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HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR
WHY AMERICANS ARE BARBARIANS
By: Justin Raimondo

The idea that America is, in any sense, a civilized country is easily
dispelled by the orgy of self-congratulation and rationalization that
accompanies the dual anniversaries of Harry Truman's decision to atom bomb
the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Want your gorge to rise? Check
out the New York Post editorial "The Bomb That Saved Millions," (August 6)
which justifies the bombings as a "military necessity." The editorial opines
that "few at the time questioned President Harry S. Truman's wisdom in using
the devastating new weapon, but revisionist historians and political
activists maintain now – more than a half-century later – that the atomic
bombing of Japan was militarily unnecessary and morally unacceptable." The
Post is New York City's most popular newspaper – a place where the official
standard of morality is closer to the Code of Lek than the Ten Commandants.
So why are we not surprised that the Post finds all this appalling?

TRASHING AMERICA?

The incineration of hundreds of thousands, and the slow death by radiation
sickness of tens of thousands more, morally unacceptable? The nerve of these
"revisionists"! Why, they must be Commies or unrepentant hippies to believe
such a thing, and sure enough, as it turns out:

"Indeed, these historians – many of whom came of age during the Vietnam era,
when trashing America was all the rage in academia – consider Truman and
others who approved the bomb's use to be nothing less than war criminals."

This, we are told, is "nonsense." All those deaths, and possibly more, were
justified by "military necessity": to hear them tell it, without the bombing
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, World War II might well be going on to this day.

DISSENTING VOICES

One of the job qualifications for being a New York Post editorial writer is a
complete ignorance of history, as well as an amorality that might be called
Murdochian, as this little screed makes all too clear. For the myth of
"military necessity" as a justification for the incineration of two cities
has been convincingly debunked by the so-called revisionists, who have shown
that the decision to drop the bomb was opposed by an impressive list of
Truman's top commanders, General Douglas MacArthur among them. In The
Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb
, historian Gar Alperovitz reveals that
Truman's chief of staff, Admiral William Leahy, chief of Naval Operations
Admiral Ernest J. King, Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, Admiral William
"Bull" Halsey, Rear Admiral Lewis L. Strauss, commanding general of the U.S.
Army Air Forces Henry H. "Hap" Arnold, General Claire Chennault of the Flying
Tigers, Army Strategic Air Forces Commander Carl Spatz, and Army Air Force
General Curtis "Bombs Away" Lemay, all challenged the military necessity
argument. Among Truman's top advisors, Secretary of State Stimson, Assistant
Secretary of War John McCloy, former Ambassador to Japan Joseph Grew, Navy
Under Secretary Ralph Bard, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, all took issue
with the decision in one way or another. In 1963, Dwight Eisenhower told
Newsweek that "it wasn't necessary to hit them with that awful thing."

ALTERNATIVES TO MASS MURDER

There were a lot of alternatives: Truman could have demonstrated the power of
the bomb without wiping out several hundred thousand civilians. He could have
altered the Rooseveltian insistence on unconditional surrender. At the time,
the US was intercepting all Japanese coded messages, and deciphering them,
and Truman knew that this was the main obstacle to Japan's peace party.
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill urged Truman to relent and allow the
Japanese to surrender, keeping their Emperor system and their honor intact.
But it was no go. When Truman stook the reins, US pronouncements on the
subject did not significantly deviate from the unconditional surrender
formula, and were purposefully vague.

THE HIROHITO FACTOR

Another argument against the "military necessity" rationale is that even
after the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki the Japanese refused to
surrender. Nagasaki was still burning as the Japanese Cabinet met to consider
the question: the vote was 12 in favor of surrender, with 3 against and 1
undecided. Since unanimity was required, the war was not stopped until
Emperor Hirohito personally intervened. He was persuaded to do so by the
proponents of peace within the Japanese government, who were given the upper
hand not by the dropping of the bomb but by the understanding that the
Emperor system would be preserved by the Allied victors.

TRUMP CARD

This is underscored by General MacArthur's belief that a full-scale invasion
of Japan would be necessary even after the atom bombs were dropped. For, as
many of Truman's political and military advisors informed him, the Japanese
considered their Emperor to be a god, and could never permit his demise or
that of his dynasty. As Japan's Prime Minister Suzuki announced on June 9,
1945, "Should the emperor system be abolished, they [the Japanese people]
would lose all reason for existence. 'Unconditional surrender', therefore,
means death to the hundred million: it leaves us no choice but to go on
fighting to the last man." It was only the Emperor's understanding that the
Chrysanthemum Throne would be retained that gave the peace party the trump
card: otherwise, those who preferred national self-immolation to surrender
would almost certainly have won out.

DOWN THE MEMORY HOLE

A panel set up by President Truman to study the Pacific war issued a report,
the United States Strategic Bombing Survey, in July 1946, which declared,

"Based on a detailed investigation of all the facts, and supported by the
testimony of the surviving Japanese leaders involved, it is the Survey's
opinion that certainly prior to 31 December 1945, Japan would have
surrendered even if atomic bombs had not been dropped, even if Russia had not
entered the war, and even if no invasion had been planned or contemplated."

The report was suppressed, ignored, and shoved down the Memory Hole.

'JUSTICE' OF THE VICTORS

Justice in wartime is the justice of the victors. This is why the war crimes
of the Allies were not allowed to be introduced into evidence at the
Nuremberg trials, or the trials of the Japanese leaders. It is why evidence
of NATO's war crimes will be dismissed out of hand by the International
Criminal Tribunal when they put Slobodan Milosevic in the dock.

THE CODE OF LEK

In explaining why, in the face of opposition from the military, as well as
top officials in his administration, Truman ignored the religious and moral
traditions of Western civilization, we are back to the Code of Lek and the
ethical norms of New York's concrete canyons (and Washington's corridors of
power) where revenge is considered the sweetest liquor. This cultural ethos
was reflected in a radio address given August 9, after Nagasaki fell victim
to the fire from heaven, in which Truman declaimed:

"Having found the bomb we have used it. We have used it against those who
attacked us without warning at Pearl Harbor, against those who have starved
and beaten and executed American prisoners of war, against those who have
abandoned all pretense of obeying international laws of warfare."

THE AMERICAN PARAGON

So here was the great guardian of democratic liberal values, the chief
executive and symbol of the West's triumph over the powers of totalitarian
darkness, exhibiting a lust for inflicting pain bordering on the
pathological. A more overt appeal to savagery can hardly be imagined.
Equating the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor with the wholesale vaporization
of innocent civilians at Hiroshima and Nagasaki would be funny – to someone
with a really grotesque sense of humor. In any case, it is not as if the
inhabitants of those unfortunate cities had any say in determining the
military policies of their leaders.

PRAGMATISM AND DECLINE

Truman may have had his own doubts about the morality of the decision, but in
the end domestic political considerations won out over ethical concerns.
Never mind about highfalutin' ethical principles, let's just get the job
done: this sort of pragmatism is supposedly synonymous with the American Way.
It was, however, a degeneration of the American character that only occurred
at the turn of the century, after World War I, waves of immigration, and the
vulgarization of the culture had already eroded the foundations of our old
Republic. That such a barbaric act as the fiery immolation of two Japanese
cities is, today, being justified and even celebrated in the US is proof
positive of our advanced state of moral decadence.

JUST IMAGINE

The great horror is that this heinous deed was committed against Japan, a
civilization as far removed from our own as the streets of New York are from
the African savannas. It's at times like these that I tend to believe the
wrong side won the war in the Pacific. Just think: if we all woke up one day
living in some alternate history, as in Phillip K. Dick's The Man in the High
Castle
, our cultural malaise would disappear overnight. Instead of listening
to the latest loutish lyrics of Eminem, American teenagers would be
contemplating the subtle beauty of the Japanese tea ceremony. If contemporary
Japan is any clue, the crime rate would be cut by 95 percent, and the
literacy rate would skyrocket. Certainly everyone's manners would improve.
All in all, life would be far more civilized, imbued with a gentility that
would make the New York Post an impossibility.

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