I think that, given more time to realize what had happened, Japan would have surrendered after the first bomb. - SW
And why is that? Because of the radiation? Because of the scale of the destruction? Frankly, like I said, this wasn\'t anything Japan hadn\'t see before. True, they hadn\'t seen radiation poisioning, but they saw thousands upon thousands of their citizens with 3rd digree burns from the fires. At the time, most japaneese buildings were still made out of wood and paper.. not brick and mortar like most other countries cities. When we started dropping bombs, those whole citys would go up like tissue paper extending the damage far -FAR- from where the bombs had originally impacted at. Look at WWII footage of post war Japan.. Tokyo looked every bit as decimated as both Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It was like the great Chicago fire all over the nation of Japan.. our pilots even complained of the stench of burning flesh they could smell rising from these citys on their high altitude bombing runs. I really don\'t think that Japan would have surrendered with just one bomb... because the devistation it caused wasn\'t all that major compaired to our other bombing runs. However, like I said, if they feared that we had an entire arsenal of these bombs compairable to our conventional weapons.. then we could kill every last living creature in that nation. That\'s something they wanted to avoid since Hirohito never wanted to "Fight till the last man stands".. they simply wanted to make it so bloody a stalemate that the Americans would back off without having to disgrace Japan into an actual surrender.
As far as military targets go.. many of their military installations were INSIDE major cities. It\'s kind of hard to descriminatnly bomb specific targets inside a major city with nuclear weaponry. Besides.. most of their military targets had already been wiped out by our firebombing raids. By the end of the war, they didn\'t even have flack cannons to shoot at our B-57\'s, which allowed us pretty much free reign over Japan\'s skies. An invasion of Japan wouldn\'t have met with much resistance from their convential army.. it would have been a gurrella war with the citizens.
I don\'t agree with the idea of Korea or Vietnam though. - SW
I don\'t quite agree with Vietnam either, since we had plenty of bases in that region anyhow. I agree, that was someone else\'s war.. the French. What happened there is, we sent in troops to aid French leigeons in Vietnam and as our troops began succumbing to poor leadership and a fanatical enemie.. we began sending more and more troops in for protection and retaliation. The whole war jus snowballed from there.
Korea, I agree with tho. Our bases in the philipines were directly at risk of Communist advancements.. and the lesson of WWII was.. keep those islands safe at all costs. It\'s how we defeated the Japaneese, by island hopping and securing safe naval passage. So we went in and beat the Korans up to the 38th parallel... pulling off some of the most specatular military tactics under Joe McArthur that our nation has ever seen. Now he wanted to push the communists all the way back to Moscow.. but as the Chineese army reinforced the North Koreans, Eisenhower withdrew McCarthy as commander of our pacific forces because he feared where war with China would lead us. Chineese involvment in the Korean war was kept under wraps for quite a few years because our rules of engagement state that if any of their soldiers attack us... we have to retaliate.
(The same thing happed in Vietnam when we found Russian Air combat pilots making bombing runs of our troops.. we didn\'t say anything because it would have set the rules of engagement into motion and triggered a Nuclear War. Same thing with the Cuban Missle Crisis.. we had a jet fighter shot down while taking reconnosance photos for a Cuban invasion plan. We ignored it because it would have blown all the diplomacy the Kennedys were working hard to keep flowing and forced us into a war.)
Bozco - My point is that if we hadn\'t been such isolationists and had tried to stop the events leading up to WWII, that war might have been over before the Germans ever crossed Poland into France.. or better yet.. might have stopped WWII all-together.
Look at the nuetral countries. While I dont know much about the small few, I dont seem to remember great violence and threats upon them by hostile countries. - Luckee
Almost nobody was neutral in WWII Luckee. The countries who remained neutral had "bought" their peace at the price of trade of valuable minerals and supplies for Germany\'s war effort. Some countries such as Switzerland even went a step further and allowed Germany to use their country as a hotbed training ground for Axis spies.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/105037.stmAnd exactly how long after America and Brittan were conquered do you think it would have taken for Germany to turn on those countries as well? After all.. Germany was trading bloodmoney stolen from Holocaust victims to Russia in exchange for food and clothing materials for their troops prior to 1941. Didn\'t stop Hitler from attacking Russian troops and taking over Russian settlements, (ultimately his downfall) which brought Russia into the war.