The Terror
America Wrought
By Robert Scheer
08/08/07 "Truthdig"
-- -- During a week of mayhem in Iraq, in which
terrorists have rightly been condemned for targeting
schoolchildren, it is sobering to recall that this week is
also the 62nd anniversary of a U.S. attack that deliberately
took the lives of thousands of children on their way to
school in the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. As
noted in the Strategic Bombing Survey conducted at President
Harry Truman’s request, when the bomb hit Hiroshima on April
6, 1945, “nearly all the school children ... were at work in
the open,” to be exploded, irradiated or incinerated in the
perfect firestorm that the planners back at the University
of California-run Los Alamos lab had envisioned for the
bomb’s maximum psychological impact.
The terror plot worked all too well, as Hiroshima’s Mayor
Tadatoshi Akiba recalled this week: “That fateful summer,
8:15 a.m. The roar of a B-29 breaks the morning calm. A
parachute opens in the blue sky. Then suddenly, a flash, an
enormous blast—silence—hell on Earth. The eyes of young
girls watching the parachute were melted. Their faces became
giant charred blisters. The skin of people seeking help
dangled from their fingernails. ... Others died when their
eyeballs and internal organs burst from their
bodies—Hiroshima was a hell where those who somehow survived
envied the dead.”
Like most of the others killed by the two American bombs,
neither the children nor the adults had any role in Japan’s
decision to go to war, but they were picked as the target
instead of an isolated but fortified military base whose
antiaircraft fire posed a higher risk. The target preferred
by U.S. atomic scientists—a patch in the ocean or
unpopulated terrain—was rejected, because the effect of
hundreds of thousands of civilians dying would be all the
more dramatic.
The victims in Hiroshima and Nagasaki were available soft
targets, much like the children playing in Iraq, suddenly
caught in the crossfire of battles waged beyond their
control. In “White Light/Black Rain,” a devastating HBO
documentary released this week, there is an interview with
the sole survivor of a Japanese elementary school of 620
students. The murder of the other 619, and the 370,000
overall deaths attributed to the bombings, 85 percent of
which were civilian deaths, has never compelled a widespread
examination of the “end justifies the means” morality of our
own state-sanctioned acts of terror. Indeed, the horrifying
footage taken by Japanese and American cameramen soon after
the devastation, and shown in the HBO film, was long kept
secret by the U.S. government for fear that an informed
American public might question this nation’s incipient
nuclear arms race.
Just exactly what distinguishes the United States’ use of
the ever-so-cutely-named “Fat Man” and “Little Boy” atomic
bombs on cities in Japan from the car bombs of Baghdad or
the planes that smashed into the World Trade Center? To even
raise the question, as was found in one recent university
case, can be a career-ending move.
Of course, we had our justifications, as terrorists always
do. Truman defended his decision to drop the atomic bombs on
civilians over the objection of leading atomic scientists on
the grounds that it was a necessary military action to save
lives by forcing a quick Japanese surrender. He insisted on
that imperative despite the objections of top military
figures, including Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, who contended
that the war would end quickly without dropping the bomb.
The subsequent release of formerly secret documents makes a
hash of Truman’s rationalization. His White House was fully
informed that the Japanese were on the verge of collapse,
and their surrender was made all the more likely by the
Soviets’ imminent entry into the fight.
At most, the Japanese were asking for the face-saving
gesture of retaining their emperor, and even that modest
demand would likely have been abandoned with the shift of
massive numbers of Allied troops and firepower from the
battlefront of a defeated Germany to a confrontation with
its deeply wounded Asian ally. Instead, the U.S. played
midwife to the birth of the nuclear monster, the ultimate
terrorist weapon that presents a continuing and growing
threat to the survival of human life on Earth.
This is a lesson to be pondered at a time when President
Bush plays power games with a nuclear-equipped Russia while
coddling Pakistan, the main proliferator of nuclear weapons
to rogue regimes, and Congress authorizes an expansion of
the U.S. nuclear program to better fight the war on terror
by “improving” the ultimate weapon of terror, which the U.S.
alone stands guilty of using.
For a fuller explanation of the
suppression of footage taken shortly after the Hiroshima and
Nagasaki attacks, follow this
link.
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