Being a U.S.
war criminal means never having to say sorry. Paul Tibbets, the
man who flew the Enola Gay and destroyed Hiroshima, lived to the
impressive age of 92 without publicly expressing guilt for what
he had done. He had even reenacted his infamous mission at a 1976
Texas air show, complete with a mushroom cloud, and later said he
never meant this to be offensive. In contrast, he called it a "damn
big insult" when the Smithsonian planned an exhibit in 1995 showing
some of the damage the bombing caused.
We might understand
a man not coming to terms with his most important contribution to
human history being such a destructive act. But what about the rest
of the country?
It’s sickening
that Americans even debate the atomic bombings, as they do every
year in early August. Polls in recent years reveal overwhelming
majorities of the American public accepting the acts as necessary.
Conservatives
are much worse on this topic, although liberals surely don’t give
it the weight it deserves. Trent Lott was taken to the woodshed
for his comments in late 2002 about how Strom Thurmond would have
been a better president than Truman. Lott and Thurmond both represent
ugly strains in American politics, but no one dared question the
assumption that Thurmond was obviously a less defensible candidate
than Truman. Zora Neale Hurston, heroic author of the Harlem Renaissance,
might have had a different take, as she astutely called Truman "a
monster" and "the butcher of Asia." Governmental
segregation is terrible, but why is murdering hundreds of thousands
of foreign civilians with as much thought as one would give to eradicating
silverfish treated as simply a controversial policy decision in
comparison?
Perhaps it
is the appeal to necessity. We hear that the United States would
have otherwise had to invade the Japanese mainland and so the bombings
saved American lives. But saving U.S. soldiers wouldn’t justify
killing Japanese children any more than saving Taliban soldiers
would justify dropping bombs on American children. Targeting civilians
to manipulate their government is the very definition of terrorism.
Everyone was properly horrified by Anders Behring Breivik’s murder
spree in Norway last month – killing innocents to alter diplomacy.
Truman murdered a thousand times as many innocents on August 6,
1945, then again on August 9.
It doesn’t
matter if Japan "started it," either. Only individuals
have rights, not nations. Unless you can prove that every single
Japanese snuffed out at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was involved in the
Pearl Harbor attack, the murderousness of the bombings is indisputable.
Even the official history should doom Truman to a status of permanent
condemnation. Besides being atrocious in themselves, the U.S. creation
and deployment of the first nuclear weapons ushered in the seemingly
endless era of global fear over nuclear war.
However, as
it so happens, the official history is a lie. The
U.S. provoked the Japanese to fire the first shot, as more and
more historians have acknowledged. Although the attack on Pearl
Harbor, a military base, was wrong, it was far less indefensible
than the attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki's civilian populations.
As for the
utilitarian calculus of "saving American lives," historian
Ralph Raico
explains:
[T]he rationale
for the atomic bombings has come to rest on a single colossal
fabrication, which has gained surprising currency: that they were
necessary in order to save a half-million or more American lives.
These, supposedly, are the lives that would have been lost in
the planned invasion of Kyushu in December, then in the all-out
invasion of Honshu the next year, if that was needed. But the
worst-case scenario for a full-scale invasion of the Japanese
home islands was forty-six thousand American lives lost.
The propaganda
that the atomic bombings saved lives was nothing but a public relations
pitch contrived in retrospect. These were just gratuitous acts of
mass terrorism. By August 1945, the Japanese were completely defeated,
blockaded, starving. They were desperate to surrender. All they
wanted was to keep their emperor, which was ultimately allowed anyway.
The U.S. was insisting upon unconditional surrender, a purely despotic
demand. Given what the Allies had done to the Central Powers, especially
Germany, after the conditional surrender of World War I, it’s understandable
that the Japanese resisted the totalitarian demand for unconditional
surrender.
A 1946 U.S.
Strategic Bombing Survey determined the Hiroshima and Nagasaki nukings
were not decisive in ending the war. Most of the political and military
brass agreed.
"The Japanese were ready to surrender and it wasn't necessary
to hit them with that awful thing," said Dwight Eisenhower
in a 1963 interview with Newsweek.
Another excuse
we hear is the specter of Hitler getting the bomb first. This is
a non sequitur. By the time the U.S. dropped the bombs, Germany
was defeated and its nuclear program was revealed to be nothing
in comparison to America’s. The U.S. had 180,000 people working
for several years on the Manhattan Project. The Germans had a small
group led by a few elite scientists, most
of whom were flabbergasted on August 6, as they had doubted
such bombs were even possible. Even if the Nazis had gotten the
bomb – which they were very far from getting – it wouldn’t in any
way justify killing innocent Japanese.
For more evidence
suggesting that the Truman administration was out to draw Japanese
blood for its own sake, or as a show of force for reasons of Realpolitik,
consider the United States’s one-thousand-plane
bombing of Tokyo on August 14, the largest bombing raid of the
Pacific war, after Hirohito agreed to surrender and the Japanese
state made it clear it wanted peace. The bombing of Nagasaki should
be enough to know it was not all about genuinely stopping the war
as painlessly as possible – why not wait more than three days for
the surrender to come? But to strategically bomb Japan five days
after the destruction Nagasaki, as Japan was in the process of waving
the white flag? It’s hard to imagine a greater atrocity, or clearer
evidence that the U.S. government was not out to secure peace, but
instead to slaughter as many Japanese as it could before consolidating
its power for the next global conflict.
The U.S. had,
by the time of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, destroyed 67 Japanese cities
by firebombing, in addition to helping the British destroy over
a hundred cities in Germany. In this dramatic footage from The
Fog of War, Robert McNamara describes the horror he helped
unleash alongside General Curtis LeMay, with images of the destroyed
Japanese cities and an indication of what it would have meant for
comparably sized cities in the United States:
"Killing
fifty to ninety percent of the people in 67 Japanese cities and
then bombing them with two nuclear bombs is not proportional – in
the minds of some people – to the objectives we were trying to achieve,"
McNamara casually says. Indeed, this was clearly murderous, and
Americans are probably the most resistant of all peoples to the
truths of their government’s historical atrocities. It doesn’t hurt
that the U.S. government has
suppressed for years evidence such as film
footage shot after the Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Yet even based
on what has long been uncontroversial historical fact, we should
all be disgusted and horrified by what the U.S. government did.
How would it
have been if all those Germans and Japanese, instead of being burned
to death from the sky, were corralled into camps and shot or gassed?
Materially, it would have been the same. But Americans refuse to
think of bombings as even in the same ballpark as other technologically
expedient ways of exterminating people by the tens and hundreds
of thousands. Why? Because the U.S. government has essentially monopolized
terror bombing for nearly a century. No one wants to confront the
reality of America’s crimes against humanity.
It would be
one thing if Americans were in wide agreement that their government,
like that of the Axis governments of World War II, had acted in
a completely indefensible manner. But they’re not. The Allies were
the white hats. Ignore the fact that the biggest belligerent on
America’s side was Stalin’s Russia, whom the FDR and Truman administrations
helped round up a million or two refugees to enslave and murder
in the notorious undertaking known as Operation
Keelhaul. We’re not supposed to think about that. World War
II began with Pearl Harbor and it ended with D-Day and American
sailors returning home to kiss their sweethearts who had kept America
strong by working on assembly lines.
In the Korean
war, another Truman project, the U.S. policy of shameful mass murder
continued. According to historian Bruce Cumings, professor at the
University of Chicago, millions of North Korean civilians were slaughtered
by U.S. fire-bombings, chemical weapons and newly developed ordnance,
some of which weighed in at 12,000 pounds. Eighteen out of 22 major
cities were at least half destroyed. For a period in 1950, the US
dropped about 800 tons of bombs on North Korea every day. Developed
at the end of World War II, napalm got its real start in Korea.
The US government also targeted civilian dams, causing massive flooding.
In Indochina,
the U.S. slaughtered millions in a similar fashion. Millions
of tons of explosives were dropped on Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia.
These ghastly weapons are literally still killing people – tens
of thousands have died since the war ended, and
three farmers were killed just last week. Among the horrible
effects of the bombing was the rise of Pol Pot’s regime, probably
the worst in history on a per capita basis.
The U.S. has
committed mass terrorism since, although not on quite the scale
as in past generations. Back in the day the U.S. would drop tons
of explosives, knowing that thousands would die in an instant. In
today’s wars, it drops explosives and then pretends it didn’t mean
to kill the many civilians who predictably die in such acts of violence.
Only fifteen hundred bombs were used to attack Baghdad in March
2003. That’s what passes as progress. The naked murderousness of
U.S. foreign policy, however, is still apparent. The bombings of
water treatment facilities and sanctions on Iraq in the 1990s deliberately
targeted the vulnerable Iraqi people. Once the type of atrocities
the U.S. committed in World War II have been accepted as at the
worst debatable tactics in diplomacy, anything goes.
American politicians
would have us worry about Iran, a nation that hasn’t attacked another
country in centuries, one day getting the bomb. There is no
evidence that the Iranians are even seeking nuclear weapons.
But even if they were, the U.S. has a much worse record in both
warmongering and nuclear terror than Iran or any other country in
modern times. It is more than hypocritical for the U.S. to pose
as the leader of global peace and nuclear disarmament.
The hypocrisy
and moral degeneracy in the mouths of America’s celebrated leaders
should frighten us more than anything coming out of Iran or North
Korea, especially given America’s capacity to kill and willingness
to do it. Upon dropping the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, President
Truman called the bomb the "greatest achievement of organized
science in history" and wondered aloud how "atomic power
can become a powerful and forceful influence toward the maintenance
of world peace." Nothing inverts good and evil, progress and
regress, as much as the imperial state. In describing the perversion
of morality in the history of U.S. wars, Orwell’s "war is peace"
doesn’t cut it. "Exterminating civilians by the millions is
the highest of all virtues" is perhaps a better tagline for
the U.S. terror state.