The debate seems to come down to a couple of questions
1. Did the bombing bring about a surrender that would not have happened happened without the bombing, a blockade or an invasion ?
If you think yes then you can see the bombing as saving lives. If ou think surrender was imminent anyway then of course this bombing seems unnecessary.
2. Was it necessary to bomb a city to trigger the surrender ?
Again, the motivation is to trigger a surrender and the question is as to what was necessary.
My opinion is that war is horrific and it does not matter that much to the civilian if they are irradiated, shot, firebombed or starved. In each case they are just as dead. I deplore the senseless destruction of civialians no matter what the cause.
BUT I emphatically disagree with people who see killing a million soldiers as preferable to fewer civilain deaths. Soldiers on all sides were not career killing machines. They had real lives and families outside the stupidity of the war that many of them had been dragged into.
I think it is legitimate for a country to save and preserve the lives of as many of its own people as possible, particularly when you are resisting the aggression of another . The atomic bombing was horrible but it worked in that it ended the war. I might disagree with the need for a second bombing so soon after the first but the American leadership ended the war in the way that was quickest and cost the least lives of Allied troops.
I feel for the Japanese at Hiroshima and Nagasaki but also feel for those who died in London, Stalingrad, Dresden, Normandy, Nanking etc etc. -- Dead is dead and the methodology matters little to the deceased
War is horrific and almost always senseless . . . I wish that atomic bombs had never been invented-- but I cannot see how the US should feel the least bit apologetic about their use-- They were used, the war ended and millions of people in a couple of dozen nations mourned their dead-- In my view the vast majority of those dead were " innocents" of one type or another
1. Did the bombing bring about a surrender that would not have happened happened without the bombing, a blockade or an invasion ?
If you think yes then you can see the bombing as saving lives. If ou think surrender was imminent anyway then of course this bombing seems unnecessary.
2. Was it necessary to bomb a city to trigger the surrender ?
Again, the motivation is to trigger a surrender and the question is as to what was necessary.
My opinion is that war is horrific and it does not matter that much to the civilian if they are irradiated, shot, firebombed or starved. In each case they are just as dead. I deplore the senseless destruction of civialians no matter what the cause.
BUT I emphatically disagree with people who see killing a million soldiers as preferable to fewer civilain deaths. Soldiers on all sides were not career killing machines. They had real lives and families outside the stupidity of the war that many of them had been dragged into.
I think it is legitimate for a country to save and preserve the lives of as many of its own people as possible, particularly when you are resisting the aggression of another . The atomic bombing was horrible but it worked in that it ended the war. I might disagree with the need for a second bombing so soon after the first but the American leadership ended the war in the way that was quickest and cost the least lives of Allied troops.
I feel for the Japanese at Hiroshima and Nagasaki but also feel for those who died in London, Stalingrad, Dresden, Normandy, Nanking etc etc. -- Dead is dead and the methodology matters little to the deceased
War is horrific and almost always senseless . . . I wish that atomic bombs had never been invented-- but I cannot see how the US should feel the least bit apologetic about their use-- They were used, the war ended and millions of people in a couple of dozen nations mourned their dead-- In my view the vast majority of those dead were " innocents" of one type or another
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