Not Everyone Wanted To Bomb Hiroshima
by
Leo Maley III and Uday
Mohan
by Leo Maley III and Uday Mohan
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Paul W. Tibbets
Jr., retired brigadier general and former businessman, died on Nov.
1, 2007. He'll forever be remembered for what he unleashed the morning
of August 6, 1945.
That day Tibbets's
B-29 christened the "Enola Gay" after his mother
dropped an atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. The blast,
fire and radiation killed 140,000 people. Many others were scarred
and injured for life. Most of the bomb's victims were women, children,
the elderly and other civilians not directly involved in the war.
Those victims also included American and Allied POWs and thousands
of Koreans forcibly conscripted by the Japanese as wartime labor.
Thus began the nuclear age an age that grows ever more dangerous
with the continuing spread of nuclear weapons.
Tibbets stridently
defended the atomic bombing of Hiroshima for the rest of his life.
Like Harry S. Truman the president who made the decision to drop
the atomic bomb Tibbets, whose job it was to implement the presidential
directive, claimed never to have lost any sleep over the bombing.
He went so far as to reenact the Hiroshima bombing in 1976 at a
Texas air show.
Tibbets insisted
that the nuclear obliteration of Hiroshima (and Nagasaki, destroyed
by a second atomic bomb just three days later) was absolutely necessary
to bring about Japanese surrender before a bloody American invasion
of the Japanese home islands. Many Americans agree.
For Tibbets,
history was unambiguous: Unleashing nuclear weapons was justified;
all criticism of the atomic bombing was suspect. For the last twenty
years or so of his life, Tibbets repeatedly denounced "revisionists"
for questioning the necessity or morality of the atomic bombing
of Japanese cities.
Through his
many public statements Tibbets reinforced the widely held notion
that only untrustworthy revisionists or members of the irresponsible
1960s generation have criticized the atomic bombings. Tibbets was
dead wrong.
Contrary to
conventional opinion today, many military leaders of the time
including six out of seven wartime five-star officers criticized
the use of the atomic bomb.
Take, for example,
Adm. William Leahy, White House chief of staff and chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff during the war. Leahy wrote in his 1950 memoirs
that "the use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki
was of no material assistance in our war against Japan. The Japanese
were already defeated and ready to surrender." Moreover, Leahy
continued, "[I]n being the first to use it, we had adopted
an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages. I
was not taught to make war in that fashion, and wars cannot be won
by destroying women and children."
President Eisenhower,
the Allied commander in Europe during World War II, recalled in
1963, as he did on several other occasions, that he had opposed
using the atomic bomb on Japan during a July 1945 meeting with Secretary
of War Henry Stimson: "I told him I was against it on two counts.
First, the Japanese were ready to surrender and it wasn't necessary
to hit them with that awful thing. Second, I hated to see our country
be the first to use such a weapon."
Adm. William
"Bull" Halsey, the tough and outspoken commander of the
U.S. Third Fleet, which participated in the American offensive against
the Japanese home islands in the final months of the war, publicly
stated in 1946 that "the first atomic bomb was an unnecessary
experiment." The Japanese, he noted, had "put out a lot
of peace feelers through Russia long before" the bomb was used.
Nor do all
Pacific war veterans agree with Tibbets's defense of the atomic
bomb. To give but one example: Responding to a journalist's question
in 1995 about what he would have done had he been in Truman's shoes,
Joseph O'Donnell, a retired Marine Corps sergeant who served in
the Pacific, answered that "we should have went after the military
in Japan. They were bad. But to drop a bomb on women and children
and the elderly, I draw a line there, and I still hold it."
These are but
a few of the military voices that have been critical of American
use of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Recalling these voices
those of both influential and ordinary military figures
should make us reject Tibbets's insistence that the atomic bombings
were militarily and morally justified. Only by challenging and resisting
Tibbets's comfortable view of history will Americans be able to
confront, honestly and critically, one of the most disturbing episodes
in the nation's past.
This article
originally appeared on the History
News Service.
November
6, 2007
Leo
Maley III [send him mail]
has taught at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst and the University
of Maryland, College Park, and Uday Mohan is the director of research
for the Nuclear Studies Institute, American University.
Copyright
© 2007 History News Service
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