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The Decision to Risk the Future:
Harry Truman, the Atomic Bomb and the Apocalyptic Narrative
by Peter J. Kuznick
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From
Japan Focus, an Asian Pacific e-journal, posted
July 23, 2007.
In his personal narrative Atomic Quest, Nobel Prize-winning
physicist Arthur Holly Compton, who directed atomic research
at the University of Chicago’s Metallurgical Laboratory
during the Second World War, tells of receiving an urgent
visit from J. Robert Oppenheimer while vacationing in Michigan
during the summer of 1942. Oppenheimer and the brain trust
he assembled had just calculated the possibility that an
atomic explosion could ignite all the hydrogen in the oceans
or the nitrogen in the atmosphere. If such a possibility
existed, Compton concluded, “these bombs must never
be made.” As Compton said, “Better to accept
the slavery of the Nazis than to run a chance of drawing
the final curtain on mankind.”[1] Certainly, any
reasonable human being could be expected to respond similarly.
Three years later, with Hitler dead and the Nazis defeated, President Harry Truman
faced a comparably weighty decision. He writes in his 1955 memoirs that, on the
first full day of his presidency, James F. Byrnes told him the U.S. was building
an explosive “great enough to destroy the whole world.”[2] On April
25, 1945, Secretary of War Henry Stimson and Brigadier General Leslie Groves
gave Truman a lengthy briefing in which Stimson reiterated the warning that “modern
civilization might be completely destroyed” by atomic bombs and stressed
that the future of mankind would be shaped by how such bombs were used and subsequently
controlled or shared.[3] Truman recalled Stimson “gravely” expressing
his uncertainty about whether the U.S. should ever use the bomb, “because
he was afraid it was so powerful that it could end up destroying the whole world.” Truman
admitted that, listening to Stimson and Groves and reading Groves’s accompanying
memo, he “felt the same fear.”[4]
Others would also draw, for Truman, the grave implications
of using such hellish weapons. Truman noted presciently
in his diary on July 25, 1945, after being fully briefed
on the results of the Trinity test, that the bomb “may
be the fire destruction prophesied in the Euphrates Valley
Era, after Noah and his fabulous Ark.”[5] Leading
atomic scientists cautioned that surprise use of the bomb
against Japan could precipitate an uncontrollable arms
race with the Soviet Union that boded future disaster for
mankind. The warnings reached Truman’s closest advisors
if not the President himself. Truman nevertheless authorized
use of atomic bombs against Japan, always insisting he
felt no “remorse” and even bragging that he “never
lost any sleep over that decision.”[6] For over sixty
years, historians and other analysts have struggled to
make sense of Truman’s and his advisors’ actions
and the relevance of his legacy for his successors in the
Oval Office.
In an incisive and influential essay, historian John Dower
divides American interpretations of the atomic bombings
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki into two basic narratives--the “heroic” or “triumphal” and
the “tragic.”[7] The “heroic” narrative,
shaped by wartime science administrator James Conant and
Stimson, and reaffirmed by all postwar American presidents
up to and including Bill Clinton, with only Eisenhower
demurring, justifies the bombing as an ultimately humane,
even merciful, way of bringing the “good war” to
a rapid conclusion and avoiding an American invasion against
a barbaric and fanatically resistant foe. Although Truman
initially emphasized revenge for Japan’s treacherous
attack on Pearl Harbor, subsequent justifications by Truman,
Conant, Stimson, and others stressed instead the tremendous
number of Americans who would have been killed and wounded
in an invasion.[8] As time passed, defenders of the bombing
increasingly added generous estimates of the number of
Japanese who the atomic bombings saved. While highlighting
the decisive role of atomic bombs in the final victory
had the unfortunate consequence of downplaying the heroic
efforts and enormous sacrifices of millions of American
soldiers, it served American propaganda needs by diminishing
the significance of Soviet entry into the Pacific War,
discounting the Soviet contribution to defeating Japan,
and showcasing the super weapon that the United States
alone possessed.[9]
This victor’s narrative privileges possible American
deaths over actual Japanese ones.[10] As critics of the
bombing have become more vocal in recent years, projected
American casualty estimates have grown apace--from the
War Department’s 1945 prediction of 46,000 dead to
Truman’s 1955 insistence that General George Marshall
feared losing a half million American lives to Stimson’s
1947 claim of over 1,000,000 casualties to George H.W.
Bush’s 1991 defense of Truman’s “tough
calculating decision, [which] spared millions of American
lives,”[11] to the 1995 estimate of a crew member
on Bock’s Car, the plane that bombed Nagasaki, who
asserted that the bombing saved six million lives--one
million Americans and five million Japanese. The recent
inclusion of Japanese and other Asian casualties adds an
intriguing dimension to the triumphal narrative, though
one that played little, if any, role in the wartime calculations
of Truman and his top advisors.
To this triumphal narrative, Dower counterposes a tragic
one. Seen from the perspective of the bombs’ victims,
the tragic narrative condemns the wanton killing of hundreds
of thousands of civilians and the inordinate suffering
of the survivors. Although Hiroshima had some military
significance as a naval base and home of the Second General
Army Headquarters, as Truman insisted, American strategic
planners targeted the civilian part of the city, maximizing
the bomb’s destructive power and civilian deaths.
It produced limited military casualties. Admiral William
Leahy angrily told an interviewer in 1949 that although
Truman told him they would “only…hit military
objectives….they went ahead and killed as many women
and children as they could which was just what they wanted
all the time.”[12] The tragic narrative, in contrast
to the heroic narrative, rests on the conviction that the
war could have been ended without use of the bombs given
U.S. awareness of Japan’s attempts to secure acceptable
surrender terms and of the crushing impact that the imminent
Soviet declaration of war against Japan would have.
Each of these narratives has its own images. The mushroom
cloud, principal symbol for the triumphal narrative, has
been almost ubiquitous in American culture from the moment
that the bomb was dropped. Showing the impact of the bomb
from a distance, it effectively masks the death and suffering
below.[13]
Survivors on the ground, however, unlike crew members
flying above, vividly recall the flash from the bomb (pika),
which signifies the beginning of the tragic narrative,
and, when combined with the blast (don), left scores of
thousands dead and dying and two cities in ruins. No wonder
many Japanese refer to the bomb as pikadon and the mushroom
cloud that so pervades the American consciousness has been
superseded in Japan by images of the destruction of the
two cities and the dead and dying.
The Smithsonian’s ill-fated 1995 Enola Gay exhibit
was doomed when Air Force Association and American Legion
critics demanded the elimination of photos of Japanese
bombing victims, particularly women and children, and insisted
on removal of the charred lunch box containing carbonized
rice and peas that belonged to a seventh-grade schoolgirl
who disappeared in the bombing. Resisting efforts to humanize
or personalize the Japanese, they objected strenuously
to inclusion of photos or artifacts that would place human
faces on the bombs’ victims and recall their individual
suffering. For them, the viewpoint should have remained
that of the bombers above the mushroom cloud, not the victims
below it. It is worth noting that, prior to the change
in military policy in September 1943, U.S. publications
were filled with photos of Japanese war dead, but no U.S.
publication carried photos of dead American soldiers.[14]
For one who has confronted the still-smoldering hatred
that some American veterans feel toward the Japanese six
decades after the U.S. victory, it is stunning how little
overt anti-Americanism one finds in Japanese discussions
of the bombings. The Japanese, particularly the hibakusha
(bomb-affected persons), have focused instead on their
unique suffering. Drawing on the moral authority gained,
they have translated this suffering into a positive message
of world peace and nuclear disarmament. In fact, a vigorous
debate about Japan’s responsibility for its brutal
treatment of other Asian peoples began in the early 1980s,
picked up steam with the revelations by comfort women in
the early 1990s, and has raged unabated, especially among
Japanese intellectuals and politicians, since 1995, fueled,
in part, by regular criticism from China and South Korea.[15]
In recent summers, I have been startled, during my annual
study-abroad course in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, by the frequency
with which some Japanese, particularly college students,
justify the atomic bombings in light of Japan’s wartime
butchery and the emperor’s culpability for Japan’s
colonialism and militarism. Perhaps this should be expected
given the multi-layered silence imposed on Japan in regard
to atomic matters--first by Japan’s own government,
humiliated by its defeat and inability to protect its citizens,
then by official U.S. censorship, which banned publication
of bomb-related information, then by the political exigencies
of Japanese dependence on the U.S. under the U.S.-Japan
Security Treaty, which blunted criticism of U.S. policy,
and finally by the silence of many bomb victims, who faced
discrimination in marriage and employment when they divulged
their backgrounds.
Many hibakusha remain incensed over their treatment by
the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission (ABCC), which the U.S.
set up in Hiroshima in 1947 and Nagasaki in 1948 to examine
but not treat the bomb victims.
Adding insult to injury, the ABCC sent physical specimens,
including human remains, back to the U.S. and did not share
its research results with Japanese scientists or physicians,
results that could have been helpful in treating atomic
bomb sufferers.[16] Anthropologist Hugh Gusterson, who
spent three years studying weapons scientists at the Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory, explains the process of
dehumanization whereby American scientists turned “the
dead and injured bodies of the Japanese into bodies of
data” and then sought additional American subjects
for further experimentation. By turning human beings into
dismembered body parts and fragments and calculating damage
instead of wounds, coldly rational scientific discourse
allowed Americans to study Japanese victims without ever
reckoning with their pain and suffering. One scientist
even got annoyed with Gusterson for saying the victims
were “vaporized” when the correct term was “carbonized.”[17]
Although Dower is undoubtedly correct that the heroic and
tragic narratives, those of victors above and victims below
the mushroom clouds, dominated the discussions surrounding
the 50th anniversaries of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, these
two narratives by no means exhaust the range of interpretive
possibilities. Missing from much of the debate has been
consideration of what I call the apocalyptic narrative,
a framework for understanding U.S. actions that has even
greater relevance to today’s citizens who must continue
to grapple with the long-term ramifications of nuclear
war, particularly the threat of extinction of human life.
While this third narrative has important elements in common
with the tragic narrative, maintaining, as did much of
America’s top military command, that surrender could
have been induced without the use of atomic bombs, it does
not see the Japanese as the only victims and holds Truman,
Byrnes, and Groves, among others, to a much higher level
of accountability for knowingly putting at risk all human
and animal existence.
Nor does the apocalyptic narrative have the kind of easily
identifiable images associated with the other two narratives.
Unlike the religious association with Armageddon or the
images of alchemical transmutation in which destruction
leads to rebirth and regeneration, nuclear annihilation
is random, senseless, final, and universal. As with the
end-of-the-world images associated with the existential
crisis of 1929-1930, the post-apocalyptic nothingness resulting
from nuclear annihilation is devoid of redemptive possibilities.
The late 1920s and early 1930s cosmological theories coupling
the concept of heat death with that of the expanding universe
anticipated, in the distant future, a barren, lifeless
planet drifting aimlessly through time and space in a universe
indifferent to human existence. Such a vision, popularized
by British astronomers James Jeans and Arthur Eddington,
was reflected in the work of influential American thinkers
like Joseph Wood Krutch and Walter Lippmann. Although the
proximate causes differ, with nuclear annihilation resulting
from human technological rather than natural destruction,
the symbolism, once human life and consciousness have been
expunged in Truman’s “fire destruction,” is
in other respects similar.[18]
By unleashing nuclear weapons on the world as the U.S.
did in 1945, in a manner that Soviet leaders, as expected,
immediately recognized as ominous and threatening, Truman
and his collaborators were gambling with the future of
life on the planet. Scientists at Chicago’s Met Lab
had issued reports and circulated petitions emphasizing
just this point before the bombs were tested and used,
warning against instigating a “race for nuclear armaments” that
could lead to “total mutual destruction.”[19]
In order to force immediate surrender and save American
lives by delivering a knockout blow to an already staggering
Japan, or, as Gar Alperovitz alternatively argues, to brandish
U.S. might against and constrain the Soviet Union in Europe
and Asia, or, as Tsuyoshi Hasegawa contends, to exact revenge
against Japan while limiting Soviet gains in Asia, Truman
willingly risked the unthinkable. He did so without even
attempting other means to procure Japanese surrender, such
as clarifying the surrender terms to insure the safety
and continued “rule” of Emperor Hirohito as
Stimson and almost all of Truman’s other close advisors
urged him to do, but which he and Byrnes resisted until
after the two atomic bombs had been dropped; allowing Stalin
to sign the Potsdam Proclamation, which would have signaled
imminent Soviet entry into the war; or announcing and,
if necessary, demonstrating the existence of the bomb.
What terrified many scientists from an early stage in the
process was the realization that the bombs that were used
to wipe out Hiroshima and Nagasaki were but the most rudimentary
and primitive prototypes of the incalculably more powerful
weapons on the horizon--mere first steps in a process of
maximizing destructive potential.
Physicist Edward Teller impressed this fact on the group
of “luminaries” Oppenheimer assembled in
the summer of 1942, looking past the atomic bomb, which
he considered as good as done, toward development of a
hydrogen bomb, thousands of times more powerful, which
became the focus of most of their efforts that summer.[20]
Not all scientists shared Teller’s enthusiasm over
this prospect. As Rossi Lomanitz recalled: “Many
of us thought, ‘My God, what kind of a situation
it’s going to be to bring a weapon like that [into
the world]; it might end up by blowing up the world.’ Some
of us brought this up to Oppenheimer; and basically his
answer was, ‘Look, what if the Nazis get it first?’”[21]
In July 1945, physicist Leo Szilard drafted a petition
signed by 155 Manhattan Project scientists urging the President
not to act precipitously in using atomic bombs against
Japan, warning: “The atomic bombs at our disposal
represent only the first step in this direction, and there
is almost no limit to the destructive power which will
become available in the course of their future development.
Thus a nation which sets the precedent of using these newly
liberated forces of nature for the purposes of destruction
may have to bear the responsibility of opening the door
to an era of devastation on an unimaginable scale.”[22]
Arthur Compton observed, “It introduces the question
of mass slaughter, really for the first time in history.”[23]
Stimson, whose finest moment would come in his desperate
postwar attempt to put the nuclear genie back in the bottle,
told the top decision makers, including Groves and Byrnes,
on May 31, 1945, that the members of the Interim Committee
did not view the bomb “as a new weapon merely but
as a revolutionary change in the relations of man to the
universe...; that the project might even mean the doom
of civilization or it might mean the perfection of civilization;
that it might be a Frankenstein which would eat us up.”[24]
Oppenheimer correctly pointed out to the participants in
that same Interim Committee meeting that within 3 years
it might be possible to produce bombs with an explosive
force between 10 and 100 megatons of TNT -- thousands of
times more powerful than the bomb that would destroy Hiroshima.[25]
Hence, the apocalyptic narrative, applying an ethical standard
to which leaders of the time could realistically be held,
and an understanding of short-term and long-term consequences
that should be expected of policymakers, indicts Truman,
Byrnes, and Groves not only for the wholesale slaughter
of civilians in Hiroshima and Nagasaki but for behaving
recklessly and thoughtlessly in inflicting a reign of terror
on the rest of humankind. In 1942, Compton assessed the
odds of blowing up the world and decided it was not worth
the risk. In 1945, Truman contemplated the prospect of
future annihilation but apparently gave it little serious
consideration. To make matters worse, he did next to nothing
to make amends for his wartime shortsightedness when the
opportunity to control nuclear weapons presented itself
again during the first year of the postwar era.
Throughout that first year, Henry Wallace, who Roosevelt
had asked to stay on as Secretary of Commerce after Truman
replaced him as Vice President, struggled valiantly to
avert an arms race and ease the threat of nuclear war .
When Wallace persisted in criticizing administration policy
toward the Soviet Union and the bomb, Truman ousted him
from the Cabinet. In his address to a national radio audience
on the night he submitted his letter of resignation, Wallace
again voiced the theme that provoked Truman’s ire,
charging that the U.S. government’s present course
may mean “the extinction of man and of the world.”[26]
That Truman bears so much responsibility for creating this
perilous state of affairs, regardless of his conscious
intentions, justifies the application of such a harsh standard
of judgment and demands a closer look at the man and his
early presidency. For if Harry Truman, a relatively decent
man, could behave so irresponsibly, what assurance is there
that future presidents, under comparable circumstances,
might not do the same? In fact, several have already come
frighteningly close.
II
Truman always accepted personal responsibility for the
bomb decision. In his memoirs, however, he states that
the Interim Committee chaired by Stimson recommended
that “the bomb be used against the enemy as soon
as it could be done....without specific warning and against
a target that would clearly show its devastating strength.” This
decision was supported by the scientific advisors to
the committee and, Truman insists, by not only British
Prime Minister Winston Churchill, but also by Truman’s
own “top military advisors.” But, Truman
adds, “The final decision of where and when to
use the atomic bomb was up to me. Let there be no mistake
about it. I regarded the bomb as a military weapon and
never had any doubt that it should be used.”[27]
Truman made the same point in a 1948 letter to his sister
Mary: “On that trip coming home [from Potsdam]
I ordered the Atomic Bomb to be dropped on Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. It was a terrible decision. But I made
it.”[28]
Although Truman left office with abysmally low approval
ratings, he is now widely viewed as one of America’s
near great presidents and treated as a political and moral
paragon by leaders of both major political parties, including
George W. Bush. President Bush’s national security
advisor and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who Bush
credits with telling “me everything I know about
the Soviet Union,” named Truman her man of the century
to Time.[29] Some historians have been equally impressed
with the man and his legacy, none more than David McCullough,
whose lavishly praiseful and historiographically vapid
biography won the Pulitzer Prize.[30]
Truman did not learn of the atomic bomb project until Stimson
told him, following the April 12 emergency Cabinet meeting,
that the U.S. was working on “a new explosive of
almost unbelievable destructive power.”[31] Over
the next few hours, days, and weeks, Truman made a series
of decisions that would set the course for his presidency
and for the future of much of the world. Whereas Roosevelt
took counsel from people of diverse views and ultimately
exercised independent judgment on foreign affairs, Truman,
inexperienced in these areas, turned almost exclusively
to more conservative thinkers who harbored animosity toward
the Soviet Union. Never comfortable with visionaries, idealists,
or intellectuals, he sought advice from people who confirmed
his own parochial instincts. His dependence on segregationist
Byrnes, a man with considerably less formal education than
even Truman himself, is a case in point. With the exception
of Wallace, whose popularity and independent political
base made him temporarily untouchable, New Dealers and
more progressive holdovers from the Roosevelt administration
were quickly marginalized by the new president and, before
long, either ousted or pressured to leave the administration.
The fact that the bomb project had generated so much momentum
by the time Truman became president that it would have
taken bold leadership on his part to avoid using these
new weapons has led some observers to minimize his personal
responsibility. On several occasions, Groves insisted that
Truman was swept along by the tide of events. “As
far as I was concerned,” Groves wrote, “his
decision was one of non-interference--basically, a decision
not to upset the existing plans....As time went on, and
as we poured more and more money and effort into the project,
the government became increasingly committed to the ultimate
use of the bomb...”[32] On another occasion, Groves
commented, “Truman did not so much say ‘yes’ as
not say ‘no.’ It would indeed have taken a
lot of nerve to say ‘no’ at that time.”[33]
He saved his most demeaning assessment for a 1963 article
in Look Magazine, in which he described Truman as “a
little boy on a toboggan.”[34]
Truman relied heavily upon the advice of Groves and Byrnes,
both of whom were strongly committed to using the bombs
and both of whom saw their use as a means of firing a warning
shot across the Soviet bow. Byrnes made his anti-Soviet
motives abundantly clear at his May 28, 1945 meeting with
scientists Leo Szilard, Harold Urey, and Walter Bartky.
Groves reiterated this sentiment when he acknowledged: “There
was never from about two weeks from the time I took charge
of this Project any illusion on my part but that Russia
was our enemy, and the Project was conducted on that basis.
I didn’t go along with the attitude of the country
as a whole that Russia was a gallant ally.”[35]
Not only did Truman rely on fervent proponents of using
the bomb, he ignored the entreaties of Stimson, State Department
Japan expert and former Ambassador Joseph Grew, Admiral
William Leahy, Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal, Assistant
Secretary of War John McCloy, and other knowledgeable insiders
who urged him to change the surrender terms and inform
the Japanese that they could keep the emperor. Indeed,
this is precisely what the U.S. ultimately did—but
only after dropping the two atomic bombs in the US arsenal.
Several scholars have argued that such modifications of
surrender terms could have significantly expedited Japanese
surrender, saving numerous Japanese and American lives,
and obviating use of the bombs,[36] especially if combined
with announcement of the impending Soviet declaration of
war, a development that Japanese leaders dreaded. General
Douglas MacArthur told former President Herbert Hoover
that, if Truman had acted upon Hoover’s May 30, 1945
memo and changed the surrender terms, the war would have
ended months earlier. “That the Japanese would have
accepted it and gladly,” he averred, “I have
no doubt.”[37] Hoover believed the Japanese would
have negotiated as early as February.[38]
Truman ordered the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
despite the fact that he and his top advisors were aware
that the Japanese had abandoned hope for military victory
and were seeking an end to the war. Prince Konoe Fumimaro
had affirmed the view held by many Japanese leaders when
he informed Emperor Hirohito in February 1945 that “defeat
is inevitable.”[39] Japan’s military desperation
was apparent to Americans who analyzed the intercepted
July exchanges between Foreign Minister Togo Shigenori
in Tokyo and Ambassador Sato Naotake in Moscow. The Pacific
Strategic Intelligence Summary for the week of Potsdam
meeting reported: “it may be said that Japan now,
officially if not publicly, recognizes her defeat. Abandoning
as unobtainable the long-cherished goal of victory, she
has turned to the twin aims of (a) reconciling national
pride with defeat, and (b) finding the best means of salvaging
the wreckage of her ambitions.”[40] As Colonel Charles “Tick” Bonesteel
III, chief of the War Department Operations Division Policy
Section, recalled: “the poor damn Japanese were putting
feelers out by the ton so to speak, through Russia.”[41]
OSS official Allen Dulles briefed Stimson on Japanese peace
feelers at Potsdam. Dulles wrote in The Secret Surrender: “On
July 20, 1945, under instructions from Washington, I went
to the Potsdam Conference and reported there to Secretary
Stimson on what I had learned from Tokyo--they desired
to surrender if they could retain the Emperor and the constitution
as a basis for maintaining discipline and order in Japan
after the devastating news of surrender became known to
the Japanese people.”[42] That such indications of
Japanese intentions were not lost on Truman and Byrnes
is apparent not only in Truman’s July 18 diary entry
referring to “the telegram from the Jap Emperor asking
for peace“[43] but in the August 3 diary entry by
Byrnes’s assistant Walter Brown, who recorded, “Aboard
Augusta/ President, Leahy, JFB agrred [sic] Japas [sic]
looking for peace.”[44] Byrnes publicly admitted
as much when he spoke to the press on August 29. The New
York Times reported, “…Byrnes challenged today
Japan’s argument that the atomic bomb had knocked
her out of the war. He cited what he called Russian proof
that the Japanese knew that they were beaten before the
first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.”[45]
Similar comments by Forrestal, McCloy, and Stimson show
how widespread this realization was. But, at Potsdam, when
Stimson tried to persuade Truman to alter his approach
and provide assurances on the emperor in the Potsdam Proclamation,
Truman told his elderly Secretary of War that, if he did
not like the way things were going, he could pack his bags
and return home.
Truman also decided to issue the Potsdam Proclamation
without Stalin’s signature, despite Stalin’s
eagerness to sign and Truman’s understanding that
Soviet entry into the war would deeply demoralize Japan
and end Japan’s misguided hopes of securing better
surrender terms through Soviet intercession.[46] Soviet
entry also destroyed the possibility that Japan’s
Ketsu-go strategy would succeed in inflicting heavy casualties
on the Allied invading force, ultimately leaving the Japanese
with little choice but surrender. Truman insisted that
firming up Soviet involvement was his principal reason
for going to Potsdam. Upon receiving Stalin’s confirmation,
he exulted, Stalin will “be in the Jap War on August
15th. Fini Japs when that comes about.”[47] Several
intelligence estimates drew the same conclusion, including
a June 30 War Department report that stated, “The
entry of the Soviet Union into the war would finally convince
the Japanese of the inevitability of complete defeat.”[48]
In the end, the Soviet invasion proved a far more powerful
inducement to surrender than did the atom bombs. Japanese
leaders, many demonstrating little concern for the suffering
of their own people, had already witnessed U.S. firebombing
and often near-total destruction of 64 cities without ending
the war.
The U.S. had shown it could level Japanese cities almost
at will in the months preceding Hiroshima. Whether the
U.S. did so with hundreds of bombers or with one plane
and one bomb did not fundamentally alter the strategic
situation in the eyes of Japanese leaders. Even Army Minister
Korechika Anami’s startling announcement on August
9 that he had intelligence indicating that the U.S. might
have more than 100 additional atomic bombs and that Tokyo
would be the next target did not change the views of members
of the War Cabinet who remained deadlocked 3-3 over whether
to simply demand retention of the emperor system or to
add three additional conditions.[49] While contradictory
postwar statements by Emperor Hirohito and other Japanese
leaders about whether the atomic bombings or the Soviet
invasion ultimately proved decisive have provided ammunition
for both sides in this debate, it seems clear that the
powerful and rapidly advancing Soviet invasion definitively
undermined both the Japanese military and diplomatic strategies
far more profoundly and fundamentally than did the evisceration,
however total and horrific, of the 65th and 66th destroyed
Japanese cities. As Prime Minister Suzuki explained on
August 13, when asked why they couldn’t delay surrender
for a few days, “If we miss today, the Soviet Union
will take not only Manchuria, Korea, Karafuto, but also
Hokkaido. This would destroy the foundation of Japan. We
must end the war when we can deal with the United States.”[50]
Top U.S. military leaders recognized Japan’s growing
desperation, prompting several to later insist that the
use of atomic bombs was not needed to secure victory. Those
who believed that dropping atomic bombs on Japan was morally
repugnant and/or militarily unnecessary included Admiral
William Leahy, General Dwight Eisenhower, General Douglas
MacArthur, General Curtis LeMay, General Henry Arnold,
Brigadier General Bonner Fellers, Admiral Ernest King,
General Carl Spaatz, Admiral Chester Nimitz, and Admiral
William “Bull” Halsey. Groves admitted that
he circumvented the Joint Chiefs of Staff to avoid, in
part, “Admiral Leahy’s disbelief in the weapon
and its hoped-for effectiveness; this would have made action
by the Joint Chiefs quite difficult.”[51] In reflecting
on his opposition, Leahy, who chaired the meetings of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff and served as Truman’s personal
chief of staff, emphasized the barbaric nature of the atomic
bombs, not doubts about their effectiveness, chillingly
proclaiming, “It is my opinion that 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....My own feeling
was that in being the first to use it, we had adopted an
ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages.”[52]
Eisenhower was equally appalled, writing in his 1963 Mandate
for Change that when he learned from Stimson at Potsdam
that use of the bomb was imminent, “I voiced to
him my grave misgivings, first on the basis of my belief
that Japan was already defeated and that dropping the bomb
was completely unnecessary, and secondly because I thought
that our country should avoid shocking world opinion by
the use of a weapon whose employment was, I thought, no
longer mandatory as a measure to save American lives. It
was my belief that Japan was, at that very moment, seeking
some way to surrender with a minimum loss of ‘face.’”[53]
Eisenhower told biographer Stephen Ambrose that on July
20, three days after learning this shocking news from Stimson,
he met with Truman and his advisors and directly recommended
that they not use the bombs.[54] Other military leaders
drew similar conclusions about the imminence of Japanese
surrender without use of atomic bombs. Air Force Chief
of Staff General Henry Arnold wrote, “it always appeared
to us that, atomic bomb or no atomic bomb, the Japanese
were already on the verge of collapse.”[55] General
Curtis LeMay argued that his conventional bombing had already
ended the war: “Even without the atomic bomb and
the Russian entry into the war, Japan would have surrendered
in two weeks.”[56] Brigadier General Bonner Fellers
wrote shortly after VJ day: “Neither the atomic bombing
nor the entry of the Soviet Union into the war forced Japan’s
unconditional surrender. She was defeated before either
of these events took place.”[57] Brigadier General
Carter Clarke, who was in charge of preparing MAGIC summaries
in 1945, later stated, “we brought them down to an
abject surrender through accelerated sinking of their merchant
marine and hunger alone, and when we didn’t need
to do it, and we knew we didn’t need to do it, and
they knew we knew we didn’t need to do it, we used
them as an experiment for two atomic bombs.”[58]
Undersecretary of the Navy Ralph Bard, the Navy representative
to the Interim Committee, recommended, before leaving the
government on July 1, that the U.S. not use the bombs without
warning given the clear evidence that Japan was already
militarily defeated and trying to surrender and the devastating
blow that would be struck by the Soviet declaration of
war. Such considerations led Admiral Leahy to conclude
that an invasion would not have been necessary. Leahy explained, “I
was unable to see any justification, from a national-defense
point of view, for an invasion of an already thoroughly
defeated Japan.”[659]
Even more surprising than the dissenting views of so many
respected military leaders is the intense criticism by
influential postwar conservatives. While moral outrage
over the atomic bombings is now widely considered to be
a left or “revisionist” position, ethical conservatives
used to be equally condemnatory. Herbert Hoover wrote to
a friend on August 8, 1945, “The use of the atomic
bomb, with its indiscriminate killing of women and children,
revolts my soul.”[60] Such attacks mounted over the
next decade and a half, leading Medford Evans to write
in a 1959 article in William F. Buckley’s National
Review, “The indefensibility of the atomic bombing
of Hiroshima is becoming part of the national conservative
creed…”[61] Even the notorious hawk Edward
Teller would later insist, somewhat disingenuously, that
he too had opposed use of the bomb, explaining, in 1970,
to Harvard biologist and Nobel laureate George Wald, “My
reason for opposing the dropping of the bomb on Japan was
that this action seemed to be wrong and unjustified.”[62]
No one can say with absolute certainty that assuring the
Japanese about the emperor, notifying them about Soviet
entry, and alerting them to or demonstrating the bomb would
have brought about Japanese surrender. But the chances
that this formula would have succeeded seem very good,
despite the vacillation by the emperor and the obstinacy
of some of Japan’s military leaders.[63] There is
even a chance that taking these steps might have sped up
the end of the war and saved American lives. However, the
relevant question is why the president of the United States,
given his expressed understanding of the potentially cataclysmic
nature of these weapons, would not seek to avoid unveiling
weapons “great enough to destroy the whole world” in
a way that would dramatically increase the chances for
future disaster or, as he himself put it, for “the
fire destruction prophesied in the Euphrates Valley Era
after Noah and his fabulous ark.”
Paul Boyer has cogently demonstrated that the American
public responded to news of Hiroshima with an eerie sense
of foreboding and widespread perception that American cities
could one day suffer the fate of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
and worse--much, much worse.[64] News commentators, editorial
writers, and journalists, instead of celebrating the military
use of the bombs against Japanese cities, foresaw the dire
implications for the future of the American people and
the world. On the evening of August 6, NBC radio news commentator
H.V. Kaltenborn declared, “For all we know, we have
created a Frankenstein! We must assume that with the passage
of only a little time, an improved form of the new weapon
we use today can be turned against us.”[65]
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch went even further the next
day, warning that science may have “signed the
mammalian world’s death warrant and deeded an earth
in ruins to the ants.”[66] On August 7, John Campbell,
editor of Astounding Science Fiction, told readers of PM
that, having contemplated this development for 15 years,
he was “scared” because this wasn’t just
a new bomb. It was “the power to kill the human race.”[67]
CBS radio commentator Edward R. Murrow captured the national
sense of fear and foreboding on August 12, reporting, “Seldom,
if ever, has a war ended leaving the victors with such
a sense of uncertainty and fear, with such a realization
that the future is obscure and that survival is not assured.”[68]
Following the announcement that Hiroshima had been bombed,
G. Bromley Oxnam and John Foster Dulles of the Federal
Council of Churches issued a statement contending that “If
we, a professedly Christian nation, feel morally free to
use atomic energy in that way, men elsewhere will accept
that verdict. Atomic weapons will be looked upon as a normal
part of the arsenal of war and the stage will be set for
the sudden and final destruction of mankind.”[69]
Much of the public concurred. Twenty-six percent of respondents
to an August Gallup Poll thought it “likely” that “some
day experiments in smashing atoms will cause an explosion
which will destroy the entire world.”[70] Reflecting
on the “almost infinite destructive power” of
this “demonic invention,” which it placed at
a “stage of development comparable to that of artillery
at the Battle of Crecy,” the Washington Post noted
on August 26, the life expectancy of the human species
had “dwindled immeasurably in the course of two brief
weeks.”[71]
But it was the scientists who best understood the nightmarish
implications of the process that Truman had initiated.
In September 1945, Arthur Compton alerted Henry Wallace,
who the scientists considered their most trustworthy ally
in the administration, of the impending doomsday scenario.
Four scientists had separately and independently approached
Compton with theoretical plans for building a super bomb.
The cat was clearly out of the bag. An effort comparable
to the Manhattan Project, he felt, would have a good chance
of success. But he and the scientists believed “that
this development should not be undertaken because we should
prefer defeat in war to a victory obtained at the expense
of the enormous human disaster that would be caused...” He
calculated the potential damage as follows: “area
completely destroyed by 1 atomic bomb, 4 square miles.
Area completely destroyable by 1000 atomic bombs, as in
a future war, 4000 square miles. Area completely destroyable
by 1000 super bombs, about 1,000,000 square miles. Area
of continental United States, about 3,000,000 square miles.”[72]
The fundamental transformation wrought by dropping atomic
bombs on Japan in August 1945 was apparent at the time
and has not been lost sight of by subsequent generations.
The atomic evisceration of downtown Hiroshima with the
uranium bomb “Little Boy” on August 6 and the
even more gratuitous obliteration of the Urakami district
of Nagasaki three days later by the plutonium bomb “Fat
Man” have merged in memory as one of history’s
watershed events. Two separate polls conducted in 1999
confirm its enduring significance. The first, sponsored
by the Freedom Forum’s Newseum, asked 67 veteran
journalists to rank the 100 most important news events
of the past century. The judges chose the atomic bombings
as the number one news story of the 20th century. In the
second, New York University’s Department of Journalism
asked 36 experts to identify the best works by American
journalists of the past 100 years. The 19 journalism faculty
members and 17 other journalism professionals placed John
Hersey’s 1946 New Yorker essay and book Hiroshima,
which humanized Japanese victims with literary images that
would haunt Americans for decades, atop their list.[73]
On his way back from Potsdam aboard the USS Augusta, Truman
received news that the city of Hiroshima had been virtually
wiped off the map. He proclaimed that “This is the
greatest thing in history!”[74] There is little evidence
that, despite his statements indicating awareness of the
forces he had unleashed, he ever gave the bomb decision
the serious thought it deserved. In 1946, when MGM sent
him a copy of the script of its upcoming docudrama about
the production and use of the bomb, The Beginning or the
End, for his approval, Truman voiced no objection to the
scene where he decides to drop the bomb. It was only the
insistence of Walter Lippmann, who during a subsequent
screening found the president’s flip decision “shocking,” that
stirred the White House to request changes.[75] The original
version appears to have been more authentic. When an interviewer
asked Truman whether the decision was morally difficult
to make, he responded, “Hell no, I made it like that,” snapping
his fingers.[76] In fact, Truman never publicly acknowledged
doubts or misgivings. When Edward R. Murrow asked him in
a 1958 interview if he had any regrets about using the
bomb or about any of his other presidential decisions,
Truman responded, “Not the slightest--not the slightest
in the world.”[77]
Nor did he welcome others expressing doubts. Upon meeting
Oppenheimer for the first time on October 25, 1945, Truman,
with his typical insecurity-masking bluster, asked Oppenheimer
to guess when the Soviets would develop a bomb. When Oppenheimer
admitted that he did not know, Truman declared that he
did: “Never.” Unnerved, Oppenheimer said at
one point, “Mr. President, I feel I have blood on
my hands.” Truman responded angrily. “I told
him the blood was on my hands—to let me worry about
that,” he recounted to David Lilienthal. Truman liked
this story enough to repeat it on several occasions, his
responses varying slightly, but his contempt for Oppenheimer
always evident. He told Acheson, “I don’t want
to see that son-of-a-bitch in this office ever again,” and
another time called him a “cry-baby scientist.”[78]
Stimson was much less sanguine about his role in enabling
the bomb decision, a problem he wrestled with incessantly
in the final months of the war. In his wartime diary, he
referred to the bomb as “the dreadful,” “the
terrible,” “the dire,” “the awful,” and “the
diabolical” and spoke of it constantly with other
top policymakers.[79] He wrote in his diary on May 28,
1945, “I have made up my mind to make that subject
my primary occupation for these next few months, relieving
myself so far as possible from all routine matters in the
Department.”[80] He brought Arthur Page to the Pentagon
and gave him little to do, wanting him, Page realized,
always on hand “to talk about the atom.”[81]
He later regretted that he was “the victim” Conant
had chosen to defend the bomb decision in his 1947 Harper’s
article.
“Conant,” Stimson explained to Felix Frankfurter, “felt very
much worried over the spreading accusation that it was entirely unnecessary
to use the atomic bomb.” Stimson admitted, “I have rarely been
connected with a paper about which I have so much doubt at the last moment.”[82]
He, more than most, understood the possibility that changing surrender terms
might end the war without using atomic bombs or invading and struggled unsuccessfully
to convince Truman to do so. In his memoir, he and Bundy admitted, “history
might find that the United States, by its delay in stating its position, had
prolonged the war.”[83] During the final months of the Pacific War, he
was wracked with doubts about the wisdom and propriety of using the bomb and
seemed to grasp the terrible significance of the new world he had helped to
usher in. He drove the point home forcefully in the final paragraph of his “official” defense,
writing: “In this last great action of the Second World War we were
given final proof that war is death. War in the twentieth century has grown
steadily more barbarous, more destructive, more debased in all its aspects.
Now, with the release of atomic energy, man’s ability to destroy himself
is very nearly complete.”[84] Yet, much as with his de facto acquiescence
in a strategic bombing policy he abhorred, he failed to impede Truman, Byrnes,
and Groves from their desired use of atomic bombs against Japan.
Even British Prime Minister Winston Churchill recognized
the problem of defending use of the bombs. Churchill visited
Truman as the end of his presidency neared. Truman threw
a small dinner to which he invited Robert Lovett, Averell
Harriman, Omar Bradley, and Dean Acheson. Margaret, the
President’s daughter, describes the scene:
Everyone was in an ebullient mood, especially Dad. Without
warning, Mr. Churchill turned to him and said, “Mr.
President, I hope you have your answer ready for that
hour when you and I stand before Saint Peter” and
he says, “I understand you two are responsible
for putting off those atomic bombs. What have you got
to say for yourselves?”[85]
Lovett intervened to save Truman from embarrassment. The
judgment of history will not be that easy to evade.
III
Hiroshima counted 140,000 dead by the end of 1945 and perhaps
as many as 200,000 by 1950. Nagasaki lost over 70,000.
Tens of thousands more have died since as a result of
bomb-related injuries from blast, fire, and radiation.[86]
Although both cities are now thriving modern metropolises,
magnificent testaments to the resiliency of the human
spirit, their citizens have made sure that their special
places in history are remembered. The people of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, led by the hibakusha, have engaged in a
valiant struggle against forgetting. Akira Kurosawa expresses
their dilemma in Rhapsody in August, his powerful 1995
film about the younger generation’s encounter with
the history of Nagasaki, in a voice-over during a scene
where sightseers casually stroll around and photograph
monuments in the Nagasaki Peace Park. The narrator observes, “But
nowadays, for most people... Nagasaki happened once upon
a time. As the years pass, people are apt to forget...even
the most dreadful things.” Many never learn them
in the first place. Public opinion polls show that over
one-third of U.S. citizens don’t know that Hiroshima
was the site of the first atomic attack, with the numbers
rising to well over 40 percent among those aged 18-29.
Or consider the jubilation of many Indians and Pakistanis
upon learning that their countries had successfully tested
nuclear weapons in 1998, a reaction that reflects the
growing belief that acquisition of nuclear weapons is
the quickest route to international respectability. Equally
uncomprehending was General Mirza Aslam Berg, retired
chief of Pakistan’s armed forces, who dismissed
fears of nuclear war between those two nuclear powers,
commenting, “I don’t know what you’re
worried about. You can die crossing the street, hit by
a car, or you could die in a nuclear war. You’ve
got to die someday, anyway.”[87] Even more ominous
is the Bush administration’s 2001 Nuclear Posture
Review, which virtually eliminates the distinction between
nuclear and conventional weapons and dramatically lowers
the bar to nuclear weapons’ use, in March 1946,
Lewis Mumford, already horrified by the orgy of destruction
Truman had unleashed and appalled by the announcement
of additional bomb tests, published a passionate piece
in Saturday Review that charged,
We in America are living among madmen. Madmen govern our
affairs in the name of order and security. The chief madmen
claim the titles of general, admiral, senator, scientist,
administrator, Secretary of State, even President. And
the fatal symptom of their madness is this: they have been
carrying through a series of acts which will lead eventually
to the destruction of mankind, under the solemn conviction
that they are normal responsible people, living sane lives,
and working for reasonable ends.
Soberly, day after day, the madmen continue to go through
the undeviating motions of madness: motions so stereotyped,
so commonplace, that they seem the normal motions of normal
men, not the mass compulsions of people bent on total death.
Without a public mandate of any kind, the madmen have taken
it upon themselves to lead us by gradual stages to that
final act of madness which will corrupt the face of the
earth and blot out the nations of men, possibly put an
end to all life on the planet itself.[88]
Stanley Kubrick came to the same realization two decades
later, understanding that he had to make Dr. Strangelove
as a black comedy because planning for nuclear annihilation
had to be the work of madmen. Year after year, when I started
taking my students to the Hiroshima Atomic Bomb Museum,
I caught myself copying the same label because in its ludicrous
disproportionality it represented the logical culmination
of the process unleashed by Truman in 1945--that by 1985
the destructive power of the world’s nuclear arsenals
had reached the equivalent of 1.47 million Hiroshima bombs.
The point of the apocalyptic narrative is not simply to
blame Harry Truman for the present nuclear insanity. Clearly,
many share responsibility for a state of affairs in which
nine nations have nuclear weapons, and numerous others
are maneuvering to join this not-so-exclusive club. Nor
is it to question Americans’ wartime valor, downplay
Japan’s responsibility for its cruel treatment of
other Asian peoples and of Allied prisoners, overlook Stalin’s
interest in keeping the Pacific War going until the Soviet
invasion of Manchuria had at least begun, or minimize the
culpability of Emperor Hirohito and other Japanese leaders
for prolonging the war in complete disregard of the well-being
of the Japanese people. Similarly, it is not simply to
condemn the needless death and ongoing suffering of hundreds
of thousands of innocent civilian victims, whose anguish
and misery must be remembered and mourned along with the
death and suffering of tens of millions of victims on all
sides. The real lesson is that Harry Truman chose to use
atomic bombs instead of attempting other potentially viable
means to end the war despite his understanding, on some
level, of what his decision augured for the future.
Is there any reason, particularly given the fact that postwar
presidents have almost unanimously applauded Truman’s
decision, to think that other presidents would not have
acted as Truman did or that future presidents won’t
respond similarly when confronted with difficult circumstances?
Is there any reason to think that George W. Bush, for example,
would show greater restraint in using nuclear weapons?
Is George Bush more ethical than Harry Truman? More compassionate?
More knowledgeable? Wiser? More contemplative? Less impulsive?
More nuanced in his understanding of foreign affairs? More
inclined toward diplomacy? Can one really have confidence
in the clarity and depth of Bush’s understanding
of world affairs when he astonishingly claims he decided
to invade Iraq after he gave Saddam Hussein “a chance
to allow the inspectors in, and he wouldn’t let them
in?”[89] Should such a man really have veto power
over the future existence of the human species?
The same could be asked about most postwar presidents,
whose accession to power has depended, like Truman’s,
much more on cronyism with and willingness to do the bidding
of political, military, and financial elites than on intellectual
and moral qualifications. And it could certainly be asked
about the heads of state of other nuclear powers.
Such concerns are reinforced by the fact that use of atomic
bombs has been seriously contemplated and/or threatened
by almost every postwar president--by Truman during the
Soviet blockade of Berlin in 1948, by Truman and Eisenhower
over Korea, by Eisenhower administration officials in support
of the French at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, by Eisenhower during
the Lebanon crisis in 1958 and in response to a threatened
Chinese invasion of Quemoy and Matsu in 1954 and 1958,
by Kennedy during the Berlin crisis in 1961 and the Cuban
Missile Crisis in 1962, by Johnson to defend marines at
Khe Sanh, Vietnam in 1968, by Nixon and Kissinger against
the North Vietnamese between 1969 and 1972, by Nixon to
deter Soviet actions on several occasions between 1969
and 1973, by Carter in Iran in 1980, by George H.W. Bush
and Clinton in Iraq, and by George W. Bush in wholesale
fashion in the 2001 Nuclear Posture Review and afterwards.
As Daniel Ellsberg has astutely argued, it is a mistake
to say that the U.S. has not “used” nuclear
weapons since Nagasaki. Ellsberg contends, “Again
and again, generally in secret from the American public,
U.S. nuclear weapons have been used, for quite different
purposes: in the precise way that a gun is used when you
point it at someone’s head in a direct confrontation,
whether or not the trigger is pulled.”[90]
Hence, the likelihood exists that, so long as nuclear weapons
remain in the arsenals of the United States and other nations,
they will be used and with consequences potentially far
more dire than the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
That Harry Truman could act in so malign a fashion, provoking
the outrage and condemnation of military, religious, and
scientific leaders, as well as ordinary citizens, in the
U.S. and abroad, only suggests what other world leaders
will be capable of doing if such weapons remain at their
disposal.
Peter Kuznick, author of Beyond the Laboratory: Scientists
as Political Activists in 1930s America, is Associate Professor
of History and Director of the Nuclear Studies Institute at American
University.
This article was written for Japan Focus. Posted July
23, 2007.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank Bart Bernstein, Herbert Bix,
Daniel Ellsberg, Michael Flynn, Uday Mohan, Mark Selden, Martin
Sherwin, and Yuki Tanaka for their thoughtful comments and astute
editorial suggestions.
Notes
[ 1] Arthur Holly Compton, Atomic Quest: A Personal Narrative
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1956), 128. Scientists
never completely ruled out the possibility of this ultimate
catastrophe. At the Trinity test, Enrico Fermi and others
still contemplated the minuscule chance this could occur
and James Conant, stunned by the “enormity of the
light,” momentarily feared they had ignited the world.
James G. Hershberg, James B. Conant: Harvard to Hiroshima
and the Making of the Nuclear Age (New York: Alfred A.
Knopf, 1993), 232.
[2] Harry S. Truman, 1945: Memoirs: 1945 Year of Decisions,
Vol. 1 (New York: New American Library, 1955), 21.
[3] Henry L. Stimson and McGeorge Bundy, On Active Service
in Peace and War (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1948),
634-5.
[4] Harry S. Truman, “Why I Dropped the Bomb,” Parade,
4 December 1988. Bart Bernstein, who brought this article
to my attention, cautions that Margaret Truman’s
editing may have influenced the wording.
[5] Robert H. Ferrell, ed., Off the Record: The Private
Papers of Harry S. Truman (New York: Harper and Row, Publishers,
1980), 55.
[6] Sadao Asada, “The Mushroom Cloud and Natioinal
Psyches: Japanese and American Perceptions of the Atomic
Bomb Decision, 1945-1995,” in Laura Hein and Mark
Selden, eds., Living With the Bomb: American and Japanese
Cultural Conflicts in the Nuclear Age (New York: M.E. Sharpe,
1997), 179. For an interesting discussion of Truman’s
repeated use of the “sleep” metaphor, see
Robert Jay Lifton and Greg Mitchell, Hiroshima in America:
Fifty Years of Denial (New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons,
1995), 176. Some scholars have suggested that Truman was
more conflicted about this decision than he admitted. See
Lifton and Mitchell, 148-9, 188-192 and Gar Alperovitz, “Was
Harry Truman a Revisionist on Hiroshima?” Society
for Historians of American Foreign Relations Newsletter
29(June 1998), 1-9.
[7] John W. Dower, “Triumphal and Tragic Narratives
of the War in Asia,” in Hein and Selden, eds., Living
With the Bomb, 37-51. For an expanded version of this analysis,
see John W. Dower, “Three Narratives of Our Humanity,” in
Edward T. Linenthal and Tom Engelhardt, eds., History Wars:
The Enola Gay and Other Battles for the American Past (New
York: Metropolitan Books, 1996), 63-96.
[8] Lifton and Mitchell, 6-7. Truman’s anger toward
the Japanese surfaced frequently. Shortly after Nagasaki,
Truman defended the bombings in a letter to the Federal
Council of Churches, explaining, “I was greatly disturbed
over the unwarranted attack by the Japanese on Pearl Harbor
and murder of our prisoners of war. The only language they
seem to understand is the one we have been using to bombard
them. When you have to deal with a beast you have to treat
him as a beast.” Quoted in Barton J. Bernstein, “The
Atomic Bombings Reconsidered,” Foreign Affairs 74(January/February
1995), 152.
[9] Michael S. Sherry, “Patriotic Orthodoxy and American
Decline,” in Hein and Selden, eds., Living With the
Bomb, 143-4, 149; Lifton and Mitchell, 240.
[ 10] George H. Roeder, “Making Things Visible: Learning
from the Censors,” in Hein and Selden, eds., Living
With the Bomb, 89.
[1 1] Barton J. Bernstein, “A Postwar Myth: 500,000
U.S. Lives Saved,” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists,
42(June/July 1986), 38-40; Bernstein, “Reconsidering ‘Invasion
Most Costly’: Popular-History Scholarship, Publishing
Standards, and the claim of High U.S. Casualty Estimates
to Help Legitimize the Atomic Bombings,” Peace and
Change 24(April 1999), 220-248; Asada, “The Mushroom
Cloud and National Psyches,” 182; Sherry, “Patriotic
Orthodoxy and American Decline,”144. For one of many
challenges to Bernstein’s “low-end casualty
estimates,” see Michael Kort, “Casualty Projections
for the Invasion of Japan, Phantom Estimates, and the Math
of Barton Bernstein,” Passport: The Newsletter
of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations
34(December 2003), 4-12.
[12] Alperovitz, The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb: And
the Architecture of an American Myth (New York: Alfred
A. Knopf, 1995), 326. [Hereafter referred to as Decision.]
[ 13] Lane Fenrich, “Mass Death in Miniature: How
Americans Became Victims of the Bomb,” in Hein and
Selden, eds., Living With the Bomb, 127.
[ 14] George H. Roeder, Jr., The Censored War: American
Visual Experience During World War Two (New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1993), 14; Laura Hein and Mark Selden, “Commemoration
and Silence: Fifty Years of Remembering the Bomb in America
and Japan,” in Hein and Selden, eds., Living With
the Bomb, 25.
[15] Nozaki Yoshiko and Inokuchi Hiromitsu, “Japanese
Education, Nationalism, and Ienaga Saburo’s Textbook
Lawsuits”; Gavan McCormack, “The Japanese Movement
to ‘Correct’ History”; Laura Hein and
Mark Selden, “The Lesson of War, Global Power, and
Social Change” all in Laura Hein and Mark Selden,
eds., Censoring History: Citizenship and Memory in Japan,
Germany, and the United States (Armonk, New York: M.E.
Sharpe, 2000).
[ 16] Monica Braw, “Hiroshima and Nagasaki: The Voluntary
Silence,” in Hein and Selden, eds., Living With the
Bomb, 158.
[ 17] Hugh Gusterson, “Remembering Hiroshima at a
Nuclear Weapons Laboratory,” in Hein and Selden,
eds., Living With the Bomb, 264,267.
[18] See Robert Jay Lifton, “The Image of ‘The
End of the World’: A Psychohistorical View,” Michigan
Quarterly Review 24(Winter 1985), 70-90; Robert Jay Lifton,
The Broken Connection (New York, 1979), especially chapters
22 and 23; Spencer R. Weart, Nuclear Fear: A History of
Images (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1988); Ira
Chernus, Nuclear Madness: Religion and the Psychology of
the Nuclear Age (Albany, 1991); James Jeans, The Mysterious
Universe (New York, 1930); Arthur Eddington, The Expanding
Universe (Cambridge, 1933); Joseph Wood Krutch, The Modern
Temper: A Study and a Confession (New York, 1929); Walter
Lippmann, A Preface to Morals (New York, 1929).
[ 19] For the full report of the Committee on Social and
Political Implications chaired by James Franck, see the
appendix to Alice Kimball Smith, A Peril and A Hope: The
Scientists’ Movement in America: 1945-47 (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1965), 560-572.
[20] Jeremy Bernstein, Hans Bethe: Prophet of Energy (New
York: Basic Books, 1980), 73. Bethe and Teller recalled
that immediate development of the hydrogen bomb was a principal
topic of conversation between Oppenheimer and Compton in
their summer 1942 meeting. Stanley A. Blumberg and Gwinn
Owens, Energy and Conflict: The Life and Times of Edward
Teller (New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1976), 116-119.
[21] Kai Bird and Martin Sherwin, American Prometheus;
The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer (New York:
Alfred A. Knopf, 2005), 188.
22] Text of petition in Robert C. Williams and Philip L.
Cantelon, eds., The American Atom: A Documentary History
of Nuclear Policies from the Discovery of Fission to the
Present 1939-1984 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania
Press, 1984), 67.
[23] Quoted in Barton J. Bernstein, “Four Physicists
and the Bomb: The Early Years, 1945-1950,” Historical
Studies in the Physical Sciences 18(No.2, 1988), 236.
[24] Henry L. Stimson diaries, May 31, 1945, Sterling Memorial
Library, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
[25] Bird and Sherwin, 293.
[26] John Morton Blum, ed., The Price of Vision: The Diary
of Henry A. Wallace 1942-1946 (Boston: Houghton Mifflin
Company, 1973), 630.
[27] Harry S. Truman, 462.
[28] Margaret Truman, Harry S. Truman (New York: William
Morrow & Company, 1973), 5.
[29] Steve Kettmann, “Politics 2000,” www.salon.com/politics2000/feature/2000/03/20/rice.
[30] For a discussion of the controversy sparked by McCullough’s
biography, see Philip Nobile, “On the Steps of the
Smithsonian: Hiroshima Denial in America’s Attic,” in
Philip Nobile, ed., Judgment at the Smithsonian (New York:
Marlowe & Company, 1995), lxii-lxv. For a more reliable
treatment of Truman, see Arnold S. Offner, Another Such
Victory: President Truman and the Cold War, 1945-1953 (Stanford,
CA: Stanford University Press, 2002).
[31] Harry S. Truman, 20.
[32] Leslie R. Groves, Now It Can Be Told: The Story of
the Manhattan Project (New York: Harper & Brothers,
1962), 265.
[33] Robert Jungk, Brighter Than a Thousand Suns: A Personal
History of the Atomic Scientists (New York: Harcourt Brace
Jovanovitch, Inc.), 208.
[34] Fletcher Knebel and Charles W. Bailey, “The
Fight Over the Atom Bomb,” Look 27(August 13, 1963),
20. For Groves’s explanation to Truman, see Alperovitz,
Decision, 780, n39.
[35] Martin J. Sherwin, A World Destroyed: The Atomic Bomb
and the Grand Alliance (New York: Random House, 1977),
62.
[36] See Alperovitz, Decision; Martin J. Sherwin, A World
Destroyed: Hiroshima and the Origins of the Arms Race (New
York: Random House, 1987); Michael S. Sherry, The Rise
of American Air Power: The Creation of Armageddon (New
Haven: Yale University Press, 1987); Ronald Takaki, Hiroshima:
Why America Dropped the Atomic Bomb (Boston: Little, Brown
and Company, 1995). For somewhat more tempered views, see
J. Samuel Walker, Prompt & Utter Destruction: Truman
and the Use of Atomic Bombs Against Japan (Chapel Hill:
University of North Carolina Press, 1997); John Ray Skates,
The Invasion of Japan: Alternative to the Bomb (Columbia,
South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press, 1994).
[37] Douglas MacArthur to Herbert Hoover, December 2, 1960,
Herbert Hoover Presidential Library, Post-Presidential
Papers, Individual File Series, Box 129 G. Douglas MacArthur
1953-1964 folder [3212 (3)]. I thank Uday Mohan for bringing
this letter to my attention. MacArthur’s insistence
on this point never wavered over the years. After a long
talk with MacArthur in May 1946, Hoover had written in
his diary: “I told MacArthur of my memorandum of
mid-May 1945 to Truman, that peace could be had with Japan
by which our major objectives would be accomplished. MacArthur
said that was correct and that we would have avoided all
the losses, the Atomic bomb, and the entry of Russia into
Manchuria.” Alperovitz, Decision, 350-51.
[38] Barton J. Bernstein, “The Struggle Over History:
Defining the Hiroshima Narrative,” in Philip Nobile,
ed., Judgment at the Smithsonian (New York: Marlowe & Company,
1995), 142.
[49] Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, Racing the Enemy: Stalin, Truman,
and Japan’s Surrender in the Pacific War (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 2005), 37.
[40] “Russo-Japanese Relations (13-20 July 1945),
Publication of Pacific Strategic Intelligence Section,
Commander-In-Chief United States Fleet and Chief of Naval
Operations, 21 July 1945, SRH-085, Record Group 457, Modern
Military Branch, National Archives.
[41] Alperovitz, Decision, 27.
[42] Allen Dulles, The Secret Surrender (New York: Harper & Row,
1966), 255-256.
[43] Ferrell, 53.
[44] Alperovitz, Decision, 415. Walter Brown wrote in his
diary on July 24, 1945, “JFB told more about Jap
peace bid to Russia. Japanese Ambassador to Russia warned
his government that same thing which happened to Germany
would happen to Japan if she stayed in the war. Emperor
had said they would fight to the last man unless there
was some modifications of unconditional surrender.” Hasegawa,
157; Richard Frank downplays the influence on U.S. policymakers
of intercepted Japanese diplomatic messages signaling Japan’s
willingness to surrender if the U.S. guaranteed the status
of the emperor, citing General John Weckerling’s
dismissive July 13 analysis in which Joseph Grew concurred.
Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, however, disputes Frank’s interpretation,
noting that Stimson, Forrestal, McCloy, and Naval Intelligence
drew very different conclusions from Togo’s July
12 telegram. Richard Frank, Downfall: The End of the Imperial
Japanese Empire (New York: Random House, 1999), 221-247;
Hasegawa, 134.
[45] “Japan Beaten Before Atom Bomb, Byrnes Says,
Citing Peace Bids,” New York Times, 30 August 1945,
1.
[46] Hasegawa, Racing the Enemy, 160-165; Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, “The
Atomic Bombs and Soviet Entry into the War Against Japan:
Which Was More Important on Japan’s Decision to Surrender
in the Pacific War?” paper delivered at workshop “The
End of the Pacific War Revisited,” Santa Barbara,
California, April 2001.
[47] Ferrell, 53.
[48] Alperovitz, Decision, 124. In his “two-step
logic,” Alperovitz argues that policymakers understood
that the combination of Soviet declaration of war against
Japan and mitigation of the demand for unconditional surrender
would likely have produced Japanese surrender without use
of the bombs. Alperovitz, Decision, 114-115.
[49] Hasegawa, Racing the Enemy, 208.
[50] Ibid., 237.
[51] Groves, 271. Leahy made his ideas known to several
people prior to the use of the bomb. It is likely, though
not certain, that he expressed his views directly to Truman.
For the circumstantial evidence supporting this thesis,
see Alperovitz, Decision, 325-326.
[52] William D. Leahy, I Was There: The Personal Story
of the Chief of Staff to Presidents Roosevelt and Truman
Based on His Notes and Diaries Made at the Time (New York:
Whittlesey House, 1950), 441. Historians have discovered
no convincing evidence that Leahy shared his ethical abhorrence
of the atomic bomb with Truman or his military colleagues
prior to its use on Hiroshima, but, for indications that
he may have expressed his views, see Alperovitz, Decision,
324-326.
[53] Dwight D. Eisenhower, Mandate for Change, 1953-1956:
The White House Years (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1963),
312-313.
[54] Stephen E. Ambrose, Eisenhower: Soldier, General of
the Army, President-Elect, 1890-1952 (New York: Simon & Schuster,
1983), 426. After maintaining the accuracy of this account
for over a decade, Ambrose informed Gar Alperovitz in 1995
that he now doubted that Eisenhower spoke directly to Truman,
despite Eisenhower’s insistence that he did so. See,
Alperovitz, Decision, p.358.
[55] H. H. Arnold, Global Mission (New York: Harper & Brothers,
1949), 598.
[56] “Giles Would Rule Japan A Century,” New
York Times, 21 September 1945, 4.
[57] Barton J. Bernstein, “Hiroshima, Rewritten,” New
York Times 31 January 1995, 21.
[58] Alperovitz, Decision, 359.
[59] Leahy, 384-385.
[60] Herbert Hoover to John Callan O’Laughlin, 8
August 1945, Herbert Hoover Presidential Library, West
Branch, Iowa, Post-Presidential Papers, Individual File
Series, Box 171. For an extensive review of the conservative
critique of the atomic bombings, see Leo Maley III and
Uday Mohan, “An Extraordinary Reversal: American
Conservatives and Hiroshima,” paper presented at
the American Historical Association Annual Meeting, Washington,
DC, 9 January 1999.
[61] Medford Evans, “Hiroshima Saved Japan,” National
Review, 14 February 1959, 525.
[62] Edward Teller to George Wald, December 12, 1969, “Teller,
Edward” Folder, Box 19, George Wald Papers, Harvard
University Archives, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
[63] Studies by Herbert Bix, Sadao Asada, Bart Bernstein,
and Richard Frank cast doubt on the assertion that the
Japanese were on the verge of surrender prior to Hiroshima,
though Bix doubts they would have held out until the November
start date for the invasion and Bernstein believes that
a combination of factors would “very likely” have
ended the war prior to November 1 without the atomic bombs.
Groundbreaking recent scholarship by Tsuyoshi Hasegawa,
making use of Japanese, Russian, and American archival
sources, demonstrates that Soviet entry into the war had
a far more profound effect on Japanese leaders than did
the atomic bombings. Herbert P. Bix, Hirohito and the Making
of Modern Japan (New York: Harper Collins Publishers, 2000),
487-530; Bix, “Japan’s Delayed Surrender: A
Reinterpretation,” Diplomatic History 19 (Spring
1995), 197-225; Sadao Asada “The Shock of the Atomic
Bomb and Japan’s Decision to Surrender—A Reconsideration,” Pacific
Historical Review 67(November 1998), 477-512; Barton Bernstein, “Understanding
the Atomic Bomb and the Japanese Surrender: Missed Opportunities,
Little-Known Near Disasters, and Modern Memory,” Diplomatic
History 19 (Spring 1995), 227-273; Frank, Downfall; Hasegawa,
Racing the Enemy; Hasegawa, “The Atomic Bombs and
Soviet Entry into the War Against Japan.”
[64] Paul Boyer, By the Bomb’s Early Light: American
Thought and Culture at the Dawn of the Atomic Age (New
York: Pantheon, 1985).
[65] Boyer, 5.
[66] Ibid.
[67] Donald Porter Geddes, ed., The Atomic Age Opens (New
York: Pocket Books, 1945), 159.
[68] Boyer, 7.
[69] “Oxnam, Dulles Ask Halt in Bomb Use,” New
York Times, 10 August 1945, 6.
[70] Lifton and Mitchell, 33.
[71 “Last Judgment,” Washington Post, 8 August,
1945, 4B.
[72] Arthur Compton to Henry A. Wallace, September 27,
1945. Copy in Arthur Compton Papers, Washington University
in St. Louis Archives. I am grateful to Daniel Ellsberg
for bringing this document to my attention.
[73] Felicity Barringer, “Journalism’s Greatest
Hits: Two Lists of a Century’s Top Stories,” New
York Times, 1 March 1999, C1; Ran Fuchs, “Journalism
names Top 100 works of the century,” Washington Square
News, 2 March 1999, 1.
[74] Harry S. Truman, 465.
[75] Nathan Reingold, “Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Meets
the Atom Bomb,” in Terry Shinn and Richard Whitley,
eds., Expository Science: Forms and Functions of Popularisation
(Boston: D. Reidel Publishing Co., 1985), 238-239.
[76] John Toland, The Rising Sun: The Decline and Fall
of the Japanese Empire 1936-1945 (New York: Random House),
766n.
[77] Wayne Phillips, “Truman Disputes Eisenhower
on ‘48,” New York Times, 3 February 1958,
16.
[78] Bird and Sherwin, 332.
[79] Elting E. Morison, Turmoil and Tradition: A Study
of the Life and Times of Henry L. Stimson (Boston, 1960),
618.
[80] Stimson diaries, May 28, 1945.
[81] Morison, 618.
[82] Hershberg, 295.
[83] Stimson and Bundy, 629.
[84] Henry Stimson, “The Decision to Use the Atomic
Bomb,” Harper’s 194(February 1947), 107.
[85] Margaret Truman, 555.
[86] Hiroshima and Nagasaki casualty estimates very widely
and are difficult to determine precisely. See John Dower, “Three
Narratives of Our Humanity,” in Edward T. Linenthal
and Tom Engelhardt, eds., History Wars: The Enola Gay and
Other Battles for the American Past (New York:Metropolitan
Books/Henry Holt and Company, 1996), 79 Note 28. For somewhat
lower estimates, see Frank, Downfall, 285-287.
[87] “Life on the Nuclear Edge,” Nation, 24
June 2002, 3.
[88] Lewis Mumford, “Gentlemen: You Are Mad!” Saturday
Review of Literature 29(2 March 1946), 5.
[89] Dana Priest and Dana Milbank, “President Defends
Allegation On Iraq: Bush Says CIA’s Doubts Followed
Jan. 28 Address,” Washington Post, 15 July 2003,
1.
[90] Daniel Ellsberg, “Introduction: Call to Mutiny,” in
E. P. Thompson and Dan Smith, eds., Protest and Survive
(New York: Monthly Review Press, 1981), i. For discussion
of the occasions on which such used was considered, see
pp. v-vi. The Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum lists several
other occasions in which the U.S. considered using nuclear
weapons, including against Soviet forces stationed in Iran
in 1946, in response to the shooting down of an American
plane over Yugoslavia later that year, at the inauguration
of the president of Uruguay in 1948, to prevent Guatemala’s
aligning with the Soviet Union in 1954, when North Korea
seized the American vessel Pueblo in 1968, and during the
invasion of Syrian troops into Jordan in 1970. |