So many decades later, it’s hard to remember the kind of
nuclear thinking top American officials engaged in during the Cold War. In
secret National Security Council documents of the early 1950s, for instance,
the country’s top strategists descended willingly into the charnel house of
futuristic history, imagining life on this planet as an eternal potential
holocaust. They wrote in those documents of the possibility that 100 atomic
bombs, landing on targets in the United States, might kill or injure 22 million
Americans and of a "blow" that might result in the "complete
destruction" of the Soviet Union.
And they weren’t just whistling Dixie. After all, in 1960, the top military
brass found themselves arguing about the country’s first Single Integrated Operational Plan
for nuclear war. In it, a scenario was laid out for delivering more than 3,200
nuclear weapons to 1,060 targets in the Communist world. Targets included at
least 130 cities, which, if all went well, would cease to exist. Classified
estimates of possible casualties from such an attack ran to 285 million dead
and 40 million injured. That’s what “the complete destruction” of the Soviet
Union and Communist China meant then and, until Dr. Strangelove hit the screens in
1964, those figures were simply part of the sort of “rational” war planning
that led to perfectly serious debate about launching a “preemptive strike” --
what, if another country were considering it, would have been a “war of
aggression” -- to eradicate that enemy. To give credit where it’s due, Army and
Navy officials did worry "about the lethal impact of downwind fallout, with
the Army explicitly concerned about limiting exposure of 'friendly forces and
people' to radioactive fallout. By contrast, the Air Force saw no need for
additional constraints [on surface nuclear blasts]."
It's this world that we “celebrate,” having now reached the 70th
anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima (August 6, 1945) and Nagasaki
(August 9, 1945). Today, we know that delivering so many nuclear weapons (or,
in fact, many less) would have
done a lot more than wipe out the “Communist world.” It would have plunged the
planet into nuclear winter and undoubtedly eradicated humanity as definitively
as the dinosaurs were wiped out by that
asteroid 65 million years ago.
Apocalypse was -- and remains -- us. After all, despite the recent nuclear agreement
that will stop a country without nuclear weapons from building them, this
planet is still loaded with a
world-ending arsenal that is constantly being expanded, updated, and modernized. Call us
lucky, but don’t call us particularly thoughtful. Today, Christian Appy, author
of American Reckoning: The
Vietnam War and Our National Identity, considers the
way in which -- except in rare moments when
antinuclear movements gained brief strength here -- Americans managed to ignore
how this country’s leaders ushered us into the nuclear age by annihilating not
one but two cities and killing hundreds of thousands of defenseless civilians. Tom
Our “Merciful” Ending to the “Good War”
Or How Patriotism Means Never Having To Say You're Sorry
By Christian Appy
Or How Patriotism Means Never Having To Say You're Sorry
By Christian Appy
“Never, never
waste a minute on regret. It's a waste of time.”
-- President Harry Truman
Here we are, 70 years after the nuclear obliteration of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, and I'm wondering if we've come even one step closer to a moral
reckoning with our status as the world's only country to use atomic weapons to
slaughter human beings. Will an American president ever offer a formal apology?
Will our country ever regret the dropping of “Little Boy” and “Fat Man,” those
two bombs that burned hotter than the sun? Will it absorb the way they
instantly vaporized thousands of victims, incinerated tens of thousands more,
and created unimaginably powerful shockwaves and firestorms that ravaged
everything for miles beyond ground zero? Will it finally come to grips with the
“black rain” that spread radiation and killed even more people -- slowly and painfully
-- leading in the end to a death toll for the two cities conservatively estimated
at more than 250,000?
Given the last seven decades of perpetual militarization and nuclear “modernization”
in this country, the answer may seem like an obvious no. Still, as a historian,
I've been trying to dig a little deeper into our lack of national contrition.
As I have, an odd fragment of Americana kept coming to mind, a line from the
popular 1970 tearjerker Love Story:
“Love,” says the female lead when her boyfriend begins to apologize, “means
never having to say you're sorry.” It has to be one of the dumbest definitions
ever to lodge in American memory, since real love often requires the strength
to apologize and make amends.
It does, however, apply remarkably well to the way many
Americans think about that broader form of love we call patriotism. With rare
exceptions, like the 1988 congressional act
that apologized to and compensated the Japanese-American victims of World War
II internment, when it comes to the brute exercise of power, true patriotism
has above all meant never having to say you're sorry. The very politicians who
criticize other countries for not owning up to their wrong-doing regularly
insist that we should never apologize for anything. In 1988, for example, after
the U.S. Navy shot down an Iranian
civilian airliner over the Persian Gulf killing all 290 passengers (including
66 children), Vice President George H.W. Bush, then running for president, proclaimed, “I will never apologize for the
United States. Ever. I don't care what the facts are.”
It turns out, however, that Bush's version of American remorselessness
isn’t quite enough. After all, Americans prefer to view their country as
peace-loving, despite having been at war constantly since 1941. This means they
need more than denials and non-apologies. They need persuasive stories and
explanations (however full of distortions and omissions). The tale developed to
justify the bombings that led to a world in which the threat of human
extinction has been a daily reality may be the most successful legitimizing
narrative in our history. Seventy years later, it’s still deeply embedded in
public memory and school textbooks,
despite an ever-growing pile of evidence that contradicts it. Perhaps it’s
time, so many decades into the age of apocalyptic peril, to review the American
apologia for nuclear weapons -- the argument in their defense -- that
ensured we would never have to say we're sorry.
The Hiroshima Apologia
On August 9, 1945, President Harry Truman delivered a radio address from
the White House. “The world will note,” he said, “that the first atomic bomb
was dropped on Hiroshima, a military base. That was because we wished in this
first attack to avoid, insofar as possible, the killing of civilians.” He did
not mention that a second atomic bomb had already been dropped on Nagasaki.
Truman understood, of course, that if Hiroshima was a “military base,” then
so was Seattle; that the vast majority of its residents were civilians; and
that perhaps 100,000 of them had already been killed. Indeed, he knew that
Hiroshima was chosen not for its military significance but because it was one
of only a handful of Japanese cities that had not already been firebombed and
largely obliterated by American air power. U.S. officials, in fact, were intent
on using the first atomic bombs to create maximum terror and destruction. They
also wanted to measure their new weapon’s power and so selected the “virgin
targets” of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In July 1945, Secretary of War Henry
Stimson informed Truman of
his fear that, given all the firebombing of Japanese cities, there might not be
a target left on which the atomic bomb could “show its strength” to the
fullest. According to Stimson's diary, Truman “laughed and said he understood.”
The president soon dropped the “military base”
justification. After all, despite Washington's effort to censor the most
graphic images of atomic annihilation coming out of Hiroshima, the world
quickly grasped that the U.S. had destroyed an entire city in a single blow
with massive loss of life. So the president focused instead on an apologia that
would work for at least the next seven decades. Its core arguments appeared in
that same August 9th speech. “We have used [the atomic bomb] against those who
attacked us without warning at Pearl Harbor,” he said, “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. We have
used it in order to shorten the agony of war, in order to save the lives of
thousands and thousands of young Americans.”
By 1945, most Americans didn't care that the civilians of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
had not committed Japan's war crimes. American wartime culture had for years
drawn on a long history of “yellow peril” racism to paint the Japanese not just
as inhuman, but as subhuman. As Truman put it in his diary, it was a country
full of “savages” --
“ruthless, merciless, and fanatic” people so loyal to the emperor that every
man, woman, and child would fight to the bitter end. In these years, magazines
routinely depicted Japanese as
monkeys, apes, insects, and vermin. Given such a foe, so went the prevailing
view, there were no true “civilians” and nothing short of near extermination,
or at least a powerful demonstration of America's willingness to proceed down
that path, could ever force their surrender. As Admiral William “Bull” Halsey said in a 1944 press
conference, “The only good Jap is a Jap who's been dead six months.”
In the years after World War II, the most virulent expressions of race
hatred diminished, but not the widespread idea that the atomic bombs had been
required to end the war, eliminating the need to invade the Japanese home
islands where, it was confidently claimed, tooth-and-nail combat would cause
enormous losses on both sides. The deadliest weapon in history, the one that
opened the path to future Armageddon, had therefore saved lives. That was the
stripped down mantra that provided the broadest and most enduring support for
the introduction of nuclear warfare. By the time Truman, in retirement,
published his memoir in 1955,
he was ready to claim with some specificity that an invasion of Japan would
have killed half-a-million Americans and at least as many Japanese.
Over the years, the ever-increasing number of lives those two A-bombs
“saved” became a kind of sacred numerology. By 1991, for instance, President
George H.W. Bush, praising Truman for his “tough, calculating decision,” claimed that those bombs had “spared
millions of American lives.” By then, an atomic massacre had long been
transformed into a mercy killing that prevented far greater suffering and
slaughter.
Truman went to his grave insisting that he never had a single regret or a
moment's doubt about his decision. Certainly, in the key weeks leading up to
August 6, 1945, the record offers no evidence that he gave serious consideration
to any alternative.
“Revisionists” Were Present at the Creation
Twenty years ago, the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum planned an ambitious exhibit
to mark the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II. At its center was to
be an extraordinary artifact -- the fuselage of the Enola Gay, the
B-29 Superfortress used to drop the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. But the curators
and historical consultants wanted something more than yet another triumphal
celebration of American military science and technology. Instead, they sought
to assemble a thought-provoking portrayal of the bomb's development, the
debates about its use, and its long-term consequences. The museum sought to
include some evidence challenging the persistent claim that it was dropped
simply to end the war and “save lives.”
For starters, visitors would have learned that some of America's best-known
World War II military commanders opposed using atomic weaponry. In fact, six of the seven
five-star generals and admirals of that time believed that there was no reason
to use them, that the Japanese were already defeated, knew it, and were likely
to surrender before any American invasion could be launched. Several, like
Admiral William Leahy and General Dwight Eisenhower, also had moral objections
to the weapon. Leahy considered the atomic bombing of Japan “barbarous” and a
violation of “every Christian ethic I have ever heard of and all of the known
laws of war.”
Truman did not seriously consult with military commanders who had
objections to using the bomb. He did, however, ask a panel of military
experts to offer an estimate of how many Americans might be killed if the
United States launched the two major invasions of the Japanese home islands
scheduled for November 1, 1945 and March 1, 1946. Their figure: 40,000 -- far
below the half-million he would cite after the war. Even this estimate was
based on the dubious assumption that Japan could continue to feed, fuel, and
arm its troops with the U.S. in almost complete control of the seas and skies.
The Smithsonian also planned to inform its visitors that some key
presidential advisers had urged Truman to drop
his demand for “unconditional surrender” and allow Japan to keep the emperor on
his throne, an alteration in peace terms that might have led to an almost
immediate surrender. Truman rejected that advice, only to grant the same
concession after the nuclear attacks.
Keep in mind, however, that part of Truman's motivation for
dropping those bombs involved not the defeated Japanese, but the ascending
Soviet Union. With the U.S.S.R. pledged to enter the war against Japan on
August 8, 1945 (which it did), Truman worried that even briefly prolonging
hostilities might allow the Soviets to claim a greater stake in East Asia. He
and Secretary of State James Byrnes believed that a graphic demonstration of
the power of the new bomb, then only in the possession of the United States,
might also make that Communist power more “manageable” in Europe. The
Smithsonian exhibit would have suggested that Cold War planning and posturing
began in the concluding moments of World War II and that one legacy of
Hiroshima would be the massive nuclear arms race of the decades to come.
In addition to displaying American artifacts like the Enola Gay,
Smithsonian curators wanted to show some heartrending objects from the nuclear
destruction of Hiroshima, including a schoolgirl's burnt lunchbox, a watch dial
frozen at the instant of the bomb's explosion, a fused rosary, and photographs
of the dead and dying. It would have been hard to look at these items beside
that plane’s giant fuselage without feeling some sympathy for the victims of
the blast.
None of this happened. The exhibit was canceled after a storm of protest.
When the Air Force Association leaked a copy of the initial script to the
media, critics denounced the Smithsonian for its “politically correct” and
“anti-American” “revision” of history. The exhibit, they claimed, would be an
insult to American veterans and fundamentally unpatriotic. Though conservatives
led the charge, the Senate unanimously passed a resolution condemning
the Smithsonian for being “revisionist and offensive” that included a tidy
rehearsal of the official apologia: “The role of the Enola Gay... was momentous
in helping to bring World War II to a merciful end, which resulted in saving
the lives of Americans and Japanese.”
Merciful? Consider just this: the number of civilians killed at Hiroshima
and Nagasaki alone was more than twice the number of American troops killed
during the entire Pacific war.
In the end, the Smithsonian displayed little but the Enola Gay itself,
a gleaming relic of American victory in the “Good War.”
Our Unbroken Faith
in the Greatest Generation
In the two decades since, we haven't come closer to a genuine public
examination of history's only nuclear attack or to finding any major fault with
how we waged what Studs Terkel famously dubbed “the Good War.” He
used that term as the title for his classic 1984 oral history of World War II
and included those quotation marks quite purposely to highlight the irony of
such thinking about a war in which an estimated 60 million people died. In the
years since, the term has become an American cliché, but the quotation marks
have disappeared along with any hint of skepticism about our motives and
conduct in those years.
Admittedly, when it comes to the launching of nuclear war (if not the
firebombings that destroyed 67 Japanese cities
and continued for five days after “Fat Man” was dropped on Nagasaki), there is
some evidence of a more critical cast of mind in this country. Recent polls, for
instance, show that “only” 56% of Americans now think we were right to use
nuclear weapons against Japan, down a few points since the 1990s, while support
among Americans under the age of 30 has finally fallen below 50%. You might also
note that just after World War II, 85% of Americans supported the bombings.
Of course, such pro-bomb attitudes were hardly surprising in 1945,
especially given the relief and joy at the war's victorious ending and the
anti-Japanese sentiment of that moment. Far more surprising: by 1946, millions
of Americans were immersed in John Hersey's best-selling book Hiroshima, a
moving report from ground zero that explored the atomic bomb's impact through
the experiences of six Japanese survivors. It began with these gripping lines:
“At exactly fifteen minutes past eight in the morning, on August 6, 1945,
Japanese time, at the moment when the atomic bomb flashed above Hiroshima, Miss
Toshiko Sasaki, a clerk in the personnel department of the East Asia Tin Works,
had just sat down at her place in the plant office and was turning her head to
speak to the girl at the next desk.”
Hiroshima
remains a remarkable document for its unflinching depictions of the bomb's
destructiveness and for treating America's former enemy with such dignity and
humanity. “The crux of the matter,” Hersey concluded, “is whether total war in
its present form is justifiable, even when it serves a just purpose. Does it
not have material and spiritual evil as its consequences which far exceed
whatever good might result?”
The ABC Radio Network thought Hersey's book so important that it hired four
actors to read it in full on the air, reaching an even wider audience. Can you
imagine a large American media company today devoting any significant air time
to a work that engendered empathy for the victims of our twenty-first century
wars? Or can you think of a recent popular book that prods us to consider the
“material and spiritual evil” that came from our own participation in World War
II? I can't.
In fact, in the first years after that war, as Paul Boyer showed in his
superb book By the Bomb’s Early Light,
some of America's triumphalism faded as fears grew that the very existence of
nuclear weapons might leave the country newly vulnerable. After all, someday
another power, possibly the Soviet Union, might use the new form of warfare
against its creators, producing an American apocalypse that could never be seen
as redemptive or merciful.
In the post-Cold War decades, however, those fears have again faded
(unreasonably so since even a South Asian nuclear exchange between Pakistan and
India could throw the whole planet into a version of nuclear winter).
Instead, the “Good War” has once again been embraced as unambiguously
righteous. Consider, for example, the most recent book about World War II to
hit it big, Laura Hillenbrand's Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival,
Resilience, and Redemption. Published in 2010, it remained on the New
York Times best-seller list in hardcover for almost four years and
has sold millions of copies. In its reach, it may even surpass Tom Brokaw's
1998 book, The Greatest Generation. A Hollywood adaptation of Unbroken
appeared last Christmas.
Hillenbrand’s book does not pretend to be a comprehensive history of World
War II or even of the war in the Pacific. It tells the story of Louis
Zamperini, a child delinquent turned Olympic runner turned B-24 bombardier. In
1943, his plane was shot down in the Pacific. He and the pilot survived 47 days
in a life raft despite near starvation, shark attacks, and strafing by Japanese
planes. Finally captured by the Japanese, he endured a series of brutal POW camps
where he was the victim of relentless sadistic beatings.
The book is decidedly a page-turner, but its focus on a single American's
punishing ordeal and amazing recovery inhibits almost any impulse to move
beyond the platitudes of nationalistic triumphalism and self-absorption or
consider (among other things) the racism that so dramatically shaped American
combat in the Pacific. That, at least, is the impression you get combing
through some of the astonishing 25,000 customer reviews Unbroken has
received on Amazon. “My respect for WWII veterans has soared,” a typical
reviewer writes. “Thank you Laura Hillenbrand for loving our men at war,”
writes another. It is “difficult to read of the inhumanity of the treatment of
the courageous men serving our country.” And so on.
Unbroken
devotes a page and a half to the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, all of it from
the vantage point of the American crew of the Enola Gay. Hillenbrand
raises concerns about the crew's safety: “No one knew for sure if... the bomber
could get far enough away to survive what was coming.” She describes the impact
of the shockwaves, not on the ground, but at 30,000 feet when they slammed into
the Enola Gay, “pitching the men into the air.”
The film version of Unbroken evokes even less empathy for the
Japanese experience of nuclear war, which brings to mind something a student
told my graduate seminar last spring. He teaches high school social studies and
when he talked with colleagues about the readings we were doing on Hiroshima,
three of them responded with some version of the following: “You know, I used
to think we were wrong to use nukes on Japan, but since I saw Unbroken I've
started to think it was necessary.” We are, that is, still in the territory
first plowed by Truman in that speech seven decades ago.
At the end of the film, this note appears on the screen: “Motivated by his
faith, Louie came to see that the way forward was not revenge, but forgiveness.
He returned to Japan, where he found and made peace with his former captors.”
That is indeed moving. Many of the prison camp guards apologized, as well
they should have, and -- perhaps more surprisingly -- Zamperini forgave them.
There is, however, no hint that there might be a need for apologies on the
American side, too; no suggestion that our indiscriminate destruction of Japan,
capped off by the atomic obliteration of two cities, might be, as Admiral Leahy
put it, a violation of “all of the known laws of war.”
So here we are, 70 years later, and we seem, if anything, farther than ever
from a rejection of the idea that launching atomic warfare on Japanese civilian
populations was an act of mercy. Perhaps some future American president will
finally apologize for our nuclear attacks, but one thing seems certain: no
Japanese survivor of the bombs will be alive to hear it.
Christian Appy, TomDispatch regular
and professor of history at the University of Massachusetts, is the author of
three books about the Vietnam War, including most recently American Reckoning: The Vietnam
War and Our National Identity (Viking).
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