The quote above is from a leaflet
that was dropped on several Japanese cities, warning the people within to
evacuate. No such warning fell on the
people of Hiroshima: that was the site of the first of the two uses of the
atomic bomb. Historians have debated the
necessity, as have students in a classroom studying world history. Whether or not the dropping of the atomic
bomb on Hiroshima was necessary, on August 6, 1945, by the word of President
Harry Truman, the city of Hiroshima felt the wrath of science.
Hiroshima is synonymous with the
mentality of Harry Truman; he was a simple man who saw the world in black and
white. Truman was told by his advisors
(Leslie Groves among them) that the dropping of the bomb would end World War II
with as little American casualties as possible.
Little or no talk of ethics took place, as Truman believed that the
simple answer to the conflict was in the grasp of the United States. Hiroshima was the result of this “quick fix”
for the war.
For the eighty thousand plus who
died instantly as the extreme blast from “Little Boy” spread quickly overhead
and through the streets, it was over before they knew it. This seems a merciful fate when coupled with
the deaths and mutations that countless victims suffered from radiation
poisoning years after the bomb fell.
So what is Hiroshima? A blunder of men, perhaps. A killer blow to fell the enemy instead of
peace talks. The opening of a new
era. Whatever one considers it, in
finality, one must also see the whole of the bombing, what it was and what it
means today.
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