In the article, Ending The War Against Japan: Science, Morality And The Atomic Bomb, the author provides information on the war in the Pacific which involved the United States and Japan. After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor the United States entered the second World War in 1941. United States gained control of Okinawa in 1945 which meant that the U.S had control, in the months of May through August there were major air attacks on Japan, the Manhattan Project and the two atomic bombs the United States dropped in Hiroshima and Nagasaki were part of the choice out of the many options that might have been given to President Truman and Secretary of War, Henry Stimson. They felt that dropping the atomic bomb was the best way to get the Japanese to give an unconditional surrender.…
On the morning of August 6, 1945, the first atomic bomb was dropped on the city of Hiroshima. On August 9, 1945, the second atomic bomb was dropped on the city of Nagasaki. Thousands died instantaneously while many more died from radiation exposure from the bombs. The use of the atomic weapons was unnecessary due to the fact the Japan’s military was greatly weakened and ready to surrender, thousands of innocent lives were sacrificed simply for political power, and there could have been alternatives to cease the war.…
By dropping the atomic bomb, we were able to put an end to a war that could have continued for many more years. Though there was much controversy over the bomb, Truman, our president at the time, apprised America saying he was quite thankful for it and celebrated the scientific achievements of the minds that created it. America was the first country to create something of this caliber and he wanted us to realize how great it was. The pragmatic decision helped America to establish its military power on a global scale. It is believed that Japan did not believe that we had a weapon that could cause so much destruction, so we had no choice but to show them. The Japanese people do not believe in surrendering, they see it as dishonorable and are…
From the mid 1940’s through the mid 1960’s, the United States was in its first cold war with the Soviet Union. It was considered cold because there was no outright fighting. The U.S. had been fighting to rid the world of communism, but only brought the communist USSR and USA together to fight their common enemy, Germany in World War two. The United States made a deal with the USSR that once Germany surrendered, ninety days after that they would declare war on Japan. The US had developed a nuclear bomb that would eventually lead to be the winning weapon of world war two.…
The atomic bomb dropped on Japan was the correlated decision of the president at the time, Harry Truman, and his chief advisors. While the pros and cons were weighed heavily, it was decided that the least blood shed would be wrought if we shed the most blood on the first strike. On August 6, 1945, the enola gay, a class B-29 heavy bomber, departed from Tinian, an island to the southeast of Japan, carrying a heavy payload which would effectively be the beginning of the end of Japan’s war against the United States. The payload at hand would be called “Little boy”, a Uranium comprised atomic bomb created for the simple purpose of mass destruction. The target of this weapon would be a bridge formed at a junction between two rivers in the downtown…
At the start of 1942, the Manhattan Project, which was codename for the creation of the atomic bomb, began. The project was to create a high functioning bomb which caused mass destruction. As WWII came to a close, with Japan and the United States the only remaining countries in combat, neither showed signs of surrendering. Something had to be done to end the war, so the United States dropped the atomic bomb. It was justifiable to drop the bomb because neither country showed signs of surrendering and the war would have to come to an end eventually.…
surrender and had a strong army of two million in home islands. The last rational option…
Many people today could argue their side and reasons on why they think the United States was justified in bombing Japan. But was Osama in Laden justified in orchestrating 9/11? No one in their right mind would support the killing of innocent civilians on 9/11 on the basis of the argument that Osama Bin Laden and his cohort wanted to end the war between radical Islam and the U.S. So why is it acceptable for the U.S. to have incinerated tens of thousands of civilian men, women, children and babies to end the War, when there was a military alternative? The U.S. could have continued the war against the Japanese armed forces instead of targeting Japanese civilians. If the Japanese civilians who were killed are not deemed to have been innocent because they may have supported the Imperialist Japanese Government, then neither was those who died in the World Trade Center or any Americans, because they support the U.S. Government!…
The results of the explosion lit up the desert sky and shook the Earth with the power that would have been over twenty thousand tons of dynamite. This action ignited the atomic age (The Trinity Test). On August 6, 1945, the United States successfully dropped the atomic bomb in Hiroshima, Japan, and from that point on, the United States entered a new state of uncertainty. The dropping of the atomic bomb sprung the nuclear era upon America which resulted in rapid changes in society's way of thinking. News outlets expressed the shock and regret that American society felt during this time and informed Americans sense of security was long lost. The dropping of the atomic bomb took the world by storm and even many of the Manhattan Project personnel were taken by surprise. Then, three days later, another bomb was dropped on Nagasaki and the hearts of many Americans sunk in their chests. Americans fear of a nuclear holocaust were significantly increased and manipulated by political activists in an effort to pressure society into a change in public policy and implement fear tactics. Atomic scientists and…
Pearl Harbor brought upon a war that America was hoping to avoid. Our right to have self-defense and moral duty to our country led Truman to his decision. Since 1942 America had been fighting World War II on two fronts. On May 8th, 1945 the war against Germany ended. At the time it became critical to end the war with Japan. That’s when the atomic bomb became an option for America. The morning of August 6th, 1945 the American B-29 dropped the atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. The bomb was built as a weapon of war. Since America was at war, congress was allowed to spend two billion dollars on the project. If the United States did not use the weapon, it in itself, along with the money would have been wasted. The Manhattan project, the project to develop the first nuclear weapon, was a success. Once President Truman had learned about the successfulness of the bomb he would have the capacity to end the war with Japan in his hands.…
The beginning of the 1900s marked the start of the Second World War Although the U.S did not want to become involved in this war, it eventually joined after the Japanese attacked U.S forces in Pearl Harbor. By dropping two atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and declaring war on Germany, the U.S had officially entered the war. Reasons why the U.S dropped these atomic bombs were and still are the subject of much controversy. After the first atomic bomb detonation in 1945 taking place in New Mexico, speculations arose disputing whether or not the implementing of these bombs was necessary to attain the surrender of the Japanese. The U.S claimed that the reason it dropped the bombs was to end…
On August 6, 1945 the Enola Gay dropped its bomb on the city of Hiroshima, Japan, forever changing warfare. The intent of the bomb was to stop the current war, World War Ⅱ, from escalating further. However, this resulted in another war after the bombs were dropped. This war was called the Cold War, and the war was fought between the USSR and the United States.…
After World War II, the whole world was waiting to see what would happen next, especially when it came to the new weapon being developed, The Atomic Bomb. This uncertain time was called The Cold War. This war was very different than the common picture of a war, close range battle, with trench warfare and heavy fire. The Cold War was fought over great distances, and according to the New Oxford American Dictionary, the Cold War was “A state of political hostility between countries characterized by threats, propaganda, and other measures short of open warfare” (Cold War). Following suit of other large nations, America overly publicized their atomic bomb, inflated the numbers of actual working bombs, and threatened to use the bomb again, in an effort to bluff Japan into surrender.…
The United States government had been warned that Nazi Germany had embarked on a program to create an atomic weapon. Germany had surrendered months prior to the intelligence reports, however the war against Japan was still intense. After creating and testing the atomic bomb, it was the responsibility of the President of the United States to make the decision to either use or not use the destructive power that is the atomic bomb. Using the atomic bomb was the correct decision, given an assessment of the facts and tests leading up to that determination and in light of the history leading up to that decision. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt had received had written letters from Albert Einstein to warn the United States of Nazi Germany.…
The United States suddenly attacked on December 7, 1941, the event known as “Pearl Harbor” by Japanese air pilots. However, this is not the boiling point and utmost decisive conflict by either side. This initiated conflict between these two countries became a gradually increasing statistic of death, and these Japanese soldiers would rather suicide than face dishonored by unnatural demise, U.S. forces had difficulty in terrain taking an expense on casualty figures. Although, President Roosevelt at the time, began a secret plan called the “Manhattan project,” which would become the most pivotal dangerous weapon on earth and become the saving grace of the war? What were the leading factors in the United States dropping the atomic bomb on Nagasaki and Hiroshima, Japan? The U.S. made its decision, these causing factors; to end the war quickly as possible, they lived by the Bushido code, the "Pacific Theater of Operations" was grueling and an insurmountable mountain to climb in duration and endurance, wanted to punish Japan for Pearl Harbor, and send a political message to Russia as an imitation tactic.…