America’s Barbaric
Logic of Hiroshima 70 Years On
By Finian Cunningham
August 04, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
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"SCF"
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Even if we accept that there was a plausible
military imperative to drop the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and
Nagasaki – to bring about a swift defeat of Japan and thus an end to
the Pacific War – the horror of civilian death toll from those two
no-warning aerial attacks places a disturbing question over the
supposed ends justifying the means.
But what if the
official military rationale touted by US President Harry Truman and
his administration turns out to be bogus? That is, the real reason
for dropping the A-bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki 70 years ago on
August 6 and 9, 1945, had little to do with defeating imperial Japan
and saving the lives of American troops. What if the real reason was
the deliberate and cold-blooded demonstration of raw military power
by Washington in order to warn the Soviet Union of America’s postwar
demarcation of global hegemony?
That leads to the most
chilling conclusion – a conclusion far worse than the official
American narrative would have us believe. For it means that the act
of obliterating up to 200,000 Japanese civilians was an event of
premeditated mass murder whose intent was solely political. Or, in
other words, an ineffable act of state terrorism committed by the
United States.
This conjecture about
the ulterior motive for the American atomic bombing of Japan has
been around for many years. In January 1995, the
New York Times reported: «Indeed, some historians contend that
the bombing was not aimed so much at the wartime enemy Japan as at
the wartime ally Soviet Union, delivered as a warning against
postwar rivalry».
With complacent
equivocation, the New York Times did not follow through on the
horrendous implications of its own partial admission for why the
atomic bombs were dropped. If the official US calculation was indeed
«a warning against postwar rivalry» to the Soviet Union, then that
makes the act an indefensible political decision that had nothing to
do with a moral imperative of promptly ending a war. It was, as
noted, a supreme act of terrorism.
Professsor Gar Alperovitz –
one of several American historians – has over the decades compiled a
compelling case that the Truman administration did in fact make the
decision to use the A-bombs as a political weapon against the Soviet
Union.
The author of ‘The
Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb’ wrote: «Though most Americans are
unaware of the fact, increasing numbers of historians now recognise
that the United States did not need to use the atomic bomb to end
the war against Japan in 1945. Moreover, this essential judgment was
expressed by the vast majority of top American military leaders in
all three services in the years after the war ended: Army, Navy and
Army Air Force».
Alperovitz cites then
US Secretary of War Henry L Stimson and such military luminaries as
General Dwight Eisenhower and Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral William
D Leahy who were explicitly opposed to using the A-bomb on Japan.
Eisenhower said it was»completely unnecessary» while Leahy noted:
«The use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of
no material assistance in our war against Japan. The Japanese were
already defeated and ready to surrender».
This points to covert
political decision-making during the critical three-week period
between the Potsdam conference (July 17-August 2 1945) and the
dropping of the A-bombs on Japan. During that period it appears that
Truman and his aides decided in secret that the then Soviet wartime
ally was to be henceforth made the postwar enemy. The Cold War was
being formulated.
Bear in mind that for
months before Potsdam, the US and Britain were appealing to Russian
leader Josef Stalin to join the Pacific War soon after the defeat of
Nazi Germany. Two months after the Third Reich was vanquished in May
1945, the Potsdam conference between the Big Three allies achieved
the much-anticipated commitment from Stalin to redeploy the Red Army
against Japan. The Soviet Union was scheduled to officially enter
the Pacific War on August 15. As it turned out, Stalin ordered the
Red Army into Manchuria on August 8, a week ahead of the scheduled
offensive.
As Harry Truman
gleefully wrote in a private letter during Potsdam this commitment
from the Soviet Union meant that «the Japs were finished».
However, the
successful testing of the first A-bomb by the United States in the
desert of New Mexico on July 16 – only the day before begining the
Potsdam summit – was a point of no return. With this awesome new
weapon, US planners must have quickly realised that they could
finish the war against Japan without the Soviet Union entering the
Pacific theatre, by dropping the A-bomb.
But the primary US
objective wasn’t to finish the Pacific War per se. American and
British military chiefs and intelligence were convinced that the
mere entry of Russia into the war against Japan would precipitate
the latter’s surrender. And besides the American invasion of
mainland Japan was not planned to take place until November 1945.
It seems clear then
that the Truman administration rushed ahead to use its new atomic
weapon on Japan because its concern was to circumscribe any advance
by the Soviet Union in Asia-Pacific. Not only was the Red Army
poised to take Manchuria and the Korean Peninsula but mainland Japan
as well.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
– two civilian centres of no military value – were thus selected as
the venues for demonstrating the most spellbinding act of terror,
not to an all but defeated Japan, but to the Soviet Union. The
atomic bombing of Japan was therefore not the last act of the
Pacific War, as the official American narrative contends, but rather
it was the first, brutal act of the nascent Cold War by the US
towards Soviet Russia.
That puts the horrific
events in an altogether different criminal light. Because the atomic
bombings can then be seen as a deliberate act of mass murder for no
other strategic reason other than to intimidate a perceived
geopolitical rival – Moscow.
Seventy years on,
history proves that this barbaric logic of the US ruling elite still
holds. After the official end of the Cold War nearly a quarter of a
century ago, Washington has evidently no intention of disarming its
nuclear arsenal. In fact, the US government under President Barack
Obama is planning to spend $355 billion over the next decade to
upgrade its stockpile of some 5,000 nuclear warheads – each many
times more powerful than the A-bombs that were originally dropped on
Japan.
Furthermore,
Washington has
offiicially declared Russia, along with China, as its top
strategic enemy, as recent as this month, according to senior
Pentagon figures.
The unilateral
withdrawal by the US from the Anti-Ballistic Missiles Treaty in 2002
and the ongoing expansion of US missile systems on Russia’s borders
and in the Pacific with provocative reference to China are testimony
to the inherent bellicose intent that resides in Washington.
As with the first and
only use of nuclear weapons 70 years ago, the US logic that led to
the holocaust at Hiroshima and Nagasaki is a barbaric logic than
pertains to this day. It is still being aimed at Russia, as it was
seven decades ago.
Only the full exposure
and eradication of this uniquely American barbaric logic will lead
to peaceful international relations.
© Strategic Culture Foundation