
      I am trolling
    52. Re:"just following orders" by arkanes · · Score: 1
      I should point out that I'm not a pacifist, simply that many people become one because it's they can find no other way out of the cycle of violence. You can learn a lot by talking to one. Telling yourself that it's okay for you to kill just this one person, or this one set of people, rapidly leads to more and more violence - if it's okay for someone to kill Japanese citizens because of the rape & torture of prisoners, then it's okay for them to kill US citizens because of the killing of innocent Japanese, which makes it okay... etc. It doesn't take the knowledge of history to see this happening - it's happening right now in the Middle East and it'll keep happening - our invasion of Iraq was justifed because of Saddams killing/torturing of people. Now there's insurgence and rebellion against the US forces there, and they feel justified because US troops have been killing Iraq citizens. So we feel justified in killing and torturing more citizens, so that we can track down the insurgents.

      Killing another human is the ultimate in putting your own more and mental comfort above the phsycial well-being of another - even more so when you then convince yourself that it's justified. At the very least, the position of the pacifist is consistent - logically, a bombing of US troops in Iraq is a fully justified action of self-defense by an oppressed populace.

    53. Re:"just following orders" by modecx · · Score: 1

      Exactly. When one force dosen't follow the rules the other wants to (usually the larger force), they disgrace their tactics.

      A guerilla war back then was dishonorable from the English aspect. Our guys aimed for their officers, also considered dishonorable.

      I don't see so much difference between what the terrorists do and what our founding fathers did... Except perhaps aiming for civilians--I don't think they did that.

      --
      Constitutional rights may be respected, repealed, or modified; but they must never be ignored.
    54. Re:"just following orders" by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The only way to remove conflict with a people committed to your destruction is to eliminate everyone of them.

      Anything less is just prolonging the problem and putting yourself at risk that they will grow strong enough to succeed at their goal.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    55. Re:"just following orders" by hunterx11 · · Score: 1

      As an American I do not deny that there were colonial terrorists during the Revolution. I am not saying that the Revolution itself was an act of terrorism--it was perfectly justified (and despite the image of guerilla warfare some like to paint, it was mainly fought by the Continental army). However, people who did things like tar and feather members of the East India Company and pour boiling tea down their throats were terrorists. And frankly, I do not think it at all unpatriotic to say that they properly should have been hanged at the time.

      --
      English is easier said than done.
    56. Re:"just following orders" by naasking · · Score: 2, Informative

      You can choose definitions of "good" and "evil" so that the notion of the lesser evil makes no sense, but I don't think those definitions serve the greater good as well as definitions that force us to agonize over fine differences in shades of gray.

      We should really abolish romantic notions of good and evil, because they simply muddy the debate and polarize people on the issues which don't matter. In your case, they will instead argue whether the ends justify "evil" means, rather than debating the facts of whether one choice really will lead to a better outcome than the other.

      Poorly defined meanings in debate is just asking for trouble. There is no circumventing debate in such charged circumstances, but at least putting it on a clearly understood foundation helps us see the real issues.

      Furthermore, I understand your concerns regarding losing sight that we are committing a horrible act simply because it's justified. But labeling a horrible act we are forced to take as 'good', doesn't automatically erase from our minds the fact that it was horrible. I may have to kill someone in self-defence, but I'm sure will never forget it, despite that I was justified in defending myself. People who have been through such scenarios will testify to the truth of this.

      Ultimately, good and evil can only be determined by justification. Are we rationally justified in such actions? If we can answer in the affirmative, then we are not committing evil. Good and evil are loaded terms, so justification is perhaps a better term that helps us focus on the real issues.

      For instance, the initiator of violence is always wrong, but when are justified in acting on a threat? This is particularly poignant with the "war on terrorism" and Bush's Iraq invasion. I think there are enough real issues to concern ourselves with that we shouldn't get tripped up by poor definitions.

    57. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      huh? Wow...

    58. Re:"just following orders" by naasking · · Score: 1

      In searching for something in a similar vein, I just realized you and I have debated a similar subject before. I don't know if you remember, but I reproduced the thread on my discussion forums. It was very interesting. :-)

    59. Re:"just following orders" by Neoprofin · · Score: 0

      I'm sure there are plenty of insurgents fighting because of the continued violence against Iraqi civilians. I'm also sure there are plenty fighting because they want their cushy job back or because they've wandered in from Jordon or Syria or yes, Suadia Arabia to fight the colonial oppressors and nonbeleivers. Having a consistant position doesn't make you right, it makes you stubborn. It's making a blanket statement that quashes all reasonable debate and discussion.

    60. Re:"just following orders" by DarkSarin · · Score: 1

      I have to disagree-think about it like this:

      a pacifist states that it doesn't matter how much anyone suffers as a result of their non-action, it is still wrong to fight. This means that regardless of how strongly the oposition states, "we are going to torture, rape, torture, pillage, rape and murder all of you and your children", they will only say, "Let's talk."

      To me that is not an acceptable position. I do not believe that it will lead to peace. I believe it will lead to one group of people getting slaughtered.

      That said, I have a great deal of respect for those who, because of their interpretation of scripture, or their personal beliefs in some deity, have adopted this approach. I think everyone has a right to believe according to their own will, and should not be forced to violate deeply held beliefs.

      However, there is absolutely no way that a civilization can base their existence on pacifism unless they have something with which to protect themselves that is not easily overcome. A good (viable) example of this is Switzerland. I know they maintain nuetrality, but they have an interesting (and perhaps unique) position--if they are attacked by any one group or nation, virtually every other nation on the planet will leap to their defense. So while this means that they could easily take the position of pacificism, they do it at the cost of everyone else either a) being pacifistic or b) everyone else fighting and getting killed to protect their ability to pacifistic and remain free. In order to be TRULY pacifistic without asking others to die for you should you be attacked, you MUST have an ULTIMATE defense--a method of protecting yourself (without causing damage to those attacking you) indefinitely. There is no technology to accomplish this at this time.

      This is why there is no logical conclusion as to which is better in terms of justification--one requires you to accept the slaughter of innocents while you do nothing (even though you might be able to protect them by fighting back), and the other requires you to kill one person in order to protect others. Are these positions equally dispicable? I personally favor the protection of innocents, even if it means that I must kill someone in order to protect them. I could not sit by and watch my family get killed while I said, "No, it is wrong to fight." I would rather die (and even in doing so fail) to protect my family than do nothing.

      The position that pacifism is the only way to prevent ever-increasing violence is patently false. History has shown that a sufficient show of force to demonstrate that you are superior on the battle field (bombing Nagasaki) can lead to bringing folks to the discussion table, and even lead to an eventual alliance between two previously warring parties (US & Japan are on pretty good terms). This has happened in other situations as well, and I think it demonstrates that the tenet of "avoiding increasing violence" is false.

      I will not comment on the current situation--there is evidence that those who are rebelling against US Troops are not in majority, so the justification you supply is flawed.

      If what you imply were true, then you would be correct. But I think (at least I hope) that if the majority of Iraqis told us to "get the hell out", then we would do so, but under the conditions that they never seek to attack us. Right now, however, I think that the majority do not want us out immediately.

      Finally, I don't think that pacifism is the answer, but neither is aggression. Militaries exist for a single reason (in my mind)--to protect the country which they serve. Not to expand it, but to protect it. I personally support the war in Iraq (notice it is NOT the war ON Iraq), because I feel we are protecting ourselves. Many disagree with the concept that we are protecting ourselves, and say that it is all about oil. That position is debatable (but the only real reason for being there other than protection would be oil), and I recognize that.

      If,

      --
      "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
    61. Re:"just following orders" by ManUMan · · Score: 1

      My comments above were not strictly related to this kind of argument. First of all your example seems to assume a few things.

      First, it assumes in such a situation, I would be able to successfully shoot the man in a way that will prevent him from hurting her. One could probably argue that I could do as much damage as I could do good in such a situation. Who's to say that I wouldn't miss the hostage taker and hit my wife instead? Sure, you could state that some persons (such as a military sniper) wouldn't worry about that, but that isn't me. Second, the example is very arbitrary.

      Finally, if you look at others who have avoided using violence to achieve their ends, (Martin Luther King, Jr. and Dorothy Day as two examples) their humanity or in King's case (manhood) isn't to be questioned just because they didn't resort to violence to address evil. My thought (and perhaps my entire point) is that our imaginations are so captured by violence as the solution to evil that we completely miss other ways (perhaps more effective ways) to address situations. What about the way persons were mistreated in South Africa under apartheid? They found a solution that didn't involve violence.

      To be sure, my rejection of violence isn't out of a basic humanism, altruism, or pragmatism. For me, that rejection is a conviction based on Christianity. While many "christians" seems to have no problem with war or violence, there is a consistent tradition of those who reject violence (King and Day are both examples-Also the Amish, Mennonites, Quakers, some Anglicans and Roman Catholics, even a few evangelical protestants like me!). I don't pretend for a moment that Christian nonviolence makes sense outside of the community shaped by the Cross, but I would state that nonviolence offers a counter example to those whose imaginations are captured by violence.

      I don't want to sound preachy or as if I have all of the answers to the tough questions of life. I'm simply trying to honestly respond to your comments.

      --
      If you are never moderated, do you really exist?
    62. Re:"just following orders" by ABaumann · · Score: 1

      Aye, but if one wrong stops 1,000 future wrongs, does that make it right?

      No matter how big of an idealist you are, there's always a point at which the ends justify the means.

    63. Re:"just following orders" by lgw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Defining "terrorist" in terms of attacking civilian targets: this isn't very interesting. The first Gulf War was probably the only war in the 20th century in which all sides weren't deliberately going after civilians.

      There are however, two useful definitions of terrorist. The first is a category of "unlawful combatant", because they are warfighters who do not wear uniforms. This is a very bad thing, because despite the tendency to attack the opponents civilains, it's generally considered bad form to *encourage* the enemy to attack *your* civilians. It's cowardly at best - warfighters are supposed to be in harm's way, protecting freindly civilians.

      Even more despiciable is *deliberately* provoking enemy reprisals on friendly civilians to gain local political advantage. Nothing good can come of putting up with that sort of thing.

      There are many people making apologies for terrorists on the basis that attacking civilians is the norm in war, but they are entirely missing the point.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    64. Re:"just following orders" by cabazorro · · Score: 1

      As someone who:
      A. Went through USMC Bootcamp.
      B. Wrote a report on The Manhattan Project.
      C. Had to study the Nuremberg Trials.

      Perhaps this will share light on the subject of the moral dilemma:
      "The Ends Justify The Means"

      As a soldier, as soon as you are issued your standard M16 Rifle you start a psycological process to assimilate the use of:
      "Deadly Force"

      Remember the phrase from Full Metal Jacket?
      "The USMC doesn't want machines, it wants killers"

      That phrase is truth to the core.

      The first phrase you are instructed to repeat over oand over as soon you start rifle training is:

      "One shot one kill"

      Killing is taught not as a some form of automation but as a SKILL!

      It takes some foretought and understanding to do it effectively. Ask anyone in you-know-where.

      My drill instructor, when asked if we ought to kill women or children when commanded to do so (Direct Order from a superior officer) he responded:

      "You are expected to follow orders, and for every action you take, YOU WILL BE HELD RESPONSIBLE.

      Couldn't agree more.
      This somewhat connects to the Nurembeg trials.

      On the aspect making the big-kill(drop the big one) in my research on the historical data of the Manhattan project produced three main reasons (weight on each vary) of why the Atomic bomb was used:
      A.- To Shorten the war.
      B.- To do some human-test-drive for unproven brand-new technology.
      C.- To tell Russia to back off!

      I personally suscribe more to reason B considering how clueless the U.S. was about the effects of radiation by atmosferic exposure. Anyway.
      To cap-up, on the Nuremberg Trials the question arose on wether a human can inflict pain on another with out making a concious decision. Pshycological studies demonstrated that remorse is not innate trade but an acquired one through childhood rearing meaning that if you are trying to prove that you felt no remorse for inflicting harm (no guilt) you must have been educated since childhood that doing harm to others as natural and acceptable. That did not fly and the nazi officers were found guilty and some of them, in a well thought conclusion, hanged for their crimes.

      --
      - these are not the droids you are looking for -
    65. Re:"just following orders" by SmellMyTeenSpirit · · Score: 1

      "Why, of course, the people don't want war. Why would some poor slob on a farm want to risk his life in a war when the best that he can get out of it is to come back to his farm in one piece. Naturally, the common people don't want war; neither in Russia nor in England nor in America, nor for that matter in Germany. That is understood. But, after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy or a fascist dictatorship or a Parliament or a Communist dictatorship."

      Göring

      I am most certainly willing to say that all war is wrong, that alternatives always exist and that they should be pursued with much more energy and commitment than war. I am not saying that --violence-- should never be used. Disgusting as it may be, there are sometimes situations that cannot be solved by anything but power, and sometimes the only power that works is violence. Violence, however, should ALWAYS be minimized. War is one of the worst possible applications of violence.

      --
      "Cornflakes are not the innocent critters they seem"- Sterling Morrison
    66. Re:"just following orders" by robocrop · · Score: 1

      "I should point out that I'm not a pacifist, simply that many people become one because it's they can find no other way out of the cycle of violence."

      But it is this very line of thought that I find offensive. Life is cyclical. All logic can be reduced to babble if it is examined closely enough. This is why I find pacifism, and other 'avoidance'-isms, to be the less honorable choice. I feel it takes more guts to dive in and try to figure out how far something should go than to throw your hands up and say 'I'm not getting involved' just because you fear what might happen.

      "Now there's insurgence and rebellion against the US forces there, and they feel justified because US troops have been killing Iraq citizens."

      This is a very loaded comment. Rather than drag out a whole argument about the war, I can just tell you that your statement is incorrect. First, the people 'rebelling' against the new government are not the majority, they are the minority. They are almost entirely Sunni muslims and al-Qaeda members. The Sunnis want their dictatorial power back (even though they are the ethnic minority), and al-Qaeda just wants to stir up the pot.

      Saying that the terror tactics these people employ are 'the will of the people' or a 'revolution against tyranny' is simply naive and insulting. These are people who have no problems blowing up their own countrymen, taking out scores of innocent civilians. Their atrocities are well documented, from shooting up schools because they educate girls to assassinating police officers and teachers. These are crimes. They are simply painted with a romantic light by people who were against the war in an effort to justify their position - more self-serving rhetoric - similar to the way that Noam Chomsky first denied and then acted as an apologist for the Khmer Rouge-led genocide in Vietnam.

      These types of crimes happen in numerous societies. Hell, in Mexico gunmen just killed the chief of police over a drug war. Nobody romanticizes that. People recognize it for what it is.

      The terrorist acts in Iraq are a peoples' revolution as much as the L.A. riots were.

    67. Re:"just following orders" by twray · · Score: 0
      Bzzzzt. Try again.

      WWI was Germany's Kaiser Wilhelm.

      WWII was Japan(Pacific) AND Hitler(Europe & Africa[Rommel])

      --
      Fine, I'll build my own moon base! With blackjack...and hookers...in fact, forget the base! - TripMaster Monkey (862126)
    68. Re:"just following orders" by rossifer · · Score: 1

      Without quite the same use of emotionally loaded language, I choose to rephrase your statement this way:

      ALL war is ALWAYS horrible and awful. Make no mistake about that.

      It's just that, sometimes, it's the right thing to do.


      I'll expand upon this statement with the observation that those attempting to justify the attack on Iraq have yet to convince me that it was the right thing to do. The US entry into WWII was the right thing to do (would have been right even earlier).

      But the neoconservatives assert that regular demonstrations of U.S. military superiority are necessary to maintain U.S. political control in today's world. And so, any reason at all will be pulled forward to "justify" the aggression of the U.S. military. As a Usian, I don't think my government does a very good job of demonstrating that it should have any control whatsoever, but that's just my opinion.

      Regards,
      Ross

    69. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also don't forget that a good portion of those fighting against us in Iraq currently are not even Iraqi citizens. They have no interest in Iraq, they aren't being oppressed in the first place since they are mostly Syrians.

    70. Re:"just following orders" by brpr · · Score: 1

      Saying that the terror tactics these people employ are 'the will of the people' or a 'revolution against tyranny' is simply naive and insulting.

      The poster you're replying to didn't say anything of the sort. He pointed out that, just as Americans feel violence against Iraqis is justified by previous violence against Americans, so (many) Iraqis now feel that violence against Americans is justified by American violence against Iraqis. Are the Iraqis who think this wrong? Yes. But so are the Americans.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    71. Re:"just following orders" by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      I think we're arguing semantics at this point. Define "good" and "evil".

      If evil is a course of action which has tragic outcomes, then just about everything is evil. Having a kid is evil since it results in their eventual tragic death. Of course, most people would consider this a trivial argument, and not very useful.

      Most people would argue that in all decisions people should do good and avoid evil. So, good is a decision which is the best possible one on moral grounds. Evil would be varying degrees of not complying with the good decision.

      Sure, war will undoubtedly lead to tragedy, and I agree that it should be avoided at almost any cost. Now, there is a question as to whether the moral cost of going to war is EVER less than the moral cost of not going to war. If the cost of war is always higher, then war is always evil. If the cost of going to war is sometimes lower, then it is sometimes the right decision, and that by definition makes it "good".

      Now, you can make all kinds of conclusions about the injustices of life itself in that a decision like going to war is sometimes the best moral decision. And you can talk about how in general that is a great "evil", but this is a different definition of evil which has no relevance to individual moral decisions. You can say that life itself is "evil" I suppose, but that doesn't help anybody run their day to day lives.

      For morality to be of any use it must be practical. For it to be practical it must deal with the environment that we must make a decision and not simply wish for our decisions to be easier ones. If we're confronted with a beligerant agressor who is out to harm a great many people, then sometimes we must be compelled out of love for the victims of aggression to stand up for what is right, and sometimes that means war. Now, we could wish that we could have some magical ability to only take out the enemy leadership, or that the bad guys would see the error of their ways and shape up, and if those things happened then war would be wrong. However, we live in the real world, and we must make decisions based on what we have, not what we'd like to have.

      I'm not trying to blur the lines of right and wrong. I'm simply pointing out that when a decisoin is the right decision we don't need to pretend that it is "evil" simply because we wish things were otherwise.

    72. Re:"just following orders" by swillden · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is interesting in that I completely agree with what you mean, but think the way you say it is sub-optimal. People are entirely too good at rationalizing away nearly anything if given permission to call it "good". They're so good at it that very quickly they feel no *need* to try to justify it. That being the case, I think society is better served if we think of war as inherently "evil", and therefore something that must be fully justified at every turn.

      IMO, American society is entirely too accepting of war now. We hear no end of people proclaiming that the war in Iraq is good because it is "defending our freedom". That notion is wrong on many levels, starting with the erroneous idea that it's possible for any military force to defend freedom and continuing on through questions about whether or not Iraq has anything to do with American freedoms at all. A healthy dose of the "war is unconditionally evil" meme would do us all a lot of good because it would force us to consider whether or not this particular evil is justified.

      In a nutshell, viewing war as evil-but-sometimes-justified forces the common man to justify it to himself, because otherwise he's evil. Viewing war as good-when-justified makes it easy for him, after a few years of justified war, to assume that war waged by his country is good, period. Frankly, I think that the American populace was taught during WWI and WWII and throughout the long Cold War that this was the case, and that perception continues to fuel our overly aggressive posture today.

      While your arguments are logically sound, they fail to take into account the ways in which most people think.

      In your case, they will instead argue whether the ends justify "evil" means, rather than debating the facts of whether one choice really will lead to a better outcome than the other.

      Ahh, but they will debate. And I think it's clear that if people are given a pass to see war as "good", they'll take it, because it's so much easier and more pleasant -- particularly if it doesn't really impact them personally.

      In actual fact, this conversation is meaningless. We're debating which definition would be best if adopted universally, but no such adoption is going to happen.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    73. Re:"just following orders" by Digital+Autumn · · Score: 1

      While you may be philosophically right, it would be an error to imagine that those atrocities were the reason the Allies were fighting in that war. It's pleasing to consider simple moral decisions on Slashdot, but World War II was not fought over moral terms. It's easy to say it should have been, after the fact, but that doesn't change the facts. If some things are so evil that you do what you have to to put a stop to it, why didn't we put a stop to Stalin's genocide?

    74. Re:"just following orders" by stinerman · · Score: 1

      That is the reason why I could never be in the military. I couldn't just take orders from a commander when it came to decisions of life or death of other people.

      For instance, if I was in Iraq right now, I'd prefer death to shooting anyone there. If Iraq invaded us, then it would probably be a different story.

    75. Re:"just following orders" by naasking · · Score: 1

      This is interesting in that I completely agree with what you mean, but think the way you say it is sub-optimal. People are entirely too good at rationalizing away nearly anything if given permission to call it "good". They're so good at it that very quickly they feel no *need* to try to justify it.

      Let's be perfectly honest here. Even your approach is flawed (as I explain below). Why? Because people who commit atrocious acts generally aren't thinking. We should promote the practice of thought, rather than trying to stifle it with deceptive absolutes.

      IMO, American society is entirely too accepting of war now.

      Because they are so far removed from it and its consequences.

      We hear no end of people proclaiming that the war in Iraq is good because it is "defending our freedom".

      Because people are far too ignorant and trusting and thus believe the propaganda.

      That notion is wrong on many levels, starting with the erroneous idea that it's possible for any military force to defend freedom and continuing on through questions about whether or not Iraq has anything to do with American freedoms at all.

      Because they don't think for themselves.

      A healthy dose of the "war is unconditionally evil" meme would do us all a lot of good because it would force us to consider whether or not this particular evil is justified.

      So you advocate countering lies with other lies. I would far prefer spreading truth and getting people thinking, because it ultimately results in a greater good (or less trouble).

      Instead of plainly stating we are justified in acting thusly because of x, y and z, people will demonize the threat and make it appear to be "absolute evil" (Abu Grahib? police brutality?). Evil must be eradicated, so rather than stopping the conflict when x, y and z are no longer an issue, we will pursue and eliminate the threat at all costs.

      People who would otherwise have to justify their actions no longer do because their enemy is clearly evil. The thought process of weighing the benefits and costs of the outcomes is entirely bypassed.

      As I'm sure you've noticed, Bush is a strong advocate of this approach, and it's not looking so rosy. The fact is, war has been demonized for a long time, and a large percentge of people already think as you do, ie. war is evil. It has and will change nothing, because people have justifications for what they do, whether rational or not.

      Ultimately, ANY approach can be manipulated to suit undesirable outcomes. The least we can do is make it clearer for those who are actually interested in the truth which is what I'm trying to achieve. Encouraging thought can only be good. Encouraging baseless absolutes serves no one. In fact, it can even cause harm by hesitation.

      In actual fact, this conversation is meaningless. We're debating which definition would be best if adopted universally, but no such adoption is going to happen.

      No conversation is meaningless if we learn from it, and there's always the possibility of changing people's perceptions.

    76. Re:"just following orders" by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
      Still civilians but a ligitimate military targets none the less.

      War industrys are ligitimate military targets. Period.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    77. Re:"just following orders" by swillden · · Score: 1

      Yes, it was. Got those axioms nailed down yet? :-)

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    78. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >...similar to the way that Noam Chomsky first denied and then acted as an apologist for the Khmer Rouge-led genocide in Vietnam.

      Chomsky was never apologetic in this sense. He simply criticized the U.S. for it's involvement in creating the atmosphere under which this could occur (i.e. bombing peasants). This doesn't automatically make him a supporter of Pol Pot any more than being against the war in Iraq would make me a supporter of Saddam Hussein. And of course, those who he was being critical of were quick to label him as such instead of engaging in the debate and refuting the facts.

    79. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do know, however, that there is NO way that you can ever be certain that if we hadn't done that that the Japanese (at that time) wouldn't have ended up winning the war.

      Oh, come on. Even if you're unwilling to concede that Japan had already lost by the time Little Boy fell, it's ridiculous to believe that by the autumn of 1945 they still had the military capability to "win" anything beyond the preservation of Japanese autonomy on the Home Islands.

      Russia had invaded Manchuria and Korea, and it was poised to land on Hokkaido. The US rained fire on Tokyo and overran Okinawa. The Pacific fleet was lost. Forces in China and Korea, weakened by the need to protect the homeland, would be lost at great expense. The Japanese homeland was starving and in danger of being obliterated in a devestatingly bloody invasion from both the north and south.

      Which war, exactly, could they have won? Who would they have beaten? What part of the Japanese empire outside of the Home Islands would not be divvied up by Russia, China, and the US? How, exactly, would they threaten the US mainland (or even Hawaii) at this point?

      I'm not addressing whether the bombs were necessary (for any reason). But victory was no longer a possibility for Japan by the time Truman made the call.

    80. Re:"just following orders" by naasking · · Score: 1

      Oh no, I'm not so presumpuous to think it would be so trivial. I think the solution will be simple, but it usually is in hindsight right? ;-)

      I'm still reading, debating and thinking. I'm certainly making progress though. As you can probably see from my forums, I have lots of material/information (over 500 pages worth).

      If I'm going to do it, I'm going to get it right. No hurry. :-)

    81. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mothafuckas love their mothafuckin' tea.

    82. Re:"just following orders" by swillden · · Score: 1

      So you advocate countering lies with other lies.

      Lies? What lies? You're saying that "war is always evil" is a lie? But it's not a lie, unless we apply your definition of "evil". Don't get so caught up in your attempt to formulate a consistent moral structure that you forget that not everyone shares your definitions.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    83. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just keep drinking your coffee. Like the advertising companies tell you to.

    84. Re:"just following orders" by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's a very good post. Trying to make war simple is to be forced to abstract away relevent information until what you're judging isn't the actual situation.

      Now, while we can't prove that Japan wouldn't have won the war if we didn't drop the bomb, I find it highly unlikely.

      People tend to forget what stage the war was at when the bomb was dropped. We had already defeated their navy. While many of their factories were intact, they still had very little in the way of war-waging capability. We had a blockade around the island and were conducting uncontested air raids on a daily basis.

      With the Japanese navy providing fish homes at the bottom of the ocean, the U.S. naval forces perched off their shores attacking their cities with abandon, and the Russian army barreling down on Japan, I find it highly unlikely that the atom bomb was the deciding factor in Japan's defeat. The only real question is what form that defeat would take and how much it would cost. E.g. extremely painful invasion, conditional surrender, or joint surrender to the U.S. and the Russians.

      Of course in the process of defeating Japan many things were done that aren't necessarily any "better" than dropping nukes -- the firebombings done to prove the bomb wasn't necessary come to mind. Similarly the attrocities of Japan are well known and highly disturbing.

      The Milgram Studies are very interesting, and everyone should know about them so silly questions like "How could do something like that only because they were ordered to?" don't get asked, and instead useful (but difficult) questions like "How do we prevent power structures like the ones that caused these things to happen from arising?"

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    85. Re:"just following orders" by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      Someone needs to check their facts. Both WWI and WWII involved Germany. The reason for Hitler's rise to power was that he blamed Germany's weaknesses and resultant loss in the first world war on the Jews. Towards the end of WWII the Allied forces defeated Germany and Hitler committed suicide thus ending Germany's fight. Japan happened to think it was a good idea to bomb Pearl Harbor in Hawaii starting the chain of events leading to the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    86. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Just like the british ran over gandhi right?

      Half of Gandhi's success had to do with British humanity. Your average dictatorship would have simply shot him and not given it a second thought.
    87. Re:"just following orders" by adrianmonk · · Score: 1
      I should point out that I'm not a pacifist, simply that many people become one because it's they can find no other way out of the cycle of violence. You can learn a lot by talking to one. Telling yourself that it's okay for you to kill just this one person, or this one set of people, rapidly leads to more and more violence - if it's okay for someone to kill Japanese citizens because of the rape & torture of prisoners, then it's okay for them to kill US citizens because of the killing of innocent Japanese, which makes it okay... etc.

      This is exactly why you must never allow the past by itself to become justification for targeting some group of people.

      It might be OK in some cases to go to war and kill some enemy combatants. But it is never OK to kill because

      • the person you kill is a member of a group that, in the past, wronged your group
      • the person you kill is a different race
      • you hate them, or you hate what they stand for
      • the person you killed did something wrong in the past

      No person or group should ever reach the status where it's a priori OK to kill them because they are who they are. If we allow them to reach that status in our minds, then something is wrong with us.

      Instead, you need to be sure that the war or the action you take will accomplish something that justifies it. And revenge or catharsis don't count as justification. It might, however, really be the best thing to kill them if you know they will try to and will have the opportunity to do something violent in the future, and if killing them is the only realistic way to stop them.

      Humans have a big problem separating the motivation of hate from the motivation of accomplishing something positive. As the Bruce Cockburn song says, "Everybody loves to see justice done ...on somebody else."

      All of this may sound like an argument in favor of pacifism, i.e. that all war is evil. In fact, what I'm trying to illustrate here is that there is such a thing as a wrong motivation for killing someone (as pacifists would agree), but there is also such a thing as a right motivation. It's true that even when we do have justification, we humans tend to muddy the waters and do stupid things like commit war crimes in a justified war. (Like when the Japanese attacked the US, and then we put innocent Japanese-Americans in internment camps.) It happens in virtually every war. It's a natural human reaction to hate another group of people, and it can even serve as motivation. No doubt in some cases the military cultivates hate for the enemy in order to keep the troops motivated.

      But none of this changes the fact that sometimes attacking someone really could be the best thing to do. Only reacting in defensive ways can sometimes prolong a conflict. Perhaps the aggressor has stopped its attack temporarily while it develops a new weapon or regroups to attack at a later date (after winter passes or something). It might be in such a case that electing to strike while you have the upper hand will end the conflict sooner, causing more violence in the short term, but less in the long term. Choosing to initiate violence can be the best thing for everybody in some cases. Yes, it takes an extra level of certainty to justify that type of action (and to avoid overreacting due to fear of things that might not even happen). My problem with pacifism is that it seems to not even allow that this type of situation exists.

    88. Re:"just following orders" by Luminary+Crush · · Score: 1

      This is exactly why the US military is pressing it's research into 'smart' weapons, and starting to use unmanned combat vehicles: to make war more easy to swallow by the public due to fewer civilian casualties, and also sustain fewer combattant casualties of our own while also causing the maximum enemy combattant casualties. If this weren't true, well, it's alot cheaper to carpet-bomb with B-52s than fire smart bombs...

      This war has been incredibly light on casualties compared to any previous major combat operation (Vietnam, Korea, WWII, WWI). Since the concept of 'total war' was instituted in WWII, we are at the lowest level of peripheral damage (# civilian casualties) and the highest level of weapon accuracy (# pounds of explosives required to destroy a target complex). That trend will continue.

      Some day I envision (as I suspect military planners do) an army operating mostly by remote control and telepresience. Robotic aircraft, advanced armed surveillance drones, and robotic ground combat vehicles will be first. The next generation will come in the form smaller combat robots - perhaps smaller than a person, fast, maneuverable, armed to kill. The third generation will be even smaller - microbots or nanobots?

      Each generation brings less risk to military personnel, more accurate target resolution (due to the fact you have no personnel risk, so you can get closer to potential targets), and lower collateral damage.

    89. Re:"just following orders" by The_Unforgiven · · Score: 1

      I think he meant Hitler The Dictator, not Hitler The Soldier (He was in World War One, but as a Corporal or something like that).

      --
      http://wsulug.org
    90. Re:"just following orders" by coopex · · Score: 1

      Hiroshima and Nagasaki were not attacks on civilains. Regardless of what you might want the Japanese to have been, they were fanatics, stupidly loyal to the emperor, and believers in some twisted concept of "honor" that justified *forced* seppuku. They were arming children with bamboo spears! When the entire populace is trained to fight you, they are clearly not civilians.

      --
      The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
    91. Re:"just following orders" by coopex · · Score: 1

      It wasn't a question of Japanese victory, it was that we tried a "gentleman's agreement" surrender in WWI with Germany, punished them, and that just created enough unrest to allow WW2 to start, hence our unyielding position in WW2 demanding unconditional surrender.

      --
      The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
    92. Re:"just following orders" by Deathprong · · Score: 1

      I laugh maniacally!

      So to avoid pitting American soldiers against Japanese kids with bamboo spears, we had to drop nuclear bombs on those kids.

      While you believe that the Japanese had a twisted sense of honor, you claim what for yourself? NO honor?

    93. Re:"just following orders" by cold+fjord · · Score: 1
      Just like the british ran over gandhi right?

      Ghandi wasn't trying to use pacifism defend a free people against invaders coming to enslave them. Ghandi was trying to free a people ruled by a small elite from a diminishing empire which possessed a basic decency. The Nazi Reich or Imperial Japan would have freely killed him and anyone who tried to resist, or failed to obey for that matter. Firing squads and gas chambers eliminated millions of non-violent resisters to Nazi evil. Ghandi must have recognized this himself despite the advice he had for the Jewish people as noted in The Ghandi Nobody Knows:
      I feel all Jews sitting emotionally at the movie 'Gandhi' should be apprised of the advice that the Mahatma offered their coreligionists when faced with the Nazi peril: they should commit collective suicide. If only the Jews of Germany had the good sense to offer their throats willingly to the Nazi butchers' knives and throw themselves into the sea from cliffs they would arouse world public opinion, Gandhi was convinced, and their moral triumph would be remembered for "ages to come." If they would only pray for Hitler (as their throats were cut, presumably), they would leave a "rich heritage to mankind." Although Gandhi had known Jews from his earliest days in South Africa--where his three staunchest white supporters were Jews, every one--he disapproved of how rarely they loved their enemies. And he never repented of his recommendation of collective suicide. Even after the war, when the full extent of the Holocaust was revealed, Gandhi told Louis Fischer, one of his biographers, that the Jews died anyway, didn't they? They might as well have died significantly.

      If you think Ghandi was a true pacifist, you should try reading up on the activities of Sergeant Major Ghandi in the Boer War. Follow that up with his views on Kashmir, and other matters involved in obtaining Indian independence. Here is a link or two, OK, three to get you going.
      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    94. Re:"just following orders" by coopex · · Score: 1

      Ah, the old "think of the children" rouse. Might wanna do a little less "thinking of the children", and spend it on reading comprehension, then you'd notice that Japan was a country of fanatics. As to the ad homiem attack on my honor, you'd best reconsider your own first, trying to paint a country that indoctrinated its "citizens" since birth in fanaticism and that the lives of those in a lower class than you were worthless, and was an unprovoked agressor, as the victim.

      --
      The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
    95. Re:"just following orders" by Kadmos · · Score: 1

      Pacifism is good in theory but I don't know any people who advocate pacifism when their families are facing imminent death. And that's the real clincher, not many people are willing to die for an idea.

      And just to clarify my previous post: I don't justify doing one bad thing because of another, but simply that when the whole world is trying to kill each other and your about to die there isn't much people won't do to save their own lives. For the record I don't hate Japan (in fact it's on my "A" list of places to visit).

    96. Re:"just following orders" by maita · · Score: 1

      In the case of WWII, if no one had opposed Hitler, then we still would have had concentration camps and the Holocaust. And you think Russians didn't have concentration camps? Besides, how would you define the actions in Chechenya, if not Holocaust?

    97. Re:"just following orders" by Pablo+El+Vagabundo · · Score: 1



      """
      B) is foolish in the extreme. I had a coworker who, at one point, stated that she felt ALL war was wrong, and there was no point at which it would be justified to fight a war. This is foolish. At some point (and what point that is is debatable) there comes a time where if you do not fight, you allow innocent civilians to be slaughtered by an enemy who will torture and rape and abuse,"""

      While I agree with you, your mindset and mine are alike. I have a great respect for people who can remain pacifist in the face of rape, torture and death. They have an ideal and who am I to say it is wrong. It is definately not foolish, it is easy to construct an aguement that it is the most sensible course of action.

      Maybe in the next life they will be rewarded. Who knows!

      Pablo
      "what would Jesus do?"

    98. Re:"just following orders" by Deathprong · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Ah, the old "think of the children" rouse.
      Sorry, I didn't realize that mentioning dead children would arouse you. You might want to do a little less "thinking of the children" yourself and instead spend some time on cultivating a healthy, adult sexuality. But I digress.

      I understood your post just fine. Believing what you wrote is something else. Reading a post from some indoctrinated-since-birth worker drone does not convince me that Japan was a country of fanatics. It does not convince me that all, or most, of the people killed by nukes in Japan deserved their fate. It does not bring me into accord with the Jenghiz Khan school of warfare that you seem to espouse.

      If you think Japan was unprovoked, please read the McCollum memo.

      If you think that it was absolutely necessary to nuke Japan in order for the US to win World War II, read this. Apparently, General MacArthur did not consider the bamboo-spear-wielding Japanese kids as grave a threat as you would have.
    99. Re:"just following orders" by m50d · · Score: 1

      Nope. Civilians are never legitimate military targets. Never.

      --
      I am trolling
    100. Re:"just following orders" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the case of WWII, if no one had opposed Hitler, then we still would have had concentration camps and the Holocaust. I don't think that appeals to most of us. Does that justify, then, the use of nuclear weapons? I don't know.

      Are you on crack? YES it justifies the use of nuclear weapons. Yes, Japan should have been nuked. They were a WAR MACHINE back then. Granted they weren't going to defeat America, but why should America sacrifice it's soldiers to fight a war that was easly ended? 9/11 Justified the use of nuclear weapons, but it's too bad the US has become to pussified to use them. Had a 9/11 style attack happened in the 1950's and a shitstain government like Afghanastan was harboring the terrorists, they woudl have all been glowing in the dark. It's too bad America has lost any sense of self preservation since then to the pussy whipped liberals.

    101. Re:"just following orders" by coopex · · Score: 0

      You have way too much obsession with children in this matter, continually bringing them up, and the fact that you think of dead children sexually, even if just to make an ad homiem attack, is disturbing.

      If you're gonna link to faked documents, at least link to those that look authentic, and that don't use Copperplate Gothic Light font instead of something standard like Courier. Having all the references to the documents not be conspiricy websites would be nice too.

      Is this the same MacArthur that wanted to nuke China? It doesn't really matter what he thought, since some Japanese historians went to the trouble of compiling an account of what actually happened. Read The Longest Day - an account of 14 Japanese Historians about the surrender, or this summary.

      Since you claim you understood my post, yet did not believe it, you clearly have no knowledge of feudal Japan to WW2. Instead you make ad homiem attacks and strawman arguemnts that latch onto a phrase that shows how fanatic the Japanese were. I pity you, never understanding the world around you, yelling louder and louder and being ignored more and more, secure in your delusions that there's an evil govt consipricy and anyone who doesn't see is a drone, and never bothering to do some actual questioning and factfinding.

      --
      The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
    102. Re:"just following orders" by G00F · · Score: 1

      Wow, if your grandmother is still alive, I would really love talking with such a person.

      --
      The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive
    103. Re:"just following orders" by coopex · · Score: 1

      If you don't like the facts I use, instead of absuing your mod points (ie modding something overrated that hasn't been modded and is at 1), go refute the facts.

      Coward.

      --
      The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
  54. mankind can be proud of bombing each other.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .... man mankind has made sure some huge progress here. bombing killing nuking evildoing torturing lying spying defeating eating terrorizing supressing enslaving each other...

    wow.... if mankind has got one thing right, then its how to hate each other and kill each other more and more perfectly... how to use power to enslave others....

    you humans can sure be proud of this one thing. cuz nowhere else in the universe has any other species cultivated hate and war so perfectly as on your planet you call earth.

    but humanity wont just walk away from this one, no sir.

    1. Re:mankind can be proud of bombing each other.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      also how to extend their natural lifespan by over 300%, how to reduce the infant mortality rate to under 5 per 1000, etc. It's easy to look at only the negatives.

  55. Re:hypocrisy? by kahei · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Rest of the World will not deal with our stupidy much longer.

    Much of this 'overgrown bully' stuff is true. The trouble is that the rest of the world is no better, indeed much of it is undeniably even worse. Don't expect that when America's luck runs out the next big kid will be nicer.

    --
    Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
  56. Re:hypocrisy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Japan had attacked us first.

    Pretty sure there was recent (in the last few years) proof that this was not the case. One report of a scout sub killed by US Navy.

    Also a report that the US had known the Japanese were planning an attack.

    Of course sometimes you need your pearl harbour to get the civilians of your country to stop sitting on the fence.

  57. Re:hypocrisy? by rudi_v · · Score: 1

    s/will not deal/is not dealing/

  58. Re:Astounding... by xMonkey · · Score: 1

    The U.S. IS a good country, but that doesn't mean its not bad.

    Er... I mean for instance you ever see that Mcnamara Documentary 'The Fog of War.'

    Well before we dropped the A bombs we had fire bombed the majority of Japanese Civilian Centers.

    Remember WWII was the first instance of real Total War. Our targets were directly civilian and civilians, along with everything else.

    You are correct, this was WWII, and whoever the loser ended up being they were going to be prosecuted for war crimes with good reason.

    The Axis lost and they were prosecuted, and with good reason.

    But if the allies had lost after we had done some of the things we'd done, then we too would have be prosecuted for war crimes, and with good reason.

    To the victor goes the spoils.

    He who controls the present controls the past.

    Blah blah blah blah...

  59. Re:hypocrisy? by Tim+C · · Score: 1

    It's not necessarily hypocrisy:

    1) it's perfectly possible for someone (or a country) to do something (especially in a time of crisis), see the effects it has, and repent. Having realised their own mistake, they may well seek to prevent others from making it

    2) the people in command at the time are not in command now, so no real hypocrisy is involved, as the people decrying these weapons are not the ones that previously sanctioned their use

    3) as you suggest, it's only natural to want to be exposed to as little risk as possible, and other nations/groups having these weapons increases the risk of them being used against the US, so of course they would rather no-one else has them

  60. 1946:THE FIFTH HORSEMAN- Old Radio to listen to. by NZheretic · · Score: 3, Informative
    Get a true feeling of the times, listen to 1946's THE FIFTH HORSEMAN:
    NBC SUSTAINING Special Series Thursdays 10:30 - 11:00pm
    Cold War propaganda concerning uses and threats of Atomic Energy
    WRITER/DIRECTOR: Arnold Marquist
    MUSIC COMPOSED and CONDUCTED by: Thomas Palouso
  61. A weapon of deterrence... by RhettLivingston · · Score: 1

    must strike fear. All that we know of the effects of atomic bombs came from our government. Our government has a vested interest in enhancing the fear factor of the atomic bombs. The greatest secrets of all in the cold war were that nuclear winters are a theoretical result of a method of usage that would not be used and that nuclear war is definitely thinkable.

    The sad thing is that the propaganda campaign has had such a devastating effect on peaceful usage of nuclear energy. We lag behind other countries in the development of peaceful nuclear usage precisely because we were the center of the propaganda campaign. If not for the cold war, we would not be in the business of mass destruction of our land to gather the coal necessary to produce half of our power. The coal power industry has seen far more deaths than the nuclear power industry and many of those deaths are just as slow and painful if not more so than those that would be expected from nuclear catastrophes.

    1. Re:A weapon of deterrence... by NemesisNL · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry but I strongly disagree. Nuclear energy is not the problem....nuclear wast is. The reason nuclear power is not an alternative in many minds is because we haven't got a clue what to do about nuclear wast. There is at the moment no safe way of disposing of it and until there is it will not be a viable alternative

    2. Re:A weapon of deterrence... by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      Nuclear light bulb rocket engines. Also referred to as a Nuclear gas core rocket.

      It would use nuclear waste, and could even carry up extra to dispose of in say the sun. If you take something based on the size of a Titan rocket, it would have orders of magnitude greater lifting power (some designs would have a 1000 ton) with multiple redunancy.

      This doesn't exist yet, but there is no technical reason we couldn't build one today.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    3. Re:A weapon of deterrence... by RhettLivingston · · Score: 1

      Just set aside a state. It would be better than destroying several states with coal mining. The waste problem is not a matter of not having ways to dispose of it. Its a matter of not having the will. And, once again, its a problem that has been heightened by nuclear mythology.

    4. Re:A weapon of deterrence... by AndyL · · Score: 1

      Havn't the Titan rockets occasionaly come crashing back down to Earth?

  62. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by wpiman · · Score: 1
    Whatever doesn't kill you makes you stronger....

    Actually, low levels of radiation may prove to be beneficial for you. There is actually some scientific data on this..

    Hormesis

  63. Typical ./ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Take a fascinating story about a lost account of the damage from the atomic bombs and use it sling around lectures on morality and politics.

    1. Re:Typical ./ by DeepHurtn! · · Score: 1

      Dear god, I hope the day never comes when people can talk about using nuclear fucking weapons on *people* without talking about morality and politics. Get your head out of your ass, that is what is important.

  64. You're right! by wiredog · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We should have just bombed the entire country into the stone age with conventional weapons, and then invaded. Sure, several times as many Japanese civilians (and 100K+ more Allied soldiers) would have been killed that way, but at least we wouldn't have used nukes.

    1. Re:You're right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Total crap , Show me the evidence that would have happened.
      Nuclear strikes against large military targets would have done the job

    2. Re:You're right! by fabs64 · · Score: 1

      jesus.. every time I read this, and it seems to be a something that doesn't want to go down, I can't help but wonder how DIFFERENTLY America must teach history compared to Australia.

      Then again history is written by the winners right?

    3. Re:You're right! by sgtrock · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I once found an English language copy entitled, "A History of Postwar Japan" that was written by a Japanese history professor some time in the '70s. While the book was focussed primarily on the '50s and '60s, he did discuss was the end of the war itself. It was his opinion that only the two A bombs gave the Emperor enough political clout to override the Japanese High Command and seek peace. Without those two extreme examples of total devastation, the Japanese Army would have fought to the last man and the last bullet.

      Find that hard to believe? Read any history of Battle of Okinawa that bothers to explore the Japanese point of view.

    4. Re:You're right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -1: Swallowing the official lies.

      The only reason the atomic bombs were used is because the Americans knew that the Soviets would take Japan, given the time to move their troops east.

      Now, be a good soldier and shoot yourself.

    5. Re:You're right! by m50d · · Score: 1

      No, how about just bombing the actual military targets? And, people like you always point out that conventional firebombing was more effective. So, in that case, if we absolutely had to bomb hiroshima and nagasaki why not do it with ordinary firebombing and not be killing people with the radiation decades after the war ended?

      --
      I am trolling
    6. Re:You're right! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      No, how about just bombing the actual military targets?

      They were military targets. They listed the industrial centers pumping out war materials. Detroit would have been a US military target, as would have been Washington D.C. But Chicago would not have been a military target. The lack of precision of the bombs necessitated large civilian casualties, even when an appropriate military target was hit. They destroyed one of the largest war factories in Japan. The weapons can be argued against because of the collateral damage, but the choice of targets was military.

    7. Re:You're right! by kevinmf · · Score: 1

      Yes, not to mention the fact that the Japanese were far from ready to give up before the bomb was dropped. They were preparing for an allied ground invasion by training civillians to fight with spears made out of bamboo. The lack of real military equipment would not have ended the war with Japan, but simply turned it into a guerrilla war. Keep in mind the kamikaze fighters too. They were definitley not ready to go quietly.

    8. Re:You're right! by m50d · · Score: 1

      An industrial center, even one producing weapons, is not a military target. If it had been an army/naval base or whatever that would have been legitimate.

      --
      I am trolling
    9. Re:You're right! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      So a tank factory is not a military target? A rail line that carries tanks to the military (but is civilian run) is not a military target?

      I think that your definition of a military target is more strict than commonly used. Yes, I agree that bombing high schools because they might be drafted isn't a military target, but a tank contracted for by the military is a military target, even if it hasn't yet been delivered.

    10. Re:You're right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nukes are just bigger weapons, and why sacrifice your own folks for the benefit of the enemy?
      All our subjective constructs (comforting stuff we make up) crumble before the necessities of survival by victory in war.
      War is not about who is right. Anyone can invent "right"
      War is about being able to walk over the enemy dead and control their territory.

    11. Re:You're right! by m50d · · Score: 1

      The tank itself is a military target, but the people making it aren't. Possibly I'm being overly strict, but if you say the factory's a military target then the people mining the metal used, the people growing food to feed everyone, and pretty soon the high school students are military targets. I say if you're not military - for example, if you wouldn't be a POW when captured (ignoring violations of the rules of war) - then you're civilian.

      --
      I am trolling
    12. Re:You're right! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      When it gets to the point where the only use of something is military, it is military. A tank factory is a military target. You can't really have tanks useful in non-military situations, and the factories (without retooling and such) are not useful for non-military uses. A disruption in immediate military capabilities, even if a civilian facility, is a military target. Targeting civilian communications and power facilities is common in that the disruption to the civilian infrastructure also disrupts the military. But then we drift off to the discussion of what *are* military targets vs what *should be* military targets.

  65. Correction of parent by Mithrandir86 · · Score: 1

    I didn't catch it before I submitted, but the penultimate sentence should read:
    However, the real reason that these bombs proliferate is for defense, as misguided as that sounds.

  66. Re:Astounding... by Capt+James+McCarthy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    With the USSR gone (for now at least), the US became an easy target for 'your the next evil empire' folks.

    Will the US fall? If history is any indicator, then it will. Probably due to an economic war with China though, not through physical war. The new war front has moved into the stock markets. But then again, you never know what the future holds.

    --
    There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
  67. Re:hypocrisy? by Dogtanian · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > > Do you think that if hitler would have developed the Atomic Bomb he would
    > > have hesitated to use it?"

    > No, probably not, so?

    I agree; this is somewhat of a red herring WRT the Japanese situation, as the Nazis (Japan's allies) had been defeated by this time, and I don't think anyone realistically thought there was a chance of Japan having a working A-bomb. (Although the Nazis *had* shipped support for a 'dirty bomb' to Japan shortly before their defeat, IIRC).

    However, remember that the Allies believed Germany was trying to develop its own atomic weapon. Although we *now* know the Germans were nowhere near developing a 'true' atomic bomb, that was not known at the time.

    And, if I was an Allied commander who had an atomic bomb, and believed that Hitler may be close to getting one in the next few months if Germany didn't lose the war, I would *certainly* have considered its use morally justifiable, and almost certainly essential.

    Of course, if the US had had the bomb *before* Germany's defeat and it was clear that Germany didn't have the bomb, would they have used it against them anyway, and would it still have been morally justifiable?

    If the Nazis had still had any real chance of winning the war, then yes. If they had been near defeat, probably not.

    My gut reaction is that the A-bomb would have been used to bring the war to a swift conclusion, regardless, simply to stop Stalin gaining ground in Eastern Europe. After all, it's widely speculated that this is one reason why Japan was bombed; to win victory before the Russians got there (and send a signal of superiority to them). You can say what you like, but I believe the suffering of the Japanese people would have been far greater under Stalin (who I consider comparable to Hitler).

    --
    "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  68. Re:hypocrisy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure, America has made mistakes -- some horrible ones even. But the kind of "bullying" this country has done is completely unheard of in human history. Name any past world power that has defeated another country and then, rather than maintaining rule over it indefinitely, left it with a peaceful government controlled by the people. I dare you.

  69. Re:hypocrisy? by Phanatic1a · · Score: 5, Insightful

    America always has been, and still is, nothing more than an overgrown bully.

    How do you explain Omaha Beach as the action of nothing more than an overgrown bully?

    Or for that matter, US intervention in WWI?

    Or when the US came to the aid of South Korea when it was invaded by Communist armies?

    I look around the world, and I see a lot of dead Americans buried in a lot of graves on foreign soil, and I'm afraid I don't see how most of those dead could possibly be construed as the result of the actions of nothing more than an overgrown bully.

    Perhaps you could explain this to me.

    The Former Soviet Union used to have a technical word, called, 'Neutral.' 'Neutral' was anyone who could not possibly hurt the Soviet Union.

    Nations like Hungary and Czechoslovakia?

    The Rest of the World will not deal with our stupidy much longer.

    I'm more concerned about having to deal with yours.

  70. Are you trying to push readers away? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Is this really news for nerds? I come here for some cool news/links about technology. Instead about 50% of the posts are blatently political with no relevance to technology. There are already numerous forums for this.

    1. Re:Are you trying to push readers away? by galfridus73 · · Score: 1
      What? Are you saying that there aren't nuclear physicists who read /.? I know for a fact that there are.

      Now, whether this is a "Your Rights Online" piece or not is debatable, and I think you and I would fall on the same side in that argument. However, the posting is about a reporter who observed, firsthand, what the "technology" of the 1940s had wrought. Sounds like an interesting read to me. And I'm not even a nuclear physicist.

      Broaden your mind. There are still nerds in the sciences, and they might actually outnumber the actual nerds who are in the IT field (the mercenaries who are out to make a buck as quickly as possible do not count as nerds). Nerds are not only about "technology" (which, as Joanna Russ has pointed out, is a bullshit term, anyhow).

  71. Mass murder vs mass murder by wiredog · · Score: 1

    Is it worse to kill 250k with atomic bombs or with conventional bombs? Hiroshima+Nagasaki had as many total casualties as the bombing of Tokyo did. One conventional, one (the combo of two, actually)nuclear, both equally deadly.

  72. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has to be asked- was it entirely a coincidence that the camp was situated near the manufacturing facilities?

    Away from residential facilities, but not out in the countryside? No, I shouldn't think it was a coincidence. Where exactly do you think is the natural place to build the thing?

  73. Careless use of radiation in medicine? by argent · · Score: 1

    All of these things happen when an overdose of Roentgen rays is given. Bombed children's hair falls out. That is natural because these rays are used often to make hair fall artificially and sometimes takes several days before the hair becomes loose

    That's the scariest thing I've read so far, using hard radiation as a depilatory. Reminds me of the practice among alchemists of using liquid mercury as a purgative.

    1. Re:Careless use of radiation in medicine? by Daniel+Rutter · · Score: 1
      That's the scariest thing I've read so far, using hard radiation as a depilatory.

      Cool, huh?

    2. Re:Careless use of radiation in medicine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about using flouroscopes to check shoe fit?

  74. Re:hypocrisy? by Tim+C · · Score: 1

    That's all deplorable, of course, but what exactly does any of it have to do with the people who died because of these bombs?

    If my country commits attrocities, it doesn't give you the right to kill me.

  75. Re:Astounding... by kahei · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I can't believe they call it an "atomic attack"

    Yeah! They should have called it a "kitten parade"! Or possibly a "neutron-assisted aliveness readjustment"! Or a "celebration of freedom"!

    I like "kitten parade" best.

    You _do_ realize that it was, actually, an attack? Using an atomic weapon? Hence 'atomic attack'? With no big evil liberal conspiracy? If they'd called it an 'unneccessary atomic attack on a civilian target' _that_ might have been slanted. Just referring to 'the U.S. atomic attack' is simply a handy way of, well, referring to the U.S. atomic attack.

    --
    Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
  76. it seemed like a good idea at the time by Suchetha · · Score: 1

    i'm not justifying what they did. but lets face it, its only in hindsight that we can tell the good and bad of an action like that. even then we can never be sure..

    in any thing we do, we can never really tell what it will lead to. what seems like a good idea may be bad.. what seems like a bad idea may be good..

    all we can do is say "it seemed like a good idea at the time" and move on. and hope that our other actions don't end up having bad consequences

    Suchetha

    --

    learn from yesterday, plan for tomorrow, party tonight
    or one out of three ain't bad
  77. Re:hypocrisy? by dangerz · · Score: 1

    That's utter crap.

    Given the opportunity, every single country in the world would want to be #1. The United States just happens to be in that position.

    The real reason America doesn't want anyone but America to have Atomic Weapons is because those countries won't be as responsible with it.

    We have experience with the bomb. We know the devastation it can cause. We know the consequences of using it, and we don't want anyone else to. That's why America is against using the A-Bomb.

    You guys can preach all you want about the USA wanting to be a bully, but you damn well know that if any other country was in this position, they'd do their best to stay up here as well.

    --
    The greatest experience we can have is the mysterious.
    - Albert Einstein
  78. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by brainburger · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The Museum in Hiroshima holds that 40,000 of the Hiroshima victims were POWs - but that they were POWs from Asia, rather than European or US.

    Of the 5 shortlisted targets for the two bombs, none of them would have been particularly free from collateral damage, however.

    What's more interesting is the whole question of whether the atomic attacks were necessary to end tha war - I shall say no more on this here but I invite all readers to look into it - it wasn't as easily justified as you may think.

  79. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by damsa · · Score: 1

    His long life isn't due to radiation, more probably has to do with the fact he got bitten by a spider.

  80. No Kidding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look at how the discussion and moderation has already turned out.

    Almost nothing related to the actual story, but yet another discussion of 'US was wrong/right/terrorists' for dropping the bombs. This is another typical flamewar that the editors knew would happen with a Japan A-Bomb story. Yet the moderation fails miserably again, instead of steering it back on-topic, it'll just go toward modding 'US are bad' comments.

    This place is so predictable here.

  81. It's a good thing Freedom won WW II by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 0

    Can you imagine if fascism had won? We might never have seen such stories.

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    1. Re:It's a good thing Freedom won WW II by Digital+Vomit · · Score: 1

      No, I can't imagine what it would have been like for a political ideal to somehow defeat armies of living, breathing, physical people. I imagine that would be quite a surreal event to witness.

      --
      Modern copyright is theft of culture from everyone and it retards the progress of the useful arts and sciences.
    2. Re:It's a good thing Freedom won WW II by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too bad it only lasted until present day. Now someone else has beaten freedom, at least in the US.

    3. Re:It's a good thing Freedom won WW II by DoTheRightThing · · Score: 1

      We would exactly talking the same way as we are talking now..except the change in roles.

  82. Copyright 2005? by waynemcdougall · · Score: 1
    How exactly is the son claiming copyright on his father's works, and in the year 2005?

    The date of creation of the work was 1945.

    --
    Recycle PCs and build a wireless community network www.hillsborough.org.nz
    1. Re:Copyright 2005? by Reverend528 · · Score: 1

      Because copyright is based on the date of publication, not the date of creation.

    2. Re:Copyright 2005? by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Because copyright is based on the date of publication, not the date of creation.

      I don't believe this is currently true in the United States. Can you cite a reference?

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    3. Re:Copyright 2005? by painandgreed · · Score: 1
      From copyrigt.gov:

      "Works Originally Created before January 1, 1978, But Not Published or Registered by That Date These works have been automatically brought under the statute and are now given federal copyright protection. The duration of copyright in these works will generally be computed in the same way as for works created on or after January 1, 1978: the life-plus-70 or 95/120-year terms will apply to them as well. The law provides that in no case will the term of copyright for works in this category expire before December 31, 2002, and for works published on or before December 31, 2002, the term of copyright will not expire before December 31, 2047."

      So, the story is copyrighted automatically on creation, and it is considered copyrighted for at least 70 years after the death of the author. I imagine the sn inherited all the father's copyright as part of this estate.

  83. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Tim+C · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In your own conscience, you would feel 100% innocent.

    And you would be lying to yourself. The guy who draws the arrow is as guilty as the guy who presses the button, who is as guilty as the guy who gives the order, and so on.

    I agree that that's the way people rationalise it to themselves, but convincing yourself that you're 100% innocent doesn't make it true.

    Of course, were I ever to find myself in the same situation, doubtless I would act in the same way; I'm not saying I'm any better. We're all human in the end.

  84. Re:hypocrisy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lots of dumbasses here. Remember, a lot of young people visit Slashdot. Young people and idiots.

  85. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by CloakedMirror · · Score: 1, Insightful

    What's more interesting is the whole question of whether the atomic attacks were necessary to end tha war - I shall say no more on this here but I invite all readers to look into it - it wasn't as easily justified as you may think.

    I suppose you think more fire-bombing like what was done to Tokyo and Dresden would have been better?

    --
    Evolutionary thinking will move you down the road, revolutionary thinking will put you on a new road!
  86. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by pooly7 · · Score: 1

    take stones, that's less harmful. (if you refer to the Einstein quote)

  87. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Sique · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For instance there are many spas (Bad Brambach, Schlema) in the Ore Mountains in Germany who offer Radon cures. You are basicly sitting in a tub filled with warm, Radon contaminated water. Radon is a radioactive noble gas, basicly a heavy version of Helium and Neon, and most of it is the product of the slow decay of Uranium-238 (via the alpha ray decay of Radium-226). The soil of the Ore Mountains is rich in Uranium, and so there are enough places everywhere, where Radon comes out of the earth. Radon is part of nearly all natural well water, you can even use Radon as a measurement of the relative amount of well water in water sources, because all surface water will loose their Radon within a short period (within 3,8 days half the Radon of a given amount has decayed, and additionally it is gaseous, and a noble gas, so it will leave the water without any chemical reaction), and rain water will not contain any Radon anyway, because it is to heavy to reach the clouds.
    Because of its heavy weight cellars in the Ore Mountain may contain a high level of Radon, it enters the cellar through earth rifts and doesn't leave it anymore. It can reach levels where it really starts to be a health risk, leading to lung cancer because of the alpha rays (Helium cores), which destroy the tissue of the lung.

    --
    .sig: Sique *sigh*
  88. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by daviq · · Score: 0

    That's even more dangerous than working in a reactor room or the job with the highest uv radiation levels--> One who works on a plane.

    --
    Go to the w3.org and put Slashdot.org through the validator.
  89. Sympathy for the Japanese by hengist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    is largely misplaced.

    The Japanese occupied China for 12 years. In just one incident, they slaughtered more than a quarter of a million Chinese in retaliation for the Doolittle raid on Japan. Thousands of prisoners were abused, tortured and murdered by the Japanese. They performed experiments with chemical and biological weapons on living people. Chinese are still being injured by leftover stocks of Japanese chemical weapons, yet the Japanese still refuse to take responsibility for what they did.

    While the nuclear strikes were terrible things, when one remembers the brutality and sheer animalistic behaviour of the Japanese, it's hard to not think "what goes around, comes around". The Japanese people were treated a hell of a lot better after their surrender than any of the peoples they conquered.

    1. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Pecisk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I guess you maybe be right, but until people will understand that revenge never brings any kind of justice, only it expands circle of violence...

      Violence will never end.

      --
      user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
    2. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by brpr · · Score: 0

      Yeah, all those animalistic Japanese kids. They sure deserved what was coming to them.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    3. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Elkboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sympathy for the Chinese is largely misplaced. Chairman Mao, if I recall correctly, was Chinese, made 20 million of his own people starve do death, and yet his stuffed corpse is on still display for the thousands, if not millions, who pay their respects to the little bastard. And they have his portrait on Tiananmen Square too.

    4. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Actually, in this case it did end. The Japanese surrendered, we (the US) spent millions rebuilding it, and Japan is now a thriving nation and respected world citizen. The US has a good relationship with Japan, and vice versa. Within the US citizenry, there is very little latent dislike or hatred of Japan. China, on the other hand, still remembers their brutal treatment by Japan, and they resent Japan's failure to really come to grips with and acknowledge their behavior.

    5. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by vaceituno · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Your reasoning is fallacious. If a japanese kill someone in china, killing an innocent japanese in Nagasaki doesn't "cancel out" anything. There is not "collective responsibility" but for the higher levels in the government. Unless we see people as individually responsible for their actions, there will always be racism, nationalism, and other hate-sims.

    6. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by kokoloko · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How that kind of nonsense gets modded Insightful is beyond me.
      While I don't believe that the bombings were ultimately immoral, I don't see how you can have no sympathy for the Japanese people. As a citizen of a free country, I cannot hold the average Japanese of 1945 responsible for the actions of the brutal military junta that ruled their country.
      WWII was perhaps the most tragic chapter in modern history. While there were clear "bad guys", most of the world's population were hostage to them. Those who dropped the bombs did what they thought was right to end the war; that doesn't mean that those who suffered don't deserve sympathy.

    7. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Sithgunner · · Score: 1

      hell of a lot better

      If you are sure they didn't abuse people and saw in the actual place, maybe you're statement is right.

      It just sounds like you say, 'just kill than torture, it's better for them'.

    8. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's true or not. United States didn't know what you are saying at the time. That story came out YEARS after the war.

      And U.S. enslaved Asian countries, and U.S. killed at least millions of Japanese civilians.
      THAT was clear for both side. Didn't you know that?

    9. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While the nuclear strikes were terrible things, when one remembers the brutality and sheer animalistic behaviour of the Japanese, it's hard to not think "what goes around, comes around". The Japanese people were treated a hell of a lot better after their surrender than any of the peoples they conquered.

      I have to agree with you. And using your line of reasoning, when Americans civilians start getting tortured and killed, they will also deserve it. I mean, American troops are abusing others at this very moment.

      See where your logic falls flat on its face? At what point did Japanese civilians become guilty? When they went to work in their defence industry? That means all employees of Boeing, Raytheon, GM, and countless other defence contractors are guilty of waging an illegal war, and of torture, and murder.

      Or were the civilians guilty because they believed in what their military was doing? That makes about 50% of the US civilian population, just as guilty, and deserving of being wiped out.

      Do I think that the US civilian population deserves to be harmed because of the actions of the military, of course not. I'm just making the point, that we have a habit of saying "Oh, they are WAY more evil than we are, so if we only do terrible stuff that falls just short of what the enemy does, then we are still good". It doesn't work that way.

      You can not state that the civilian population of Japan deserve no sympathy in one breath, and then express outrage when US civilians (contractors) get killed in Iraq.

      You had better hope that "what goes around, comes around" isn't a factor here, because currently, there is deficit in the US "terrible shit done to others" account.

      No matter the level of "evilness" of any administration, civilian deaths deserve sympathy. Many civilians who are killed in war may well have backed, supported, funded or encouraged their administration, and their policies. In most cases, an equal number did not.

      Can civilian casualties be avoided in all cases, no. What can be avoided is the apathy for the victims caught in the middle of something that they are powerless to change.

    10. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Saltine · · Score: 1


      While the nuclear strikes were terrible things, when one remembers the brutality and sheer animalistic behaviour of the Japanese, it's hard to not think "what goes around, comes around".


      If only it had been the Chinese that closed the circle of bad karma instead of America. Because arguably by your logic America in turn deserves comeuppance for the nuclear strikes--comeuppance which wouldn't necessarily come from Japan. So sympathy for, say, the victims of the Sep 11 attack... would be "largely misplaced"? Bummer.

    11. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Your argument is a complete non sequitur. We are discussing the brutality of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, and someone mentioned that sympathy for Japan is misplaced because of the things that they did to the surrounding nations that led up to the bombing.

      What Mao and the Chinese Communists did is after the war and had no effect on any of the parties involved in WWII. Thus, your statement about "sympathy for the chinese" makes no sense in the current discussion.

    12. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by be-fan · · Score: 1

      The same thing could be said of the Americans with respect to the native Americans. If "hasn't killed lots of innocent people and occupied their land" is a prerequisite for feeling sympathy towards a country, then very few countries in existance today deserve sympathy.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    13. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by be-fan · · Score: 1

      Justice is not a result, it is a process.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    14. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by HungWeiLo · · Score: 1

      Technically, Mao did liberate China from the Japanese (hence the special treatment with the portrait and all). He was merely freely spending his "political capital" in the years following.

      --
      There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
    15. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      when one remembers the brutality and sheer animalistic behaviour of the Japanese, it's hard to not think "what goes around, comes around".

      Please remember that there is often a disparity between the wishes of the populace of a nation, and the wishes of that nation's leadership and military. The former is not necessarily complicit in the wrongdoings of the latter.

      Your kind of reasoning is the same used by those who say the United States "deserved" to lose 3,000 people--mostly civilians--on 9/11, because it was a fair response to the US's Middle Eastern foreign policy.

      Remember, the atomic bombings were designed to END a war. The 9/11 attacks were designed to START one.

    16. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by NaruVonWilkins · · Score: 1

      So, basically, you're saying that civilians are to blame for military action? Sounds an awful lot like Afghanistan/Iraq right now.

    17. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      This is just silly -- so since north american whites enslaved blacks for years, there should be no sympathy for the white mother who is slaughtered by an attacker in her home (of any colour)?

      These links are fallacious as another poster points out -- past behaviour to another group (or even to yourself) does not justify cruel and unusual torture or destruction of personal property.

      It is possible that some Japanese at the time *deserved* to be attacked by bombs, but that the vast majority of those who suffered in the ways described deserved it is unsupportable.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    18. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

      Who exactly is 'they' supposed to refer to? Many of the Japanese civilians killed in the allied bombings were not the same individuals responsible for the war atrocities you refer to. I don't see how indiscriminate killing can ever be justified even when it is seen as the only option. Even the fact that they would certainly have done the same to us without a moment's hesitation (given the chance) cannot justify it.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    19. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Cyno · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I always feel sympathetic when innocent people are killed.

      You can't blame all of Japan or Germany or the US for the actions of a few lunatics.

    20. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to this same line of reasoning, atrocities commited by the American people and American government justify the mass-killing of Americans?

      A Christian, European invasion wiped-out nearly the entire indigenous population of North America w/ extreme ferocity, visciousneess, and brutailty. From the King Philip's war, up to the supposed "closing" of the "Indian wars" in 1890, *millions* of people were killed or starved to death. (and the American Indian population of this country conintues to decline up to the 1920's.)

      The U.S. contributed to the genocide of 200,000 indigenous people in Guatemala in that country's civil war -- starting that war with a 1959 CIA-orchestrated coup-d'etat of Guatemala's democratically-elected government -- and aiding the genocide through subsequent military, intelligence and logitical support of successive brutal regimes. Americans killed 2 million+ people in Asia in the 60's to 70's. ...And just in case you think that killing was "justified," -- what about all those invasions and interventions in places like Mexico, El Salvador, Nicaragua, The Dominican Republic, Panama, Iran, and The Congo, and Hondorus?

      So, how people does a country have to kill -- how much brutality must it inflict or cause to be inflicted -- before it is justified to have a mass-killing of that country's population through Atomic weapons?

      Quoth you:
      "what goes around, comes around"

      Are you one of those nuts who think that 9-11 was a "justified" atack, too?

    21. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by NaruVonWilkins · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I suspect they didn't "think it was right" to end the war. I think that they wanted to show the Soviet Union that we had the bomb.

      The Japanese attempted a few weeks before to open negotiations for surrender with the Soviets. We didn't want to let that happen. This was publicly known at the time - but the US said they wouldn't allow Japan to retain Hirohito, and that was part of Japan's proposed surrender agreement.

      Reasonable, right? Don't let the emperor stay in power? The public may have thought so, too... until when the Japanese were allowed to surrender to the US, we allowed him to stay in power then, too.

    22. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by byron036 · · Score: 1
      Violence will never end.

      Violence is a by product of life; the only real peace is found where nothing exists.

    23. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "If a japanese kill someone in china, killing an innocent japanese in Nagasaki doesn't "cancel out" anything."

      It cancels out future Chinese deaths. They didn't kill and stop, they continued to kill until they were stopped by the atomic bombs, one dropped on the headquarters of the IJA's fifth division, the other hitting a Mitsubishi munitions factory.

    24. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      That statement, while sound, is extremely misleading and out of place in this context.

      The bombs were not dropped out of revenge.
      The violence did end.
      There is no justice to be had in war.

      --
      No Comment.
    25. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      Why bring up the Japanese occupation of China to demonstrate this? Why not keep it limited to the conflict in question? You can do so and still show that sympathy is largely misplaced.

      Why was Japan involved in the war in the first place? Maybe because they attacked the US unprovoked?

      They started it. We ended it decisively and then helped them rebuild to be the strong nation it is today. I have no sympathy for either side.

      --
      No Comment.
    26. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      ...after stripping him of all but his label. Kinda important point don't you think? He was left as a figurehead only with no power whatsoever.

      --
      No Comment.
    27. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by NaruVonWilkins · · Score: 1

      ...as was included in the Japanese surrender offer originally.

    28. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by m50d · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah. Remember Koom Valley!

      --
      I am trolling
    29. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      No, the only surrender offer from the Japanese was an offer of conditional surrender that amounted to nothing but withdrawal.

      --
      No Comment.
    30. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by NaruVonWilkins · · Score: 2, Interesting

      On the second floor of the museum in the Peace Park at Hiroshima, past the exhibit about nuclear proliferation, but before you get to the room with video, you will find replicas of the documents themselves, and you will find that you are wrong. There was almost no difference between what the Japanese offered the Soviets and what the US offered the Japanese. You're thinking of what the Japanese previously offered the US, which is not what I'm talking about, and not what could have ended the war without using the bomb.

    31. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      Shit man, you weren't very obvious about that wee little fact. You're talking about the offer the US gave Japan, but you presented it as though Japan offered it to the US.

      What does it matter if the US offered Japan something similar to what Japan offered Russia? Really now.

      I was talking about the only offer that Japan presented to the US.

      --
      No Comment.
    32. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by vaceituno · · Score: 1

      You are again mistaking criminal japanese and the whole population of japan. Probably there were some people responsible for the deaths in China in Nagasaki, but Do you think they were all involved? The children too? Read my post again: There is no such a thing as collective responsibility, individual people are responsible for what they do. What if you surname was Smith and I punish you because a Smith hurt me? Is that justice? Come on.

    33. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous+Bullard · · Score: 1
      What Mao and the Chinese Communists did is after the war and had no effect on any of the parties involved in WWII. Thus, your statement about "sympathy for the chinese" makes no sense in the current discussion.

      Wonderful spin! As soon as Mao had driven the Nationalists out of China and declared his personal "proletarian dictatorship" in 1949, he sent his indoctrinated thugs to invade China's peaceful neighbour Tibet (which had remained neutral in the madness of WWII).

      Unlike Japan, which has apologized to China and has for decades provided generous aid (for which the Communist Party naturally took all credit for), China continues to hold all of Tibet under terror and oppressive military rule to this day, without slightest sense of remorse.

      Although the Japanese occupation of China and other nations was obviously murderous and inhumanely brutal, that occupation ended almost 60 years ago. And luckily China's language(s), religion, national traditions or national identity were never under threat of total annihilation and extinction. Not so with occupied Tibet!

      The chinese would deserve a lot more sympathy if they themselves stopped wiping the Tibetan nation off the planet NOW.

      --

      Should invading one's peaceful neighbours be opposed, or rewarded with trade deals?

    34. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by NaruVonWilkins · · Score: 1

      It matters quite a bit. The Japanese were refused audience by the US after the initial attempt at conditional surrender. They then went on to contact the Soviets, who we know passed the offer on to the US. The US just didn't get back to the Soviets.

    35. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Cervantes · · Score: 1

      I was going to mod, but instead I'll comment, starting with a large "Bugger you, mate".

      Remember friend, history is written by the victors. The US, like every other major power, has had it's share of atrocities. The difference is the US, as the victor, has generally been able to supress and gloss over its 'incidents', and by the same token, make much noise about the faults of it's fallen foes, for the purpose of looking like the white knight, defending the world against evil.

      I'd remind you, this is the same US that has conducted biological and chemical experiments on it's own troops and citizens, participated in the firebombing of Dresden, the slaughter of Vietnamese noncombatants, holds political prisoners in an offshore base without trial or reporesentation, refused to agree to a worldwide ban on landmines, also refused to agree on a worldwide ban on children in the military, still says to kids "You aren't old enough to drink, but you can go kill these bad guys for us"...

      Sympathy is not something you have to earn, in my books. A horrible event happened, and we sympathize with all those who died and suffered, regardless of nationality or reasoning. Sympathy is something that happens person-to-person, not nation-to-nation... as such, I can sympathize with the thousands of dead and injured soldiers coming out of Iraq, even if I don't agree with the war or the nation that sent them there. By the same token, you can sympathize with the japanese people, even if you don't agree with the nation that took them to war. Have a little bit of humanity for those who did what they thought was right and followed their leaders where they were told to go, whether they be Japanese, American, or Other.

      --
      If I knew the wedgies I gave you back in 6th grade would have resulted in this . . . I might have taken a moments pause.
    36. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous+Bullard · · Score: 1
      Sympathy for the Japanese is largely misplaced. ...occupied China for 12 years. ...Thousands of prisoners were abused, tortured and murdered ...the Japanese still refuse to take responsibility ...when one remembers the brutality and sheer animalistic behaviour of the Japanese...

      The Japanese terror ended some 60 years ago, they've apologized and provided China generous aid for decades (although the Communists took credit for all that reconstruction), but now that you seem to express comprehension of what it was like to live under brutal and murderous oppression, I would like you to replace "Japanese" with "Chinese" in the section I quoted; and (partially) "occupied China" with "totally occupied Tibet", and that "for 12 years" should now read "for the last 55 years and still remorselessly ongoing".

      Should sympathy for the Chinese also be misplaced in your view?

      Think about China destroying her peaceful neighbour, Tibet's language, Tibet's culture, Tibet's religion, Tibetans' national identity... not partially but in all of Tibet. Almost one fifth of all Tibetans have already died under China's military occupation.

      The insane and decadent dictator Mao is still being idolized in China as the #1 national hero, not by one elected prime minister making anachronistic shrine visits but by all of the China's self-appointed regime, and by extension every Chinese citizen. All of China's school and history text books are methodically warped to erase any unflattering events and crimes from history, and yet many Chinese who reside overseas to study, work (or spy on the host nations) with access to information outside Party Censors' grip, still refuse to accept the truth about China's brutality against Tibet.

      The Japanese already realize that they weren't actually "liberating" their victims. How about the Chinese end their own ongoing crime against their Tibetan neighbours and then we can all have a hearty talk about who deserves most of the sympathy? Okay

      --

      Should invading one's peaceful neighbours be opposed, or rewarded with trade deals?

    37. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      "Sympathy for the Japanese is largely misplaced."

      Yes, I am certain that almost all of those children, babies, pregnant women, buddhist monks and nuns and convalescent old folks all bore a collective responsibility for Japanese war crimes and were duly nuked in punishment.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    38. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Omestes · · Score: 1

      Err... This goes beyond china, the Japanese were also "not very nice" to Americans during the war.

      Also all speculation of a Japanese surrender without nukes is silly. THEY WERE WILLING TO DIE. We had to show them what lengths we would go to to finish the silly war.

      The Germans were saintly compaired to the Japanese.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    39. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by sumbry · · Score: 1

      One could say the same thing of what we did to the Native Americans, or the slaves, or even the damn US Eugenics movement. We can and are just as brutal as the best of them.

      I still believe our actions in WWII were both necessary and justified, I just do so with my blinders off.

    40. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Omestes · · Score: 1

      Umm... Please... Reality is calling you, drop the happy-hippy Peace crap. Violence is as human as language, and art. Revenge might not equal justice (a term in need of definition, if ever there was one), but retaliation can STOP further violence too. The secret is when to retaliate, and when to cut your losses.

      I am one of the few people I know who still support Truman's decision to nuke Japan. It was needed to keep further American casaulties. It was needed to stop the stupid war in the (fully Japanese caused) pacific.

      Why is it that no one ever bitches about the unprovoked causalties in Pearl Harbor, only the Japanese, who started the damn war (or our involvement), and who did god-knows what atrocities on Americans and Chinese.

      My opinion is they got what they deserved. And if it wasn't for Hiroshima and Nagisaki tens of thousands of more Americans would have died fighting the suicidal psychotic Japanese.

      Mind, I have nothing against them now. But then... The morals and ideas of today have NOTHING to do with the past. They don't apply, and all atempts to make them do so are idiotic and delusional.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    41. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "Probably there were some people responsible for the deaths in China in Nagasaki, but Do you think they were all involved?"

      More than you think there were. "Civillians" were drafted into service in those factories (such as the Mitsubishi factory in Nagasaki). To the Japanese government, at home and abroad, the line between "soldier" and "civillian" was very vague, if not non-existent.

      "The children too?"

      The children were being given bamboo spears with which to defend the home islands at the time. They drilled with them daily in their schools. It would have been a glorious death to charge US guns and tanks with those spears, I'm sure, were it not for the atomic bombs.

      "There is no such a thing as collective responsibility, individual people are responsible for what they do."

      If individualism trumps everything in all cultures, then the individual Japanese were guilty of directly supporting the actions of their military abroad by continuing to work in those military factories.

      "What if you surname was Smith and I punish you because a Smith hurt me?"

      What if I was the one that put the gun in his hand?

    42. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That six year old girl with all her skin burned off really got what was coming to her. Serves her right for raping Nanking.

    43. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot. QED.

    44. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by hengist · · Score: 1
      Why bring up the Japanese occupation of China to demonstrate this? Why not keep it limited to the conflict in question?

      Because the one led to the other.

      Why was Japan involved in the war in the first place? Maybe because they attacked the US unprovoked?

      The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour was intended to destroy the US Pacific Fleet. The destruction of that fleet was necessary so that the Japanese could seize resources in the Pacific to continue their war in China. These resouces included oil, which was being embargoed by the US in retaliation to the Japanese massacre in Nanking.

    45. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by hengist · · Score: 1

      Becuse it would have much better if they had died fighting off an Allied invasion with spears.

    46. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by _newwave_ · · Score: 1

      Unless we see people as individually responsible for their actions, there will always be racism, nationalism, and other hate-sims.

      Nationalism != hate-sim.

      You're contadicting yourself. You call out nationalism as a "hate-sim" and speak of individual responsibility, yet you cannot recognize that it is the actions of individual malevolent leaders that have used nationalism as a tool to evil ends. Can you not see that nationalism has also been a great aid in rallying nations to fight said tyrants?

      I love it when socialists hide themselves in the "multiculturalists" label.

    47. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by hengist · · Score: 1
      Sympathy for the Chinese is largely misplaced. Chairman Mao, if I recall correctly, was Chinese, made 20 million of his own people starve do death,

      Apples and oranges. Mao didn't take over until after WW2 was over. 1949, IIRC.

      Also, taking your argument to its logical conclusion, you would seem to be saying that the Chinese deserved the Japanese occupation, because four years after the occupation ended, someone would take power in China who would cause the deaths of a lot of Chinese. Doesn't really follow, does it?

    48. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by hengist · · Score: 1
      Your kind of reasoning is the same used by those who say the United States "deserved" to lose 3,000 people--mostly civilians--on 9/11, because it was a fair response to the US's Middle Eastern foreign policy.

      The US is a democracy, and the US military is an all-volunteer force. So, the people bear some responsiblity for US foreign policy.

      There is no question, however, that 9/11 WAS NOT a fair, reasonable or appropriate response, as there were other methods available for influencing US policy that the al Qaeda animals ignored in favour of simply killing people who aren't like them.

      Remember, the atomic bombings were designed to END a war. The 9/11 attacks were designed to START one.

      Except, to al Qaeda, the war had been going on for years before hand. The US people just didn't realise it.

    49. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by hengist · · Score: 1
      Your reasoning is fallacious. If a japanese kill someone in china, killing an innocent japanese in Nagasaki doesn't "cancel out" anything

      The Japanese were in China right up until the surrender. The Japanese were killing people in China right up until the surrender. The strikes on Hiroshima and Nagasaki led to the surrender. Therefore, the strikes prevented the Japanese (who were, by all reasonable standards, "a nation at war") killing innocent Chinese (and Vietnamese, and Allied prisoners).

      Also, if you RTFA, you'll see that the target in Nagasaki, dodgy bomb-aiming aside, was military.

    50. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what you are basically saying that killing any number of civilians is quit ok if you can show their country has done something else bad down the line? Does this include the US as well? Most of the middle east saw 11 sep as just revenge. Funny enough the US didn't agree.

    51. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by hengist · · Score: 1
      Remember friend, history is written by the victors. The US, like every other major power, has had it's share of atrocities. The difference is the US, as the victor, has generally been able to supress and gloss over its 'incidents', and by the same token, make much noise about the faults of it's fallen foes, for the purpose of looking like the white knight, defending the world against evil.

      Never defended the US, being non-USian I don't particularly care how the US is portrayed.

      Reading the other comments attached to this story, you can see that the whole "The-Japanese-were-innocent-victims-of-US / Allied / White-aggression" fallacy is still strong. I'm just speaking up for the victims of Japan.

    52. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by hengist · · Score: 1
      I am certain that almost all of those children, babies, pregnant women, buddhist monks and nuns and convalescent old folks all bore a collective responsibility

      And how many of those women, monks, nuns and old folks did anything to stop the Japanese atrocities? How many of them worked in the munitions plants, or cheered the government? Or even questioned what their husbands, brothers, fathers, and sons were doing in China?

      How many pregnant Chinese women deserved to have their stomachs slit open with bayonets? How many old Chinese people deserved to be starved to death? How many Chinese children deserved to be brutalised and murdered? How many Allied prisoners deserved to be beheaded with swords, or starved to death, or shot in the back?

      It is apparent in the comments attached to this story that the myth of Japanese victimhood is still strong. If the Japanese had not started the war, there would have been no attacks, and people would not have been burned alive, or crushed, or died lingering deaths from radiation poisoning.

      I'm sorry those people suffered, and I'm sorry those people died, but I'm not sorry the nuclear attacks happened.

    53. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by hengist · · Score: 1
      I always feel sympathetic when innocent people are killed.

      An humane and enlightened attitude - yet you are strangely silent on your sympathy for the victims of the Japanese aggression.

    54. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by hengist · · Score: 1
      I don't see how you can have no sympathy for the Japanese people

      I had imagined that my statement that the bombings were terrible would have implied that I have some sympathy for the Japanese who suffered and died. I just have far more sympathy for the true victims than for the aggressors.

    55. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Snaller · · Score: 1

      Wow, this racist drivel gets moderated Insightful? How slashdot has fallen.

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    56. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Snaller · · Score: 1

      You are too good for this forum...

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    57. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see, it was a "magic" military target, and using it's uber military "magic" prevented any civilians from being harmed. Sorry there buddy, military target or not civilians died, and that can NEVER be justified.

    58. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn the liberal establishment for teaching our young kids that bleeding-heart leftist propaganda like "two wrongs don't make a right." We need more upstanding "eye for an eye" folks like you in the world.

    59. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by hengist · · Score: 1

      Pointing out Japanese war crimes is racist, yet their Chinese victims don't rate a mention?

      All this sympathy for the victims of the atomic bombings, but nary a word about Japan's victims?

      Japan started the war. Japan is responsible for the people killed by Japanese, Japan is responsible for the Japanese who died.

      I save the bulk of my sympathy for the real victims.

      But I don't expect /. hypocrites to understand that.

    60. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by hengist · · Score: 1
      You can not state that the civilian population of Japan deserve no sympathy in one breath, and then express outrage when US civilians (contractors) get killed in Iraq.

      I didn't say that the Japanese do not deserve sympathy, I said the sympathy would be better placed with the victims of Japanese atrocities.

      You had better hope that "what goes around, comes around" isn't a factor here, because currently, there is deficit in the US "terrible shit done to others" account.

      Check my profile, I'm not American. America has a record of not caring about the rest of the world, why should the rest of the world care about them?

    61. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      "I'm sorry those people suffered, and I'm sorry those people died, but I'm not sorry the nuclear attacks happened."

      Let me guess. Yank?

      Welcome to my 'foes' list.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    62. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you maybe be right, but until people will understand that revenge never brings any kind of justice, only it expands circle of violence...

      Nothing ever brings any kind of justice.

    63. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      Right, in other words, like I said. The Japanese had no justification for attacking the US except in expanding their aggression.

      Again, as far as the US is concerned, it doesn't really matter what was going on between China and Japan. They didn't get actively involved until _after_ they were attacked at Pearl Harbor.

      --
      No Comment.
    64. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Snaller · · Score: 1

      Pointing out Japanese war crimes is racist

      No, that you think its ok to slaughter a ton if innocent civilians just because they are Japanese is.
      All this sympathy for the victims of the atomic bombings, but nary a word about Japan's victims?

      Because we were not talking about them. Victims are victims. We were talking about your evil attitude of holding everybody guilty. Alqueda holds all americans responsible for that their presidents have done - you think that is fair? Its a sick mindset.

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    65. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by dynamo · · Score: 1

      Oh yes, and the US is now also a thriving nation and a respec..

      oh.

    66. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Elkboy · · Score: 1

      No, that's not my point. My point is that you can always find some atrocity that justifies makes new atrocities. It's a pointless blame game that never stops and doesn't exactly foster peace and understanding.

      Also, I'm pointing out the Chinese hypocricy when they slam Japan for covering up history. Yes, Japan's coverup is deeply shameful, but China, the country that denies Tiananmen and glorifies Mao is not the right nation to bitch about it until they clean their own shit up.

    67. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by Cyno · · Score: 1

      silient?

      MUST I YELL OUT LOUD HOW INSANE ALL THESE MURDERERS ARE? WILL THAT HELP MAKE IT BETTER? MAYBE TAKE AWAY SOME OF THE SADNESS OR CHANGE THE FACTS THAT MILLIONS WERE KILLED BY COUNTLESS COWARDS AND MURDERERS WHO BOMB AND POISON AND KILL INNOCENT PEOPLE CARELESSLY?

      We are no better than they.. and no amount of noise will change reality. We must move on and learn from our past and stop supporting people who show signs and have trends that seem erily similar to these murderers. To label a group of people, to stereotype, takes you one step closer to becoming them. That's all the do. They call these victims "terrorists" or "jews" and kill them for being different.

      Without the internet, without the freedom of speech, I believe Bush would have taken us to the edge of being the next Japan or Germany. And you want me to feel sympathy for the victims? What about us good people who have these attrocities committed in our names? Do you feel any sympathy for what they have to go through? The dead don't have to live with the terrible reality of knowing how evil humanity really is. They, at least, get some peace from our sickness.

    68. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by albyrne5 · · Score: 1

      Ya know, as I read your post, this was *SO OBVIOUSLY* your point, that Iwas flabbergasted at how people mis-interpreted. People are nuts, eh? Oh well.

    69. Re:Sympathy for the Japanese by amightywind · · Score: 1

      By chance I read your recent posts about China. It saddens me that someone with such well argued and contrary (on this moronic forum anyway) opinions is on my foes list. Not anymore.

      --
      an ill wind that blows no good
  90. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by DenDave · · Score: 4, Informative

    Fat Man was 21 kt yield as I recall.. The fireball ascended into the wind and fallout was not over ground zero. The black rain fell over Nishiyama, to the east.

    There is still some residual radiation but surpisingly, the vast majority of radioactive fall-out pollution in the region is due to US atmospheric testing in the 50's, and that was way off in the Pacific!

    The neutron radiation is also negligable compared to the background pollution.

    --
    -if at first you don't succeed, stay the heck away from paragliding.
  91. Re:hypocrisy? by gini_ · · Score: 1

    "America should have minded her own business and stayed out of the World War. If you hadn't entered the war the Allies would have made peace with Germany in the Spring of 1917. Had we made peace then there would have been no collapse in Russia followed by Communism, no breakdown in Italy followed by Fascism, and Germany would not have signed the Versailles Treaty, which has enthroned Nazism in Germany. If America had stayed out of the war, all these 'isms' wouldn't today be sweeping the continent of Europe and breaking down parliamentary government - and if England had made peace early in 1917, it would have saved over one million British, French, American, and other lives."

    Sir Winston Churchill, New York Enquirer, 1936

  92. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by envelope · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Another reason we used the bomb was to show Stalin that we had it and were willing to use it.

    --

    appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars
  93. On a similar note by tezza · · Score: 1
    For a photo diary of a nuclear fallout [Chernobyl] site see:

    http://www.kiddofspeed.com/

    It's done the rounds before, but maybe new people haven't seen it yet. Possibly apocryphal, left to reader to decide.

    Also has some AMAZING pictures of the Orange Revolution in the Ukraine at the end of last year. Very much well worth a look.

    --
    [% slash_sig_val.text %]
    1. Re:On a similar note by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

      Oh, you mean the story covered by slashdot 3-4 times and was found out to be fake?

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    2. Re:On a similar note by Wiseazz · · Score: 1

      As I recall, the pretense for the story was false (that this chick just rides her motorcycle in areas where nobody else has access and snapped those pictures). When in fact, you could take some kind of guided tour, which was the origination of the pictures.

      Someone please correct me if I'm wrong (and I know you will!) but I believe that though the story was false, the pictures were real.

      --
      My sig sucks.
  94. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by arivanov · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Not, just there.

    All Bulgarian, Cheh and most Caucasus (Russian and Georgian) SPAs are like this.

    Radon containing water works miracles on arthritis, joints problems as well as many forms of eczema. While it usually fails to provide permanent cure it provides 3-4 months of relief or gives medications a better chance to work.

    In btw, the feeling is weird... 20 minutes in a warm pool of such water makes you feel like your joints have started to melt. They feel like rubber.

    The mechanism is still unclear, but it is not the Radon which is the active agent. It is the way its decay changes water properties.

    --
    Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
    http://www.sigsegv.cx/
  95. Good thing, too... by dpilot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs did one simple service for the entire world, and all of humanity: they gave us all fear.

    Imagine that you're a military type, and you've got this brand new, super-powerful toy, the Biggest Bomb in the World. It tooks millions to build, and the biggest aspect of all that work was that nobody really knew if it even could be built. But once it is known that one can be built, it's only a matter of time until others do it.

    Further imagine that Hiroshima and Nagasaki had never happened, so the Bomb wouldn't be anything real in the public's mind, just another weapon, just another bomb. Military types are prone to exaggerate their own capability, so without having seen the Bomb used against a real city, it would have remained a bomb, not The Bomb. Seeing pictures of a devastated atoll just isn't the same as hearing reports of death from a devastated city.

    Finally, imagine the Cold War, where both sides have the Bomb, but the world lacked the fear generated by Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Imagine both sides with thousands of Bombs, each. Hiroshima and Nagasaki happened during that brief interval in history, when only one side had the Bomb, when there was no issue of retaliation, when Mutual Assured Destruction, wasn't even a possiblity, much less a deterrent policy.

    What do you think our chances of surviving the last 60 years would have been, without the Fear from Hiroshima and Nagasaki permeating our culture. Sometimes I fear that that Fear is fading, but I hope that enough is left to keep us alive until we hopefully mature as a species.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    1. Re:Good thing, too... by Digital+Vomit · · Score: 1
      Sometimes I fear that that Fear is fading, but I hope that enough is left to keep us alive until we hopefully mature as a species.

      Mature as a species? This isn't Star Trek. We're not going to magically evolve into "better human beings" one day. We've been this way for thousands of years and we're not going to change any time soon.

      The only thing worse than the fact that we are the way we are is this idea that some day we will simply stop being evil. The kind of thinking that one day we'll "mature as a species" just shifts the responsibility for each person to overcome his own sin on to some kind of abstract event or process in the future.

      There is no maturing of the species. There is only the maturing of a person.

      --
      Modern copyright is theft of culture from everyone and it retards the progress of the useful arts and sciences.
    2. Re:Good thing, too... by dustmite · · Score: 1

      Mature as a species? This isn't Star Trek. We're not going to magically evolve into "better human beings" one day. We've been this way for thousands of years and we're not going to change any time soon.

      Actually, it might well get worse, not better, because genetically, it's usually the most passive people who become victims of wars/conflicts, while those who are doing the killing, and those who do things like drop A-bombs on others, are the ones whose genetic material is more likely to survive. On average over any long period of time, evolution favours the sharpest/best killing machines.

      One hope might be that such behaviour is 100% cultural/environmental, rather than genetic. This is highly unlikely though, it's actually a combination of both.

      On the other hand, our ability to cooperate peacefully and build civilisations with industrialised economies is what allows us to produce better "murder/defence technology". This means evolution might in some ways favour slightly less aggressive but smarter & cooperative genes, than highly aggressive but "dumber" genes.

    3. Re:Good thing, too... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "evolution favours the sharpest/best killing machines"

      Bullshit. You americans are so fucked up by your violent McCulture. Evolution favours the individuals that reproduce before they die. Think about it.

      Make love, not war.

    4. Re:Good thing, too... by slavemowgli · · Score: 1

      So... it's better to be evil than it is to be good because being evil allows you to better yourself, while being good doesn't (at least not to the same extent)?

      --
      quidquid latine dictum sit altum videtur.
    5. Re:Good thing, too... by dustmite · · Score: 1

      WTF? Firstly, I'm not American, have never been there, and don't like US culture either. Secondly, I wasn't advocating the evolution of our species towards being better "killing machines" - merely stating the UNFORTUNATE fact this is almost always the case in real life in nature. Brush up on your reading skills.

      Evolution favours the individuals that reproduce before they die.

      Exactly my point - how many Hiroshima/Nagasaki victims successfully reproduced?

    6. Re:Good thing, too... by dpilot · · Score: 1

      That's not what I said, at all. If the Bomb had to be used in war, and I tend to believe it's a historical/human necessity that it had to be, then it's best used when there can't be a 2-way escalating shooting match.

      History, partly because of Hiroshima/Nagasaki, has established a sort of "band gap" between conventional and nuclear weapons. Fortunately we've gone back to the bottom side of the gap. One can certainly make the point that some conventional weapons, like the daisy-cutter or fuel bombs are on par with a small nuke, blurring what I call the "band gap." But those weapons are at the top end of conventional, and can't escalate significantly higher.

      The most dangerous thing about small nukes is that someone might be able to convince themselves that, "It's less powerful than some conventional weapons," and then actually use them. THEN things can escalate.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  96. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It's called 'diffusion of responsibility', BTW, not 'dilution'.

  97. Re:hypocrisy? by Evil+Pete · · Score: 1

    A lot of the scientists involved had thought that Japan would be shown the power of the nuke and then threatened. Failing that, that a military target would be used, Hiroshima wasn't that much of military target, otherwise why was it untouched in the regular bombings. However, even after Hiroshima was bombed communications within the country was so bad that the central government didn't know what had happened until the bombing of Nagasaki. Nagasaki was in that sense unnecessary and so too probably was Hiroshima. There was talk within the Japanese goverhment of surrender, an explicit threat of nuclear weapons was never made to tip the balance.

    Too late now of course. Lots of bad shit happens in wars. What is not so well appreciated is that a lot of very very bad stuff happens in the closing days of a war, because the enemy defenses collapse and bloodlust takes over. Happens all through history, WW2 was no exception. You could view the use of nuclear weapons as an example of this with an unusually potent weapons technology. Still, more died in Tokyo or Dresden than at Hiroshima.

    --
    Bitter and proud of it.
  98. Re:hypocrisy? by Phanatic1a · · Score: 1

    1. That's as may be. It's entirely possible our intervention in WWI turned out to be a mistake. That still does not speak to my question, which was "How was our that intervention the work of nothing more than a bully?"

    2. Churchill was not always right.

  99. People are so obsessed with the concept of nuclear by glrotate · · Score: 1

    Might I suggest All About Radiation
    by L. Ron Hubbard

  100. Re:hypocrisy? by xSauronx · · Score: 1
    i imagine its far more likely that their aggressive attitude against it comes from the fact the US government wants to hold as much power and influence as possible over everyone.

    but thats just a guess, and I'm from the US.

    --
    By and large, language is a tool for concealing the truth. -- George Carlin
  101. Urban legand? by scharkalvin · · Score: 1

    I've heard a story that may be just an Urban legand, about a Japanese man who survived the Hiroshima bomb by being in an underground lab at the time. After the explosion, he walked out unharmed and seeing the ruins of his former place of employment headed home to his family. He arrived home in Nagasaki just in time to survive the SECOND bomb in the basement of his home with his family!!! (Oh no not AGAIN!!!)

    1. Re:Urban legand? by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 2, Informative

      yes, it is urban legend. Hiroshima and Nagasaki are far apart and the man would not be working gin one town and living n another.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    2. Re:Urban legand? by dr_dank · · Score: 1

      Then he tried to commit suicide by eating pop rocks with soda!

      --
      Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
    3. Re:Urban legand? by scharkalvin · · Score: 1

      Hiroshima and Nagasaki are far apart and the man would not be working in one town and living n another.
      Yes he could be, if he were a scientist working on a top secret project for weeks at a time in a secret bunker building. The man might have even been a political prisoner, and was 'liberated' by the bombing.

    4. Re:Urban legand? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      I've heard a story that may be just an Urban legand

      According to one source, 280,000 people of Hiroshima's 350,000 population survived the initial blast. In Nagasaki, 200,000 of 270,000 were alive at least one year afterward (I didn't search too hard to find initial casualties).

      So, the story is that one person out of the 280,000 who lived through something bad went someplace and was part of the 75% that survived something else bad there. Frankly, I'd be surprised if there weren't hundreds of such stories.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    5. Re:Urban legand? by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      it is a bunch of crap.

      besides that, a basement will not protect you from death in a nuclear explosion.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    6. Re:Urban legand? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      besides that, a basement will not protect you from death in a nuclear explosion.

      Sure it can. The blast doesn't incinerate everything within some radius and nothing outside. The devistation is heavier towards the middle and less at the edges. So, if he were to be at some distance away from the blast, a basement would be survivable when the second floor of the same building would result in death.

    7. Re:Urban legand? by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      if a building is effected by the blast of the bomb, the person in the basement would die from radiation poisoning a few days later, as most people in both cities did.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  102. Read the Article: Nagasaki was a gaint war factory by skeptictank · · Score: 1

    were the Japanese used slave-labor to manufacture ships, torpedo and other war machines.

  103. Re:hypocrisy? by Anspen · · Score: 1

    1) Who said they *had* to invade Japan to get a surrender? At this point of the war the Japanese had almost no reserve stocks or transport capability needed to keep the economy going (and the population fed).

    2) Who said the *US* had to invade? On August 8th the Soviet Union declared war on the Japanese. Sure that might have meant a communist Japan, but that's a whole different argument than millions of dead. And besides the Japanese Army had quit a healthy respect for the Red Army. Perhaps they would have surrendered anyway.

    3) Why did they drop the bombs on a heavily populated civilian area? They could have at least started by bombing some small, unpopulated island. One of the reasons the Manhattan project was so expensive is that they didn't just build a bomb, they build the entire infrastructure to mass-produce bombs.

    4) Why did they need *unconditional* surrender? It's clear that Japan was quite aware of its unwinnable position quite early on. By the end of the war a serious offer to negotiate might have worked a lot better than clinging to the unconditional line, which in the end wasn't even achieved (the armed forces surrendered unconditionally, the Japanese nation didn't.

  104. After seeing the museum at Hiroshima by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trust me you don't want to be nuked. Between the black rain, the burns and the radiation... well it sounds like pure hell.

  105. Torture? by paranode · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Who's tortured? Hope you're not talking about Gitmo or Abu Ghraib. The prisoners in Gitmo eat better meals than our military in Iraq or schoolchildren in our schools. The localized abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib was hazing at worst. Frat pledges endure worse than these prisoners have had to put up with. Doesn't make it right, but it's a far cry from torture.

    1. Re:Torture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No doubt. I heard on the radio this morning that the average prisoner in GitMo has GAINED 15 lbs. And prisoners there are trained to cry "abuse". A story was given about one prisoner who knew that journalists were coming the next day, so he bashed his head on the floor and claimed that the guards did it. So much for the horrendous conditions.

    2. Re:Torture? by hamburger+lady · · Score: 1, Insightful

      what kind of sick fraternity did you belong to?

      how about this, gimme your address, so i can come by your house tonight, tie you up and beat you for a while. maybe i'll sodomize you with a lightstick. piss on you a few times. you know, good old fasioned hazing stuff.

      hopefully, you won't get beaten so bad you'll die, like that cab driver in basura.

      anyhoo, at the end, while you're lying tied up in a pool of your own excrement, i'll bring you a nice steak burrito, which will obviously make it all better.

      frat pledges, my ass.

      --

      ---
      Is this the MPAA? Is this the RIAA? Is this the DMCA? I thought it was the USA!
    3. Re:Torture? by rosie_bhjp · · Score: 1

      Oh my god you are so right. We had this guy who was pledging for our frat so we tied him up, beat him until he shit all over himself, and then left him there. Hahahahaha Then we came back in later and fucked him in the ass.

      We had this other guy who we beat up pretty good. He ended up dying on us when we beat his legs so hard we shattered his leg bones into a pulp. He ended up dying from blood clots going into his heart and lungs. Fuckin pussy.

      It's cool though cause they ate well.

      --
      A radio maverick jumps to internet only. The Future of Rock n Roll
    4. Re:Torture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The people who are doing the torturing are the same people telling you that the prisoners are well fed.

      And you believe them?

    5. Re:Torture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can't sepearate the individuals deviating from the rules and the authorities punishing those deviants then there is no hope of you understanding the situation.

    6. Re:Torture? by Analogy+Man · · Score: 1
      The prisoners in Gitmo eat better meals than...

      And this is the nonsense logic I am concerned with. It is not relevant that they had rice pilaf with their chicken breast fillet, New York strip or a 2 year old MRE.

      My concern over this is that there is very limited access to information and tons of ass covering. Bush has been "shocked" by each of the dozen or so disclosures over the last year and a bit and claims it is the action of a few bad apples, Cheney pretty much says he doesn't give a damn with a "kill'em all and let the devil sort them out" attitude, Rumsfeld says I approved these "interogation techniques" but only based on Kafka "The Trial" like criteria for when the rules apply and when they do not...don't ask don't tell but don't blame me if you are confused and cross the line. As tight as this gang is I would expect a more consistent story line.

      Do not for a moment think that I am sympathetic to the terrorists and their methods. My concern is when our government speaks in terms of vengence and measuring moral conduct with a scale where GOOD is anything north of PURE EVIL we begin to sound and act like them.

      --
      When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
    7. Re:Torture? by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
      Gitmo and Abu Ghraib aren't that bad, fine, then sign your ass up and take a trip down there, you and Rumsfeld can enjoy the fine food, the wonderful scenery, and the hazing.

      And don't let me hear you bitch about your civil rights.

      --
      Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
    8. Re:Torture? by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      So you have never heard of frat hazing killing people? People literally dying of fright? I am not condoning either but the prisoners was more understandable.

      You have some kids guarding these insurgents. They have no training on how to be guard in a prison. You know either the prisoners or other in thier organization are responsible for injuring or killing your comrades. Some of these prisoners are surely linked to the the beheadings of American citizens. It is understandable that some rage manifests.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    9. Re:Torture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is equaly understandable that you get airplanes into your buildings then.

    10. Re:Torture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You know either the prisoners or other in thier organization are responsible for injuring or killing your comrades.

      According to the military's own investigations, around 70% of the prisoners of Abu Ghraib were innocent. The Red Cross figured it was closer to 90%.

      So no, they don't know. That's the point. No trials. No records. No information. No accountability.

    11. Re:Torture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry but I'm not a terrorist who blows up women and children for religion so it won't be necessary. In case you didn't read the OP, nobody said it was 'A-OK!!', rather that there is no evidence of torture, only a few immature soldiers mistreating prisoners. Don't take the exception for the rule.

  106. Re:hypocrisy? by PakProtector · · Score: 1

    Bless you. Someone with a mind and capable of using it. I have no idea what people's knee-jerk reaction to common sense is when it proves that common sense says that killing people is the best way to stop people from being killed.

    Bless you, sir/madam, for having the open-mindedness to look at the facts, and the courage to speak the truth.

    May your Code never SEGFAULT.

    --

    Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
    man: no entry for woman in the manual.
    "Qua!?"

  107. D-Day Museum in New Orleans by sheared · · Score: 1

    Every Slashdot poster should be required to visit the D-Day museum in New Orleans -- especially the Pacific's exhibit. After seeing that, I have no qualms about decisions made by the US to try to end the war.

    Heck, had they not dropped the bombs, my grandfather would not likely be here right now (and subsequently me either), since he was a Marine scheduled to make that invasion of Japan.

  108. bool IronyFilter=True by wiredog · · Score: 1

    Considering that Aussie troops would have been hitting the beaches alongside the American, Canadian, and British troops, Australia would have taken heavy casualties as well.

    1. Re:bool IronyFilter=True by fabs64 · · Score: 1

      wow.. completely absoloutely irrelevant to what I had to say, but other than that yeah you're right

  109. Just a question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does anyone here knows about an organization called "Soka Gakkai"?
    What is it?

  110. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Alioth · · Score: 1

    A month later (which is when he visited), radiation levels would have fallen well below safe levels.

  111. Re:hypocrisy? by PakProtector · · Score: 2, Insightful
    1) Who said they *had* to invade Japan to get a surrender? At this point of the war the Japanese had almost no reserve stocks or transport capability needed to keep the economy going (and the population fed).

    They had to. Japan was already amassing forces in expectation of an invasion, forces that outnumbered American ones. Women and Children were being trained to fight. And all were expected to fight to the death and not surrender. A ground invasion would have led to the total annihilation of the Japanese people, or a large majority of them.

    2) Who said the *US* had to invade? On August 8th the Soviet Union declared war on the Japanese. Sure that might have meant a communist Japan, but that's a whole different argument than millions of dead. And besides the Japanese Army had quit a healthy respect for the Red Army. Perhaps they would have surrendered anyway.

    I refer you to the fact that the Japanese did not surrender after the first bomb, but the second. The fact that they did not surrender after such an awesome display of raw power would point to the fact that they had never intended to surrender, but, as afore mentioned, fight to the last man, woman, and child.

    3) Why did they drop the bombs on a heavily populated civilian area? They could have at least started by bombing some small, unpopulated island. One of the reasons the Manhattan project was so expensive is that they didn't just build a bomb, they build the entire infrastructure to mass-produce bombs.

    Both of the cities were also military targets, and the civilian populations were mobilized to give resistance, i.e., fight to the death. Hiroshima had Army Headquarters and the HQ for Southern Japan's defense. Nagasaki was a strategically vital seaport and ordinance factory.

    4) Why did they need *unconditional* surrender? It's clear that Japan was quite aware of its unwinnable position quite early on. By the end of the war a serious offer to negotiate might have worked a lot better than clinging to the unconditional line, which in the end wasn't even achieved (the armed forces surrendered unconditionally, the Japanese nation didn't.

    It's partly cultural. During the Second World War, there were still a vast majority of persons in Japan, pretty much the whole population, that believe in "Death Before Dishonor." Surrender was shameful, and they would have died first. Many of them did on outlying islands, after they had been routed to caves and, when soldiers called for their surrender, they generally fired back, and when they didn't they just stayed in there.

    Unconditional Surrender was needed to force the concept fully across into Japanese Society that they had been defeated. And as to them being willing to surrender before the bombs, they didn't surrender after the first one, as I have said afore. That's why we dropped two.

    --

    Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
    man: no entry for woman in the manual.
    "Qua!?"

  112. Re:hypocrisy? by korbin_dallas · · Score: 1

    I think you and Churchill underestimate the sin of Greed.

    WW1 was not the first, nor would it have been the last war fought in Europe.

    Please reread history and rethink the BIG PICTURE of human nature. We have not ended war by having 2 massive wars. We have simply changed the nature of it. The rich countries, USA, Europe, Russia, Japan, fight them with expensive pinpoint weapons. The poorer countries such as those in Africa do it the old fashioned way, with dumb bullets, and bayonet charges. The cruelty in poor wars is beyond belief. Yet, these are never reported to the civilised world. And you, who feels that America is a bully, have no knowledge or care of them, do you?

    To quote an African soldier who machine gunned his enemy: "We kill them like sheep."

    --
    They Live, We Sleep
  113. yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "feared that his father's reports would sway American public opinion against building an arsenal of nuclear bombs. "

    The reports should have been released.
    That is unless your NOT a communist.

  114. there are no clean hands in war. by lobsterGun · · Score: 3, Insightful


    First British Bombing raid on Berlin: 23 Aug 1940

    First German Bombing raid on London: 7 September 1940

    1. Re:there are no clean hands in war. by Eccles · · Score: 1

      Actually...

      First German Bombing raid on London: 31st May 1915

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    2. Re:there are no clean hands in war. by irix · · Score: 1

      Your dates for London and Berlin are wrong. The Germans were dropping bombs on London before September.

      On top of that, the Luftwaffe started the practice of area ("terror") bombing of cities with Rotterdam much earlier in 1940. They then started area bombing British cities (including London) well before the RAF was area bombing Germany. The RAF didn't speficifially start area bombing until December 1940.

      Even if the Luftwaffe hadn't started area bombing I suspect that the RAF would have done so anyway. It was the only way to hit anything at night with 1940s technology, and RAF/Luftwaffe bombers couldn't survive in daytime raids.

      --

      Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
    3. Re:there are no clean hands in war. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > First British Bombing raid on Berlin: 23 Aug 1940

      > First German Bombing raid on London: 7 September 1940

      You are fully correct, but Churchill reports this in his memoires, and I don't think this is disputed. According to Churchill a German plane (or a small squadron, I don't know) made an unfortunate error in navigation, completely missing its target and dropping their bombs instead on London.

      Churchill was not amused and ordered a revenge bombing against Berlin, in which 80 (if I rembemer correctly) bombert took part. One could easily argued this was a serious mistake, as one a few German bombs had been dropped.

      Hitler was not amused, either. Especially since he had Molotow visiting him in his bunker, forcing them to to go underground. I guess you can imagine the result of the sarcasm of Molotow and the humiliation of Hitler. Next week, Goering ordered a full-scale attack on London, later shifting to other major cities.

      As some people here like to herald the killing of innocent citizens as a good deed, I might add that the shift from airfields and, especially, radar installations probably gave the RAF the required recovery time. The radar was incredebily important to match the German fighter superiority.

      Apologies for my horrible English.

    4. Re:there are no clean hands in war. by m50d · · Score: 1

      There are clean hands, just not the Brits in that particular war.

      --
      I am trolling
    5. Re:there are no clean hands in war. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correction:
      First German Bombing raid on London: May 1915

      http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/FWWzeppelinra ids.htm

    6. Re:there are no clean hands in war. by Luminary+Crush · · Score: 1

      This shift of targets from the airfields and radar installations to the cities in general and London in particular is creditted with losing the Battle of Britain for the Germans - because of the reason you state: it gave the RAF time to recover and resupply.

  115. The Japanese used US POWs for slave labor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See here.

    Google results here

    Of course, that's a helluva lot better than the Japanese treated a lot of other prisoners. Just search for "Unit 731" and read tales of vivisection, human medical experimentation, chemical weapons testing on POWs, etc.

    At least the Nazis were only really nasty to a few groups - they targeted their atrocities. The Japanese in WWII were equal-opportunity monsters.

    And they're still damn near the most downright racist society on the planet.

  116. Re:hypocrisy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you, who feels that America is a bully, have no knowledge or care of them, do you?

    We're too busy trying to use our pinpoint strikes on poor countries like Iraq and finding them pretty useless when there's no tanks to blow up, planes to shoot down, or government buildings to raze.

  117. Re:hypocrisy? by insert_username_here · · Score: 1

    I used to think that was the case, but having read the Wikipedia article posted above, I'm now not so sure. It seems there were several alternative ways to end the war:

    Operation Starvation (as described here): 160 planes planted around 2,000 sea mines in many of the major ports of Japan in April 1945. This proved to be so effective that 35/47 convoy routes had to be abandoned due to the risk to shipping. This would have had a major impact on supplies and logistics. Quoth Wikipedia: "After the war, the commander of Japan's minesweeping operations noted that he thought this mining campaign could have directly led to the defeat of Japan on its own had it began earlier.". Of course, the death by starvation would have probably been as painful as the nuclear attacks.

    Operation August Storm (Here): This was to be the initial Russian foray into the war, which started after the Russian declaration of war on August 8th. The Soviets were planning to head through China, and launch a land invasion long before the planned American invasion in March 1946. Having the Russians suddenly transform from weary neutral to enemy, with a major military campaign to boot, would surely have had some effect on the morale of the Japanese military command.

    Of course, this would have also resulted in heavy civilian casualties. But if the Soviets didn't get anywhere, there would've been no reason why the Americans couldn't have dropped the bomb later (after warning the Soviet allies, of course).

    And finally, they could have always performed a demonstration blast, before actually attacking civilian targets. To their credits, the Americans did drop leaflets to warn the Japanese about their new weapons.

    --
    -- Dramatisation - May Not Have Happened
  118. Re:hypocrisy? by PakProtector · · Score: 2, Informative

    That about them not knowing what happened at Hiroshima until after Nagasaki was bombed is a bold faced lie.

    Many people noticed that suddenly virtually all telephone and telegraph lines leading to and from the city were cut, and that the city was no longer broadcasting Radio. The Japanese Military dispatched two Officers in a plane to go and see what had happened. Within 4 hours they had gotten there and had made report as to the damage. Keep in mind that by the time they got 100 miles away from the city, they could still see the mushroom cloud and could see the city burning. Still.

    For information: The Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki: Hiroshima: The Bombing.

    --

    Edward@Tomato - /home/Edward/ man woman
    man: no entry for woman in the manual.
    "Qua!?"

  119. Re:hypocrisy? by brpr · · Score: 1

    They had to. Japan was already amassing forces in expectation of an invasion

    The fact that Japan was amassing forces doesn't mean that America had to invade.

    I refer you to the fact that the Japanese did not surrender after the first bomb, but the second. The fact that they did not surrender after such an awesome display of raw power would point to the fact that they had never intended to surrender, but, as afore mentioned, fight to the last man, woman, and child.

    That's one interpretation. A more plausible interpretation would be that displays of military force were largely ineffective as a means of inducing Japanese surrender. Negotiations for a conditional surrender would probably have been far more effective.

    Both of the cities were also military targets, and the civilian populations were mobilized to give resistance, i.e., fight to the death. Hiroshima had Army Headquarters and the HQ for Southern Japan's defense. Nagasaki was a strategically vital seaport and ordinance factory.

    Yeah, and the cities contained a lot of civilians too. So they were civilian targets, there's no getting around it.

    Unconditional Surrender was needed to force the concept fully across into Japanese Society that they had been defeated.

    It wasn't necessary to get that concept fully across into Japanese society. A little delusion can go a long way to saving lives. And as has already been pointed out, the bombs didn't even achieve conditional surrender, so even by your standards they were actually a complete failure as well as a waste of 1000s of lives.

    --
    Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
  120. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by surprise_audit · · Score: 2, Informative
    Radon also occurs naturally over granite. People living on or near to large areas of granite are advised *not* to try to make their houses completely airtight, to avoid a build-up of radon gas.

    There are even places in Scotland, and probably elsewhere, where the natural background radiation is so high that you can get more than the maximum recommended dosage just by walking around outside.

  121. Re:hypocrisy? by Elkboy · · Score: 1

    You should also know that people like General Dwight D. Eisenhower, General Douglas MacArthur and Fleet Admiral William Leahy opposed the use of the bomb and thought it was unnecessary for Japan's surrender.

    You should also know that any talk of saving japanese lives is utter hypocrisy coming from a nation that carpet bombed Tokyo.

    Furthermore, you can't ignore the lot less noble power struggle with the up-and-coming Soviets. The bombs were a show of power in this struggle.

  122. No ... by cablepokerface · · Score: 0

    ... Thank you.
    I live in the Netherlands which is the country right next to Germany. I much enjoyed growing up without cancer.

    Probably being all the way up there in the US makes you care not a whole lot about my fait. I wish you all the best though.

    1. Re:No ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are not many things that seem to frighten the US government more than marijuana. The Netherlands is at odss with regard to this fear. Mind-boggling, isn't it?

    2. Re:No ... by gelfling · · Score: 1

      Oh I've already had cancer but thanks all the same.

  123. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Rasta+Prefect · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Has to be asked- was it entirely a coincidence that the camp was situated near the manufacturing facilities?

    They Japanese were big on forced labor camps. Given this, I'd say there is a pretty obvious reason for the camp to be located near manufacturing facilities.

    --
    Why?
  124. Re:hypocrisy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    If my country commits attrocities, it doesn't give you the right to kill me.

    I have as much right to stop you from committing atrocities as you have to commit them.

    But in this case, the US was viciously attacked, so like it or not, we were involved.
    ----
    Slow Down Cowboy!

    Slashdot requires you to wait between each successful posting of a comment to allow everyone a fair chance at posting a comment.

    It's been 1 hour, 30 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment

  125. WWII was also about oil . . . by Idou · · Score: 1

    At least it was for Japan.

    Japan attacked Pearl Harbor because the U.S. decided to cut off Japan's oil supply. Japan has no oil supply and very insignificant amounts of natural gas. Without oil, the Japanese empire was doomed.

    It should be stressed that the primary reason for implementing Kamikazes was the lack of fuel. One way tickets require less fuel . . .

    Finally, for those that say the atomic bombs SAVED lives, you are quite right as long as you stay within the constraints of the "American Empire" condition, that MUST always be decisive and never show compromise.

    However, indulge me for a moment, and imagine an island nation that has been defeated overseas and is now isolated from the resources (oil) that brought it to civilization. What if, at this point, the U.S. worked with its allies to make sure Japan was completely cut off from the outside world. The U.S. could then use the promise of trade as carrot to lead what was left of the Japanese empire to a peaceful end of the war WITHOUT invasion of the mainland. But, that would take time, perhaps require inspections, and even help from other allies, like the damn commies.

    No, the U.S. was too self righteous to compromise and show moderations then . . . and some would argue things have not changed since.

    --
    Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!
    1. Re:WWII was also about oil . . . by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      Congrats, that is the single DUMBEST thing I have ever read on slashdot. If you would put down your knee jerk reaction for a second, and actually oh I don't know, study history you would see that the US did try to use the carrot, repeatedly. They warned the Japanese that they did not approve of their actions in Manchuria and elsewhere in China and that if they did not cease those actions they would cut off trade. Japan ignored the warnings and continued into China unabated. The US was very isolationist at the time, but once again, in your rush to bash the US you totally ignore history. The US wanted to avoid war at all costs, but could not go on trading with an enemy of it's allies. However, accorrding to you that is an evil, evil thing to think.
      Furthermore, the use of Kamikze's wasn't because Japan lacked fuel(what the fuck do you think those planes were laden with? Candy?) they used them because they had no planes an most of their good pilots had been killed and they didn't have resources to train new ones(namely planes and experienced pilots to teach them). The Kamikaze pilots were only given a few hours of instruction time, and it really showed because a large number of them missed their targets.
      Your ignorance of history is hilarious, and your rant has made my day, thank you, thank you, thank you.

    2. Re:WWII was also about oil . . . by Idou · · Score: 1

      I see . . . having an opinion different from yours means I must be dumb or, at the very least, do not deserve the kind of respect you would give "your kind." Yet, ironically, this behavior only strengthens my points that the U.S. is being driven by a culture that is both shortsighted and uncompromising. But I must digress . . .

      Yes, Empires are tough to negotiate with, but the U.S. not realizing that cutting off Japan from oil was the same as an act of war was due to a gap in the cultures. Before WII, Japan had always been treated as an inferior nation by the Western powers, being limited in international treaties. Even Japanese immigrants were not allowed to own land in the U.S. So, to say the least, there were not a lot diplomatic communication between the nations, because Japan (and Asia) was considered an insignificant interest to the West.

      However, this is beyond the scope. My argument is that Japan was crippled before the invasion of Okinawa. Had the U.S. not been so busy thinking of its own empire, better alternatives could have been implemented.

      Btw, Kamikazes DID only have enough fuel to reach their targets. The fact that their pilots were inexperienced is self-evident (why waste a good pilot). The good pilots got full fuel tanks and were not sent on suicide missions ("all the good pilots were killed" does not seem very logical, imho).

      I have spent significant time in BOTH countries, studying BOTH histories. Consequently, my views are very different from those that have only learned their history in one country or the other.

      I would recommend you doing the same, but your blatant intolerance and hostility towards different views makes me think that instead of the Pacific war, your time would be much better spent studying the ill effects of the war in Europe and self-destructive nature of the Nazis regime.

      --
      Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!
    3. Re:WWII was also about oil . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are dumb, face it. Your "opinion" doesn't count for shit when its based on blatently wrong and factualy incorrect information.

    4. Re:WWII was also about oil . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh look mommy, a troll...

  126. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

    The question you really have to ask yourself is, by this one horrendous action, can I save many more lives?? In the case of Nagasaki, arms and munitions plants were *also* knocked out, so that even if Japan had not surrendered, their means for continuing the war was greatly reduced. Does that outweigh the aftermath of two nuclear weapons?? I don't know.

  127. Re:hypocrisy? by Elkboy · · Score: 1

    I'm a strong opponent against nuclear weapons and that's the very reason for discussing the only actual use of them.

    Nuclear bombs and other war atrocities like them can never be reduced to "war is hell, whatcha gonna do about it?"

    Maybe there was no real options in 1945. Discussing it now might help to create options in future wars, however. With the development on nuclear arms in the world deteriorating, it's a highly relevant discussion.

  128. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by brainburger · · Score: 1

    haha - no surprise on my part from your response.
    To answer your question, no I don't think more firebombing would have been better. It wasn't the only other option though. - One option was to do nothing militarily and await the outcome of the surrender negotiations which were underway.

  129. History is kind of funny like that.... by TTL0 · · Score: 0
    His story infuriated MacArthur, who had it quashed.

    History is generally written by the winners.

    --
    Sanity is the trademark of a weak mind. -- Mark Harrold
  130. Re:We nuked the wrong country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I sincerely regret *you* haven't been erased from the map, you wanker. Thankfully, your time will come and I'll be dancing on your grave.

  131. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by yerfatma · · Score: 5, Funny

    You wouldn't have liked him when he was angry though.

  132. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As long as you're paying taxes, you're paying the soldier to burn that child.

  133. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Gorbag · · Score: 1
    And you would be lying to yourself. The guy who draws the arrow is as guilty as the guy who presses the button, who is as guilty as the guy who gives the order, and so on.
    In which case, you have to include the guy who voted for the program, and the taxpayer who paid for it.

    Nobody wants to kill children. Sometimes, however, avoiding what you don't want to do means much greater evils happen.

    --
    -- I speak only for myself
  134. Re:hypocrisy? by gini_ · · Score: 1

    WW1 was not the first, nor would it have been the last war fought in Europe.

    Of course not, europe has been in a state of war since the end of the last ice age. What made WW1 siginificant that US intervention changed the end result to something else than a stalemate (whis was the end result of most conflicts in europe before that). Balance of power you see. "The war that ends all wars" was not the kind of futile bloodfest that it could and should have been. Because of (probably well meaning) US intervention, other side won quite handsomely and that sow the seeds for much larger destruction later on.

    Those "big bully" -references are mostly reactions to US actions in 1950's and onwards. I wouldn't call them well meaning at all. Imperialistic, vicious and murderous are words that come to mind to describe them.

  135. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is so true, McNamara actually mentions this in relation to the excessive firebombing of japanese cities (which killed and destroyed more than the two H-bombs). Would you rather not firebomb the cities? And then have to send 500,000 american troops to land on the beaches of a country which evidently had a large portion of the population who were prepared to fight to the death? At what point is it permissible to do something in war because it is too henious?

    McNamara goes through all this in "The Fog of War" documentary, and actually calls for restrictions to nuclear weapons and to "total war". And as General LeMay said, if they had lost the war, they would have been prosecuted as war criminals.

    The documentary, Fog of war has 8.3 on IMDB http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0317910/ which would put it in the top 50 movies of all time on IMDB http://www.imdb.com/chart/top - if they put documentaries in there.

    Truely a great piece, must see. Get it now.

  136. GET OVER IT! by p51d007 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I'm about tired of all this "hand wringing" BS about oh my, we dropped the bomb on the poor innocent peace loving people of japan. Screw em! A. They started the d**n war! B. They murdered, raped hundered of thousands of people in China, Korea, Phillipines. C. Ask any soldier who was lucky enough to survive Iwo Jima, Okinawa et al what they think of the peace loving people of Japan. The purpose of a war is to KILL PEOPLE and BREAK THINGS. War is an ugly brutial business. If I was a president and had a weapon that could possibly end the suffering of a war sooner, I'd use it in a heart beat! My grandfather and uncle were with the 5th marine division on Iwo, Tariwa, Okinawa. Both came back completely changed. My grandfather lost the hearing in one ear when a Jap mortar fell close to the foxhole he and his buddies were in. He survived, one of his buddies died, the other lost a leg. My mom said that after he got back, he would wake up in the night sweating, and screaming. He was the lucky one.... he came back! Thousands did not. Had we invaded the Japanese islands (operations olympia and corrinet) we would have lost thousands upon thousands of American lives, not to mention the amount of japanese killed. In this politically correct world we live in, we are causing undo suffering because we have to be "sensitive" to the (insert your best line) of the enemy. Screw them! As Gen. Patton said "dying for your country isn't honorable....make the other poor dumb bastard die for his country!" (paraphrasing) Sadly, I think it will take another terrorist attack to finally wake this country up, and put this PC crap out to pasture where it belongs! Perhaps if a plane full of gas landed in the middle of hollywood, or on rodeo' drive, then maybe they will wake up!

    1. Re:GET OVER IT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Firstly, you don't deserve a reply.

      Secondly, the purpose of war is not to kill people and to break things. The purpose of war varies, however it's purpose is usually one of these:
      economic boost, gaining power/influence, maintaining it, self-defense

      Killing people and breaking things is just one means towards that end, and frankly it's a damn shame.

      World War II had casualties on both sides, but you seem entirely one-sided in your rant. I'm an American as well, but looking back at that war, I feel that dropping the atomic bomb was excessive, and I would have preferred another way. This report is important to be shown to the public, if for anything, our RIGHT to know.

      Fuck censorship, and fuck you for being such a stupid person for thinking killing is okay... it's not.

    2. Re:GET OVER IT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I feel that dropping the atomic bomb was
      > excessive, and I would have preferred another way.

      Time has blinded you eyes. The Japanese were bloodthirsty monsters and this was the only way to stop them without a massive loss of American lives.

    3. Re:GET OVER IT! by grunherz · · Score: 1

      Type in all caps, swear, curse, insult and offer absolutely no intelligent content then post as an AC.

      That'll show how smart you are and how absolutely correct your position is.

      --
      Four weeks, Twenty papers, that's two dollars ... plus tip.
    4. Re:GET OVER IT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The purpose of war varies, however it's purpose is usually one of these:
      economic boost, gaining power/influence, maintaining it, self-defense "

      Which of these was the justification for Pearl Harbor?

      If you attack someone who is capable of ENTIRELY DESTROYING YOUR NATION, then that is among the risks you take!

    5. Re:GET OVER IT! by jac1962 · · Score: 1

      ". . .and I would have preferred another way."

      Yet you never offer "another way" that achieves the desired result: the elimination of totalitarian regimes like Imperial Japan.

      "Another way" seems to always mean appeasement of the very real evil that manifests itself in the form of brutal dictatorships that murder not only their neighbors but their own citizens, and if history has taught us one thing, appeasement never works.

      In the context of the times, the use of atomic bombs against Imperial Japan was the correct decsion both militarily and politically.

      Too bad for the residents of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, just as it was too bad for the millions of victims of Imperial Japans aggression.

      --
      "I worked hard for it. I deserve it. And I have it," Campbell said. "It's all mine."
    6. Re:GET OVER IT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Type in all caps, swear, curse, insult and offer absolutely no intelligent content then post as an AC.

      That'll show how smart you are and how absolutely correct your position is.


      Yes, as a matter of fact, it did. At least,
      compared to your vacuous posting.

    7. Re:GET OVER IT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How come you're happy to advocate mass murder and say "screw 'em", but feel the need to censor out the word 'damn'? Christian hatemonger blinded by dumb patriotism perchance?

  137. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or the person paying the taxes that helped to pay for it...

  138. Re:hypocrisy? by will_die · · Score: 1

    This is always an interesting question, and makes pops in all these "what-if" war books. It does ignore that Russia and Italy were facing major defeats, and that france was requiring unconditional surrender which was not going to happen; and Germany was still ready for a fight.
    However to put the quote into place. This was said 20 years after WW1, when it was looking like what became WW2 was going to happen.
    In his books on WW1 he never makes this comment or anything similar to it. In his on WW2 books he never makes a comment like this or anything similar.
    During this time period Churchill made his living by writing, and he wrote numerous article which he personnally disagreed with in addition to some he later disagreed with.

    Also there was a lawsuit over this because Churchill claims he never said it. IIRC the lawsuit was finally settled in Churchills favor because the other person never showed up in court.

  139. And by Safety+Cap · · Score: 1

    it was the 'Military-Industrial Complex' that Ike warned about.

    --
    Yeah, right.
  140. Re:hypocrisy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or, sometimes, when the US doesn't move quite fast enough, the country in question handles the removal for them, and the successor regime screws them over instead.

    (Think Iran.)


    WTF? The USA installed the Shah in power in 1953, ousting a democratically elected government because it was a bit too left wing.

    The current state of Iran is a direct result of the country being fucked around by the West (the UK and USA in particular) for many years.

  141. US-side propaganda by dustmite · · Score: 1

    One gets the impression reading that paragraph that this wasn't what he really thought, but rather, that he already suspected he was going to get censored, and was trying to write as US-friendly an article as possible in order to try avoid being censored, so that his article could get to the US public.

  142. Highly misleading by bani · · Score: 1

    You're posing your statements as if the US just decided out of a vacuum to cut off oil exports to japan, for no reason at all. Deliberately ignoring the context of the time, and japan's alliance with the axis powers.

    The US cut off japan's oil to stop their expansionism.

    Lets see now. Japan is cut off from american oil. The US demands Japan leave china and indochina. Japan can choose either diplomacy or war. Japan chose war, and the result was pearl harbor.

    It's nice to play woulda-coulda-shoulda, but we already know from historical documents and first hand interviews that japan would never have chosen a diplomatic solution.

    1. Re:Highly misleading by Idou · · Score: 1

      It is also nice to write history in such a way that leaves no doubt in the past actions of one's nation.

      I would post some arguments to your post, by the fact is, I have heard your argument many, many times and the fact is it is based on KNOWING things, you simply do not, kinda of like KNOWING there is a God. But this type of KNOWING is beyond argument, so I suppose the thread dies here.

      The depressing thing is that there are patterns in Japan, Korea, Vietnam and, yes, Iraq invasions. Yet the patterns are not seen as history repeating itself to the American public because their history has been written in such a way that the pattern is lost.

      I respect your view, but for me to accept your view as my own would be for me to give up hope that that the human race is possible of coexisting peacefully.

      --
      Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!
    2. Re:Highly misleading by bani · · Score: 1

      In other words, that the reason you lack evidence to back your argument up is that the evidence was 'erased' or 'supressed' or 'rewritten' by the victors?

      That's a very convenient excuse.

      You've done nothing but convince me you're completely unhinged.

    3. Re:Highly misleading by Idou · · Score: 1

      Fortunately, History cannot be erased, suppressed, or rewritten. However, my history books in both highschool and college in the U.S. did not include things like the following quote:

      Curtis LeMay, later said: "I suppose if I had lost the war, I would have been tried as a war criminal. I would think a crime would be a crime, regardless of which side won . . .

      No, you misunderstood my post. The evidence exists but the American public has been taught to look back at WWII and the Asian Pacific conflicts with pride. Therefore, invasions like Iraq are simply the continuation of the "liberation crusade," what makes America Great.

      However, just looking at the relative death counts of the conflicts I listed paint a clear picture of the destructive path the American empire has left in history. Yet, though the dots are there, no textbook or teacher/professor I ever had in the U.S. ever connected them.

      One last note. If you are a typical American, your primary and only language is English, and you have no excuse for poor reading comprehension. Misquoting an argument is not a form of argumentation accepted by the rest of the world. You might want to remember that next time you post.

      --
      Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!
    4. Re:Highly misleading by bani · · Score: 1

      I'm a typical american I guess in that I'm japanese-american and grew up in a japanese household.

      I suggest you ask any japanese you know about the animosity they hold for america regarding WWII. Be sure to talk to veterans of the japanese army.

      You might also want to ask some chinese and koreans about historical american empire building, vs say historical japanese empire building.

      Your attempt to paint japanese as some kind of innocent victim in WWII shows how distorted your worldview is.

      As for painting all americans with the same brush, I seriously doubt you'll find that everyone looks at WWII or Iraq with the same rose colored glasses.

      Turn off your reality distortion field and take a look around for once. And try not to let your hatred blind you too much.

      Stop deliberately omitting historical context when making your arguments and people might take you a little more seriously, rather than a raving looney.

    5. Re:Highly misleading by Idou · · Score: 1

      Why thanks, Nisei. So does this mean you are the ultimate authority on public opinion of both nations now?

      I believe this mess started because I refused to let a post that stated Japan DESERVED the nukes to go unprotested. No, I do not believe Japan was a victim, but I also think most Americans are seriously closed minded when it comes to the subject and consider anything but their ridiculously oversimplified little story as "looney" (at least you did not call me a terrorist, which I appreciate, considering the times).

      No, the world is a bit more complex, Nisei (or should I say "Sansei?"). I hope I haven't been completely wasting my time, and you have at least visited, say, the Hiroshima museum? Next time you are asking people about the war, you might want to balance your sample and question those coming out of that musuem.

      Finally, in the end, the popular views of the war are just that "views." Views are well reasoned subjective opinion at best and blindly memorized mindless dogma at worst. However, I propose that there is an objective criteria that can be used. Since the end of WII, the U.S. has continued to engage in various conflict throughout the world, resulting in millions of deaths. Japan, on the other hand, has never invaded or engaged in combat since 1945.

      You may see my views as BS, but, logically, you must know I see your views to be equally distorted. However, your views reflect the popular beliefs of a nation that, at this very moment, is slaughtering foreigners on their foreign soil. Could it be that their is some flaw in this mindset, not because the mindset is not well thought out but because it results in people being TOO comfortable with their nation's wartime actions that they do not object to the next time, and next time, and next time . . .

      Does a better example of history repeating itself exist?

      --
      Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!
    6. Re:Highly misleading by bani · · Score: 1

      Nisei (or should I say "Sansei?")

      Your racial attacks just rendered your entire post null.

      Have fun with your next spittle-producing spew. I won't be listening, and I doubt anyone else will either.

    7. Re:Highly misleading by Idou · · Score: 1

      How is that a racial attack? No, really, I want to know.

      First, it has nothing to do with race, it applies to the generations a family has lived in another country.

      Second, I honestly have never heard it used in Japanese as an attack or insult, in general. Nor have I ever heard anyone be offended when called a "nissei." It is like hearing you are from Texas and calling you a Texan, or "Tex." Actually, I would say it is even less provocative than that because it has no specific reference to geography, either. Pretty timid there, Tex . . . do steamed vegtables give you heart-burn?

      And I might add, for someone who thinks the Japanese deserved to be nuked, you certainly are quick at pulling out the "R" word out when it appears to be at your advantage. But seriously, inquirering minds want to know. I have devoted close to half my life to the Japanese language and culture, met many types of Japanese individuals (even *cowars back* "nissei"), and never have seen this kind of reaction before. Please enlighten me to the wrongfulness of my doings. You can even call me Tex, make us ol' even lik'.

      Ahh, America . . . I love the irony . . . Number one killer of foreigners and still everyone is scared to death to say anything that could be even remotely construed as not politically correct. Priorities people . . .

      Yes, I said this thread was dead before when we started saying we "knew" things we could not possibly know. And yet here I type, wanting to know more about the fascinating world of Bani . . .

      --
      Sdelat' Ameriku velikoy Snova!
  143. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    C'mon, mods, +5 Funny!

  144. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Of course, were I ever to find myself in the same situation, doubtless I would act in the same way; I'm not saying I'm any better. We're all human in the end."

    Those parting comments strike me as rationalizations in themselves. Just because we are all humans doesn't mean some people would not be able to accept their responsibility in such atrocities and not have to revert into delusionary psychological defense mechanisms. Perhaps some of us are indeed better.

  145. Re:hypocrisy? by Tom · · Score: 1

    How do you explain Omaha Beach as the action of nothing more than an overgrown bully?
    Logical consequence of the decision to enter WW2. A decision that was not made easily, but as it turns out was the correct one to make. Oh, I'm not speaking on moral or ethical terms, but on economical - see "The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers" (ISBN: 0679720197)

    Or for that matter, US intervention in WWI?
    That one might be true. I still don't quite get it, makes little sense from a power-political POV. Then again, maybe I don't know the whole picture.

    Or when the US came to the aid of South Korea when it was invaded by Communist armies?
    Preservation of US presence in southeast asia, an important part of the cold war strategy (same as Vietnam, really). The importance of South Korea to the US is comparable to that of Kuba to the Sovjets.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  146. Re:Astounding... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    You win. I think it's time for a new poll?

    Best Euphemism For An Atomic Attack?
    [ ] Kitten Parade
    [X] Neutron-Assisted Aliveness Readjustment
    [ ] Celebration Of Freedom
    [ ] 18.95 Candygrams/cm^3
    [ ] Fission-Based BSOD
    [ ] CowboyNeal's Post-Burrito Special

    More?

  147. Wikipedia link for the actual bombings by grimJester · · Score: 1

    Atomic_bombings_of_Hiroshima_and_Nagasaki

    It saved the lives of approximately One Million US Service Personnel,

    Bullshit. "Years after the war, Secretary of State James Byrnes claimed that 500,000 American lives would have been lost - and that number has since been repeated "authoritatively", but in the summer of 1945 US military planners projected 20,000-110,000 combat deaths from the initial November 1945 invasion, with about three to four times that number wounded"

    Also, killing civilians to save soldiers is hardly ok.

    1. Re:Wikipedia link for the actual bombings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's compare to Okinawa. Okinawa is a little island, nothing compared to the main islands of Japan. Checking one source I see:

      US Deaths: 12,000
      Japanese Military Deaths: 107,539
      Japanese Civilian Deaths: 42,000-142,000

      That's from a total population of about 300,000.
      True, it looks like we wouldn't have lost a million Americans invading Japan, but we would have almost certainly killed far more Japanese than the 200,000-300,000 killed by the bombs.

      We can't know what would have happened. I don't think we should place blame. War is Hell. WWII was a full-scale war, and nobody was holding back. If Japan or Germany had had an A-bomb, they would have used it. The bomb was developed when victory was far from certain. When it was ready, it was clear that we were going to win, but we decided to use it as a finishing blow, to get it over faster and to make a point. Today Japan and Germany are doing quite well, "Freedom and Democracy" survived the cold war, and no third nuclear weapon has been used in anger. Seems like the world did okay despite our actions.

      Should we celebrate it? No. Should we villify it? No.
      We should learn from it.

  148. Re:People are so obsessed with the concept of nucl by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

    Note that, at the time the bombs were dropped, we (meaning everyone) did not know as much about the dangerous health effects of radiation, especially at smaller doses. Due to such ignorance, these bombs could have been seen more or less as oversized conventional bombs which cause a lot of physical destruction. Just something to keep in mind.

    --
    Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
  149. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Zeussy · · Score: 1

    Radiation (i.e atomic, not just like any old radiation) is different to what a lot of people think. Chernobyl is now a nature park and you can go on a guided tour Article and Article

    As well as walking round the erie cities themselves.

  150. Sorry, but the Japs got what they deserved. by darkmeridian · · Score: 0

    You seem to equate Japanese and American lives. But let's remember that the Japanese began this war with a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor while conducting peace talks with America. That has got to count for something, right? Or how about the Rape of Nanking? Or the Bataan Death March? Or how about the execution of Allied prisoners of war? Or how about eating those executed prisoners of war?

    The Japanese started the war against America, slaughtering 2400 servicemen who were at peace with the Japanese. The Japanese murdered hundreds of thousands of humans, while conducting bioweapons research on them that incldued vivisection. The Japanese executed POWs and ate their corpses. (Read Flyboys.)

    So you can do all the moral equivalence you want. But be damned sure that if the Japanese could have nuked us, they wouldn't have hesitated.

    http://mensightmagazine.com/Articles/Bradley/flybo ys.htm

    --
    A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    1. Re:Sorry, but the Japs got what they deserved. by Triskele · · Score: 1
      But let's remember that the Japanese began this war with a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor while conducting peace talks with America.

      Given that the US was taking very aggressive steps in the Pacific and threatening Japan on many fronts (having held its trade captive for something like 60 years) are you surprised they attacked when it became clear that US diplomacy was nothing of the sort and the US had no interest in peace except on its own terms? How times change eh?

      --

      --
      USA: home of the world's largest terrorist training camp.

    2. Re:Sorry, but the Japs got what they deserved. by bw5353 · · Score: 1
      You seem to equate Japanese and American lives. But let's remember that the Japanese began this war with a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor while conducting peace talks with America. That has got to count for something, right?

      The Japanese did not start the conflict with the US, even though they did initiate this particular armed part of the conflict. The Americans under commodore Matthew Perry had initiated a completely unprovoked attack on Japan less than 100 years earlier, and Americans and Europeans swarmed around the area colonizing one country after the other. The Americans had led a war in the nearby Philippines a few decades earlier, and the French and the English had been involved in the opium wars against China in the 19th century, not to mention the events in Indochina and Indonesia. In China, the Western nations had until recently had large interest spheres which were basically controlled by the West. The only purpose of the West leading wars thousands of miles from home was self interest, and it built on a lack of respect of the local people.

      It is hardly surprising that the Japanese felt threatened by Westerners in general, and that they wanted to do something about it.

      This doesn't mean that the Japanese did the right thing of course. The Pearl Harbor incident was neither a clever move nor morally justified. However, the Western nations didn't behave in a clever or moral way either, and hadn't done so for several hundred years from an Asiatic perspective.

  151. NYT Lies About HIroshima and Gets Pulitzer by neomantra · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A form of Pentagon-supported censorship... http://www.democracynow.org/static/hiroshima.shtml summary: After the bomb drop on Hiroshima, press are confined to a barge off the coast of Japan. Wilfred Burchett, an independent journalist, decides to go and see things first hand and writes about it ("I write these facts as dispassionately as I can in the hope that they will act as a warning to the world."). William L. Laurence of the New York Times, and on the Pentagon payroll, writes a series of stories discrediting Burchett and gets the Pulitzer Price. Democracy Now is trying to get the Pulitzer stripped from the NYT. from http://archive.webactive.com/pacifica/demnow/dn200 10806.html Soon after the bombing, as reporters converged on a ship off the coast of Japan to cover the surrender of the Japanese, one independent reporter named Wilfred Burchett took a train for 30 hours to Hiroshima. He couldn't believe what he saw: people with their skin melting off them, images of people engraved on the sides of buildings. He sat down with his Hermes typewriter in the rubble, and tapped out the words, "I write this as a warning to the world." He talked about something he called, 'bomb sickness', that he had never seen before. Another reporter did a ten-part series on the dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He was William Leonard Laurence of the New York Times. He was also on the payroll of the Pentagon. One of his headlines was, "No Bomb Sickness Found." He won the Pulitzer Prize for his reporting. Wilfred Burchett died of cancer decades later, but always traced it to Hiroshima.

    1. Re:NYT Lies About Hiroshima and Gets Pulitzer by neomantra · · Score: 5, Informative

      A form of Pentagon-supported censorship...

      http://www.democracynow.org/static/hiroshima.shtml

      Summary:
      After the bomb drop on Hiroshima, press are confined to a barge off the coast of Japan. Wilfred Burchett, an independent journalist, decides to go and see things first hand and writes about it ("I write these facts as dispassionately as I can in the hope that they will act as a warning to the world."). William L. Laurence of the New York Times, and on the Pentagon payroll, writes a series of stories discrediting Burchett and gets the Pulitzer Price. Democracy Now is trying to get the Pulitzer stripped from the NYT.

      (sorry, accidentally pushed submit instead of preview)

    2. Re:NYT Lies About HIroshima and Gets Pulitzer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wilfred Burchett died of cancer decades later, but always traced it to Hiroshima.

      How does that work? Cancer is common, and it happened decades later. Unless it was a very unusual form of cancer, there's no reason to suspect an unusual cause. Unless you've got some seriously detailed medical reports to back that up, your reasoning sucks.

    3. Re:NYT Lies About Hiroshima and Gets Pulitzer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Democracy Now is trying to get the Pulitzer stripped from the NYT.

      The chances of that are close to nil. This is the New York Times we're talking about. This stuff happens every decade or so, and they never return the prizes, e.g. Walter Duranty. To admit error would break the illusion that it ever was a good newspaper.

  152. You assume an extra couple of speculative steps by ianscot · · Score: 4, Insightful
    You make some good points, but then you leap off the cliff of accepted wisdom and discard that proverbial baby with the bathwater... to mix my metaphors horribly. Ahem.

    ... read up on the firebombing of Japanese cities, or European cities. ...The attack on Tokyo killed far more people, destroyed far more of the city than both of the nuclear weapons.

    So true -- and in general, the point that people take the nuclear weapons as something completely distinct from "strategic" bombing campaigns, on both sides of the war, is ever so appropriate to make. By the time we got to the Hiroshima and Nagasaki moment, those were natural extensions of the logic of those campaigns. Truman (one of my least favorite Presidents) had authorized the use of the bombs as soon as they'd work, and they were used without another decision on his part basically. For us to look back and deal with them alone has to be deeply wrong.

    That doesn't mean there isn't something to be learned, though, or that we should accept the rationale that you offer for why they "worked" even on those "logic of the war" terms without scrutiny.

    Even ignoring the fact that it stopped the war early, the use of the nuclear weapons both saved American lives, and saved the lives of countless Japanese civilians who would've been killed in the firestorm that followed a mass bombing of those cities.

    And now we're off in the land of wishfully-accepted wisdom, positing possible events and their potential consequences. This line of thinking is certainly out there, it's worth thinking about -- and it's exactly where people who want not to deal with the morality of those bombs would like us all to come to a full stop.

    Unfortunately "it stopped the war earlier and saved lives on both sides" asks us to accept that those arguments are true when they're essentially speculative. There was very real debate within the US's own armed forces about the potential costs of an invasion. There were different plans among the different services for how the end could come with Japan. They disagreed about what to do, and to suggest that there was a clear answer is a lie. To lump all that together and say "Okay, but it worked because the war didn't go any longer" avoids several questions -- "Why not drop the first bombs somewhere other than on a densely-populated city?" and so on -- and can amount to self-censorship that's just about to that head-in-the-sand point by now.

    For one example: When the Smithsonian exhibit around the Enola Gay got neutered in the 1990s, one of the suggested additions to the exhibit, supposedly for "balance," was a display with a purple heart and a (quite high) estimate of the number of Purple Hearts that were prevented by the bombings. Some pretty major right wing influences, stirred up partly by "Air Force" magazine (which is a trade publication largely for purchasers of modern air weapons), wanted those fictional body counts included in the exhibit. Alas, the good folks at the museum are not especially fond of the idea of displaying fictional Purple Hearts. Partly, you know, they feel a responsibility not to insult those who got the real thing. Partly they just don't want to make things up to put on display -- and the proposed revisions weren't to be attributed to any particular primary source, they were meant to be in the neutral narrative voice of the exhibition's information panels. They chose to simply display the plane with almost no exhibit at all. Just a shiny fuselage.

    Second example, and the one that horrifies me: Chester Nimitz, judging by both remarks of his own in October of 1945 and by comments of his widow, regretted the bombs horribly.

    "The Japanese had, in fact, already sued for peace before the atomic age was announced to the world with the destruction of Hiroshima and before the Russian entry into war." Nimitz's widow later recalled that he "always felt badly over the dropping of that bomb becaus

    --
    "Fundamentalism" isn't about divine morality. It's about human authority.
    1. Re:You assume an extra couple of speculative steps by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Yes, it is speculation the it saved lived.
      Just like if I get up and start walking out of my offive, it is speculation that I will leave thru the door.

      The russians were poised to sweep through the Japanese in china, and move into Japan.

      The Americans were poised to move into Japan.
      The unconditional surrendar we the only thing that stop that. Even the mildest estimates of human death outstrip the total death from the droppings.

      Speaking of speculation:

      "always felt badly over the dropping of that bomb because he said we had Japan beaten already."

      plus, just becasue the Japanese were 'beaten' doesn't mean they were going to stop fighting. If the militants had gotten there way, they would have kept fighting until they were dead. You would have had to go through a lot of civilians to get to them.

      I do not believe it saved more lives aver all becasue that it what was told, I believe it because of what I have learned about the Japanese governemt at the time, the Russions position and stratagy, and from some people I know who were alive during that period.

      I also believe that the Bombs caused the Americans to misstep as they marched toward total Japanes elemination and think that, perhaps we had done enough to avenge Pearl Harbor.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:You assume an extra couple of speculative steps by snuf23 · · Score: 1

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't there a political component to the use of the bomb? As in by that point in the war irregardless of whether the US invaded Japan or not, it was becoming obvious that the USSR and the US were going to be the emerging super powers. The demostration of the use of the bomb (and in particular using it twice, quickly) was a show of the extent of the US's military power.

      --
      Sometimes my arms bend back.
    3. Re:You assume an extra couple of speculative steps by anonymo · · Score: 1

      It was the US that asked Soviet to break the peace-treaty with Japan and attack from the North. Actually Soviet occupied a few island in the Nothern part of Japan e.g. Kunashir - it is a fantastic island with subtropic Southern beaches and skiing platoes on the North (I saw a documentary on this island a long time ago)
      So even if Soviet and USA competed on occupying Japan (just like in occupying Germany) it was US that asked for a Soviet intervention in exchange selling the East-European countries to Soviet.

      The use of A-bomb was not needed strategically, but it was a politician's "toy". The military wanted to "spare" A-bomb to a future conflict, but the politicians wanted a swift victory.
      (If you have a hammer everything seems to be nails)
      Sun Tzu wrote something like this: Always left a backdoor to your enemy - even if it is a trap - so it wont' be too desparate to make an unexpected manuever.
      Using the A-bomb became a signal to the already paranoid Stalin to prepare for the next war - that led to the Cold War where in indirect conflicts the two superpowers tried to take over the rest of the word using any methods on both sides :-(

      Japan was left alone, without allies, no resources left. The capitulation was just a question of time - accelerated with continued attack on Japan.

      Just a footnote on bombing Dresden, Tokyo and other cities: Even in modern times with smart bombs (they were less than 10% even in the Gulf War) only about 5 % of the bomb eliminates the target. It was even less in WWII.
      E.g. when Peenemunde was bombed in the 1 large coordinated attack of 600 bombplanes none of the bombes his the V2 factories. the only hit was on the baracks of prisoners and Nazis. One of the chief-engineers was killed. The whole factory that was still intact was dismounted and moved to an other site in Southern Germany. And Peenemunde was not heavily defended like Hamburg or Dresden. And there was a new system used when one plane circled around the target are releasing small fire bombs to mark the target area.
      The only option was and still is carpet-bombing.
      Talking about cruel bombing is in a way non-sense: the whole concept of war is cruel on any sides.

  153. The Immortal 600 by PeeAitchPee · · Score: 2, Informative

    the Japanese were likely not the first, and certainly not the last to use prisoners as hostages in this manner.

    Actually, in 1864 during the American Civil War, the Union Army held 600 captured Confederate officers and men in front of Foster's Battery on Morris Island for 45 days, partly out of revenge for the relocation of 600 prisoners into Charleston City and partly in an effort to prevent the Confederates holding Charleston Harbor from mounting effective counter-fire. It didn't work -- the Confederates artillery fired back anyway and Charleston didn't fall until the end of the War -- but luckily none of the prisoners were killed.

  154. IRONY Re:A quiz! by pyat · · Score: 1

    irony?

    well, it's like goldy and bronzy, only it's made of iron

    (quoting Baldrick from Blackadder III)

  155. This is not a fact! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The fact of the matter is that Japan was fully prepared to fight an invasion of Japan to the last man/woman/child."

    This is not, I repeat, this is not a fact!
    On the contrary, it is highly contested.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_bombings_of_Hi roshima_and_Nagasaki#Opposition_to_use_of_atomic_b ombs

    Do I think it saved millions of Allied soldiers' (and Japanese soldiers/civilians) lives? Absolutely.

    You are free to think whatever you want, but talking of millions of lives saved is just utter bullshit.
    Now I'm aware that the argument you bring for was _the_ argument used to justify the dropping of the atomic bombs. However, if you follow the history of this justification, you can see that the number of lives allegedly saved goes up and up and up.
    From up to 500 000 casualties, claimed by McGeorg Bundy in his famous Harper's essay, to 1 Million in Truman's autobiography, to several millions by Bush Sr. in his speaches.

    The funny thing is, if you look at the casualty estimates of the time and if you look at the fact that there is strong evidence Japan would have surrendered even without using the bomb, even the lowest figures are questionable.

  156. Who deserves to be burned alive? by chrysrobyn · · Score: 4, Insightful
    You seem to equate Japanese and American lives.

    I do that. Regularly. I consider it a quality I'm proud of.

    But let's remember that the Japanese began this war with a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor while conducting peace talks with America. That has got to count for something, right?

    Forgotten history is doomed to repeat itself. The USS Arizona, if memory serves, is one of the most popular tourist magnets for Japanese tourists. Why aren't either hypocenter of the atomic bombs detonations a destination for Americans? The Japanese seem keen to remember their lessons.

    Deciding that any race is worth more, or less, than another is a quality I never wish to have. Do you really think the US has the high road by comparing the slaughter of 2400 volunteer servicemen to the murder of nearly a quarter of a million women, children and old men in Nagasaki and Hiroshima? Do you honestly expect me to think that it takes 100 Japanese lives to make up for a single American? Or do I add up all the atrocities committed by the Japanese soldiers and then decide how many Germans to slaughter to compensate for Nazi atrocities?

    1. Re:Who deserves to be burned alive? by HungWeiLo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Forgotten history is doomed to repeat itself. The USS Arizona, if memory serves, is one of the most popular tourist magnets for Japanese tourists. Why aren't either hypocenter of the atomic bombs detonations a destination for Americans? The Japanese seem keen to remember their lessons.

      It's not that the Japanese are all knowing and wise about their own past histories. Do remember that the USS Arizona is a representation of their past glory and victory against the might United States. In constrast, you will not see many Japanese tourists in Bataan or Nanking going to their war museums, I assure you.

      --
      There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
    2. Re:Who deserves to be burned alive? by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Why aren't either hypocenter of the atomic bombs detonations a destination for Americans?

      Why isn't anywhere in Japan a major destination for vacationing Americans? Probably the same reasons that most places in southeast Asia aren't. They're a 12- to 18-hour plane ride away, and too many Americans don't want to go to Japan to eat Chinese food (there's a famous quote of a US pro athlete not looking forward to going to Japan for an exhibition game that resurfaces occaisionally), because they heard that you can't really get Almond Chicken or Sweet & Sour Pork over there.

      More people drag their sorry asses farther to see a silly car race in the US each weekend for 10 months out of the year than go to pay their respects on Memorial Day and Veteran's Day (among other US holidays), which are seen as much for the day off from work as they are sales events (and token appreciation for the "reason for the season" is given), etc.

      Do the Japanese visit Nanking or other places in Manchuria? So much for their collective guilt.

    3. Re:Who deserves to be burned alive? by rjh · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Do you really think the US has the high road by comparing the slaughter of 2400 volunteer servicemen to the murder of nearly a quarter of a million women, children and old men in Nagasaki and Hiroshima?
      There is no moral high road in war. However, it's pretty clear that even under today's definition of war crimes, neither Hiroshima or Nagasaki rise to that level.

      Both sides, pro and con, agree that Japan had committed itself to what's called "total war"--the complete, one hundred percent mobilization of the population towards actions materially significant to the war's outcome. Twelve-year-olds went to school not to learn math and literature and history, but to learn how to use bamboo spears to defend the homeland. Men unfit for military duty and women were forcibly conscripted into working at war-materiel factories. By some estimates, more than 90% of the Japanese population over age twelve was involved with the war effort.

      If a government is going to turn essentially its entire population into military targets, the government has absolutely no right to complain when the population is targeted militarily.

      I sympathize with your view that people are people. I agree with it wholeheartedly. I agree that you cannot equate 2400 lives at Pearl Harbor with 200,000 at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But your own argument undercuts your position. You seem to be saying the 200,000 dead by atomic fire are somehow worse than the 2400 dead by sneak attack.

      But as you just said, no equivalency can be drawn.

      I do not mean to insult you here, but what I've seen in your responses so far leads me to suspect that in your mind there is a clear answer to whether The Bomb was right or wrong, and that Truman bears the brunt of the responsibility for The Bomb being dropped. I would respectfully submit to you that neither is true, and that the militaristic, atrocity-prone Imperial government holds a great deal of responsibility for the outcome.

      This is a tremendous area of gray moral muck, and it behooves us to judge with charity to the deciders and compassion to the victims.

      Someday we may have to make our own difficult moral choice in a field of gray muck, and we would like to be judged charitably. Someday we may be the victims of horrific violence, and we would like to be remembered with compassion.
    4. Re:Who deserves to be burned alive? by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      You are President Truman in 1945. Your country has been dragged into a war by a sneak attack. The enemy fights to the last man, committing suicide rather than surrendering. They execute your POWs, amid repeated reports of cannibalism. They are taking airplanes and deliberately crashing them into your ships, at great cost to your soldiers. On Iwo Jima, of the twenty-two thousand defending Japanese soldiers, only thirty surrender and only a thousand are captured. The fight for Okinawa left America with 39,000 casualties. Okinawa, Iwo Jima: to you, these are hollow victories borne on the corpses of thousands of your young. Every day, your Secretary of Defense writes more and more letters to the kin of the fallen, expressing the thanks of a grateful nation for their sacrifices in our collective time of need. However sincere and noble those sentiments are, you know that they are just empty words to those who have lost a loved one to Japanese guns. The truth is that too many Americans are dying. The war has to end.

      Military men present Operation Olympus, the invasion of the Japanese motherland. They estimate a million American casualties; hundreds of thousands of young Americans will fall on foreign shores--little more than jagged rocks--ten thousand miles from home. The Japanese have shown that they will not surrender without a show of absolute, total, and utter destruction. The military men also reveal the Manhattan Project to you: a superbomb that could end the war.

      The decision is this: 200,000 men will die; choose whether these are American or Japanese lives. If 200,000 Japanese lives could be saved by sacrificing the lives of 75,000 Americans, would you? To any sane person the right choice is to let the Japanese pay the price for a war they started. The means by which the deed is done does not change the fact that it is indebateable that the Japanese must be forced to bear the cost of a war they started and ruthlessly prosecuted. Any debate is over the horrors of war, and let's face it, the Japanese started that one.

      So reply to this instead of modding Overrated.

      http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:nY-xrLLZCN4J: rbvhs.vusd.k12.ca.us/~groswell/apeuro/unit9/docs/A BombDecision.htm+japan+world+war+II+%22operation+o lympus%22&hl=en&start=4

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    5. Re:Who deserves to be burned alive? by abulafia · · Score: 1
      I do not mean to insult you here, but what I've seen in your responses so far leads me to suspect that in your mind there is a clear answer to whether The Bomb was right or wrong, and that Truman bears the brunt of the responsibility for The Bomb being dropped. I would respectfully submit to you that neither is true, and that the militaristic, atrocity-prone Imperial government holds a great deal of responsibility for the outcome.

      Um. One point. Truman clearly was the one who chose to use the bomb.

      If a mugger puts me in a position where I can either shoot him or be beaten up, it is still my decision to pull the trigger. This blame-the-loser mentality might be fine for muddling the ethics debate after the fact and may even be correct, but does nothing to illuminate the choices made at the time.

      --
      I forget what 8 was for.
    6. Re:Who deserves to be burned alive? by indytx · · Score: 1
      Forgotten history is doomed to repeat itself. The USS Arizona, if memory serves, is one of the most popular tourist magnets for Japanese tourists. Why aren't either hypocenter of the atomic bombs detonations a destination for Americans? The Japanese seem keen to remember their lessons.

      Or, it could be that Hawaii IN GENERAL is an EXTREMELY popular tourist destination for Japanese tourists. Hawaii caters to Japanese tourists and it's reasonably priced (versus Japan). Have you ever actually been to Japan? It's expensive. It's small. It's a long, expensive flight away.

      Maybe there are other factors than The Japanese seem keen to remember their lessons.

      --
      Make love, not reality television.
    7. Re:Who deserves to be burned alive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I for one welcome our new Gook killing overloards!

      Kill'em all!

    8. Re:Who deserves to be burned alive? by geekee · · Score: 1

      "Forgotten history is doomed to repeat itself. The USS Arizona, if memory serves, is one of the most popular tourist magnets for Japanese tourists. Why aren't either hypocenter of the atomic bombs detonations a destination for Americans? The Japanese seem keen to remember their lessons.

      Deciding that any race is worth more, or less, than another is a quality I never wish to have. Do you really think the US has the high road by comparing the slaughter of 2400 volunteer servicemen to the murder of nearly a quarter of a million women, children and old men in Nagasaki and Hiroshima? Do you honestly expect me to think that it takes 100 Japanese lives to make up for a single American? Or do I add up all the atrocities committed by the Japanese soldiers and then decide how many Germans to slaughter to compensate for Nazi atrocities?"

      You miss the point entirely. The US was defending itself. Japan was the agressor. It's not a question of numbers of deaths. It's a question of how to end the war. You can argue that it was a poor choice of ways to end the war, but your arguement is bs because it implies that killing Japanese people was an act of revenge, which would be a difficult claim to prove given the circumstances. Watch "The Fog of War". It's a documaentary interviewing McNamara where he discusses the end of WWII and Vietnam.

      --
      Vote for Pedro
    9. Re:Who deserves to be burned alive? by jimi+the+hippie · · Score: 1

      "Deciding that any race is worth more, or less, than another is a quality I never wish to have." This has nothing to do with race. The quality you describe is a really bad one to have. If you can't differentiate between the good and the bad, then you are obviously lacking the morals that make one "good."

    10. Re:Who deserves to be burned alive? by MrDyrden · · Score: 1
      Forgotten history is doomed to repeat itself. The USS Arizona, if memory serves, is one of the most popular tourist magnets for Japanese tourists. Why aren't either hypocenter of the atomic bombs detonations a destination for Americans? The Japanese seem keen to remember their lessons.
      As someone who was JUST at the Hiroshima Peace Park last week, I can tell you that you are 100% wrong. Days in Tokyo went by without seeing more than a handful of Americans, yet in Hiroshima at the Peace Museum I saw dozens and dozens.

      It's definitely a major destination for tourists, without a doubt.

    11. Re:Who deserves to be burned alive? by jimi+the+hippie · · Score: 1

      Correction, the quality you disdain is a great one to have. One must be able to tell light from dark.

    12. Re:Who deserves to be burned alive? by chrysrobyn · · Score: 1
      Or, it could be that Hawaii IN GENERAL is an EXTREMELY popular tourist destination for Japanese tourists. Hawaii caters to Japanese tourists and it's reasonably priced (versus Japan). Have you ever actually been to Japan? It's expensive. It's small. It's a long, expensive flight away.

      I've never been to Hawaii. I live in Japan. Just as Hawaii is an extremely popular tourist destination, as are Las Vegas and San Fransisco. To a lesser degree, as are Chicago and New York City. Notably, the cities to which JAL flies.

      Japan may be expensive and small, but it is also true that most Japanese people don't need to go far to enjoy some vacation. Novelty is why people travel so far, otherwise any beach in Japan (I've recently enjoyed Fukuoka) will suffice as well as Hawaii.

  157. Re:raw display of power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The display of power was not intended for Japan, it was intended for Russia. The intent was for them to know what we had and that we would use it. We couldn't bomb Russia, they were an ally. But we bombed the enemy, close to ally soil, but away from their population center. Signed, sealed, delivered.

  158. Re:hypocrisy? by deimtee · · Score: 1

    If my country commits attrocities, it doesn't give you the right to kill me.

    Actually, under the rules of war, it does. You don't even have to commit atrocities, just be at war. Americans call it "collateral damage".

    --
    I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
  159. Not to mention we firebombed 40%+ of all cities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The nukes are not even the worst we did to Japan. Tokyo, mostly a wooden city at the time was over 50% razed to the ground by firebombs with that very intention.

    100,000 Civillians died in one day of Tokyo firebombing. Some 40 other cities were also firebombed. All in the name of 'ending the war'.

    Sick.

    1. Re:Not to mention we firebombed 40%+ of all cities by tokyopimpdaddy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, I don't offer any special insight here. I've lived in Japan for 6 years, even married a Japanese, and look forward to having kids one day. But I don't claim insight into this. It's too big, too deep, and I'm not talking about Japan, I'm talking about anyone caught up in a World War, something many of us on this forum, in all fairness, don't know shit all about.

      There is confusion here in Japan on both sides about the war, the Bomb, the right , the wrong. Would Japan be here today with it or without it? The bottom line is, we don't know. Hundreds disappeard under military rule in Japan in the 1930's for speaking out against the march to war. There is no shrine to these people as they have been deleted.

      Much of Tokyo was firebombed. The town where I used to live in Kanagawa-ken was razed by Allied bombing. Then again, my home town in Europe was firebombed, and as my grandmother said, the heat from the burning paper mills made the glass melt in the nearby houses. Burning people.

      The obsession with Hiroshima and Nagasaki from a suffering point of view is a morbid curiosity about the technology, not the event. Ask the people of Dresden. Of Coventry. It's been used to show the Japanese people as victims. Indeed they were during that raid, but not just from the Bomb, but from their own government, from the act of War. Many Asian people suffered under Japanese beliefs of superiority - something I see the echoes of. It's not nice, it's not pretty, but it's real.

      We cannot judge 60 years ago, but as it says on many memorials, never again, and in the [paraphrased] words of Thomas Paine 'may I live in a time of suffering so my children might know peace'. We might think our lives are hard, but virtually none of us have watched people burn to death, been a party to the genocide of millions and hid behind our own fears. I glad I don't have to live with that, I'm glad I don't need to make those decisions.

      --
      Zenwalk 4 - GNU/Linux Athlon XP2500+
      Mac OS X 10.4.x MacBook Core Duo 2GHz
      WinXP Athlon64 3700+ DFI/Nvidia6800
    2. Re:Not to mention we firebombed 40%+ of all cities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      War's not very pretty is it? It's about destroying your enemy with all means available. If you have an advantage, use it to the fullest. If you detect a weakness, exploit it. You cannot fight with restraint or you will pay the price.

    3. Re:Not to mention we firebombed 40%+ of all cities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > All in the name of 'ending the war'.

      By that time, the name was NOT "ending the war", but rather, "punishing the race and the nation that kept fighting the war and sending them all to hell."

    4. Re:Not to mention we firebombed 40%+ of all cities by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      How would you have run the war?

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
  160. Re:Astounding... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Best Euphemism For An Atomic Attack? [ ] Kitten Parade [X] Neutron-Assisted Aliveness Readjustment [ ] Celebration Of Freedom [ ] 18.95 Candygrams/cm^3 [ ] Fission-Based BSOD [ ] CowboyNeal's Post-Burrito Special

  161. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jawohl !

    Orders are Orders.

    It's not my fault.

    I was somewhere else / too busy / doing something else / not interested in politics / visiting folks in the country / ...

    My tv / radio / home theater / computer / internet connection was on the fritz, and by the time the repair technician got to me, it was already 1947.

    Oh no, that's just a guy that looks like me at the time. I never enlisted. I never had hair like that.

    And so on....

    A midsummer night's-mare ???

  162. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by wpiman · · Score: 3, Informative

    I did some research on Radon when we found out our house had it. Seems that the acceptable dose was never really studied- but inferred from radon levels in mines which are much higher. Workers who worked in mines were in there 40 hours a week- and were fine until the amount of radon in the air reached 100ppm. In the home- they calculated 4ppm (in the us- 10ppm is allowable in Europe) to be safe based off of exposure times extrapolated from the data. Great math- but it could be poor science if this theory proves true.

  163. Re:hypocrisy? by higon · · Score: 0

    > And that's just Americans. You are also looking at the fact that civilians were being
    > organised to mount suicide attacks and to provide extra backup for the army, and
    > everyone was expected to fight to the death -- "Death before Dishonor."And that's just Americans.

    Oh, this is interesting. Right now, there are countries which have sucidal
    bombers against United States (well, They're not clear about what they are
    against sometimes). And you gonna say they're organized by government? And
    can that be the reason to drop A.Bomb?

    What would you think if our beloved United States were attacked, and millions
    of civilians were being killed indiscriminately, and there were no hope that
    enemy kept your family alive. For example, U.S. soldiors tended to kill enemies
    even if enemy has surrendered, and U.S. did destroy other cultures and enslaved
    other countries. Let's assume we face them as an virtual enemy. What would you
    think? There isn't a place to escape.

    As a person once lived in Japan, I can say their core-thought and culture is
    not much different from that in the past, before A.Bomb. There are many attempt
    to justify a use of A.Bomb. And yours are so weak. U.S didn't know about them.
    But United States citizens stereotype has been changed since we dropped the bomb.
    Little sympathy made stereotype so much better.

    Can't wait until you start saying "Iraqis are so nice now, because we bomb.".
    Last year, you didn't heard of any story about how Iraqi culture really is, did
    you? Why not?

  164. Re:hypocrisy? by grunherz · · Score: 1

    Don't expect that when America's luck runs out the next big kid will be nicer.

    China.

    Sleep tight folks ...

    --
    Four weeks, Twenty papers, that's two dollars ... plus tip.
  165. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    read Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse_Five for another take on this.....

  166. Irony by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1
    "Nations like Hungary "

    You mentioning Hungary is quite bad, because it was the USA who messed it up for the 10 million Hungarians at that time.

    Let me explain, at that specific date in 1956, the world was occupied with another crisis: the Suez-channel conflict. When the Hungarian revolution happened, a new hungarian goverment has been created and declared independency from the soviet union and asked the support of the western world. You know how did the soviets react? They basically waited. Waited for what position would the USA take. That was basically the biggest blown opportunity to liberate a country in the last 50 years, because the USA reacted in a way that diplomatically signaled the soviets that they don't care. So well, Hungary became an independent country in 1990, only because the USA couldn't have focused on two things at once.

    Quoting from the wikipedia article you linked:
    'While Britain and France were intervening in the Suez crisis, the United States declared its position through John Foster Dulles in late October: "The United States does not consider Hungary an ally." With this combination of political and foreign policy considerations, the Presidium decided to break the cease-fire and eliminate the Hungarian revolution.'


    As someone familiar with the cold war actions taken by the USA and the former USSR, i'd welcome if you would not try to put the USA as some good guy. The past and present actions of the USA clearly show that it is not the case.
    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
    1. Re:Irony by Phanatic1a · · Score: 1

      You mentioning Hungary is quite bad, because it was the USA who messed it up for the 10 million Hungarians at that time.

      Yah, 'cause the USA was the nation that invaded it and butchered thousands of people.

      Oh, wait, it wasn't.

  167. It's one of those things... by _LORAX_ · · Score: 2, Insightful

    that you end up not talking about. My grandfather died a few years ago and while my father was going threw his things he found a special medal from the navy along with a letter. He had been one of the first people on the ground at nagasaki after the bomb.

    It's something he told no one about, and it he had not saved the medal and letter we still would not have known.

  168. Classified-Top Secret / Group 4 / Burnbag only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The reprint is still spoofing the truth ... as shown on part 4 of the article. There it says, quoting roughly, that Disease-X was being treated on an experimental basis with ... [illegible] drug.

    The drug was opium. It helps the immune system, mainly kidneys and liver, organize formation, collection and elimination of salts which contain radiation minerals, and thus accelerates curing. Withing a few years after the bombings, the contaminated populations had completely recovered, including hair, reproductive and immune system capacity, and etc.

    The reason this is still "top secret" is that the planet's annual production capacity in opium is limited (by geographic and political availability of alkaline soil, accessible mountainous exposures with cheap labor, supervised by loyal warlords, dark nights, for complete formation of plant alkaloids, etc.) to approximately one-tenth of the size of the "national medical reserve" the U.S. alone would require to stabilize its own "designated survivor" population, in the event of a nuclear wars between the U.S. and Russia, China, France, etc. If amongst the powers on this planet, the U.S. maintained exclusive control of the entire production of the planet's maximum production capacity in opium-based pain killers, it would take the U.S. alone ten years to acquire its required "two-balled" military "entirety" for a nuclear war.

    Oddly, or contrary to our Hollywood-created popular opinion, survival ("continuity of government") in a nuclear war is not determined by the bombing phase, which is relatively shortlived, using missiles which the media generally portrays as "sexy" and/or "terrifying. Survival in a war by mass contamination, and diplomacy by threat of mass contamination (read: state-sponsored terrorism), is based on not on the bombing phase, but on the longer and economically more arduous restoration phase. This more crucial phase starts with medication-stabilization programs of the government/military/fema, to treat the "designated survivors." The only know treatment for 500rem+ radiation sickness, on a mass contamination basis, is by production control and medical delivery of opium-based painkillers and treatment alkaloids.

    That was the purpose of the experiments on Tuskeegee prisonors. (The controlled contamination and experimental treatment of black prisoners was for national-security dosage determinations, required for determination of (a) the size of the designation population which could be expected to survive (with any degree of continuing political stability), and then the ten-year annual production capacity of the planet, for treatment of the U.S.'s designation survivor population alone.

    Is it by accident that this article just happens to blotch out and make that word illegible, while be bomb and control the most critical of the opium production areas of the planet, Afghanistan?

    1. Re:Classified-Top Secret / Group 4 / Burnbag only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      This is the best conspiracy theory/nut ravings that I have heard in a long time. Kudos.

    2. Re:Classified-Top Secret / Group 4 / Burnbag only by YaRness · · Score: 1

      mods should learn to do a fact checking on google before applying "Interesting" points.

      or maybe... the mods are part of the conspiracy, using reverse psychology by modding it up... yeah.

      shit, my tin foil hat must be loose.

  169. Japan was already defeated... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >. I do know, however, that there is NO way that you can ever be certain that if we hadn't done that that the Japanese (at that time) wouldn't have ended up winning the war

    Unfortunnatly, it's false...We know the outcome of the war without the nuke. Japan was seeking a way to end the war in a diplomatic way.
    The country was "dead", they were lacking a lot of primary ressource, oils etc.
    So in other word, Japan was already defeated, they had the URSS on their border too, I guess the only reason of the nuke was to avoid that Japan falls under the control of the URSS.

    It reminds me a bit the forgoten eastern front.

    1. Re:Japan was already defeated... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Sorry, you are wrong. While the Japanese were no longer a threat outside of Japan, the taking of Okinawa to the tune of 30,000 american casualties pretty much convinced the american war effort that the nuke was preferable to trying to fight 5 million estimated civilian/military troops to land on Japans beaches.

      Talk to a marine who served in the pacific and see what he thinks of the bomb. Its estimated to have actually saved a few million lives. The Japanese war commanders STILL thought they could win/"find advantagous surrender terms" even after the second bomb was dropped.

      The crime in Japan was not the bomb, it was a whole host of customs and cultural problems that defeat/surrender was not an option.

  170. By your logic there weren't many here, either.... by Ellis+D.+Tripp · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While the men went off to war, the women went to work in defense plants and other facilities to aid the war effort. Children helped with scrap metal drives and such, while seniors tended "Victory Gardens".

    Would Japan have been justified in wiping out a couple of major US cities if it had developed the capability to do so?

    --
    Remember "News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters"? Help make it a reality again! http://soylentnews.org
  171. Sniff by ShoobieRat · · Score: 1

    I wonder how much of this story and commentary has been twisted to support the current anti-nuke fad of today?

  172. The problem is by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

    ...that the only thing would have been needed is some diplomacy to liberate a lot of people from soviet opression. You brought a few examples when the USA for some reason, not necessary out of goodwill stepped in an did something. I brought you an example when there would have been an easy situation to solve and the USA didn't. Watching and not taking action wasn't very human thing to do. This occasion proves that the USA didn't or still doesn't care about human life more than the USSR did, you are just protecting your own interests, so there is no moral high horse for you to sit on.

    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
    1. Re:The problem is by Phanatic1a · · Score: 1

      I brought you an example when there would have been an easy situation to solve and the USA didn't.

      So we fucked up. It happens, human decision-making is flawed, and hingsight is 20/20.

      This occasion proves that the USA didn't or still doesn't care about human life more than the USSR did

      No, it doesn't. All it proves is that we're capable of error, like that's some fucking revelation.

      The assertion that the US is, and always has been, nothing but a bully can be disproved by a single counterexample, which I have provided. Examples of past fuckups on the part of the US are insufficient to confirm that assertion.

      you are just protecting your own interests, so there is no moral high horse for you to sit on.

      Every nation acts to protect its own interests. The moral difference arises from the differences in those interests. The Soviet Union overran Poland in WWII, and went on to rule it oppressively for another 40 years. America overran France and Italy and Germany and Japan in WWII, and went on to allow them to rule themselves as democratic states.

      Both America and the Soviet Union were acting what they perceived to be their best interests, but if you're going to suggest that both actions were morally equivalent, I'm going to laugh at you and call you an asshat.

  173. Um... No... by VaticDart · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Unless what I've read on the subject is wrong, this is not correct. The most uselessly destructive act of World War 2 was the firebombing of Tokyo on March 9th and 10th of 1945, which killed around 100,000 people. The purpose of this raid was to demoralize the Japanese people in the possible event of a future invasion by US forces. The Dresden raid did, to my knowledge, have a more concrete military target, even if the destruction and death that ensued was horrid and unnecessary.

    This is just me, but I think that the Dresden firebombing sticks in the mind of the US more because it was Europeans who died, while for years after World War 2, the Japanese continued to to be something of a inferior people in the minds of a lot of people in the US. Remember people, the history that a culture builds itself on is not necessarily "what really happened" but always some kind of selection from amid many possible histories. History and the present feed back on each other, any present, in order to exist, has to build its own past. This, to me, is what the Dresden versus the Tokyo firebombings are an excellent example of.

    1. Re:Um... No... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      I'm an european, Dresden is simply closer, also the focus in teaching WW1-2 here is more on the european side. To be honest i simply wasn't aware of the scale of destruction in Tokyo.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    2. Re:Um... No... by VaticDart · · Score: 1

      Most people don't seem to be. Current Japanese culture isn't too big on teaching people much about World War 2, from those who grew up in Japan that I've talked to, so I doubt they'd really bring it up much in world political discussions. And yeah, European cultures tend to concentrate mostly on the European side of the war, which makes sense, but it's still good to learn about what else happened.

    3. Re:Um... No... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, if the Japanese taught WWII history, they'd have to mention the part where they killed nearly 400,000 people in Nanking (and raped 80,000 women and girls). Or the part where they poured gasoline on POW's and set them on fire. Etc, etc.

  174. Re:By your logic there weren't many here, either.. by rjh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The difference is we didn't have total mobilization. We still had schools which educated children in math and literature, not spear drills. We still had hospitals servicing civilian needs, not off-limits to everyone but the military. We still had plumbers and electricians and carpenters building civilian housing, not forcibly conscripted into working exclusively on military projects.

    If you're asking me if the defense plants were valid targets, sure. If the Japanese had somehow been able to bomb Rosie the Riveter, that would've been entirely appropriate within the laws and customs of war. The instant a civilian starts working for a military purpose, they stop being a civilian. In wartime Japan, more than ninety percent of the population over age twelve was working for the war effort. Hence, there were very few civilians in Japan.

  175. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by ikkonoishi · · Score: 4, Funny

    And so long as you let your plants live, you are providing oxygen for the flame that the soldier uses to burn that child.

  176. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Pope · · Score: 1

    I'm sure the POW camp was last thing on General LeMay's mind, after he firebombed the living crap out of Japan's civillian population for a few months, causing more death and destruction than the 2 A-bombs combined.

    --
    It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
  177. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by KH · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Lots of people have already pointed out he lived 57 years after his visit to post-nuke Nagasaki.

    I would like to post a comment as someone who knows some people who were there that day.

    There certainly is a strange thing about the effect of the bomb to people. I have no statistics, but my anecdotal experience shows that those who are still alive 60 years after their experience are extremely healthy.

    My father was 14 and was 2.5km from the ground zero. He, obviously unscathed, visited the ground zero after a day or two. He is 74 now and plays tennis every day. He does get his conditions checked every year as a survivor. He is apparently an interesting case because he does have half the amount of white blood cells compared to normal. This is somewhat consistent with the well-known effect of radiation. Still, he doesn't even catch cold.

    And my father is not an exception. There is a rather well known view among Nagasaki population that some survivors are extremely healthy. This may simply mean that they survived because they are extremely strong. There might be a correlation but it would be really hard to tell which is the cause and which is the effect. Some people may be just lucky that their damaged genes have better ability to repair itself.

    On the other hand, people are now starting to talk about the effect on the third generation. There seem to be some concern that instead of the second generation, symptoms are appearing in the third generation. The effect of the bombing in terms of how much the radiation affects the genes is understandably hard to prove. There are many many other factors, and it is practically impossible to isolate the experience in a nuked environment as the major cause of mutation.

    Personally, I don't have an opinion whether dropping the a-bombs is justified. It's history and that's what happend, we cannot change it. But if I'm pressed, I'd personally think because of the bomb, I'm here. If there had been no bomb in Nagasaki that day, my father may not have survived till the end of the war. It's well-known that teenager boys had been recruited to become Kamikaze attacker. An elder brother of his was being trained to be one. Another year or so, my father would probably have become one.

    Every time I think about the bomb, I have a strange feeling. If my father had been killed on that day, I would not be here to think about the bomb. It was obviously a major event in his life although he always talks about it in a calm manner. I think he is a cool guy.

  178. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

    What makes you think you're not in the same situation?

    (Do I bother to mention Iraq, presidential elections, "napalm", or would that be underestimating the inteligence of Slashdot readers?)

    --
    Watch this Heartland Institute video
  179. Repeorter meant well but was a flake. by BroncoInCalifornia · · Score: 1
    I did not have a clear picture of what this guy experienced in Nagasaki. I do not think this guy was a very good writter.

    Also he was very being very opinionated about things he did not know much about. Even though he saw hair falling out of children, he dicounted the idea of radiation sickness. He did come back to it in the end though, I would have preferred to just read the guys observations without reading his opinions.

    He spent some time on the war stories of POWs too. This was a digression.

    It is a shame this story was not printed after it was written. But I think the reason decades passed before it was published is that this just was not very good.

    --

    Religion is the main cause of atheism.

    1. Re:Repeorter meant well but was a flake. by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      " I do not think this guy was a very good writter."

      Judging from all the "(illegible)" bits, it was a hand-written first draft.

      "Even though he saw hair falling out of children, he dicounted the idea of radiation sickness."

      No, he didn't think the radiation came from returning to the bombed area.

      And even then, he talked about the doctors' opinions, as well as one or two cases that poked holes in their theory that the radiation came from fallout rather than the initial blast.

      "He spent some time on the war stories of POWs too. This was a digression."

      He wrote what he saw in Nagasaki. By the time he got in there it was a big "tourist" destination for former POWs that had nothing else to do at the time. That, and Nagasaki itself housed several POW camps, one of which was used to man the factory that was targeted by the bomb.

  180. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by brouski · · Score: 1

    He did look a bit green afterwards.

    --
    Proud member of the American Non Sequitur Society. We might not make much sense, but boy do we love pizza!
  181. yes, but that was WWII by Ender+Ryan · · Score: 1
    Funny enough, I was thinking about WWII this morning while getting ready to go to work. I was specifically thinking about the atomic bomb, the making of it, the science and engineering, and the eventual deployment of it against the Japanese. I thought about Nanking, the allied firebombing of European cities, how all that compared to the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Was it justified? Would the alternative have been worse?

    Many people today point at the U.S. and use actions from WWII in their arguments regarding U.S. actions today. Of course, they only do themselves and their arguments a disservice. Allied Europeans helped to build the bombs, provided resources, condoned their use, etc. It was a question of justification at the time; it was just survival. In fact, those primitive nuclear weapons did far less damage than the many firebombings during WWII. They were something people had never seen. It was shocking and terrible. It was a more effective terrorism than the firebombing that had been engaged in previously. The firebombing that was initiated by the European Allies.

    People continue to make all kinds of silly justifications, "Hiroshima was payback for Pearl Harbour,"(payback is justification?) and criticisms, "The U.S. is the only country to ever use a nuclear bomb"(the point being that, the U.S. is and always has been, evil). Of course, the truth is that it was a strategic action taken during the greatest(ie. most fucking horriffic) war of all of human history. The devastation caused by the atom bomb is a drop in the bucket in the context of WWII.

    Was it justified? Was it wrong? Those questions have very little meaning. It is just not that simple; all meaning is lost when looked at in such simple terms. There is nothing to be learned when viewed out of its historic context.

    OTOH, since the discussion here is veering all over the place, I submit that the current U.S. administration's discussion about deploying tactical nukes is pure fucking insanity and clearly shows just how stupid and ignorant they are, and further that the administration's lying to the public to further its agenda is a clear fucking sign regarding its (lack of) integrity and self-serving purposes.

    --
    Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken - Tyler Durden
    1. Re:yes, but that was WWII by dcam · · Score: 1

      Many people today point at the U.S. and use actions from WWII in their arguments regarding U.S. actions today. Of course, they only do themselves and their arguments a disservice. Allied Europeans helped to build the bombs, provided resources, condoned their use, etc. It was a question of justification at the time; it was just survival. In fact, those primitive nuclear weapons did far less damage than the many firebombings during WWII. They were something people had never seen. It was shocking and terrible. It was a more effective terrorism than the firebombing that had been engaged in previously. The firebombing that was initiated by the European Allies.

      I know I am not addressing your main point, but the firebombings of Japan did far more damage than the firebombings of Germany. More people were killed in a single firebombing raid on Tokoyo, than were killed by both atomic bombs.

      OTOH, since the discussion here is veering all over the place, I submit that the current U.S. administration's discussion about deploying tactical nukes is pure fucking insanity and clearly shows just how stupid and ignorant they are, and further that the administration's lying to the public to further its agenda is a clear fucking sign regarding its (lack of) integrity and self-serving purposes.

      It is also rank hypocricy to be doing this while simultaneously telling Iran and Nth Korea they can't have nukes.

      --
      meh
  182. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by modecx · · Score: 1

    Wow, so, that's probably what compells the Scotts to deep-fry Mars bars!

    --
    Constitutional rights may be respected, repealed, or modified; but they must never be ignored.
  183. a-bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think there was a more controversial topic then the a-bomb. For Japanese atrocities committed against prisoners, at Bataan, Singapore, at sea, Nanjing, one could argue that we want to make sure we bring the horror of war to the Japanese people (civilians) to let them know that war isn't just fun and games like Tojo's government made them out to be. Although one must also think -- didn't the US already do that with battleships bombarding coastal industrial centers at will and bombers terror bombing Tokyo with incendiaries? I suppose, like Truman said, the cost of lives lost to the a-bombs may just be well under the lives that will be lost on both sides if a landing on the home islands took place.

  184. why the will to invade a country.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    who are seeking a diplomatic way to end the war?
    WHY?
    They lost, they agree that they were losing, they wanted to end the war in a diplomatic way.

    The nuke was unnecessary and can you repeat after me : crime agains't humanity ?

  185. "Nine who Survived" (BOTH H & N) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
    "Nine who Survived" by Trumbull [1957]is a collection of nine survivor accounts. Nine people who survived Hiroshima became refugees and found their way to Nagasaki, only to survive yet another bombing!

    I read this as a schoolboy, just weeks before the Cuban Missile Crisis (October 1962). It was pretty sobering. It made the prospect of nuclear war pretty real.

    Later, it turned out that friends of my family were prisoners of the Japanese, and suffered horribly. Later still, it turned out that a classmate of my father (in Holland) had fled Holland in 1939 for the safety of the Dutch East Indies, now Indonesia. The Japanese put him in a prison work force in -you guessed it- Nagasaki. He was in the bowels of a ship that was under construction when the bomb went off. He said it was the loudest sound he'd ever heard. He also said he just "ran like hell".

    Anyone interested in what a "loose nuke" from Iran, or N Korea can do should read Trumbull's book. I guarantee that you'll never think about the subject in quite the same way as you did before the read.

  186. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Oblio · · Score: 1

    Moralisticly, thats a hard claim to make. Thats the equivilent of the Presidents "We do not distinguish between Terrorists and their hairdressers" position.

    Some sort of shared responsibility model is needed, but I'm afraid I don't have one ready made to help.

    --
    Pax -- Ob
  187. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by pmancini · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The real question to ask is why on God's Green Earth (or blue once you actually see it from space) did the Japanese intermix their civilian population with military manufacture? No one else did that as much as was possible (though the Brits did have secret aircraft factories in populated areas.)

    The reason is multi-part but basically that was simply how Japan worked. Instead of big, mega factories, often you had small cottage industry that served the greater factory. Its actually a very nice model in peacetime.

    The casualties were even worse than they needed to be. Fearing incendiery attacks, the Japanese organized to pull down wooden structures. However, they did not organize to haul away said piles of wood which ended up burning more efficiently that way.

    If you look at what the japanese were doing to prepare themselves for the inevitable invasion by the Allies (including the Russians) you will no doubt come to the conclusion that dropping two atomic bombs was by far better than having a poorly armed population attempting to fight it out. They were trainng young women to fight with bamboo spears. It would have been a sensless slaughter that Japan probably would not have recovered from. I think the question is quite well answered in the book "Downfall."

    Also, there is a film put out by Showtime in 1995 called "Hiroshima" that I thought was very well balanced. It does portray the Emperor in a more heroic light than I think he deserves but for the most part I think it does show the intentions of everyone involved quite well. Its 3 hours long. I got a copy off of Half.com. Its hard to find but well worth it.

    --Pete

  188. Re:hypocrisy? by 0111+1110 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    if i was a country in some of those US black lists I'd be developing WMD like mad

    And just imagine how surprised you would be when you were invaded anyway. Nuclear weapons are really not very practical for many reasons, which is one reason why they have never been used except for that one time in WWII. As for chem/bio they are not much of a serious threat either. Show me an example in modern warfare where they have helped win a war and I may change my mind.

    --
    Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
  189. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by NanoGator · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "As long as you're paying taxes, you're paying the soldier to burn that child."

    Erm. So what do you do when you want your local police and fire services to be active, but don't want soldiers to burn children?

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  190. How is this "Your Rights Online?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    I fucking hate Slashdot.

    1. Re:How is this "Your Rights Online?" by m50d · · Score: 1

      Because it shows that the US censors information about their wartime atrocities? I'd say that's pretty relevant to my rights online.

      --
      I am trolling
    2. Re:How is this "Your Rights Online?" by festers · · Score: 1

      Because it's not "Your Online Rights", it's "Your Rights Online. Linguistically you could put the emphasis on "Your Rights", as in we are talking about rights in an online forum. But really, chill out...you're only the 10000th person to whine about such a petty detail.

      --


      -------
      "Every artist is a cannibal, every poet is a thief."
  191. Re:hypocrisy? by Anspen · · Score: 1

    They had to. Japan was already amassing forces in expectation of an invasion, forces that outnumbered American ones. Women and Children were being trained to fight. And all were expected to fight to the death and not surrender. A ground invasion would have led to the total annihilation of the Japanese people, or a large majority of them.

    So? Let them have their amassed forces (not exactly crack troops by the way). My point is that by this stage of the war Japan had lost most of its transportation and a large part of its production capability. Since the Japanese islands are resource poor, this meant no possibility of doing anything against the US forces (No new planes or ships and even if they could build them: no fuel to run them). Meanwhile the population is slowly starving and the Russians might invade any minute. Seems like a good time to surrender (something that, despite stereotypes nad common knowledge, *was* discussed at high levels)

    I refer you to the fact that the Japanese did not surrender after the first bomb, but the second. The fact that they did not surrender after such an awesome display of raw power would point to the fact that they had never intended to surrender, but, as afore mentioned, fight to the last man, woman, and child.

    Then why did they surrender after the second? Beside the fact that it took time to get a clear picture of what had actually happened in Hiroshima and the fact that the US didn't really give them a lot of time to do this, my point was that it still isn't clear what was most important in triggering the surrender: the military importance of the bombs (resistance is futile), the excuse this gave the surrender faction of the government, the Russian declaration of war or the guarantee given that the Emperor would remain. If they 'never intended to surrender' why did they after the second bomb?

    Both of the cities were also military targets, and the civilian populations were mobilized to give resistance, i.e., fight to the death. Hiroshima had Army Headquarters and the HQ for Southern Japan's defense. Nagasaki was a strategically vital seaport and ordinance factory.

    Military significance is unimportant. The goal of the bombings wasn't to hit the military; it was to demonstrate the new weapon. Why choose a target with civilians at all? The power of the new weapon could have been amply demonstrated by removing some landscape. Arguing that civilians who have been mobilised to resist invaders count as military targets is a very slippery slope by the way. By that reasoning you could very easily declare *everyone* a combatant

    It's partly cultural. During the Second World War, there were still a vast majority of persons in Japan, pretty much the whole population, that believe in "Death Before Dishonor." Surrender was shameful, and they would have died first. Many of them did on outlying islands, after they had been routed to caves and, when soldiers called for their surrender, they generally fired back, and when they didn't they just stayed in there.

    I call bullshit. Yes, that's the racist argument used at the time, but the higher echelons knew that certain factions within the Japanese government had been trying to make a deal for years. Hell, that was the whole war plan: to cripple the US, build a strong position, then negotiate a great deal. As the war turned sour the ambitions were tuned down (though they were still unrealistically high: they expected to keep at least Korea and Manchuria). Japanese soldiers where a special breed: indoctrination started immideatly after grammar school and was brutal. And even then there were plent of surrenders.

    The problem was on the US side. The United States has always had a dislike for compromises at the end of a war. This was increased by the German nazi propaganda, which stated Germany hadn't been *really* lost

  192. Curious about the attack by grumpyman · · Score: 1

    If the main intention is to destroy the war manufacturing facilities at Nagasaki, then I wonder if anybody gave warning to the civilians to escape? Did Japanese government knows the target? Did the US inform the Japanese government? Or directly to the civilians (paper leaflets)? At that point in the the Japanese barely has any air force left as I recall from books.

    1. Re:Curious about the attack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, leaflets where dropped by the thousands to warn civilians. It looked like it was snowing to the japanese citizens, however the Japanese government put out propaganda telling people to ignore the warnings as they are only an American trick. almost all Japanese citizens believed their government over the words in the leaflets.

    2. Re:Curious about the attack by ShoobieRat · · Score: 1

      The bomb dropped on Nagasaki didn't even land on target, so I'm not sure early-warning (however you want to view that idea) would have done much good.

  193. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by russellh · · Score: 1

    Ahh, moral absolutism. Great.

    --
    must... stay... awake...
  194. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "just following orders" wasn't an acceptable defense at Nuremberg, and it shouldn't be for other war crimes.

  195. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by grumpyman · · Score: 1

    I would agree that everybody in that chain-of-command has part responsibility. However, I would argue that the workers or the pilot or the likes are that much responsible as the generals up there who make the decision. Did the worker or the pilot really have a say in this? If they did and refuse to take the order, that'll be considered treason and probably sent to prison for life. Did the worker or the pilot comes up with the idea of such attack? Nobody wants to be responsible for the decision, but ultimately somebody made the decision, and the pilot/worker has no say in this.

  196. right, right, right by scotty777 · · Score: 1
    Elements of the Japanese leadership almost kept the war going after the second bomb! There is no evidence that Japanese forces were about to call it quits. There is lots of evidence that civilians would have fought to the death on the home islands.

    That having been said, the effects of these bombs are shocking. The shock is so great, people are willing to do anything to avoid these bombs. That's what makes them attractive as weapons of war, but also makes them targets for banning.

  197. "Other people were worse" is not an argument by AtlanticCarbon · · Score: 1

    Other countries doing terrible things is not a justification for US actions. Same reasoning comes up today when a terrorist cuts off someone's head and then flag-waivers use that as an some sort of justification for US wrongs.

    There are better arguments for the use of the a-bomb, like ending the war earlier and saving lives that way or even crass realpolitik arguments that make more sense. But pointing to other wrongdoing is not helpful.

  198. non-Japanese Asians were also saved by scotty777 · · Score: 1

    The early end of the war also saved the lives of countless numbers in China, Malaysia, Korea, Thailand, Burma, and elsewhere. Those people did nothing to start the war. Those people are grateful for the early end of the war. And given the horrible Japanese actions they saw, it's not surprising that they don't object to the use of the A-bombs. I've traveled a lot over there, and never heard a word of complant outside of Japan. Never. Not once.

  199. Quote from Startrek:TNG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One world's butcher is another world's hero

  200. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by DeepHurtn! · · Score: 1

    "Just following orders" is not an acceptable defense, according to the Nuremberg trials at least.

  201. Go read "Thank God for the Atom Bomb" by myth_of_sisyphus · · Score: 1
    By Paul Fussell. He was a soldier who had fought his way across Germany and when they surrendered, his troops were all being shipped over to the Pacific. None of them expected to live. The Japanese were arming women and children with pointed sticks and fighting to the death. (Human wave attacks and the like.)

    When the bombs dropped they knew it had saved their own asses and probably lots of Japanese too.

    It's easy to make high moral judgements like "we never should have dropped the bombs" without your own life on the line.

  202. It's PLEBEIAN. by C10H14N2 · · Score: 1


    You know, when you repeatedly use a derogatory term, at least spell it correctly. I mean, you might as well say "moran."

    Geezuz, you clueless plebeian.

    1. Re:It's PLEBEIAN. by torpor · · Score: 1

      Geezuz, you clueless plebeian.



      Its Jesus, dude. Christ.

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    2. Re:It's PLEBEIAN. by C10H14N2 · · Score: 1


      I'm an atheist, but I prefer to stop short of blatant blasphemy. I say "geezuz" like many say "Yhwh." Deliberate misspelling is much different than obvious ignorance.

  203. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's not moral absolutism. He didn't say "you are completely morally responsible for the soldier burning the child." He says, correctly, that you are paying for it.

    And thus are part of a shared responsibility for it. If we live in a society with a representative government, then the policies of that government are the responsibility, to some extent, of the people who live in it. Responsibility is not exactly the same thing as moral culpability: responsibility can be collective (e.g., a company has to honor its debts even if no person who created the debt is still there.)

    But it is a problem to think that you can enjoy all the benefits of a nation-state without sharing in the responsibility for the actions of that nation-state, particularly if there is some representative system at hand.

  204. A-bomb probably saved my father's life by hqm · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My father was 17 and preparing to ship out as a radar operator for the land invasion of Japan, when the bomb was dropped, and the war ended.

    I don't know if he would have lived through that invasion, it was predicted to be terrible. After the battles for Pacific islands, the mass murder of civilians by the Japanese in Okinawa, it was pretty certain to be an awful thing.

    He told me that after the first A bomb was exploded, many people in the world simply did not believe or understand what happened. Many thought that the US had towed a barge of explosives into the waterfront and detonated it.

    I don't think people today second-guessing the decisions made then have as much moral superiority as they think they do.

  205. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 1

    In other words, nothing to see here...

    --

    kurzweil_freak

    5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

    Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

  206. Have you stopped to think about much of that... by CyricZ · · Score: 1

    ... museum is pure propoganda? Of course a museum in New Orleans (America!) and funded by the American government will present history in a very pro-American way. Of course they'll demonize the Japanese and the Germans, while never mentioning any of their own horrific acts. I mean, come on. This is fairly common sense stuff here. If you can't see through such obvious propoganda, I fear that you're completely oblivious to some of the more obscured government brainwashing.

    --
    Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
  207. It's Great to See... by Wicked187 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's great to see so many people trying to be philosphical about something that they can not comprehend. I am completely speculating (but so is most everyone else here), but I would think at least 95% of the people posting were not born or even in gestation during WWII. Heck, your parents probably were not either.

    You have read a couple of history books that give you some highlights about a war. The highlights often have some spin, or perhaps your history teacher adds some spin to them. Here is a news flash... people die during war. Sometimes they die a gruesome death. Sometimes war is necessary. Many times, we would rather not go to war, but we must, so we do. And in all of the times that we go to war, people die. It is a tradgedy to lose a human life, but it does become necessary. It is painful. It sucks. It is life.

    Quit trying to condemn people. You have not been there. You can say what you would have done... but not even you know what you actually would have done. It is the same BS that is going on right now. Just give it a rest, because you really do not know what you are talking about.

    --
    Politics, Life, and More on my Aspiring for the Future
    1. Re:It's Great to See... by m50d · · Score: 1
      I think not being there gives you a better perspective. It's hard for someone whose husband/wife/brother/etc. was killed in a POW camp to be impartial.

      Are you saying we can't condemn anything that we weren't there for? How about serial killers today? How about Nanking or anything else the pro-bomb side uses to argue the bomb was justified?

      --
      I am trolling
    2. Re:It's Great to See... by Triskele · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Quit trying to condemn people. You have not been there. You can say what you would have done... but not even you know what you actually would have done. It is the same BS that is going on right now. Just give it a rest, because you really do not know what you are talking about.

      What a load of bollocks. It is our duty to interrogate the past and consider the morality of their actions. In part this informs our own actions (something the US needs big time right now) and it also helps prevent the wartime propaganda infecting subsequent history. People who might have been revered during the war when discovered to have committed heinous crimes against humanity should have all honour stripped from them even posthumously (and for those of a Biblical bent, unto the seventh generation).

      --

      --
      USA: home of the world's largest terrorist training camp.

    3. Re:It's Great to See... by davew2040 · · Score: 1

      What a class argument: "You just don't get it, so pass the ammunition!"

    4. Re:It's Great to See... by ShoobieRat · · Score: 1

      It's true that none of us "youngsters" can know what it is like to attack a country with nukes at the end of a long and bloody war.

      However, that aside, one must be aware that there is a very large difference between the nuke-sentiment during the days of WWII, and of today.

      People today, are frankly idiotically fearful of nukes and all things containing the word "nuclear". It has been the bane of our civilization. MRI scanners used in hospitals are actually called "Nuclear-Magnetic-Resonance-Imaging" machines, but because people are so paranoid of all things with "nuclear" in the title, the name had to be changed to just "MRI" because no one would get in it. Stupid.

      Anyway, no one can view the events at the end of WWII-Pacific in the same light as today. To do so would be completely out of context with the feelings and social situations of the 1940's.

    5. Re:It's Great to See... by ShoobieRat · · Score: 1

      It is our duty to interrogate the past and consider the morality of their actions.

      Yes, it is good to not forget the past and learn from it, but I think the root of the problem he was talking about is that you must view the past in the SAME context that it was lived in. One must understand things from the frame of mind that those things were done in. If you can do that, and still find fault, then you have a voice to speak with. If you do not, and you find faults, it is because you are not truly seeing the situation as it was.

  208. also read "Nine Who Survivied" by scotty777 · · Score: 1

    Also, please read "Nine Who Survivied Hiroshima and Nagasaki", the accounts of nine refugees from Hiroshima, who went to Nagasaki, and survived that as well. A sobering read.

  209. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by adrianbaugh · · Score: 4, Informative

    I would say that walking around in a heavy fallout zone is an extremely unhealthy activity

    Hiroshima and Nagasaki were both classical airburst detonations. These typically produce low local fallout as the radioactive material is mostly swept up into the stratosphere as the fireball rises. Although there were certainly many cancer cases, most of these were caused by prompt radiation (ie gamma and neutrons directly from the nuclear reactions in the fireball), and that prompt radiation dies away very quickly (hours rather than days).

    I wouldn't like to walk around in a heavy fallout zone either, but those are generally associated with groundbursts or radiological devices rather than airbursts. So I think this reporter was probably okay. See the FAQ at nuclearweaponarchive.org for more info.

    --
    "'I pass the test,' she said. 'I will diminish, and go into the West, and remain Galadriel.'"
    - JRR Tolkien.
  210. Re:hypocrisy? by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    I don't know what you think I was saying, but that was exactly my point.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  211. Re:hypocrisy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I look around the world, and I see a lot of dead Americans buried in a lot of graves on foreign soil

    And a whole row of non-americans buried besides each one of them, with "<-- I was shot/bombed/sliced/poked/burned/skinned/robbed/rap ed by stupid" written on their grave stones.

  212. NOT legend: read "Nine Who Survived ..." by scotty777 · · Score: 3, Informative

    "Nine Who Survived Hiroshima and Nagasaki" by Trumbull [1957] documents the stories of nine refugees from the Hiroshima bombing. These poor sods wound up in Nagasaki. Got bombed again there, and lived to tell the story. An incredible read.

  213. Re:Astounding... by CyricZ · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Perhaps the next war we be a true man-on-man war. Two men will stand near, and battle each other with their penises. No more bullets, not more rockets. Only sperm blobs and erectile stabbings. The victor would drop his ballsack onto the loser's chin and forehead in a show of teabaggery. That is what the future holds, my friend.

    --
    Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
  214. answer by scotty777 · · Score: 1

    Yes, their leader was one of the very, very few pacifist Japanese in the 30's, and right through the war. He was jailed, and badly mistreated in jail. After the war, that gave the organization a really good name. A lot of Japanese politicos joined. It's a Budhist sect.

  215. Actually, 250,000 died in Tokyo in one night by scotty777 · · Score: 1

    The firebombing set off a firestorm that was the largest of WWII. May 10, 1945.

  216. UnCensored? by tonsofpcs · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't this be uncensored, as the later articles were censored???

  217. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My brother used to work for a company that manufatured electronic components for the miltary. (He couldn't tell me exactly what, but I deduced from what he told me that they were components that went in bombs or missiles.) One guy had a poster on his wall that showed a grinning pilot and copilot in a bomber flying away from a mushroom cloud over a burning city in the background. The caption to the picture read "Now comes Miller time!".

  218. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by aikon29 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Basically, that 4 ppm (picoCuries/L, as they say) seems to be a really low number here in the US. According to the EPA, if you don't smoke and your house is tested and comes in at 4 pCi/L, then there is a 0.2% chance that you MIGHT get lung cancer. (By the way, radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer).

    It's not that I don't think that radon is bad (I run a radon inspection business), it's just that I think that the US has way too high of standards when it comes to "acceptable" levels. Europe's standards are a lot better at 10 pCi/L (though if you don't smoke there's still only a 0.4% chance you might get lung cancer), but at least they're being reasonable.

  219. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by king-manic · · Score: 1

    if he ingested no materials, if the ambient ionizing radiation was low, and the heavy radio active dust had settled, then it's not surprising he didn't get sick. He might also have very good DNA repair mechanisms which would prevent cancer.

    --
    "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
  220. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by grumpyman · · Score: 1
    True that it is not an acceptable defense at those trials, but let's put them into perspectives. They were using 'just following orders' as a defense tactics and those in trials are prominent nazi, not regular joe-blow factory worker who manufactured tanks an bombs.

    The original poster of this thread is arguing that instead of 'nobody is to blame', he's saying everybody is to blame. Every level of officer has to make the decision of whether the order was lawful or not, and that makes them partly responsible, however, they were NEVER in position to make decisions like 'lets make a nuke', or 'lets drop a nuke'. Military is not a democratic process.

  221. Maybe the article wasn't censored... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe it was deemed unreadable?

  222. Re:Dresden by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I agree with your comments about Dresden.

    Don't forget the firestorm at Hamburg, or the firestorm in Tokyo (both done on purpose, though Tokyo got out of hand due to the wooden houses and lack of firefighting equipment).

    I've read a couple of people replying to this, and they try and justify Dresden. Read a couple of books on the subject and you'll see that everyone from the flyers, to the POWs on the ground, to Bomber Command could not justify bombing Dresden. More than likely it was "punishment" in the eyes of the commanders (Harris believed in civilian casualties as a part of the war effort - it's the cost to Germany to support wounded and killed civilians).

    1) It was not significant in supporting the Eastern Front.
    2) It had a high number of refugees coming from the east.
    3) It had no significant military targets

    There can be little to no justification for Dresden, and little to no justification is ever given in the official records. It just happened.

  223. President Bush's friends by jgardn · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yes, the military censored the executions and brutal treatment the Japanese gave President's Bush's friends after they crashed and were captured. They did this for a number of reasons. One of the reasons was simple. The things the Japanese did were unimaginable to the American public; should the public have discovered at the time, the sentiment towards the Japanese may have turned from conquering them to annihilating them.

    You think the Vietnam war was tough? Go back and find out what really happened in the Japanese conflict. Vietnam vets have no right to complain. When the Pacific Theater vets came back, they didn't complain. My own grandfather has never talked about what happened in Guadalcanal as a Marine foot soldier. All we know is that he was one of the handful of surviving troops. Most of his buddies never set foot on the sand.

    One story I heard from a Pacific War vet told how he felt so bad for shooting a Japanese in the back as he was preparing to throw a grenade on his friends. He thought shooting someone in the back was unconscionable! He thought maybe he should've whistled or yelled to get him to turn around. All the while, he knew that his friends would go to get water and the Japanese snipers would wait until their backs are turned to shoot them. He knew the torture that his captured friends would endure. He knew that the Japanese would wrap themselves with bamboo so they could stay alive for a few moments longer after getting shot. I mean, the Japanese were far, far, worse than anything you or I could imagine.

    And as you know, none of this was let out to the public. No one knew what was really happening there except the military. All these parents would get messages saying their children died honorably in battle defending their troops, when in truth, they were brutally beaten, tortured, and executed, usually by beheading. That's what was censored.

    --
    The radical sect of Islam would either see you dead or "reverted" to Islam.
    1. Re:President Bush's friends by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      This _really_ needs to be modded up.

      Don't get me wrong, I hold no animosity towards Japan or Japanese people today. However...

      If you believe the sentiments of most of the people in this thread, you'd have to believe that the US attacked innocent little Japan out of the blue and then bombed the shit out of them. Talk about revisionist history!

      People NEED to remember history here. Not revise it to fit your current moral standard. I am FUCKING SICK AND TIRED of people condemning the states for ending the war with Japan.

      Personally, I'm glad we won that war. Although, sometimes I wonder if the world would be better off now if we had lost.

      Why is it that everyone convenienty forgets that Japan started the war with the US entirely unprovoked? Why is it that we ignore the Japanese culture that bread some of the fiercest, most loyal fighters in history? Where the hell do you think terrorists got the idea for suicide bombing? The Japanese INVENTED that shit, using it against US.

      It's people like this that insist on changing the past rather than learning from the past that will ensure we repeat the tragedies of the past.

      --
      No Comment.
    2. Re:President Bush's friends by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      You think the Vietnam war was tough? Go back and find out what really happened in the Japanese conflict. Vietnam vets have no right to complain. When the Pacific Theater vets came back, they didn't complain. My own grandfather has never talked about what happened in Guadalcanal as a Marine foot soldier. All we know is that he was one of the handful of surviving troops. Most of his buddies never set foot on the sand.

      My maternal grandfather was in the USMC in the pacific theater and absolutely refused to talk about. My paternal grandfather was in the Wehrmacht at Stalingrad, and I only ever got him to talking about it a couple times, after telling him about some of the stuff I saw in Desert Storm. The shit he described sure put my experience in perspective for me. I was pretty wigged out for a while when I came back, but listening to his stories made mine sound like a day at the circus. To top it all off, he only got out alive because he secretly took megadoses of beta carotene and memorized the symptoms of liver failure from a medical textbook he stole, thereby securing a slot on one of the last planes out before they started just leaving the sick and wounded there to die.

      War up close is universally unpleasant, but some of those WW2 guys saw some shit that'd mess anyone up.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    3. Re:President Bush's friends by sumbry · · Score: 2, Informative

      Japan did not start the war "entirely unprovoked." The US had an embargo in place against Japan that stopped some 90 percent of incoming oil shipments to Japan.

      We were knee-deep in the war, without actually being in the war (or so we tell ourselves). But we basically forced the hand of the Japanese. Our embargo crippled them. They would have been unable to keep fighting the war had they not attacked Pearl Harbor, cause they would have run out of oil.

      Our hands were not entirely clean at all before we jumped into WWII. Many more anecdotes like this detail why the Japanese actually believed that we expected and knew that they were going to attack and were actually surprised at the ease at which they bombed Pearl Harbor.

    4. Re:President Bush's friends by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      We were knee-deep in the war, without actually being in the war (or so we tell ourselves). But we basically forced the hand of the Japanese. Our embargo crippled them. They would have been unable to keep fighting the war had they not attacked Pearl Harbor, cause they would have run out of oil.

      Errr....how did attacking Pearl Harbor end the embargo? Economic sanctions are hardly a reasonable justification for attacking anyway. At best they allow one to say "we have nothing significant to lose if we attack". So if by "provoking" you mean "refused to aid their war effort", maybe...

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    5. Re:President Bush's friends by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      So in your mind any nation that has had an embargo or other economic sanction placed against them, they are in turn justified in using military force against the sanctioning country?

      Sure you don't want to re-think that one?

      That's a tactic that when used wisely can be used instead of force. It is relied on heavily in our current world. Yes, it has been abused at times as well but I still prefer it over force.

      --
      No Comment.
    6. Re:President Bush's friends by Maniakes · · Score: 1

      Japan dealt with the oil embargo by invading the Dutch East Indies, which had large oil fields. Japan didn't do this before Pearl Harbor because they feared American intervention if they invaded European colonies, and their supply lines to the Dutch East Indies would have been extremely vulnerable to an American counterattack out of the Philipines.

      So Japan decided to preempt the expected American intervention by first destroying most of the American Pacific Fleet in Pearl Harbor, then invading the Philipines. This then left their supply lines secure for an invasion of the Dutch East Indies.

      In hindsight, it is questionable whether the US really would have intervened on behalf of a Dutch colony when we didn't intervene on behalf of the Netherlands themselves when they were invaded by Germany in 1940. But the Japanese considered US intervention likely enough that they were unwilling to risk it.

      --
      A legparnasom tele van angolnaval.
    7. Re:President Bush's friends by sumbry · · Score: 1

      Are you serious? The entire reason the US wants democracy in the middle east is to stabilize trade and oil prices!!!

      If an Oil Embargo was launched against the US and 90 percent of our incoming oil dried up overnight, would we not respond by sending 2 or 3 carrier battle groups and all the military force we could muster?

      Answer your own damn question - would we be justified in that scenario?!? Go check-up on your history before you answer.... sheesh.

    8. Re:President Bush's friends by dvdeug · · Score: 1

      Most of his buddies never set foot on the sand. [...] All the while, he knew that his friends would go to get water and the Japanese snipers would wait until their backs are turned to shoot them. [...] He knew that the Japanese would wrap themselves with bamboo so they could stay alive for a few moments longer after getting shot.

      It's war. Those are entirely reasonable and fair tactics.

      executed, usually by beheading.

      So they got a quick and merciful death?

    9. Re:President Bush's friends by sumbry · · Score: 1

      Hardly a justifiable reason? Are you kidding? Your country is in the middle of a war. Oil shipments have ground to an almost halt. You have no way to move troops, you have no way to move ammo. You have no way to move metals. You have no way to move any type of supplies anywhere.

      Production for every war related and unrelated material grounds to a stop as the supply-chain is halted because no one can move anything cause there is no damn oil to do it with. Shipments for every concievable thing stop as well.

      Do you:

      A) Realize that the gig is up and surrender to the allies (at this point minus the US)

      OR

      B) Continue using military force, which you already have deployed around half the globe, to get the oil flowing again?

      Use your brain. By blocking Japans oil shipments we basically ensured our entrance into the war. It was only a matter of time, that's why the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and why they were actually surprised as the ease at which they did it.

      If oil shipments to the US suddenly dried up one day, what do you think we'd do?

    10. Re:President Bush's friends by NecrosisLabs · · Score: 1

      And the reason for the embargo? Japan's invasion of China. That embargo was not a moral causus belli.

    11. Re:President Bush's friends by sumbry · · Score: 1

      Go back and read the parent. I never said it was. I was however responding to the original posters belief that Japan attacked us out of the blue.

      They didn't.

      We tried to be involved in the war without actually getting our hands dirty. It didn't work.

    12. Re:President Bush's friends by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      B) Continue using military force, which you already have deployed around half the globe, to get the oil flowing again?

      Like I said to the other poster, please explain how attacking Pearl Harbor got the oil flowing again. The closest argument he could come up with was that it allowed them to take over the Dutch East Indies, but even he conceded that this would not necessarily have resulted in the US declaring war on Japan. And even if it was a definite, foregone conclusion, it still in no way justifies a sneak attack. There's a huge difference between an embargo providing the impetus for an act of war, and a true provocation.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    13. Re:President Bush's friends by sumbry · · Score: 1

      And that's where we differ. You seem to believe than stopping oil shipments to a country isn't an act of war. I believe differently.

      If that happened to the U.S. today, while we wouldn't outright declare war, we would respond with a whole lot of gunpower almost immediately. We'd shoot first and ask questions later. Hell we've launched Carrier Battle Groups to the Middle East on mere rumors... We wouldn't wait half the time the Japenese did before attacking Pearl Harbor.

      The problem is that the Japenese and U.S. viewed the U.S.'s entrance to the war a bit differently. The Japenese knew it was inevitable, and in the same way that Bush now wants to use pre-emptive war, so did they. They attacked us first and inflicted (or tried anyways) as much damage as possible before the inevitable outright decleration that they believe was unavoidable if they were going to have a shot at winning the war.

      And as long as that embargo was in place - they didn't have a chance in hell. That's because the embargo was working!

    14. Re:President Bush's friends by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      Um, sure, that might be the US's response in that situation.

      That wouldn't make it right.
      That certainly wouldn't mean I'd agree with it.

      And to answer your question, no, the US would most certainly NOT be justified in that scenario.

      You seem to have the impression that just because the US does something, that it is OK and justified. Hardly the case.

      --
      No Comment.
    15. Re:President Bush's friends by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1
      And that's where we differ. You seem to believe than stopping oil shipments to a country isn't an act of war. I believe differently.

      War is armed physical conflict between two large groups of people. Calling a trade embargo an act of war is a pretty big stretch, particularly since there are and have been scores of trade embargoes of the years that did not result in war. Most notably the 1973-74 Arab Oil Embargo, wherein the arab OPEC nations stopped selling oil to supporters of Israel (e.g. the US) in retaliation for the Yom Kippur war. So OK, you're welcome to your idiosyncratic view of embargo as an overt act of war, but the historical reality just doesn't agree with you.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
  224. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by VAXcat · · Score: 3, Funny

    Or it could have been hormesis - turns out, the correct, small dose of radiation can actually be benificial

    --
    There is no God, and Dirac is his prophet.
  225. Re:hypocrisy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Germans used Chlorine gas on a large scale in WW1. It was not used in WW2 afaik because the use of gas in war was already banned by convention and it seems we got through WW2 without it. Sad that today in Iraq (Falluja)the Americans think they are above the Geneva convention and have (if reports are to believed) resumed using both gas and napalm recently.

  226. to hell with you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    starvation "often [kills] 10s of millions"

    you're an idiot.

    and in fact a city full of dead burning civilians isn't a "drop in the bucket" compared to the misery of "the" war. actually it's an atrocity. and you've already sold your soul by quantifying atrocities and justifying one with another-- there comes a point where the scale of death is so large that any sentient human should recognize it as the cyclic perpetuation of destruction and hell. (i don't think you meet that qualification i just laid out, since you said: "Just because something pulls at our heart strings does not make it a a significant effect", which is a very clutzy juggling act for trying to justify to your confused heart and mind the murder of endless groups of hundreds of thousands of people.) what you said is the equivalent of murdering the wife and kids of a single evil father who dominates them within his home, just to make him submit or surrender. (which is actually the schematic paradigm of most wars.)

    and in fact any idiot knows it's an atrocity-- except you-- which is why americans can't even look in the mirror or stare it in the face. for example a release of godzilla here in the states (american release) had scenes of people burning in buildings censored out. --interesting tidbit, considering all the so-called justification of atomic holocaust?

    yes you might say: "it was justified but it was still nasty". but of course that's the problem, isn't it, not the resolution.

    it's pretty sad to see all this kind of talk on the board. if we had just recently come out of the destruction of a world war somehow i think the value of pacifism wouldn't be lost on so many people.

    and i shouldn't have to mention this: BUT AMERICA DIDN'T GIVE A FLYING FUCK ABOUT THE PLIGHT OF THE JEWS OR ANYBODY ELSE UNDER NAZIISM, WHICH IS WHY SO MANY JEWISH FLIGHTERS WERE TURNED AWAY. you see, things changed when this thing happened at pearl harbor. so you should probably very carefully re-evaluate your notions of benevolence for america or any nation that gets chalked up with fighting a heroic necessary war strictly for the purpose of stopping evil in a foreign land, solely out of beneficience and concern for the suffering of faraway humans.

    maybe you haven't noticed this, but we're not talking about the loss of "5 in location Y". you are clueless. and actually on some level i sincerely hope that you NEVER get a clue about it, and yet at the same time i do-- i'm sure what i'm saying is lost on you.

    1. Re:to hell with you by Illserve · · Score: 1

      And you need to learn how to write with less spittle and venom if you want anyone to care about what you have to say.

      You just wasted 10 minutes.

  227. Yeah but that's not the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody said he wouldn't own the copyrights. What they said was that they wouldn't be copyright 2005. In other words the son is saying he wants the countdown to start in 2005, the date of publication, which is not how it is supposed to work.

    1. Re:Yeah but that's not the problem by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      IIRC, Copyright mark is the date of first publication, otherwise it would be listed as "unpublished work Copr. 1946". If first publication is on 2005, then the copyright is then and lasts for another 90 years from that date or 120 years from creation, whichever is shorter. Since the 120 years would be shorter, although the copyright is 2005, the end of the copyright happens 120 years from creation, 2066.

    2. Re:Yeah but that's not the problem by waynemcdougall · · Score: 1
      IIRC, Copyright mark is the date of first publication,

      I don't know where you get that idea from. Copyright applies from when a work is created. I think the following applies: US Copyright

      Works Originally Created before January 1, 1978, But Not Published or Registered by That Date

      These works have been automatically brought under the statute and are now given federal copyright protection. The duration of copyright in these works will generally be computed in the same way as for works created on or after January 1, 1978: the life-plus-70 or 95/120-year terms will apply to them as well. The law provides that in no case will the term of copyright for works in this category expire before December 31, 2002, and for works published on or before December 31, 2002, the term of copyright will not expire before December 31, 2047.

      Interesting questions: one could argue the material was written in Japan by a US Citizen. Which country's copyright laws apply? I'd say Japan's as in 1945.

      Does providing the work to a censor count as publication? It's debatable, but I'd say yes: The legislative reports define "to the public" as distribution to persons under no explicit or implicit restrictions with respect to disclosure of the contents. Of coruse this is probably moot because it was created before 1976.

      Regardless I object to someone slapping on the current year as the date of copyright. Maybe that is supposed to be a reference to the book the son is publishing, but the original work (and that's all the website is quoting) should become public domain much earlier than what the son is claiming. Not to mention applying his own name (and hence his own lifespan).

      I object to the sloppiness that can curtail the growth of the public domain. Of course copyright is now so long that for all practical purposes it makes almost no difference in the here and now.

      Unless you can successfully argue that the article was legally "published" by distribution to the censors in which case it would NOW be in the public domain.

      --
      Recycle PCs and build a wireless community network www.hillsborough.org.nz
  228. some day, some one is going to .... by Sjobeck · · Score: 0

    stop acting like a defective human being and stop the circle of violence & hatred & fear & greed & set a new standard for how to behave.

    This person would be, for instance, the exact opposite of "W".

  229. and that was just the beginning! =( by v3xt0r · · Score: 0

    The world hasn't even begun to prepare for the worst that is yet to come... =(

    --
    the only permanence in existence, is the impermanence of existence.
  230. Minor point by geekoid · · Score: 1

    "...condoned what they had done and dreamed up ways to kill more people faster and easier ..."

    actualy, we have created weapons that allows us to accomplish a mission and kill fewer people.

    Right now the military is R&Ding ways to accomplish a mission with taking zero lives.

    While war is horrible, it is nice to know that fewer people are dying. Each one tragic, sure, but stil a lot less.

    " Let's not pretend that some ways of making war are better than others."

    How many people would have died in IRAQ if we used 1940's methods?

    because we are developing ways to kill few people, I would say that there are better ways of making War.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  231. Re:hypocrisy? by m50d · · Score: 1

    The reason people don't accept any justification is because they believe some things are wrong regardless of what caused them. If you believe eating babies is wrong, you won't accept any justification someone tries to give you for having eaten babies. You'll just say they did wrong.

    --
    I am trolling
  232. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by theendlessnow · · Score: 1
    Did he die? Or is this just an elaborate pro-nuke coverup?? Maybe it was just his carbon-copy that survived?

    I actually know the truth... but I have only confided in Bob Dole.

  233. Re:hypocrisy? by m50d · · Score: 1

    I don't know enough about Omaha Beach to comment, but WWI was very much about looking out for their own. US didn't care until a) a US passenger ship got sunk b) the Zimmerman telegram showed Hitler had plans to attack the US c) it was pretty clear the Brits and French were winning. That looks very much like a nation that cares only about itself. South Korea was also about their own interest. The invasion had a fair bit of popular support, and I can't imagine the US would think fighting back up the country (everything except the very tip had been invaded by the time the US got involved) would be the best thing for its people. No, they intervened to show the USSR that they wouldn't accept the spread of communism, and that they were in control of the world. Sounds like an overgrown bully to me.

    --
    I am trolling
  234. [Re:Nuclear myths] Details! by LiberalApplication · · Score: 1
    I've read reports from The Business about what's likely to happen in the aftermath of a nuclear war, and let me tell you, it churned my stomach. The things I was expecting to happen never happened. The things I never imagined could happen would happen, and would have consequences far beyond what I could foresee.

    Okay, you can't say that to a bunch of science-geeks and not actually give us any details! Please share some of the tastybits!

  235. Nagasaki as Manhatten? by iabervon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Is it just me, or might MacAuthur have been disturbed by the section which discribed Nagasaki geography in terms of Manhatten, and been ill-disposed to the rest of the article because of it? That's just a bit too much identification with the enemy for comfort, plus they probably didn't want to give the citizens of NYC particular nightmares. And, even though the article reports that most of the stuff destroyed was factories of military contractors, it associates it with a residental and business area.

  236. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by lgw · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The bomb at Nagasaki was dropped on the wrong target. Not the wrong city, mind you, but the intended target was the center of town, and the actual target was an industrial facility on the edge of town. Visibility was quite low, and there were enough large buildings to fool the aircrew (our at least convince them that, whatever it was, it was a valuable target).

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  237. Because long term dangers were not well known then by wsanders · · Score: 1

    At the time the dangers of low-level exposure were not well known. Hence all the sicknesses in people living downstream of US aboveground tests, for example. And radium watches (*) were still being made then. And ambulance-chasing trial-lawyering had not become a major industry.

    (*) Not dangerous for wearers, but certainly hazardous for manufacturers and as waste. See: http://www.roger-russell.com/jeffers/radiumdials.h tm

    --
    Give a man a fish and you have fed him for today. Teach a man to fish, and he'll say "WHERE'S MY FISH, YOU IDIOT?"
  238. Re:hypocrisy? by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Fortunaty, there hasn't been a need to use chem/bio weapons to win a war.

    To deny that they could be used in that matter is foolish.

    Nukes have been used to prevent war. MAD - Mutually Assured Destruction. Have a way to deliver a payload that will kill the politicains who send those men and women to war is one sure way to prevent war.

    Without Nukes, I beleive threre would have been a WWIII in europe with the US and Russia.

    I could be wrong, but Based on thr world event of that era, I am mostly likly to be correct.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  239. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hiroshima you may have a point... but please explain Nagasaki. Kthx!

  240. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Felgerkarb · · Score: 1

    As a short aside, there is a lot unknown about long term radiation effects, particularly low dose.

    There are three basic models about what happens at low doses. The first is that the relationship between exposure and damage is linear, so 0 dose equals no damge, but a little causes a little damage and a lot causes a lot of damage. This is the most conservative model and is adovcated as the one to use by radiation safety experts.

    The second is that the relationship is linear above a threshold. So 0 dose equals no damage, a little also equals no damage, and above a certain point, the relationship is linear. The question is, what is the threshold, and is it the same for everyone.

    The third model, and this is the most interesting one to me, is that the relationship is 'U' shaped. That is 0 dose equals no damage, a lot of dose equals a lot of damage, but a little dose is actually less damaging than either. In other words, actually beneficial somehow! There is some evidence for it, but the mechanism is poorly understood. There is anecdotal evidence that those on the outskirts of the Japanese atomic blasts lived longer than those closer or farther from the blast radius.

    The problem, of course, is testing each of these models, controlling for exposure over the long term. Most people working with radiation use the ALARP (as low as reasonably possible) priniciple to guide their exposure...

    just an fyi

  241. I believe that's called by dustmite · · Score: 1

    a straw-man argument. Try again.

    1. Re:I believe that's called by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      A straw man is fabricating an opposing view and shooting holes in it as support for your own. Both of the arguments presented are valid and often argued sides of the point. So, your straw-man accusation is a non sequitur.

  242. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
    He was there about a month after the bomb (according to the byline). Especially if it had rained before then, the fallout should mostly have been washed away to the sea.

    I'd guess the reason it was censored is not so much the effects on the Japanese, for which few would have had sympathy then, but that he mentions the POW camps sited close to munitions factories and bombed regardless.

  243. I disagree by Cigarra · · Score: 1

    There is no maturing of the species. There is only the maturing of a person.

    I strongly disagree... the Society as a system is much more than the sum of its parts, and certainly evolves in time.

    --
    I don't have a sig.
  244. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by SmellMyTeenSpirit · · Score: 1

    The whole debate of atom bomb v. land invasion is inherently flawed. In no, I repeat, in NO WAY were those our only two options. There was a strong voice in the Navy urging that we simply blockade Japan, saving more lives than either of the options you present. Then there is the whole world of diplomacy and surrender, which, I assure you, was in fact an option. The United States was very clear on insisting on unconditional surrender, and many parts of the Japanese power structure were ready for this, given the condition that the emperor stay in power. We of course did not accept this, nuked them, accepted their unconditional surrender, and then allowed the emperor to stay anyway.

    The idea of this situation being binary is literally a lie.

    --
    "Cornflakes are not the innocent critters they seem"- Sterling Morrison
  245. The REAL effects of the Atom bomb... by d474 · · Score: 1

    One word: Godzilla

    The amount of people killed by this "effect" of radiation are truly countless. It's a God damned shame.

    --
    Authority questions you. Return the favor.
  246. Re:hypocrisy? by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1
    Hiroshima wasn't that much of military target, otherwise why was it untouched in the regular bombings

    It was a military target. Just not one of the highest priority ones. As the reporter in the artcile noted, several factories producing military equipment in the town HAD been bombed before, although others had not.

    Toward the end of the war when they thought they might have nukes to use, Hiroshima was specifically left off the list of targets to hit,even though it had quite a few factories producing weapons the Japanese were using against us. Why? So that they would have a fairly 'clean' target to hit to show Japan what the bomb was capable of. If you hit a target that had already been heavily bombed, it would be hard to decern what was destroyed by the big bomb, vs previous smaller ones. The nuke may have seemed less impressive, and less likely to influence the Japanese to surrender.

  247. revenge by Britz · · Score: 1

    Many people state that Japan was rightly punished for their hprrible crimes in China.

    The truth is that many bombings were/are not only immoral, but also senseless. Why punish a small Japanese child living in Nagasaki for somthing that a Japanese soldier did in China? This is called collective punishment. Want to talk about 1-2 million Vietnamese killed in the 60s and 70s? (Again many through carpet bombing with B52s just to pressure the North into some agreement in Paris in order to be able to withdraw).

    Anyways, droppping one atomic bomb to demonstrate its power? OK! But two? On cities?

    The fire bombings over Germany needed to be over the inner cities, because those had old houses that burned better. So the USAF and the RAF mainly bombed old inner cities in Germany instead of factories, because at that time aiming was really hard. It not only destroyed a large part of the Germany cultural heritage and a lot of German civillians. The flying personel of the bombers didn't have a very good chance of returning.

    I am not shitting You. Factories were not the target! The whole thing with the bombing went very, very wrong.

    And I am still very glad that the Americans and the British fought the Nazis (I am German) and freed this continent. This was very important. But the fact remains that the bombings did almost nothing to help that cause. The ground troops did it.

    Even if a war is justified, it is not justified to do anything You like.

  248. The Fog of War by SmellMyTeenSpirit · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "Why was it necessary to drop the nuclear bomb if LeMay was burning up Japan? And he went on from Tokyo to firebomb other cities. 58% of Yokohama. Yokohama is roughly the size of Cleveland. 58% of Cleveland destroyed. Tokyo is roughly the size of New York. 51% percent of New York destroyed. 99% of the equivalent of Chattanooga, which was Toyama. 40% of the equivalent of Los Angeles, which was Nagoya. This was all done before the dropping of the nuclear bomb, which by the way was dropped by LeMay's command. Proportionality should be a guideline in war. Killing 50% to 90% of the people of 67 Japanese cities and then bombing them with two nuclear bombs is not proportional, in the minds of some people, to the objectives we were trying to achieve."

    "LeMay said, 'If we'd lost the war, we'd all have been prosecuted as war criminals.' And I think he's right. He, and I'd say I, were behaving as war criminals. LeMay recognized that what he was doing would be thought immoral if his side had lost. But what makes it immoral if you lose and not immoral if you win?"

    These quotes come from Robert McNamara in Errol Morris' film The Fog of War. (More quotes can be found on the wikiquote page: http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/The_Fog_of_War)

    I completely agree with you, but I would follow up your point with McNamara's comment about proportionality. McNamara became lost in his own ability to improve our firebombing campaigns, and, in doing so, perhaps fascilitated the deaths of tens of thousands of people that could otherwise have lived, all without changing the ultimate result of the campaign.

    --
    "Cornflakes are not the innocent critters they seem"- Sterling Morrison
  249. Technology may allow pacifism to thrive by GreenSwirl · · Score: 1

    If you have an indefeatable defensive technology -- say a big force field around your border, then you can go ahead and be a pacifist. At the rate technology is advancing, I would be surprised if a similarly effective solution does not come to pass in our lifetimes.

    This situation allows you to separate some sticky issues. Now how do you justify invading Iraq? They can't physically hurt you. It must be because you let yourself become addicted to their oil. (Actually, the physical threat Iraq posed has always been non-existent, so yup, we're there for the oil.)

    What if everybody had personal defense shields, making guns obsolete? It would be the opposite of the Old West, where everyone carried guns and asshole behaviour could easily get you perforated. How would our behaviour change? Would we revel in the peace we had afforded, or would we all become obnoxious jerks who act without fear of reprisal?

    1. Re:Technology may allow pacifism to thrive by EvilSporkMan · · Score: 1

      What if everybody had personal defense shields, making guns obsolete? It would be the opposite of the Old West, where everyone carried guns and asshole behaviour could easily get you perforated.
      No, it'd be Dune.

      --
      -insert a witty something-
  250. Reason: shorten war and save lives by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Sense that it may make, I still wouldn't want to be the guy to decide to drop an atom bomb within a mile of an allied pow camp."

    It's really easier than you think - it's all about dilution of responsibility.


    It is not that simple and it is also naive to apply Vietnam analogies to World War II. You do not seem to understand the admittedly evil mathematics of war. To spare lives at an enemy war materials factory may end up getting more of your soldiers killed. It may save more lives to end production at that factory and to deprive the enemy front line troops of the materials they need to offer effective resistance. In that context it is still a tough decision but a logical one. In short, the best strategy is often get the damn war over as fast as possible.

  251. Switzerland by homer_ca · · Score: 1

    Switzerland is also a mountainous country with formidable defences, and they maintained those defences through the Cold War. Some history here and here. Still, what you said is true. A pacifist country like post-WWII Japan needs a strong ally for its defence.

    1. Re:Switzerland by DarkSarin · · Score: 1

      Like I stated--I have little knowledge of the history of Switzerland, just that only a stark raving lunatic would attack them.

      --
      "We don't know what we are doing, but we are doing it very carefully,..." Wherry, R.J. Personnel Psychology (1995)
  252. Re:hypocrisy? by Moridineas · · Score: 1

    I do agree with this. I do not think nuclear weapons should ever be used. Then again, I don't see a potential future that is anything like WW2.

    It was a horrible thing. But then, so is most of war.. imho, the key is to avoid war, rather than trying to make rules of war.

  253. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course he lived longer than you or me... are YOU 95 yet?

  254. Myth: "just following orders" by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ... to the pilot who is "just following orders" ...

    That is a myth. Only sociopaths think that way and the military is pretty good at weeding those out. More likely is that at the time of weapon release the pilot honestly believed that there was a valuable military target below. Only later do they find out the intel was completely wrong. Do you think President Clinton knowingly had an aspirin factory or the Chinese embassy bombed?

    "Just following orders" was a last ditch defense strategy used by war criminals at trial. There were SS soldiers who after arriving at the concentration camps refused to be a part of the murder of women and children. They were transfered to front line combat units and were not court martialed. To court martial them would have required publication of the order that were disobeyed. No one wanted that on paper.

  255. Myth: "you would feel 100% innocent" by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In your own conscience, you would feel 100% innocent.

    Complete nonsense. Have you spoken to many combat vets? Especially those from World War II where everyone believed their caused was just and moral. The World War II vets that I knew felt guilty about killing the armed men who were shooting at them. The only ones they wanted to kill were the "sons-of-bitches who started the damn war". They guys they had to shoot in order to protect themselves and their friends were just "unlucky bastards" like themselves.

    Hell, a World War II vet I knew felt guilty just feeding anti-aircraft shells into a hopper and this was while his ship was under attack.

    More recently I had a college buddy who served in the first Gulf War and was involved in target selection. They prayed hard that their intel was correct and that their interpretation of photos and other data was correct. They felt responsible for whatever happened, the pilot pulled the trigger but they aimed the gun.

  256. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Herkules · · Score: 1

    Logic like that makes the 9/11 attack OK!

    "Civilians who" pay for "the weapons of war are not civilians."

    Do you see now why you are SO wrong ?

    --
    CIA Factbook 2002 (US):"Since 1975, practically all the gains in household income have gone to the top 20% of households
  257. Consider yourself lucky you can be critical by Frangible · · Score: 1

    Everyone opposed to the dropping of the A-Bombs should consider themselves to be extremely fortunate they are allowed to have the freedom to express their opinions and are not killed for showing dissent. Under a world led by Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan, you would have no such freedom. Just ask the millions of Chinese the Japanese murdered during the time, which Japan has never apologized for or acknowledged (indeed, it is being left out of history books). The only way to meet violent fascists is with force. Japan got what it deserved, and today has evolved to a better nation because of it. I do not bear any ill will towards the Japanese of today, but the violent fascist aggressors who started WW2 got what they deserved. And you should be happy that we won, and were able to do so decisively and strategically through nuclear weapons. Funny, the power to end the war in our favor, save American lives and keep the world the free, and people still whine. Thank the power of the atom. Don't whine about it.

    1. Re:Consider yourself lucky you can be critical by jnelson4765 · · Score: 1

      Um, the Japanese didn't have a real fascist movement in the same way as Germany and Italy did - the people in the Japanese government that planned the Imperial expansion were good old-fashioned colonialists.

      Concider that England and Spain did equally foul things in their colonial conquests.

      Oh, and making the citizens of a country responsible for that country's actions is abhorrent. To re-phrase this, should we recognize 9-11 as being justified because of our mistreatment of the Veitnamese? Should I hold everyone in any country responsible for the decisions of a small elite?

      BTW - no country could ever hold American soil for long. Don't doubt that. All this talk of "What if Hitler had won?" is utter bullshit - the Axis armies combined couldn't have held New England, much less the entire country. We have a long and proud tradition of being a heavily armed and cranky populace - not the best group of people to try and subdue.

      Also, the war was over before we dropped the bombs. The bombs were dropped to show the world the dawning of a new age - the age of Pax Americana.

      --
      Why can't I mod "-1 Idiot"?
  258. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Rakarra · · Score: 1

    Sure, I could go on a guided tour there, but I sure as hell wouldn't drink any of the water.

  259. Truman cooked the intelligence.... by scrout · · Score: 0

    Estimated 1 million losses if we invaded Japanese mainland...
    Japanese would fight til death, commit harakare..
    Russia needed to know we had bomb(s)....

    All just justification to blow up stuff and look like a big man.
    Just like schrub today.

    I am sure the dems roasted Truman back then...

  260. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you get UV radiation from working on a plane, I think you're working on the wrong side of it...

  261. Missing the Point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    In 1945, there were 3 possibilities and associated sets of consequences.

    Case I: Dropping the atomic bomb.
    Consequences: (1) War ends within about a month. (2) Casualties are shifted from the American soldiers to the Japanese civilian population. (3) The suffering of the peoples in Southeast Asia ends within about a month.

    Case II: Not dropping the atomic bomb and invading the home islands of Japan.
    Consequences: (1) War ends within about 6 months. (2) Casualties are shared among the American soldiers, the Japanese soldiers, and the Japanese civilian population. (3) The suffering of the peoples in Southeast Asia persists for another 6 months.

    Case III: Not dropping the atomic bomb and blockading the home islands of Japan to starve its people to death.
    Consequences: (1) War ends within about 1 year. (2) Casualties are shifted from the American soldiers to the Japanese civilian population. (3) The suffering of the peoples in Southeast Asia persists for another year.

    The "suffering" dilemma faced by the American government in 1945 is consequences #2/#3 under cases I, II, and III. The opponents of case I omit consequence #3, which includes rapes, murders, and biological experiments.

    The overall suffering for humanity, where all peoples are considered to have the same worth, is minimized in case I. It is the right decision.

  262. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    During the bomb raids on Germanys industrial areas a lot of prisoners were killed, as the nazi regime made extensive use of forced labour. While German civilians and soldiers had at least some kind of shelter, the prisoners were kept above ground where they were sure to die. It is quite probable that the allied commanders knew this fact, but destroying the German industry was important enough to sacrifice these people.

  263. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not that I don't think that radon is bad (I run a radon inspection business), it's just that I think that the US has way too high of standards when it comes to "acceptable" levels.


    ALARA.

  264. Yes I'm sure assclown! by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Do you understand the difference between a camp holding irregular fighters (who are NOT covered by the geneva convention) and camps dedicated to genocide?

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  265. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Changes water properties? Did you read what you wrote? The radon is not chemically reacting (being inert) with the water and neither is it causing a nuclear reaction.

  266. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

    If you can't get your government's attention through the vote, you're much more likely to get their attention by failing to pay taxes, than by burning your garden.

  267. Moron Reporters by sycodon · · Score: 1

    Why am I not surprised that some dumbass reporter ignored the rules, went to into a restricted area, then reported what we now know to be incorrect information?

    Sure maybe people were not turned into shriviling piles of flesh from the residual raditation, but given what little was known about nuclear weapons, it was stupid thing to do.

    It reminds me of an idiot who ignores the sign warning of thin ice, walks out onto the lake, and jumps up and down proclaiming..."see the ice isn't thin!"

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  268. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Lord+Prox · · Score: 3, Interesting

    it's just that I think that the US has way too high of standards when it comes to "acceptable" levels.

    Granite and marble are both naturally radioactive, as are bricks used for building materials. The US capitol building has a natural background radation of 30 microrems per hour. which is higher than EPA limits for "safe" LINK

    Strom Thurman and Congress brain damage jokes may now start.

  269. Re:hypocrisy? by 3x3eyes · · Score: 1

    Or when the US came to the aid of South Korea when it was invaded by Communist armies?

    And on the same coin, when the Chinese "volunteer army" came to the aid of the North Korean. The Chinese had issued warnings that they would react if the US encroached on the frontier at the Yalu River. Indeed fresh from memories of Hiroshima, MacArthur mentioned that atomic weapons might be used in the Korean War sounds like bullying to me.

  270. Re:hypocrisy? by Duhavid · · Score: 1

    The Zimmerman telegram showed that Kaiser Wilhelm was trying to entice Mexico into the war. Hitler was a corporal about that time, and had no real input into policy.

    And why does everything have to be 100% one thing? There were elements of self and other interest, in my opinion, in intervening in South Korea.

    --
    emt 377 emt 4
  271. CNN article twists the facts? by sycodon · · Score: 1

    From the CNN story:

    In a September 8, 1945 dispatch, Weller walked through the city -- a "wasteland of war" -- and found evidence to back the talk of radiation fallout from American radio reports.

    Though thousands of burn victims had died within a week after the attack, doctors were stumped by "this mysterious 'disease X"' which sickened and was killing many Japanese as well as allied soldiers freed from prison camps a month later.

    From the actual article:
    As one whittles away at embroidery and checks the stories, the impression grows that the atomic bomb is a tremendous, but not a peculiar weapon. The Japanese have heard the legend from American radio that the ground preserves deadly irradiation. But hours of walking amid the ruins where the odor of decaying flesh is still strong produces in this writer nausea, but no sign or burns or debilitation.

    Nobody here in Nagasaki has yet been able to show that the bomb is different than any other, except in a broader extent flash and a more powerful knock-out.

    ----------

    What's up with this?

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  272. Re:hypocrisy? by scotty777 · · Score: 1
    General Patton once said something like 'no dumb bastard ever won a war by dying for his country--the trick is to make the other dumb bastard die for his.'

    I think that the Japanese could have read this quote in American history books:

    "War is the remedy that our enemies have chosen, and I say let us give them all they want." - General William T. Sherman

    Understanding that one American maxim could have saved them a lot of grief.

    As a matter of fact, Imperial Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, who designed the attack on Pearl Harbor, studied at Harvard University opposed going to war with the US. He also served in Washington, DC as Japanese Naval Attaché to the United States in 1925-28. His statement, when he was told of the attack on Pearl Harbor was "We have awakened a sleeping giant and have instilled in him a terrible resolve."

  273. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by DeadChobi · · Score: 1

    Vote.

    --
    SRSLY.
  274. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Guppy06 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "There was a strong voice in the Navy urging that we simply blockade Japan, saving more lives than either of the options you present."

    Not quite. What they were actually saying was "give the blockade more time." It had been up for months prior, slowly starving the islands, but there was no sign of wavering in the Japanese military command. Instead, they send the Yamato off with no fuel (thanks to the blockade), with the intent of beaching her on Okinawa and acting as static guns.

    "Then there is the whole world of diplomacy and surrender, which, I assure you, was in fact an option."

    Diplomacy? With the same country that had negotiators pretending to negotiate a peaceful resolution to their invasion of China with the US while an attack fleet was steeming towards Pearl Harbor at the same time? "Fool me once, shame on you..."

    What conditions would they push for in that diplomacy? That the US abandon support for China? Hang on to some of the islands they grabbed in 1941?

    Yes, there were parts of the Japanese government looking for peace, but they had no power in their government. Those in power were waiting for the eventual invasion of the home islands and forcing the US into a pyrrhic victory in order to negotiate from more strength. And to that end they gave spears to children. They only surrendered when the atomic bombs demonstrated there was no hope to make the victory costly for the US beyond the price tag of the bombs.

    "The United States was very clear on insisting on unconditional surrender, and many parts of the Japanese power structure were ready for this,"

    Yeah, the parts that had no power. These were some of the same voices that said going to war with the US was a bad idea back in 1941, but if anything they lost influence as Japan lost captured territories over the years (since it became easier to see us as filthy gaijin invaders).

    "and then allowed the emperor to stay anyway."

    Not in the way they wanted. The constitution MacArthur forced down their throats, the one that reduced the political influence of the emperor to that of a figurehead at best, is not one that they would have accepted voluntarily. One of the less etherial reasons parts of the Japanese government wanted to leave the emperor's office unchanged is that the military forces effectively ruling the country used their power in his name. They knew that, if their offices relied more on a popularly-elected legislature, they'd be replaced with people like the peaceniks they were busy supressing.

    John of England got to keep his throne, too. But there was still the little matter of the Magna Carta...

  275. Eisenhower was wrong by jmichaelg · · Score: 1
    In a Newsweek interview, Eisenhower again recalled the meeting with Stimson:

    "...the Japanese were ready to surrender and it wasn't necessary to hit them with that awful thing."

    Eisenhower was fighting in Europe against Germans who thought pretty much the way he did. The German Army didn't have a mindset that produced Kamikazes. Eisenhower didn't have any Okinawas or Iwo Jimas to fight so he didn't have any first hand experience with soldiers who knew they were fighting to the death. Just before the Japanese cabinet voted to surrender or continue in mid August, a Japanese general presented his plan for ultimate victory - he wanted the entire nation to become Kamikazes.

    Moreover, the Japanese government was divided into the civilian half which wanted to surrender and the military half which wouldn't consider it. The military had the guns and the procedural ability to checkmate any move on the civilian side. They had consistently wielded that ability to thwart the civilian's motions to surrender. Without a decision to surrender, the default was to continue fighting. The bomb convinced Hirohito that if he wanted his nation to survive, he had to go against his military and choose to give up.

    After the vote was taken to surrender and Hirohito had recorded his agreement, there was an aborted military coup. A coup was what the civilians had anticipated would happen if they ever succeeded in getting the government to surrender.

    When Hirohito announced his surrender, he said the bomb played a part in that decision:

    Moreover, the enemy has begun to employ a new and most cruel bomb, the power of which to do damage is indeed incalcuable, taking the toll of many innocent lives. Should we continue to fight, it would not only result in an ultimate collapse and obliteration of this Japanese nation, but also it would lead to the total extinction of human civilization. Such being the case, how are We to save the millions of Our subjects; or to atone Ourselves before the hallowed spirits of Our Imperial Ancestors? This is the reason why We have ordered the acceptance of the provisions of the Joint Declaration of the Powers.
    Eisenhower knew none of this when Stimson told him what was going to happen. Even still, if just for a moment you ignore the facts and you were right and the Japanese were indeed willing to surrender, did it matter? The perception was that they were not willing to surrender and we had to do whatever it took to get them to surrender.
  276. Re:hypocrisy? by Duhavid · · Score: 1

    Almost forgot. The Lusitania was a British cargo and passenger ship. The American involvment was that there were Americans aboard her. A note on that, the Germans had publicized that they considered the waters around England as an area in which British flagged vessels were "liable for destruction". This in return for the British blockade of Germany. There is also a claim that the Lusitania was carrying munitions, which, if true, made her a legitimate target of the German navy. Also, according to my reading, the Lusitania was built with the capacity of conversion to what is called and "Armed Merchant Cruiser". This would mean that it was possible for the Luistania to be carrying guns, and serving as part of the Royal Navy. How much the captain of the sub that sank the Lusitania knew about this, I dont know.

    --
    emt 377 emt 4
  277. How long does it take to surrender? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
    Even after Nagasaki the Jap war hawks stagged an abortive palace coup to stop the surrender.

    Even we accepted you premise that the second bomb was more a political statement aimed a russia it was still justifed.

    Anybody believe Stalin would not have gone into western europe without atomic weapons to restrain his ambitions? Anybody at all?

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  278. The Internment of 110,000 Japanese Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  279. If I were to drop the bomb... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... and I knew it would be for political reasons mainly, I would do this:

    I'd use first nuke to nuke peak of Mt. Fuji.
    Of course, devastation there would be remarkable sight, due to the bright white top that would be scarred and blackened, not to mention that the top would look blown away (it wouldn't be that much in reality).

    Then, I'll say if they don't surrender within 24 hours, I would drop another on unnamed huge city.

    Panic would do the rest.

  280. Re:hypocrisy? by Duhavid · · Score: 1

    if US can have WMD, why can't everyone else?


    America ( and Russia and China ) have a lot to loose, and a lot of reasons not to use Nuclear weapons. North Korea, Iraq under Saddam, Iran, and some others had much less ( percieved ) to lose, and more ( percieved ) reasons to want to use them.

    I would much rather no one had them, but that is not reality. Name a reasonable path to that end.

    I think that the current non-proliferation idea is about the best that we can manage.
    --
    emt 377 emt 4
  281. Bullshit by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
    The Japanese were not split in any meaninfull way.

    After TWO citys got nuked the emperor personally decided to surrender (after Nagasaki). When this happened a group of Japanese officers decided to stage a coup because they believed the emperor was wrong to surrender (guess they decided he was'nt a god after all).

    Get your history straight. They NEVER offered to disarm, they NEVER offered to take the emperors power away (he is only a figure head now).

    IIRC the last 60 years it the longest peacefull period in recorded Japanese history (which is full of civil wars etc). Boshedo needed to end as a system of government.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  282. Re:hypocrisy? by Duhavid · · Score: 1

    On pt #2.

    Yes, they sanctioned their use, but I dont think that that means that they did not ponder the issue, that it was a glad/happy/joyful decision for them to make.

    --
    emt 377 emt 4
  283. Because it's not true. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Show me link. Japan made peace offers, never offered to surrender.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  284. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, I don't.

    If something is providing resources to the enemy, it is a valid target. Period.

  285. Re:hypocrisy? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

    "How do you explain Omaha Beach as the action of nothing more than an overgrown bully?"

    Perhaps not, but I can think of another big US amphibious landing: Veracruz.

    "Or for that matter, US intervention in WWI?"

    We had our feelings hurt that we weren't allowed to continue playing both sides.

    We got involved in a family feud among European royalty under the guise of "making the world safe for democracy." The specific democracy was the newfound democracy in Russia, to where we sent a lot of troops to actually fight against said democracy, trying to keep them in the war.

    The history of the Twentieth Century might have been very different had we not gotten so involved in internal Russian affairs. Soviet communism might not have taken as much of a hard line as it did if the ostensibly democratic US weren't actively shooting at them (the bourgeois royalists from the UK were all but expected, but us?)

    At any rate, don't forget that our involvement in WWI comes not long after the Spanish-American War.

  286. Everything is questionable by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
    But giving a link to what is essentually another forum (Wiki) is not convincing.

    BTW the 500,000 estimate was for US troops. Jap casualties would have been much higher.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  287. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by wpiman · · Score: 1
    Agreed. There is no use trying to justify actions in war by any moral standards-- war is simply not morale.

    Robert McNamara said it best- there are no rules of war- if the US had lost WWII- he and other US officials would have been tried as war criminals.

  288. "Sympathy for the Japanese", eh? by SvnLyrBrto · · Score: 1

    One wonders if people like you have ever gotten out of your wretched little white-bread suburbs, and actually gotten to know, or have even MET, any Japanese people. Not the racist caricatures of hollywood movies; but real, living, honest-to-god Japanese PEOPLE.

    I have. And I have a damn sight more sympathy for my Japanese and Japanese-American friends than I have for trash like you.

    cya,
    john

    --
    Imagine all the people...
    1. Re:"Sympathy for the Japanese", eh? by hengist · · Score: 1
      One wonders if people like you have ever gotten out of your wretched little white-bread suburbs, and actually gotten to know, or have even MET, any Japanese people.

      Actually, I've been to Japan. I've also worked and socialised with Japanese people. Japanese of my generation are much the same as everyone else, and I got on well with the ones I met. But, they still have quite a victim attitude not just about the two nuclear strikes, but about the entire war.

      I also have a Chinese wife, who is from the North-East, the part of China that was occupied. Do you know any Chinese, or have even MET someone who suffered under the occupation? My mother-in-law was born during the occupation, and I'll give you three guesses why she's under five feet tall.

      Nuking those cities sucked. Fire-storming Tokyo sucked. But it was a very dirty war, and the nuclear attacked ENDED it. In a dirty war, save your sympathy for the victims, not the aggressors.

  289. The Jewish commies quit after VE day. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
    They were primarilly interested in defeating Germany so their Fearless leader in Moscow could take over europe.

    Understandable given their ethnicity and political leanings. Hardly admirable.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  290. false by scotty777 · · Score: 1
    The US didnt even give enough time to the Japanese to go on-site to the Hiroshima disaster area, assess the situation and surrender.

    Japanes officials who saw the Hiroshima devestation were in Tokyo, and discussed the matter in the War Council. The War Council, folowing the discussion, decided not to surrender. Recent memoirs from senior Japanese officals make this quite clear. Some in the war council pooh-poohed the devestating effects. Others thought that there weren't more bombs. But the simple fact is that they discussed it and decided to continue the war. It was a bad move, and had ugly, ugly consequences.

  291. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by bungeejumper · · Score: 1

    You don't have to go to Europe...you can come to Massachusetts or New Hampshire (the Granite state). Basically, the basements are carved out of solid granite which has radon trapped in it...old old houses have built up quite a bit of radioactivity because of the radon 'oozing' out of the granite underneath.

  292. hence - reason for robots by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    re the reason to make a robot base on the moon

    prepare 10000000s of unemployed humans and robots working for $0

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  293. Re:hypocrisy? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

    "America should have minded her own business and stayed out of the World War."

    Sir Winston Churchill, New York Enquirer, 1936

    What did you expect him to say? "As First Lord of the Admiralty, I manipulated the sinking of the Lusitania, filling the cargo holds of a 'passenger liner' with ammunition and deliberately routing her through waters filled with German submarines, for the very intent of dragging the US into the war. Because we needed something to break the stalemate." Heck, most of that stuff was still classified in the 1930's.

    Oh, and don't forget what else he's not going to say to the American press at the time: "No, we're still not going to pay for all that stuff that we got from you during the war." No "Lend-Lease" stuff during that war, they were lucky we didn't demand cash up front (which, in hindsight, we probably should have). He was suggesting that they didn't need the materiel, anyway.

    "Had we made peace then there would have been no collapse in Russia followed by Communism,"

    We entered after the overthrow of the Czar. When Wilson urged Congress to "make the world safe for democracy," Russia was the democracy he was referring to. After the ousting of the Czar, it became the first and only democratic combattant. Before that, even with the Lusitania incident, Wilson was hard-pressed to convince Americans why we should get into a yet another royal family feud in Europe.

    (And not long before, we were just as likely, if not more likely, to enter the war on the side of Germany and Austria. The UK was doing some of the same things the Germans were doing to our ships.)

    "and Germany would not have signed the Versailles Treaty, which has enthroned Nazism in Germany."

    Yeah, all our fault. We didn't even sign the damned treaty! The US negotiated a separate peace treaty because we didn't like the way it looked.

    "If America had stayed out of the war, all these 'isms' wouldn't today be sweeping the continent of Europe and breaking down parliamentary government"

    What parliamentary government? The UK was really the only example of anything resembling decent democracy in Europe, as had been the trend for the past few centuries at that point. Mainlaind Europe, including/especially the countries he listed, had always been wracked with internal strife (communism was 30-40 years old by that point). The only difference, really, was that the Powers that Be bloodied themselves and each other enough during the Great War that the unwashed masses actually had a chance to overpower them for once.

    Heck, Germany and Italy as unified countries was still a relatively new concept going into the Great War.

  294. well, not quite by scotty777 · · Score: 1
    Therefore the demonstration of the atom bomb and it's effects for the USSR was also a part of the desission for Truman when he ordered the use of the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

    In major policy discussions of that type, every possible view comes up for analysis. So sure, the effects on the USSR came up. We should hope that to be the case.

    But you suggest that it is the only, or at the very least a primary reason for A-bombs use. Truman said, in public, and on every reported private occasion, that the purpose was to bring an immediate end to hostilities. He was not only considering the impending invasion of the home islands of Japan, but also the continued mayhem and death being wrought throughout the Far East. For example, a delay of one month could easily have made mass starvation possible in both Korea and northern China.

  295. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Shakrai · · Score: 2, Funny

    Strom Thurman and Congress brain damage jokes may now start.

    IN SOVIET RUSSIA, Congress brain-damages YOU.

    Now where is that "Post Anonymously" button.... nope, that wasn't it.

    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  296. why being 5% involved in crime gets 100% fine? by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    By your logic, any one can organize a group of people to be only 1% involved with importing cocaine into usa, yeah each one does a tiny bit , does that mean they cannot be prosecuted, oh but by the DAs own rules, if you are even remotely partly involved you get the full force of law and punishment just as equal to doing it all your self. But common LAW isnt good enough for the govt or 'men in charge' isnt it... they are above the law.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  297. Read this. by rjh · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think it says something that of all the professional soldiers I know, none of them share your view. None. Zero. Their attitude is simple: violence is wrong. It is never morally right to engage in war. The only question is whether not engaging in war is an even worse moral choice.

    "War is hell," as Sherman put it. A USMC gunnery sergeant described his job as "legally sanctioned murder". Col. Jeff Cooper, USMC (Ret.), one of the finest living riflemen today and founder of some terrific shooting schools, has said he'd far rather be a cop than a soldier: when a cop shoots someone, it's usually somebody who's made some really bad choices and is endangering lives, but when a soldier shoots someone, it's usually for no other reason than the other guy is wearing the wrong color of uniform. Cooper's said in the past that he thinks most of the people he killed in war, he would've really liked if he'd ever had the chance to sit down and have a beer with them.

    Ask General Hal Moore, USAR (Ret.), or Sgt. Major Basil Plumley, USAR (Ret.), if they think what they did in the Ia Drang was "right". They'll be quite adamant: it was not right, it was a horror, a nightmare, and something no human being should ever inflict on another. What would've been worse is doing nothing.

    I am not a pacifist. I've actually had to pull a twelve-gauge on someone before, and give a mugger a choice: he could keep on beating an unconscious victim with a tire iron, or he could go away. (He elected to go away, for which I am immensely grateful. I did not need that stain on my soul.) His victim survived, albeit with a lengthy stay in the intensive care unit.

    After it was all over I spent the next half-hour puking my guts out. I am glad I spent the next half-hour puking my guts out. That tells me that I'm still human. That tells me that I recognize other people are human beings and deserve to exist. That tells me that I'm not a bully. That tells me that I'm not evil.

    People like you scare the living shit out of me, because the instant someone like you gets a weapon, you start to rationalize its use. I'm not worried about lunatics with tire irons who are beating the living shit out of unconscious people; in all my years I've only met one of those, so they're pretty uncommon.

    But I know tons of people like you. People who talk about how the instant someone breaks into their home, they'd better have an ambulance handy. People who have their explanations and justifications prerationalized. People like you scare the living shit out of me.

    I'm a firearms owner. Quite proud to be one. I'm a big fan of the Second Amendment. But I'm just as big a fan of moral responsibility, which, I hate to say, is becoming harder and harder to find nowadays.

    1. Re:Read this. by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      I see no point in self hatred. I see no point in wallowing in guilt for protecting one's own.

      I have been the victim, and never again.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    2. Re:Read this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He elected to go away, for which I am immensely grateful

      So did he get away, or was he caught?

    3. Re:Read this. by Grym · · Score: 1

      I think it says something that of all the professional soldiers I know, none of them share your view. None. Zero. Their attitude is simple: violence is wrong. It is never morally right to engage in war. The only question is whether not engaging in war is an even worse moral choice.

      The GP said, "Choosing not to fight, and letting an evil group conqueror you, is wrong." It seems to me that, semantics aside (that you are referencing a "net"-morality), you're saying the same thing.

      But I know tons of people like you. People who talk about how the instant someone breaks into their home, they'd better have an ambulance handy. People who have their explanations and justifications prerationalized. People like you scare the living shit out of me.

      Most people don't take the time or intellect to judge every single action they make in an intelligent, morally-based perspective. Even attempting to do so would lead to a paralysis of action in everyday life (which, paradoxically, is immoral). All of us, whether we realize it or not, internalizes certain tenets which guide our actions. For most people, these tenets arise from their upbringing and religion. (Although, they can also come from keen introspection or philosophical study.) The use of tenets isn't perfect (conflicting tenets, fringe scenarios, etc.), but it's a good compromise between unattainable moral perfection and chaos.

      Here's a commonly tenet (which also happens to be one of mine). If someone is about to intentionally endanger my life or those I love, they should be stopped--even if that means the ending of their life. Is that pre-rationalized? Absolutely. But I implore you, why that is immoral?

      -Grym

  298. get YOUR facts straight, will you? by scotty777 · · Score: 1
    you say "at least get your facts straight"

    and "The second bomb was dropped before the Japanese government had actually made any official response"

    The official response was Japan's continuation of hostilities. No Cease-Fire. Just more shooting.

    There were Japanese officials in the War Council who had been to Hiroshima, and they wanted an immediate surrender, and said so in the War Council. They were overruled, and the War Council decided to "wait and see" rather than surrender. They decided to keep fighting. All this was before the second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki.

    In fact, after the second bomb (Nagasaki), some of the same "wait and see" officials tried to capture the Emperor and grab power, just so that the war could continue. Thank God they were stopped.

  299. What is this, the Borg? by violet16 · · Score: 1

    What's with everyone classifying the Japanese as a single entity? "The Japanese military did some terrible things, so it's fine to kill Japanese civilians." That logic can justify the murder of innocents in any country you want to name, including the US (except then, of course, we'd call it terrorism).

    For Christ's sake, people are individuals, not units of a nation-state hive mind.

  300. Actually... no by scotty777 · · Score: 1

    Japanese tourists visit the infamous "Bridge Over the River Kwai" in large numbers. The tourist train that goes from Bangkok to Singapore makes a side trip to the real bridge, just for the tourists. That railway claimed the lives of huge numbers of prisoners of all nationalities and that is made plain at the site itself. Japanese tourists don't go there to celebrate "their past glory and victory against the might United States", not by any stretch of the imagination.

    1. Re:Actually... no by HungWeiLo · · Score: 1

      Because it was made into a very very famous movie, perhaps? They certainly don't go there to do a big sumimasen apology session to atone for the crimes of their fathers. They go there because it's culturally and historically (mostly culturally due to the movie) important and well-known.

      Besides, I didn't say they were at the USS Arizona to celebrate. The parent said something about how the Japanese are likely to be more wise about war and its casualties because they happen to go on more tours to Pearl Harbor, and it's really because it's a famous tourist attraction, and not (for most Japanese tourists) because they want to reflect deeply on the reasons for mankind to go to war or anything like that.

      --
      There are a huge number of yeast infections in this county. Probably because we're downriver from the bread factory.
    2. Re:Actually... no by scotty777 · · Score: 1
      Well, I've been to Japan a few times, and I have found that many Japanese young people, though seemingly hazy on the details of the war, have much the same view that I have: Their country was in the hands of a military/industrial elite, and they were engaged in empire building. They are recognize that their military forces were incredibly brutal to civilians and prisoners. And so on... More to the point, they seem acutely embarrassed by the conduct of their nation, their military, and their leaders.

      I have come to realize that they only seem to be hazy on the details. They are in fact better informed than they let on. I've seen shows on Japanese TV, in prime-time, shows with huge viewership that go into the awful details, and have panel discussions on the same. The panelists are popular people from varied backgrounds: Singers, artists, movie stars, TV personalities of all stripes. These same documentary & panel discussion shows focus on varied subjects: sometimes it's African wildlife, other times it's deep-sea sport fishing, or scuba diving in Mexico, or driving Route 66. But a few I saw were on WW2. They don't mince words. So I believe that the facts are known, but their peculiar culture prevents them from talking about it the way we are doing here. They are very resolute in their determination not to go down the path of brutality and war again. And they are feel deeply ashamed of what was done.

      I think there are a few dyed-in-the-wool ultra-nationalist-militarists, just as there are in every country that I've been to. But most people, young and old alike are deeply aware of the lessons learned, although they don't show it the way you and I would, or the way the Germans or Italians would.

      So yes, they put on the silly tourist face, with the giggly girls giving peace signs for their snapshot photo albums. But inside, they know. And they would rather look like brainless nitwits than show their shame and sorrow openly. I weep for them, and with them. And when they stand in the Peace Park in Hiroshima, and show their sorrow, they have come there to do that; it may be the only place were they can show their sorrow. They can't speak their shame, but everybody knows. Everybody knows.

      By the way, Otaru City, Hokaido was just outside the range of the fire bombers, so it's one of the very few cities where pre-war wood structures remain in large numbers. That city is also a tourist center now. I've been there, too, and I've often found people regarding the wood structures in a very thoughtful way. I have a feeling I know what they are thinking. There's more, but I can't say some of the rest.

      By the way, were you aware that Nagasaki was the only Christian city in Japan? 85% Christian. The Portugese, and later the Dutch had trading posts there, all throughout the period where Japan was "closed to the world". Nagasaki was their "window to the world". So ironic. So heartbreaking.

  301. Re:"just following orders" "never forget it" by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    You say...

    but I'm sure will never forget it, despite that I was justified in defending myself. People who have been through such scenarios will testify to the truth of this.

    ---

    You forget or are unaware that in this century people in southern america had parties and celebrated killing negros and whites who sympathised with them. They felt no remorse or guilt and if they never forgot it, it was to remember it with fondness in their advancing years.

    ---

    The only reason we are against killing is because we have been trained (very recently) to think of killing other human beings as a bad thing. It is very easy for humans to not only learn to kill but learn to enjoy killing. It is very easy for them to learn to enjoy torturing them too.
    Hell, more than a few of the yale students in the Milgrim psych test enjoyed themselves thinking they were really torturing the victims with painful electric shocks. And that was a -really- small sample size (a few hundreds) so the tendency has to be really common in humans.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  302. sure, they were just preparing to kill 'em by scotty777 · · Score: 1
    which while brutal and unjustified certainly didn't "kill millions".

    The Japanese intentions can hardly be argued; they were preparing large scale deployments of chemical and biological weapons. In fact, large scale tests were conducted in China, and killed or maimed ten of thousands.

    Are you trying to knock over a straw man? The Japanese had lots of killing potential left in their war machine, with more on the way. They also used, and intended to use, every nasty capability that they possessed.

  303. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

    Hah! Deep-fry Mars bars?? Try 'em frozen - Mars Bars for Men! :)

  304. no, that's not the way it was by scotty777 · · Score: 1
    You say: Nagasaki was a city like most others in wartime, with some military facilities and a bunch of civilians who worked at them along with their grandparents, parents, children,

    Actually, Nagasaki was a fleet headquarters, with huge shipyards, and supplier factories all over the city. And the workers in all those factories ranged from children to the elderly, along with large numbers of slave labor prisoners pulled from all over the Far East. The city was one big military shipyard. Some estimates are that 90% of the non-military population was manufacturing war goods.

    You say: "Of course it was a civilian target, just the same as any other city would be", but the facts say otherwise.

    1. Re:no, that's not the way it was by BJH · · Score: 1

      children to the elderly, along with large numbers of slave labor prisoners pulled from all over the Far East

      So which of those were not civilians?

    2. Re:no, that's not the way it was by scotty777 · · Score: 1
      Nagasaki was one big warship manufacturing plant, which certainly made it a target under the rules of war- both then and now. Your characterization "with some military facilities and a bunch of civilians who worked at them along with their grandparents, parents, children is plainly wrong.

      Now if you want to say that yes, OK, it was a munitions and weapons manufacturer that was bombed, but the people were all untouchable civilians and their untouchable families, then say that.

      I think (just my opinion) that you see that the US was not restricted by the rules of war to targeting people in uniform. People directly and actively assisting the war, whether young or old, in uniform or not, were targets in that war, and they knew it and expected nothing less. By 1945 that was the way it was on both sides.

      Your statement, that Nagasaki was "a city like most others in wartime, with some military facilities and a bunch of civilians" doesn't come close to describing Nagasaki in the summer of 1945.

      I'll be delighted to entertain your conclusions, and the facts and logic you use to derive them. If you conclude that the bombing was unwaranted, please offer a real justification for your conclusion, based on accurate descriptions of the ground truth.

      In my view, the bombing was as ugly as ugly gets. It was not the only ugly act of that war, let alone the first. That much, I hope we can agree on. But I've never heard anyone who fought it, not anyone on either side, say that Nagasaki was some sort of haven that should not have been targeted by military force. Not anybody. If you want me to believe that, tell me why. Explain why a city dedicated to building warships should have been spared military action.

      What is left then, in my view, is the argument that the US was obliged to forgo the use of the A-bomb. I believe we both know that both sides were engaged at that point in unrestricted warfare: unrestricted military targets, and unrestricted weapons. Ugly, but there it is. And the unrestricted military operations policy was put in place by the Japanese, years befor they attacked the Americans. War is an ugly, ugly undertaking. That war at least as much as any other. You may not know it now, but they all knew it then. They all knew how ugly it was, and they all kept at it. God help those who forget it this day.

  305. That may be true... by PatientZero · · Score: 1
    ...but targeting civilians for political purposes is terrorism even by the U.S.'s definition. And terrorism used to "win the war" is -- you guessed it! -- terrorism. That Japan was already asking to surrender makes it worse, if that's possible.

    Before anyone argues that the use of the two atomic bombs was isolated or necessary, what about the fire-bombing of Japanese cities that killed far more civilians?

    --
    Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
    I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
  306. Re:"just following orders" "never forget it" by naasking · · Score: 1

    You forget or are unaware that in this century people in southern america had parties and celebrated killing negros and whites who sympathised with them. They felt no remorse or guilt and if they never forgot it, it was to remember it with fondness in their advancing years.

    YOU are neglecting the fact that such people were raised in an environment that promoted such actions. They were taught the view that negros were less than trash, so naturally they acted like it.

    Humans are animals (in the biological sense, ie. creatures), and like animals they will do what they are trained to do. If they are trained to kill, they will kill. If they are trained to commit suicide, they will commit suicide. If they are trained to think for themselves, they will think for themselves.

    Certainly there are deviations from this pattern (moreso than in less sophisticated/intelligent animals), but the trend is there.

    The only reason we are against killing is because we have been trained (very recently) to think of killing other human beings as a bad thing. It is very easy for humans to not only learn to kill but learn to enjoy killing. It is very easy for them to learn to enjoy torturing them too.

    I'm sorry, but it doesn't seem like a very recent development to me. We have religious manuscripts dating back thousands of years that outline similar "rules of conduct", ie. thou shalt not kill, etc.

    Hell, more than a few of the yale students in the Milgrim psych test enjoyed themselves thinking they were really torturing the victims with painful electric shocks. And that was a -really- small sample size (a few hundreds) so the tendency has to be really common in humans.

    Extrapolating from a limited sample size is the epitome of bad science. But if I were to hazard a theory from the psychological standpoint, I'd say it's because they relished the feeling of power, not that they enjoyed delivering pain. This results naturally from our animal instincts to dominate.

    And as additional food for thought, my comment wasn't necessarily in the sense of "they will remember because killing was such a horrible act", but could also be taken to mean "they will remember because violence is generally so far removed from modern society".

  307. Why the POW camp was next to the war plants by Medievalist · · Score: 1

    If you read the article, it repeatedly mentions that the armor plate factories and shipyard were staffed with Allied POW slave labor. The reporter is able to debunk a few of the claims made by the Japanese and American governments based on the testimony of these workers.

    The munitions plants, unsuprisingly, used Japanese workers.

  308. Re:By your logic there weren't many here, either.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We still had schools which educated children in math and literature, not spear drills. We still had hospitals servicing civilian needs, not off-limits to everyone but the military.

    I'd like to take the time to point out that you didn't have an enemy right off your shores, poised to pretty much destroy the backbone of your counter and effectively neuter most of the males in the country. Can you blame them? They were raised on the concept of fighting to the death, rather than (as they saw it) a dishonourable surrender.

    I'd also like to point out that the constitution protects the right to bear arms, essentially creating an army of the entire population of the US.

    So, for the US, it's not quite as simple as "total war" but it's not exactly not "total war" either.

  309. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's right. We did them a favour by nuking them. WTf are you smoking? Moron.

  310. Japan did NOT want to end the war by coopex · · Score: 1

    Hirohito and the military knew about that city's destruction later that day, but were paralyzed by indecision. Hirohito did not meet with his supreme war council until about 11 a.m. Aug. 9, within minutes of when the second bomb fell on Nagasaki. Another choice quote: "The Japanese military did not want people to know about the atomic bomb," said Tsuia Etchu, founder of Nagasaki's Atomic Bomb museum. Etchu was an army officer in the city of Fukuoka when the bomb fell.

    It stands to reason that the military didn't want people to know that America had these superweapons, so that people would still have some delusion about fighting to the death and taking as many American's with them as possible.

    To anyone who has some knowledge of the mindset of the Japanese from feudal times to WW2, it is blindingly clear that Japan simply would not surrender. They created seppuku to preserve "honor" for chrissake. They had 12 year olds working in factories and schoolgirls throwing themselves off cliffs because the govt told them the Americans would rape them.

    Can you really look at these facts and pretend that America was the agressor?

    --
    The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
  311. How sad the whole Hiroshima Nagasaki insident was. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Last year I went to Japan for a personal vacation, and I desided to stay in the area around Hiroshima. I had recently found out that my great-grandpa actually helped to design the bomb casing on the bomb that were dropped there... T_T So this was another reason to visit Hiroshima, if anything, to say a small prayer at the peace park. When I finally got to Hiroshima, it was just like any other city in Japan... until you get to the Peace Park... Never before have I ever felt like that... the whole park had such a powerful feeling. There were still buildings of rubble standing, and of course the bomb dome... the monuments and peace bells... The museum with art draw by people that survived... There were even young Japanese with guitars singing peace songs in the park, which you could hear most everywhere... T_T We truly unleashed hell on earth... but the message in Hiroshima is so clear... war should be stopped, atom bombs should never be used...

  312. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by DruggedBunny · · Score: 1
    But it is a problem to think that you can enjoy all the benefits of a nation-state without sharing in the responsibility for the actions of that nation-state, particularly if there is some representative system at hand.

    And if you didn't vote for the government that took the decision... ?

  313. Not about justice by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
    War, even a just war, does'nt deal out much justice.

    It is about winning.

    The only questions in Trumans mind should have been:
    'Will this be the cheapest way (in terms of American lives) to win the war?'
    'What will using this weapon do to the political situation after the war?'

    It is'nt as complicated as you make it. You save more lives by shortening wars then you take by fighting ruthlessly.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  314. The lesser evil by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    I have always thought that choosing the lesser evil is a moral obligation, and those that stick their head in the sands while ignoring the greater evil are cowards who bear the full responsibility of their inaction. Was dropping the bombs evil? Yep. Were the viable alternatives worse? Yep. It was an easy decision that even with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight was almost assuredly correct. Of course, no one can ever know for sure, as we are dealing with counter-factuals. But there is little indication that Japan was close to surrender and that the war could have been ended in a manner that better saved both the Japanese and Americans. The Japanese have gotten over this issue. You should, too.

  315. Re:By your logic there weren't many here, either.. by Deathprong · · Score: 1

    Rosie the Riveter is not a legitimate military target. She's a civilian. The fearsome bamboo-spear-wielding Japanese kid is not a legitimate military target. He's a civilian.

    This idea that it's ok to pulverize an enemy's industrial capability without regard to civilian lives in order to spare soldiers the inconvenience of having to take control of some buildings has got to go.

    Even if that were ok with you, the nukes dropped on Japan killed people who did not work in military plants. They destroyed homes and killed babies. If that's ok with you then you have no honor. You are a machine pretending to be a man.

  316. Was fully justified. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Japan had an active spy network among Japanese and American citizens. Many sent their childern back to Japan for indoctronation.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  317. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Starving Japan into submission through a naval blockade would not have been a more humane alternative. My grandparents lived in Holland at the end of the war. There was massive hunger and widespread starvation there. And my grandmother still refuses to talk about it. Also watch (or read) "Grave of the Fireflies", based on the true story of a 14 yo boy who watches his little sister starve to death at the end of the war.

    The atom bomb was an a atrocity. But in the context of World War II, and weighed up against a repeat of the battle of Okinawa on a grand scale or starving the entire Japanese population, at least it ended the war.

  318. Re:"just following orders" "never forget it" by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    I'm not neglecting anything in particular.
    I was addressing what seemed to be your point that people in general would feel horrible guilt over killing people when it is clearly not true.
    People have to be specifically trained NOT to be violent, and even then, in a majority of cases the training doesn't take. Despite huge penalties (going to hell, going to prison, being executed) a lot of people enjoy injuring and hurting others- even to the point of killing them.
    Humans repeatedly engage in these activities. It is a lot harder remain peaceful than it is to be violent. In fact, in some cases remaining peaceful will just get you killed. Given power over others, humans routinely abuse it. They don't need to be trained to do so.
    The same religious documents relate how god "rewards" the faithful with the young women of the sinners after the faithful kills every male and every woman that is too old or young. (see the section dealing with Mose's flock laying waste to a city - of whom half the population at least (and probably more like 90%- had done nothing to him or his people).
    Other religious documents go into exquisite detail on how to torture and kill other human beings as long as they are not among the faithful. (Check out the Koran for nice details).
    Religions that have suceeded have done so by murdering large numbers of people who were not among the faithful (yup- even buddism and atheism).
    I agree with you on the power point. Inflicting pain was probably merely an expression of having power.
    As far as animals go- lots of predatory animals have a great deal of fun playing with their food before they finally kill it. Humans have the potential wired in to enjoy playing with their victims before they finally kill them.
    Our ultra-pacifism really is very recent- mostly since the invention of TV where a few people could repeatedly hammer home messages like "animals are equal to humans", "good always wins in the end", "if we protect ourselves, we'll become monsters just like them" and other similar soft-headed notions.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  319. Who deserves to be burned alive? You do! by HornWumpus · · Score: 1
    Hippy.

    In wartime.

    Enemy lives == negative value (they are threats).
    Allied lives == positive value.

    It IS that simple.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  320. Re:By your logic there weren't many here, either.. by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

    "We still had plumbers and electricians and carpenters building civilian housing, not forcibly conscripted into working exclusively on military projects."

    Try again.

    During World War II, manufacturing various "consumer items" (refrigerators, automobiles) was forbidden. This also included housing materials. I remember watching a documentary about how a model-train company switched to producing war materiel during World War II because they couldn't get any metal for trains or tracks.

    Since most of the larger employers had switched to producing war materiel (because they couldn't get the necessary materials), the only jobs--and especially the better paying jobs--were at the war plants. If you had a family to feed, that's where you went.

  321. A hypothetical choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since Slashdotters love to be philosophical and hypothetical, I propose this question.

    You are the leader of Nation A. Nation A is at war with Nation B, and both sides have suffered heavy losses. At this point in the war, Nation B is clearly losing. You are faced with a choice between two war plans.

    Plan 1 will result in 100 A-troops dead, and 100 B-troops dead as well as one thousand B-civillians, but Nation B will be forced to immediately surrender.

    Plan 2 will result in 101 A-troops dead, and five million B-troops dead, as well as five million B-civillians. Again, Nation B will be forced to immediately surrender.

    These numbers are estimates, based on the best (limited) information you have.
    I defy you to find an elected leader who will exchange the life of one of his/her own soldiers for the lives of the "enemy." Because when it's all over, he/she still has to face that soldier's family.

    1. Re:A hypothetical choice by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1
      I defy you to find an elected leader who will exchange the life of one of his/her own soldiers for the lives of the "enemy." Because when it's all over, he/she still has to face that soldier's family.

      How about I show you an elected leader who sacrifices many hundreds of his own troops because he is a raving psychopath who lied to start the war in the first place and never had any intentions of it being a "cake-walk" over in "ten weeks", because war is just so damned profitable.

      Oops. Pardon me. I can't do that. The example I wanted to point to wasn't actually elected.


      -FL

  322. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

    Even if you're a shareholder that votes against a company's decision, you are both benefiting from any advantage gained from that decision and sharing in the responsibility (i.e., debts) from it. You do get "I told you so" rights, though.

    Again, confusing responsibility and culpability is a mistake.

  323. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by NanoGator · · Score: 1

    Were US voters allowed to vote on whether to drop A-bombs on Japan during WWII?

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  324. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by modecx · · Score: 1

    Yeah! Fer Men wifout teef! //ouch those are hard! :P

    --
    Constitutional rights may be respected, repealed, or modified; but they must never be ignored.
  325. Re:We nuked the wrong country by gelfling · · Score: 1

    Probably not, at least not with anger management problems like yours.

  326. Mmm....a slight flaw with your plan by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    Yes, we are sending two bombers, one of which will care a nuclear weapon. They will be arriving in the Nagasaki area around 7am on August the 9th. Please evacuate the area before we attack. ... Whether you like it or not, surprise is an element of any military attack, let alone one as precarious as the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were. Remember, we didn't even HAVE another nuke at that point. Fortunately, the Japanese didn't know this.

  327. Many problems by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    First, our bombing wasn't that accurate in WWII. Japanese civilian and military facilities were intertwined. Heck, it still hard now with GPS guided missiles. Second, your plan would not have ended the war. It was the utter shock of the bombs that caused the Japanese to quit. Yet another round of conventional bombs would have killed just as many people, but the war would have dragged on for months, killing far more.

  328. Re:hypocrisy? by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

    The kind of "democracy" where a single unelected political party controls the government and Lenin gets to order executions? Don't have any illusions about the Bolsheviks. Allied intervention in the Russian civil war didn't stop the Bolsheviks from setting up a democracy if that's really what they wanted.

    --
    In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
  329. Re:hypocrisy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Iran-Iraq war and its use of chemical weapons comes to mind...

    Do I win a cookie?

  330. you nonsense by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

    Adjusted for population, Iraq civilians have a 911 every couple of weeks.. And since you went there, adjusted for troop levels and advancements in battlefield medicine, infantry duty in Iraq is every bit as tough as infantry duty in Vietnam. Now count the total of American casualties, pushing 2,000, and compare that to the last Gulf War. Then you can stfu about us "kicking ass".

  331. In his profile... by SvnLyrBrto · · Score: 1

    > Let me guess. Yank?

    He claims to be a New Zealander.

    I guess racist and xenophobic warmongering trash who celebrate the murder of civilians by the most horrific weapon invented by man come in all nationalities.

    cya,
    john

    --
    Imagine all the people...
    1. Re:In his profile... by hengist · · Score: 1

      I am a New Zealander. Live in Canterbury. With my Chinese wife.

      Gives me a different perspective on the Japanese.

    2. Re:In his profile... by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      Ok so some Japanese civilians in Nagasaki and Hiroshima might have had relatives who participated in atrocities. And this makes them liable to the extent that nuking them is ok?

      Let me ask you this, if there had been no nuke, would it be justifiable to round up the populations of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and put them into concentration camps, for example or maybe just lethal injection? To punish them for the things that other Japanese people had done?

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    3. Re:In his profile... by hengist · · Score: 1

      I was going to write a long and indignant "of course not" response to this, but then I realised that what you asked is a huge non sequitor from any of my other posts.

      Just because the Japanese are our friends now does not make a Japanese civilian's life worth any more or less than a Chinese civilian's. Yet, people are so eager to paint the Japanese as the poor victims of white aggression and forget about the Chinese all together. In my household, things are quite different.

    4. Re:In his profile... by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      Chinese being the poor victims of yellow oppression.

      The problem we have, human beings and the world in general, is that the indignant response of vengeance and generally devaluing human life such that innocent victims of war become mere 'collateral damage' which is excused because 'they were on the other side' is what allows atrocity in the first place.

      The fact that Japanese civilians fell victim to the atrocity of nuclear bombing is just as bad as the fact that Chinese civilians fell victim to the atrocities commited by Japanese troops.

      The fact that the one occured cannot reduce the atrocity of the other.

      Nukes are evil and any nation that possesses them is, virtually by definition, a terrorist state.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  332. Personal Responsibility by Rank_Tyro · · Score: 1

    I never dropped bombs on anyone, nor did I ever shoot rockets at anyone. However......I did load those weapons onto F-16's during Desert Storm.

    I accept the fact that I helped kill those people. I was just as responsible as the pilot that delivered those weapons, as well as the commander that ordered those weapons delivered to targets.

    Don't think for a minute that those of us in uniform during wartime just "casually" perform our duty without thinking of the consequences. We all think about what we do.
    Sometimes what we end up doing is just fucking awfull, but don't pretend that we are all telling ourselves lies.

    We ALL take responsibility for the things we do.

    --
    Today's show is brought to you by the number 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0: 25
  333. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by TaoJones · · Score: 1
    In btw, the feeling is weird... 20 minutes in a warm pool of such water makes you feel like your joints have started to melt. They feel like rubber.

    Uhm, fuck radon. A jacuzzi and a few beers. Same feeling, less radiation.

    --
    "Fear is the rootkit of democracy.." Blarkon
  334. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

    It was actually IMHO less of an atrocity than the firebombings which burned to death MORE civilians than both atomic bombs combined.

  335. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

    Oh yes. My single vote makes such a difference that I should be held responsible for the actions of any other member of society! Right.

  336. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by DruggedBunny · · Score: 1

    I'd have the choice not to be a shareholder of a company's stock. I don't take responsibility for other people's actions.

  337. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by arivanov · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yes.

    I know what I wrote. And I am a chemist by the way.

    Water is a very complex substance. You have both van-der-vaals (weak) and polar (strong) interactions between the water molecules and dissolved substances which tend to be much more organised and complex then most average lamerz think. These can be altered by many factors including magnetic field and ionising radiation. After being altered they stay altered for days and sometimes weeks.

    A.

    --
    Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
    http://www.sigsegv.cx/
  338. Barefoot Gen by Coeurderoy · · Score: 1

    Barefoot Gen is a portrayal of the Atomic Bombing of Japan created by Artist Keiji Nakazawa.

    It describes the situation in Japan before, during and after the bomb from the point of view of a joung boy.

    I also think that the most important point is not: where the US right or not in dropping the bomb.

    Some would arge that the Emperor was on the werge of surrounding, other would deny it, and yet other would say that a surrender without a complette shake up of the power structure would be useless.

    But what is the most damning element in the story it the sensorship that the US occupation forces maintained on the occupied countries.

    Accounts of the bombing where not only sensored in the US, but mainly in Japan, the penalty for trying to publish something about this was in theory at least death. In practice it was just impossible to get a printer, and trying a little to hard would get you into prison.

    Freedom of speech is not something that can be only given when convenient.

    The US also imposed a certain way of rebuilding the countries, and for instance in Germany it stopped many (most) emigrated intelectuals from returning to Germany, not just pro Soviet Communist, but anybody that would be "left leaning" would be seen as a potential "Communist Spy" and therefore barred from returning.

    I also notice that many poster do not understand why europeans are not more thankful for the US role during WWI and WWII.

    Well the US has over the years supported many right wing neo-facistic governments (in general to 'free' the citizens from the risk of getting 'left wing facists at their helm).
    So the "ideological sanctity" of the US is very suspect.
    The US intervention came quite late in both cases, and came at points where the economical interests of the US where at stake.

    So I believe the Europeans are very thankful to the GI's that risked or gave their lives for freedom.
    But do not expect this to extend to the US leadership.
    Because we also remember that people that had to flee the Nazis often where a couple of years latter in a position of fleeing from Mac Carthy.

    And you might want to ponder Göddels remark to the judje that gave him the US nationality:
    (paraphrasing: Oh but now, I read the US constitution yesterday evening, and there are ways to build the same kind of police state I just left).

    Good luck and Happy Dreams....
    ---
    There is no excuse for Software Patents

  339. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The bomb at Nagasaki was dropped on the wrong target. Not the wrong city, mind you..."

    Wrong. The intended target was Kokura. Because of cloud cover over Kokura they went for secondary target Nagasaki, also obscured by clouds, but a break did appear allowing some targeting.

    see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_bombings_of_Hi roshima_and_Nagasaki

  340. Re:hypocrisy? by m50d · · Score: 1
    You're right, sorry, wrong war

    I don't say it was 100% one thing, but the post I was replying to seemed to think South Korea proved the US didn't just act out of self interest. It doesn't, because self interest was plenty of reason to intervene.

    --
    I am trolling
  341. Re:hypocrisy? by m50d · · Score: 1

    There's all sorts of conspiracy ideas, certainly the ship doesn't look to have been as innocent as was publicly claimed. It took an unusual route that almost seems as if it was trying to goad the sub into sinking her. A suggestion I've heard is it was overplayed to the public to give a plausible reason for American intervention when they wanted to keep the real one (the zimmerman telegram) secret (since they didn't want the Germans switching to stronger ciphers).

    --
    I am trolling
  342. Japanese Bio Weapon Halted by rrgg · · Score: 1

    About a year ago, the US uncovered a sunken Japanese sub which contained Japanese bioweapons targetted for the west coast.

    So please, if the US hadn't devastated Japan with that bomb, it was only a matter of time before it got hit.

  343. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by jbbrwcky · · Score: 1

    In war we are all guilty. Guilty for letting the light of reason splutter and fail, inviting in the forces of chaos and hate.

    But, if you must choose war, choose total war. Any war fought haphazardly and without conviction is going to lead inexorably to a doomed end. Killing an enemy soldier is good as he might kill 5 of your nation's soldiers. Killing a citizen making the bombs or making the planes, is just as good, as those bombs or planes might killed tens or hundreds of your nation's soldiers.

    But when you get down to it, "guilty" really is just a point of view, usually forced upon the vanquished by the victors. Do Americans feel guilty for making and dropping an atomic bomb or carpet-bombing Vietnam where little children might burn to death? Or do the Japanese feel guilty for force marching prisoners-of-war to prison camps in order to thin them out or executing prisoners out of hand because they feel like it? Frankly, I doubt either do, and that's why wars must be a last resort for anyone, as it makes monsters of all of us.

    --
    Honi soit qui mal y pense.
  344. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Pinkoir · · Score: 1

    I have no idea why parent is modded funny. Hormesis is an acccepted phenomenon.

    -Pinkoir

  345. Re:hypocrisy? by Phanatic1a · · Score: 1

    No, dammit.

    Self-interest isn't the same thing as acting like an overblown bully, which the poster to whom I originally responded claimed was all the US ever was and is.

    It's in my self-interest to get up in the morning, go to work, and collect a paycheck. I do not work for my employer out of altruism. But that's not at all the same thing as mugging people in alleys.

    Yes, self-interest was plenty of reason to intervene. And yet our intervention was not the action of a bully.

    Words mean things.

  346. Re:hypocrisy? by Duhavid · · Score: 1

    You can bet the British didnt want any hint of the German codes being broken to get out. The only reason the RN got a strategic victory at Jutland was because they were able to muster the entire fleet on the basis of codebreaking. It might have been a strategic as well as a tactical German victory otherwise. And the KM still had teeth after Jutland.

    If Britain had not been able to command the English channel, she might have been pushed out of the war. And the French were already hanging on by the skin of their teeth with the British in the game.

    --
    emt 377 emt 4
  347. Re:hypocrisy? by Duhavid · · Score: 1

    Almost forgot... If the English had lost control of the English channel, there is reason to believe that the naval blockade of Germany would have been broken, which would probably have increased Germany's war fighting abilities.

    --
    emt 377 emt 4
  348. Re:hypocrisy? by m50d · · Score: 1

    But you claim your intervention shows you were not a bully. Which it doesn't, because self-interest would be enough reason for a bully to do it. Self interest doesn't necessarily show the US is a bully, but it means the intervention doesn't prove the US isn't a bully.

    --
    I am trolling
  349. Your arguments suck the big fallacy by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

    Yet you never offer "another way" that achieves the desired result: the elimination of totalitarian regimes like Imperial Japan.

    There may be a better fit, but this smacks of "argumentum ad ignorantium". This fallacy is committed whenever it is argued that a proposition is false because it has not been proved true.

    "Another way" seems to always mean appeasement of the very real evil

    On the logical front this is called a [poorly-executed]* strawman. You've constructed an argument to disagree with, instead of sticking to the argument at hand.

    *My 2-cents

    BTW, have you noticed that "evil" is rather pragmatically and dynamically defined in US foreign policy endeavors? I mean, our Sec. of Def. shook Sadam's hand mighty enthusastically in the 1980s, did he not?

    If you're intellectually honest, you have to acknowledge that the US will insert or bolster a dictatorship whenever it "best" serves our interest. Unfortunately for us, folks who make skilled dictators usually don't also make good lapdogs, and tend to go rogue eventually.

    if history has taught us one thing, appeasement never works

    Here's the fallacy of hasty generalilzation. BTW, diplomacy and politic is almost always less expensive, less damaging and more durably successful than war. That's the conclusion history actually tends to bear.

    In the context of the times, the use of atomic bombs against Imperial Japan was the correct decsion both militarily and politically.

    Perhaps. But you've not presented even one valid logical argument to support your assertion. That's the condition of critical thinking these days though. :^(

    I tend to agree that the hasty conclusion of the war was, on balance, preferable. Many lives were taken by these bombs, but by most accounts, more were spared by ending the war quickly.

    Too bad for the residents of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, just as it was too bad for the millions of victims of Imperial Japans aggression.

    What a nice example of a "red herring" fallacy. A logician would only have to point to lessons learned from Sesame Street to debunk this one; two wrongs don't make a right.

  350. Why no immediate surrender? by RealProgrammer · · Score: 1

    According to Masuji Ibuse'sBlack Rain, a recollection of Hiroshima, it was because there was such chaos on the one hand and pride on the other that the Emperor, who still had supreme authority, didn't fully believe the reports.

    Remember, in July, 1945 the Bomb was only a rumor. The American Air Force dropped leaflets over Hiroshima saying that it was coming, and the Japanese thought it was just propaganda. Communication with the region was confined to reports through the mouths of refugees.

    A single bomb that can destroy a city? It was the stuff of science fiction. The Emperor may have also thought that there was only one bomb, or clinged to the dream of victory, until the second bomb dropped. Then he had to know that it was over.

    --
    sigs, as if you care.
  351. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

    You bite them slowly... :)

  352. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by pmancini · · Score: 1

    That's really well written, thanks. I pretty much agree with your points entirely from my reading of the situation.

    I think actualy the result we got is probably the best we could have gotten. By "we" I mean everyone. History has momentum and the things that lead to WWII started a long, long time before 1937.

    --Pete

  353. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by joelt49 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Uh, did you read what the grandparent actually wrote?

    its decay changes water properties.
    (emphasis mine) You're right -- it's not chemically reacting, as it's inert, and it's not causing what we think of as nuclear reactions, but radiation can still change water's properties.

  354. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by lgw · · Score: 1

    Yes, but they *knew* it wasn't Kokura, they weren't *that* lost. They didn't pick a specific target close to a POW camp, however, that park was an accident.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  355. Re:hypocrisy? by Evil+Pete · · Score: 1

    It isn't a "bold faced lie"(sic). At worst I was merely wrong. I based it on what was written in "Brighter Than a Thousand Suns". That book didn't say that they didn't realise something had happened they just didn't know what, only much later did they realise it was a nuclear weapon. Though some Japanese scientists feared a nuclear attack well before Hiroshima but were not listened to.

    As for the burning city. Well when a single raid killed 100,000 in Tokyo from incendiaries do they automatically think this wasn't the result of a similar kind of attack?

    --
    Bitter and proud of it.
  356. Re:hypocrisy? by Lfen · · Score: 1

    Every single country? That's sad. Being the imperial power is so expensive it leads slowly but inexorably to finacial disaster. I'd rather be Sweden, or Norway, some advanced country but one that didn't have to field huge navies and armies and spend vast sums to project power around the world. All empires eventually exhaust themselves. It happened to the British, to the Romans, etc. etc. It will happen to us. There is nothing we can do about it of course. lfen

  357. you're confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're confused.
    By the time India gained independence
    outright colonialism had gone out of fashion,
    and WW2 had just ended,
    and the good guys, the allies, the british,
    couldn't be conquerors like the Nazi's no-more.

    The conqueror changed ideology as a result
    of an unrelated war, and india was just too big to occupy. Sure, Ghandi made it easier to sympathize with the Indians, but he didn't make the brish leave

  358. it wasn't fake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  359. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Actually, the bomb casing itself produced a lot
    of fallout which came down to the ground as "black
    rain".

  360. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by jericho4.0 · · Score: 1

    People entering Hiroshima and Nagasaki 2 days after the explosion were in little danger.

    --
    "A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
  361. Re:So what happened to this reporter? Cancer? by brainburger · · Score: 1

    That's a possibility for the motive yes - that does mean that the bombings were not required to end the war though, which takes us back to my original comment.

  362. Four conditions: a victory of sorts. by NockPoint · · Score: 1
    Unfortunnatly, it's false...We know the outcome of the war without the nuke. Japan was seeking a way to end the war in a diplomatic way.

    The most horrible outcome might have been a surrender on the terms the Japanese were discussing. The Japanese would have kept their military, their Imperial system, no war crime trials, no occupation of Japan. This way they would have written the history to be that Japan had won the war.

    Also, no post war food aid, and ~20 million Japanese civilians would have starved to death after the war.

  363. So what do you do?... by tre4lien · · Score: 1
    Erm. So what do you do when you want your local police and fire services to be active, but don't want soldiers to burn children?

    What you do is:

    Put FIRST priority on keeping personal religion out of government, development of international equality, high priority on human rights, and acceptance of differing political and social systems when you VOTE!

    If your choosen candidate puts national interests (economic or cultural) before international stability, co-operation, and development - then you are voting TO burn the child.

    If your choosen candidates first priority is building liberal diversity, international economic development, and the international diplomatic structure, then you are voting AGAINST burning the child.

    War is not an environment like propogandists portray. The seeds of Atrocities are bred in all "Us vs.Them" thinking. We set up Police and external Media to (usually)prevent it during peace time, but in war the police join the "Us vs.Them" and are supported by the Media - by definition, war changes our limits.

    In (effective) democratic systems, paying taxes is a statement of faith that the system of govt can correct the wrongs of the current govt. - so long as you didn't vote for those wrongs. If the current Govt is changing the System of govt such that the wrongs can not be corrected - then you have the same options that non-democratic (or broken-democratic) states have - revolt. I might support someone's decision to stop paying taxes in this phase, but I would not suggest that it is a Safe decision... at this point you become "Them".

  364. Re:Boy Scouts by vertinox · · Score: 1

    I had an Great Uncle who participated in costal defense drills as Boy Scouts on the East Coast. It didn't involve weapons training, but mostly camping on the beach looking for U-Boats. But believe me... If things had gone poorly in Europe and German landing craft had established a beach head in New Foundland, every man, woman, and child would be learning to use some sort of weapon.

    I think Boy Scouts in UK had weapons training, but I can't confirm that.

    Soviets and Germans both had 13 years olds in the Military. I think Russians had actual Females. The German leadership had an aversion to Women even working in factories.

    --
    "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
    -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
  365. Re:Only because of the Emperor by vertinox · · Score: 1

    There are only two reasons the Japanese surrendered.

    1. Because the Emperor said so.

    2. They got to keep the Emperor.

    Otherwise we could have destroyed every city and they would have never gave up, Atomic bomb or not.

    Remember, the Emperor had to force the surrender since the top brass had planned to remove him if he tried (hence the recording of the surrender).

    --
    "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
    -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)