Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Obama uses Hiroshima visit to urge nuclear-free future

President doesn’t offer apologies for World War II attack

- By Nancy Benac and Foster Klug

HIROSHIMA, Japan — With an unflinchin­g look back at a painful history, President Barack Obama stood on the hallowed ground of Hiroshima on Friday and declared it a fitting place to summon people everywhere to embrace the vision of a world without nuclear weapons.

As the first sitting American president to visit the city where the U.S. dropped the first atomic bomb, Mr. Obama came to acknowledg­e — but not apologize for — an act many Americans see as a justified end to a brutal war that Japan started with a sneak attack at Pearl Harbor.

Some 140,000 people died after a U.S. warplane targeted Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945, and 70,000 more perished in Nagasaki, where a second bomb was dropped three days later. Japan soon surrendere­d.

“Their souls speak to us,” Mr. Obama said of the dead. “They ask us to look inward, to take stock of who we are and who we might become.”

With a lofty speech and a warm embrace for an elderly survivor, Mr. Obama renewed the call for a nuclear-free future that he had first laid out in a 2009

speech in Prague.

This time, Mr. Obama spoke as a far more experience­d president than the one who had employed his upbeat “Yes, we can” campaign slogan on the first go-round.

The president, who has made uneven progress on his nuclear agenda over the past seven years, spoke of “the courage to escape the logic of fear” as he held out hope for diligent, incrementa­l steps to reduce nuclear stockpiles.

Mr. Obama spent less than two hours in Hiroshima but seemed to accomplish what he came for. It was a choreograp­hed performanc­e meant to close old wounds without inflaming new passions.

In a solemn ceremony on a sunwashed afternoon, Mr. Obama and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe placed wreaths before the cenotaph, a simple arched stone monument at Hiroshima’s Peace Memorial Park. Only the clicking of camera shutters intruded on the moment as Mr. Obama closed his eyes and briefly bowed his head.

Then, after each leader gave brief remarks, Mr. Obama approached two aging survivors of the bombing who were seated in the front row, standing in for the thousands still seared by memories of that day.

Ninety-one-year-old Sunao Tsuboi, the head of a survivors group, energetica­lly engaged the president in conversati­on, telling Mr. Obama he would be remembered as someone who listened to the voice of a few survivors. He urged him to come back and meet more.

“He was holding my hands until the end,” Mr. Tsuboi said. “I was almost about to ask him to stop holding my hands, but he wouldn’t.”

Mr. Obama stepped over to meet historian Shigeaki Mori. Just 8 when the bomb hit, Mr. Mori had to hold back tears at the emotion of the moment.

Mr. Obama patted him on the back and wrapped him in an embrace. From there, Mr. Obama and Mr. Abe walked along a tree-lined path toward a river that flows by the A-bomb dome, the skeletal remains of an exhibition hall that stands as silent testimony to the power of the bomb blast 71 years ago and as a symbol for internatio­nal peace.

Mr. Abe welcomed the president’s message and offered his own determinat­ion “to realize a world free of nuclear weapons, no matter how long or how difficult the road will be.”

Mr. Obama received a Nobel Peace Prize early in his presidency for his antinuclea­r agenda but has seen uneven progress. The president can point to last year’s Iran nuclear deal and a weapons treaty with Russia. But North Korea’s nuclear program still looms as a threat, and hopes for a pact for further reductions with Russia have stalled. Critics also fault the administra­tion for planning a big and costly program to upgrade U.S. nuclear stockpiles.

Just as Mr. Obama had delicate sensitivit­ies to manage in Hiroshima, so too did Mr. Abe. The Japanese leader made a point to dismiss any suggestion that he pay a reciprocal visit to Pearl Harbor.

Mr. Abe did not rule out going to Hawaii someday, but clearly wanted to avoid any notion of moral equivalenc­e. In Japan, Pearl Harbor is not seen as a parallel for the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but as an attack on a military installati­on.

 ?? Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images ?? President Barack Obama hugs Shigeaki Mori, a survivor of the 1945 atomic bombing of Hiroshima, during a visit Friday to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park. Mr. Obama paid a moving tribute to victims of the world's first nuclear attack.
Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images President Barack Obama hugs Shigeaki Mori, a survivor of the 1945 atomic bombing of Hiroshima, during a visit Friday to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park. Mr. Obama paid a moving tribute to victims of the world's first nuclear attack.

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