L
LRThunder
Guest
True, but as I keep saying you and I, as well as the Church, has the benefit of hindsight. Truman and our military didn’t.Sure. And the Church’s statement isn’t limited to atomic bombs either.
True, but as I keep saying you and I, as well as the Church, has the benefit of hindsight. Truman and our military didn’t.Sure. And the Church’s statement isn’t limited to atomic bombs either.
Even after the first atomic bomb, they wouldn’t surrender. They certainly wouldn’t have gone peacefully.A land invasion would certainly have been more costly to our troops, and to the Japanese themselves very likely. Was it absolutely necessary to invade Japan? We pretty much had them defeated outside of Japan. IOW, was the choice only between invading Japan or nuking them until they surrendered? Or could we have negotiated a treaty to end the war without invasion?
I hear what you’re saying as to hindsight. But I wouldn’t say they had no idea what the atom bomb could do. And ultimately, they had to justify their decision to use it to God.True, but as I keep saying you and I, as well as the Church, has the benefit of hindsight. Truman and our military didn’t.
Or they could have had to justify their decision to invade which would’ve killed many more people.I hear what you’re saying as to hindsight. But I wouldn’t say they had no idea what the atom bomb could do. And ultimately, they had to justify their decision to use it to God.
I don’t argue with any of this. The means used to stop them. That’s what’s in question.Even after the first atomic bomb, they wouldn’t surrender. They certainly wouldn’t have gone peacefully.
I think it was necessary to eliminate them as soon as possible. They were conquering parts of mainland Asia, and could have used their home island to launch bombing attacks. We had to stop them. We did it the least costly way possible. How could that have been wrong? It was certainly a just war, we had to stop them at all costs. They were trying to take over the world.
The means used to stop them saved more lives than the alternative. How could that have been wrong?I don’t argue with any of this. The means used to stop them. That’s what’s in question.
I researched this back in the '80s when I was doing my MA in Soviet Studies. Stalin had promised at Yalta that he would go to war against Japan a certain number of days (I think it was 90) after Germany surrendered. The USSR’s attack on Japan came in strict accordance with the scheduling that he had promised. The timing of the Hiroshima bomb was a coincidence. An attack of that magnitude could not have been done like, “Oh, look, the capitalists dropped a super-weapon on Japan–let’s attack now!” Too much planning and preparation required.I was listening to an historian on this subject last week on C-SPAN, he pointed out that the USSR entered the war against Japan the same time we dropped the bomb on Hiroshima, invading Manchuria with 1.5 million troops.
Any invasion would have been of the Japanese homeland would have been by the US and the USSR, leading to a Japan divided like Germany. The Sovs would have certainly gotten Hokkaido, the northern island. Dropping the bombs avoided this.
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This link is not what was asked. It is twenty years later. I believe the original question is to get the Church’s position at the time of attack.Another link from the 2nd Vatican Council (See GS #80 and associated references.)
ewtn.com/library/COUNCILS/V2MODWOR.HTM
The good that might come from an evil act doesn’t justify the evil act. It was wrong because it was an act that resulted in the indiscriminate killing of hundreds of thousands of civilians.The means used to stop them saved more lives than the alternative. How could that have been wrong?
How can it be more right to send humans to their death storming heavily defended beaches when the enemy knows you’re coming? It would have been worse than storming the beaches of Normandy (in this case we had no other choice).
What I’m saying is that a land invasion would have resulted in the death of even more civilians. How could a land invasion have been the better course of action?The good that might come from an evil act doesn’t justify the evil act. It was wrong because it was an act that resulted in the indiscriminate killing of hundreds of thousands of civilians.
Yes, but that is the question being asked. Calling it evil just begs the question and does not solve anything. If it was objectivly evil, then it could not be used, even if a million had to die to avoid it’s use, as might well have happened.… did not justify the use of evil means (the dropping of atomic bombs on cities and the indiscriminate killing of civilians).
If you read item 80 in the link, there are references to papal statements at the time.This link is not what was asked. It is twenty years later. I believe the original question is to get the Church’s position at the time of attack.
No, we could not have, should not have and would have done nothing but pass on another war to the next generation. There is a reason why unconditional surrender is the only option that should be given to an aggressive foe who is willing to commit any atrocity against you. I think we sometimes forget what Imperial Japan was like.IOW, was the choice only between invading Japan or nuking them until they surrendered? Or could we have negotiated a treaty to end the war without invasion?
I believe CCC 2314, which I quoted, makes this exact point.Yes, but that is the question being asked. Calling it evil just begs the question and does not solve anything. If it was objectivly evil, then it could not be used, even if a million had to die to avoid it’s use, as might well have happened.
I think it said after the attack. It didn’t say at the time. But your distinction is a good one. Sometimes events occur that are so horrible that they aren’t foreseen until they happen. But does that get the decision maker off the hook? It might mitigate the decision somewhat. Only God really knows.This link is not what was asked. It is twenty years later. I believe the original question is to get the Church’s position at the time of attack.
Again, that is a later document which was not around in 1945. Also, section 80 does not mention anything to do with this thread and the footnotes do not include any references earlier that 1963 for that section.I believe CCC 2314, which I quoted, makes this exact point.
That’s fine. So are you saying that therefore the indiscriminate mass killing of civilians in war was OK?Again, that is a later document which was not around in 1945. Also, section 80 does not mention anything to do with this thread and the footnotes do not include any references earlier that 1963 for that section.
The combined immediate combat deaths of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were approximately 200,000; add to that another 100,000 deaths over the next 60 years in long-term effects, and you still have 300,000.The nuclear bombing of Nagasaki and Hiroshima are and were a massive War Crime, even though the USA were never brought to court for this crime against humanity.
I agree that the use of incendiary bombs to destroy Dresden was questionable, especially since the resulting firestorm engulfed the residential sections of the city, which had little to do with military or industrial targets (again, as opposed to the Japanese targets; see below). 200 German factories were damaged, which hampered the flow of German war production, but in my own humble opinion, that could have been done more effectively with HE and rendered the same result with much less collateral damage.Like Dresden was too.
None of the three targets we’re discussing here were “random”, nor were they attacked strictly for terror purposes. Dresden was targeted in order to hinder the city’s rail system from moving upwards of half a million German troops into the eastern section of Germany to engage advancing Soviet forces. That, at least, was the stated objective. As for Hiroshima and Nagasaki, see below.No matter what the Germans and Japanese did, anti-civilian random terror is totally immoral.
Considering the fact that the plants which produced the components and research for the atomic bomb hadn’t even been built when 1943 began, that a good deal of the research and development hadn’t even been accomplished yet, that nobody had any idea, even in early 1944, whether what they were producing would work or not, and that the general consensus was that we were racing against the Germans to produce the bomb before they did (and that if we did produce one before they did, it would be used against Germany) the idea that Hiroshima was specifically targeted long before 1943 is questionable, at best.And Hiroshima was a very unimportant city, chosen long before 1943 to be the target of the first a-bomb. Why? Because of the many Catholics living there? I do not know. It was purposely left undestroyed by regular anti-industry bombardment by the US Airforce.
The United States isn’t squeaky clean, and everybody knows this. Andersonville was a war crime. Wounded Knee was a war crime. My Lai was a war crime. The reasoning behind the Mexican and Spanish-American Wars was a trumped-up bunch of balderdash, in both cases. But Hiroshima and Nagasaki, in my personal estimation, were not war crimes.Sorry for the patriots among you, but the USA indeed has committed war crimes too. Nagasaki and Hiroshima were two of them.
The historical reality is that Japanese resistance during the US conquests of places like Peleliu, Tarawa, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa indicated that millions upon millions of American and Japanese lives were going to be lost before the Pacific war ended, which conservative estimates placed as happening some time in early 1948, and liberal estimates placed as possibly late as 1955. The bombs, for all their negatives, did help tip the scales to ending the war sooner, thus saving millions of lives.Face historical reality.
In 1945, there was no such concept as “nuclear war”, and to apply such a term to Hiroshima and Nagasaki is both disingenuous and inaccurate. The United States had a total of three very small weapons in its stockpile in 1945: one was exploded in New Mexico, and the other two over Japan. The idea of “nuclear warfare” came much later, when both the United States and the Soviet Union had large stockpiles of much more powerful weapons. It also has to be borne in mind that nobody really knew very much about atomic weapons effects in 1945; these things were brand-new, and since we were in a total war, any new weapon that could be used to our advantage was going to be used. If we had known about radiation effects in more detail in 1945, would it have deterred us from using them? Possibly. But at the time, such effects were unknown, so it’s more or less a moot point.Nuclear warfare is ALWAYS illegitimate. And I am not a silly pacifist.