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Works Cited Takaki, Ronald. Hiroshima: Why America Dropped the Atomic Bomb. Boston: Little, 1995. 46-47 Donovan, Robert. Conflict and Crisis: The Presidency of Harry S. Truman. New York: Norton, 1977. 94 Wyden, Peter. Day One: Before Hiroshima and After. New York: Simon, 1984. Allen, Thomas, and Norman Polmar. Code Name Down Fall: The Secret Plan to invade Japan—and Why Truman Dropped the Bomb. New York: Simon, 1995 Uchii, Soshichi “Nuclear Research in the Soviet Union.”8 Jan. 2004. July 2004 <http://www.bun.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~suchii/Sci.Ethics/soviet.bomb.html> U.S. National Archives, Record Group 77, Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Manhattan Engineer District, TS Manhattan Project File '42-'46, folder 5D Selection of Targets, 2 Notes on Target Committee Meetings. http://www.dannen.com/decision/targets.html Szilard, Leo. Interview. President Truman Did Not Understand. Aug. 1960. July 2004 <http://www.peak.org/~danneng/decision/usnews.html> 1 Marshall Strother Woods 10th July, 22, 2004 2 Before a decision could be reached about a nuclear attack in Japan, the United States had to answer three questions. First, what, if any, were the alternatives to a nuclear attack on Japan? Second, how would such an attack affect the United States’ standing amongst the post-war powers, and especially its relationship with the Soviet Union? Finally, if use of the atomic bomb was deemed acceptable and necessary to victory, how could it be used to effectively secure a Japanese surrender? The United States’ failed to answer any one of these questions adequately, and as a result, it launched an unnecessary nuclear assault which resulted in the deaths of over 240,000 Japanese civilians.i Prospects for any diplomatic solution to the War in the Pacific were doomed, from the United States’ point of view, in 1944 by Franklin Roosevelt when he said the following at a press conference in Washington: “We [Churchill and Roosevelt] formally reemphasized what we had been talking about before, and that is we don’t think there should be any kind of negotiated armistice, for obvious reasons. There ought to be unconditional surrender.”ii Initially, this statement was not intended to be taken as doctrine; it was propaganda meant to rally the troops and public to War in the East.iii However, as time passed, the movement for unconditional surrender picked up popularity within the Allied countries.iv Fueled by stories of human rights violations in Japan, lingering rage over the destruction of Pearl Harbor, and frustration over the increasing casualties in Japan, the American public began to believe “unconditional surrender” to be the only acceptable victory scenario in the Pacific.v When Roosevelt died, Truman was uncertain of his position, and relied heavily on Roosevelt’s legacy to guide him.vi As a part of this reliance, Truman accepted Roosevelt’s propaganda as a realistic War aim, a mistake that would ruin all further negotiations with Japan.vii 3 By the time the U.S. was considering using the Atomic bomb, the Japanese had already been negotiating with the Soviet Union and Chiang Kai-Shek of the Chinese for some time.viii The negotiations were fruitless for the most part.ix The Soviet Union had no desire for peace with the Japanese and were merely stalling until they could make their move on Japanese territory in Manchurian Chinax, but they were an earnest peace attempt on the part of the Japanese. On May 29, 1945, the Japanese envoy to the Soviet Union Naotake Sato said to a Russian official, “Japan follows Russia’s example in her desire to end hostilities as quickly as possible. The Pacific War, however… as a result of result of America’s attitude, we have no choice to continue the fight,”xi Truman knew of the negotiations, but disregarded them as a Japanese attempt to spread dissention throughout the Allies.xii Instead, Truman and the rest of the allied powers (except Russia) stubbornly refused to negotiate with Japan and, on July 2nd, 1945, approved of an ultimatum demanding Japan’s total surrender of lands and military forces to Allied control.xiii The ultimatum included a clause that threatened Japan with “prompt and utter destruction” if it did not comply; so, when Japan publicly denounced the ultimatum on July 30th, the States felt justified in ending all further communication until Japan had been thoroughly defeated.xiv Aside from use of the nuclear bomb, a conventional invasion of the Japanese homeland was the only method the United States had to secure an unconditional surrender from the Japanese. As the War progressed, and Japan retreated farther west, it began localizing its resources in Japan and Manchuria in preparation for such an invasion. The peace negotiations with the Chinese and Soviets mentioned above were an attempt to secure Japan’s Western front so that troops could be removed from China to 4 help defend Japan.xv After peace negotiations failed, Japan stepped up industrial production in China in order to support the troops that remained there without diverting sending from the island.xvi Generals also suggested that if the army was driven off Japan itself, it could retreat to its Manchurian holdings and continue the fight there.xvii Baron Kantaro Suzuki expressed the Japanese determination in April 1945 when he recommended that the army “fight to the very end” even if “one-hundred million” Japanese had to perish.xviii One June 15th Truman received from the Joint War Plans Committee an outline of the United States’ strategy for a full scale invasion of Japan.xix The following describes the three different scenarios addressed in the “Olympic-Coronet Plan”: If the Olympic-Cornet plan went according to schedule, there would be tow landings, which were expected to result in a total of 193,500 battle casualties. If… the Kyushu invasion ended the war, then the battle casualty count would be 132,500. The worst-case scenario envisioned three major amphibious assaults, and the estimated consequence of this triple invasion was 220,000 battle casualties…total casualties, in the triple invasion scenario, would exceed 250,00 and were climbing toward 500,000xx Clearly, an invasion of Japan was out of the question. The American casualties, to say nothing of Japanese casualties, predicted in Olympic-Coronet were more than enough to justify use of the Atomic Bomb to Truman from a purely military standpoint. He later stated, “It occurred to me, that a quarter of a million of the flower of our young manhood were worth a couple of Japanese cities, and I still think they were and are.”xxi In this and only this respect did Truman make the right assessment about Japan. The Japanese were simply too determined to allow themselves to be defeated at home by a conventional invasion. Having determined that use of the atomic bomb was justified from a military standpoint, Truman had one last issue to consider: the Soviet Union’s reaction to a 5 nuclear assault. Since the Yalta Conference in February of 1945, the United States and the Soviet Union had been in a heated debate over what to do with their European territory after Germany was defeated.xxii After the land had been divided up between the Allies and Russia, the chief concern was how to repair the damage that had been done in Europe.xxiii It was concluded at Yalta that each conquering country should be responsible for the reconstruction of its own territory, provided Germany paid $20 billion in reparations for its aggression, $10 billion of which would go to the Soviet Union.xxiv Neither the US nor the Soviet Union complied with this plan for long. During the negotiations between the US and Soviet Union that continued after Yalta, it became evident that the Soviets were completely disregarding their responsibility for East Germany. Instead of repairing its infrastructure, the Soviet Union was pillaging the German cities and industry and exporting their goods to Moscow en masse.xxv Truman reacted on May 18 by replaced his standing reparations negotiator with a conservative hardliner who was given specific orders to reduce the $20 billion figure, which he thought would devastate the German economy.xxvi This conflict with Russia made an atomic strike on Japan even more appealing. Not only would such an attack serve to end the War in Japan, but many officials believed that it could be used to intimidate the Soviets into complacency in the West. Secretary of State James Byrnes and Director of the Manhattan Project General Leslie Groves, arguably the two most influential people to the President regarding the atomic bomb, were key advocates of this “atomic diplomacy.”xxvii Sadly, these two labored under a similar misconception: that the Soviets would take 7 to 20 years before they could develop a bomb of their own.xxviii Two scientists who had worked at Los Alamos warned 6 them that the Soviets would most likely have a bomb in 3 to 4 years, but neither Groves nor Byrnes would listen;xxix Groves was too eager to show a return on the 2 billion dollars that the United States had spent on his Manhattan Project, and Byrnes was too frustrated with the Soviets to miss such a vital opportunity to make the United States a dominating force. Both Byrnes and Groves advised the President to use the bomb, but the Soviets, who would be a nuclear power by 1949, were ultimately unthreatened.xxx Satisfied with the bomb’s expected impact on Russia and Japan, the White House had only to resolve the question of where and when the bomb would be dropped. This decision fell on two Committees which met on May 10-11 and May 31 respectively.xxxi The first of the two Committees, the Target Committee, was responsible for making preliminary recommendations for the target of the atomic bomb. The most important question at the Target Committee was whether to use the “gadget” (as it was referred to) on a smaller military target, or a larger, more populated area. The goals of the Target Committee are stated in the following excerpt from Section 7 of its summary: “1) obtaining the greatest psychological effect against Japan and 2) making the initial use sufficiently spectacular for the importance of the weapon to be internationally recognized…” For this reason, the possibility of using the weapon on a small military target was largely forsaken. Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, who attended the meeting, insisted that the target be large enough in area that it would fully contain the explosion, so as to demonstrate the full capabilities of the bomb.xxxii The Interim Committee affirmed much of what the Target Committee had concluded. It considered demonstrating the atomic bomb in front of the UN or Japanese officials or warning the Japanese before the bomb was dropped so it could evacuate the 7 target city, but these ideas were quickly dismissed for fear that the Japanese would move US POWs to the drop site or the bomb would not go off, living the U.S. with only one remaining functional bomb.xxxiii As Dr. Leo Szilard testified later in an interview with U.S. News and World Report, the prospect of a nuclear demonstration on neutral ground was highly feasible. The U.S. could have easily manufactured more bombs in time to launch an effective nuclear strike, even if the demonstration was a disaster.xxxiv Instead, the Interim Committee concluded that the bomb should be used on a highly populated city, but one with a military industrial center so as to justify the slaughter.xxxv The meeting of the Interim Committee was rushed.xxxvi At the time, the Soviet Union was preparing for an invasion of Japanese Manchuria and Byrnes, who lead the meeting, wanted to end the War before the Union had the chance to gain any more territory.xxxvii On top of that, General Douglas Macarthur, who was unaware that the atomic bomb even existed until the day before it was dropped, was becoming frustrated with the delay of Olympia-Coronet, and reported that the invasion would become impossible after November of that year.xxxviii As a result, the Interim Committee hastily disregarded the prospect of a peaceful demonstration in order to end the war as quickly as possible. Throughout these final phases of the decision-making process, President Truman was left almost entirely in the dark. He was informed of the results of the Interim Committee, but he did not seem to comprehend what he had condoned. He wrote in his diary on July 25, 12 days before the first bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, “this weapon is to be used against Japan between now and August 10. I have told the Sec. of War, Mr. Stimson, to use it so that the military objectives and soldiers and sailors are the target and 8 not women and children.”xxxix On August 9th he announced “the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, a military base. That was because we wished in this first attack to avoid, insofar as possible, the killing of civilians.”xl Over 66,757 civilians had perished in the bombing.xli Truman had no real reason to lie, the U.S. had been firebombing civilians in Tokyo for weeks; therefore, it must be concluded that he either did not know or did not understand what had occurred. Although Truman supported the bombing in later statements, his morality almost definitely would have caused him to reconsider had he comprehended what he was doing. The same day Truman wrote the above diary entry, his Chief of Staff issued and order to General Carl Spaatz of the Pacific Air Force to drop the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Kokura (“one of the largest arsenals in Japan and is surrounded by urban industrial structures”xlii), or Niigata (“Machine tool industries are located there and it is a potential center for industrial despersion[sic]. It has oil refineries and storage.”xliii) according to Spaatz’s judgment. He followed through with this order on August 6th. As soon as the Japanese realized what had happened at Hiroshima, they immediately were prepared to surrender. Three key leaders keeping Japan in the War, Emperor Hirohito, Baron Suzuki, and Foreign Minister Togo, all quickly reversed their positions when faced with the new American weapon.xliv Hirohito ordered Togo to immediately step up his peace effort saying, “Japan should not miss the chance for peace by vain efforts to secure better terms.”xlv The War would have ended with Nagasaki untouched had it not been for a series of events that prevented the Japanese peace negotiations to begin in time. 9 First, the atomic bomb had wiped out all communications within Hiroshima, preventing the Japanese leadership from understanding the extent of the devastation until long afterwards.xlvi The American’s, not realizing the strength of their own bomb, had ordered the second strike much too soon to allow Japan time to surrender.xlvii Second, on August 7th, two relatively small time field commanders and a nuclear scientist decided to move the date of the second atomic attack from August 11th to August 9th, further decreasing Japan’s allowed response time. Third, one day before the Nagasaki bombing, Stalin gave the order to invade Manchurian Japan (just as Byrnes had feared) with 1.5 million men, which distracted Japan just long enough to miss its last chance at surrender. Finally, Nagasaki was not meant to be the second. Major Charles W. Sweeney, the pilot responsible for delivering the bomb, was flying over Kokura, a significantly more military target, preparing to drop the bomb when he found the cloud cover over the Arsenal to be to heavy to allow a visual bombing. He then changed his flight path towards the secondary target, Nagasaki, and completed his mission, killing thousands more civilians than a similar attack in Kokura would have.xlviii Eventually, of course, Japan surrendered. In a matter of days, the United States had achieved absolute victory without experiencing a single casualty. However, the convenience that the atomic bomb afforded the US in defeating Japan was easily balanced by moral and political losses. The United States had demonstrated its willingness to use its nuclear capabilities and thereby inspired the Soviet Union to begin building arms to defend itself. The United States had decimated Japanese economic centers and enraged the people of Japan, making post-war occupation much more difficult to manage. Most importantly, by using the atomic bomb on civilians, the United 10 States sacrificed the moral high ground. It had lowered the expectations of a civilized country by committing mass murder and getting away with it. In the coming Cold War, the US could not in good conscience advocate nuclear disarmament because it had already used nuclear weapons. Because of the major oversights committed during Truman’s Presidency, the United States and its people are now forced to live with the guilt of having committed one of the most overt and devastating acts of violence ever to be witnessed by man. i Takaki, Ronald. Hiroshima: Why America Dropped the Atomic Bomb. Boston: Little, 1995. 46- 47 ii iii iv v vi Takaki, 35 Takaki, 35 Takaki, 35 Takaki, 37 Donovan, Robert. Conflict and Crisis: The Presidency of Harry S. Truman. New York: Norton, 1977. 94 vii Donovan, 95 Donovan, 92 ix Wyden, Peter. Day One: Before Hiroshima and After. New York: Simon, 1984. 230 x Wyden, 233; Takaki, 66 xi Allen, Thomas, and Norman Polmar. Code Name Down Fall: The Secret Plan to invade Japan— and Why Truman Dropped the Bomb. New York: Simon, 1995. 197 xii Allen, 196 xiii Donovan, 94-95 xiv Wyden, 229 xv Allen, 196 xvi Allen, 195 xvii Allen, 195 xviii Allen, 195 xix Allen, 203 xx Allen, 208 xxi Donovan, 97 xxii Wyden, 127 xxiii Donovan, 56 xxiv Donovan, 76 xxv Donovan, 78 xxvi Donovan, 78 xxvii Takaki, 62-63 xxviii Wyden, 157 xxix Takaki, 62 viii 11 Uchii, Soshichi “Nuclear Research in the Soviet Union.”8 Jan. 2004. July 2004 <http://www.bun.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~suchii/Sci.Ethics/soviet.bomb.html> xxxi U.S. National Archives, Record Group 77, Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, Manhattan Engineer District, TS Manhattan Project File '42-'46, folder 5D Selection of Targets, 2 Notes on Target Committee Meetings. http://www.dannen.com/decision/targets.html this is a memo sent to Groves containing a summary of the Target Committee; Takaki, 42 xxxii http://www.dannen.com/decision/targets.html xxxiii Wyden, 160-161 xxxiv Szilard, Leo. Interview. President Truman Did Not Understand. Aug. 1960. July 2004 <http://www.peak.org/~danneng/decision/usnews.html> xxxv Wyden, 162 xxxvi Wyden, 156 xxxvii Takaki, 66 xxxviii Allen, 210 xxxix Takaki, 42 xl http://www.dannen.com/decision/hst-ag09.html this is an excerpt from Truman’s radio broadcast xli Takaki, 46-47 xlii http://www.dannen.com/decision/targets.html xliii http://www.dannen.com/decision/targets.html the misspelling of “dispersion” is included in the original document xliv Wyden, 296 xlv Wyden, 300 xlvi Wyden, 296 xlvii Takaki, 48 xlviii Takaki, 47 xxx 12