Hate to be picky, but it depends on the kind of mushroom.
Hate to be picky but you're reaching.
Hate to be picky, but it depends on the kind of mushroom.
Hate to be picky but this thread got silly a few posts back.Hate to be picky but you're reaching.
Nope. The information came from this wonderful thing called a "book". You know, those hardcover paper thingys people used to read before the internet rotted their minds.Got a link for this BS?
Nah, just raging firestorms that destroyed more of those cities and killed more people than either of the nukes did. Mushroom cloud, fire tornadoes, they're both rather apocryphal.Hate to be picky but you were talking about the firebombings of Dresden and Tokyo. Neither of which had one big mushroom cloud.
Tokyo was firebombed almost to the same degree that Dresden was. When you look a Pearl as being allowed to happen it makes the US the problem rather than the solution as far as armed conflict goes. There is no doubt that the US caused 9/11 and the goals were what has unfolded since then.
Perhaps a wider view of some events will help shed light on the specific actions that are interlinked.
What If We Are The 'Bad Guys?' : Waking Times
In what way?I guess it was Nagasaki that actually put the finishing touches on it!![]()
Actually, the OP is correct. The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on 6 and 9 August 1945 respectively did not end the war.
The signature of the surrender aboard the Missouri on 12 August 1945 did.
Nope. The information came from this wonderful thing called a "book". You know, those hardcover paper thingys people used to read before the internet rotted their minds.
If you're interested, the book is called "Flyboys", written by James Bradley. Don't ask what chapter it's in, just read the book.
The book is fantastic as it goes into much greater detail into the causes of the Pacific War. It also deals with the fates of 8 US Navy airmen who were shot down and ultimately cannibalized by Japanese officers. Some of the facts in the book weren't declassified until shortly after the turn of this century.
And for a little background on the author, he's the son of one of the men who raised the American flag on Iwo Jima. He also wrote "Flags of Our Fathers".
Nagasaki was 3 days AFTER Hiroshima, so it was probably just to clinch any lingering doubts.
About the US having the ability to repeat the explosion. Now air/fuel do (almost) as much damage with no contamination.Nagasaki was 3 days AFTER Hiroshima, so it was probably just to clinch any lingering doubts.
Nagasaki was 3 days AFTER Hiroshima, so it was probably just to clinch any lingering doubts.
Finally, something that personally pisses me off every time I read re-interpretations of history. I love reading about, and learning if new facts or artifacts have been discovered. What I do not like is speculation without anything to back it up. Most of the university papers publish "what they believe" actually happened, based on "learned opinion". Well, that doesn't always work. What was the mood of the people? What was on every radio station and newspaper?
You'da thunk Alamagordo woulda given 'em some idea.My second point. Dropping a nuke had to happen, but not because 'the war would be over sooner', or 'many American lives would be saved'. That's a line for public consumption. The government and the military had to know exactly what this device would do. Japan gave them the perfect reason to test. Theory is one thing: detonation is another.
You'da thunk Alamagordo woulda given 'em some idea.
I believe that a few government/military leaders wished to continue. If the transcripts of the meetings with the Emperor are accurate, Hirohito got his way. To me, i this makes sense. The generals may have wished to die fighting, but Hirohito didn't see it that way. He may have sympathized with the suffering of the Japanese civilians, or believed that if they didn't surrender, the nation would be wiped out. I do not believe anything was ever recorded that definitively explained the emperor's decision.