How is deliberately killing innocent people an unintended consequence?
From the notes of the Target Committee:
Why was Hiroshima on the list?
Note; not that it’s an important military target. The focus was on choosing cities for maximum psychological damage. This deliberate killing of innocent humans runs counter to every just war theory the Catholic Church has ever taught.
This is not firing a missile at a munitions factory during a just war and regretting that the cleaning crew got killed. This is killing innocent babies to make a political point.
We deliberately chose inhabited cities containing innocent people to die. Now, if you choose to say that you get to perform evil in order to achieve greater good, or those Japanese babies deserved it because of what their parents did, or it’s okay to kill Japanese babies so long as American soldiers stay alive, you’re entitled to that opinion; but that’s inconsistent with Catholic theology.
Call it “war is hell,” or call it “I get to do whatever I want to to defend my country regardless of morality,” or call it “I follow Jesus sometimes but not during war” or what have you. Just don’t call it moral. 'Cause it ain’t.
Look Mr. Nice Guy,
Just because you don’t understand the tactic that godless fascists, albeit of an imperial nature, used in their techniques of adjusting the population for certain work; or, for deliberately using those populated areas for the human shield factor; or, because large urban centers have the necessary civil infrastructure to convert to military use in a time of extreme war: doesn’t mean the U.S. Government, President Truman, the pilots and crew of both the Enola Gay and Bockscar, and everyone else involved in the mission didn’t.
That you don’t have a heart for what war really is, means you need to understand the US political structure and how the government is, and has been, influenced by the finance industry, and international finance as well. The same entities influence both the RINO/Neo-Cons, and the extreme left wing. Due to human nature, the left wing is taking hold- it appeals to the degenerative human spirit, which seeks, and fails, to work outside of God and the Church.
The Japanese created the issue by placing key military centers in the cities; the U.S. merely fought a tactical war. If it wouldn’t have been those people, it would have been some other massive amount, and much more blood and suffering than there was.
In the end, it could have come down to “how many of theirs will we have to kill to win?” and “How many of ours will die in the process?”, and, “Is this worth it?”. Guess what, as stomach churning as that proposition is, that is the foundational question from the squad level up to the President himself.
That is war. If you’ll notice, President Reagan made the decision not to respond to the bombings of the Marine Corps barracks in Beirut. It was a very tough decision for him. The options were weighed, and Reagan realized a response would have brought no good thing. Truman did the same thing, and unfortunately, and fortunately, a decision was made to respond. It was the ultimate proposition- we have the power to end your entire country and you can’t stop it. We will not fight you, and we will help you rebuild, if you just stop fighting us. Remember, we didn’t attack. Japan did. They were seeking to master the Pacific just as Hitler sought to master Europe, and in his twisted little head, the world.
That you disagree with, or armchair-quarterback, almost 70 years after the fact, and from a self-righteous position that only has become engendered by increased influence of the left, is not the problem of Harry S. Truman’s memory, nor any other individual involved in the mission.
Further, out of how many documents do you draw your conclusion of the intent, and what source? Out of the tons of pages released from the project/mission, the
only pertinent aspects to draw a conclusion, are these?:
From the notes of the Target Committee:
Quote:
Dr. Stearns described the work he had done on target selection. He has surveyed possible targets possessing the following qualifications: (1) they be important targets in a large urban area of more than three miles diameter, (2) they be capable of being damaged effectively by a blast, and (3) they are likely to be unattacked by next August.
Why was Hiroshima on the list?
Quote:
Hiroshima - This is an important army depot and port of embarkation in the middle of an urban industrial area. It is a good radar target and it is such a size that a large part of the city could be extensevely damaged. There are adjacent hills which are likely to produce a focusing effect which would considerably increase the blast damage. Due to rivers it is not a good incendiary target. (Classified as an AA Target)
Hardly.
Contd. down.