New York Daily News

Truman was right to use the A-bomb

- RICHARD COHEN cohenr@washpost.com

Should the United States apologize for the nuclear bombing of Japan at the very end of World War II? The bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, 70 years ago this month, killed as many as 250,000 people, most of them civilians. For many of the victims, it was a horrible, excruciati­ng death, and for many others, the effects of burns and radiation, although not immediatel­y lethal, produced years of agony. Should we say we’re sorry?

My answer is no, but I do not dismiss the question out of hand. It is naggingly relevant, raising issues of proportion, race and culture. A recent article on the website of the decidedly liberal magazine The Nation makes three points. The bombings were animated by racial animus, they were disproport­ionate to the number of U.S. deaths that might have resulted from an invasion of the Japanese mainland, and the bombs amounted to wretched excess: Japan was ready to surrender anyway.

Maybe so. But an imminent Japanese surrender was hardly apparent at the time. Instead, even as the war was ending, the Japanese fought nearly to the last man on Iwo Jima, a monthlong battle in which almost 7,000 Marines were killed. Of the 21,000 Japanese soldiers on the island, only about 200 were taken prisoner. Still later in 1945, the Japanese fought tenaciousl­y until mid-June to hold Okinawa. That battle cost 14,000 American lives.

There was reason to believe that Japan would never surrender and that an invasion of the main Japanese islands would result in staggering American casualties. If that was the case, then any weapon that saved American lives would be justified. The author of the article in The Nation, Christian Appy, states, however, that the casualty projection­s were always exaggerate­d. Whatever the figure, a commander-in-chief has the responsibi­lity to husband American lives.

What about racism? “American wartime culture had for years drawn on a long history of ’yellow peril’ racism to paint the Japanese not just as inhuman, but subhuman,” Appy writes. Yes, indeed. But at the same time, the Japanese were doing their level best to prove the bigots right. They had abused and murdered POWs, they had massacred civilian population­s and were flying their own airplanes into American fighting ships. The famous kamikaze attacks cost the Japanese almost 4,000 pilots and killed almost 5,000 American sailors. Americans had to wonder: What kind of people would sacrifice their own in pursuit of what, by then, was a losing cause? Little wonder we thought of the Japanese then as we now think of the Islamic State.

Harry S Truman was characteri­stically terse and not particular­ly introspect­ive about his decision to use the bomb. But it is clear from his diary — cited by Appy — that he loathed the Japanese, who, after all, had started the war with a sneak attack on Pearl Harbor. The President was a product of his time, and terrible times they were. Three major powers had emerged that did not hesitate to slaughter innocent people — Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union and Japan. As for America and its allies, they had already firebombed Dresden and Hamburg and incinerate­d many of the major cities of Japan. The writer L.P. Hartley said that “the past is a foreign country.” The past of 1945 was a world steeped in blood.

Could a “demonstrat­ion” bomb have gotten Japan to surrender? Who knows. Was Truman intent on accelerati­ng the surrender so as to keep the Soviets out of Japan? Maybe. Was the loss of Japanese civilian life out of proportion to the projected loss of American life? Probably.

These questions are well worth pondering, but so is this one: What could Truman have said to Americans who lost a loved one in an invasion of the Japanese home islands if they knew he had a weapon that could have ended the war and not used it? What, in the dead of night when sleep did not come and he stared at the ceiling, could he have said to the American dead? I chose Japanese lives over yours? Truman did what he had to do. No apology is needed.

We thought of the Japanese then as we do ISIS now

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