Both Hiroshima and Nagasaki as targets had military objectives … people do disagree …but, among other things, one was a major military headquarters which would have led the fight had we followed the plan and landed our troops in Japan in a contested landing … and the other was a seaport that brought military supplies from production facilities in Korea.
There is a separate set of discussion threads here on Catholic Answers that thoroughly and exhaustively discuss Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Usually the subject gets a lot of attention in August.
Here is a post I looked up; if this subject is of interest, might want to consider doing a search for similar posts by this poster …
GKC
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=728443&highlight=hiroshima
GKC
Senior Member
Join Date: May 25, 2004
Posts: 7,941
Re: Should we have dropped Atomic bombs on Japan
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ghosty
It wasn’t just from you’re posts, but you definitely helped solidify my understanding and I thank you for it.
I’ve not come across anything that specifically says that a high casualty rate was aimed for, which is why I said I don’t know to what extent it is true, but it’s the obvious implication of all the plans and “clean speak”. After all, without a high casualty rate the proposed “shock and awe” wouldn’t have been so shocking or awful.
What documents have you come across that detail the casualty rates that were intended/anticipated? I’m very interested in learning more about that angle specifically.
Peace and God bless!
There was no specific anticipated casualty figure I know of (not to say that there were none, and I may even have read and forgotten them), save that it was hoped to be high. There was no experience with dropping the things, at all, not to mention over built up areas. What was hoped for was as big an effect as possible (hence the original aiming point of the Nagasaki bomb, which would have been more deadly than the actual hypocenter), to equate to the multi-plane, multi-day raids on Tokyo, for example. The contrast of the 1 plane, 1 bomb, to 500 plane raids over several days, was the shock and awe hoped for. It took two, and some behind the scenes maneuvering by the peace faction, but it worked.
In fact, among the things hoped for in Hiroshima was a successful drop, period. No one had exploded a uranium bomb, in any sense. It was expected to work, but…Imagine if the bomb had not exploded, floated down to land at the T crossing of the Aioi bridge, and wound up in the hands of Dr. Yoshio Nishima. It was terra incognito. Recall what Oppenheimer had told Marshall could be done with the next production bombs, with respect to OLYMPIC, and what Marshall was then planning to do. Nobody knew.
As always, Frank/DOWNFALL is the first man to read, though I recently finished Coffey’s IMPERIAL TRAGEDY, which is illuminating.
GKC