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August 10



Todayinah Editor Editor says, what if atom bombs weren't used? muses The Quintessential on the Iconic Photos web site: This is an opinion piece. You might want to skip this post if such things offend you.
It is interesting to see that sixty-five years from the atom bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the issue is still controversial. It is not extremely surprising to me at least because I belong to that small minority who believed the surrender of Japan would have arrived even without the use of the atom bombs. Holding this view point as I do, I had a few debates back in college, beyond college, and in workforce. And writing this post flared up the debate again - this time with my girlfriend. She wrote this beautiful piece below to help "elucidate" a few points. I guess it elucidates me not to date history majors (:P love you). Anyhow, two of us went over the piece, abridged it, and I suggested we put a few photo-related themes in. And here it is..

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In 2010, the Quintessential wrote ~ these days, we often forget that the atomic bombs were nearly used on Japan during the Second World War. With the anniversary of the Soviet declaration of war on Imperial Japan (or as they call it in Orwellian jargon of Socialist Democratic Republic of Japan, "Fraternal Help for Pacification") looming, it is hard to remember another more obscure non-event that would have also happened sixty-five years ago today, had it not been for President Truman's decision two weeks prior.

What if .. Atom Bombs Weren't UsedThe bible-quoting haberdasher from Missouri wrote in his diary on July 25th 1945 that with an atomic bomb, military objectives and soldiers and sailors will be targets indiscrimately along with women and children. He overruled the Department of War which was advocating its use, by writing: "It is certainly a good thing for the world that Hitler's crowd or Stalin's did not discover this atomic bomb. It seems to be the most terrible thing ever discovered, and it should not be made useful".

A new story by the QuintessentialThe Battle of Okinawa and its devastating aftermath prompted the United States to look for alternatives to subdue mainland Japan. But with Truman vehemently against the atomic bomb and the Soviet invasion of Japan imminent, the United States had no choice but to go forward with the plans for Operation Olympic. In the ensuing decades, much had been made of heroism on the beaches of Miyazake, from Carl Mydans' photos of X-Day landings to Clint Eastwood's box-office hit Our Boys of Kyushu, but it was tragic and demoralizing that Japan's strategic geography, its awaiting guerillas and kamikaze troops meant the Allies casulties were high. Despite these setbacks, the war in the Pacific was over in eighteen months. With the Soviets invading from the north, and the Americans blockading the ports, the Japanese morale was soon cracking. That winter, Emperor Hirohito sat in pallor as his youngest brother denounced him in the privy council. But the martial law imposed to quell riots in Tokyo and Yokohama was the signal to the wider world that Japan would fight to the bitter end. That end arrived on 24th January 1947, with Emperor Hirohito signing the instrument of surrender inside the war-ravished Imperial Palace in front of General MacArthur and Marshal Vasilevsky.

The next day, the flag used by Commodore Perry when he entered Tokyo Bay in 1853, was flown atop the Imperial Palace. Hidden behind that iconic W. Eugene Smith photo of flag rising - which now graces the National Pacific War Memorial in Chesapeake, Virginia - were deeper discomforts that there might be an "influence gap" between the U.S. and the Soviets. With the war for mainland Japan consuming most of American manpower, Truman failed to prevent Turkey, Iran, Greece, Italy and Korea from falling into the communist camp. Churchill bemoaned this failure in his "Iron Curtain" speech at Westminster College, London. Encroaching Soviet sphere withered away America's last remaining shreds of isolationism, but like Wilson before him, Truman was too occupied by a single issue to fully grasp America's place on the world's stage. In his magisterial book "Colossus: the Price of America's Empire", Niall Ferguson wrote, "Truman's moral decision not to use the Atom Bomb - which rehabilitated his posthumous reputation - was revealed only after his presidency, the end of which was prematurely facilitated by hesitance and spinelessness he displayed towards the blockaded citizens of West Berlin". That November, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York - an isolationist who reverted his stance to vehemently urge America to join Britain in her courageous but eventually doomed Berlin Airlift - had all the good reasons to be smiling manaically from ear to ear when he held up a newspaper predicting his victory four hours before the polled closed.

In 1950, Japan was divided into North and South Japans with Tokyo itself jointly administered between the Soviet Union, China and the United States. In 1955, the Chiyoda Wall dissecting the Imperial Palace went up; in the years that followed, its importance was underlined in two famous presidential speeches made in front of it: Adlai Stevenson's "Today we are all Japanese," and Ronald Reagen's "Mr. Gorbachev, Tear Down This Wall", but back in 1955, so palpable were the fears that the Soviet Union would drive 20 miles down the 36th parallel delimitation line to invade Tokyo that the wall came as a relief.

The idea of using the atomic weapons seems ridiculous now, knowing as we do the atom's perverse effects. But back in the 1950s, everyone entertained those ideas; Generals MacArthur and Le May nearly prevailed upon President Dewey to use them when the Soviets invaded Korea and Hungary and squashed revolts there. There were proposals to use nuclear weapons to shot down Russian satellites, to quell insurgants against American-supported dictators in South America, and to control weather. Senator Joseph MacCarthy of Wisconsin denounced Dewey as a red agent for his refusal to use them against the Russian fleet. Only with President Steveson's gentle explanation after the Cuban Missile Crisis, did we finally come to terms with the dangers of what Oppenheimer called, "Destoryer of Worlds". Even then, we didn't fully understand the true horror of nuclear weapons until Richard Nixon annihilated North Vietnam.

To yearn nostalgically for the destruction of multiple Japanese cities is definitely a taboo, but it is always tempting to indulge in some alternative history. Atom bombs would undoubtably have ended the war before the Soviets joined it, and would have led to the American occupation of entire Japan, not just its southern parts. And without the constant anxieties about the Soviet presence in the Far East, America would not have gone into Vietnam. Without the costly war for Japan, American would have prevented the communist encroachments in China and East Europe. On the other hand, a Japan devastated by nuclear bombs and its population alienated by such inhumanity would not have warmed up to Americans occupiers who dropped the bombs. It is equally hard to imagine a modern futuristic Japan without the industrial centers in the south. But all these counterfactuals aside, this much is certain: despite its high human costs and less-than-satisfactory outcome, Operation Olympic was America's finest hour.


Entry posted by Guest Historian The Quintessential Email the AuthorVisit the Authors Web Site © The Quintessential, 2010-.
Story Tags Click on the hyperlinked metadata to surf the site! Permalinks: Post, Day. Browse Thread: Iconic Photos Blog Source: Iconic Photos Labels: Hiroshima, Nakasaki, World War 2, Japanese, America.

Readers Comment Kirk Edwards commented on 2010-08-18 20:23:58 ~ Enjoyable.But,unlikely.The U.S public was tired of war and so was Truman.Truman would require a major divergence to alter him to this degree.

Readers Comment Eric Oppen commented on 2010-08-18 20:42:38 ~ Basically, wha tKirk said. Truman just saw the A-bomb as just another weapon, and used it accordingly.

Readers Comment Eric Lipps commented on 2010-08-19 00:30:19 ~ And Truman wasn't only targeting the Japanese, either. His message to the Soviets was loud and clear: We now have the means to wipe you off the planet, and we're willing to use it if you push us too far. Unfortunately for him, thew Soviets were already racing to build one of their own. Some of his military advisers, basically regarding the Russians as flea-ridden medieval barbarians, refused to take this seriously, but in fact, in our history, they had the bomb only four years after we did despite the devastation of the war--and not just because of espionage, either: Igor Kurchatov and Andrei Sakharov were top-flight nuclear physicists, and they weren't alone. Kurchatov's team had independently developed what we now know to have been a workable bomb design, though Stalin preferred to use the ones we had generoussly demonstrated worked for sure.

Readers Comment David Atwell commented on 2010-08-19 02:00:49 ~ A very well thought out AH, but with its difficulties. Yet top marks for trying. However, even allowing for the none use of the two nukes, it would be impossible for the USA to retreat back into isolationism in the post WWII period. Far too much had taken place globally for a repeat of the post WWI period. So whether the Soviets like it or not, I highly doubt that Turkey, Iran, Greece, Italy and Korea are going to fall as outlined in the scenario without major US intervention. In a similar situation, I also highly doubt that the USSR will get northern Japan. Now I realise that the author has used the divided Germany here, as a model for this AH Japan, but realistically I can't see the USSR getting much further than grabbing Hokkaido at best.

Readers Comment Michael Balikoff commented on 2010-08-19 04:46:55 ~ Once again we see the dreamers, or the if only...... making noises about the prognoses of the ending to the hostilities during W.W.11. It would have been a different language for sure by now that all the fictitious dreaming would be wrote in either in German or Japanese. The Japanese was too brain washed to admit they were defeated and were willing to fight to the very end and being in the BCOF after the end gave us a very vivid picture of what reality was at that time and the bomb was the straw the broke the Emperor's back and brought on the cessation of warfare.....jazzman

Readers Comment Jeff Provine commented on 2010-08-19 15:44:11 ~ Great re-appropriation of terms from OTL. I met a pilot at the Pearl Harbor museum who had just finished flight school the week before the a-bomb dropped. Even 40-some years later, he was still disappointed that he didn't get a chance to fight. There're always new soldiers ready to go, but whether there would be enough to make up for the 1 million US casualties...

Facebook Comment John Braue commented on Facebook : The Quintessential glosses over the hideous casualties -- including Japanese civilian, far greater than Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined -- that Operation Olympic was expected to produce. "Bull" Halsey notoriously said "Before we're through with them, the Japanese language will be spoken only in hell." In this dystopian vision, that might have become the literal truth."


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