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JimG
Guest
Historical revisionism sometimes occurs with succeeding generations. It’s important to retain original source material and original recollections of participants.I attended a public affairs forum last year where a German historian questioned the “morality” of the U.S. bombing German cities. No one at this Forum ever mentioned the bombing each and every night for many months of London, and I truly believe that when all of the World War II veterans pass away Germany is going to change history – they weren’t responsible for the war – Great Britain and the USA was.
As to the German historian questioning the morality of the U.S. bombing of German cities, it seems a fair criticism. The atom bombs have become the focus of the morality question, but those were simply a more concentrated form of city bombing which had been practiced throughout the war. From a morality standpoint, I can’t make a case to justify either one. Yet from a historical standpoint, it does seem apparent that these types of bombings did shorten the war, ultimately saving lives. And of course, the Allied nations had no monopoly on morally questionable tactics.
As for the two atom bombs that were used, they had a yield (without looking this up) something on the order of 20 kilotons. Compared to what is in the U.S. and Russian arsenals today, they were midget bombs. Now, ICBM’s can carry warheads of 1 megaton easily, going up to much larger yields of 10 or 20 megatons.
Is it moral to even own such a powerful deterrent force? I couldn’t argue for getting rid of it unilaterally, because we would then be open to nuclear blackmail not only from Russia but other nations. I also believe that without the existence of the U.S. deterrent force, the U.S. would have lost the Cuban missile crisis showdown, and the cold war. The deterrent is effective even when not used.