The Harry Truman dilemma

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Do you believe that the Japanese stopped fighting because they could not fight without hiroshima and nagasaki. I believe it is because they saw the seriousness of the U.S. and because they feared more bombs.

A lone Raven
 
Always remember that no one **like **his enemy during a war. When you have to choose between your own people and the people from the enemy land, the choice is obvious.

Truman chose to bring back the troops at home.
 
The bombing prevented approximately 20 million deaths – including civilian deaths – in the subsequent winter from exposure to the cold, starvation, and warfighting.

As I have explained before, even the two bombs did not stop the Japanese military. The Emperor actually – himself in person – surrendered three times. The military refused to surrender and attempted to assassinate the Emperor. Even after the official surrender, the military brutally tortured and murdered their Allied prisoners of war.

Oh and, if we had waited, then the Japanese would have had their own nuclear bombs. They were developing them at the University of Tokyo and in North Korea. They had already sent trial balloons over the American West Coast to set forest fires. But I have already said this.
  1. What do folks think the Japanese military would have done with their own nukes?
  2. How many hundreds of million of deaths would have been added to the 20 million predicted for the winter following H & N?
Good points!

And Welcome Back, Ani!!

We also now know that the Japanese had built a fleet of huge submarines that could carry two or three airplanes in a hangar structure. Their first raid was planned to damage locks at the Panama Canal. Subsequent planned raids were to use the planes to seed dirty bombs / radioactive fallout along the U.S. West Coast.

Fortunately the war ended before they submarines and their airplanes could be deployed and the U.S. Navy caused the giant submarines to be scuttled.
 
Not if you make an effort to attack the weapons themselves, and in those days, no, they wouldn’t have all been civilians. Especially on the Ho Chi Minh trail or in a weapons manufacturing complex. Security concerns.
You don’t seriously believe what I highlighted, do you?
 
You don’t seriously believe what I highlighted, do you?
Yes, I do. If you know of a warehouse in a city that has weapons, you attack the warehouse, not the whole city.

If you know of a passenger train carrying weapons secretly, you try to hit only the car with the weapons.

Not that complicated, really, nor outrageous.
 
But I am repeating myself for no good reason. I have gone into all of this in great detail at the links I have given. I wonder if you have read those explanations. And mine are not the only explanations. Have you read them?
Ani:

That’s partly why I asked the Mods to kill the Thread. We have an instance where posters on one side of the issue believe this has to be a debate they must win by browbeating the opposition into submission rather than the respectful roundtable discussion the OP requested where everyone tried to discuss what they knew about the situation President Truman faced and then to discuss it and the potential consequences of his decision to drop the bombs, along wih the consequences if he hadn’t.

Only after that were we supposed to discuss the moral and ethical implications, when everyone involved in the discussion KNEW THE COST of the decision.

It’s easy to sound all high and mighty and moral and eithical when one doesn’t have to pay the price. It’s quite another matter when one knows that the price of one’s decision will be paid in blood by millions of one’s countrymen, by millions more of one’s enemies and maybe even one’s one self and one’s own family.

Situational Ethics as understood by Ethicists is that one applies Eternal Principals and Standards to Individual Situations knowing that there may very well be a cost paid by somone who can’t afford to pay that cost.

I know I’m goin to get Bar-b-qued. If I do, It’ll only serve as proof for what I said above, and additional reason for this thread to be closed.

Your Brother in Christ, Michael
 
Yes, I do. If you know of a warehouse in a city that has weapons, you attack the warehouse, not the whole city.

If you know of a passenger train carrying weapons secretly, you try to hit only the car with the weapons.

Not that complicated, really, nor outrageous.
Pro_Universal:

And almost impossible, since in the real world most of the world’s “bad guys” Intermingle themselves and their weapons and munitions among civilians, and there won’t be a car on the train where the “bad guys’” and/or their weapons are separated from the rest of the people.

What do you do then, Let the “bad guys” you refused to kill use the weapons you refused to take out slaughter the INNOCENT civilians YOU are responsible to protect? Because that’s exactly what will happen.

I’m sorry, but that’s how things happen in the real world. You don’t kill the terrorists and destroy their weapons when you have the chance, they will DELIBERATELY slaughter the INNOCENT civilians you are responsible to protect.

There is no third option that goes, “Don’t kill terrorists and don’t destroy their weapons, and they won’t slaughter the civilians entrusted to your protection.”

I don’t know what the Early Church Fathers said, but the Babylonian Talmud said that the man who failed to provide for the protection of his family and his community when he had the ability to do so was worse than a man who broke his promises and turned his back on his community (that’s what an infidel was).

Your Brother in Christ, Michael
 
Pro_Universal:

And almost impossible, since in the real world most of the world’s “bad guys” Intermingle themselves and their weapons and munitions among civilians, and there won’t be a car on the train where the “bad guys’” and/or their weapons are separated from the rest of the people.
This is really off topic though. There is no question that the atomic bombs were aimed at wiping out whole cities, not at getting hidden targets.
What do you do then, Let the “bad guys” you refused to kill use the weapons you refused to take out slaughter the INNOCENT civilians YOU are responsible to protect? Because that’s exactly what will happen.
What does this have to do with Japan? Are you saying that the Japanese army didn’t use uniforms? Or what?

You’re talking about terrorism. I’m talking about atom bombs on Japan during world war II. I see no comparison between the two, but interestingly…

Do you think dropping nukes on say, every city in Saudi Arabia, would be justified on the theory that we might kill some terrorists in the strike?
 
Yes, I do. If you know of a warehouse in a city that has weapons, you attack the warehouse, not the whole city.

If you know of a passenger train carrying weapons secretly, you try to hit only the car with the weapons.

Not that complicated, really, nor outrageous.
Human weapons are not accurate enough to destroy ONLY the one warehouse or the one railroad car.
 
Yes, I do. If you know of a warehouse in a city that has weapons, you attack the warehouse, not the whole city.

If you know of a passenger train carrying weapons secretly, you try to hit only the car with the weapons.

Not that complicated, really, nor outrageous.
Not that complicated for folks with

[SIGN]guidance systems[/SIGN]

At the time of Truman, folks did not have guidance systems. Bombardiers aimed using their eyes and a set of maps. At the time of H&N, the weather over Japan was inclement; The Americans had 3 nukes. One they had tested. The other 2 had to hit the Japanese military.

The Japanese military had to believe that the Americans had more nukes where the N&H nukes had come from. Since the Japanese military were developing their own nukes, they knew darn well what H&N meant and they did end up believing that the Americans had more nukes.

Even given that, the Japanese military were determined to drag the entire nation of Japan down around its ears in a spectacular mass sepuko. The military disobeyed the Emperor on two separate occasions and conspired to assassinate him. The third surrender was one which the Emperor made public by means of a photograph and a statement.

As for collateral damage: the so-called 'civilian population" were, for the most part, manufacturing munitions and therefore could not be defined as civilian. Moreover, flyers were sent over the possible targets days before the nukes hit in order to warn civilians to evacuate and seek shelter. Those who were civilians evacuated. Those who supported the military stayed.

Everything possible was done to avoid civilian casualties, given the technology available to the Americans at the time of H&N.

But I have said all of this before. I am assuming that folks did not in fact read the information posted two summers ago? Am I correct?
 
This is really off topic though. There is no question that the atomic bombs were aimed at wiping out whole cities, not at getting hidden targets.
It’s not off topic.

Moreover the object of the act was not to wipe out whole cities.

The object of the act was to end the Pacific War before the following winter.

The cities of N&H were, in reality, not totally wiped out. Not even close to being totally wiped out.

I suspect you have not read the thread to which I pointed you. Your replies do not reference any of those posts. Your replies merely tautologize your point of view. Where is the discussion in that?
 
Human weapons are not accurate enough to destroy ONLY the one warehouse or the one railroad car.
They are now. But they were not at the time of Truman.

Now we have mini robot weapons which can enter one building on a block and destroy or disable enemy combatants within without effecting neighbouring buildings.

We also have guidance systems on our missiles and bombs which ensure p(name removed by moderator)oint accuracy.

Truman did not have guidance systems. Nor did he have robotic weapons.
 
Human weapons are not accurate enough to destroy ONLY the one warehouse or the one railroad car.
So what?

If your only option is to kill hundreds of thousands of civilians, or to use weapons that might not do the job, you choose failure.

There is no Catholic command to win wars. There is no such thing as a command to “do what it takes” to win any war, regardless of the cost.
 
So what?

If your only option is to kill hundreds of thousands of civilians, or to use weapons that might not do the job, you choose failure.

There is no Catholic command to win wars. There is no such thing as a command to “do what it takes” to win any war, regardless of the cost.
What is your definition of “war”?
 
So what?

If your only option is to kill hundreds of thousands of civilians, or to use weapons that might not do the job, you choose failure.

There is no Catholic command to win wars. There is no such thing as a command to “do what it takes” to win any war, regardless of the cost.
The arguments in this thread have had no real Catholic basis and concentrates on “the end justify the means”. Catholic teaching will be ignored in favor of secular rationalization.

CCC
1754 The circumstances, including the consequences, are secondary elements of a moral act. They contribute to increasing or diminishing the moral goodness or evil of human acts (for example, the amount of a theft). They can also diminish or increase the agent’s responsibility (such as acting out of a fear of death). Circumstances of themselves cannot change the moral quality of acts themselves; they can make neither good nor right an action that is in itself evil.
1755 A morally good act requires the goodness of the object, of the end, and of the circumstances together. An evil end corrupts the action, even if the object is good in itself (such as praying and fasting “in order to be seen by men”).
The object of the choice can by itself vitiate an act in its entirety. There are some concrete acts - such as fornication - that it is always wrong to choose, because choosing them entails a disorder of the will, that is, a moral evil.
1756 It is therefore an error to judge the morality of human acts by considering only the intention that inspires them or the circumstances (environment, social pressure, duress or emergency, etc.) which supply their context. There are acts which, in and of themselves, independently of circumstances and intentions, are always gravely illicit by reason of their object; such as blasphemy and perjury, murder and adultery. One may not do evil so that good may result from it.
The only (and extremely non-catholic) Logic used is explicitly condemned in the Catechism
1759 “An evil action cannot be justified by reference to a good intention” (cf. St. Thomas Aquinas, Dec. praec. 6). The end does not justify the means.
I imagine to de-humanize the enemy makes them easier to kill. They are no longer Men, Women and children, they are the enemy we must kill them before they get us.
 
The arguments in this thread have had no real Catholic basis and concentrates on “the end justify the means”. Catholic teaching will be ignored in favor of secular rationalization.

CCC

The only (and extremely non-catholic) Logic used is explicitly condemned in the Catechism

I imagine to de-humanize the enemy makes them easier to kill. They are no longer Men, Women and children, they are the enemy we must kill them before they get us.
Good post.

The only way to justify the bombings on Japan. Is to prove that the bombing was not discriminate and did not target civilians (difficult). Or to employ the theologically unsound principals of proportionalism (condemned in Veritatis Splendor).

It seems to me quite obvious that the act of dropping the bomb was intrinsically evil and as such, totally unjustifiable by definition.

Also, I have yet to find one faithful Catholic theologian who supports the bombings as moral acts.
 
I know what my uncle, my sister in law’s father, an older cousin and several guys I know who were on ships awaiting the word to start the invasion and one guy who was a POW in Japan at the time thought. Not a one of them thought Harry was anything but a hero.

Lets hear a little condemnation from all you bleeding hearts about the Batan Death March, The Rape Of Nanking, December 7th, etc.
 
Lets hear a little condemnation from all you bleeding hearts about the Batan Death March, The Rape Of Nanking, December 7th, etc.
Yes. These are bad also. So, you hold that because they did bad things it’s okay for us to do bad things? I guess I missed that part of moral theology.

By the way, I’m not a bleeding heart. Not even close. I did vote for a democrat once, but only because he was pro-life and pro-gun (the republican was pro-choice). I probably won’t get that chance again.
 
I know what my uncle, my sister in law’s father, an older cousin and several guys I know who were on ships awaiting the word to start the invasion and one guy who was a POW in Japan at the time thought. Not a one of them thought Harry was anything but a hero.

Lets hear a little condemnation from all you bleeding hearts about the Batan Death March, The Rape Of Nanking, December 7th, etc.
Bleeding heart?

Is that how you describe Catholic Doctrine?
 
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