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#46 | |
Let's Sink Sumptin' !
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Cold as it may seem, General Curtis LeMay regarded the Hiroshima and Nagasaki raids as merely an addition ( and a redundant and unwelcome addition) to a campaign he felt his B-29s had already decisively won. If anything he was annoyed that they diminished the credit given his conventional bombers for flattening Japan.
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#47 |
Lucky Jack
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I always find it...amusing is perhaps the word, that Le May would receive the Japanese Order of the Rising Sun after the war, perhaps for his services in city redesigning?
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#48 | |
Let's Sink Sumptin' !
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#49 | |||
Gefallen Engel U-666
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"Only two things are infinite; The Universe and human squirrelyness?!! |
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#50 |
Lucky Jack
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Of course, that's not forgetting the possibility that the Allied invasion force would have been scattered to the four winds by Typhoon Louise which smashed into Okinawa as a Cat. 3 (185kmh/115mph winds) around about the time that the invasion was due to begin. This in turn would have given extra support to the Japanese who would have seen it as a sign from the Shinto gods in the same manner that the Mongolian fleets were scattered by the 'Kami-kaze' at Koan and Bun'ei.
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#51 |
Let's Sink Sumptin' !
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One of the great fears of the Joint Chiefs was that historically no Japanese government had ever surrendered or, even if one did, that Japan's armed forces would comply with that surrender. Had Downfall gone ahead, the emperor might at some point been spirited away for "his safety" possibly squelching the only spark of hope for any sort of organized capitulation. If there was no organized surrender, the Joint Chiefs warned in a policy paper that they foresaw "no alternative to annihilation" of the between four and five million Japanese combatants in the home islands, on the Asian continent, and across the Pacific.
So, you have naval blockade that might result in starvation and disease for the millions on Japan with maybe millions more dying in China, the Netherlands East Indies and other Japanese occupied areas as the protracted conflict drags on. You have a costly invasion pending that could take months if not years, might even entail the tactical use of atomic weapons and would reduce what was left of Japan to cinders. And then you have the dropping of the two atomic bombs, which along with the Soviet invasion of Manchuria just might shock someone in authority in Japan into surrender. The atomic bombs were awful. The alternatives seem much worse.
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#52 |
Navy Seal
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Having read all the posts here , it's seems clear everyone is saying basically the same thing. War, especially in a nuclear context is an ugly thing and maybe that's a good thing.
Hopefully that ugliness will make war something to be avoided. We have more important things to consider such as environmental and climate issues anyhow. I think it will take the collective intelligence of all people in the world to work that one out. Last edited by Commander Wallace; 08-10-15 at 07:24 AM. |
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#53 |
Elite Spam Hunter
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I was born post WWII, but not that far after WWII. My parents had witnessed WWII. My father was officer in the Waffen SS and proud of that.
From what I've learned during all my years about history, when it comes to Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the possibility of bombing Germany with nukes, Robert Oppenheimer comes to mind: "We knew the world would not be the same. A few people laughed, a few people cried, most people were silent. I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita; Vishnu is trying to persuade the Prince that he should do his duty and, to impress him, takes on his multi-armed form and says, "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds." I suppose we all thought that, one way or another." Let's just hope NEVER again. |
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#54 | |||||
Dominant Wolf
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![]() ![]() And yesterday, the West commemorated the Nagasaki bombing. A plutonium bomb delivered from the skies, leaving 74.000 people dead in a fraction of a second - not counting wounded people, most of whom did not survive. ![]() Hm... Well, fair enough ! ![]() Raising another matter now. According to the official version of the event - which I'll admit to be true for now -, what happened on June 10, 1944 in Oradour ? ![]() Waffen SS destroyed a village and massacred its inhabitants to make an example out of it. Their goal ? People say it was to terrorize the population so that the resistance stops harassing german troops going northward on their way up to la Normandie. So, the SS is said to have acted that way at Oradour in order to put an end to the kleinkrieg, the resistance's war - that was indeed supposed to allow members of the resistance to avoid more difficulties and disasters, as well as to save many lives. ![]() Ah ? And can you enlighten me on what basis it is any different, please ? Both wanted to put an end to a war, didn't they ? ![]() Look carefully, dig a bit deeper into the subject. The final excuse will always be the same : "Allies were fighting for civilization, while Germans for their part were fighting for the bad side : the cause of criminal nazism". I'll respond to that through some answer from Hjalmar Schacht. Acquitted at the end of the Nuremberg trials, during the hearing he said : Quote:
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However, that propaganda was quickly refuted - on march, 11th 1946, Rudolf Höss, once inspector of concentration camps, basically said : Quote:
![]() As soon as 1948, Maurice Bardèche clearly posed the problem : Quote:
Authorities don't want anyone to ask this question to himself, since only the negative response is allowed. But what lies ahead, behind that will to prevent open discussion related to the subject ? ![]() The answer to that question especially can be found at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, among other places. Thousands of dead people in a fraction of a second, as well as horrendously mutilated people... ![]()
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#55 |
Lucky Jack
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Did he just defend Hitler?
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#56 |
Silent Hunter
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interesting discussion.
I read in "Wages of Destruction", that by early 1942, both Speer and Friedrich Fromm (of Valkyrie fame, but at that time chief of Army Armament) had both been briefed by German scientists and well understood the potential of the atomic bomb, but both came to the conclusion that Germany could not afford to spend billions on a weapon that would take years to develop.
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#57 | |
Navy Seal
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@Alex: you realise that the Nazi eguenics principle would not let you live ?? Jews, gypsies and Slavs were not the only ones on the list. Mental cases were also on the kill list. |
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#58 | |
Gefallen Engel U-666
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![]() A "LeMay Bombing Leaflet" from the war, which warned Japanese civilians that "Unfortunately, bombs have no eyes. So, in accordance with America's humanitarian policies, the American Air Force, which does not wish to injure innocent people, now gives you warning to evacuate the cities named and save your lives." ![]() ![]() ![]()
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"Only two things are infinite; The Universe and human squirrelyness?!! |
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#59 | ||
Gefallen Engel U-666
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"Only two things are infinite; The Universe and human squirrelyness?!! |
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#60 |
Lucky Jack
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Careful we don't stray into Wolfenstein territory here, especially if we start talking about 'Die Glocke'
![]() In regards to the Nazi bomb, IIRC their first major project was to build a reactor, like the Allies 'Tube Alloys' and 'Manhatten' but IIRC the reactor, if indeed it was ever built, suffered a problem and was shut down. What didn't help was that whenever the Allies got wind of anything that could be used in the making of a nuclear bomb or reactor by Germany they sent a load of Lancasters or B-17s over to bomb it into the dirt. That being said, I wouldn't have been surprised if they were close to creating at the very least a dirty bomb. |
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