Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki | |||||||
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Part of the Pacific War of World War II | |||||||
Atomic bomb mushroom clouds over Hiroshima (left) and Nagasaki (right) | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
United States Manhattan Project: United Kingdom Canada | Japan | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
William S. Parsons Paul W. Tibbets, Jr. Robert A. Lewis Charles Sweeney Frederick Ashworth | Shunroku Hata | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
Manhattan District: 50 U.S., 2 British 509th Composite Group: 1,770 U.S. |
Second General Army: Hiroshima: 40,000 (5 Anti-aircraft batteries) Nagasaki: 9,000 (4 Anti-aircraft batteries) | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
1 British, 7 Dutch, and 12 American prisoners of war killed |
Hiroshima:
Nagasaki:
Total killed:
|
The United States detonated two nuclear weapons over the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6 and 9, 1945, respectively, with the consent of the United Kingdom, as required by the Quebec Agreement.
The two bombings killed between 129,000 and 226,000 people, most of
whom were civilians, and remain the only use of nuclear weapons in armed
conflict.
In the final year of the war, the Allies prepared for a very costly invasion of the Japanese mainland. This undertaking was preceded by a conventional and firebombing campaign which devastated 67 Japanese cities. The war in Europe had concluded when Germany signed its instrument of surrender on May 8, 1945, and the Allies turned their full attention to the Pacific theater. The Allies called for the unconditional surrender of the Imperial Japanese armed forces in the Potsdam Declaration on July 26, 1945, the alternative being "prompt and utter destruction". Japan ignored the ultimatum and the war continued.
By August 1945, the Allies' Manhattan Project had produced two types of atomic bombs, and the 509th Composite Group of the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) was equipped with the specialized Silverplate version of the Boeing B-29 Superfortress that could deliver them from Tinian in the Mariana Islands.
The Allies issued orders for atomic bombs to be used on four Japanese
cities on July 25. On August 6, one of the modified B-29s dropped a
uranium gun-type bomb ("Little Boy") on Hiroshima. Another B-29 dropped a plutonium implosion bomb ("Fat Man")
on Nagasaki three days later. The bombs immediately devastated their
targets. Over the next two to four months, the acute effects of the
atomic bombings killed between 90,000 and 146,000 people in Hiroshima
and 39,000 and 80,000 people in Nagasaki; roughly half of the deaths in
each city occurred on the first day. Large numbers of people continued
to die for months afterward from the effects of burns, radiation sickness,
and other injuries, compounded by illness and malnutrition. In both
cities, most of the dead were civilians, although Hiroshima had a
sizable military garrison.
Japan surrendered to the Allies on August 15, six days after the Soviet Union's declaration of war and the bombing of Nagasaki. The Japanese government signed the instrument of surrender on September 2 in Tokyo Bay, which effectively ended World War II.
Scholars have extensively studied the effects of the bombings on the
social and political character of subsequent world history and popular culture, and there is still much debate concerning the ethical and legal justification for the bombings.
Background
Pacific War
In 1945, the Pacific War between the Empire of Japan and the Allies
entered its fourth year. Most Japanese military units fought fiercely,
ensuring that the Allied victory would come at an enormous cost. The
1.25 million battle casualties incurred in total by the United States in
World War II included both military personnel killed in action and wounded in action.
Nearly one million of the casualties occurred during the last year of
the war, from June 1944 to June 1945. In December 1944, American battle
casualties hit an all-time monthly high of 88,000 as a result of the
German Ardennes Offensive.
America's reserves of manpower were running out. Deferments for groups
such as agricultural workers were tightened, and there was consideration
of drafting women. At the same time, the public was becoming war-weary,
and demanding that long-serving servicemen be sent home.
In the Pacific, the Allies returned to the Philippines, recaptured Burma, and invaded Borneo. Offensives were undertaken to reduce the Japanese forces remaining in Bougainville, New Guinea and the Philippines. In April 1945, American forces landed on Okinawa,
where heavy fighting continued until June. Along the way, the ratio of
Japanese to American casualties dropped from 5:1 in the Philippines to
2:1 on Okinawa. Although some Japanese soldiers were taken prisoner, most fought until they were killed or committed suicide. Nearly 99% of the 21,000 defenders of Iwo Jima were killed. Of the 117,000 Okinawan and Japanese troops defending Okinawa in April–June 1945, 94% were killed; 7,401 Japanese soldiers surrendered, an unprecedentedly large number.
As the Allies advanced towards Japan, conditions became steadily
worse for the Japanese people. Japan's merchant fleet declined from
5,250,000 gross tons
in 1941 to 1,560,000 tons in March 1945, and 557,000 tons in August
1945. Lack of raw materials forced the Japanese war economy into a steep
decline after the middle of 1944. The civilian economy, which had
slowly deteriorated throughout the war, reached disastrous levels by the
middle of 1945. The loss of shipping also affected the fishing fleet,
and the 1945 catch was only 22% of that in 1941. The 1945 rice harvest
was the worst since 1909, and hunger and malnutrition became widespread.
U.S. industrial production was overwhelmingly superior to Japan's. By
1943, the U.S. produced almost 100,000 aircraft a year, compared to
Japan's production of 70,000 for the entire war. By the middle of 1944,
the U.S. had almost a hundred aircraft carriers in the Pacific, far more
than Japan's twenty-five for the entire war. In February 1945, Prince Fumimaro Konoe advised Emperor Hirohito that defeat was inevitable, and urged him to abdicate.
Preparations to invade Japan
Even before the surrender of Nazi Germany on May 8, 1945, plans were underway for the largest operation of the Pacific War, Operation Downfall, the Allied invasion of Japan. The operation had two parts: Operation Olympic and Operation Coronet. Set to begin in October 1945, Olympic involved a series of landings by the U.S. Sixth Army intended to capture the southern third of the southernmost main Japanese island, Kyūshū. Operation Olympic was to be followed in March 1946 by Operation Coronet, the capture of the Kantō Plain, near Tokyo on the main Japanese island of Honshū by the U.S. First, Eighth and Tenth Armies, as well as a Commonwealth Corps
made up of Australian, British and Canadian divisions. The target date
was chosen to allow for Olympic to complete its objectives, for troops
to be redeployed from Europe, and the Japanese winter to pass.
Japan's geography
made this invasion plan obvious to the Japanese; they were able to
predict the Allied invasion plans accurately and thus adjust their
defensive plan, Operation Ketsugō,
accordingly. The Japanese planned an all-out defense of Kyūshū, with
little left in reserve for any subsequent defense operations. Four veteran divisions were withdrawn from the Kwantung Army in Manchuria in March 1945 to strengthen the forces in Japan,
and 45 new divisions were activated between February and May 1945. Most
were immobile formations for coastal defense, but 16 were high quality
mobile divisions. In all, there were 2.3 million Japanese Army troops prepared to defend the home islands, backed by a civilian militia of 28 million men and women. Casualty predictions varied widely, but were extremely high. The Vice Chief of the Imperial Japanese Navy General Staff, Vice Admiral Takijirō Ōnishi, predicted up to 20 million Japanese deaths.
On June 15, 1945, a study by the Joint War Plans Committee, who provided planning information to the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
estimated that Olympic would result in 130,000 to 220,000 U.S.
casualties, with U.S. dead in the range from 25,000 to 46,000. Delivered
on June 15, 1945, after insight gained from the Battle of Okinawa, the
study noted Japan's inadequate defenses due to the very effective sea
blockade and the American firebombing campaign. The Chief of Staff of the United States Army, General of the Army George Marshall, and the Army Commander in Chief in the Pacific, General of the Army Douglas MacArthur, signed documents agreeing with the Joint War Plans Committee estimate.
The Americans were alarmed by the Japanese buildup, which was accurately tracked through Ultra intelligence. Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson was sufficiently concerned about high American estimates of probable casualties to commission his own study by Quincy Wright and William Shockley. Wright and Shockley spoke with Colonels James McCormack and Dean Rusk, and examined casualty forecasts by Michael E. DeBakey
and Gilbert Beebe. Wright and Shockley estimated the invading Allies
would suffer between 1.7 and 4 million casualties in such a scenario, of
whom between 400,000 and 800,000 would be dead, while Japanese
fatalities would have been around 5 to 10 million.
Marshall began contemplating the use of a weapon that was
"readily available and which assuredly can decrease the cost in American
lives": poison gas. Quantities of phosgene, mustard gas, tear gas and cyanogen chloride were moved to Luzon from stockpiles in Australia and New Guinea in preparation for Operation Olympic, and MacArthur ensured that Chemical Warfare Service units were trained in their use. Consideration was also given to using biological weapons against Japan.
Air raids on Japan
While the United States had developed plans for an air campaign
against Japan prior to the Pacific War, the capture of Allied bases in
the western Pacific in the first weeks of the conflict meant that this
offensive did not begin until mid-1944 when the long-ranged Boeing B-29 Superfortress became ready for use in combat. Operation Matterhorn involved India-based B-29s staging through bases around Chengdu in China to make a series of raids on strategic targets in Japan.
This effort failed to achieve the strategic objectives that its
planners had intended, largely because of logistical problems, the
bomber's mechanical difficulties, the vulnerability of Chinese staging
bases, and the extreme range required to reach key Japanese cities.
Brigadier General Haywood S. Hansell determined that Guam, Tinian, and Saipan in the Mariana Islands would better serve as B-29 bases, but they were in Japanese hands. Strategies were shifted to accommodate the air war, and the islands were captured between June and August 1944. Air bases were developed, and B-29 operations commenced from the Marianas in October 1944. These bases were easily resupplied by cargo ships. The XXI Bomber Command began missions against Japan on November 18, 1944.
The early attempts to bomb Japan from the Marianas proved just as
ineffective as the China-based B-29s had been. Hansell continued the
practice of conducting so-called high-altitude precision bombing, aimed at key industries and transportation networks, even after these tactics had not produced acceptable results.
These efforts proved unsuccessful due to logistical difficulties with
the remote location, technical problems with the new and advanced
aircraft, unfavorable weather conditions, and enemy action.
Hansell's successor, Major General Curtis LeMay,
assumed command in January 1945 and initially continued to use the same
precision bombing tactics, with equally unsatisfactory results. The
attacks initially targeted key industrial facilities but much of the
Japanese manufacturing process was carried out in small workshops and
private homes. Under pressure from United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) headquarters in Washington, LeMay changed tactics and decided that low-level incendiary raids against Japanese cities were the only way to destroy their production capabilities, shifting from precision bombing to area bombardment with incendiaries. Like most strategic bombing during World War II,
the aim of the air offensive against Japan was to destroy the enemy's
war industries, kill or disable civilian employees of these industries,
and undermine civilian morale.
Over the next six months, the XXI Bomber Command under LeMay firebombed 67 Japanese cities. The firebombing of Tokyo, codenamed Operation Meetinghouse, on March 9–10 killed an estimated 100,000 people and destroyed 16 square miles (41 km2)
of the city and 267,000 buildings in a single night. It was the
deadliest bombing raid of the war, at a cost of 20 B-29s shot down by
flak and fighters.
By May, 75% of bombs dropped were incendiaries designed to burn down
Japan's "paper cities". By mid-June, Japan's six largest cities had been
devastated. The end of the fighting on Okinawa
that month provided airfields even closer to the Japanese mainland,
allowing the bombing campaign to be further escalated. Aircraft flying
from Allied aircraft carriers and the Ryukyu Islands also regularly struck targets in Japan during 1945 in preparation for Operation Downfall. Firebombing switched to smaller cities, with populations ranging from 60,000 to 350,000. According to Yuki Tanaka, the U.S. fire-bombed over a hundred Japanese towns and cities. These raids were devastating.
The Japanese military was unable to stop the Allied attacks and the country's civil defense
preparations proved inadequate. Japanese fighters and anti-aircraft
guns had difficulty engaging bombers flying at high altitude. From April 1945, the Japanese interceptors also had to face American fighter escorts based on Iwo Jima and Okinawa. That month, the Imperial Japanese Army Air Service and Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service stopped attempting to intercept the air raids to preserve fighter aircraft to counter the expected invasion.
By mid-1945 the Japanese only occasionally scrambled aircraft to
intercept individual B-29s conducting reconnaissance sorties over the
country, to conserve supplies of fuel. In July 1945, the Japanese had 1,156,000 US barrels (137,800,000 l) of avgas
stockpiled for the invasion of Japan. About 604,000 US barrels
(72,000,000 l) had been consumed in the home islands area in April, May
and June 1945.
While the Japanese military decided to resume attacks on Allied bombers
from late June, by this time there were too few operational fighters
available for this change of tactics to hinder the Allied air raids.
Atomic bomb development
The discovery of nuclear fission by German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann in 1938, and its theoretical explanation by Lise Meitner and Otto Frisch, made the development of an atomic bomb a theoretical possibility. Fears that a German atomic bomb project
would develop atomic weapons first, especially among scientists who
were refugees from Nazi Germany and other fascist countries, were
expressed in the Einstein-Szilard letter. This prompted preliminary research in the United States in late 1939. Progress was slow until the arrival of the British MAUD Committee report in late 1941, which indicated that only 5 to 10 kilograms of isotopically enriched uranium-235 were needed for a bomb instead of tons of natural uranium and a neutron moderator like heavy water.
The 1943 Quebec Agreement merged the nuclear weapons projects of the United Kingdom and Canada, Tube Alloys and the Montreal Laboratory, with the Manhattan Project, under the direction of Major General Leslie R. Groves, Jr., of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Groves appointed J. Robert Oppenheimer to organize and head the project's Los Alamos Laboratory in New Mexico, where bomb design work was carried out. Two types of bombs were eventually developed, both named by Robert Serber. Little Boy was a gun-type fission weapon that used uranium-235, a rare isotope of uranium separated at the Clinton Engineer Works at Oak Ridge, Tennessee. The other, known as a Fat Man device, was a more powerful and efficient, but more complicated, implosion-type nuclear weapon that used plutonium created in nuclear reactors at Hanford, Washington.
There was a Japanese nuclear weapon program,
but it lacked the human, mineral and financial resources of the
Manhattan Project, and never made much progress towards developing an
atomic bomb.
Preparations
Organization and training
The 509th Composite Group was constituted on December 9, 1944, and activated on December 17, 1944, at Wendover Army Air Field, Utah, commanded by Colonel Paul Tibbets. Tibbets was assigned to organize and command a combat group
to develop the means of delivering an atomic weapon against targets in
Germany and Japan. Because the flying squadrons of the group consisted
of both bomber and transport aircraft, the group was designated as a
"composite" rather than a "bombardment" unit. Working with the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos, Tibbets selected Wendover for his training base over Great Bend, Kansas, and Mountain Home, Idaho, because of its remoteness. Each bombardier completed at least 50 practice drops of inert or conventional explosive pumpkin bombs and Tibbets declared his group combat-ready. On April 5, 1945, the code name
Operation Centerboard was assigned. The officer responsible for its
allocation in the War Department's Operations Division was not cleared
to know any details of it. The first bombing was later codenamed Operation Centerboard I, and the second, Operation Centerboard II.
The 509th Composite Group had an authorized strength of 225 officers
and 1,542 enlisted men, almost all of whom eventually deployed to
Tinian. In addition to its authorized strength, the 509th had attached
to it on Tinian 51 civilian and military personnel from Project Alberta, known as the 1st Technical Detachment. The 509th Composite Group's 393d Bombardment Squadron was equipped with 15 Silverplate B-29s. These aircraft were specially adapted to carry nuclear weapons, and were equipped with fuel-injected engines, Curtiss Electric reversible-pitch propellers, pneumatic actuators for rapid opening and closing of bomb bay doors and other improvements.
The ground support echelon of the 509th Composite Group moved by rail on April 26, 1945, to its port of embarkation at Seattle, Washington. On May 6 the support elements sailed on the SS Cape Victory for the Marianas, while group materiel was shipped on the SS Emile Berliner. The Cape Victory made brief port calls at Honolulu and Eniwetok
but the passengers were not permitted to leave the dock area. An
advance party of the air echelon, consisting of 29 officers and 61
enlisted men flew by C-54 to North Field on Tinian, between May 15 and May 22. There were also two representatives from Washington, D.C., Brigadier General Thomas Farrell, the deputy commander of the Manhattan Project, and Rear Admiral William R. Purnell of the Military Policy Committee, who were on hand to decide higher policy matters on the spot. Along with Captain William S. Parsons, the commander of Project Alberta, they became known as the "Tinian Joint Chiefs".
Choice of targets
In April 1945, Marshall asked Groves to nominate specific targets for
bombing for final approval by himself and Stimson. Groves formed a
Target Committee, chaired by himself, that included Farrell, Major John
A. Derry, Colonel William P. Fisher, Joyce C. Stearns and David M. Dennison from the USAAF; and scientists John von Neumann, Robert R. Wilson and William Penney
from the Manhattan Project. The Target Committee met in Washington on
April 27; at Los Alamos on May 10, where it was able to talk to the
scientists and technicians there; and finally in Washington on May 28,
where it was briefed by Tibbets and Commander Frederick Ashworth from Project Alberta, and the Manhattan Project's scientific advisor, Richard C. Tolman.
The Target Committee nominated five targets: Kokura (now Kitakyushu), the site of one of Japan's largest munitions plants; Hiroshima, an embarkation port and industrial center that was the site of a major military headquarters; Yokohama, an urban center for aircraft manufacture, machine tools, docks, electrical equipment and oil refineries; Niigata, a port with industrial facilities including steel and aluminum plants and an oil refinery; and Kyoto, a major industrial center. The target selection was subject to the following criteria:
- The target was larger than 3 mi (4.8 km) in diameter and was an important target in a large city.
- The blast would create effective damage.
- The target was unlikely to be attacked by August 1945.
These cities were largely untouched during the nightly bombing raids
and the Army Air Forces agreed to leave them off the target list so
accurate assessment of the damage caused by the atomic bombs could be
made. Hiroshima was described as "an important army depot and port of
embarkation in the middle of an urban industrial area. It is a good
radar target and it is such a size that a large part of the city could
be extensively damaged. There are adjacent hills which are likely to
produce a focusing effect which would considerably increase the blast
damage. Due to rivers it is not a good incendiary target."
The Target Committee stated that "It was agreed that
psychological factors in the target selection were of great importance.
Two aspects of this are (1) obtaining the greatest psychological effect
against Japan and (2) making the initial use sufficiently spectacular
for the importance of the weapon to be internationally recognized when
publicity on it is released. ... Kyoto has the advantage of the people
being more highly intelligent and hence better able to appreciate the
significance of the weapon. Hiroshima has the advantage of being such a
size and with possible focussing from nearby mountains that a large
fraction of the city may be destroyed. The Emperor's palace in Tokyo has a greater fame than any other target but is of least strategic value."
Edwin O. Reischauer, a Japan expert for the U.S. Army Intelligence Service, was incorrectly said to have prevented the bombing of Kyoto. In his autobiography, Reischauer specifically refuted this claim:
... the only person deserving credit for saving Kyoto from destruction is Henry L. Stimson, the Secretary of War at the time, who had known and admired Kyoto ever since his honeymoon there several decades earlier.
On May 30, Stimson asked Groves to remove Kyoto from the target list
due to its historical, religious and cultural significance, but Groves
pointed to its military and industrial significance. Stimson then approached President Harry S. Truman about the matter. Truman agreed with Stimson, and Kyoto was temporarily removed from the target list. Groves attempted to restore Kyoto to the target list in July, but Stimson remained adamant. On July 25, Nagasaki
was put on the target list in place of Kyoto. It was a major military
port, one of Japan's largest shipbuilding and repair centers, and an
important producer of naval ordnance.
Proposed demonstration
In early May 1945, the Interim Committee
was created by Stimson at the urging of leaders of the Manhattan
Project and with the approval of Truman to advise on matters pertaining
to nuclear energy. During the meetings on May 31 and June 1, scientist Ernest Lawrence had suggested giving the Japanese a non-combat demonstration. Arthur Compton later recalled that:
It was evident that everyone would suspect trickery. If a bomb were exploded in Japan with previous notice, the Japanese air power was still adequate to give serious interference. An atomic bomb was an intricate device, still in the developmental stage. Its operation would be far from routine. If during the final adjustments of the bomb the Japanese defenders should attack, a faulty move might easily result in some kind of failure. Such an end to an advertised demonstration of power would be much worse than if the attempt had not been made. It was now evident that when the time came for the bombs to be used we should have only one of them available, followed afterwards by others at all-too-long intervals. We could not afford the chance that one of them might be a dud. If the test were made on some neutral territory, it was hard to believe that Japan's determined and fanatical military men would be impressed. If such an open test were made first and failed to bring surrender, the chance would be gone to give the shock of surprise that proved so effective. On the contrary, it would make the Japanese ready to interfere with an atomic attack if they could. Though the possibility of a demonstration that would not destroy human lives was attractive, no one could suggest a way in which it could be made so convincing that it would be likely to stop the war.
The possibility of a demonstration was raised again in the Franck Report issued by physicist James Franck
on June 11 and the Scientific Advisory Panel rejected his report on
June 16, saying that "we can propose no technical demonstration likely
to bring an end to the war; we see no acceptable alternative to direct
military use." Franck then took the report to Washington, D.C., where
the Interim Committee met on June 21 to re-examine its earlier
conclusions; but it reaffirmed that there was no alternative to the use
of the bomb on a military target.
Like Compton, many U.S. officials and scientists argued that a
demonstration would sacrifice the shock value of the atomic attack, and
the Japanese could deny the atomic bomb was lethal, making the mission
less likely to produce surrender. Allied prisoners of war
might be moved to the demonstration site and be killed by the bomb.
They also worried that the bomb might be a dud since the Trinity test
was of a stationary device, not an air-dropped bomb. In addition,
although more bombs were in production, only two would be available at
the start of August, and they cost billions of dollars, so using one for
a demonstration would be expensive.
Leaflets
For several months, the U.S. had warned civilians of potential air
raids by dropping more than 63 million leaflets across Japan. Many
Japanese cities suffered terrible damage from aerial bombings; some were
as much as 97% destroyed. LeMay thought that leaflets would increase
the psychological impact of bombing, and reduce the international stigma
of area-bombing cities. Even with the warnings, Japanese opposition to the war
remained ineffective. In general, the Japanese regarded the leaflet
messages as truthful, with many Japanese choosing to leave major cities.
The leaflets caused such concern that the government ordered the arrest
of anyone caught in possession of a leaflet.
Leaflet texts were prepared by recent Japanese prisoners of war because
they were thought to be the best choice "to appeal to their
compatriots".
In preparation for dropping an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, the Oppenheimer-led Scientific Panel of the Interim Committee
decided against a demonstration bomb and against a special leaflet
warning. Those decisions were implemented because of the uncertainty of a
successful detonation and also because of the wish to maximize shock in the leadership. No warning was given to Hiroshima that a new and much more destructive bomb was going to be dropped. Various sources gave conflicting information about when the last leaflets were dropped on Hiroshima prior to the atomic bomb. Robert Jay Lifton wrote that it was July 27, and Theodore H. McNelly wrote that it was July 30.
The USAAF history noted that eleven cities were targeted with leaflets
on July 27, but Hiroshima was not one of them, and there were no leaflet
sorties on July 30.
Leaflet sorties were undertaken on August 1 and August 4. Hiroshima may
have been leafleted in late July or early August, as survivor accounts
talk about a delivery of leaflets a few days before the atomic bomb was
dropped.
Three versions were printed of a leaflet listing 11 or 12 cities
targeted for firebombing; a total of 33 cities listed. With the text of
this leaflet reading in Japanese "...we cannot promise that only these
cities will be among those attacked..." Hiroshima was not listed.
Consultation with Britain and Canada
In 1943, The United States and the United Kingdom signed the Quebec Agreement,
which stipulated that nuclear weapons would not be used against another
country without mutual consent. Stimson therefore had to obtain British
permission. A meeting of the Combined Policy Committee, which included one Canadian representative, was held at the Pentagon on July 4, 1945. Field Marshal Sir Henry Maitland Wilson
announced that the British government concurred with the use of nuclear
weapons against Japan, which would be officially recorded as a decision
of the Combined Policy Committee.
As the release of information to third parties was also controlled by
the Quebec Agreement, discussion then turned to what scientific details
would be revealed in the press announcement of the bombing. The meeting
also considered what Truman could reveal to Joseph Stalin, the leader of the Soviet Union, at the upcoming Potsdam Conference, as this also required British concurrence.
Orders for the attack were issued to General Carl Spaatz on July 25 under the signature of General Thomas T. Handy, the acting Chief of Staff, since Marshall was at the Potsdam Conference with Truman. It read:
- The 509th Composite Group, 20th Air Force will deliver its first special bomb as soon as weather will permit visual bombing after about 3 August 1945 on one of the targets: Hiroshima, Kokura, Niigata and Nagasaki. To carry military and civilian scientific personnel from the War Department to observe and record the effects of the explosion of the bomb, additional aircraft will accompany the airplane carrying the bomb. The observing planes will stay several miles distant from the point of impact of the bomb.
- Additional bombs will be delivered on the above targets as soon as made ready by the project staff. Further instructions will be issued concerning targets other than those listed above.
That day, Truman noted in his diary that:
This weapon is to be used against Japan between now and August 10th. I have told the Sec. of War, Mr. Stimson, to use it so that military objectives and soldiers and sailors are the target and not women and children. Even if the Japs are savages, ruthless, merciless and fanatic, we as the leader of the world for the common welfare cannot drop that terrible bomb on the old capital [Kyoto] or the new [Tokyo]. He and I are in accord. The target will be a purely military one.
Potsdam Declaration
The July 16 success of the Trinity Test in the New Mexico desert exceeded expectations. On July 26, Allied leaders issued the Potsdam Declaration, which outlined the terms of surrender for Japan. The declaration was presented as an ultimatum
and stated that without a surrender, the Allies would attack Japan,
resulting in "the inevitable and complete destruction of the Japanese
armed forces and just as inevitably the utter devastation of the
Japanese homeland". The atomic bomb was not mentioned in the communiqué.
On July 28, Japanese papers reported that the declaration had been rejected by the Japanese government. That afternoon, Prime Minister Suzuki Kantarō declared at a press conference that the Potsdam Declaration was no more than a rehash (yakinaoshi) of the Cairo Declaration and that the government intended to ignore it (mokusatsu, "kill by silence").
The statement was taken by both Japanese and foreign papers as a clear
rejection of the declaration. Emperor Hirohito, who was waiting for a
Soviet reply to non-committal Japanese peace feelers, made no move to
change the government position. Japan's willingness to surrender remained conditional on the preservation of the kokutai (Imperial institution and national polity), assumption by the Imperial Headquarters of responsibility for disarmament and demobilization, no occupation of the Japanese Home Islands, Korea or Formosa, and delegation of the punishment of war criminals to the Japanese government.
At Potsdam, Truman agreed to a request from Winston Churchill that Britain be represented when the atomic bomb was dropped. William Penney and Group Captain Leonard Cheshire
were sent to Tinian, but found that LeMay would not let them accompany
the mission. All they could do was send a strongly worded signal to
Wilson.
Bombs
The Little Boy bomb, except for the uranium payload, was ready at the beginning of May 1945.
There were two uranium-235 components, a hollow cylindrical projectile
and a cylindrical target insert. The projectile was completed on June
15, and the target insert on July 24. The projectile and eight bomb pre-assemblies (partly assembled bombs without the powder charge and fissile components) left Hunters Point Naval Shipyard, California, on July 16 aboard the cruiser USS Indianapolis, and arrived on Tinian on July 26. The target insert followed by air on July 30, accompanied by Commander Francis Birch from Project Alberta.
Responding to concerns expressed by the 509th Composite Group about the
possibility of a B-29 crashing on takeoff, Birch had modified the
Little Boy design to incorporate a removable breech plug that would
permit the bomb to be armed in flight.
The first plutonium core, along with its polonium-beryllium urchin initiator, was transported in the custody of Project Alberta courier Raemer Schreiber in a magnesium field carrying case designed for the purpose by Philip Morrison. Magnesium was chosen because it does not act as a tamper. The core departed from Kirtland Army Air Field on a C-54 transport aircraft of the 509th Composite Group's 320th Troop Carrier Squadron
on July 26, and arrived at North Field July 28. Three Fat Man
high-explosive pre-assemblies, designated F31, F32, and F33, were picked
up at Kirtland on July 28 by three B-29s, two from the 393d Bombardment
Squadron plus one from the 216th Army Air Force Base Unit, and
transported to North Field, arriving on August 2.
Hiroshima
Hiroshima during World War II
At the time of its bombing, Hiroshima was a city of industrial and
military significance. A number of military units were located nearby,
the most important of which was the headquarters of Field Marshal Shunroku Hata's Second General Army, which commanded the defense of all of southern Japan, and was located in Hiroshima Castle. Hata's command consisted of some 400,000 men, most of whom were on Kyushu where an Allied invasion was correctly anticipated. Also present in Hiroshima were the headquarters of the 59th Army, the 5th Division and the 224th Division, a recently formed mobile unit. The city was defended by five batteries of 7-cm and 8-cm (2.8 and 3.1 inch) anti-aircraft guns
of the 3rd Anti-Aircraft Division, including units from the 121st and
122nd Anti-Aircraft Regiments and the 22nd and 45th Separate
Anti-Aircraft Battalions. In total, an estimated 40,000 Japanese
military personnel were stationed in the city.
Hiroshima was a supply and logistics base for the Japanese military. The city was a communications center, a key port for shipping, and an assembly area for troops. It was a beehive of war industry, manufacturing parts for planes and boats, for bombs, rifles, and handguns. The center of the city contained several reinforced concrete
buildings and lighter structures. Outside the center, the area was
congested by a dense collection of small timber workshops set among
Japanese houses. A few larger industrial plants lay near the outskirts
of the city. The houses were constructed of timber with tile roofs, and
many of the industrial buildings were also built around timber frames.
The city as a whole was highly susceptible to fire damage. It was the second largest city in Japan after Kyoto that was still undamaged by air raids,
primarily because it lacked the aircraft manufacturing industry that
was the XXI Bomber Command's priority target. On July 3, the Joint
Chiefs of Staff placed it off limits to bombers, along with Kokura,
Niigata and Kyoto.
The population of Hiroshima had reached a peak of over 381,000
earlier in the war but prior to the atomic bombing, the population had
steadily decreased because of a systematic evacuation ordered by the Japanese government. At the time of the attack, the population was approximately 340,000–350,000. Residents wondered why Hiroshima had been spared destruction by firebombing.
Some speculated that the city was to be saved for U.S. occupation
headquarters, others thought perhaps their relatives in Hawaii and
California had petitioned the U.S. government to avoid bombing
Hiroshima. More realistic city officials had ordered buildings torn down to create long, straight firebreaks. These continued to be expanded and extended up to the morning of August 6, 1945.
Bombing of Hiroshima
Hiroshima was the primary target of the first atomic bombing mission
on August 6, with Kokura and Nagasaki as alternative targets. The 393d
Bombardment Squadron B-29 Enola Gay, named after Tibbets' mother and piloted by Tibbets, took off from North Field, Tinian, about six hours' flight time from Japan. Enola Gay was accompanied by two other B-29s: The Great Artiste, commanded by Major Charles Sweeney, which carried instrumentation, and a then-nameless aircraft later called Necessary Evil, commanded by Captain George Marquardt, which served as the photography aircraft.
Aircraft | Pilot | Call Sign | Mission role |
Straight Flush | Major Claude R. Eatherly | Dimples 85 | Weather reconnaissance (Hiroshima) |
Jabit III | Major John A. Wilson | Dimples 71 | Weather reconnaissance (Kokura) |
Full House | Major Ralph R. Taylor | Dimples 83 | Weather reconnaissance (Nagasaki) |
Enola Gay | Colonel Paul W. Tibbets | Dimples 82 | Weapon delivery |
The Great Artiste | Major Charles W. Sweeney | Dimples 89 | Blast measurement instrumentation |
Necessary Evil | Captain. George W. Marquardt | Dimples 91 | Strike observation and photography |
Top Secret | Captain Charles F. McKnight | Dimples 72 | Strike spare—did not complete mission |
After leaving Tinian, the aircraft made their way separately to Iwo
Jima to rendezvous with Sweeney and Marquardt at 05:55 at 9,200 feet
(2,800 m), and set course for Japan. The aircraft arrived over the target in clear visibility at 31,060 feet (9,470 m).
Parsons, who was in command of the mission, armed the bomb in flight to
minimize the risks during takeoff. He had witnessed four B-29s crash
and burn at takeoff, and feared that a nuclear explosion would occur if a
B-29 crashed with an armed Little Boy on board. His assistant, Second Lieutenant Morris R. Jeppson, removed the safety devices 30 minutes before reaching the target area.
During the night of August 5–6, Japanese early warning radar detected
the approach of numerous American aircraft headed for the southern part
of Japan. Radar detected 65 bombers headed for Saga, 102 bound for Maebashi, 261 en route to Nishinomiya, 111 headed for Ube
and 66 bound for Imabari. An alert was given and radio broadcasting
stopped in many cities, among them Hiroshima. The all-clear was sounded
in Hiroshima at 00:05. About an hour before the bombing, the air raid alert was sounded again, as Straight Flush flew over the city. It broadcast a short message which was picked up by Enola Gay. It read: "Cloud cover less than 3/10th at all altitudes. Advice: bomb primary." The all-clear was sounded over Hiroshima again at 07:09.
At 08:09, Tibbets started his bomb run and handed control over to his bombardier, Major Thomas Ferebee.
The release at 08:15 (Hiroshima time) went as planned, and the Little
Boy containing about 64 kg (141 lb) of uranium-235 took 44.4 seconds to
fall from the aircraft flying at about 31,000 feet (9,400 m) to a
detonation height of about 1,900 feet (580 m) above the city. Enola Gay traveled 11.5 mi (18.5 km) before it felt the shock waves from the blast.
Due to crosswind, the bomb missed the aiming point, the Aioi Bridge, by approximately 800 ft (240 m) and detonated directly over Shima Surgical Clinic. It released the equivalent energy of 16 kilotons of TNT (67 TJ), ± 2 kt. The weapon was considered very inefficient, with only 1.7% of its material fissioning. The radius of total destruction was about 1 mile (1.6 km), with resulting fires across 4.4 square miles (11 km2).
Enola Gay stayed over the target area for two minutes and
was ten miles away when the bomb detonated. Only Tibbets, Parsons, and
Ferebee knew of the nature of the weapon; the others on the bomber were
only told to expect a blinding flash and given black goggles. "It was
hard to believe what we saw", Tibbets told reporters, while Parsons said
"the whole thing was tremendous and awe-inspiring ... the men aboard
with me gasped 'My God'". He and Tibbets compared the shockwave to "a
close burst of ack-ack fire".
Events on the ground
People on the ground reported a pika (ピカ)—a brilliant flash of light—followed by a don (ドン)—a loud booming sound.
Some 70,000–80,000 people, around 30% of the population of Hiroshima at
the time, were killed by the blast and resultant firestorm, and another 70,000 were injured. It is estimated that as many as 20,000 Japanese military personnel were killed. U.S. surveys estimated that 4.7 square miles (12 km2)
of the city were destroyed. Japanese officials determined that 69% of
Hiroshima's buildings were destroyed and another 6–7% damaged.
Some of the reinforced concrete buildings in Hiroshima had been
very strongly constructed because of the earthquake danger in Japan, and
their framework did not collapse even though they were fairly close to
the blast center. Since the bomb detonated in the air, the blast was
directed more downward than sideways, which was largely responsible for
the survival of the Prefectural Industrial Promotional Hall, now commonly known as the Genbaku (A-bomb) dome. This building was designed and built by the Czech architect Jan Letzel, and was only 150 m (490 ft) from ground zero (the hypocenter). The ruin was named Hiroshima Peace Memorial and was made a UNESCO World Heritage Site
in 1996 over the objections of the United States and China, which
expressed reservations on the grounds that other Asian nations were the
ones who suffered the greatest loss of life and property, and a focus on
Japan lacked historical perspective.
The bombing started intense fires that spread rapidly through timber
and paper homes, burning everything in a radius of 2 kilometers
(1.2 mi). As in other Japanese cities, the firebreaks proved ineffective.
- The Hiroshima Genbaku Dome after the bombing
- Direct, thermal flash burns
The air raid warning had been cleared at 07:31, and many people were outside, going about their activities. Eizō Nomura was the closest known survivor, being in the basement of a reinforced concrete building (it remained as the Rest House after the war) only 170 meters (560 ft) from ground zero at the time of the attack. He died in 1982, aged 84.
Akiko Takakura was among the closest survivors to the hypocenter of the
blast. She was in the solidly-built Bank of Hiroshima only 300 meters
(980 ft) from ground-zero at the time of the attack.
Over 90% of the doctors and 93% of the nurses in Hiroshima were
killed or injured—most had been in the downtown area which received the
greatest damage. The hospitals were destroyed or heavily damaged. Only one doctor, Terufumi Sasaki, remained on duty at the Red Cross Hospital.
Nonetheless, by early afternoon the police and volunteers had
established evacuation centres at hospitals, schools and tram stations,
and a morgue was established in the Asano library.
Most elements of the Japanese Second General Army headquarters were undergoing physical training on the grounds of Hiroshima Castle, barely 900 yards (820 m) from the hypocenter. The attack killed 3,243 troops on the parade ground. The communications room of Chugoku
Military District Headquarters that was responsible for issuing and
lifting air raid warnings was located in a semi-basement in the castle.
Yoshie Oka, a Hijiyama Girls High School student who had been mobilized
to serve as a communications officer, had just sent a message that the
alarm had been issued for Hiroshima and neighboring Yamaguchi, when the bomb exploded. She used a special phone to inform Fukuyama
Headquarters (some 100 kilometers (62 mi) away) that "Hiroshima has
been attacked by a new type of bomb. The city is in a state of
near-total destruction."
Since Mayor Senkichi Awaya had been killed while eating breakfast with his son and granddaughter at the mayoral residence, Field Marshal Shunroku Hata,
who was only slightly wounded, took over the administration of the
city, and coordinated relief efforts. Many of his staff had been killed
or fatally wounded, including a Korean prince of the Joseon Dynasty, Yi U, who was serving as a lieutenant colonel in the Japanese Army. Hata's senior surviving staff officer was the wounded Colonel Kumao Imoto, who acted as his chief of staff. Soldiers from the undamaged Hiroshima Ujina Harbor used Shinyo-class suicide motorboats, intended to repel the American invasion, to collect the wounded and take them down the rivers to the military hospital at Ujina. Trucks and trains brought in relief supplies and evacuated survivors from the city.
Twelve American airmen were imprisoned at the Chugoku Military
Police Headquarters, about 1,300 feet (400 m) from the hypocenter of the
blast.
Most died instantly, although two were reported to have been executed
by their captors, and two prisoners badly injured by the bombing were
left next to the Aioi Bridge by the Kempei Tai, where they were stoned to death. Eight U.S. prisoners of war killed as part of the medical experiments program at Kyushu University were falsely reported by Japanese authorities as having been killed in the atomic blast as part of an attempted cover up.
Japanese realization of the bombing
The Tokyo control operator of the Japan Broadcasting Corporation
noticed that the Hiroshima station had gone off the air. He tried to
re-establish his program by using another telephone line, but it too had
failed.
About 20 minutes later the Tokyo railroad telegraph center realized
that the main line telegraph had stopped working just north of
Hiroshima. From some small railway stops within 16 km (10 mi) of the
city came unofficial and confused reports of a terrible explosion in
Hiroshima. All these reports were transmitted to the headquarters of the
Imperial Japanese Army General Staff.
Military bases repeatedly tried to call the Army Control Station
in Hiroshima. The complete silence from that city puzzled the General
Staff; they knew that no large enemy raid had occurred and that no
sizable store of explosives was in Hiroshima at that time. A young
officer was instructed to fly immediately to Hiroshima, to land, survey
the damage, and return to Tokyo with reliable information for the staff.
It was felt that nothing serious had taken place and that the explosion
was just a rumor.
The staff officer went to the airport and took off for the
southwest. After flying for about three hours, while still nearly 160 km
(100 mi) from Hiroshima, he and his pilot saw a great cloud of smoke
from the bomb. After circling the city to survey the damage they landed
south of the city, where the staff officer, after reporting to Tokyo,
began to organize relief measures. Tokyo's first indication that the
city had been destroyed by a new type of bomb came from President
Truman's announcement of the strike, sixteen hours later.
Events of August 7–9
After the Hiroshima bombing, Truman issued a statement announcing the
use of the new weapon. He stated, "We may be grateful to Providence"
that the German atomic bomb project
had failed, and that the United States and its allies had "spent two
billion dollars on the greatest scientific gamble in history—and won".
Truman then warned Japan: "If they do not now accept our terms, they may
expect a rain of ruin from the air, the like of which has never been
seen on this earth. Behind this air attack will follow sea and land
forces in such numbers and power as they have not yet seen and with the
fighting skill of which they are already well aware." This was a widely broadcast speech picked up by Japanese news agencies.
The 50,000-watt standard wave station on Saipan, the OWI radio station,
broadcast a similar message to Japan every 15 minutes about Hiroshima,
stating that more Japanese cities would face a similar fate in the
absence of immediate acceptance of the terms of the Potsdam Declaration
and emphatically urged civilians to evacuate major cities. Radio Japan, which continued to extoll victory for Japan by never surrendering, had informed the Japanese of the destruction of Hiroshima by a single bomb. Prime Minister Suzuki
felt compelled to meet the Japanese press, to whom he reiterated his
government's commitment to ignore the Allies' demands and fight on.
Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov informed Tokyo of the Soviet Union's unilateral abrogation of the Soviet–Japanese Neutrality Pact on August 5. At two minutes past midnight on August 9, Tokyo time, Soviet infantry, armor, and air forces had launched the Manchurian Strategic Offensive Operation.
Four hours later, word reached Tokyo of the Soviet Union's official
declaration of war. The senior leadership of the Japanese Army began
preparations to impose martial law on the nation, with the support of Minister of War Korechika Anami, to stop anyone attempting to make peace.
On August 7, a day after Hiroshima was destroyed, Dr. Yoshio Nishina
and other atomic physicists arrived at the city, and carefully examined
the damage. They then went back to Tokyo and told the cabinet that
Hiroshima was indeed destroyed by a nuclear weapon. Admiral Soemu Toyoda,
the Chief of the Naval General Staff, estimated that no more than one
or two additional bombs could be readied, so they decided to endure the
remaining attacks, acknowledging "there would be more destruction but
the war would go on". American Magic codebreakers intercepted the cabinet's messages.
Purnell, Parsons, Tibbets, Spaatz, and LeMay met on Guam that same day to discuss what should be done next. Since there was no indication of Japan surrendering, they decided to proceed with dropping another bomb. Parsons said that Project Alberta
would have it ready by August 11, but Tibbets pointed to weather
reports indicating poor flying conditions on that day due to a storm,
and asked if the bomb could be readied by August 9. Parsons agreed to
try to do so.
Nagasaki
Nagasaki during World War II
The city of Nagasaki had been one of the largest seaports in southern
Japan, and was of great wartime importance because of its wide-ranging
industrial activity, including the production of ordnance, ships, military equipment, and other war materials. The four largest companies in the city were Mitsubishi
Shipyards, Electrical Shipyards, Arms Plant, and Steel and Arms Works,
which employed about 90% of the city's labor force, and accounted for
90% of the city's industry.
Although an important industrial city, Nagasaki had been spared from
firebombing because its geography made it difficult to locate at night
with AN/APQ-13 radar.
Unlike the other target cities, Nagasaki had not been placed off
limits to bombers by the Joint Chiefs of Staff's July 3 directive,
and was bombed on a small scale five times. During one of these raids
on August 1, a number of conventional high-explosive bombs were dropped
on the city. A few hit the shipyards and dock areas in the southwest
portion of the city, and several hit the Mitsubishi Steel and Arms
Works.
By early August, the city was defended by the 134th Anti-Aircraft
Regiment of the 4th Anti-Aircraft Division with four batteries of 7 cm
(2.8 in) anti-aircraft guns and two searchlight batteries.
In contrast to Hiroshima, almost all of the buildings were of
old-fashioned Japanese construction, consisting of timber or
timber-framed buildings with timber walls (with or without plaster) and
tile roofs. Many of the smaller industries and business establishments
were also situated in buildings of timber or other materials not
designed to withstand explosions. Nagasaki had been permitted to grow
for many years without conforming to any definite city zoning plan;
residences were erected adjacent to factory buildings and to each other
almost as closely as possible throughout the entire industrial valley.
On the day of the bombing, an estimated 263,000 people were in Nagasaki,
including 240,000 Japanese residents, 10,000 Korean residents, 2,500
conscripted Korean workers, 9,000 Japanese soldiers, 600 conscripted
Chinese workers, and 400 Allied prisoners of war in a camp to the north
of Nagasaki.
Bombing of Nagasaki
Responsibility for the timing of the second bombing was delegated to
Tibbets. Scheduled for August 11 against Kokura, the raid was moved
earlier by two days to avoid a five-day period of bad weather forecast
to begin on August 10.
Three bomb pre-assemblies had been transported to Tinian, labeled F-31,
F-32, and F-33 on their exteriors. On August 8, a dress rehearsal was
conducted off Tinian by Sweeney using Bockscar as the drop airplane. Assembly F-33 was expended testing the components and F-31 was designated for the August 9 mission.
Aircraft | Pilot | Call Sign | Mission role |
Enola Gay | Captain George W. Marquardt | Dimples 82 | Weather reconnaissance (Kokura) |
Laggin' Dragon | Captain Charles F. McKnight | Dimples 95 | Weather reconnaissance (Nagasaki) |
Bockscar | Major Charles W. Sweeney | Dimples 77 | Weapon delivery |
The Great Artiste | Captain Frederick C. Bock | Dimples 89 | Blast measurement instrumentation |
Big Stink | Major James I. Hopkins, Jr. | Dimples 90 | Strike observation and photography |
Full House | Major Ralph R. Taylor | Dimples 83 | Strike spare—did not complete mission |
At 03:49 on the morning of August 9, 1945, Bockscar, flown by
Sweeney's crew, carried Fat Man, with Kokura as the primary target and
Nagasaki the secondary target. The mission plan for the second attack
was nearly identical to that of the Hiroshima mission, with two B-29s
flying an hour ahead as weather scouts and two additional B-29s in
Sweeney's flight for instrumentation and photographic support of the
mission. Sweeney took off with his weapon already armed but with the
electrical safety plugs still engaged.
During pre-flight inspection of Bockscar, the flight
engineer notified Sweeney that an inoperative fuel transfer pump made it
impossible to use 640 US gallons (2,400 l; 530 imp gal) of fuel carried
in a reserve tank. This fuel would still have to be carried all the way
to Japan and back, consuming still more fuel. Replacing the pump would
take hours; moving the Fat Man to another aircraft might take just as
long and was dangerous as well, as the bomb was live. Tibbets and
Sweeney therefore elected to have Bockscar continue the mission.
This time Penney and Cheshire were allowed to accompany the mission, flying as observers on the third plane, Big Stink,
flown by the group's operations officer, Major James I. Hopkins, Jr.
Observers aboard the weather planes reported both targets clear. When
Sweeney's aircraft arrived at the assembly point for his flight off the
coast of Japan, Big Stink failed to make the rendezvous.
According to Cheshire, Hopkins was at varying heights including 9,000
feet (2,700 m) higher than he should have been, and was not flying tight
circles over Yakushima as previously agreed with Sweeney and Captain Frederick C. Bock, who was piloting the support B-29 The Great Artiste. Instead, Hopkins was flying 40-mile (64 km) dogleg patterns. Though ordered not to circle longer than fifteen minutes, Sweeney continued to wait for Big Stink
for forty minutes. Before leaving the rendezvous point, Sweeney
consulted Ashworth, who was in charge of the bomb. As commander of the
aircraft, Sweeney made the decision to proceed to the primary, the city
of Kokura.
After exceeding the original departure time limit by nearly a half-hour, Bockscar, accompanied by The Great Artiste,
proceeded to Kokura, thirty minutes away. The delay at the rendezvous
had resulted in clouds and drifting smoke over Kokura from fires started
by a major firebombing raid by 224 B-29s on nearby Yahata the previous day. Additionally, the Yahata Steel Works intentionally burned coal tar, to produce black smoke.
The clouds and smoke resulted in 70% of the area over Kokura being
covered, obscuring the aiming point. Three bomb runs were made over the
next 50 minutes, burning fuel and exposing the aircraft repeatedly to
the heavy defenses around Kokura, but the bombardier was unable to drop
visually. By the time of the third bomb run, Japanese anti-aircraft fire
was getting close, and Second Lieutenant Jacob Beser, who was monitoring Japanese communications, reported activity on the Japanese fighter direction radio bands.
After three runs over the city, and with fuel running low because of the failed fuel pump, Bockscar and The Great Artiste headed for their secondary target, Nagasaki. Fuel consumption calculations made en route indicated that Bockscar had insufficient fuel to reach Iwo Jima and would be forced to divert to Okinawa, which had become entirely Allied-occupied territory only six weeks earlier.
After initially deciding that if Nagasaki were obscured on their
arrival the crew would carry the bomb to Okinawa and dispose of it in
the ocean if necessary, Ashworth agreed with Sweeney's suggestion that a
radar approach would be used if the target was obscured.
At about 07:50 Japanese time, an air raid alert was sounded in
Nagasaki, but the "all clear" signal was given at 08:30. When only two
B-29 Superfortresses were sighted at 10:53, the Japanese apparently
assumed that the planes were only on reconnaissance and no further alarm
was given.
A few minutes later at 11:00, The Great Artiste dropped
instruments attached to three parachutes. These instruments also
contained an unsigned letter to Professor Ryokichi Sagane, a physicist
at the University of Tokyo who studied with three of the scientists responsible for the atomic bomb at the University of California, Berkeley, urging him to tell the public about the danger involved with these weapons of mass destruction. The messages were found by military authorities but not turned over to Sagane until a month later. In 1949, one of the authors of the letter, Luis Alvarez, met with Sagane and signed the letter.
At 11:01, a last-minute break in the clouds over Nagasaki allowed Bockscar's bombardier, Captain Kermit Beahan, to visually sight the target as ordered. The Fat Man weapon, containing a core of about 5 kg (11 lb) of plutonium,
was dropped over the city's industrial valley. It exploded 47 seconds
later at 1,650 ± 33 ft (503 ± 10 m), above a tennis court,
halfway between the Mitsubishi Steel and Arms Works in the south and
the Nagasaki Arsenal in the north. This was nearly 3 km (1.9 mi)
northwest of the planned hypocenter; the blast was confined to the Urakami Valley and a major portion of the city was protected by the intervening hills. The resulting explosion released the equivalent energy of 21 ± 2 kt (87.9 ± 8.4 TJ). Big Stink spotted the explosion from a hundred miles away, and flew over to observe.
Bockscar flew on to Okinawa, arriving with only sufficient
fuel for a single approach. Sweeney tried repeatedly to contact the
control tower for landing clearance, but received no answer. He could
see heavy air traffic landing and taking off from Yontan Airfield. Firing off every flare on board to alert the field to his emergency landing, the Bockscar
came in fast, landing at 140 miles per hour (230 km/h) instead of the
normal 120 miles per hour (190 km/h). The number two engine died from
fuel starvation as he began the final approach. Touching down on only
three engines midway down the landing strip, Bockscar bounced up
into the air again for about 25 feet (7.6 m) before slamming back down
hard. The heavy B-29 slewed left and towards a row of parked B-24
bombers before the pilots managed to regain control. Its reversible
propellers were insufficient to slow the aircraft adequately, and with
both pilots standing on the brakes, Bockscar made a swerving
90-degree turn at the end of the runway to avoid running off it. A
second engine died from fuel exhaustion before the plane came to a stop.
Following the mission, there was confusion over the
identification of the plane. The first eyewitness account by war
correspondent William L. Laurence of The New York Times, who accompanied the mission aboard the aircraft piloted by Bock, reported that Sweeney was leading the mission in The Great Artiste. He also noted its "Victor" number as 77, which was that of Bockscar. Laurence had interviewed Sweeney and his crew, and was aware that they referred to their airplane as The Great Artiste. Except for Enola Gay,
none of the 393d's B-29s had yet had names painted on the noses, a fact
which Laurence himself noted in his account. Unaware of the switch in
aircraft, Laurence assumed Victor 77 was The Great Artiste, which was in fact, Victor 89.
Events on the ground
Although the bomb was more powerful than the one used on Hiroshima,
its effects were confined by hillsides to the narrow Urakami Valley.
Of 7,500 Japanese employees who worked inside the Mitsubishi Munitions
plant, including "mobilized" students and regular workers, 6,200 were
killed. Some 17,000–22,000 others who worked in other war plants and
factories in the city died as well. Casualty estimates for immediate deaths vary widely, ranging from 22,000 to 75,000. At least 35,000–40,000 people were killed and 60,000 others injured.
In the days and months following the explosion, more people died from
their injuries. Because of the presence of undocumented foreign workers,
and a number of military personnel in transit, there are great
discrepancies in the estimates of total deaths by the end of 1945; a
range of 39,000 to 80,000 can be found in various studies.
Unlike Hiroshima's military death toll, only 150 Japanese
soldiers were killed instantly, including 36 from the 134th AAA Regiment
of the 4th AAA Division. At least eight Allied prisoners of war (POWs) died from the bombing, and as many as thirteen may have died. The eight confirmed deaths included a British POW, Royal Air Force Corporal Ronald Shaw, and seven Dutch POWs. One American POW, Joe Kieyoomia,
was in Nagasaki at the time of the bombing but survived, reportedly
having been shielded from the effects of the bomb by the concrete walls
of his cell. There were 24 Australian POWs in Nagasaki, all of whom survived.
The radius of total destruction was about 1 mi (1.6 km), followed by
fires across the northern portion of the city to 2 mi (3.2 km) south of
the bomb.
About 58% of the Mitsubishi Arms Plant was damaged, and about 78% of
the Mitsubishi Steel Works. The Mitsubishi Electric Works suffered only
10% structural damage as it was on the border of the main destruction
zone. The Nagasaki Arsenal was destroyed in the blast. Although many fires likewise burnt following the bombing, in contrast to Hiroshima where sufficient fuel density was available, no firestorm
developed in Nagasaki as the damaged areas did not furnish enough fuel
to generate the phenomenon. Instead, the ambient wind at the time pushed
the fire spread along the valley.
As in Hiroshima, the bombing badly dislocated the city's medical
facilities. A makeshift hospital was established at the Shinkozen
Primary School, which served as the main medical centre. The trains were
still running, and evacuated many victims to hospitals in nearby towns.
A medical team from a naval hospital reached the city in the evening,
and fire-fighting brigades from the neighboring towns assisted in
fighting the fires. Takashi Nagai
was a doctor working in the radiology department of Nagasaki Medical
College Hospital. He received a serious injury that severed his right
temporal artery, but joined the rest of the surviving medical staff in
treating bombing victims.
Plans for more atomic attacks on Japan
Groves expected to have another "Fat Man" atomic bomb ready for use
on August 19, with three more in September and a further three in
October (a second Little Boy bomb (using U-235) would not be available until December 1945.)
On August 10, he sent a memorandum to Marshall in which he wrote that
"the next bomb ... should be ready for delivery on the first suitable
weather after 17 or 18 August." Marshall endorsed the memo with the
hand-written comment, "It is not to be released over Japan without
express authority from the President",
something Truman had requested that day. This modified the previous
order that the target cities were to be attacked with atomic bombs "as
made ready". There was already discussion in the War Department about conserving the bombs then in production for Operation Downfall, and Marshall suggested to Stimson that the remaining cities on the target list be spared attack with atomic bombs.
Two more Fat Man assemblies were readied, and scheduled to leave Kirtland Field for Tinian on August 11 and 14, and Tibbets was ordered by LeMay to return to Albuquerque, New Mexico, to collect them. At Los Alamos, technicians worked 24 hours straight to cast another plutonium core. Although cast, it still needed to be pressed and coated, which would take until August 16.
Therefore, it could have been ready for use on August 19. Unable to
reach Marshall, Groves ordered on his own authority on August 13 that
the core should not be shipped.
Surrender of Japan and subsequent occupation
Until August 9, Japan's war council still insisted on its four
conditions for surrender. The full cabinet met on 14:30 on August 9, and
spent most of the day debating surrender. Anami conceded that victory
was unlikely, but argued in favour of continuing the war nonetheless.
The meeting ended at 17:30, with no decision having been reached. Suzuki
went to the palace to report on the outcome of meeting, where he met
with Kōichi Kido, the Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal of Japan.
Kido informed him that the emperor had agreed to hold an imperial
conference, and gave a strong indication that the emperor would consent
to surrender on condition that kokutai
be preserved. A second cabinet meeting was held at 18:00. Only four
ministers supported Anami's position of adhering to the four conditions,
but since cabinet decisions had to be unanimous, no decision was
reached before it ended at 22:00.
Calling an imperial conference required the signatures of the prime minister and the two service chiefs, but the Chief Cabinet Secretary Hisatsune Sakomizu had already obtained signatures from Toyoda and General Yoshijirō Umezu
in advance, and he reneged on his promise to inform them if a meeting
was to be held. The meeting commenced at 23:50. No consensus had emerged
by 02:00 on August 10, but the emperor gave his "sacred decision", authorizing the Foreign Minister, Shigenori Tōgō,
to notify the Allies that Japan would accept their terms on one
condition, that the declaration "does not comprise any demand which
prejudices the prerogatives of His Majesty as a Sovereign ruler."
On August 12, the Emperor informed the imperial family of his decision to surrender. One of his uncles, Prince Asaka, then asked whether the war would be continued if the kokutai could not be preserved. Hirohito simply replied, "Of course." As the Allied terms seemed to leave intact the principle of the preservation of the Throne, Hirohito recorded on August 14 his capitulation announcement which was broadcast to the Japanese nation the next day despite a short rebellion by militarists opposed to the surrender.
In his declaration, Hirohito referred to the atomic bombings, and
did not explicitly mention the Soviets as a factor for surrender:
Despite the best that has been done by every one—the gallant fighting of military and naval forces, the diligence and assiduity of Our servants of the State and the devoted service of Our one hundred million people, the war situation has developed not necessarily to Japan's advantage, while the general trends of the world have all turned against her interest. Moreover, the enemy now possesses a new and terrible weapon with the power to destroy many innocent lives and do incalculable damage. Should we continue to fight, not only would it result in an ultimate collapse and obliteration of the Japanese nation, but also it would lead to the total extinction of human civilization.
Such being the case, how are we to save the millions of our subjects, or to atone ourselves before the hallowed spirits of our imperial ancestors? This is the reason why we have ordered the acceptance of the provisions of the joint declaration of the powers.
In his "Rescript to the Soldiers and Sailors" delivered on August 17,
however, he stressed the impact of the Soviet invasion on his decision
to surrender.
Reportage
On August 10, 1945, the day after the Nagasaki bombing, Yōsuke Yamahata, correspondent Higashi, and artist Yamada arrived in the city with orders to record the destruction for maximum propaganda purposes, Yamahata took scores of photographs, and on August 21, they appeared in Mainichi Shimbun, a popular Japanese newspaper. Leslie Nakashima filed the first personal account of the scene to appear in American newspapers. A version of his August 27 UPI article appeared in The New York Times on August 31.
Wilfred Burchett was the first western journalist to visit Hiroshima after the bombing, arriving alone by train from Tokyo on September 2. His Morse code dispatch, "The Atomic Plague", was printed by the Daily Express
newspaper in London on September 5, 1945. Nakashima's and Burchett's
reports were the first public reports to mention the effects of radiation and nuclear fallout—radiation burns and radiation poisoning.
Burchett's reporting was unpopular with the U.S. military, who accused
Burchett of being under the sway of Japanese propaganda, and suppressed a
supporting story submitted by George Weller of the Chicago Daily News.
Laurence dismissed the reports on radiation sickness as Japanese
efforts to undermine American morale, ignoring his own account published
one week earlier.
A member of the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey,
Lieutenant Daniel McGovern, used a film crew to document the effects of
the bombings in early 1946. The film crew shot 90,000 ft (27,000 m) of
film, resulting in a three-hour documentary titled The Effects of the Atomic Bombs Against Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The documentary included images from hospitals showing the human
effects of the bomb; it showed burned-out buildings and cars, and rows
of skulls and bones on the ground. It was classified "secret" for the
next 22 years.
Motion picture company Nippon Eigasha started sending cameramen to
Nagasaki and Hiroshima in September 1945. On October 24, 1945, a U.S. military policeman
stopped a Nippon Eigasha cameraman from continuing to film in Nagasaki.
All Nippon Eigasha's reels were confiscated by the American
authorities, but they were requested by the Japanese government, and
declassified.
The public release of film footage of the city post-attack, and some
research about the effects of the attack, was restricted during the occupation of Japan, but the Hiroshima-based magazine, Chugoku Bunka, in its first issue published on March 10, 1946, devoted itself to detailing the damage from the bombing.
The book Hiroshima, written by Pulitzer Prize winner John Hersey, which was originally published in article form in the popular magazine The New Yorker,
on August 31, 1946, is reported to have reached Tokyo in English by
January 1947, and the translated version was released in Japan in 1949.
It narrated the stories of the lives of six bomb survivors from
immediately prior to, and months after, the dropping of the Little Boy
bomb.
Beginning in 1974, a compilation of drawings and artwork made by the
survivors of the bombings began to be compiled, with completion in 1977,
and under both book and exhibition format, it was titled The Unforgettable Fire.
The bombing amazed Otto Hahn and other German atomic scientists, whom the British held at Farm Hall in Operation Epsilon. Hahn stated that he had not believed an atomic weapon "would be possible for another twenty years"; Werner Heisenberg did not believe the news at first. Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker
said "I think it's dreadful of the Americans to have done it. I think
it is madness on their part", but Heisenberg replied, "One could equally
well say 'That's the quickest way of ending the war'". Hahn was
grateful that the German project had not succeeded in developing "such
an inhumane weapon"; Karl Wirtz
observed that even if it had, "we would have obliterated London but
would still not have conquered the world, and then they would have
dropped them on us".
Hahn told the others, "Once I wanted to suggest that all uranium should be sunk to the bottom of the ocean". The Vatican agreed; L'Osservatore Romano expressed regret that the bomb's inventors did not destroy the weapon for the benefit of humanity. Rev. Cuthbert Thicknesse, the Dean of St Albans, prohibited using St Albans Abbey for a thanksgiving service for the war's end, calling the use of atomic weapons "an act of wholesale, indiscriminate massacre". Nonetheless, news of the atomic bombing was greeted enthusiastically in the U.S.; a poll in Fortune magazine in late 1945 showed a significant minority of Americans (23%) wishing that more atomic bombs could have been dropped on Japan. The initial positive response was supported by the imagery presented to the public (mainly the powerful images of the mushroom cloud).
During this time in America, it was a common practice for editors to
keep graphic images of death out of films, magazines, and newspapers.
Post-attack casualties
Frequent estimates are that 140,000 people in Hiroshima (39% of the
population) and 70,000 people in Nagasaki (28% of the population) died
in 1945, though the number which died immediately as a result of
exposure to the blast, heat, or due to radiation, is unknown. One Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission
report discusses 6,882 people examined in Hiroshima, and 6,621 people
examined in Nagasaki, who were largely within 2000 meters from the hypocenter, who suffered injuries from the blast and heat but died from complications frequently compounded by acute radiation syndrome (ARS), all within about 20–30 days. The most well known of these was Midori Naka,
some 650 meters from the hypocenter at Hiroshima, who would travel to
Tokyo and then with her death on August 24, 1945 was to be the first
death officially certified as a result of radiation poisoning, or as it
was referred to by many, "Atomic bomb disease". It was unappreciated at
the time but the average radiation dose that will kill approximately 50%
of adults, the LD50,
was approximately halved, that is, smaller doses were made more lethal,
when the individual experienced concurrent blast or burn polytraumatic injuries. Conventional skin injuries that cover a large area frequently result in bacterial infection; the risk of sepsis and death is increased when a usually non-lethal radiation dose moderately suppresses the white blood cell count.
In the spring of 1948, the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission (ABCC) was established in accordance with a presidential directive from Truman to the National Academy of Sciences–National Research Council to conduct investigations of the late effects of radiation among the survivors in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In 1956, the ABCC published The Effect of Exposure to the Atomic Bombs on Pregnancy Termination in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The ABCC became the Radiation Effects Research Foundation
(RERF), on April 1, 1975. A binational organization run by both the
United States and Japan, the RERF is still in operation today.
Cancer increases
Cancers do not immediately emerge after exposure to radiation; instead, radiation-induced cancer has a minimum latency period of some 5+ years and Leukemia some 2+ which peaks around 6–8 years later.
Dr Jarrett Foley published the first major reports on the significant
increased incidence of the latter among survivors. Almost all cases of
leukemia over the following 50 years were in people exposed to more than
1Gy. In a strictly dependent manner dependent on their distance from the hypocenter, in the 1987 Life Span Study, conducted by the Radiation Effects Research Foundation,
a statistical excess of 507 cancers, of undefined lethality, were
observed in 79,972 hibakusha who had still been living between 1958–1987
and who took part in the study. As the epidemiology study continues with time, the RERF estimates that, from 1950 to 2000, 46% of leukemia deaths which may include Sadako Sasaki and 11% of solid cancers
of unspecificed lethality were likely due to radiation from the bombs
or some other post-attack city effects, with the statistical excess
being 200 leukemia deaths and 1,700 solid cancers of undeclared
lethality. Both of these statistics being derived from the observation
of approximately half of the total survivors, strictly those who took
part in the study.
Birth defect investigations
While during the preimplantation period, that is 1–10 days following conception, interuterine radiation exposure of "at least 0.2 Gy" can cause complications of implantation and death of the human embryo. The number of miscarriages caused by the radiation from the bombings, during this radiosensitive period, is not known.
One of the early studies conducted by the ABCC was on the outcome of pregnancies occurring in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and in a control city, Kure, located 18 mi (29 km) south of Hiroshima, to discern the conditions and outcomes related to radiation exposure. James V. Neel led the study which found that the overall number of birth defects was not significantly higher among the children of survivors who were pregnant at the time of the bombings.
He also studied the longevity of the children who survived the bombings
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, reporting that between 90 and 95 percent
were still living 50 years later.
While The National Academy of Sciences raised the possibility
that Neel's procedure did not filter the Kure population for possible
radiation exposure which could bias the results. Overall, a statistically insignificant
increase in birth defects occurred directly after the bombings of
Nagasaki and Hiroshima when the cities were taken as wholes, in terms of
distance from the hypocenters however, Neel and others noted that in
approximately 50 humans who were of an early gestational age at the time of the bombing and who were all within about 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) from the hypocenter, an increase in microencephaly and anencephaly
was observed upon birth, with the incidence of these two particular
malformations being nearly 3 times what was to be expected when compared
to the control group in Kure, were approximately 20 cases were observed in a similar sample size.
In 1985, Johns Hopkins University geneticist James F. Crow examined Neel's research and confirmed that the number of birth defects was not significantly higher in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Many members of the ABCC and its successor Radiation Effects Research Foundation
(RERF) were still looking for possible birth defects among the
survivors decades later, but found no evidence that they were
significantly common among the survivors, or inherited in the children of survivors.
Investigations into brain development
Despite the small sample size of 1,600 to 1,800 persons who came forth as prenatally exposed at the time of the bombings, that were both within a close proximity to the two hypocenters, to survive the in utero absorption of a substantial dose of radiation and then the malnourished post-attack environment, data from this cohort does support the increased risk of severe mental retardation
(SMR), that was observed in some 30 individuals, with SMR being a
common outcome of the aforementioned microencephaly. While a lack of
statistical data, with just 30 individuals out of 1,800, prevents a
definitive determination of a threshold point, the data collected suggests a threshold interuterine or fetal dose for SMR, at the most radiosensitive period of cognitive development, when there is the largest number of undifferentiated neural cells (8 to 15 weeks post-conception) to begin at a threshold dose of approximately "0.09" to "0.15" Gy,
with the risk then linearly increasing to a 43% rate of SMR when
exposed to a fetal dose of 1 Gy at any point during these weeks of rapid
Neurogenesis.
However either side of this radiosensitive age, none of the prenatally exposed to the bombings at an age less than 8 weeks, that is prior to synaptogenesis or at a gestational age more than
26 weeks "were observed to be mentally retarded", with the condition
therefore being isolated to those solely of 8–26 weeks of age and who
absorbed more than approximately "0.09" to "0.15" Gy of prompt radiation energy.
Examination of the prenatally exposed in terms of IQ performance
and school records, determined the beginning of a statistically
significant reduction in both, when exposed to greater than 0.1 to 0.5
Gray, during the same gestational period of 8–25 weeks. However outside
this period, at less than 8 weeks and greater than 26 after conception,
"there is no evidence of a radiation-related effect on scholastic
performance."
The reporting of doses in terms of absorbed energy in units of (Gy and rad) rather than the use of the biologically significant, biologically weighted Sievert, in both the SMR and cognitive performance data is typical. The reported threshold dose variance between the two cities, is suggested to be a manifestation of the difference between X-ray and neutron absorption, with Little Boy emitting substantially more neutron flux, whereas the Baratol that surrounded the core of Fat Man,
filtered or shifted the absorbed neutron-radiation profile, so that the
dose of radiation energy received in Nagasaki, is mostly that from
exposure to x-rays/gamma rays, in contrast to the environment within
1500 meters of the hypocenter at Hiroshima, were instead the in-utero
dose more depended on the absorption of neutrons, which have a higher biological effect per unit of energy absorbed. From the Radiation dose reconstruction work, which were also informed by the 1962 BREN Tower-Japanese city analog, the estimated dosimetry at Hiroshima still has the largest uncertainty as the Little Boy-bomb
design was never tested before deployment or afterward, therefore the
estimated radiation profile absorbed by individuals at Hiroshima had
required greater reliance on calculations than the Japanese soil,
concrete and roof-tile measurements which began to reach accurate levels
and thereby inform researchers, in the 1990s.
Many other investigations into cognitive outcomes, such as Schizophrenia
as a result of prenatal exposure, have been conducted with "no
statistically significant linear relationship seen", there is a
suggestion that in the most extremely exposed, those who survived within
a kilometer or so of the hypocenters, a trend emerges akin to that seen
in SMR, though the sample size is too small to determine with any
significance.
Hibakusha
The survivors of the bombings are called hibakusha (被爆者, Japanese pronunciation: [çibakɯ̥ɕa]),
a Japanese word that literally translates to "explosion-affected
people". The Japanese government has recognized about 650,000 people as hibakusha. As of March 31, 2019, 145,844 were still alive, mostly in Japan. The government of Japan recognizes about 1% of these as having illnesses caused by radiation. The memorials in Hiroshima and Nagasaki contain lists of the names of the hibakusha who are known to have died since the bombings. Updated annually on the anniversaries of the bombings, as of August 2019, the memorials record the names of more than 500,000 hibakusha; 319,186 in Hiroshima and 182,601 in Nagasaki.
If they discuss their background, Hibakusha and their children were (and still are) victims of fear based discrimination and exclusion when it comes to prospects of marriage or work due to public ignorance about the consequences of radiation sickness or that the low doses that the majority received were less than a routine diagnostic x-ray, much of the public however persist with the belief that the Hibakusha carry some hereditary or even contagious disease.
This is despite the fact that no statistically demonstrable increase of
birth defects/congenital malformations was found among the later conceived
children born to survivors of the nuclear weapons used at Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, or indeed has been found in the later conceived children of
cancer survivors who had previously received radiotherapy.
The surviving women of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, that could conceive, who
were exposed to substantial amounts of radiation, went on and had
children with no higher incidence of abnormalities/birth defects than
the rate which is observed in the Japanese average.
A study of the long-term psychological effects of the bombings on the
survivors found that even 17–20 years after the bombings had occurred
survivors showed a higher prevalence of anxiety and somatization symptoms.
Double survivors
Perhaps as many as 200 people from Hiroshima sought refuge in Nagasaki. The 2006 documentary Twice Survived: The Doubly Atomic Bombed of Hiroshima and Nagasaki documented 165 nijū hibakusha (lit. double explosion-affected people), nine of whom claimed to be in the blast zone in both cities. On March 24, 2009, the Japanese government officially recognized Tsutomu Yamaguchi as a double hibakusha.
He was confirmed to be 3 km (1.9 mi) from ground zero in Hiroshima on a
business trip when the bomb was detonated. He was seriously burnt on
his left side and spent the night in Hiroshima. He arrived at his home
city of Nagasaki on August 8, the day before the bombing, and he was
exposed to residual radiation while searching for his relatives. He was
the first officially recognized survivor of both bombings. He died on January 4, 2010, at the age of 93, after a battle with stomach cancer.
Korean survivors
During the war, Japan brought as many as 670,000 Korean conscripts to Japan to work as forced labor. About 5,000–8,000 Koreans were killed in Hiroshima and another 1,500–2,000 died in Nagasaki. For many years, Korean survivors had a difficult time fighting for the same recognition as Hibakusha
as afforded to all Japanese survivors, a situation which resulted in
the denial of the free health benefits to them in Japan. Most issues
were eventually addressed in 2008 through lawsuits.
Memorials
Hiroshima was subsequently struck by Typhoon Ida
on September 17, 1945. More than half the bridges were destroyed, and
the roads and railroads were damaged, further devastating the city. The population increased from 83,000 soon after the bombing to 146,000 in February 1946.
The city was rebuilt after the war, with help from the national
government through the Hiroshima Peace Memorial City Construction Law
passed in 1949. It provided financial assistance for reconstruction,
along with land donated that was previously owned by the national
government and used for military purposes. In 1949, a design was selected for the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park.
Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall, the closest surviving
building to the location of the bomb's detonation, was designated the Hiroshima Peace Memorial. The Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum was opened in 1955 in the Peace Park. Hiroshima also contains a Peace Pagoda, built in 1966 by Nipponzan-Myōhōji.
Nagasaki was also rebuilt after the war, but was dramatically changed
in the process. The pace of reconstruction was initially slow, and the
first simple emergency dwellings were not provided until 1946. The focus
on redevelopment was the replacement of war industries with foreign
trade, shipbuilding and fishing. This was formally declared when the
Nagasaki International Culture City Reconstruction Law was passed in May
1949.
New temples were built, as well as new churches owing to an increase in
the presence of Christianity. Some of the rubble was left as a
memorial, such as a torii at Sannō Shrine, and an arch near ground zero. New structures were also raised as memorials, such as the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum, which was opened in the mid-1990s.
Debate over bombings
The role of the bombings in Japan's surrender,
and the ethical, legal, and military controversies surrounding the
United States' justification for them have been the subject of scholarly
and popular debate.
On one hand, it has been argued that the bombings caused the Japanese
surrender, thereby preventing casualties that an invasion of Japan would
have involved. Stimson talked of saving one million casualties.
The naval blockade might have starved the Japanese into submission
without an invasion, but this would also have resulted in many more
Japanese deaths.
Japanese historian Tsuyoshi Hasegawa
argued that the entry of the Soviet Union into the war against Japan
"played a much greater role than the atomic bombs in inducing Japan to
surrender because it dashed any hope that Japan could terminate the war
through Moscow's mediation". A view among critics of the bombings, that was popularized by American historian Gar Alperovitz
in 1965, is the idea of atomic diplomacy: that the United States used
nuclear weapons to intimidate the Soviet Union in the early stages of
the Cold War. Although not accepted by mainstream historians, this became the position in Japanese school history textbooks.
Those who oppose the bombings give other reasons for their view,
among them: a belief that atomic bombing is fundamentally immoral, that
the bombings counted as war crimes, and that they constituted state terrorism.
Legacy
Like the way it began, the manner in which World War II ended cast a
long shadow over international relations for decades to come. By June
30, 1946, there were components for only nine atomic bombs in the US
arsenal, all Fat Man devices identical to the one used in the bombing of
Nagasaki.
The nuclear weapons were handmade devices, and a great deal of work
remained to improve their ease of assembly, safety, reliability and
storage before they were ready for production. There were also many
improvements to their performance that had been suggested or
recommended, but that had not been possible under the pressure of
wartime development. The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Fleet Admiral William D. Leahy had decried the use of the atomic bombs as adopting "an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages", but in October 1947, he reported a military requirement for 400 bombs.
The American monopoly on nuclear weapons lasted only four years
before the Soviet Union detonated an atomic bomb in September 1949. The United States responded with the development of the hydrogen bomb, a nuclear weapon a thousand times as powerful as the bombs that devastated Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Such ordinary fission bombs would henceforth be regarded as small tactical nuclear weapons.
By 1986, the United States had 23,317 nuclear weapons, while the Soviet
Union had 40,159. By 2017, nine nations had nuclear weapons, but Japan was not one of them. Japan reluctantly signed the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons in February 1970,
but it still sheltered under the American nuclear umbrella. American
nuclear weapons were stored on Okinawa, and sometimes in Japan itself,
albeit in contravention of agreements between the two nations. Lacking the resources to fight the Soviet Union using conventional forces, the Western Alliance came to depend on the use of nuclear weapons to defend itself during the Cold War, a policy that became known in the 1950s as the New Look. In the decades after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the United States would threaten to use its nuclear weapons many times.