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66 Years Ago: The Crime of Nagasaki -- The 'Forgotten' A-Bomb City

Posted: 08/09/11 12:08 PM ET

Few journalists bother to visit Nagasaki, even though it is one of only two cities in the world to "meet the atomic bomb," as some of the survivors of that experience, 66 years ago today, put it. It remains the Second City, and "Fat Man" the forgotten bomb. No one in America ever wrote a bestselling book called Nagasaki, or made a film titled Nagasaki, Mon Amour. "We are an asterisk," Shinji Takahashi, a sociologist in Nagasaki, once told me, with a bitter smile. "The inferior A-Bomb city."

Yet in many ways, Nagasaki is the modern A-Bomb city, the city with perhaps the most meaning for us today. For one thing, when the plutonium bomb exploded above Nagasaki it made the uranium-type bomb dropped on Hiroshima obsolete.

And then there's this. "The rights and wrongs of Hiroshima are debatable," Telford Taylor, the chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials, once observed, "but I have never heard a plausible justification of Nagasaki" -- which he labeled a war crime. Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., who experienced the firebombing of Dresden at close hand, said much the same thing. "The most racist, nastiest act by this country, after human slavery, was the bombing of Nagasaki," he once said. "Not of Hiroshima, which might have had some military significance. But Nagasaki was purely blowing away yellow men, women, and children. I'm glad I'm not a scientist because I'd feel so guilty now."

A beautiful city dotted with palms largely built on terraces surrounding a deep harbor--the San Francisco of Japan -- Nagasaki has a rich, bloody history, as any reader of Shogun knows. Three centuries before Commodore Perry came to Japan, Nagasaki was the country's gateway to the west. The Portuguese and Dutch settled here in the 1500s. St. Francis Xavier established the first Catholic churches in the region in 1549, and Urakami, a suburb of Nagasaki, became the country's Catholic center. Thomas Glover, one of the first English traders here, supplied the modern rifles that helped defeat the Tokugawa Shogunate in the 19th century.

Glover's life served as a model for the story of Madame Butterfly, and Nagasaki is known in many parts of the world more for Butterfly than for the bomb. In Puccini's opera, Madame Butterfly, standing on the veranda of Glover's home overlooking the harbor (see left), sings, "One fine day, we'll see a thread of smoke arising.... " If she could have looked north from the Glover mansion, now Nagasaki's top tourist attraction, on August 9, 1945, she would have seen, two miles in the distance, a thread of smoke with a mushroom cap.

By 1945, Nagasaki had become a Mitsubishi company town, turning out ships and armaments for Japan's increasingly desperate war effort. Few Japanese soldiers were stationed here, and only about 250 of them would perish in the atomic bombing. It was still the Christian center in the country, with more than 10,000 Catholics among its 250,000 residents. Most of them lived in the outlying Urakami district, the poor part of town, where a magnificent cathedral seating 6000 had been built.

At 11:02 a.m. on August 9, 1945, "Fat Man" was detonated more than a mile off target, almost directly over the Urakami Cathedral, which was nearly leveled, killing dozens of worshippers waiting for confession. Concrete roads in the valley literally melted.

While Urakami suffered, the rest of the city caught a break. The bomb's blast boomed up the valley destroying everything in its path but didn't quite reach the congested harbor or scale the high ridge to the Nakashima valley. Some 35,000 perished instantly, with another 50,000 or more fated to die afterwards. The plutonium bomb hit with the force of 22 kilotons, almost double the uranium bomb's blast in Hiroshima.

If the bomb had exploded as planned, directly over the Mitsubishi shipyards, the death toll in Nagasaki would have made Hiroshima, in at least one important sense, the Second City. Nothing would have escaped, perhaps not even the most untroubled conscience half a world away.

Hard evidence to support a popular theory that the chance to "experiment" with the plutonium bomb was the major reason for the bombing of Nagasaki remains sketchy but still one wonders (especially when visiting the city, as I recount in my new book) about the overwhelming, and seemingly thoughtless, impulse to automatically use a second atomic bomb even more powerful than the first.

Criticism of the attack on Nagasaki has centered on the issue of why Truman did not step in and stop the second bomb after the success of the first to allow Japan a few more days to contemplate surrender before targeting another city for extinction. In addition, the U.S. knew that its ally, the Soviet Union, would join the war within hours, as previously agreed, and that the entrance of Japan's most hated enemy, as much as the Hiroshima bomb, would likely speed the surrender ("fini Japs" when the Russians declare war, Truman had predicted in his diary). If that happened, however, it might cost the U.S. in a wider Soviet claim on former Japanese conquests in Asia. So there was much to gain by getting the war over before the Russians advanced. Some historians have gone so far as state that the Nagasaki bomb was not the last shot of World War II but the first blow of the Cold War.

Whether this is true or not, there was no presidential directive specifically related to dropping the second bomb. The atomic weapons in the U.S. arsenal, according to the July 2, 1945 order, were to be used "as soon as made ready," and the second bomb was ready within three days of Hiroshima. Nagasaki was thus the first and only victim of automated atomic warfare.

In one further irony, Nagasaki was not even on the original target list for A-bombs but was added after Secretary of War Henry Stimson objected to Kyoto. He had visited Kyoto himself and felt that destroying Japan's cultural capital would turn the citizens against America in the aftermath. Just like that, tens of thousands in one city were spared and tens of thousands of others elsewhere were marked for death.

General Leslie Groves, upon learning of the Japanese surrender offer after the Nagasaki attack, decided that the "one-two" strategy had worked, but he was pleased to learn the second bomb had exploded off the mark, indicating "a smaller number of casualties than we had expected." But as historian Martin Sherwin has observed, "If Washington had maintained closer control over the scheduling of the atomic bomb raids the annihilation of Nagasaki could have been avoided." Truman and others simply did not care, or to be charitable, did not take care.

That's one reason the US suppressed all film footage shot in Nagasaki and Hiroshima for decades (which I probe in the new book Atomic Cover-up).

After hearing of Nagasaki, however, Truman quickly ordered that no further bombs be used without his express permission, to give Japan a reasonable chance to surrender--one bomb, one city, and seventy thousand deaths too late. When they'd learned of the Hiroshima attack, the scientists at Los Alamos generally expressed satisfaction that their work had paid off. But many of them took Nagasaki quite badly. Some would later use the words "sick" or "nausea" to describe their reaction.

As months and then years passed, few Americans denounced as a moral wrong the targeting of entire cities for extermination. General Dwight D. Eisenhower, however, declared that we never should have hit Japan "with that awful thing." The leftwing writer Dwight MacDonald cited America's "decline to barbarism" for dropping "half-understood poisons" on a civilian population. His conservative counterpart, columnist and magazine editor David Lawrence, lashed out at the "so-called civilized side" in the war for dropping bombs on cities that kill hundreds of thousands of civilians. However much we rejoice in victory, he wrote, "we shall not soon purge ourselves of the feeling of guilt which prevails among us.... What a precedent for the future we have furnished to other nations even less concerned than we with scruples or ideals! Surely we cannot be proud of what we have done. If we state our inner thoughts honestly, we are ashamed of it."

Greg Mitchell's new book and e-book is "Atomic Cover-Up: Two U.S. Soldiers, Hiroshima & Nagasaki, and The Greatest Movie Never Made." Email: epic1934@aol.com

 
 
 

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Few journalists bother to visit Nagasaki, even though it is one of only two cities in the world to "meet the atomic bomb," as some of the survivors of that experience, 66 years ago today, put it. It r...
Few journalists bother to visit Nagasaki, even though it is one of only two cities in the world to "meet the atomic bomb," as some of the survivors of that experience, 66 years ago today, put it. It r...
 
 
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10:57 AM on 09/05/2011
"The release of atom power has changed everything except our way of thinking...the solution to this problem lies in the heart of mankind. If only I had known, I should have become a watchmaker." Albert Einstein

The Manhattan Project, a Top Secret Military Effort, has expunged true scientific exploration

into the opportunities Nuclear Technologies has to offer mankind, because it is was controlled

by military decisions. Thorium, the other natural radioactive element appearing on the Periodic

Table, was discarded early due to its resistance to weapon production. Now Thorium is the

nuclear fuel of choice because of its resistance to weapon production.

The Convenient Truth is that the Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor(LFTR) is

The Earth Friendly Reactor.
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wom122
Primum non nocere
10:21 PM on 08/10/2011
Most countries go to war thinking, or at least having convinced themselves, that they are fighting the good fight. It is easy to find justification to using any weapon once you've established that you are fighting evil. Problem is that alll sides to any conflict share those beliefs so what if we were the ones on the receiving end of those WMD's? Likely the Japanese would have had no shortage of excuses as to why using those deadly toys was the morally right thing to do.

Homo Sapiens would eventually destroy our Planet Earth but with a bit of luck I won't be around to witness the Apocalypse.
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Erewhon7
Join atheists, our non-prophet organization
08:01 PM on 08/10/2011
I would like to thank thousands of participants in Manhattan Project whose heroic and tireless efforts resulted in unconditional Japanese surrender and prevented million+ of Japanese and American casualties..
Bravo.
04:51 PM on 08/10/2011
Are we to forget the fact that these people had Korean slaves they were using to build the ships? My father was there and he helped free the slaves the Japanese were using. He and many other men from the US returned the slaves to Korea! Where they thankful to us? War is NEVER perfect. The US soldiers were empathetic to the Japanese civilians as well.
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Godzilla1916
12:36 PM on 08/10/2011
War, violence, human yearnings for self determination and even dominance are all complicated and personal choices; and while I can understand and secretly cheer the expressionism of the rioters in England; I read this and withdraw my support for all violence. As an American 66 years after the fact, I condemn the bombing of Nagasaki as a war crime while recognizing the complexity of bio-political decisions of yesterday. The legacy of pain and suffering remain for the Japanese survivors of such though, and it is for me to pay that karma debt.
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fgbouman
Curmudgeon & Designer
08:46 AM on 08/10/2011
I don't think I made it clear in my last commeny...my wife was one when they dropped the bomb on her, five when her father was disappeared and six when the North Koreans overran her home. War sucks.
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fgbouman
Curmudgeon & Designer
08:38 AM on 08/10/2011
My wife's family fled the horrors of Osaka for the comparative peace of Nagasaki. Fortunately her mom took the warning leaflet she found seriously so that they were in a bomb shelter when the bomb was dropped. Ultimately they returnrd home where before long her father was executed by Syngman Rhee's American-backed regime and she suffered through the Korean War.
I'm not sure why so many people leaving comments here think that it is just peachy keen that children be subjected to this but I, for one, do not believe that war is ever justified; those who cause them are almost never the ones who suffer.
05:51 AM on 08/10/2011
From a great deal of what I've heard and read, the American losses in an invasion of the Japanese homeland, in light if the resistance that was encountered on Iwo Jima and Okinawa, would have been horrendous. We used the bomb because we had to. Remember, after the first bomb, the enemy refused to surrender. The second one did the trick. I'm sure many of the veterans, more than a few of whom are lying in their graves, would have wanted the bomb developed and used earlier. So man would not have had to die.
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Tree S-B
Well, you know...
12:18 PM on 08/10/2011
The leaders of Japan wanted nothing less than world domination. They would not stop until the second bomb was dropped.
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FearlessFreep
I'm actually a radical leftist
12:40 AM on 08/10/2011
Wasn't there another city that they were going to drop the second A-bomb on? But weather conditions there were unfavorable so they nuked Nagasaki instead.
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10:11 AM on 08/11/2011
The original second target was the Kokura arsenal but it was completely covered by clouds when Bock's Car flew over and Major Charles Sweeney, the pilot and mission commander was under orders to bomb by sight - Norton bombsight - and not by radar. They stayed on station hoping that the weather would clear but finally reached a tipping point with fuel and noticed Japanese fighters climbing up to attempt to intercept so they flew on to Nagasaki. Conditions were only marginally better over Nagasaki and originally Sweeney gave the okay to bomb by radar but the weather cleared at the last moment so the bombardier could use the bombsight - which probably accounted for missing the aiming point.
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blackhawk78
10:31 PM on 08/09/2011
I love computer generals who weren't in the fox holes big talkers.
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realitytrumpsbull
two 'alves of coconut!
08:43 PM on 08/09/2011
More than the actions that ended the war in the pacific, I'm interested in the lead-up to the war, the development of the Axis powers, the 'lets you and him fight' yellow journalism, the agitators, the propagandists, and the economic contentions of the time that led to the social problems that heralded the onset of the Mother Of All Shitstorms that was WWII. One good question would be, 'could it happen again'? Are the people in various countries still gullible enough to let themselves be churned up to war by government propaganda, or have we learned, along with people in other countries, to ask a lot more questions?  If there was a Hitler today, could he be stopped? What gave rise to someone like that to begin with? And, what was the nature of the German partnership with Japan?   

I don't think it could happen again. I think the world has modernized to the point where we have strong partnerships with other countries, and most nations have come to a point of realization on things like weapons of mass destruction. With any luck, Hiroshima and Nagasaki will be the first, and the last cities, to have been thusly destroyed. But, there's always tomorrow, and the hidden ambitions and machinations of those that strive for positions of power, the dictators, the Stalins, the Mussolinis, Hitlers, Ceaucescu's, and others who would rule with an iron fist over their peoples and other countries also if so empowered.  We, as humanity, have the power to wreak such havoc on the face of the earth as to eliminate all life. Or, we could make the wiser choice of learning to govern ourselves and our violent impulses and prevent wars of conquest or ideology, through cooperation and education. To hide our history, to lie about it, is to set the stage for a repeat.  The war ended in America's/Europe's favor, but England could be speaking German today, and so could we, and not by choice. U-boats were off the coast of New York, at one point. London burned.

Where will we go from here, who will be tomorrow's tin-pot that gains widespread popularity, enrages the population, and sets them to war? Which starving people will save themselves from the brink by annihilating another country and taking their resources? It's the 21st century, 7 billion to walk the earth this year, no pressure...
shylove2
warfare state is pathological
08:11 PM on 08/09/2011
We took a similar scotched earth policy to end our Civil War...
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Tree S-B
Well, you know...
12:19 PM on 08/10/2011
that's "scorched earth."
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fjg
a jolly good fellow
08:09 PM on 08/09/2011
Because of the bombings of Nagasaki and Hiroshima, the Japanese have been able to portray themselves as victims of WW2.

Millions of Filipinos and Chinese would beg to differ with them.
MrStat1
I believe in the rule of law
06:07 PM on 08/09/2011
Crime? What crime? The Japanese started the war, and it was the judgement of the military and Truman that 500,000 to 1,000,000 American soldiers would lose their lives invading Japan. This was done to save them and end the war. If 500,000 people are going to die you make damn sure it is their 500,000 people and not yours.
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fgbouman
Curmudgeon & Designer
08:53 AM on 08/10/2011
So you equate the killing of unarmed women and children from ttwenty thousand feet in the air with one to one combat between armed men? You're not thinking.
01:51 AM on 08/11/2011
And two bits says you weren't in the fighting.
11:41 AM on 08/10/2011
not to mention the bigger irony....That an invasion of mainland Japan would have killed far far more Japanese.
02:42 PM on 08/09/2011
I have breakfast most mornings with guys that where on a ship comming from D-day going to japan. It is my opinon they have a differt veiw than any of us. they cheered. And us Harley riders know what a fatboy is!
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FearlessFreep
I'm actually a radical leftist
12:36 AM on 08/10/2011
Is their perspective automatically more "legitimate" than Greg Mitchell's?
01:52 AM on 08/11/2011
It's certainly more enlightened.