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http://www.japanfocus.org/article.asp?id=231

The Night Hell Fell From the Sky
Sixty years ago, Tokyo was firebombed by B-29s and 100,000 perished.
David McNeill remembers

March 10 is the 60th anniversary of one of the great forgotten atrocities
of World War II: the fire-bombing of Tokyo which killed over 100,000
people.

Saotome Katsumoto was 12 when he heard the familiar rumble of B-29 bombers.

"It was a midnight air raid, but unlike anything we had experienced
before. The planes flew in very low, so low you could see the fires
reflected in their undercarriages, and they dropped mostly incendiaries.
The fires started everywhere and we tried to fight them, but there was a
strong, northerly wind fanning the flames. All around me people were on
fire, writhing in agony."

Sixty years ago today, on March 10, 1945, the U.S. abandoned the last
rules of warfare against civilians when 334 B-29's dropped close to half a
million incendiary bombs on sleeping Tokyo.

The aim was to cause maximum carnage in an overcrowded city of flimsy
wooden buildings; an estimated 100,000 people were 'scorched, boiled and
baked to death,' in the words of the attack's architect, General Curtis
LeMay. It was then the single largest mass killing of World War II,
dwarfing even the destruction of the German city of Dresden on Feb. 13,
1945.

B-29 pilot Chester Marshall flew above the destruction, but not far
enough: "At 5,000 feet you could smell the flesh burning," he later told
Australian broadcaster ABC. "I couldn't eat anything for two or three
days. You know it was nauseating, really. We just said 'What is that I
smell?' And it's a kind of a sweet smell, and somebody said, 'Well that's
flesh burning, had to be.'"

Even the city's rivers were no escape from the firestorm: the jellied
petroleum that filled the bombs, a prototype of the napalm that laid waste
to much of Vietnam two decades later, stuck to everything and turned water
into fire. "Canals boiled, metal melted, and buildings and human beings
burst spontaneously into flames," wrote John Dower in War Without Mercy.
People who dived into rivers and canals for relief were boiled to death in
the intense heat.

The next day, Suzuki Ikuko, then a 19-year-old student, went looking for
survivors. "We tried to find our teacher who lived downtown, but there was
nothing left, just ruins and charred trees. You couldn't tell east from
west because everything was gone, so we gave up. Afterwards we heard that
our teacher was found in a pile of bodies in Omotesando" [Today a
fashionable district of central Tokyo].

The bombing incinerated over 15 kilometers of central Tokyo, left over a
million homeless and opened the curtain on an orgy of destruction in the
final months of the Pacific War that included dozens of similar raids on
Japanese cities and culminated in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki in August. When the droning of bombers finally stopped on August
15, 1945, nearly 70 cities had been reduced to rubble and well over half a
million people, mostly civilians, were dead. LeMay reportedly said: "If we
had lost the war, we would have been tried as war criminals."

Some thought that Imperial Japan, like Nazi Germany, deserved what it got
for the brutal, relentless bombing of Shanghai and Chongqing, the Rape of
Nanjing and other war atrocities across Asia. Gregory Clark, former
Australian diplomat and now vice-president of Akita university, says: "You
have to put it in context. All I remember as a kid was cheering when we
heard that Japan was bombed." Revenge was mixed with the fear of Allied
casualties in the event of a land invasion of the Japanese archipelago,
where millions of civilians had been mobilized to defend the homeland.

But others asked where had the moral high ground of the Allies gone since
Franklin D. Roosevelt described the 1940 Nazi blitzkrieg of British cities
as "inhuman barbarism"? "No one seemed conscious of the irony," wrote U.S.
historian Howard Zinn. "One of the reasons for the general indignation
against the Fascist powers was their history of indiscriminate bombing of
civilian populations."

The Tokyo fire bombing was the apprenticeship for a generation of future
Cold War warriors. LeMay, the inspiration for the demented General Jack D.
Ripper in Stanley Kubrick's antiwar satire Dr. Strangelove who once said
"You've got to kill people, and when you've killed enough they stop
fighting," later became US Air Force chief of staff (1961-65). He is now
remembered mainly for his attempt to goad the USSR into World War III.

In a moment of political surrealism rivaled by the award of the 1973 Nobel
Peace Price to Henry Kissinger, Le May was awarded the First Order of
Merit by the Japanese government in 1964, for helping to reconstruct
Japan's Self Defense Forces after the war.

Robert McNamara, a former statistician who helped plan the Tokyo,
Hiroshima and Nagasaki raids, went on to become U.S. Defense Secretary
(1960-68) during the war against Vietnam, where he authorized carpet
bombing of vast swathes of the country with incendiaries and Agent Orange.
In last year's documentary The Fog of War, McNamara ponders the morality
of victor's justice, saying: "Was there a rule then to say that you
shouldn't bomb, shouldn't kill, shouldn't burn to death 100,000 civilians
in a single night?"

The legacy of the March 10 raid though is what it bequeathed to the rest
of the century: the trumping of political and moral arguments against mass
civilian slaughter by military technicians and rationalists. As historian
Mark Selden wrote: "Elimination of the distinction between combatant and
non-combatant would shape all subsequent wars from Korea to Vietnam to the
Gulf War and the ethnic conflicts of the former Soviet Union and
Yugoslavia, to mention but a few." It's a legacy we still live with.

Today, the gleaming plantation of concrete and glass spires in downtown
Tokyo, built over the carbonized remains of the victims of the 1945
firebombing, is testimony to Japan's remarkable talent for reinvention,
and for forgetting. "My mother never told me about the firebombing," says
Shinozaki Hatae, who is too young to remember it. "She says the past is
the past." Few want to talk about what happened, least of all the Japanese
government, which has sheltered under the U.S. defense umbrella since the
1950s and buried the sins of the past beneath the rhetoric of the
trans-Pacific alliance.

In a bid to reverse this historical amnesia, survivor Saotome Katsumoto,
now 72 and a historian and novelist, collected $800,000 and built a museum
dedicated to the firebombing two years ago. Harrowing photographs and
testimonies, and twisted and melted household artifacts are among the
small number of items left over from the firestorm. "Japanese people
haven't fully learned from the past," he says. "I think that is the
government's intention. In my opinion, they think if people learn about
this miserable past then Japan will not be able to go to war in the
future."

Saotome says his greatest fear as an old man is forgetting. "All the
people who experienced Dresden, Auschwitz and Tokyo are getting older.
Today is a turning point in history and the following generations will
have to depend on the accounts that the past generation left. Young people
are not being taught about what happened and that its dangerous. Countries
that learn from the past don't repeat it. That's why Germany and France
didn't take the same course as the U.S. in Iraq I think."

"Youngsters do not understand the horror of war," agrees Mrs. Suzuki
Ikuko. "When the Iraq War started I couldn't watch it on TV. It was too
painful. But my grandson said he though it was cool. He said it was like a
videogame."


David McNeill prepared this article for Japan Focus. He is a Tokyo-based
journalist and teacher, and a coordinator of Japan Focus on ZNet.

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