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Why U.S Droped Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki

So the privy council represented the more nationalist elements in Japan !
but considering there was a failed coup attempt even after the events in Hiroshima and Nagasaki to stop the unconditional surrender the emperor had some valid apprehensions about intervening that early !

Precisely. The privy council were either military generals turned politicians or career politicians who were connected to the military. The Emperor had really no power , just a mere figurehead, albeit with a powerful religious role.

It was only after Okinawa that the Emperor started to voice his concerns. The propaganda machine was nefarious , really. News papers were printing out how Japan was winning the war ! I'm sure the sight of B-17s overhead ....and frequent bombings... Should have sent a message.

Had the council has their way, they would have had the entire nation suffer an invasion on the home islands. They'd have the whole Japanese people fight to the death for their misguided sense of honor. Many of our people died and were fooled by the military government ! The military started the damned war in China, in fact it was the junior officers of the Kwangtung Army that agitated the Mukden Incident. And instead of punishing these lecherous traitors, the Army High Command rewarded them by invading Manchuria proper. As you see, the Japanese people had no say in this war, it was a private affair my the Imperial Army's Kwangtung Command.

This is a moral lesson we must learn. To never allow the military to control government , less suffer a catastrophe of epic proportions due to such adventurism.

That damned war was preventable.
 
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The reason in my eyes is the American fear of Russian territorial ambitions in relations to Japan. Also the Americans knew that if Russia came to Japan it would be split like Germany was. All in all the Americans tried and succeeded in making Japan a strong ally after WW2 which is a remarkable feat after the fire bombing and the nuclear bombing and the executions and the insults to the Japanese culture as invaders after WW2
I should add that the Army would have listened, but there were fanatics in the Imperial Privy Council that would have opposed. In fact, some of them would preferred the Emperor dead than do anything contrary to their plans.
I thought a direct order from the Emperor could not be rejected
 
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The reason in my eyes is the American fear of Russian territorial ambitions in relations to Japan. Also the Americans knew that if Russia came to Japan it would be split like Germany was. All in all the Americans tried and succeeded in making Japan a strong ally after WW2 which is a remarkable feat after the fire bombing and the nuclear bombing and the executions and the insults to the Japanese culture as invaders after WW2

I thought a direct order from the Emperor could not be rejected

To the common citizen, The Emperor's wish was the Will of Heaven. But to military fanatics who valued a misguided sense of Bushido, death by fighting was preferable to surrender, which was considered without honor.

To these fanatics , if the Emperor stood in the way, they would have killed him. In fact , that failed coup's aim was just that. They would have harmed The Emperor , whatever cost to prevent him from advocating a surrender.
 
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Japan should have initiated the surrender process immediately after the horrendous firebombing of Tokyo (March 9-10, 1945). Over 100,000 were dead and a million homeless. When Berlin fell another opportunity was there for Japan. But all these were missed for whatever reason. Had Japan initiated the surrender process the massacre in Hiroshima & Nagasaki could have been prevented.
 
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That's just a convenient argument made by Americans to justify their military bravado. Saving 15 million lives by using Atomic bombs is a wierdly exaggerated statement. We are hearing this age old argument of aggressors justifying killing with the saving of lives relative to what would have been lost had the killing not taken place.
If the US wanted to end the war with minimum casualties, they could have done it by demonstrating a low yield atomic bomb's capability at a relatively uninhibited area.
Let me put it to you this way...

For most people, a gun shot to a leg will compel them to surrender and submit to demands made of them. Some people are tougher, they may need two gun shots before they submit. Take special forces training, for example. There are gradual escalation in terms of physical hardships to induce candidates to surrender and remove themselves from the roster. The US learned that cold temperature and being constantly wet are great motivators for lesser candidates to drop. No need to be sadistic like the Russians that everyone falsely admire.

No different in warfare. Although the first punch should be powerful enough to shock the enemy into confusion and hopefully submission, there are always more powerful reserves readied to be used in the event he refuses to submit. You presents the arguments as to why A, B, and C reasons should be compelling for him to surrender, then you present D, E, and F reasons why that if he refuses to surrender, more death and destruction can be rained upon his forces and his land. And so the escalation.

Japan received many shocking blows during the war. Her military were in tatters. The Army troops were initially slowly isolated, then swiftly isolated from their supplies. The Navy were rendered impotent to counter the Americans' and allies' navies. In the air war, her combat experienced pilots were being killed off daily, and had to resort to training boys in suicide missions -- the Kamikazes. Her cities received no protections from daily bombardment. The fire bombings produced hundreds of thousands of casualties, the word 'casualties' includes killed and wounded. The escalation from the Allies was inevitable and inexorable.

But Japan refused to surrender.

So what make you think -- naively -- that Imperial Japan would be so frightened at a low yield nuclear demonstration destruction of a small island somewhere witnessed by only a select few VIPs from both sides ?

OPERATION KETSU-GO
The sooner the Americans come, the better...One hundred million die proudly.

- Japanese slogan in the summer of 1945.

Japan was finished as a warmaking nation, in spite of its four million men still under arms. But...Japan was not going to quit. Despite the fact that she was militarily finished, Japan's leaders were going to fight right on. To not lose "face" was more important than hundreds and hundreds of thousands of lives. And the people concurred, in silence, without protest. To continue was no longer a question of Japanese military thinking, it was an aspect of Japanese culture and psychology.

- James Jones, WWII

Japanese Homeland Defense Strategy

With the greater part of Japan's troop strength overseas and industrial production suffering under constant American air attacks, the defense of the Japanese home islands presented an enormous challenge to the Japanese Imperial General Headquarters (IGHQ). On 8 April 1945, the Imperial General Headquarters issued orders, to be effective 15 April, activating the First and Second General Armies.(1) These two Armies would be responsible for the ground defense of the Japanese home islands. Also, on 8 April 1945, IGHQ issued an order activating the Air General Army, effective 15 April. The purpose of the new Air General Army was to coordinate the air defense of Japan, providing a single headquarters through which cooperation with the ground forces and the Navy could be expedited in implementing the defense of the home islands.(2) Simultaneously with the activation of the First and Second General Armies and the Air General Army, IGHQ issued orders for the implementation of Ketsu-Go(Decisive) Operation. Defensive in nature, the operation divided the Japanese home territory into seven zones from which to fight the final decisive battles of the Japanese empire.(3)

The strategy for Ketsu-Go was outlined in an 8 April 1945 Army Directive.(4) It stated that the Imperial Army would endeavor to crush the Americans while the invasion force was still at sea. They planned to deliver a decisive blow against the American naval force by initially destroying as many carriers as possible, utilizing the special attack forces of the Air Force and Navy. When the amphibious force approached within range of the homeland airbases, the entire air combat strength would be employed in continual night and day assaults against these ships. In conducting the air operations, the emphasis would be on the disruption of the American landing plans. The principal targets were to be the troop and equipment transports. Those American forces which succeeded in landing would be swiftly attacked by the Imperial Army in order to seek the decisive victory. The principal objective of the land operation was the destruction of the American landing force on the beach.
The Quantung Army was defeated on mainland China, as so many have so often pointed out. But no sane military mind would dismiss the combat experience of the soldiers. The Quantung Army was on the march home and with its combat experience, the urban guerrilla warfare these soldiers could conduct against the occupying forces would cost inestimable lives on both sides.

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By the time of the decision to use nuclear weapons on Imperial Japan, fighters, tanks, and rifles were already being manufactured in underground factories, manned by children and the elderly, and these factories survived the Allies' bombings on the surface. The Japanese were creative to use peanut oil as lubricant for machines, to either manufacture these weapons or in the weapons themselves.

So how much more deaths could be from both sides if these weapons, no matter how inferior they could be, were used in an insurgency war against the occupiers ?

Do you really think that you brought on any new arguments ?

Japan was indeed fighting a losing war which become clear after battle of Okinawa & other battles fought on Japanese Islands & Japanese imperial government are to be partially blamed for pushing Americans to make the deadly Nuclear attacks. But Americans were really adamant & were making unreasonable demands. They were not clearly diplomatic in their approach as they had been with west European powers.
I somewhere read that before Hiroshima attacks Emperor Hirohito was ready for a "conditional surrender" which the Americans never took seriously & when the Soviet Union suddenly declared war on Aug. 8, the day before the Nagasaki Atomic bomb was dropped,Emperor Hirohito put pressure on the military government to immediately surrender unconditionally. But the Americans never heeded it & dropped the bomb again. At least they could have stopped with Hiroshima & avoided the Nagasaki nuclear attacks
The US and allies were never under any obligations to accept a conditional surrender.

Any 'conditions' are essentially gestures of goodwill that can be legally used against the victor's side at unknown time. So the better option is to demand an unconditional surrender and use those gestures of goodwill as inducements for cooperation later.

So the privy council represented the more nationalist elements in Japan !
but considering there was a failed coup attempt even after the events in Hiroshima and Nagasaki to stop the unconditional surrender the emperor had some valid apprehensions about intervening that early !
I doubt he knew of the failed palace coup -- AFTER both cities were destroyed.

The fact that there was a coup attempt means that the decision to use nuclear weapons was, in an odd way, justifiable in hindsight. The coup, later known, revealed that the Japanese government was seriously divided with the final authority -- the Emperor -- favored unconditional surrender, and the military favored continuation of the war, even on home soil.

What if the coup succeeded ?

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Just like loony 9/11 conspiracy theories, leave the A-bombs on Japan issue alone long enough, and a naive fool will raise the same old arguments as something new and shockingly discovered.
 
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SOCIAL SCIENTISTS BELIEVE LEADERS LACK A SENSE OF WAR'S REALITY - NYTimes.com
By PHILIP M. BOFFEY, Special to the New York Times
Published: September 7, 1982

...Roger Fisher, professor of law at Harvard University, offers a simple suggestion to make the stakes more real. He would put the codes needed to fire nuclear weapons in a little capsule, and implant the capsule next to the heart of a volunteer, who would carry a big butcher knife as he accompanied the President everywhere. If the President ever wanted to fire nuclear weapons, he would first have to kill, with his own hands, that human being.

''He has to look at someone and realize what death is - what an innocent death is. It's reality brought home, '' says Professor Fisher.
Fisher's proposal was -- and still is -- at best an intellectual exercise designed to illustrate the psychological and emotional separation of the decision maker from the executors of his decision and the consequences. But it also reveals a point not often discussed, is that the moral distaste for what the President must do to access the codes exists only in a society where life is valued above all. That valuation often does not exist uniformly in the world, then and now.

The Emperor of Japan is far more isolated from his people than the US President is to the American citizenry. The Japanese people are subjects. The American people are citizens. If not moral and political opposites, then at least a moral sea existed between the two societies and peoples back then. Did Hirohito ever had to present himself to the Japanese people -- subjects -- for their approval ? No. Did Truman had to present himself to the American people -- fellow citizens -- for their approval ? Yes. For the monarchy of Japan and the Japanese people, they are not -- and never will be -- equals. They may be fellow Japanese, but one is already borned a superior in every way. For the US President and the American people, they are fellow Americans and fellow citizens -- equals -- first, before one is approved for higher office and responsibilities.

Regardless of weapons and the extent of their destructive capabilities, Fisher may be wiser in presenting his proposal to despotic countries instead of the ones where he and his fellow academics are well protected and allowed to create these proposals. That is not to say that if Hirohito had actually faced such a moral dilemma, WW II in Asia would not have occurred. Saddam Hussein actually either personally killed or personally close to the killings he ordered, that disregard for human lives came easy for him. But Saddam Hussein is a product of the Iraqi society as much as Hirohito was of his and of Truman to his and it is the society that must be examined, whether that society is the American, the Japanese, the ME, or pre-war Germany that made possible Adolph Hitler.

Fisher was able to present his proposal, if not to his President's face, then in a venue where his Presidents -- plural -- could easily find his proposal. Could there be a Japanese version of Fisher back then ? Could there be an Iraqi version of Fisher during Saddam Hussein's rule in Iraq ? Not -- to both questions.
 
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Japan received many shocking blows during the war. Her military were in tatters. The Army troops were initially slowly isolated, then swiftly isolated from their supplies. The Navy were rendered impotent to counter the Americans' and allies' navies. In the air war, her combat experienced pilots were being killed off daily, and had to resort to training boys in suicide missions -- the Kamikazes. Her cities received no protections from daily bombardment. The fire bombings produced hundreds of thousands of casualties, the word 'casualties' includes killed and wounded. The escalation from the Allies was inevitable and inexorable.
But Japan refused to surrender.
So what make you think -- naively -- that Imperial Japan would be so frightened at a low yield nuclear demonstration destruction of a small island somewhere witnessed by only a select few VIPs from both sides ?

By the time of the decision to use nuclear weapons on Imperial Japan, fighters, tanks, and rifles were already being manufactured in underground factories, manned by children and the elderly, and these factories survived the Allies' bombings on the surface. The Japanese were creative to use peanut oil as lubricant for machines, to either manufacture these weapons or in the weapons themselves.

So how much more deaths could be from both sides if these weapons, no matter how inferior they could be, were used in an insurgency war against the occupiers ?

Do you really think that you brought on any new arguments ?


The US and allies were never under any obligations to accept a conditional surrender.

Any 'conditions' are essentially gestures of goodwill that can be legally used against the victor's side at unknown time. So the better option is to demand an unconditional surrender and use those gestures of goodwill as inducements for cooperation later.


What if the coup succeeded ?

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Just like loony 9/11 conspiracy theories, leave the A-bombs on Japan issue alone long enough, and a naive fool will raise the same old arguments as something new and shockingly discovered.

I'm not making any conspiracy theories. I was just pointing out the alternatives available.

How about using a relatively low yield nuclear weapon in any area other than thickly populated towns. Since according to you the ultimate aim of American forces was to frighten the Japanese into submission. Your military could have used atomic bombs near a Japanese military division in Japanese mainland / some mountainous area in mainland japan / or anywhere else in Japanese mainland which was not thickly populated. By doing so disastrous power of Nuclear weapons could be visible to everyone , of course with some casualties ... But American military never did that since they had a different agenda/plan. ( which is really complex).
But it's indeed true that use of Nuclear weapons ended the war before the arrival of Soviet & it in a way brought Japan under complete American influence which indirectly helped Japan to grow economically at a rapid pace with a generous American help.
 
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cuz the Japanese were brave dudes, and were beating the shit out of the Americans?
 
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I'm not making any conspiracy theories. I was just pointing out the alternatives available.

How about using a relatively low yield nuclear weapon in any area other than thickly populated towns. Since according to you the ultimate aim of American forces was to frighten the Japanese into submission. .
Right!!!
If the aim was just to "frighten" Japanese then atom bomb on Hiroshima was enough, why was another one dropped on Nagasaki??

Btw @Lord Aizen awesome article :tup::tup::tup: and @Nihonjin1051 's contribution to the thread also deserves a mention here.
 
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Right!!!
If the aim was just to "frighten" Japanese then atom bomb on Hiroshima was enough, why was another one dropped on Nagasaki??
Btw @Lord Aizen awesome article :tup::tup::tup: and @Nihonjin1051 's contribution to the thread also deserves a mention here.

Like i said when the Soviets declared war on Japan on August 8, the American establishments was faced with multiple dilemmas. They never trusted the Soviets ( in fact hated them even though they were allies) & wanted to limit their presence in Asia pacific.
American establishments felt that time was running out since there was a bit delay in Japanese offering an unconditional surrender. So their next "bizarre" option was immediately using another nuclear bomb ( note that they already bombed Hiroshima by then) to speed up the process before Russians wanted to get in the game.


Another reason for second bombing was to send a clear warning to the leaders of the Soviet Union that their cities would suffer the same fate if the Soviets attempted to stand in the way of Washington’s plans to create an American Century of US global domination .
@vostok
 
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I'm not making any conspiracy theories. I was just pointing out the alternatives available.
You are no different than others in the past in that you do not have the courage to come out and admit you are a conspiracy theorist so you dances around the subject by 'pointing out the alternatives'. That is just like the loony 9/11 conspiracy theories believers who claims they are 'Just Asking Questions' or JAQ. I call it JAQ-ing off.

How about using a relatively low yield nuclear weapon in any area other than thickly populated towns.
By what criteria in 1945 to qualify as 'low yield' ? By today's criteria, Fat Man and Little Boy are 'low yield'. Nuclear weapons back then was indeed a new thing. The program was very much a rushed project, intended to produce ANY weapon of ANY yield as quick as possible with the limited amount of U235 they had.

Since according to you the ultimate aim of American forces was to frighten the Japanese into submission.
Yes, by destroying things that matters to the war, or more accurately, things that DIRECTLY affect the enemy's ability to wage and sustain a war, and that includes the psychological factors as well.

Sorry, but we -- not just I -- have to be truthful and brutal about this since this is war -- people have to die and property have to destroyed in order to make an argument for surrender compelling. This cruel calculus have been in mankind's history since the days of the first weapon, probably a rock, and that rock was probably the A-bomb of its day.

But American military never did that since they had a different agenda/plan. ( which is really complex).
The US at that time wanted the war to end quickly, as would ANYONE who ever entered a war. Different wars will have different political goals and often the consequences do not meet those political goals, and when that happens, it usually is because the war's political goals do not conform to objective reality and forces the war into duration that make supporting the war increasingly untenable. In other words, the longer the war, the less support it will receive from home.

So what the hell does 'really complex' mean ? Zilch. It is just another way of insinuating loony conspiracy theories without the courage of admitting it.

If the political goal is unconditional surrender, which it was, then as long as the Allies insist on achieving that goal the alternative to the nuclear weapons was invasion and occupation of the Japanese main home islands. Via hindsight, we know that since there was an attempt palace coup even after Hiroshima and Nagasaki were destroyed, an invasion and occupation would be result in a bloody insurgency war. Hindsight also revealed that large capabilities to manufacture weapons, no matter their qualities, survived conventional bombings, which further supports the alternative bloody insurgency war.

An occupation to rebuild is not the same as an occupation to SUBDUE. Do you understand that ?

Nazi Germany did not surrender and the result was that Germany was erased from the political map. We may have had East and West Germanys, but essentially, the politically unified Germany was gone. Each partition from the old Germany was rebuilt according to its master, who did not have to subdue anyone. The German people was utterly defeated, militarily and psychologically, and that defeat was costly to all sides. So what if there were long term geopolitics involved that we did not want the Stalin to have a part of Japan ? So what if, in the interest of long term denial of any part of Japan to Stalin, nuclear weapons figured significantly into the calculus ? The Allies would still have to face an unpleasant alternative: a bloody invasion and equally bloody occupation of Japan.
 
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That's just a convenient argument made by Americans to justify their military bravado. Saving 15 million lives by using Atomic bombs is a wierdly exaggerated statement. We are hearing this age old argument of aggressors justifying killing with the saving of lives relative to what would have been lost had the killing not taken place.
If the US wanted to end the war with minimum casualties, they could have done it by demonstrating a low yield atomic bomb's capability at a relatively uninhibited area.

you don't spend $2 billion dollars ($26 billion in todays money) and not use it.

we gave Imperial Japan many chances to surrender UNCONDIONAL surrender that is. we gave a warning what was to come and that's more than what Imperial Japan ever gave us when they did a sneak attack against Pearl Harbor and the blitzkrieg offensive in South East Asia.


Operation Downfall would of cost many more lives on both sides.

we can play morals and ethics, but it matters not it had to be down the end was going to be bloody one way or another.
 
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@Nihonjin1051 Why do you think @Lord Aizen Article is a good one?

In fact, it's pretty appalling , based on 2 simple facts.

First of all, when you discuss historical topics, you need to base the decision making mechanism on the time the decision made, not present time. Many things mentioned in that article happen after the fact (The bombs has gone off), how would that matter to the decision making based on that fact that the decision maker himself does not know about?
Bear in mind, Military Intelligence is still in their infancy, there are no way either side would have know more thane what they know on the go then today, There are no way to know the Japanese Emperor wanted to surrender, unless the Japanese had contacted the American to express their view of surrender.

Student of history (History or Military History alike) was first taught this simple rules - You cannot judge an historical event based on information you know now . if you do, then most of the war would have fought in a meaningless matter. Question like

Why the 300 have to make their last stand in Thermopylae when we know for a fact that the Spartan have no or cannot send in reinforcement to defence Athens?

Why do William Hull surrender Fort Detroit during war of 1812 when they are indeed outnumber the British Canadian 3 to 1?

Why do Edward Pakenham attack New Orleans even the peace agreement was signed a month ago (Strictly speaking 16 days ago??) Resulting the Battle of New Orleans?

Why do the 3rd Light Horse of the Australian Imperial Force commence a third charge to their absolutely death when the order have been rescinded 15 minutes earlier?

Why do the Argentinian surrender to the British in the battle of goose green when the British is in fact out of ammunition and out number 2 to 1??

I can go on about it until maybe tomorrow just for the historical event that i know on top of my head, i can probably go on and on forever if i started to dig deep into books.

Problem is, when all 5 situations happened, the person who make the decision to do so does not have the information we have today, of course decision is going to be easy knowing something that you know inside and out 70 years ago. But when you have to put a judgment on that decision the maker made that day, you cannot use the information you know to judge whether or not that is a sane/good judgment or simply a bad one.

What Truman knows before Aug 6 is simply facts.


Facts
- over 90% of the previous engagement from Guadalcanal to Okinawa the Japanese force fight to their death and 90% or more Japanese are rather being killed by the American instead of surrender. And ferocity of the fight have increase ever closer to the Japanese Home Island


Facts
- There are still considerable strategic reserve of Japanese Troop in Manchuria and Occupied China.

Facts - US is running out of money to keep the war afloat.

Facts - They don't know how effective or ineffective BEOFRE the bomb was dropped.

Now, when you decided or weight in option, and you only do ever know the 4 facts from above. What would you do? You will order an assault on Japanese Home Island? Keep on the bombing Campaign? or let the Russia have at it? Or use the bomb?

Second thing why I thought this article is shit is, Russian knows about the bomb before being drop to Japans. Truman tell Stalin no later than July 24

It's quite well documented for Truman, Churchill and Soviet Field Marshall Zhukov written in their own memoir stating Truman told Stalin one way or another.

Yet this piece of information was precausiously missing in the article....

Atomic Bomb: Decision - Truman Tells Stalin, July 24, 1945
 
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That's just a convenient argument made by Americans to justify their military bravado. Saving 15 million lives by using Atomic bombs is a wierdly exaggerated statement. We are hearing this age old argument of aggressors justifying killing with the saving of lives relative to what would have been lost had the killing not taken place.
If the US wanted to end the war with minimum casualties, they could have done it by demonstrating a low yield atomic bomb's capability at a relatively uninhibited area.

In this era we are too soft sided to approach things to a minimum. But during that time, everything was all on the table.
It was not a US bravado, it was decisive outcome.
We are hearing this age old argument of aggressors justifying killing with the saving of lives relative to what would have been lost had the killing not taken place.
Hold your horse in there. I think you been reading the wrong books.
 
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