09/08/2025 lewrockwell.com  2min 🇬🇧 #286764

 Hiroshima, 80 ans après la bombe, appelle le monde à abandonner l'arme nucléaire

Why « We » Really Dropped the First A Bombs. Two in Three Days.

By  L. Reichard White

August 9, 2025

"At 8:16 on the morning of August 6, 1945, the world got a glimpse of its own mortality. At that moment, the city of Hiroshima was obliterated by a fireball that sent waves of searing heat, then a deafening concussion, across the landscape. Three days later, a second bomb hit Nagasaki.... [President Dwight D.] Eisenhower said in 1963"'It wasn't necessary to hit them with that awful thing.'

"... Besides the Manhattan Project's internal momentum was an external motive. Its leaders had to justify the $2 billion ($26 billion in today's dollars) expense to Congress and the public... Byrnes...warned Roosevelt that political scandal would follow if it [the atomic bomb] was not used.... 'How would you get Congress to appropriate money for atomic energy research [after the war] if you do not show results for the money which has been spent already?'"...the U.S. had produced two types of bombs-one using uranium, the other plutonium. Whenever anyone suggested that the moment the bomb was dropped the war would be over, [bureaucrat] Groves countered, 'Not until we drop two bombs on Japan.' As [historian] Goldberg explains... 'One bomb justified Oak Ridge, the second justified Hanford.' Hiroshima was hit with the uranium bomb, nicknamed 'Little Boy'; the plutonium bomb, 'Fat Man,' was used against Nagasaki. -Why We Dropped The Bomb By William Lanouette, CIVILIZATION, The Magazine of the Library of Congress, January/February 1995

Because of MAGIC intercepts of Japanese diplomatic cables, US decision makers were aware that the Japanese authorities were seeking an end to the war well before Truman authorized use of the nukes. Also  HERE.

As Vietnam era Sec. of Defense Robert S. McNamara, who was part of the command under Curtis LeMay - which firebombed 66 Japanese cities before dropping the nukes - confesses,  "He (General LeMay), and I'd say I, were behaving as war criminals."

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