The terms “innocent civilians” and “non-combatants” keep being used here. During WWII, they could only be applied to children because the entire civilian population was working to support the war effort. Farmers and factory workers were all feeding the military machine on both sides, so differentiating between “innocent civiians” and those working for the military becomes impossible. Here in the US, all car production stopped and the factories were used to make military vehicles, from Jeeps to tanks to airplanes. The efforts of the logger and the worker in the plywood mill were the initial steps in the production of landing craft and PT boats. The cotton farmer and the textile worker were producing canvas tops for trucks and uniforms for the soldiers. The entire agricultural and industrial production of the warring countries thus became part of the war effort and removed those engaged in them from the “innocent civilian” category.
It’s so easy to read a history book and then make moral pronouncements on the morality of what happened. It’s quite another thing to live with all the rationing and shortages, three or four families crammed into one house, the blue stars in the windows tearfully being replaced by gold stars, and the hundreds of thousands of dreaded telegrams that always meant more windows with gold stars. The mood of the US in 1945 was that anything that would end the war and bring the troops home was a good thing.
Before trying to argue the morality of what happened sixty something years ago, try to talk to some old people before they all die out and find out how things really were back then. History books just can’t do justice to the realities of life in the forties.
Geezerbob:
Until they died during the last few years, I was privileged to know several survivors of the Bataan Death March, including one who carried his “buddy” for the last half of the “March” like one of the sacks of mail he carried before WW II in San Francisco as a Mailman while his “buddies” formed a phalanx so the Japanese wouldn’t see them and “use them for bayonet drill” (the man who told me about this was the man who was carried as the sack of mail, the other, who died last year, only talked about it during the last years of his life). If the bombs had not been dropped, I wouldn’t have met any of them, as the Japanese Imperial Army had given orders that, in the event of the invasion of Japan, all of the POW’s in Japan’s custody were to be executed.
Since the Japanese starved and executed so many of them while using others in Bio-warfare experiments, I have no doubts those orders would have been carried out.
And, if the papers unearthed in the book listed below are correct, Japan detonated its own Aotmic bomb on August 12,1945.
Japan’s Secret War (JAPAN’S RACE AGAINST TIME TO BUILD ITS OWN ATOMIC BOMB), Wilcox, Robert K. (1995, Marlowe and Company)
If not for the shock of the two atomic bombings, the realization that we had more, and the realization that they couldn’t get theirs airborne, the USA would have been hit with an atomic bomb. Picture the Hollywood sign as background to a scene that looks like Hiroshima looked and you have the idea.
The Japanese had already used biological weapons on the Chinese, and were working on packaging the same weapons (Bubonic Plague Bombs that had been dropped on the Chinese) so they would survive the trip to America. Those who remember the anthrax scare should have a good idea of the terror Bubonic Plague would have caused if it would have hit and spread along several cities and towns in the Pacific Northwest.
At the same time, the Japanese were building jet and Rocket planes to be used as Kamikazis and storing them in caves. If we would have invaded Japan, these would have been aimed at our fleet by the hundreds, and they would have gotten through, given Japan more time to figure out how to get their Plague Bombs, and possibly their atomic bomb, over here.
This above information was what was on Truman’s desk according to the latest declassified papers
What do you think would have happened if Truman had not dropped ours because of the moral qualms expressed here, and then Japanese would first have inflicted Bubonic Plague on us and then dropped their own atomic bomb on us after annihilating most of our fleet in a Kamikazi blitz? What do you think would have happened to those who were “Prisoners of the Japanese” had we not drpped the bombs?
If all these things did happen, including the slaughter of the POW’s and the dropping of the Atomic Bomb on Los Angeles, what do you think we would have done with ALL the Atomic Bombs in our inventory?
People forget the Japanese weren’t just sitting there waiting to be invaded. They were “fighting back”, and their way of fighting back was pretty nasty.
Your Brother in Christ, Michael