Nuclearism and
the Legacy of U.S. Media Coverage of Hiroshima
by Uday Mohan, April 21, 2007 |
Presented at the “Think Outside
the Bomb” National Youth Conference on Nuclear
Issues, Washington DC, April 21, 2007
On August 6, 1945, the bomb that we are trying to think
outside of here today was used as a weapon of mass destruction
for the first time in history. The United States, engaged
in a fierce war with Japan, dropped an atomic bomb on
the city of Hiroshima, destroying it almost entirely.
The blast, heat, and radiation killed more than 140,000
people. The White House delivered the dramatic news about
the dawn of the atomic age through a press release of
a presidential statement. The press release set the tone
for much of the media coverage to come in the final days
of the war and the months after. It emphasized vengeance
as a motive for bombing Hiroshima. It focused on the
technological achievement in producing the bomb. At the
same time it omitted any mention of radiation, a key
feature of the new weapon. The White House also implied
that Hiroshima had been targeted because it had an army
base, but failed to mention that the aiming point for
the bomb had been the center of a city of more than 300,000
civilians. [1]
After the White House statement, came 14 press releases
from the War Department. [2] This
concerted government media campaign anticipated the possibility
of public controversy. As General Leslie Groves, head
of the secret project to build the bomb, put it, “it
may be necessary to control the situation by the issuance
of carefully written press releases.” [3]
Controlling the situation was exactly what General Groves
did. A few months earlier he had hired the New York Times
science reporter, William Laurence, to become the bomb’s
publicist in waiting. Groves’s investment paid
off handsomely. Laurence crafted press releases and stories,
many of them rhapsodic, about the exciting dawn of a
new scientific age, about the heroic effort to produce
and use the bomb, and about the positive aspects of atomic
energy. Laurence, perhaps the first fully embedded journalist
in history, helped shape how we Americans came to think
about nuclear weapons and energy. He and other members
of the media helped put in place a narrative that legitimized
the use of nuclear weapons and absorbed the bomb into
American life. They did this by accepting government
control of information about atomic power, downplaying
the dangers of radiation and marginalizing the civilian
victims, obscuring the fact that President Truman could
have avoided the bomb in forcing Japan’s surrender,
and, in other ways, normalizing the existence of nuclear
weapons.
There has always been a tension between national security
and press freedom [4]—one
can see this, for example, in how the Bush administration
in its early years enjoyed limited critical scrutiny
from the press, mostly because of 911 and the threat
of terrorism. The limited scrutiny made it easier for
the administration to go to war, despite a case for war
that was as weak then as it is now. The same tension
between security and freedom held true in World War II.
The project to build the atomic bomb was understandably
never discussed openly. But the Truman administration
kept the existence of the bomb a secret until its combat
use.
The administration could have chosen a different path.
For example, many scientists recommended that the administration
disclose the existence of the bomb and at least attempt
to force Japanese surrender through a nonlethal demonstration
of the bomb’s power. But despite the efforts of
some scientists and the misgivings of some Truman administration
and military officials, the US dropped the bomb on an
unsuspecting enemy. Once they used it, the administration
had to justify its use and this is where the American
media came in.
Much of the coverage of the first few days after the
Hiroshima bombing bore the stamp of William Laurence’s
work. [5] Either
directly through his New York Times byline or through
newspaper stories based on material handed to journalists
that Laurence had crafted, the media reflected to a large
degree an uncritical pro-bomb viewpoint. News reports
noted, for example, that the bomb had obliterated an
army base, that science had now harnessed the power of
the universe, and that revenge had finally been visited
on the Japanese. Initial editorial opinion was almost
uniformly supportive of the use of the bomb. [6]
As the Washington Post commented, reflecting a widespread
view, “However much we deplore the necessity, a
struggle to the death commits all combatants to inflicting
a maximum amount of destruction on the enemy...” [7] It
wasn’t until eight years later that the Post appeared
to take back these words: On the day of his retirement
in 1953, Washington Post editor Herb Elliston told a
reporter that he had many regrets as he looked back over
his tenure. “One thing I regret is our editorial
support of the A-bombing of Japan. It didn't jibe with
our expressed feeling [before the bomb was dropped] that
Japan was already beaten." [8]
All in all, the initial coverage of the atomic attack
was remarkably faithful to the official, pro-bomb viewpoint. [9] As
General Groves commented, “most newspapers published
our releases in their entirety.” [10] Perhaps
not surprisingly (and reflecting the uncritical wartime
mood), the Washington Press Club, soon after the Hiroshima
bombing, responded to the news by offering its members
a new drink, an Atomic Cocktail. [11]
But Laurence represented a-bomb championing at its most
vigilant and enthusiastic. He heralded the bomb in poetic,
at times biblical terms. And with his descriptions he
helped set the predominant image of the a-bomb and of
the atomic era—an enormous, powerful mushroom cloud
that held viewers in awe—an image that photography
and film cemented through repetition. In Laurence’s
atomic portraits, the victims simply didn’t merit
attention, but the mushroom cloud did. In his eyewitness
account of the Nagasaki bombing, for example, he described
the explosion in terms of wonder and incredulity:
“Awe-struck, we watched [the pillar of purple
fire] shoot upward … becoming ever more alive
as it climbed skyward through the clouds…. It
was a living thing, a new species of being, born right
before our incredulous eyes…. [J]ust when it appeared
as though the thing has settled down … there came
shooting out of the top a giant mushroom…. The
mushroom top was even more alive than the pillar, seething
and boiling in a white fury of creamy foam… As
the first mushroom floated off into the blue it changed
its shape into a flowerlike form, its giant petal curving
downward, creamy white outside, rose-colored inside.” [12]
In his long New York Times article, which included eight
paragraphs on individual crew members and others on the
mission, [13] Laurence
said virtually nothing about the victims. When he did,
it was just to dismiss them:
“Does one feel any pity or compassion for the
poor devils about to die? Not when one thinks about Pearl
Harbor and the Death March on Bataan.”
Laurence’s dismissal of the victims of the first
use of nuclear weapons was not uncommon. Media focus
on righteous vengeance, supposed necessity of the bombings,
and the technological accomplishment of American and
Allied science pushed the dead and dying out of the spotlight. [14] Government
censorship aided in this marginalization, especially
through censorship about radiation and of visual evidence.
The first photograph of Japanese victims appeared
in Life magazine about two months after the end of the
war. [15] But
the magazine used a caption to undercut the power of
the photos. The caption stated that the photographer “reported
that [the] injuries looked like those he had seen when
he photographed men burned at Pearl Harbor.” [16] For
the most part, photographs of the human cost of the atomic
bombings seldom appeared in the American media until
the 1950s, [17] by
which time they would have had little influence on nuclear
policy, which had fully absorbed nuclear arms and power
into American military planning and civilian life.
The early media neglect of Japanese victims was reinforced
by the lack of emphasis on radiation In Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, due partly to censorship. The first serious
attempt at explaining what had happened in Japan came
from an Australian journalist, Wilfred Burchett. Almost
a month after Hiroshima had been bombed, Burchett arrived
there and understood the horror of the bomb for the first
time. Initially supportive of the bomb’s use, Burchett
ultimately rejected nuclear weapons because of what he
had seen in Hiroshima. Reporting from the scene of the
devastation, his account differed dramatically from that
of other journalists:
"In Hiroshima, 30 days after the first atomic bomb
destroyed the city and shook the world, people are still
dying, mysteriously and horribly—people who were
uninjured in the cataclysm—from an unknown something
which I can only describe as the atomic plague.
“Hiroshima does not look like a bombed city. It
looks as if a monster steamroller has passed over it
and squashed it out of existence. I write these facts
as dispassionately as I can in the hope that they will
act as a warning to the world." [18]
A war correspondent who had reported from many battlefronts,
Burchett compared Hiroshima with what he had witnessed
elsewhere: "In this first testing ground of the
atomic bomb I have seen the most terrible and frightening
desolation in four years of war…. When you arrive
in Hiroshima you can look around for twenty-five and
perhaps thirty square miles. You can see hardly a building.
It gives you an empty feeling in the stomach to see such
man-made destruction." [19]
Burchett’s reference to the atomic plague immediately
moved the War Department into action. At first they ordered
Burchett to leave Japan. Then the camera he had used
in Hiroshima mysteriously disappeared. The US occupation
authorities claimed that Burchett had been taken in by
Japanese propaganda about radiation. [20] They
decided to let him stay in Japan and opted instead to
deal with his charges about atomic sickness by simply
denying that radiation had caused any problems. As a
result, a New York Times reporter who had a week earlier
reported witnessing sickness and death due to the lingering
effects of the atomic bomb simply reversed the truth.
He now reported that according to the head of the US
atomic mission to Japan the bomb had not produced any “dangerous,
lingering radioactivity.” [21] The
Washington Post uncritically noted that the atomic mission
staff had been unable to find any Japanese person suffering
from radiation sickness. [22]
To drive home the point that radiation was not a problem,
General Groves invited thirty reporters out to the New
Mexico site where the bomb had first been tested two
months earlier. This effort paid off with a banner headline
in the New York Times: “U.S. Atom Bomb Site Belies
Tokyo Tales; Tests on New Mexico Range Confirm That Blast,
and Not Radiation, Took Toll,” [23] Life
magazine concluded after the escorted tour in New Mexico
that no Japanese person could have died as a result of
lingering radiation. [24]
In fact, radiation killed thousands of Japanese in the
months after the bomb was dropped. The 1960 population
census in Japan estimated that the leukemia mortality
rate for persons entering Hiroshima within three days
of the bombing was three times higher than it was in
all of Japan. [25]
The ease with which many reporters went along with official
tales about the bomb is evident as well in their acceptance
of the bomb’s necessity for ending the war. Necessity
in this case had three aspects: vengeance, war-driven
inevitability (which was sometimes regrettable), and
absence of other reasonable means for ending the war.
The last aspect has survived most tenaciously up to the
present. According to this view, Truman simply didn’t
have any choice except to use the bomb; if he had not,
somewhere between half and one million American casualties
would have resulted from an invasion of the Japanese
homeland. I won’t address this issue here, except
to say that historians have picked apart this myth over
the years, so much so that even the former chief historian
of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission calls the bomb vs
invasion view of history a myth. [26]
As the media helped to cleanse the new weapon of criticism,
it also exalted the benefits of nuclearism to American
life. A few months after the bombing, Atlantic magazine
commented that “Through medical advances alone,
atomic energy has already saved more lives than were
snuffed out at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.” [27] Life
magazine regularly featured picture spreads and stories
about the beauty and splendor of atomic energy and the
glory of atomic miracles such as a Million Volt Cancer
Treatment. [28] The
magazine did this hand in hand with the government. For
several years after the war, the photos of atomic images
that Life published came mostly from the Army or the
Atomic Energy Commission, rather than from its own photographers. [29] In
the imagery and narrative that unfolded over time, the
magazine implicitly urged its readers to set aside residual
fears of atomic weapons—just as the arms race was
heating up—and instead focus on the benefits and
benevolence of the nuclear establishment. [30] Thus
the dual nature of most media coverage—limiting
the negative view of Hiroshima and Nagasaki while playing
up the positive aspects of nuclearism—not only
eased the bomb into American life, but it also eased
the way for an all out arms race with the Soviet Union.
As the bomb got absorbed into American life and military
planning, the media largely continued to toe the administration’s
line about nuclear issues. Nuclear weapons testing in
the Marshall Islands and in the American heartland—in
places like Nevada—produced little scrutiny. As
the victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki had been marginalized,
so were the radiation victims in the Marshall Islands
and the downwinders at home.
To be sure, the mass media did pose some challenges
to the official narrative—John Hersey’s Hiroshima
is the premier example. News outlets did publish contrary
opinion and information occasionally. [31] But
there was no concerted effort to investigate government
claims and challenge the view of nuclear weapons that
settled into place after the bombings of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki.
* * * * * * * *
Having laid out this rather bleak story, I do want
to end with a quote from Wilfred Burchett, who along
with Hersey and a few others, showed what the media was
capable of doing when it sided with humanity rather than
with official narratives and nuclear glory: As Burchett
put it,
“In visiting Hiroshima, I felt that I was seeing
in the last days of [World War 2] what would be the fate
of hundreds of cities in a [World War 3]. If that does
not make a journalist want to shape history in the right
direction, what does?” [32]
Uday Mohan is the Director of Research for American
University's Nuclear Studies Institute.
[1] Robert
Jay Lifton and Greg Mitchell, Hiroshima in America:
Fifty Years of Denial (New York: Grossett/Putnam, 1995),
5.
[2] Ibid.,
10. Compare Lifton and Mitchell’s account with
the Department of Energy’s account of the Manhattan
Project’s public relations campaign (www.mbe.doe.gov/me70/manhattan/public_reaction.htm).
[4 See,
especially, Jeffery A. Smith. War and Press Freedom:
The Problem of Prerogative Power (New York: Oxford
University Press,1999).
[5] For
Laurence’s impact, see ibid.; Beverly D. Keever,
News Zero: The New York Times and the Bomb (Monroe,
Maine: Common Courage Press, 2004); and Spencer Weart,
Nuclear Fear: A History of Images (Cambridge, Mass.:
Harvard University Press, 1988).
[6] Lifton
and Mitchell, Hiroshima in America, 24.
[8] “Elliston
Reviews Post’s Role in Tackling Public Problems,” Washington
Post, April 20, 1953, 7. For more on journalistic
dissent, see Uday Mohan and Leo Maley III, “Orthodoxy
and Dissent: The American News Media and the Decision
to Use the Atomic Bomb Against Japan, 1945-1995,” in
Cultural Difference, Media Memories: Anglo-American
Images of Japan, ed. Phil Hammond (London: Cassell,
1997), and Uday Mohan and Leo Maley III, "Journalists
and the Bomb," op-ed distributed by the History
News Service (HNS) in 2000 and published in several
US newspapers, including the Atlanta Constitution
(published as “Blasting the A-Bomb,” 8/7/00,
A11). HNS version available at www.h-net.org/~hns/articles/2000/080100a.html.
[9] An
important issue not addressed here is the sense of
dread the atomic bomb introduced into American life.
News coverage and commentary reflected this sense
of dread, but a public conversation about nuclear
weapons never developed, partly because the media
helped justify the atomic bombing of Japan and legitimize
the existence of nuclear weapons.
[10] Lifton
and Mitchell, Hiroshima in America, 10.
[11] Allan
M. Winkler, Life Under a Cloud: American Anxiety
about the Atom (New York: Oxford University Press,
1993), 27.
[12] William
L. Laurence, “Atomic Bombing of Nagasaki Told
By Flight Member,” New York Times, September
9, 1945, 1 and 35.
[13] Keever,
News Zero, 70-71.
[14] This
media emphasis was perhaps understandable given the
wartime mood, hatred of the Japanese, and government
censorship. But at the same time, there were dissenters
who suggested that a different perspective was possible
regarding the use of the bomb. See references in
endnote 8 and Leo Maley III and Uday Mohan, “Time
to Confront the Ethics of Hiroshima,” op-ed
for History News Service (www.h-net.org/~hns/articles/2005/080405b.html)
published in 2005 in various U.S. newspapers; Uday
Mohan and Leo Maley III, “Hiroshima: Military
Voices of Dissent,” op-ed for History News
Service (www.h-net.org/~hns/articles/2001/072601b.html)
published in 2001 in various U.S. newspapers; and
Leo Maley III and Uday Mohan, “Second-Guessing
Hiroshima,” op-ed for History News Service
(www.h-net.org/~hns/articles/1998/072998a.html)
published in 1998 in various U.S. newspapers.
[15] George
H. Roeder Jr., “Making Things Visible: Learning
from the Censors,” in Laura Hein and Mark Selden,
eds., Living with the Bomb: American and Japanese
Cultural Conflicts in the Nuclear Age (Armonk, NY:
M.E. Sharpe, 1997), 93.
[18] Quoted
in Richard Tanter, “Voice and Silence in the
First Nuclear War: Wilfred Burchett and Hiroshima,” in
Ben Kiernan, ed., Burchett Reporting the Other Side
of the World, 1939-1983 (London: Quartet, 1986),
18.
[20] Amy
Goodman with David Goodman, “Hiroshima Cover-Up:
How the War Department’s Timesman Won a Pulitzer,” in
Goodman with Goodman, The Exceptions to the Rulers
(New York: Hyperion, 1994), 295.
[21] Lawrence’s
September 5, 1945 article quoted and described in
Goodman with Goodman, “Hiroshima Cover-Up,” 299-300.
However, Lawrence does note in his later article
that the atomic mission chief confirmed that some
Japanese had died because of low counts of white
corpuscles, rather than from blast- or burn-related
wounds: William H. Lawrence, “No Radioactivity
in Hiroshima Ruin; What Our Superfortresses Did to
a Japanese Plane Production Center,” New York
Times, September 13, 1945. 4. Three days earlier,
Lawrence had largely dismissed Japanese claims of
the lingering dangers from the atomic attack, but
did note that a Dutch medical officer had confirmed
that “some persons” (presumably referring
to Allied POWs) had died from a “mysterious
relapse” and that four Dutch soldiers had died
both of their wounds and uranium after-effects: Lawrence, “Atom
Bomb Killed Nagasaki Captives; 8 Allied Prisoners
Victims-- Survivor Doubts After-Effect,” New
York Times, September 10, 1945, 1.
[22] “Radioactivity
at Hiroshima Discounted,” Washington Post,
September 13, 1945, 2.
[23] William
L. Laurence, “U.S. Atom Bomb Site Belies Tokyo
Tales; Tests on New Mexico Range Confirm That Blast,
and Not Radiation, Took Toll,” New York Times,
September 12, 1945. 1 and 4.
[24] Lifton
and Mitchell, Hiroshima in America, 52.
[25] Tanter, “Voice
and Silence in the First Nuclear War,” 26.
[26] See
J. Samuel Walker, Prompt and Utter Destruction: Truman
and the Use of Atomic Bombs against Japan (Chapel
Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1997),
5-6. For detailed accounts of the decision to use
the bomb, see Gar Alperovitz, The Decision to Use
the Atomic Bomb and the Architecture of an American
Myth (New York: Knopf, 1995) and Tsuyoshi Hasegawa,
Racing the Enemy: Stalin, Truman, and the Surrender
of Japan (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard
University Press, 2005).
[27] Quoted
in Paul Boyer, By the Bomb's Early Light: American
Thought and Culture at the Dawn of the Atomic Age
(New York: Pantheon), 123.
[28] Peter
Bacon Hales, “The Mass Aesthetic of Holocaust:
American Media Construct the Atomic Bomb,” Tokyo
Daigaku Amerika Kenkyu Shiryo Senta Ninpo 17 (March
1996): 10.
[31] A
few U.S. officials and leaders responded to these
challenges with an article intended to silence the
critics. Henry Stimson, who had been secretary of
war under Presidents Roosevelt and Truman, responded
with a seemingly authoritative essay (written with
the assistance of General Groves, Harvard University
President James Conant, and others): "The Decision
to Use the Atomic Bomb," published in the February
1947 issue of Harper's. For background on the intent
behind and drafting of this article, see Barton J.
Bernstein, "Seizing the Contested Terrain of
Early Nuclear History: Stimson, Conant, and Their
Allies Explain the Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb," Diplomatic
History 17 (Winter 1993), 35-72; James Hershberg,
James B. Conant: Harvard to Hiroshima and the Making
of the Nuclear Age (New York: Knopf, 1993), 279-304;
and Alperovitz, The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb,
445-492.
[32] Quoted
in Tanter, “Voice and Silence in the First
Nuclear War,” 37.
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