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GKC
Guest
Thank you for your service to the country.I’m X Army, I know how the war machine works so I have some qualifications on this matter, don’t discount them. My argument if taken seriously 60+ years ago results in an entire city never being destroyed. The results would have been the same, the war would have ended, this time with less bloodshed, this time we are not considered the bad guys because we at least warned them of what was to come, this time we wouldn’t be still paying for that mistake.
You can choose to play arm chair general all you want, the facts are the facts, and they are grim. I would hate to think the majority still thinks it was OK to make this call here, that we have not learned from our mistakes, that we are losing lives to this day, all due to people like you that opt to make themselves appear to be within the popular consensus.
I’m retired Air Force. I helped build the war machine, including working, many years after the fact, with folks who worked on the Manhattan project.
The facts are the facts, and they are indeed grim. Any alternate approach would have resulted in more casualties and more deaths. We learned a good deal from history and it includes that fact, in particular. Nothing in your post to which I originally responded suggests you have any familiarity with the historical situation. That conclusion may be erroneous, but it is inevitable, on the face.
The subject is a hobby area of mine, and one upon which I have a moderately extensive library (true of many topics, that). I became interested in it while in the Air Force and have pursued it for years.
I find that facts are useful in a discussion like this, to leaven the abstract opinions. My basic recommendations are to read Frank’s DOWNFALL and Newman’s TRUMAN AND THE HIROSHIMA CULT (particularly his chapter on why a demonstration was an exercise in futility). Or, if you need to keep the reading closer to your assumptions, Alperovitz’s THE DECISION TO USE THE ATOMIC BOMB.
GKC