Remembrance, Reflection and Resistance
by David Krieger
August 05, 2011

David KriegerWe remember the horrors of the past so that we may learn from them and they will not be repeated in the future.  If we ignore or distort the past and fail to learn from it, we are opening the door to repetition of history’s horrors.

In August, we remember the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which took place on August 6 and 9, 1945, respectively. Both were illegal attacks on civilian populations, violating long-standing rules of customary international humanitarian law prohibiting the use of indiscriminate weapons (as between combatants and non-combatants) and weapons that cause unnecessary suffering. 

In a just world, those who were responsible for these attacks, in violation of the laws of war, would have been held to account and punished accordingly.  They were not.  Rather, they were celebrated, as the atomic bombs themselves were celebrated, in the false belief that they brought World War II to an end.

The historical record is clear about these facts: First, at the time Hiroshima and Nagasaki were leveled, each with a single atomic bomb, Japan had been trying to surrender. Second, the US had broken the Japanese codes and knew that Japan had been trying to surrender. Third, prior to the use of the atomic bombs, the only term of surrender offered to Japan by the US was “unconditional surrender,” a term that left the Emperor’s fate in US hands.  Fourth, the precipitating factor to Japan’s actual surrender, as indicated by Japanese wartime cabinet records, was not the US atomic bombs, but the Soviet Union’s entry into the war against them.  Fifth, when Japan did surrender, after the atomic bombings, it did so contingent upon retaining the Emperor, and the US accepted this condition.

The US drew a self-serving causal link from the bombings, which was: we dropped the bombs and won the war.  In doing so, we reinforced the US belief that it can violate international law at times and places of its choosing and that US leaders can attack civilians with impunity.

Following the victory in Europe, the Allied powers held the Nazi leaders to account at the Nuremberg Tribunals for crimes against peace, war crimes and crimes against humanity.  The Charter creating the Nuremberg Tribunals was signed by the US on August 8, 1945, two days after it had dropped an atomic bomb on the city of Hiroshima.  One day after signing the Charter, the US would drop a second atomic bomb on the city of Nagasaki.  Both atomic bombings were war crimes that, if they had been committed by Nazi leaders, most certainly would have been universally denounced and punished at Nuremberg.

Upon reflection, we must come to understand Hiroshima and Nagasaki as war crimes, if such crimes are not to be repeated.  We must resist the double standard that makes crimes committed by our enemies punishable under international law, while the same crimes committed by our leaders are deemed to be acceptable.  We must resist nuclear weapons themselves. They are city-destroying weapons whose possession should be considered prima facie evidence of criminal intent.

It has been two-thirds of a century since Hiroshima and Nagasaki were destroyed by atomic bombs.  There remain over 20,000 nuclear weapons in the world.  We must resist the tendency to normalize these weapons and consign them to the background of our lives. They reflect our technological skills turned to massively destructive ends and our failed responsibility to ourselves and to future generations.

Looking back at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, General Eisenhower said that the bombings were not necessary because Japan was already defeated; and Admiral William Leahy, Truman’s chief of staff, compared us to barbarians of the Dark Ages and said that he was not taught to make war by destroying women and children.  Einstein said that, looking forward, we must change our modes of thinking or face unparalleled catastrophe.  Changing our modes of thinking begins with remembrance, reflection and resistance.

David Krieger is President of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.

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shawn wallace09-01-2011   13:20
A very well written and well stated article and even I who studied history was not aware of the fact that Japan was already surrendering a fact not taught in history ,,, Tho I learned long ago the history taught is always taught from the perspective of the victo when in actual fact it has nothing to do with factual basis ,,, I myself enbarked on a research project that ended up spanning a period of 10 years all the books & archives are available but never taught in course structure ,,, I thank you for bringing these facts to light and am in total agreement that the lessons of the past not learned are bound to be repeated ,,, the teaching of false history is the single greatest impediment to our race advancing as a species or civilization ,,, So I thank U for this new information which in fact reveals that the dropping of the 2 nuclear devices were literally a demonstration of power and a warning to the citizens of the world who the newest world power was ,,, By sitting out a large part of the both wars the US gained while Britain was literally bankrupt by August 1941 thereby ending the riegn of the British Empire ,,, while the US manufactured & supplied arms ( Ford ,, GM ,,AT&T ,,,ITT ,,, Standard Oil ( Rockefellers) & financed ( Union Bank ,,, Prescott Bush ) to both sides ,,, The book " Trading With the Enemy " by Charles Higham is a very interesting & well documented read in this regard ,,, So again I thank U David Krieger for revealing some facts I was unaware of ,,, Best Wishes ,,,Shawn Wallace
Edward Silverman09-01-2011   14:41
After the Japanese surrenderd unconditionally US forces entered the Japanese homeland and upon reaching Tokyo, one million armed Japanese soldiers lined the streets on both sides. These soldiers were told to die for the Emperor upon an active assault by an enemy. Thousands or hundreds of thousands of US Soldiers would have been killed or maimed without the Atom Bombs being dropped. The Japanese would never have agreed to unconditional surrender. All the talk about not having to drop the bomb is simply monday night quarterbacking.
Kristofer Young, DC09-01-2011   21:57
Thank goodness that one of the "monday night quarterbacks" that Mr. Silverman refers to, was General Eisenhower.
Jim Purdie09-07-2011   15:41
I strongly recommend a new book a memoir by y Loftin, Witness To An Extreme Century. This book covers this subject in detail. He spent years interviewing survivors. Covers many other senseless slaughters, Nazi Germany, Vietnam and the sixties.


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