Poll: were the nukes dropped on japan in WW2 really needed to win?

Recommended Videos

Sean951

New member
Mar 30, 2011
650
0
0
JustJuust said:
Sean951 said:
AndyFromMonday said:
The argument that it would have "cost more lives" is complete and utter bullshit. You know how many civilians died? 246,000. I don't give a flying shit if Japan ignored the Potsdam Declaration. Absolutely NOTHING could justify what happened at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Even the most conservative estimates put the cost of invasion at much higher for the Japanese. American casualties alone were expected to reach 1,000,000 over the course of the invasion. Not to mention the firebombing campaign had a higher immediate death toll in Tokyo, causing over 100,000 casualties and leaving 500,000 homeless, once again using the more conservative estimates.
I remember reading that they made A LOT of purple heart medals to give out in expectation of mainland invasion. So much in fact, that they still have purple hearts left after almost 60 years
120,000 left in fact, enough that they give the units in Iraq and Afghanistan a surplus to hand out in the field.
 

Sniper Team 4

New member
Apr 28, 2010
5,433
0
0
Fun fact: This EXACT topic is what finally made me cave and create an account on this website. I was reading so many posts that were making me angry that I felt I had to respond. On page 7. Were no one was bothering to read replies anymore. Still, it made me feel better. My answer hasn't changed.

Yes, they were needed. Anyone who witnessed the Japanese fight on tiny islands saw that they were devoted to the cause, even if it was lost. Imagine trying to take an entire country were the vast majority of people thought that way. To say it would be a bloodbath is an understatement.
On a side note, there's a good chance I wouldn't be alive as my grandfather was supposed to be in the first wave of troops that would invade Japan.
 

Drenaje1

New member
Aug 6, 2011
171
0
0
Hmmm. Part of the reason why they went with the nuke option was that a land invasion could have possibly dragged the war on for another year, costing immense amounts of money, and the projected human sacrifice of such an invasion was something that by that point most generals were keen to avoid. The Japanese were willing to fight to the last man, we had learned this during the island-hopping campaign. The soldiers were tired, the generals were tired, the people were tired of the war. Something needed to be done to break Japan's will to fight. The atom bomb seemed to be a viable solution, and although we recognize it to be a horrific instrument, in the end, it still may have saved more lives.
 

Commissar Sae

New member
Nov 13, 2009
983
0
0
JustJuust said:
Commissar Sae said:
Furthermore Japan was already trying to surrender! They had sent a request through Switzerland that Japan would surrender, but only with the condition that the Emperor remain blameless for the war and be left in peace. (Something which happened anyway.)
They were trying to surrender, but that wasn't the only condition. The other conditions were

a) Japan gets to keep all of its military forces intact

b) Japan would stay in control of its government

c) Territories Japan took over would stay as Japanese territories (korea, bit of china, and the rest)

Kind of ridiculous terms I thinketh
JustJuust said:
Commissar Sae said:
Furthermore Japan was already trying to surrender! They had sent a request through Switzerland that Japan would surrender, but only with the condition that the Emperor remain blameless for the war and be left in peace. (Something which happened anyway.)
They were trying to surrender, but that wasn't the only condition. The other conditions were

a) Japan gets to keep all of its military forces intact

b) Japan would stay in control of its government

c) Territories Japan took over would stay as Japanese territories (korea, bit of china, and the rest)

Kind of ridiculous terms I thinketh
At the same time thought you get the Emperor sending this message: "His Majesty the Emperor, mindful of the fact that the present war daily brings greater evil and sacrifice upon the peoples of all the belligerent powers, desires from his heart that it may be quickly terminated."
"His Majesty is deeply reluctant to have blood lost among the peoples on both sides for this reason, and it is his desire, for the welfare of humanity, to restore peace with all possible speed."

Something which was completely ignored at the Postdam Conference. Had they opened diplomatic lines they could easily have come to a more reasonable peace agreement. Also by that point what military forces, the Navy was devastated after the destruction of the Yamoto, morale was shot all around and they were basicaly decimated, starving and had lost most of their infrastructure. The will to fight was gone in all but the high command.
 

thepyrethatburns

New member
Sep 22, 2010
454
0
0
Yes.

Books like Persimmon Wind show, from a Japanese civilian's point of view, how the populace was being prepared to fight off a land invasion. The notion that the will to fight was gone from the people is just revisionist history. The civilian populace were being drilled in not just armed combat but throwing bamboo spears and attacking bare-handed. The popular sentiment was still "Death Before Dishonor".

But, as has already been said, this topic has been made every time August 6th rolls around and will probably continue long after we are all dead. At this point, we're just regurgitating arguments and convincing nobody.
 

AndyFromMonday

New member
Feb 5, 2009
3,921
0
0
Sean951 said:
AndyFromMonday said:
The argument that it would have "cost more lives" is complete and utter bullshit. You know how many civilians died? 246,000. I don't give a flying shit if Japan ignored the Potsdam Declaration. Absolutely NOTHING could justify what happened at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Even the most conservative estimates put the cost of invasion at much higher for the Japanese. American casualties alone were expected to reach 1,000,000 over the course of the invasion. Not to mention the firebombing campaign had a higher immediate death toll in Tokyo, causing over 100,000 casualties and leaving 500,000 homeless, once again using the more conservative estimates.
Frankly, even the firebombings were unnecessary. I could go into detail but in the end, Japan was alone in a war against the entire world. How long do you honestly believe they could have lasted? Even though they ignored the first peace treaty that the Allies proposed their military did not posses a threat and their nuclear program was barely in its infancy. They would have surrender either way.
 

Commissar Sae

New member
Nov 13, 2009
983
0
0
Sean951 said:
Commissar Sae said:
Sean951 said:
Commissar Sae said:
Sean951 said:
Kinguendo said:
The Allies recieved 5 different scenarios in which the Japanese were willing to surrender and accept identical terms to those accepted by America... 7 MONTHS before they surrendered. The nukes were completely unnecessary as with those 7 months of bloodshed.
They were dismissed as they ran counter to Allied policy at the time, which called for unconditional surrender.
Yes the deaths of hundreds of thousands was such a better alternative to losing a few votes. And thats why I hate politicians.
Nothing to do with domestic politics. "Allies" refers to more than just America, and the Allies had that position.
Of Course, Hence hatred for all politicians. Hell my Prime Minister at the time congradulated Truman for testing the bomb on Yellow people rather than whites... But the American political leadership in particualr was rather weak with Truman and if they accepted a conditional surrender it would have destroyed his political clout and a have destroyed any chance at re-election, none of the other allies had much in the way of forces in the Pacific war (other than the Aussies and Kiwis) so it was mainly an American initiative.
It was actually Roosevelt who first dismissed the attempts to surrender around the time of the Yalta Conference, not Truman.
Point to you, but they could have renegotiated at the Postdam conference.
 

Sean951

New member
Mar 30, 2011
650
0
0
While I don't like that the bombs became necessary, I would like to point out that the American high command was doing what was best for it. Dropping the bombs cost 0 American lives and inflicted thousands of casualties, while invading would have cost America significantly in both manpower and financial assets. It may sound cruel, but when a country declares war on you, your loyalty is to your people. For the record, this does not mean break agreements to not use certain weapons, like gas, which America did not use during the war.
 

JayOwnAss

New member
Nov 4, 2009
13
0
0
It is really, really astounding, how almost everyone here has absolutely no problem to justify a nuklear strike against a city full of civilians.
Maybe I do not understand this kind of behavior because it is an American thing as it is related to pride, patriotism and the lack of ability to see something bad in the history of America.
Would it have been really that bad if Japan surrendered with own terms?
There are even hints ( that are not waterproof of course ) that the Japanese already surrenderd days before the bombs dropped, but the US-Gouvernment wanted them to surrender without conditions AND for the most important thing they wanted to test the bomb.

But even if alle this is totally untrue und all you guys are right to say that they killed less people with the bomb than hypothetically would have died during an invasion (which is by far not certain), do you feel comfortable by justifying the dropping of the bomb? Or do you do it only to soothe your conscience and try to convince yourself that everything was absolutely okay and well done?
 

HammerzArk

New member
Jul 24, 2011
1
0
0
Completely Unnecessary, and its good to see that the propaganda that every Japanese citizen was willing to fight, that we didn't fire bomb every city in Japan to the ground (except Hiroshima and Nagasaki) and the dropping was just a way to intimidate Europe and test the A-bomb on a metropolitan target. But I suppose the winners get to write history.

"Admiral William Leahy, top military aide to President Truman, said in his war memoirs, I Was There: "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 because of the effective sea blockade and the successful bombing with conventional weapons. My own feeling is that in being the first to use it, we had adopted an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages." And General Dwight Eisenhower agreed."
 

Sean951

New member
Mar 30, 2011
650
0
0
JayOwnAss said:
It is really, really astounding, how almost everyone here has absolutely no problem to justify a nuklear strike against a city full of civilians.
Maybe I do not understand this kind of behavior because it is an American thing as it is related to pride, patriotism and the lack of ability to see something bad in the history of America.
Would it have been really that bad if Japan surrendered with own terms?
There are even hints ( that are not waterproof of course ) that the Japanese already surrenderd days before the bombs dropped, but the US-Gouvernment wanted them to surrender without conditions AND for the most important thing they wanted to test the bomb.

But even if alle this is totally untrue und all you guys are right to say that they killed less people with the bomb than hypothetically would have died during an invasion (which is by far not certain), do you feel comfortable by justifying the dropping of the bomb? Or do you do it only to soothe your conscience and try to convince yourself that everything was absolutely okay and well done?
Dropping the bomb was never the ideal solution, but to allow Japan to keep it's military and oversea gains would have solved nothing. The war would only have stopped long enough for Japan to rebuild and start again. To truly win a war, you can leave no doubt in your opponents mind that they lost. We never really took that approach since then, which is likely a good thing (we didn't drop nuclear weapons on Korea as MacArthur wanted), but other than Korea and possibly Vietnam, the world hasn't known a major war that involved all of the world powers since.
 

Commissar Sae

New member
Nov 13, 2009
983
0
0
HammerzArk said:
Completely Unnecessary, and its good to see that the propaganda that every Japanese citizen was willing to fight, that we didn't fire bomb every city in Japan to the ground (except Hiroshima and Nagasaki) and the dropping was just a way to intimidate Europe and test the A-bomb on a metropolitan target. But I suppose the winners get to write history.

"Admiral William Leahy, top military aide to President Truman, said in his war memoirs, I Was There: "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 because of the effective sea blockade and the successful bombing with conventional weapons. My own feeling is that in being the first to use it, we had adopted an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages." And General Dwight Eisenhower agreed."
Actually Kyoto was thankfully untouched by the firebombings alongside with a few others (granted the others were atomic bomb targets so it was more so that they could gauge the destruction afterwards but hey.)

Good find on the quote.

Edit: oh and welcome to the Escapist.
 

Purple Shrimp

New member
Oct 7, 2008
544
0
0
if the bombs hadn't been dropped the world wouldn't have understood the horrible destructive power of nuclear weaponry, which would have made the Cold War more likely to result in actual conflict
 

IkeGreil29

New member
Jul 25, 2010
276
0
0
Was it needed? No
Was it easier to do? Yes

A land invasion would have resulted in too many casualties on both sides, and a whole bunch of other crap that we don't want.
Letting them rot there would just bring the Russians in and then the USSR could have possibly spread there.

I would have supported a demonstration out at sea. They wouldn't have agreed, because it might have seemed too risky to waste millions of dollars.

Then, what I would have suggested, is drop the one on Hiroshima, and tell them they had 5+ bombs ready or in the process of getting ready, which was true. Enough to make anyone surrender.
 

Vankraken

New member
Mar 30, 2010
222
0
0
The nukes where basically a show of force that made the japanese realize that things will 100% end badly so they surrendered. Without the use of the nukes an invasion would of been required and almost every civilian would of fought for every inch of soil resulting horrific loses on each side. The cost in human lives lost due to the nukes is a drop in the bucket compared to what a land invasion would of been.
 

Dragonpit

New member
Nov 10, 2010
637
0
0
No, they weren't needed to win, but they did, as many others pointed out already, shorten the war. The president of the era ok-ed their drop because letting the war continue could result in substantially greater losses than if the bombs weren't dropped at all.

That's also why the a-bomb has since then been considered a war crime.
 

toastmaster2k8

New member
Jul 21, 2008
451
0
0
Yes, The American land invasions would of been a blood ocean ( D-day, about twice as worst), the way they were fighting they would of literally fought to last Child capable of firing a weapon or wielding a sword ( if you don't believe me look up Japan WWII suicide weapons, second link). so in the end, more people would of died on both sides if we didn't nuke them.
 

DinkumFair

New member
Mar 11, 2011
11
0
0
They weren't required for the allies to win. The nukes were required to win quickly and decisively. It is a long winded debate that has raged for over 50 years.
 

Sean951

New member
Mar 30, 2011
650
0
0
HammerzArk said:
Completely Unnecessary, and its good to see that the propaganda that every Japanese citizen was willing to fight, that we didn't fire bomb every city in Japan to the ground (except Hiroshima and Nagasaki) and the dropping was just a way to intimidate Europe and test the A-bomb on a metropolitan target. But I suppose the winners get to write history.
Well, considering the War Cabinet was split 50/50, and they declared Martial Law to make sure people couldn't surrender, I think it's safe to say that they were preparing to put up one hell of a fight.

Oh, and speaking [http://s4.photobucket.com/albums/y105/LordAzrael/Az/?action=view&current=slanted.jpg] of propaganda, how's this?
Taken from the Yasukuni War History Museum in Tokyo. I went through with one of my friends, and we had to laugh at just how slanted the whole thing was. Laugh, or cry over the absurdity. According to the text in the museum, the Japanese "expanded their defensive concerns" into Korea, helped "establish order and control" in China, and then were "forced into war" by the war-hungry American government. That whole Axis power thing is barely mentioned, and forget about trying to find anything that would portray the Japanese as something other than a peaceful people minding their own business in the Pacific. I mean, every country puts their own slant on history (while I learned that the American Revolution was a great act of freedom, I'm sure in Britain it's regarded as "those ungrateful little punks starting shit"), but the level of denial and disregard here was just outstanding.

This is actually why a lot of people are still really upset at Japan.
The quote is a bit from the blog of an American who has been living in Japan for the last few years to help put the picture into context, as I found it from his blog.
 

toastmaster2k8

New member
Jul 21, 2008
451
0
0
Purple Shrimp said:
if the bombs hadn't been dropped the world wouldn't have understood the horrible destructive power of nuclear weaponry, which would have made the Cold War more likely to result in actual conflict
Probably would happen too.