Dropping the Bomb
Why did the U.S. unleash its terrible
weapon?
Monday, August 21, 1995
By John F. McManus
Prevailing wisdom concerning the August 1945 atomic bombings of the
Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki holds that those twin horrors were undertaken to
force Japan to sue for peace. Had the bombs not been employed (so the "wisdom"
goes), an enormous number of American troops would have perished in an inevitable
amphibious operation against the Japanese mainland.
During much of 1995, controversy engulfed plans by Washington, DC's
Smithsonian Institution to exhibit the Enola Gay, the B-29 bomber that delivered
the A-bomb over Hiroshima. Incredibly, the exhibit's original commentary intended to
empathize with Japan and portray the United States as perpetrators of a "war of
vengeance." The planned text even declared of the Pacific conflict, "For most of
the Japanese, it was a war to defend their unique culture against Western
imperialism."
Veterans groups, angry citizens, and some members of Congress
eventually forced the Smithsonian to rewrite the text for the exhibit. What finally
emerged, not surprisingly, is now being targeted by an assortment of pacifists and
anti-nuclear partisans. A wall panel now informs viewers:
[The atomic bombs] destroyed much of the two cities and caused many
tens of thousands of deaths. However, the use of the bombs led to the immediate surrender
of Japan and made unnecessary the planned invasion of the Japanese home islands. Such an
invasion, especially if undertaken for both main islands, would have led to heavy
casualties among American, Allied, and Japanese armed forces and Japanese civilians.
This current display, therefore, repeats the notion that the
dropping of the bombs by the U.S. brought Japan to the peace table and saved countless
lives on both sides. But this historical view, like the original commentary intended for
the exhibit, is not supported by the facts.
Immediately after the war had ended, President Harry Truman
publicized the view of wartime Army Chief of Staff General George C. Marshall that an
invasion of the Japanese mainland would have required "a million men for the landing
and a million more to hold it, and ... half a million casualties."
Much of the historical perspective on the era holds that the
Japanese were prepared to fight to their very last man, and that until the horror of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki had been visited upon their homeland Japanese leaders had no
intention of surrendering. But in fact the Japanese had sent peace feelers to the West as
early as 1942, only six months after the December 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. More would
come in a flood long before the fateful use of the atomic bombs.
In her 1956 book, The Enemy at His Back, journalist
Elizabeth Churchill Brown supplied overwhelming evidence to counter the inaccurate views
about the close of the war. Beginning in 1949, she plunged into dozens of wartime memoirs
and congressional hearings dealing with the conflict. The wife of noted Washington
Star columnist Constantine Brown, Mrs. Brown had access to many of "the men
who were no longer 'under wraps,'" as she noted. She wrote, "With this knowledge
at hand, I quickly began to see why the war with Japan was unprecedented in all history.
Here was an enemy who had been trying to surrender for almost a year before the conflict
ended."
In her book, Brown supplied abundant evidence about the immense
perfidy that kept the Japanese from surrendering until such time as the Soviets were ready
to enter the war against Japan and the American forces had dropped the atomic bombs on
civilian populations.
Divided Opinion
Even before Japan started the war, its leadership was divided into
two sharply opposing factions. Those who never wanted any hostilities between Japan and
the United States were known as "the peace party." They counted among their
number Emperor Hirohito and several high officers in the navy.
The other faction, the militarists led by Army leader Tojo, was
known as "the war party." It was this group's belief that Japan should rule the
Pacific and most of the lands touching it. These individuals were responsible for
launching the vicious attack on our naval base at Pearl Harbor, Japan's only victory of
any consequence during the entire war.
The next major event in the war, the famous naval battle occurring
near Midway Island in June 1942, saw the Japanese navy dealt a huge defeat. While there
were to be many other naval engagements in which the Japanese navy was also routed, Midway
was actually a dramatic turning point in the war, a realization shared by many in Japan's
leadership.
After Midway and prior to the U.S. assault on Guadalcanal in August
1942, as reported in his 1950 book Journey to the Missouri, Toshikasu
Kase, an official of the Japanese Foreign Office, delivered a highly confidential message
to the interned British ambassador, Sir Robert Craigi. It contained a "discreet hint
regarding the eventual restoration of peace." Emanating from Japanese Foreign
Minister Togo, this message stated, "Should it happen that the British Government
became desirous of discussing or negotiating peace they would find the Japanese Government
ready to be helpful."
Kase wrote that "even as early as the summer of 1942, we few in
the foreign office were endeavoring to lay the foundations for future
negotiations...."
In his 1952 book Fleet Admiral King, Admiral Ernest J.
King reported President Roosevelt's 1942 understanding that "by the application of
sea power, Japan could be forced to surrender without an invasion of her home
islands." This attitude, shared by most of our military leaders, would quickly be
abandoned by the President. Instead, the costly island-by-island advance of U.S. forces
northward through the Pacific continued. Major land battles between U.S. and Japanese
forces, marked by fierce fighting and many casualties, included:
Solomon Islands, June 1943.
New Guinea, September 1943.
Bouganville and Tarawa, November 1943.
Marshall Islands, January 1944.
Saipan in the Marianas, June 1944.
Leyte in the Philippines, October 1944.
Iwo Jima, February 1945.
Okinawa, April 1945.
The June 1944 American assault on the island of Saipan convinced
even some of Japan's hard-liners that their cause was lost. In his book, Toshikasu Kase
wrote that on June 26, 1944, Baron Kido, a close adviser to the Emperor, "sent for
Foreign Minister Shigemitsu and asked him if he would work out some plan looking toward an
eventual diplomatic settlement of the war." The only unwavering stipulation sought by
anyone in the Japanese "peace party" was the retention of the Emperor and the
continuance of the monarchy.
But America's leaders began trumpeting the need for
"unconditional surrender" without ever spelling out exactly what that would
mean. Many Japanese feared that the Americans intended to force the termination of their
culture, even the denigration of their deeply revered Emperor. They had good reason for
such concerns. By July 3, 1945, the Washington Post alluded to such a
concern: "Senator White of Maine, minority leader, declared ... that the Pacific war
might end quickly if President Truman would state specifically just what unconditional
surrender means for the Japanese."
Attacking the Monarch
In his 1954 book The Untold Story of Douglas MacArthur,
Frazier Hunt reported that Owen Lattimore, the deputy director in charge of Pacific
Affairs of the Office of War Information, "called on President Truman and
remonstrated against the government taking any position which would enable the monarchy to
remain in Japan." According to Hunt, Lattimore had violated policy by using his
office to attack the Emperor, even recommending that the Japanese monarch be exiled to
China. Attacking Japan's monarchy could only lead to prolonging the war and opening the
door to Soviet presence in Asia. As would subsequently be revealed, Lattimore had reason
to act as he did: The Senate Internal Security Subcommittee would conclude a few years
later that Lattimore "was from some time in the middle 1930s a conscious, articulate
instrument of the Soviet conspiracy."
In his 1966 book No Wonder We Are Losing, wartime U.S.
official Robert Morris stated that the undefined demand for unconditional surrender was
"frightening" to the Japanese. Working for Naval Intelligence as an expert in
its Psychological Warfare Department, Morris reported that careful interrogation of
Japanese prisoners confirmed that "the Japanese would yield most readily if they were
assured that they could keep Emperor Hirohito." Morris also stated that
"intelligent prisoners ... consistently reported that Japan would prefer to surrender
before the Soviet Union entered the war [because they] feared the Bolshevization of the
home islands."
Once Saipan was in American hands, President Roosevelt journeyed to
Hawaii to meet with our nation's top Pacific commanders, General Douglas MacArthur and
Admiral Chester Nimitz. Both emphasized that Japan could now be forced to surrender
without an invasion of her homeland. In his 1950 book I Was There, Admiral
William D. Leahy, President Roosevelt's aide who was present at the meeting, confirmed
that there was never any consideration given during the meeting to an invasion of the
Japanese mainland.
In the fall of 1944, Emperor Hirohito attempted to make peace with
China, but his efforts failed because Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek felt compelled to
follow the lead of his wartime allies, Great Britain and the United States, neither of
which was planning for an early Japanese surrender. The Emperor then made contact with a
group of Siamese and had them send peace proposals to Washington. By now, the Japanese
were aware of the alarming possibility that the USSR might be invited into the war.
More peace overtures were being sent by Japan through various
channels. In No Wonder We Are Losing, Robert Morris stated that "the
Japanese had explored the possibility of a negotiated peace through the Vatican as early
as November 1944." Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn noted in his 1990 book Leftism
Revisited that the Japanese had tried to arrange peace "in April 1945 through
the Vatican."
"The Army"
In the U.S., the diplomatic element favoring a continuation of
all-out war with Japan was led by Harry Hopkins, President Roosevelt's closest adviser,
whose fanatical esteem for Soviet Russia was legendary. Among the very few military
officials who favored continued fighting, the leader was Army Chief of Staff George
Marshall who, right up to the actual use of the atomic bombs, would listen to no talk of a
Japanese surrender and insisted on the need for a full-scale invasion of Japan proper. Of
President Roosevelt's military advisers, it was to Marshall alone he looked for military
perspective about the Pacific war. The other members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff might
have their say during meetings, but Marshall's view always prevailed. After President
Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945, Marshall's influence continued with the arrival of
President Truman. Of Marshall's role, Elizabeth Churchill Brown wrote:
I found that all final and absolute decisions of the war were taken
by the President and "the Army." Who "the Army" was, I discovered by a
process of elimination and a close study of the war. The Joint Chiefs of Staff consisted
of Admiral Ernest J. King, Chief of Naval Operations; General H.H. Arnold, Chief of the
Army Air Force; General George C. Marshall, Army Chief of Staff; and Admiral William D.
Leahy, President Roosevelt's and later President Truman's Chief of Staff who presided over
the meetings. Although the recommendations of the Joint Chiefs were always unanimous, more
often than not the two admirals disagreed with General Marshall in private. And General
Arnold, according to his memoirs, also quite often did not go along with General
Marshall's views. Secretary of War Henry Stimson was so seldom consulted that he, too,
must be eliminated. Finally I discovered a passage in General Arnold's book, "Global
Mission," which summed up the picture. He wrote -- "Usually, he [Marshall] was
spokesman at our conferences." Arnold referred to Admiral Leahy as the Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs, but to Marshall as the spokesman. I therefore came to the inescapable
conclusion that, when I read that "the Army" or "the Joint Chiefs" had
decided upon such-and-such a strategy, the decision was invariably that of General
Marshall.*
* On June 14, 1951,
Senator Joseph McCarthy delivered to the Senate a review of the career of George Marshall.
His speech, the product of journalist Forest Davis' research, detailed Marshall's
incompetence as a military official, his rise to prominence within the military through
political connections, and his diplomatic disloyalty to the United States and its true
allies. The speech was later published in book form as America's Retreat From
Victory.
The first atomic bomb was exploded over Hiroshima on August 5, 1945;
the second was detonated over Nagasaki four days later. On August 8th, the Soviet Union
declared war on an already beaten Japan. But other Japanese attempts to surrender had been
coming fast and furious prior to these historically important developments.
One of the most compelling was transmitted by General MacArthur to
President Roosevelt in January 1945, prior to the Yalta conference. MacArthur's
communiqué stated that the Japanese were willing to surrender under terms which included:
Full surrender of Japanese forces on sea, in the air, at
home, on island possessions, and in occupied countries.
Surrender of all arms and munitions. · Occupation of the
Japanese homeland and island possessions by allied troops under American direction.
Japanese relinquishment of Manchuria, Korea, and Formosa, as
well as all territory seized during the war.
Regulation of Japanese industry to halt present and future
production of implements of war.
Turning over of Japanese which the United States might
designate war criminals.
Release of all prisoners of war and internees in Japan and in
areas under Japanese control.
Amazingly, these were identical to the terms which were accepted by
our government for the surrender of Japan seven months later. Had they been accepted when
first offered, there would have been no heavy loss of life on Iwo Jima (over 26,033
Americans killed or wounded, approximately 21,000 Japanese killed) and Okinawa (over
39,000 U.S. dead and wounded, 109,000 Japanese dead), no fire bombing of Japanese cities
by B-29 bombers (it is estimated that the dropping of 1,700 tons of incendiary explosives
on Japanese cities during March 9th-10th alone killed over 80,000 civilians and destroyed
260,000 buildings), and no use of the atomic bomb.
Countless thousands of Japanese civilians perished as a result of
the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. And the world was suddenly and
violently brought into the atomic age.
Belated Revelations
The U.S. government has never published MacArthur's communiqué
detailing Japan's willingness to end the war, even though its existence first came to
light in an article by Chicago Tribune journalist Walter Trohan and
published on August 19, 1945 in both the Tribune and the Washington
Times Herald. A military intelligence officer with access to classified
information had given Trohan a copy of this peace proposal with the stipulation that he
keep it confidential until the war ended. Trohan honored his end of the agreement, and
then wrote his article immediately after Japan's August 14th surrender had been announced.
Trohan's sensational revelations occasioned no response from the
White House and State Department. Nor did it attract the kind of attention from the mass
media it surely deserved. Historian Harry Elmer Barnes, writing in the May 10, 1958 issue
of National Review, supplied additional credence to the Trohan report:
After General MacArthur returned from Korea in 1951, his neighbor in
the Waldorf Towers, former President Herbert Hoover, took the Trohan article to General
MacArthur and the latter confirmed its accuracy in every detail and without qualification.
But the January 1945 attempt to end the war wasn't Japan's only
move. Robert Morris wrote in No Wonder We Are Losing:
... the Japanese made other overtures through the Soviet Union which
were not transmitted to us. But on June 1, Tokyo wired its Ambassador in Moscow that the
Emperor wished to make peace and told him to request Soviet mediation. This information
was decoded by the United States -- two months before the atomic bomb dropped and the
Soviet Union entered the war against Japan.
In his 1963 book How the Far East Was Lost, Professor
Anthony Kubek told of a July 6, 1945 message sent to the State Department by American
diplomats in Sweden which claimed "that Prince Carl Bernodotte, nephew of King
Gustov, had been told by the Japanese military attaché in Sweden that Japan had lost the
war and wanted to enter surrender negotiations through the King of Sweden."
Kubek further reported on July 12th, "Prince Konoye was
received by the Emperor and ordered to Moscow as a peace plenipotentiary to 'secure peace
at any price.'" Despite the strong efforts of the Japanese ambassador in Moscow to
arrange for Prince Konoye's visit, however, the Russian government rejected the proposal.
In his 1966 work The Death of James Forrestal, Cornell
Simpson wrote that Forrestal, the Secretary of the Navy at the time, "had originated
a plan to end the war with Japan five and a half months before V-J Day [August 14, 1945]
finally dawned." Simpson pointed out that, had this plan been implemented, the atomic
bombs would never have been used and "the Russians would not have had a chance to
muscle into the Pacific war for the last six of its 1,347 days." Simpson added:
The last point, of course, is why the fellow travellers hurriedly
persuaded FDR to reject Forrestal's plan, and why they saw to it that the American people
heard nothing about this chance to save untold numbers of American lives .... In May,
another move to end the Pacific war was similarly scuttled. The very same month that
Germany surrendered, Truman approved a peace ultimatum to Japan, subject to endorsement by
the military. But on May 29, General Marshall rejected it as "premature."
General MacArthur's January 1945 communiqué containing Japan's
detailed peace proposal reached President Roosevelt two days before he departed for his
meeting with Churchill and Stalin at Yalta. With his mind already made up about the need
to continue the war, he completely discounted the entire proposal and flippantly remarked
to an aide, "MacArthur is our greatest general and poorest politician."
At the conference in Yalta, with secret Communist agent Alger Hiss
at his side, Franklin Roosevelt agreed to everything Josef Stalin wanted -- and more.
Plans previously discussed at a November 1943 Big Three conference held in Teheran were
finalized at Yalta.
The Soviets were to be welcomed into the Pacific war after Germany
surrendered. They were to be given rights to the port of Dairen, Port Arthur's naval base,
several Japanese island possessions, and both Outer Mongolia and Manchuria, where huge
stores of Japanese arms were stockpiled. These munitions were later transferred to Mao
Tse-tung's Communist forces, enabling them to carry on the war with the Nationalist
Chinese forces and eventually seize control of mainland China.
Decisions reached at Yalta also gave the Soviet Union a green light
to take huge chunks of Poland, as well as Prague and Berlin.
Bomb at the Ready
Just prior to departing for Yalta, President Roosevelt also received
confirmation via Secretary of War Henry Stimson that the scientists working on the
development of the atomic bomb expected it to be ready for use in August. Possessed of
this intelligence, he nevertheless went to Yalta with the intention of prolonging the war,
welcoming the Soviet Union into it, and ignoring Japan's detailed peace offerings.
President Roosevelt died on April 12th and was succeeded at once by
Harry Truman. After Germany surrendered on May 8th, President Truman began making plans
for the next Big Three conference to be held in the German city of Potsdam in mid-July.
This gathering would legitimize all that had been decided at Yalta.
On May 28th, Stalin informed Harry Hopkins that Russia would move
against Japan on August 8th. On May 29th, as noted previously, President Truman's plan to
send Japan a surrender demand was scuttled by General Marshall as "premature."
Truman would then defer any further discussion of Japan's surrender until after the
Potsdam meeting. In Moscow, Stalin brusquely told Japanese emissaries in Moscow that he
saw no reason to discuss an end to the war until after Potsdam.
On July 16th, President Truman received word that a successful test
of the atomic bomb had been completed in New Mexico. The Potsdam conference, delayed a day
because of Stalin's alleged heart attack, began on July 17th. On July 24th, the President
informed a not-surprised Stalin about the bomb.*
* Stalin wasn't
surprised because, as was later shown, there were active Soviet spies working in the group
developing and producing the atomic bomb.
On July 25th, U.S. military officials were ordered to drop the bomb "after August
3rd." The Potsdam conference closed on August 2nd.
As has already been noted, the first atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima
on August 5th; the USSR entered the war on August 8th; and the second bomb devastated
Nagasaki on August 9th. Japan was finally permitted to surrender on August 14th.
No good evidence exists to demonstrate that the atomic bomb was
needed to hasten the end of the war with Japan. While many Americans have been persuaded
that a full-scale invasion of Japan and its accompanying huge number of casualties were
avoided, no invasion was ever needed. Japan was beaten and was trying to surrender.
Another argument to justify the use of the atomic bomb holds that
the demonstration of some awesome and terrible power would aid the United States in future
diplomatic confrontations with Soviet Russia. Norman Cousins and Thomas K. Finletter
offered this rationalization in an article appearing in the June 15, 1946 Saturday
Review of Literature. Secretary of War Stimson proposed this same rationale in his
1948 memoir, On Active Service in Peace and War.
Of course, if the frightening power of the atomic bomb were to be
employed as a diplomatic weapon, such an advantage could have been gained by a
demonstration that did not consume hundreds of thousands of defenseless human beings. If
its effect was directed more at Russia than at Japan, the victims at Hiroshima and
Nagasaki died for a mere diplomatic edge. The incredible lack of morality in such a
decision is self-evident.
Authoritative Opposition
Other more rational and moral voices spoke out in opposition to what
had been done to the Japanese people. One of the first was Secretary of the Navy James
Forrestal, who had tried to end the war months before the bomb. In his diary entry for
August 10, 1945, he wrote:
The Secretary of War made the suggestion that we should now cease
sending our bombers over Japan; he cited the growing feeling of apprehension and misgiving
as to the effect of the atomic bomb even in our own country. I supported that view and
said that we must remember that this nation would have to bear the focus of the hatred of
the Japanese.
In 1946, the United States Strategic Bombing Survey, headed by Rear
Admiral R.A. Ofstie, issued a report entitled The Campaigns of the Pacific War.
Among its many revealing passages can be found:
In June [1944] the loss of the Marianas had struck terror into the
hearts of responsible Japanese authorities and had convinced many that the war was lost.
By January 1945 Japan was in fact a defeated nation.
[P]rior to 31 December 1945, and in all probability prior to
1 November 1945, Japan would have surrendered even if the atomic bombs had not been
dropped, even if Russia had not entered the war, and even if no invasion had been planned
or contemplated.
In his 1950 work I Was There, Admiral William Leahy
discussed his reaction to the use of the bomb:
It is my opinion that the use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima
and Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan. The Japanese were
already beaten and ready to surrender ....
It was my reaction that the scientists and others wanted to
make the test because of the vast sums that had been spent on the project .... My own
feeling was that in being the first to use it, we had adopted an ethical standard common
to the barbarians of the Dark Ages.
In his 1967 book Utopia: The Perennial Heresy,
Professor Thomas Molnar put his finger on a major reason why the bomb was used:
In our times the portentous event is the atomic bomb which creates
general insecurity and is credited with effecting a total change in mankind's destiny
since it can no longer be called a "single event" but a permanent state with
which we shall have to live from now on. Accordingly, voices are already heard that,
living as we do "in the shadow of the bomb," our traditional moral assumptions
will have to be reconsidered. Religious leaders declare that the existence of "the
bomb" has so activated our awareness of science that, as Paul Tillich says, "we
must forget everything traditional we have learned about God, perhaps even that word
itself." Political leaders, fearful of the final cataclysm of nuclear annihilation,
say that men must huddle together under a world government .... (Emphasis added.)
Looking to the UN
Almost immediately after the first atomic bombs had been used, U.S.
Communist Party chieftain William Z. Foster suggested the need for United Nations control
of atomic energy. In an article appearing in the party newspaper Daily Worker
on August 13, 1945, he wrote: "If... the new atomic power which is a product of
international science is to be directed to constructive uses, the general military control
of it will have to be vested in the Security Council of the United Nations." Foster,
of course, knew that the Soviet Union would control the military use of atomic power
through the privilege it had been granted to appoint the UN's Undersecretary for Political
and Security Council Affairs. That post has always had jurisdiction over all military,
disarmament, and atomic energy matters for the world body.
In September 1949, Mr. Truman announced that the Soviets had
exploded their own atomic bomb, and that America's monopoly on this awesome weaponry had
ended.
Only a few days after the U.S. had dropped the A-bombs on Japan,
President Truman sought to justify their use in a letter he sent to the Federal Council of
Churches: "I was greatly disturbed over the unwarranted attack by the Japanese on
Pearl Harbor and their murder of our prisoners of war. The only language they seem to
understand is the one we have been using to bombard them. When you have to deal with a
beast you have to treat him as a beast."
Years later, Mr. Truman would again attempt to defend his decision
to use the bomb against Japan. As Harry Elmer Barnes reported in National Review,
May 10, 1958, the former President stated: "The need for such a fateful decision, of
course, would never have arisen had we not been shot in the back by Japan at Pearl Harbor
in December 1941." According to Barnes, the Hiroshima City Council responded to
Truman as follows:
Had your decision been based on the Imperial Navy's surprise attack
on your country's combatants and military facilities, why could you not choose a military
base for the target? You committed the outrage of massacring 200,000 non-combatants as
revenge, and you are still trying to justify it.
Hundreds of thousands of Japanese civilians did perish in the raids
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But their deaths had nothing to do with either forcing Japan to
the peace table or gaining a diplomatic edge over the Soviet Union. Their deaths did,
however, usher the world dramatically into the age of atomic weaponry -- where the threat
of nuclear terror has been effectively used to propel mankind -- especially the United
States -- to the brink of world government.
The very existence of atomic weapons, and especially their use
against Japan, has been cited ever since 1945 by enemies of national sovereignty and
promoters of the United Nations as a prime reason why nations can no longer be independent
and peoples can no longer expect God-given freedom.
Current commentaries about the events surrounding the use of the
atomic bomb are appearing virtually everywhere. The summer 1995 issue of Foreign
Policy offered "Hiroshima: Historians Reassess." And the
January/February issue of the Council on Foreign Relation's journal Foreign Affairs
contained "The Atomic Bombings Reconsidered."
Both articles disregard fundamentally important matters such as the
MacArthur communiqué of January 1945, Japan's many attempts to surrender, and the
pro-Soviet treachery accomplished at Yalta and Potsdam. The articles promote the notion
that only through the reflections of modern scholars may we come to understand that there
were alternatives to the bomb. In reality, those alternatives have been a matter of
conspiratorial history for five decades.
From at least January 1945, the many thousands of dead and wounded
on both sides of the Pacific war must be counted as victims of the treacherous
determination to extend the conflict in order to benefit the Soviet Union and use the
bomb. Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, and all who supported this perfidy must be held
historically accountable.
No one can blame the horrible killing and maiming at Iwo Jima,
Okinawa, Hiroshima, and Nagasaki on our nation's military forces whose leaders, with the
prominent exception of George Marshall, tried to stop the war prior to each of these
events.
Without doubt, war is hell. But World War II in the Pacific was hell
for at least six months more than was needed. And when it was finally over, the real
winners were the conspirators who had done their very best for Josef Stalin, Mao Tse-tung,
and world government.
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted material herein is distributed without profit or
payment to those who have expressed prior interest in receiving this
information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. For further information please refer to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
|