The
Hiroshima Myth
by
John V. Denson
by John V. Denson
Every year during the first two weeks of August the mass news media
and many politicians at the national level trot out the "patriotic"
political myth that the dropping of the two atomic bombs on Japan
in August of 1945 caused them to surrender, and thereby saved the
lives of anywhere from five hundred thousand to one million American
soldiers, who did not have to invade the islands. Opinion polls
over the last fifty years show that American citizens overwhelmingly
(between 80 and 90%) believe this false history which, of course,
makes them feel better about killing hundreds of thousands of Japanese
civilians (mostly women and children) and saving American lives
to accomplish the ending of the war.
The
best book, in my opinion, to explode this myth is The
Decision to Use the Bomb by Gar Alperovitz, because it not
only explains the real reasons the bombs were dropped, but also
gives a detailed history of how and why the myth was created that
this slaughter of innocent civilians was justified, and therefore
morally acceptable. The essential problem starts with President
Franklin Roosevelt’s policy of unconditional surrender, which was
reluctantly adopted by Churchill and Stalin, and which President
Truman decided to adopt when he succeeded Roosevelt in April of
1945. Hanson Baldwin was the principal writer for The New York
Times who covered World War II and he wrote an important book
immediately after the war entitled Great Mistakes of the War.
Baldwin concludes that the unconditional surrender policy ".
. . was perhaps the biggest political mistake of the war . . . .
Unconditional surrender was an open invitation to unconditional
resistance; it discouraged opposition to Hitler, probably lengthened
the war, costs us lives, and helped to lead to the present aborted
peace."
The stark fact is that the Japanese leaders, both military and
civilian, including the Emperor, were willing to surrender in May
of 1945 if the Emperor could remain in place and not be subjected
to a war crimes trial after the war. This fact became known to President
Truman as early as May of 1945. The Japanese monarchy was one of
the oldest in all of history dating back to 660 B.C. The Japanese
religion added the belief that all the Emperors were the direct
descendants of the sun goddess, Amaterasu. The reigning Emperor
Hirohito was the 124th in the direct line of descent.
After the bombs were dropped on August 6 and 9 of 1945, and their
surrender soon thereafter, the Japanese were allowed to keep their
Emperor on the throne and he was not subjected to any war crimes
trial. The Emperor, Hirohito, came on the throne in 1926 and continued
in his position until his death in 1989. Since President Truman,
in effect, accepted the conditional surrender offered by the Japanese
as early as May of 1945, the question is posed, "Why then were
the bombs dropped?"
The author Alperovitz gives us the answer in great detail which
can only be summarized here, but he states, "We have noted
a series of Japanese peace feelers in Switzerland which OSS Chief
William Donovan reported to Truman in May and June [1945]. These
suggested, even at this point, that the U.S. demand for unconditional
surrender might well be the only serious obstacle to peace. At the
center of the explorations, as we also saw, was Allen Dulles, chief
of OSS operations in Switzerland (and subsequently Director of the
CIA). In his 1966 book The
Secret Surrender, Dulles recalled that ‘On July 20, 1945,
under instructions from Washington, I went to the Potsdam Conference
and reported there to Secretary [of War] Stimson on what I had
learned from Tokyo – they desired to surrender if they could retain
the Emperor and their constitution as a basis for maintaining discipline
and order in Japan after the devastating news of surrender became
known to the Japanese people.’" It is documented by Alperovitz
that Stimson reported this directly to Truman. Alperovitz further
points out in detail the documentary proof that every top presidential
civilian and military advisor, with the exception of James Byrnes,
along with Prime Minister Churchill and his top British military
leadership, urged Truman to revise the unconditional surrender policy
so as to allow the Japanese to surrender and keep their Emperor.
All this advice was given to Truman prior to the Potsdam Proclamation
which occurred on July 26, 1945. This proclamation made a final
demand upon Japan to surrender unconditionally or suffer drastic
consequences.
Another startling fact about the military connection to the dropping
of the bomb is the lack of knowledge on the part of General MacArthur
about the existence of the bomb and whether it was to be dropped.
Alperovitz states "MacArthur knew nothing about advance planning
for the atomic bomb’s use until almost the last minute. Nor was
he personally in the chain of command in this connection; the order
came straight from Washington. Indeed, the War Department waited
until five days before the bombing of Hiroshima even to notify MacArthur
– the commanding general of the U.S. Army Forces in the Pacific
– of the existence of the atomic bomb."
Alperovitz makes it very clear that the main person Truman was
listening to while he ignored all of this civilian and military
advice, was James Byrnes, the man who virtually controlled Truman
at the beginning of his administration. Byrnes was one of the most
experienced political figures in Washington, having served for over
thirty years in both the House and the Senate. He had also served
as a United States Supreme Court Justice, and at the request of
President Roosevelt, he resigned that position and accepted the
role in the Roosevelt administration of managing the domestic economy.
Byrnes went to the Yalta Conference with Roosevelt and then was
given the responsibility to get Congress and the American people
to accept the agreements made at Yalta.
When Truman became a senator in 1935, Byrnes immediately became
his friend and mentor and remained close to Truman until Truman
became president. Truman never forgot this and immediately called
on Byrnes to be his number-two man in the new administration. Byrnes
had expected to be named the vice presidential candidate to replace
Wallace and had been disappointed when Truman had been named, yet
he and Truman remained very close. Byrnes had also been very close
to Roosevelt, while Truman was kept in the dark by Roosevelt most
of the time he served as vice president. Truman asked Byrnes immediately,
in April, to become his Secretary of State but they delayed the
official appointment until July 3, 1945, so as not to offend the
incumbent. Byrnes had also accepted a position on the interim committee
which had control over the policy regarding the atom bomb, and therefore,
in April, 1945 became Truman’s main foreign policy advisor, and
especially the advisor on the use of the atomic bomb. It was Byrnes
who encouraged Truman to postpone the Potsdam Conference and his
meeting with Stalin until they could know, at the conference, if
the atomic bomb was successfully tested. While at the Potsdam Conference
the experiments proved successful and Truman advised Stalin that
a new massively destructive weapon was now available to America,
which Byrnes hoped would make Stalin back off from any excessive
demands or activity in the post-war period.
Truman secretly gave the orders on July 25, 1945 that the bombs
would be dropped in August while he was to be in route back to America.
On July 26, he issued the Potsdam Proclamation, or ultimatum, to
Japan to surrender, leaving in place the unconditional surrender
policy, thereby causing both Truman and Byrnes to believe that the
terms would not be accepted by Japan.
The conclusion drawn unmistakably from the evidence presented,
is that Byrnes is the man who convinced Truman to keep the unconditional
surrender policy and not accept Japan’s surrender so that the bombs
could actually be dropped thereby demonstrating to the Russians
that America had a new forceful leader in place, a "new sheriff
in Dodge" who, unlike Roosevelt, was going to be tough with
the Russians on foreign policy and that the Russians needed to "back
off" during what would become known as the "Cold War."
A secondary reason was that Congress would now be told about why
they had made the secret appropriation to a Manhattan Project and
the huge expenditure would be justified by showing that not only
did the bombs work but that they would bring the war to an end,
make the Russians back off and enable America to become the most
powerful military force in the world.
If the surrender by the Japanese had been accepted between May
and the end of July of 1945 and the Emperor had been left in place,
as in fact he was after the bombing, this would have kept Russia
out of the war. Russia agreed at Yalta to come into the Japanese
war three months after Germany surrendered. In fact, Germany surrendered
on May 8, 1945 and Russia announced on August 8, (exactly three
months thereafter) that it was abandoning its neutrality policy
with Japan and entering the war. Russia’s entry into the war for
six days allowed them to gain tremendous power and influence in
China, Korea, and other key areas of Asia. The Japanese were deathly
afraid of Communism and if the Potsdam Proclamation had indicated
that America would accept the conditional surrender allowing the
Emperor to remain in place and informed the Japanese that Russia
would enter the war if they did not surrender, then this would surely
have assured a quick Japanese surrender.
The second question that Alperovitz answers in the last half of
the book is how and why the Hiroshima myth was created. The story
of the myth begins with the person of James B. Conant, the President
of Harvard University, who was a prominent scientist, having initially
made his mark as a chemist working on poison gas during World War
I. During World War II, he was chairman of the National Defense
Research Committee from the summer of 1941 until the end of the
war and he was one of the central figures overseeing the Manhattan
Project. Conant became concerned about his future academic career,
as well as his positions in private industry, because various people
began to speak out concerning why the bombs were dropped. On September
9, 1945, Admiral William F. Halsey, commander of the Third Fleet,
was publically quoted extensively as stating that the atomic bomb
was used because the scientists had a "toy and they wanted
to try it out . . . ." He further stated, "The first atomic
bomb was an unnecessary experiment . . . . It was a mistake to ever
drop it." Albert Einstein, one of the world’s foremost scientists,
who was also an important person connected with the development
of the atomic bomb, responded and his words were headlined in The
New York Times "Einstein Deplores Use of Atom Bomb."
The story reported that Einstein stated that "A great majority
of scientists were opposed to the sudden employment of the atom
bomb." In Einstein’s judgment, the dropping of the bomb was
a political – diplomatic decision rather than a military or scientific
decision.
Probably the person closest to Truman, from the military standpoint,
was Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral William Leahy,
and there was much talk that he also deplored the use of the bomb
and had strongly advised Truman not to use it, but advised rather
to revise the unconditional surrender policy so that the Japanese
could surrender and keep the Emperor. Leahy’s views were later reported
by Hanson Baldwin in an interview that Leahy "thought the business
of recognizing the continuation of the Emperor was a detail which
should have been solved easily." Leahy’s secretary, Dorothy
Ringquist, reported that Leahy told her on the day the Hiroshima
bomb was dropped, "Dorothy, we will regret this day. The United
States will suffer, for war is not to be waged on women and children."
Another important naval voice, the commander in chief of the U.S.
Fleet and Chief of Naval Operations, Ernest J. King, stated that
the naval blockade and prior bombing of Japan in March of 1945,
had rendered the Japanese helpless and that the use of the atomic
bomb was both unnecessary and immoral. Also, the opinion of Fleet
Admiral Chester W. Nimitz was reported to have said in a press conference
on September 22, 1945, that "The Admiral took the opportunity
of adding his voice to those insisting that Japan had been defeated
before the atomic bombing and Russia’s entry into the war."
In a subsequent speech at the Washington Monument on October 5,
1945, Admiral Nimitz stated "The Japanese had, in fact, already
sued for peace before the atomic age was announced to the world
with the destruction of Hiroshima and before the Russian entry into
the war." It was learned also that on or about July 20, 1945,
General Eisenhower had urged Truman, in a personal visit, not to
use the atomic bomb. Eisenhower’s assessment was "It wasn’t
necessary to hit them with that awful thing . . . to use the atomic
bomb, to kill and terrorize civilians, without even attempting [negotiations],
was a double crime." Eisenhower also stated that it wasn’t
necessary for Truman to "succumb" to Byrnes.
James Conant came to the conclusion that some important person
in the administration must go public to show that the dropping of
the bombs was a military necessity, thereby saving the lives of
hundreds of thousands of American soldiers, so he approached Harvey
Bundy and his son, McGeorge Bundy. It was agreed by them that the
most important person to create this myth was Secretary of War,
Henry Stimson. It was decided that Stimson would write a long article
to be widely circulated in a prominent national magazine. This article
was revised repeatedly by McGeorge Bundy and Conant before it was
published in Harper’s magazine in February of 1947. The long
article became the subject of a front-page article and editorial
in The New York Times and in the editorial it was stated
"There can be no doubt that the president and Mr. Stimson are
right when they mention that the bomb caused the Japanese to surrender."
Later, in 1959, President Truman specifically endorsed this conclusion,
including the idea that it saved the lives of a million American
soldiers. This myth has been renewed annually by the news media
and various political leaders ever since.
It
is very pertinent that, in the memoirs of Henry Stimson entitled
On
Active Service in Peace and War, he states, "Unfortunately,
I have lived long enough to know that history is often not what
actually happened but what is recorded as such."
To
bring this matter more into focus from the human tragedy standpoint,
I recommend the reading of a book entitled Hiroshima
Diary: The Journal of a Japanese Physician, August 6, September
30, 1945, by Michiko Hachiya. He was a survivor of Hiroshima
and kept a daily diary about the women, children and old men that
he treated on a daily basis in the hospital. The doctor was badly
injured himself but recovered enough to help others and his account
of the personal tragedies of innocent civilians who were either
badly burned or died as a result of the bombing puts the moral issue
into a clear perspective for all of us to consider.
Now
that we live in the nuclear age and there are enough nuclear weapons
spread around the world to destroy civilization, we need to face
the fact that America is the only country to have used this awful
weapon and that it was unnecessary to have done so. If Americans
would come to recognize the truth, rather than the myth, it might
cause such a moral revolt that we would take the lead throughout
the world in realizing that wars in the future may well become nuclear,
and therefore all wars must be avoided at almost any cost. Hopefully,
our knowledge of science has not outrun our ability to exercise
prudent and humane moral and political judgment to the extent that
we are destined for extermination.
August
2, 2006
John
V. Denson [send him
mail] is the editor of two books, The
Costs of War and Reassessing
the Presidency. In the latter work, he has chapters especially
relevant for today, on how Lincoln and FDR lied us into war.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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