C
CaptFun
Guest
CaptFun responds in RED
Actually I don’t disagree with you (much … and not your sentiments at all!)
Actually I don’t disagree with you (much … and not your sentiments at all!)
CaptFun:
These points are where you go wrong. First, the targets were not strictly military; read the targeting documents and you’ll see that they ruled out strictly military targets in favor of civilian + military targets. Good info Ghosty. Though I did not say “strictly” military, just military … which they were (in both cases). Most of WWII was like that … the target was a ball bearing factory – bomb the town it’s in and try to get IT and your pilots and plane home hopefully. I DO think somewhere along the line that cities were hit that were without much military value … targets of opportunity spontaneously chosen during a run in some cases. I don’t doubt your documentation. I DO doubt that civilians were purposely targeted on their own somewhat … two major harbor towns full of enemy ships, some factories and war making material plants in direct line for what would be if necessary the optimal line for the invasion of Honshu and Kyushu (the south).
And the subsequent treatment of the Japanese as a “conquered” or at least “occupied” people later (with presumably the same US leadership) bears me out a bit. Although Mc Arthur was known to bitterly oppose the bombings and HE was in charge of the occupation so you could be right (per the bad motive) as well as right about the facts THAT civilians were not given much consideration (I put it this way rather than admitting they were deliberately targeted AS MUCH AS the militarily strategic targets were).
Second, ends never justify the means in Catholic moral teaching, Ironically the Japanese were trying to negotiate an armistice via the Vatican. The US had no diplomatic relations with the Vatican - and Truman, whose call it was - was not a Catholic.
and therefore the “fruits of peace” don’t enter into the equation. Not before hand no, yet by their fruits you shall know them might apply to THINGS as well as people.“It’'ll be better” wouldn’t have cut it with me. But I would have wanted the war to end as quickly and cleanly as possible. Viewed as a “battle” a commander would want his side to lose no one (which happened) and to cause the enemy to surrender and end the war (the highest purpose one could shoot for) – and THEN delivering a JUST PEACE which is ever so much better than a “just war” for the most part.
Third, there was no collateral damage because all of the damage was directly intended. Damage can mean end the opponents war making power. Since these were combination targets as most cities were in those days of “dumb bombs” civilian casualties were probably way down the list of things that were even thought about. I don’t think genocide was the idea. Nor indiscriminate depopulation as the goal.
Again, the targeting documents make this point very clear: they wanted to wipe out whole cities to demonstrate that the U.S. was able and willing to do so in order to psychologically terrorize the Japanese, and so that the full scope and power of the bombs could be demonstrated and observed. That may be true … “whole cities” is our point of contention maybe. A city is not a person or the people - had this unused before weapon knocked down the whole skyline of the two cities - while the civilians survived underground like Londoners in the blitz - I don’t think heads would have rolled or that the mission wasn’t accomplished. Race hatred or a blood lust of “kill them all” is probably not found in those plans - and I’d think it cynical to infer such myself (though it COULD have been true in some case or other - mostly I think it was get the job done and the thinking was more on the battle and not much about civilians at all).
This isn’t Monday-morning quarterbacking or conspiracy theory, it’s what the Targeting Committee itself said. No that’s your take, and you have seen the stuff. I don’t doubt the Committee had doomed the “cities” and by deduction that means the “civilians in them” too. Personally I don’t like even the soldiers to be killed frankly. Let alone the Rosie the riveter type civilians who are merely military support.
Peace and God bless! Thanks, you too. Thought provoking. And some of it we can’t know - like the hearts of men.
My recently departed Dad was 18-21 in the war (Europe). He’d take off his glasses because he didn’t want to see if he’d shot anyone while they ran along - hoping the enemy’d retreat, so they could get a night’s sleep.
But he did shoot. They liberated Dachau and 68,000 prisoners on April 29, 1945. The “Thunderbirds” were slated to go to Japan for the coming invasion. There A-bomb news came. They couldn’t process it. The 2nd A-bomb … and quickly … the war was over … they were going HOME! Alive! They cheered.
Moral dilemma: You are Truman. You have such a weapon. You did not build it or order it built. FDR did. IF you drop it … it could end the war. Stalin (who doesn’t have one) is acting like he wants to continue the present war in Europe some more. The GOP wants the kids in Europe to come home (for motives good or ill?).
IF you don’t drop the bombs do more of YOUR soldiers get killed in this war while you spare the enemy which is still poised to kill them when they invade?
HOW do you explain your decision to your countrymen and women if you DON’T do what you can to win and win fast while seemingly giving time to a hostile enemy?
Is a treason charge in your future? Glad I wasn’t Truman. What’s done is done.
If a black hearted planner had the worst possible motives for what was done … he’s probably dead himself now and undergoing justice possibly in the afterlife.