Time Waits 4 No Man
New Member
- Location
- At The Edge Of Time
Some US government officials (alive at that time) openly stated (as their personal opinion) "That the atom bombs dropped on Japan were revenge for Pearl Harbor." My parents were alive in World War II. My dad was a copilot on a B-24 bomber and a German POW prisoner after his plane was shot down over Czechoslovakia. The pilot of his plane and all but one crewmember were killed. Of the Germans, my dad said he was treated better than what American propaganda had led him to believe would be the case. The POW camps were rigidly controlled, but not brutal - at least in the one where he was held prisoner.This has haunted me my whole life. Everyone I've asked, who were adult at the time, told me it was necessary and ended the war. In fact, They were COMEPLETELY for it! "The best thing that could have happened!"
Anyway, he told me years later that when he'd heard Hiroshima and Nagasaki had been nuked everyone cheered. The time was August,1945 and the war in Europe had ended, leaving him no longer a POW. Not being attached to an army unit due to his pilot status, he was free to roam around Germany and then France for several months. He saw some things happen too, like American GI's robbing bombed out German banks by blowing their vaults. But they weren't after the worthless German Reichsmarks either, he said, but after safe deposit boxes holding jewels and gold. He also witnessed several US soldiers drag a German into an alleyway and shoot him; he never knew the reason why. So the nuking of Japan was welcomed by most after all the years of war.
Was the nuking of Japan necessary? Depends on who you ask. Did we save more lives by taking out Hiroshima and Nagasaki? The US military seems to think so. But take a moment and read this:
HOW MANY DIED? NEW EVIDENCE SUGGESTS FAR HIGHER NUMBERS FOR THE VICTIMS OF MAO ZEDONG'S ERA (Washington Post - 1994)
"While it is hardly any comfort to their victims, the two people most associated with mass deaths in this bloodiest of human centuries -- Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin -- were likely surpassed by a third, China's Mao Zedong. Mao launched more than a dozen campaigns during his rule, which began when he founded Communist China in 1949 and ended with his death in 1976. Some are well known while others, such as a bloody campaign to "purify class ranks" in the late 1960s, which involved army units, have received little publicity. While most scholars are reluctant to estimate a total number of "unnatural deaths" in China under Mao, evidence shows he was in some way responsible for at least 40 million deaths and perhaps 80 million or more."
Could the US have prevented the estimated 80 million that China is alleged to have murdered? And the millions more that the USSR is said to have committed in the post-World War II era? In fact, it is widely believed that the USSR and China exterminated at least 100 million people - and possibly more. Could America have stopped communism in the USSR in, say, 1946 or 1947 by nuking Moscow and taking out their leaders and government so that they could not carry out their widespread "social cleansing"? And then do it again by hitting China with the same nukes? Could killing 10 or even 20 million in that region of the world have saved upwards of 60 to 80 million lives in the long run? In the end, could America's nuclear bombs have prevented all the deaths that eventually followed? Were our nuclear weapons actually life-givers rather than life-takers?
We'll never know.
