Revthought
Posts: 523
Joined: 1/14/2009 From: San Diego (Lives in Indianapolis) Status: offline
|
Amazing family history! My grandfather who retired a CWO (he was commissioned with a bridge rank during the war) after 30 years in the navy, served in both oceans during WW2 and was part of D-day (up real close pulling sunk LCUs out of the invasion lanes) and Iwo Jima, and served in Korea would tell you no; however, though I never challenged him on this, I always found his notion about the use of the Atomic bombs on Japan at odds with his own experience as part of operation crossroads where he lamented his treatment, and that of his fellow sailors. To him it was always insedious that American sailors were used, at least in his mind, as human test subjects; however, this was "fine" to do to Japanese women and children in service of "ending the war quickly." So my opinion is yes, we do owe them an apology. Wholesale murder of civilians in the name of winning a war is wrong, and now would be rightly classed as a "war crime." Furthermore, it isn't really revisionism when main stream historians have largely come to the conclusion Japan was trying to float surrender under the terms that the emperor stays, which was ignored by both the Soviet Union and the United States in favor of achieving their own strategic gains visa vis their own allies. The Soviets did not want the war to end before their enterance into the Asian land war, and the United States... Well come to your own conclusions. My thought is they wanted to use the atomic bomb to test, and then demonstrate to the Soviets, the destructive power of the weapon. quote:
ORIGINAL: tocaff On Tinian Island on a fateful day in August 1945 my father and the rest of his crew were lazing around as they weren't scheduled to fly their B-29 anywhere. An officer appeared and told them to report to Operations. Once there they were told that they were a Super Dumbo, an observation plane, and would that they would also report any downed planes. They were issued dark goggles and told that there would be a bright flash that they weren't supposed to look at. Their plane was loaded with gas and that's it. They were part of a mission over Nagasaki. There would be a weather plane, 2 Super Dumbos, a plane with a bomb and later another plane for damage assessment. My father's bewildered crew boarded, took off from Tinian's North Field and tried to figure out what was going on. A single plane with one bomb? They witnessed the second A bomb used in anger. They were initially horrified by what they saw and on the way back to Tinian reported a downed P-47. By the time they landed they had realized that they had witnessed a chance to end the war. They wanted one of these bombs for every B-29 so that Japan could finally be defeated and then they could go home. Revisionist history would tell us another story. It is impossible for us, today to put ourselves into the shoes of the men fighting against Japan in 1945 as the values were totally different due to the monumental struggle that had been going on for years. To judge another time by the values of today is flat out wrong, just as judging one culture by another culture's standards is wrong. Does the USA owe Japan an apology? To my thinking, no. I don't intend this to be a political football,
_____________________________
Playing at war is a far better vocation than making people fight in them.
|