You are incorrect. Machinery even today is useless without people, pre-computer age it was even more true. It was not enough to simply destroy the machines - you have to destroy the people, too, or they will repair and rebuild - even if those people running the factories are schoolchildren.Stuart wrote:It's not a rationalization at all, its a straightforward statement of a military problem and its solution. Tokyo is like every other Japanese city - now as much as then - the small manfacturing plants and machine shops are mixed in with the residential areas. Previous B-29 raids had more or less failed to destroy the big plants let alone the little ones (bombing from 30,000 feet with conventional weapons is quite a problem) and the bombing offensive was grinding to a half due to the combination of unworkable tactics and an unsuitable target set. The fire-bombing campaign was explicitly designed to solve the problem presented by the structure of Japanese industry. After Tokyo was burned down, photographs show the remains of presses and drilling machines left standing in the ruins. Your statement that the population was the specific target was quite wrong, industry was the target, the people who died just were in the wrong place at the wrong time.Broomstick wrote: It was a nice rationalization, particularly since there was some truth in it, but when 1945 rolled around and you get to the March firebombing of Tokyo that was specifically intended to destroy the city and large numbers of its citizens. In fact, the firebombing of March killed more people than either of the atomic bombs.
Japan blurred the line between civilian and military, and the Japanese population paid a heavy, heavy price for it.
The people WERE targets, not just buildings and machines.
Yes, and they were ignored. It wasn't that the populace didn't believe they would be bombed, it's that the Japanese did not flee battle.By the way, are you aware that the B-29s dropped leaflets all over Japan listing the targets for fire-bomb raids (including Hiroshlima and Nagasaki) and advising people to leave them?
They were a formidable enemy, and I keep saying that if ever Japan and the US go to war again I hope to god we're on the same side. We do NOT want to fight them again! The Japanese - both military and civilian - fought amazing battles with amazingly little gear and support. With modern technology... I'd really rather not see that, thank you very much.
The problem was that in 1945 it looked like the whole damn population from toddlers on up was going to fight - invading Japan was going to come awful damn close to total extermination because the two things we had learned were 1) the Japanese do not fear death and 2) the Japanese do not surrender.Of course, we're not stupid. The U.S. kills by stand-off firepower and wer're very good at it. That's a long way from saying we intended to exterminate the population. Basically if people fought they would die, if they didn't, they wouldn't. And if we had to kill them we would do so in the most cost-effective manner.We were planning to invade Japan. We weren't going to fight mano a mano - the US doesn't do that. No, we rain death from afar or above or whatever we can to maximize the number of them killed and minimize the number of us killed. We weren't going to confront peasants with pitchforks on the beaches, we were going to burn the houses down around their ears. Well, OK, yes, we DID have plans to send men onto the beaches, there would have been some D-Day style fighting, but as much as possible the plan was to destroy as much of Japan as possible from above before we set foot on the islands.
I have heard it said that the atomic bombings were so horrific that the living envied the dead - I don't know if that's really true or not, but a weapon of that magnitude was starting to look like the only way to avoid a bloodbath. The Japanese had more stomach for massacre than the US did, and that's a bad thing to confront when you're planning an invasion.
Yes - in Europe such centers of military industry could be eliminated yet still leave villages and farms intact. This could not be done in Japan. The subjugation of Japan meant the destruction of just about every fucking village and city in the whole country, and the destruction of virtually every center of agriculture. It's all very fine to speak of military necessity but the reality - and the leadership were well of aware of it - was that 90-95% of the Japanese population might have to be destroyed. Some US troops balked at conducting air raids over Japanese towns. There were real concerns that a significant number of US soldiers were going to refuse to do the necessary killing.Not quite so; yes, we were going to destroy every Japanese community that was of economic significance; destroy any means of communciation and destroy all transport facilities. That's standard prepping for an invasion. The problem was that the structure of Japanese industry was such that economic dispersal went vto a very low level so destroying the whole set-up was a pretty complex task.The people planning that knew damn well that they were going to be killing women, children, old men, and infants, and the plans were to firebomb every inhabitation above a certain size regardless of whether or not it held military assets.
Certainly. The US was desperate avoid it, even if the Japanese weren't. However, we continually have a new generation coming up through the schools and thus it is important to ask these questions again and again. Without an understanding of the context the moral dilemmas can't be comprehended, much less debated and discussed.And its a perfectly accurate argument. The invasion would have been a nightmare.That is the plan that was halted by the dropping of two atomic bombs, which is why students of history often argue that those two bombs resulted in less death than the planned invasion would have.
Of course, the question of where lines are drawn are where the arguments erupt. What justifies taking a single human life? What justifies destroying a building? What justifies bombing and entire city? These questions should NOT be easy to answer, these moral questions should require thought. War quickly becomes a matter of choosing the lesser of two evils.There's a doctrine called proportionality. What this means is that the scale of destruction whould be gauged by the military necessity for destroying the target. If, for example, there is a sniper in a single building, then the task of killing him should be proportional to the military objective of killing him. Destroying the whole town would be inadmissable but destroying the whole building would probably be acceptable. It doesn't matter whether the building is a house, a church or a hospital, whether it is empty of full of civilians. If there is a sniper in there, then taking out said building is legitimate but destroying the whole town is not.Are you saying that if something is a legitimate military target then ANY means is acceptable to destroy that target?
I am inclined to agree with you, but as I said, we should ask these questions over and over. That's part of the reason I stir the pot in these threads - I want people to THINK.Now, we can apply this to Dresden (and to every other town we flattened in World War Two). It's military industries are undoubtedly a viable target. It's railway communications (which were peculiarly essential in Dresden's case) were undoubtedly a military target, its command structures were undoubtedly military targets. So destroying them was undoubtedly legitimate. What was proportional? Well, the only means we had to get at them were heavy bombers, the accuracy and payload of heavy bombers was such that they could not strike at said targets accurately enough to destroy them, the only way to erase them was to burn down the whole damned town. It was the militarily appropiate and legitimate response and that's that. We literally had no lesser option.
And likewise people dwell on the Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuclear bombings as if they were the ultimate evil, but ignore the Toykro raid of March 1945. This, to my mind, is an argument for more thorough teaching of history but I'm not holding my breath, waiting for it to happen. Meanwhile, the well-known battles and bombings still provide fodder for moral debate, after which you can say "by the way - this over here was even worse"Actually. Dresden was a long way from the top of the heap on those criteria. It stuck in the mind because it was the last large city that got turned into a bonfire and because it was a city that was familiar to people. Say "Essen" and people think of Krupps and steel and artillery. Say "Dresden" and people thought of china statuettes and a toursit destination. As teh advertising people say, all a matter of image.There's bombing a town and then there is incinerating it - Dresden stuck in the mind not because it was a legitimate target for bombing that was in fact bombed (lots of towns got bombed) but because of the density of the bombs dropped and just how total the destruction was.
And yet we have sunk hundreds of millions of dollars into weapons that target more and more precisely. The reality is (as always) that you need the right tool for the right job. There are situations that, arguably, do require an entire city to burn. There are other situations where, if one only could target one person or one building, that would be preferable. I prefer a world in which the destruction can be tailored to what is truly necessary, rather than based on what tools are available.As to your first comment, these is a difference between bombing a town and burning it down. Burning it down works. We found out quite early that cities are destroyed by fire, not explosions, that pure bombing does risibly small amounts of damage. Fire on the other hand devastates the target areas. It's more cost-effective to burn targets down. Nuclear weapons are essentially giant incendiaries, we rely on fire for their primary effects.
The US military has also tried to develop non-lethal means of defeating people - think what that could mean IF you had to invade and area with a hostile civilian populace, or merely pass through such an area.
The problem is the psychological damage that does to OUR troops - Americans don't react well to gunning down 8 year olds, even if said 8 year olds are carrying spears and intending to kill them.I know. Doesn't matter, if they fight they die. If they don't, they don't. If using civilians as soldiers (no matter how ineffective they are) results in teh deaths of other civilians, the responsibility lies with the Japanese, not us. They broke the rules, they pay the price. SEP.The Japanese were seriously discussing arming the populace with bamboo spears. Peasants, old men, women, and children armed with pointy sticks against fully equipped Marines staging a D-Day style invasion is... pathetic. That's not what is normally considered a "military force". No doubt there would have been some resistance with actual weapons in some places but the end result would have been a slaughter, the Japanese caught between their burning homes and the armed men storming the beaches.
That was the problem with Japan, from our viewpoint - they genuinely preferred death to surrender. They would rather die in battle than surrender, and if they were captured that had that irritating tendency to suicide - preferably while taking some of us with them. It scared the fucking shit out of the average GI.
Not to mention the reaction of the people back home who don't (and often can't) understand the situation on the ground at the front.