Pappa wrote:Ian wrote:Pappa wrote:Ian wrote:Uh-huh. Have you any idea how many more people would have died in Operations Olympic and Coronet had the war NOT been brought to an abrupt end?
Should that ever be a valid reason for murdering 200,000 civilians?
What JimC said.
"War is evil. But sometimes it is a necessary evil." - George Orwell
You think Japan would've called it quits over nothing more than threats and wishful thinking? Oh please.
No, I'm asking whether voluntarily killing thousands of completely innocent civilians is ever right in any context. You seem to think it is.
No, I do not think it's ever "right" at all. That's Gawd's line of thinking.
I think the atomic bombings were immoral, abhorrent and exceptionally cruel.
But, I think that between 1) that option and 2) the casualties (including civilians, unaviodably) that would have occured during Olympic and Coronet, the first phase of which was only a few weeks away from happening, the a-bomb option was
by far the lesser of two evils. In terms of body count, probably by a factor of 10, maybe even 20 times or more. And since notions of some 3rd option are speculative at best, I can accept Truman's decision as an ugly necessity.
In war, there are rarely opportunities for choosing between right and wrong. Those are a rare blessing. Many times, choosing between wrong and very wrong tend to be all there is. An invasion would have been a far less moral choice, and the a-bomb was the only thing that afforded a choice at all. Tokyo had been bombed into ruins four months earlier. Major raids had taken place all through the spring and summer, and all that was happening was more casualties on both sides. Japan's leaders not only weren't surrendering, they were actively preparing the population for the imminent invasion.
Something that just occurred to me: were it not for the a-bomb, my whole family might not exist. My grandfather was a prisoner of war held by the Japanese in 1945. By mid-summer he had suffered severe sunburn and was getting close to the point of starvation. So aside from making millions of casualties in an invasion unnecessary, not to mention freeing up all the occupied people in China, Korea, Indonesia, southeast Asia, etc., a quick end to the war also freed up a great number of prisoners, including my grandfather.