Slashdot Mirror


G-7 Leaders At Hiroshima To Urge More Visits to Nuclear Bombsites (voanews.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Sunday leaders from the G-7 countries gathered in Hiroshima Sunday, a gesture which the Japanese government hopes will send a message of peace and nuclear nonproliferation. The seven world leaders will first honor the dead at Hiroshima Peace Park and visit an atomic bomb museum, which the Associated Press calls "a dream come true for many surviving victims, who have for decades campaigned to bring leaders of nuclear states to Hiroshima to see the damage." In addition, Japan hopes that the world leaders will also issue a "Hiroshima Declaration," which reportedly will call for more transparency about stockpiles of nuclear weapons, but also more visits to Hiroshima and Nagasaki by both world leaders and young people.

7 of 240 comments (clear)

  1. Re:There has only been one country.... by jedidiah · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Get over yourself.

    Hiroshima and Nagasaki are not at all remarkable in terms of destruction. The Allies leveled the whole of Germany and Japan during WWII. If you only fixate on two cities, then you are belittling the entire rest of the war.

    Also, you are belittling the Japanese. They are not a nation to be trivialized and that's exactly what you doing when you try to claim that we could do anything short of everything we could.

    Typical "White Man's Burden" BS.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  2. Where are the "peace protests" over Bataan? by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 5, Insightful

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    How about all the other Japanese War Crimes?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    ---

    Further, the irony is that the firebombings of Tokyo killed as many people as the nukes did. Where are the protests of that?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    ---

    Finally, would invading have been better?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    "During World War II, nearly 500,000 Purple Heart medals were manufactured in anticipation of the estimated casualties resulting from the planned Allied invasion of Japan. To the present date, total combined American military casualties of the seventy years following the end of World War IIâ"including the Korean and Vietnam Warsâ"have not exceeded that number. In 2003, there remained 120,000 Purple Heart medals in stock. The existing surplus allowed combat units in Iraq and Afghanistan to keep Purple Hearts on-hand for immediate award to soldiers wounded in the field."

    We are STILL handing out WWII Purple Hearts to this day because we ended up not having to invade. If the Japs didn't want to get nuked, perhaps they shouldn't have started a war of aggression.

  3. Idiocy on parade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1. Japan itself convinced the US to drop the bomb on Hiroshima. When US troops fought the Japanese from island to island on the approach to the big island, they encountered waves of fanatical suicide attacks on land, and from the air. American soldiers were shocked to encounter large numbers of Japanese civilian women who killed their children and then killed themselves in front of the Americans rather than simply surrendering and being given food and water. Japanese sailors at sea who'd been aboard ships that were sunk would frequently swim away from US sailors who were trying to pull them from the water (a centuries' old international naval traditions of plucking enemies from the sea, everyone sailor's true adversary), often choosing to drown themselves. The imperial leadership of Japan had convinced its population that Americans were barbarians who would treat them so badly that death was preferable. This was evil propaganda intended to convince the people to sacrifice themselves to protect their emperor-god from the disgrace of surrender.

    2. Japan itself brought-on Nagasaki. After Hiroshima, the US told the imperial Japanese government to surrender or face more, and the imperial Japanese government chose not to surrender. The allies at the time were demanding "unconditional surrender" and when they Japanese, AFTER Nagasaki still refused to unconditionally surrender and instead asked to be allowed to preserve their emperor, the allies compromised and allowed that condition - but the action proved the imperial govt would have been willing to get nuked some more to preserve the moron in the palace. The Japanese negotiations were NOT focused on the Japanese people, who would have been saved BEFORE Hiroshima had the emperor held any concern for his citizens and surrendered THEN.

    3. NO American president could have possibly sent American men to invade Japan and die by the hundreds of thousands and then later have been exposed to have had a weapon he could have dropped from one plane with no American casualties at all and won the war. Such a president would have been forcibly removed from office, and tried and executed for treason. This was a WORLD WAR. Millions of people were dead and maimed.

    I am one of those Americans who is glad the bomb was developed AND used. I Had family who fought and probably would have died had the bombs not been used, and who rejects the silly out-of-context moralizing by people who have no experience with war and are too young to know anything about REAL war (as opposed to the phone mini-wars we now pretend to wage).

  4. Re:There has only been one country.... by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, I'd characterize it as "The Soviet army ended the war in Europe, and we helped". No slight against the US and other allies, as we pretty much defeated Japan on our own as well, even though we prioritized the war in Europe.

    There were *many* reasons for dropping atomic weapons on Japan. I think people stumble a bit when they point to specific events as the "reason", but I'd imagine the answer, like many complex things in life, was made up of a variety of motivations:

    * Americans were becoming war-weary, but anything less than total victory would have been seen as a slap in the face to those who fought.
    * The Japanese were defending their home territory fanatically, and projections for losses of life on *both* sides were horrendous.
    * Russia was planning to invade with their vast manpower and disregard for casualties, and the US feared it would have potentially occupied large portions of Japan, turning it into a communist puppet state like with Eastern Europe.
    * Japan seemed unwilling to concede to unconditional surrender, even in the face of certain military defeat, instead adopting a strategy of inflicting massive casualties against invaders to force more favorable terms.
    * Many in the US wanted to test nuclear weapons on live targets to learn their destructive potential
    * US leaders / military wanted to demonstrate the might of the those weapons to the Soviets and the world at large as a warning against future actions against our interests
    * The American people would likely have demanded an impeachment of a President who didn't use the weapons at his disposal to win the war.

    It's hard to say how these factors all weighed into the decision and in what proportions. Only Truman would really know that.

    Ultimately, though, there's an argument to be made that, whatever forced the Japanese hand into timely surrender ultimately saved many thousands of allied soldiers lives as well as saving the lives of hundreds of thousands or even *millions* of Japanese from the horror and suffering of a protracted land campaign, or mass starvation inflicted by blockades and isolation, as some have argued for (starvation was already becoming a problem). We could also argue that Japan is far better off today having been forced to completely surrender and accept the efforts by the US to help rebuild Japan into a modern liberal democracy.

    --
    Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
  5. Picking at scabs by Tailhook · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No actual problems left so lets go back and wallow in the old ones. The direct result of the bombs, the surrender, the subsequent governance and unwavering economic and military allied status with the US is that Hiroshima is a thriving metropolis worth hundreds of billions and populated by 1.17 million healthy, safe Japanese. But lets set all of that aside and haunt the remnants of a 70 year old war so we can tsk tsk at the US.

    Pathetic.

    --
    Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
  6. The invasion by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Fun fact: the US military was going full-on for the invasion of the Japanese home islands. The atom bomb was top-secret, remember? Casualty estimates were huge for both sides. The Japanese had a defense plan, and it was a good one. They had correctly predicted what the Americans were going to do. It would have been a bloodbath. When the Japanese surrendered it was a huge relief to both sides.

    August 5, 1963

    Dear Kup:

    I appreciated most highly your column of July 30th, a copy of which you sent me.

    I have been rather careful not to comment on the articles that have been written on the dropping of the bomb for the simple reason that the dropping of the bomb was completely and thoroughly explained in my Memoirs, and it was done to save 125,000 youngsters on the American side and 125,000 on the Japanese side from getting killed and that is what it did. It probably also saved a half million youngsters on both sides from being maimed for life.

    You must always remember that people forget, as you said in your column, that the bombing of Pearl Harbor was done while we were at peace with Japan and trying our best to negotiate a treaty with them.

    All you have to do is to go out and stand on the keel of the Battleship in Pearl Harbor with the 3,000 youngsters underneath it who had no chance whatever of saving their lives. That is true of two or three other battleships that were sunk in Pearl Harbor. Altogether, there were between 3,000 and 6,000 youngsters killed at that time without any declaration of war. It was plain murder.

    I knew what I was doing when I stopped the war that would have killed a half a million youngsters on both sides if those bombs had not been dropped. I have no regrets and, under the same circumstances, I would do it again -- and this letter is not confidential

    . Sincerely yours,

    Harry S. Truman

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  7. Re: There has only been one country.... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 4

    The US governmentt never stated that officially, as for scholars... Let them spend some time in a foxhole.

    Amen to that... too many "smart people" have ideas and opinions on things they have only read about...

    A more useful exercise is to interview and ask the US soldiers who fought on Iwo Jima and Okinawa and were facing having to invade Japan itself if they thought it was a good idea.