Enigma wrote:Unfortunately, even some of those that evacuated after Hiroshima was nuked, got nuked in Nagasaki. Double survivors, I think they were called for those that survived the nuking of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Correct. There are more than 160 identified double-survivors, and probably more. This gets back to the problem that, by August 1945, there wasn't really any place in Japan that was safe any more. ALL the cities were at risk of being bombed, if not by atomics than by conventional bombs.
Where, exactly, did Bakustra expect the Japanese to evacuation
to?
Stas Bush wrote:Why I mentioned blockade is because it was a more realistic alternative than the crazy attacks on Kyushu which was chock-full of Japanese troops. Also, I disagree with the notion that the USSR would invade mainland Japan easily.
My understanding is that the US
feared the Soviets would invade and take over Japan. It wouldn't be the first time one nation has misjudged the capability of another. If the US thought the Soviets could take some or all of Japan that would have factored into their thinking whether or not the Soviets actually had that capability.
Bakustra wrote:In addition, the proponents of the blockade felt that Japan would surrender quickly, by the end of the year.
Well, of course the proponents of the blockade thought it would work! You don't support something like that unless you think it will work!
But that blithely ignores the human toll a blockade would take, that would be disproportionately borne by the civilians. Look what happened during blockades of Iraq, how many deaths were attributed to that? Are you aware that, after the war was over where there was NO obstacle to delivering food and aid to Japan, no fear of attacks on shipping, and no resistance from Japan, the US struggled to stave off hunger those first couple years of occupation? There was widespread hunger and malnutrition. 1946 was considered a famine year
despite the US delivery of food and aid,
despite the fact that MacArthur's first actions were to set up a means to get food to the Japanese as it was painfully obvious the entire nation was a hair's breadth from mass starvation. In fact, on August 30, three days before the official surrender ceremony, MacArthur issued an order that no Allied personnel were to obtain food in Japan, they'd have to carry their own, because MacArthur wasn't a dumbass and realized just how dire the situation was for the Japanese. That was after the fighting stopped. In a war, with a blockade, and shipping losses... no way. Come on, even if a blockade had let food into Japan, who was going to send it to them? On top of that, they'd be weakened by hunger and poor diet, disease would take hold – at a time when penicillin was a closely-guarded secret experimental drug, so LOTS more deaths from disease and infection than today – and a LOT of Japanese would die. They'd still fight, though – in the Pacific the US frequently found themselves up against half-starved, malnourished Japanese that wouldn't surrender.
They could have offered the terms that were eventually offered accepted and which Japan proposed to the US in January 1945- that the Emperor would not be forced to abdicate, which could precipitate the final showdown that occurred historically between the Emperor and the army officials planning to resist indefinitely.
They could have sprinkled pixie dust on the guns and sung “Kum By Ya”, too, but in the real world that wasn't going to happen. No, by 1945 the Allies were not going to accept anything BUT total and unconditional surrender. Do you not understand that? No negotiating was going to happen on that. The end of the Potsdam Declaration spells it out quite bluntly:
We call upon the government of Japan to proclaim now the unconditional surrender of all Japanese armed forces, and to provide proper and adequate assurances of their good faith in such action. The alternative for Japan is prompt and utter destruction.
The Japanese kept trying to get terms that would promise the Emperor would stay in power. The Allies weren't cutting any deals, especially since they knew that
eventually they'd win based on numbers and resources alone. The Allies didn't have to negotiate, by that point it was just a question of how many would have to die before Japan surrendered or was destroyed. The
Allies decided to let Hirohito live, reduced to a figurehead. The Japanese had zero say in it. There was no way in hell the Allies were going to be worn down to more generous terms.
Do you really think the Allies gave a fuck if the military and the Emperor went for each other's throats?
Then there was the business in Okinawa - over 100,000 Japanese casualties, 50,000 US, and tends of thousands of dead civilians. That was one battle for one island out of all the many islands of Japan. Over 1400 suicide attacks. Episodes of mass suicide by captured Japanese, and also by Okinawan civilians. Okinawa maintains that over 100,000 civilians died.
Okinawa killed 12,000 American troops directly, not 50,000. In total less than 20,000 American troops died as a result of the Okinawan campaign, being incredibly generous with the number of troops that died later of wounds sustained on Okinawa.
Hey, stupid – I put a word in my part of the quote in bold. Do you know why? Because I don't think you know what the word “casualty” means. It means “removed from combat”. That's not just the dead, that's the wounded too badly to keep fighting, and the guy over there having a nervous breakdown, curled into a fetal position sucking his thumb. That's why I said CASULTIES, not DEAD, when referring to the troops. Anyone who can't fight has to be replaced, whether dead or POW or severely injured.
Your other figures ignore that the majority of mass suicides among civilians were ordered and forced by Japanese soldiers.
And this makes them less dead because.... wait, no, they're still dead. I'm sorry, from the standpoint of how high the pile of corpses is, what difference does it make whether they were killed by enemy fire, friendly fire, willing suicide, or forced suicide? Do you think there would be
fewer suicides on, say, Honshu? Do you think that somehow the military would not force civilians on Honshu to commit suicide? This point you make is no point at all. In an invasion of Japan civilians
would have died in enormous numbers.
Again, the Okinawans were
less loyal to the Emperor than those on the other main islands. If anything, on those islands the civilian participation would have been
greater and their death toll higher.
The estimates for either deaths or casualties varied enormously. That's hardly a surprise, given the variables involved.
We will never know for sure, but the higher estimates relied on the idea that significant fractions of Japanese civilians would fight, and that the invasion would last at least six months, and were unaware of the pending invasion of Hokkaido by the USSR or the full disposition of troops in Japan or the lack of ammunition or equipment among the Japanese forces.
On basis do you think the Japanese civilians
wouldn't fight? Seriously? What could possibly lead you to that conclusion? We have examples of civilians engaging US troops in battle in Okinawa. We have examples of civilians killing themselves rather than surrender. We have numerous statements and testimonies from Japanese who were civilians at the time discussing how the nation was preparing civilians to fight the anticipated invasion, and how to kill themselves if it looked like defeat was inevitable. This includes people who were
children at the time talking about how they were being prepared to battle invaders with improvised weaponry.
Against that, what evidence can you offer that the civilians
wouldn't fight?
Assuming the invasion would only take six months is, frankly, a rather optimistic estimate. It was, I suppose,
possible, but the real question is how
likely would that have been?
Stas maintains that the USSR didn't really have that much capacity to invade Hokkaido – in which case maybe the USSR doesn't try, or tries and rapidly withdraws, and then how does that effect your cheerful estimate?
And finally – the military at the time had to make decisions
based on what they knew. Bakustra, you make the mistake of so many, assuming that the 20/20 hindsight of a half century later applies to those there at the time. If the best information the Allies had was that the Japanese had plenty of ammunition THAT is what the decision is based on, not finding out five years later that half the ammo had been sunk in a harbor somewhere. Of course the Allies did not have perfect knowledge of Japanese troop distribution – keeping that sort of thing secret is kind of important to waging war, you know? Guess what – the Japanese didn't know our troop distribution, either.
Looking at these factors, it is quite likely Japan would have surrendered in September, before any US invasion could begin, with the invasion of Hokkaido in August. It is also likely that if they didn't do so then, they would have collapsed as an effective fighting force once the USSR invaded Honshu (they would have been facing underequipped forces with barely any ammunition in Hokkaido and northern Honshu) and Olympic finally began. It is also possible that Japan would have surrendered once the USSR took Manchuria in a matter of days. It is possible that civil unrest would have forced a surrender in August or September as well. In other words, it is quite possible that the nukes shortened the war only by a matter of weeks rather than the half-year that was thought to be necessary.
Oh, my, you
are wearing rose colored glasses. How does that paragraph square with Stas's mention of the
lack of USSR capability to invade and take Hokkaido? And if they can't/won't take Hokkaido WHY the fuck would they try Honshu, especially since the USSR
knew the Americans were planning to invade it, so why not let US troops get shot instead of USSR troops? And why would Japan suddenly surrender after losing Manchuria when they hadn't surrendered after losing all their other holdings? That makes no sense. What was so magic about Manchuria?
Now, losing
Honshu, THAT might make them surrender.... for damn sure losing Okinawa didn't, and that was much more an integral part of Japan than Manchuria.
Can we limit alternatives to those that have some contact with reality?
The notion of a million dead in an invasion of Japan was not simply pulled out of someone's ass. It's not a figure made of pixie dust and the masturbatory fantasies of adolescents. It was arrived at by military people who actually had an education in these matters, based on how things had gone over several years of fighting a particular enemy. Unless you can justify a smaller figure you can't handwave it away.
Yes, in the case of Japan there actually was reason to fear Marines facing off against "hordes of starving, emaciated children to brandish ice picks". School girls were being instructed to tie their ankles and knees together before killing themselves so their body wouldn't fall into an indecent pose. I don't know why the idea of child soldiers is somehow inconceivable to you - African has plenty of them in today's world. Are you less dead if it is a child that stabs you?
No it wasn't. I went over this. First of all, you haven't justified that this would have happened in serious numbers, especially given that again, the assumption that this would happen was based on a single island, while other experience, and the opinion of the emperor's staff, suggests that civil opposition to the military was mounting, and that it was unlikely that civilians would of their own volition fight in significant numbers.
That “one island”, Okinawa, had experienced civilian resistance throughout the war, not just during the battle to take it, because many Okinawans did and still view themselves as distinct from the Japanese. There was MUCH more resistance to Imperial Japan on Okinawa than on the main islands. Or did you not know that Okinawans have their own language, customs and culture? It's like saying the Welsh are identical to the English just because they're both part of the United Kingdom. There was every reason to believe that in central Japan civilians would be MORE loyal to the military cause and MORE cooperative with the army and MORE likely to fight invading allies and LESS likely to side with invaders.
Even after Japan surrendered there was still civilian resistance to the Americans. There wasn't a lot of it, and it wasn't publicized a lot, but it still occurred. What makes you think that during a
war, the civilians would not resist?
Again, the Hitler Youth, Volkssturm, and Werwolf units did not act like this, so why would we assume that Japanese civilians in similar situations would have continued to fight?
Did you read my post?
Because the Japanese had a different culture. Germans had a much stronger taboo against suicide than the Japanese (there were some German suicide missions, but nowhere near as many or as organized and glorified as the Japanese kamekazi). Germans had a culture that didn't see surrender as particularly shameful, whereas in Japan many saw surrender as worse than death. These weren't just military values, they were cultural values. Germans, being Western, find the survival of the individual quite important whereas the Japanese put more stock in group survival than Western nations did (and arguably still do) and thus Japanese civilians were more willing to sacrifice themselves for what is perceived at the good of the whole.
There probably would have been a lot of crying 7 year olds happy to surrender in exchange for food and protection, but I'm not so sure about, say, the 15 year olds.
We DID warn the civilians. Unfortunately, on a realistic level, there wasn't a fuck of a lot the civilians could do. A lot of them just wouldn't evacuate, any more than the English evacuated London during the Blitz.
They ranked the cities, you idiot. They specifically ranked them as targets, so that it was Kokura as the first priority, then Nagasaki, then x, then y.
God, you are so thick – no, Nagasaki wasn't formally designated “second choice” in the way you think, it was
what was practical as a target on that morning. Weather dictated targets as much as any other factor. If the clouds sorted out differently it would have been a
different city that was number two, not Nagasaki.
In any case, there was no safe city to go to. There was nowhere in Japan that wasn't a target on someone's map. What next, you'd want the Allies to published dates and times of attack, too? You're being stupid.
PS: The English did evacuate a number of people from London during the Blitz, particularly children considered non-essential to industry, and a number of people left on their own.
And quite a few people made a point of NOT evacuating. In fact, the royal family made a point of staying in London.
Another important distinction is that there was a place the could evacuate TO – the range of bombs falling on England was limited, past a certain point you were safe because the bombs simply couldn't reach that far. Japan was different, because there was NO place that couldn't be bombed. That was just one of the horrors of WWII, that for some people there was no longer any safe place to flee to.