Why the US didn't Nuke Tokyo

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  • čas přidán 22. 03. 2023
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    Tsuyoshi Hasegawa - Racing the enemy. Stalin, Truman, and the surrender of Japan.
    Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin - American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer
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    blog.nuclearsecrecy.com/2014/...
    www.doug-long.com/stimson4.htm
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Komentáře • 8K

  • @ThePresentPast_
    @ThePresentPast_  Před rokem +1950

    Comment for mistakes and nuance:
    For all the military affectionados. I know the b-29 is called a SUPERfortress. Noticed it too late in the editing game. My bad.
    At 10:04 I say Guernica was the first city bombed by airplanes. This is incorrect. Depending on your definition this happened in 1911 in Libya during the Italian-Ottoman war. Or in 1914 in Liege during WW1.
    Nuance:
    Some of you feel I glossed over Japanese war crimes. In the video I mention the axis power inflicted atrocities on a scale not seen before. I could have put more weight on the extent of war crimes by the Japanese army in China and Asia. As these are maybe less well known. However, personally I am not convinced that if the army perpetrates war crimes of any extent, that the civilian population of that nation deserves to suffer as result of that. Even if their nation is the aggressor. Do Russian civilians need to suffer for the current war in Ukraine? I don't think so. But you are welcome to disagree with that sentiment.

    • @mageshpandian2544
      @mageshpandian2544 Před rokem +41

      "US ALMOST nuked Tokyo" would be a better title imo

    • @pyeitme508
      @pyeitme508 Před rokem +6

      It's fine.

    • @joshuataylor3550
      @joshuataylor3550 Před rokem +138

      Always bizarre to me that war should develop any morals or ethics. Fees like you already left that behind by declaring war.

    • @ailo4x4
      @ailo4x4 Před rokem

      @@joshuataylor3550 Ah, not so. War is an extension of politics. It's purpose is, arguably, to get them back to the table. With the Laws of Armed Conflict (LOAC), Geneva Convention, etc., we would be no better than the raiding hordes of the Mongols.

    • @Tethloach1
      @Tethloach1 Před rokem +9

      There is no solution, pain, and suffering is reality. I don't know anymore.

  • @n33cho
    @n33cho Před 10 měsíci +2038

    It's crazy that the city of Kokura made the list and was originally one of the two intended targets. Heavy cloud cover prevented the allies from bombing it and instead they diverted the raid to Nagasaki. The fate of thousands of people sealed by a weather system.

    • @Exocool
      @Exocool Před 10 měsíci +176

      "How clouds saved a city"

    • @JarateHunter
      @JarateHunter Před 10 měsíci +211

      @@Exocool "...and doomed another"

    • @danielwijoyo
      @danielwijoyo Před 10 měsíci +2

      ​@@RaviKBT98-fu6bkwhat the name of the cities you've mentioned? Is it still a good vacation until present?

    • @DawgDanger
      @DawgDanger Před 10 měsíci +53

      ​@@danielwijoyoI think the spared city was Kyoto

    • @licharcanist1702
      @licharcanist1702 Před 10 měsíci +17

      @@RaviKBT98-fu6bk this was referenced in the Oppenheimer movie

  • @Oxhfor
    @Oxhfor Před rokem +7589

    There was manufactured 500.000 purple hearts in the months leaning up to the invasion of mainland Japan. This should be a good estimate of the US military worst case scenario.

    • @ThePresentPast_
      @ThePresentPast_  Před rokem +948

      Yeah that's an insane stat

    • @Julianna.Domina
      @Julianna.Domina Před rokem +1276

      In fact, the US Military is still giving out purple hearts from that massive order today, since they haven't given 500,000 since WW2.

    • @Gillan1220
      @Gillan1220 Před rokem +284

      It was used in later U.S. military conflicts and recently saw use in Iraq 20 years ago.

    • @Ballin4Vengeance
      @Ballin4Vengeance Před rokem +134

      Conservative estimate

    • @NBrixH
      @NBrixH Před rokem +420

      @@Ballin4Vengeance The large estimate is 1,5mil, and the conservative estimate is 500k. So yeah, it really gives a good picture of how many casualies they were expecting

  • @edum.6353
    @edum.6353 Před 10 měsíci +408

    I watched Oppenheimer and there's a scene of them deciding which japanese cities they would drop the bomb, one of the guys reportedly spare Kyoto because he spent his honeymoon there. its insane how things are random, due to his personal connection Kyoto wasn't destroyed.

    • @ICICESTPARlS
      @ICICESTPARlS Před 10 měsíci +1

      är du svensk

    • @reguluscorneas3046
      @reguluscorneas3046 Před 10 měsíci +128

      He also said Kyoto was an important cultural site before he mentioned the honeymoon thing

    • @raymondpaller6475
      @raymondpaller6475 Před 9 měsíci +18

      The once of prevention is worth the pound of cure. The prevention is don't go to war with the United States, and the randomness never has to get pondered or addressed.

    • @itsjayswelly
      @itsjayswelly Před 9 měsíci +24

      ​@@reguluscorneas3046yeah but the reason he knew it was a cultural site is because he went there

    • @TomFynn
      @TomFynn Před 9 měsíci +25

      That was Secretary of War Henry L. Stimpson, and yes, he intervened with Truman to take Kyoto off the list because he spent his honeymoon there so knew that it was an important cultural center.

  • @sentinelav
    @sentinelav Před 10 měsíci +434

    My grandfather was a bomber pilot who flew a Lancaster over Dresden. Despite receiving a prestigious medal, the guilt destroyed him. It's the darkest moment in my family's history, and echoes of its impact still persist.

    • @Sad-jd9lp
      @Sad-jd9lp Před 10 měsíci +3

      😢

    • @Theoneandonlyearthhuman
      @Theoneandonlyearthhuman Před 10 měsíci

      As it should, scum

    • @rajveerkanojiya2985
      @rajveerkanojiya2985 Před 10 měsíci +5

      so your grandpa is the man who nuked japan?

    • @sentinelav
      @sentinelav Před 10 měsíci +54

      @@rajveerkanojiya2985 Dresden is in Germany. He wasn't even told it was a civilian town when heading in.

    • @justapleb7096
      @justapleb7096 Před 9 měsíci +32

      They don't teach about Dresen in history class... Unless the teacher was free styling the lessons.

  • @russellfrancis813
    @russellfrancis813 Před 10 měsíci +3853

    It's crazy to me how the Japanese can get firebombed and lose 100k people, have dozens of cities razed to the ground, with tens, or hundreds of thousands of additional deaths, and they STILL wouldn't surrender.

    • @michaelliu8196
      @michaelliu8196 Před 10 měsíci +550

      Is a pride thing.

    • @scentedcandle5949
      @scentedcandle5949 Před 10 měsíci

      The Japanese people wanted to surrender, the Japanese elite (who weren’t being firebombed or razed) didn’t want to surrender. They were holding out hope that the Russians would come support them.

    • @mnpd3
      @mnpd3 Před 10 měsíci +566

      I was born shortly after the War. What you say is exactly what the WWII generation said - they were astounded by that fact. In Europe German resistance grew progressively weaker as the end grew nearer. But with Japan the war only became more intense. In fact, the worse U.S. casualties occurred in battles near the end of the Pacific War in places like Okinawa and Iwo Jima.

    • @tutowo7304
      @tutowo7304 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@michaelliu8196 As proud as the Nazi

    • @AD-jq7ow
      @AD-jq7ow Před 10 měsíci

      Culture they prefer to kill themselves instead of deshonnor

  • @georgehawes5308
    @georgehawes5308 Před rokem +3725

    My much beloved dad was a Navy Lieutenant in WW2. He served as the gunnery officer on a destroyer. His ship was in the East Atlantic (European theater) when Germany surrendered. He told me he thought: "Wonderful - now I get to go home." Much to his dismay, however, his ship went back across the Atlantic, through the Panama Canal, and kept going west. He was in the Pacific while the Japanese were using kamikaze suicide pilots on our ships when the 2 atomic bombs were dropped and Japan surrendered. His ship then anchored in Nagasaki Harbor 2 weeks after the bomb was dropped there. He said they were not allowed to go ashore, but he went up in the top of the ship and could see what was left of the city. I asked him what it looked like, and he described it in one word "Flat".
    He died of cancer in 1991 after a couageous 5 year fight. I always wondered if his exposure to the Nagasaki radiation may have contributed to his death.

    • @every1665
      @every1665 Před rokem +290

      God bless your father. Ordinary servicemen seemed to be utilized as human guinea pigs during the early years of nuclear weapons and of course, just followed orders.

    • @anandpandit6763
      @anandpandit6763 Před rokem

      How many german women your father r@ped..... its karma he died due to cancer...

    • @hhvhhvcz
      @hhvhhvcz Před rokem +259

      You haven't said how old your dad was when he died but above 65, it's very hard to tell if radiation had any impact on his life spam. My own educated guess would be very little since it was an air detonated bomb and there'd had been very little radioactive particles in the air even a day after the detonation. Moreover, USA suffered a lot worse from industrial chemical pollution in the coming years, just all the leaded gasoline and lenient limits on heavy metals in agriculture produce (still an issue to this day btw) or even as simple thing as smoking and stress would be larger factors.

    • @TruthSeeker-yb2lm
      @TruthSeeker-yb2lm Před rokem +60

      My grandfather was a cannon cocker, artiller, in Africa fighting Rommel. Two of my unles were Vietnam vets that lost their live to agent orange.
      God bless your father. I not only appreciate your fathers service but your father, just as my grandfather and my uncles, your father and them are my heroes!

    • @georgehawes5308
      @georgehawes5308 Před rokem +61

      @@every1665 Thank you, and I agree with your comments. At least Dad survived and came home to live out his life. A lot of good people didn't.
      I was born in 1948, after he returned from the war. If they hadn't dropped the bombs and the war hadn't ended when it did, there is a good chance I wouldn't be here today.

  • @davidburdick594
    @davidburdick594 Před 9 měsíci +41

    My father was a marine at just 17 and fought in the south Pacific then ended up landing in Japan. He then went to China and was the personal body guard for General Marshall and General Mitchell during the negotiations between Mao and Chiang Kai Shek. He then went to Korea. May he rest in peace.

  • @parmusical
    @parmusical Před 10 měsíci

    Love the delivery style and nicely fit background sounds!

  • @Conn30Mtenor
    @Conn30Mtenor Před rokem +1449

    There were a number of Japanese cities that were never targeted. Nara, Kyoto and Kanezawa. They were deemed cultural sites important to the Japanese people and would be important in their rehabilitation.

    • @emiliovicente7138
      @emiliovicente7138 Před rokem

      Pure bullshit, killed millions of civiliand and razed millons of buildings, but take care of cultural sites? No one gonna believe that bullshit. The important thing about the rehabilitation of Japan was they forgvige all Japan's war crimes and never talk about it. Also forgiving the emperor itself

    • @user-xo8mr4hf4r
      @user-xo8mr4hf4r Před rokem

      There were a few military figures at the Pentagon who had classical educations, and knew where NOT to drop the bombs. God bless America.

    • @SawdEndymon
      @SawdEndymon Před rokem +68

      And LeMay liked Nara. Seriously, he visited there and loved it

    • @faccebookk3704
      @faccebookk3704 Před rokem +38

      Charles Burnham , ??? rehabilitation ??? Do you really believe that the Japanese have forgotten and forgiven Hiroshima and Nagasaki?

    • @wyattbreymeyer4033
      @wyattbreymeyer4033 Před rokem +308

      @@faccebookk3704 they have not forgotten but they have forgiven, japans atrocities towards china however, may never

  • @andrewclarke8163
    @andrewclarke8163 Před rokem +2632

    TLDW: Tokyo was already destroyed by firebombs. They wanted to nuke cities that were mostly still intact because that would better showcase the nukes' insane power.
    Edit: The video is still worth watching imo.

    • @michaelplunkett8059
      @michaelplunkett8059 Před rokem

      Additionally, it was feared that decapitation and eliminating the Emperor and leadership would delay a surrender. You need them to make and enforce a decision.

    • @michaelmo2218
      @michaelmo2218 Před rokem +99

      Yes. It appears Japan was mostly "toast" these were the remaining high populated locations . Once America had a presence/ residence in Japan, they started up programs that merely analyzed the human wounds from the A bombs. Not to provide medical assistance .

    • @Steve_Takes
      @Steve_Takes Před rokem

      The Japanese were hated. Americans were incredibly racist at the time. Even racist against American Minorities fighting for America. They had no problem experimenting both versions. Today America is the greatest because of TODAY'S Americans. Americans back then were racist murderers. These bombings are a dark stain in American history, no different from the gas chambers in Germany. Nothing worth Celebrating.

    • @remy-
      @remy- Před rokem +63

      And they wanted to showcase it to their friend Russia. One for the effect, two to show there was more.
      Klaus Fuchs made a world saving decision.

    • @Guacamole.
      @Guacamole. Před rokem +117

      Thank you. Holy f*** this guy took 20 minutes to talk about something that could have been said in 5

  • @divyaprakashbiswas8781
    @divyaprakashbiswas8781 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Thank you so much for this video. I am really shocked at how perspective and narrative can change history.

    • @bholdr----0
      @bholdr----0 Před 10 dny +1

      How about how perspective and narrative ARE history?

  • @izimirizimir
    @izimirizimir Před 10 měsíci

    Really good documentated. Nice work

  • @songsofloveresistance8549
    @songsofloveresistance8549 Před rokem +1723

    My late grandfather was in bomber command and involved in the fire bombing of Dresden. This was a much needed perspective on the motivation of the allies and one that needs to be discussed honestly. I do know this - those who flew those missions might have believed in the justness of their cause, but they also knew the hell and the horror they were inflicting with those fire bombs, because it haunted my grandfather for the rest of his life. Thank you.

    • @Movingforward2000
      @Movingforward2000 Před rokem

      To bomb Germany was totally uneccesary & stupid of the americans.

    • @eyejswije8860
      @eyejswije8860 Před rokem +21

      Thank you for sharing

    • @timcory4455
      @timcory4455 Před rokem +63

      In 1945 Japan's Council of War wanted to continue fighting to the last man. Japan left the Allies no other option but to destroy whole nation!

    • @swaggerog7284
      @swaggerog7284 Před rokem +13

      Allies view of Dresden was of disgusted how could there bomber plans be cause this must damaged in non military zone

    • @FeralFox1
      @FeralFox1 Před rokem +12

      My great grandma made b29s so there's a chance she helped make the enola gay

  • @clemens1993
    @clemens1993 Před rokem +502

    I live in Berlin in that 8km radius. And it just shook me to the core, because it made me realize not only how I am literally sitting on history, but also how the area you take for granted for your daily life, where most of the things you do on a daily basis are located is just...a map to a military leader.
    I mean we all played video games before and it is not about killing, but rather winning with skill and tactics against an opponent.
    But this is what real war is - playing games with people's lives.
    Just imagine you find out your home area is now targeted for carpet bombing. I just felt vulnerable immediately.

    • @ASonce2129
      @ASonce2129 Před rokem +11

      I realised just now that if anything happens to new delhi, my city would also be devastated.....

    • @marcuscicero9587
      @marcuscicero9587 Před rokem +1

      scary thought brother

    • @johnkelly1198
      @johnkelly1198 Před 11 měsíci

      Grow some balls

    • @saintburnsy2468
      @saintburnsy2468 Před 11 měsíci +9

      Imagine how more vulnerable you would be without America and the protection she provides. Would you feel safe if Germany had only itself to rely upon in a war?

    • @olzhastortpayev8053
      @olzhastortpayev8053 Před 10 měsíci +10

      ​@@saintburnsy2468russia would've ruled all of Europe after 1945 had the us not existed

  • @adamdormus2522
    @adamdormus2522 Před 8 měsíci

    Your videos are really interesting and informative. Thank you!

  • @122blazer
    @122blazer Před 10 měsíci

    Quality video. Good job 👍 you speak well and your are good to listen to and smart analysis.

  • @paul_nederland8150
    @paul_nederland8150 Před rokem +255

    According to National Geographic: "U.S. Secretary of War Henry Stimson wanted Kyoto removed from the target list, on the grounds that the city was too culturally significant to the Japanese to be destroyed. Some say his personal fondness for the city-he visited in the 1920s and may have honeymooned there-was the real reason he appealed to President Harry Truman to remove Kyoto from the list."

    • @discoverkenya
      @discoverkenya Před rokem +2

      **Arnold Schwarzenegger voice** you son of a b*tch… that was actually a really good read. Self scribed or could you sight your sources and or a reading list. Interested to read more on the subject. Never read a persons comment ( and one so long) and obligingly continued 👏🏾

    • @sakn415
      @sakn415 Před rokem +1

      @8866 Panda have this known somewhere that is more accessible than a youtube comment. Like the other person said, you include sources. Good read

    • @Aikinai
      @Aikinai Před rokem +3

      Skipping this fact was a huge miss for the video. And he actually states the opposite, claiming that the decision makers didn’t care about the shrines.

    • @FaitCeQueVeut
      @FaitCeQueVeut Před rokem

      Our planet is a place of desperation; yet, we're still here hoping for happiness. Well, some of us are...

    • @seriouscat2231
      @seriouscat2231 Před rokem

      The point was to make an ordinary firebombing look like an atomic bomb. So you had to pick a city that was mostly made of wood and paper, with as few concrete structures as possible. Ergo the two that were chosen. Then simulate radiation sickness using chemical weapons.

  • @damnjustassignmeone
    @damnjustassignmeone Před rokem +699

    My grandfather was a tail gunner on a B-17 before being shot down and captured. He always said remember, we didn’t know at the time what the outcome was going to be. We were in the present looking at the future. You’re in the present looking at the past.

    • @caydcrow5161
      @caydcrow5161 Před rokem +34

      Woah that kit hit heavy…the greatest generation truly was the greatest!

    • @captnjd
      @captnjd Před rokem +18

      My grandfather piloted a B-17 and it was shot down too! I wonder if they knew each other.

    • @booqrdoit9138
      @booqrdoit9138 Před rokem +22

      Very intelligent take from your grandpa, a wise hero

    • @SimulationT-900
      @SimulationT-900 Před rokem

      My grandfather was the one who captured your grandfather

    • @corneliusmcmuffin3256
      @corneliusmcmuffin3256 Před rokem +2

      @@captnjd I don’t wanna crush your hopes and dreams but there was a heck of a lot of b17’s produced, and so bombers getting shot down is not really that unusual. So yes they knew each other :)

  • @motrebal
    @motrebal Před 10 měsíci

    My first time seeing your channel, excellent! well balanced and intelligent, keep it up you are a pro.

  • @JoHnAnDjAnEdOe81
    @JoHnAnDjAnEdOe81 Před 10 měsíci

    Great editing and fascinating video! Keep up the great work! New sub. Cant wait to watch more videos.

  • @MatAK49
    @MatAK49 Před 10 měsíci +538

    Well.
    Of all the videos I've watched regarding air raids and bombing of Japanese cities during the latter part of WWII, this is actually the first video I've watched where the narrator talks not only about the bombings, but FIRE bombings. It's interesting how this fact is rarely brought up as firebombing is the worst kind for the victims to deal with and extremely difficult to put out due to the chemicals used in these bombs. I rate this video with high scores for It's presentation and narrative.

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 Před 10 měsíci +39

      @MatAK49 What he does not mention is that Japan began bombing civilians in 1931 and did not stop killing civilians until the two atomic bombs were dropped. In all the Japanese killed some 20m million Asian civilians more than 20 times the number of Japanese civilians killed. The Japanese killed to conquer and enslave. The American bombing was to stop Japnese aggression.

    • @imonit4272
      @imonit4272 Před 10 měsíci +7

      @dennisweidner - Thank you! The apologist tone of the clown who made this video makes me sick.

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 Před 10 měsíci

      @@imonit4272 There is no doubt that the bombing was horrific and the photographic images show that. Unfortunately, there are no photographs of the millions of Japanese who were saved by forcing the Japanese to surrender. War is a terrible thing, but it was not America that began the War. The important fact is that America fought the war and forced Japan to surrender with only one goal in mind, to end Japanese aggression and brutal murder of civilians throughout Asia. Once the Germans and Japanese launched the War, it could only be won by the application of American industrial power on a massive scale. This was Germany's and Japan's choice, not America's choice to go to war.

    • @fellknight
      @fellknight Před 10 měsíci

      respectfully, any discussion of whether or not to drop the bomb that ignores the 1944-1945 situation of firebombing entire cities into the ground is simply intentionally incomplete. I'm not saying who is right or wrong, I do lean on one side, and I believe that if we hadn't used them in 1945, we probably destroy civilization in the 1950s once everyone has enough nukes and nobody knows how bad an actual (very low-yield, btw) nuke is.

    • @PriscinaSkyy
      @PriscinaSkyy Před 10 měsíci +19

      @@imonit4272 have some empathy. Yes, those bombs ended the war.. But they were literally designed to kill civilians. They weren't even made to kill the Japanese military or government because they weren't in a centralised location. They were literally made only to kill Japanese civilians. And they damn near didn't work. I'd say, anything created purely for civilian deaths deserves apologies, no matter how much good they did. You can do something good and still be apologetic for it. I'd bet the soldiers then did feel sorry.
      Unless you're a psychopath, you'd feel sorry for civilian deaths.

  • @AlexanderRay92
    @AlexanderRay92 Před rokem +327

    The bottom line is that a Total War cannot be civilized, and a Total War on one can only be defended by a Total War on the other.

    • @Weavileiscool
      @Weavileiscool Před rokem +3

      That is the sad truth

    • @hxhdfjifzirstc894
      @hxhdfjifzirstc894 Před rokem +24

      We didn't start the fire...

    • @Nonamelol.
      @Nonamelol. Před rokem +21

      @@hxhdfjifzirstc894 But America is a strong nation, and is very powerful, and since Japan is now much smaller that subconsciously makes people go against the US. It’s psychology. If a grown up and a kid are fighting people will usually side with the kid, pretty stupid but that’s how things are unfortunately.

    • @deboogs
      @deboogs Před rokem +1

      That would be very thoughtful and poetic if it weren't complete horseshit.

    • @Mylo-gy7sh
      @Mylo-gy7sh Před rokem

      Especially in the 40s

  • @UptheMountainVideo
    @UptheMountainVideo Před 9 měsíci

    Excellent insights and commentary

  • @vrajgautam1512
    @vrajgautam1512 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Hats off man what a video 💯🙌🏼.

  • @jeraldbottcher1588
    @jeraldbottcher1588 Před rokem +202

    One forgets another reason why Tokyo was not targeted. In order for the Japanese to surrender, they needed some leadership to survive to effect the surrender. If Tokyo was destroyed then there would not have been anyone to make the decision to give up. Then the full invasion would have been required to bring and end to the war (which really is what happened in Germany). Yes the firebombing had a tremendous effect, but it did not bring about surrender.

    • @maynardburger
      @maynardburger Před rokem

      Specifically, they really wanted to keep the Emperor alive, as they knew it was primarily the military leadership around him that was ultra gung-ho and would encourage fighting to the last man. They really did not want the country under such ultranationalist rule.

    • @user-xo8mr4hf4r
      @user-xo8mr4hf4r Před rokem +4

      You make a good point. I'll look into it.

    • @staringgasmask
      @staringgasmask Před rokem

      It was different with the Germans. The US didn't want anyone from the NSDAP to make peace outside of inconditional surrender, since they would keep the party in charge.
      In fact, when Hitler was bombed, US generals deemed his survival more benefitial for the German defeat, since they wouldn't have to deal with the OKW as "The good guys who killed Hitler", while they also were pretty bad (throwing Rommel under the bus due to envy and trying countless times to get Manstein removed from command, in addition to general incompetence, for example)

    • @kkeelty64
      @kkeelty64 Před rokem +4

      @@user-xo8mr4hf4r Additionally, the US didn't "start with the firebombing of Japan". The first B-29 missions over the Japanese mainland were conventional HE bombs dropped in daylight from high altitude. Only when these missions had a significantly worse outcome than daylight bombing in Europe (due to the effects of the then-unknown jet stream) did LeMay come in and change tactics.

    • @brucepoole8552
      @brucepoole8552 Před rokem +1

      It sure helped with the surrender

  • @thirdpedalnirvana
    @thirdpedalnirvana Před rokem +529

    Historical questions of morality aside, it's interesting to consider that without the atom bomb, the US may have rained an equal amount of destruction on Hiroshima and Nagasaki with fire bombing, with little to no effect on Emperor Hirohito's intransigence. In effect, it's not the actual deaths of Japanese civilians that won the war; rather it was BRANDING. Prior to the atom bomb, the US military was seen as a formidable, but costly force to be reckoned with. Capable of overpowering Japanese forces, but doing less damage per dollar than the Japanese could do - despite the fact that Japan had little defense about the carpet bombing. Fire is fire... its been used in warfare since the earliest warfare. The Atom bomb didn't actually take more lives than could have been claimed by fire, but the nature of it... the unleashing of new forces of nature never before seen on the battlefield, the almost godlike demonstration of not just financial might and military strength, but also technical dominance rebranded what it meant to go head to head with the US, what the stakes could be. It is a bit like the iPod effect. Digital music players had existed for years already, but they were never presented in such a way as to fundamentally change how people thought about listening to music. The atom bomb didn't fundamentally change the might of the US military or it's destructive capacity (that came later with the cold war arms race) - what it did to is fundamentally change how people saw the difference between the military might of a large nation and one of a small nation. It was the rewriting of David vs Goliath. It was the eradication of the idea that an underdog has any reason to fight. Of course, then there was Vietnam, which proved that in order for Goliath to win, the objective has to be a military objective. It cannot be a social, economic, or political objective.

    • @tjen7929
      @tjen7929 Před rokem +14

      The atom bomb was more than just 'fire'. It's radiation had lasting, generational, genetic effects that were felt for decades.

    • @madensmith7014
      @madensmith7014 Před rokem +41

      ​@@tjen7929 studies were made, or more like of course the US would observe the results while they were in control of the country during the post war occupation.
      The US monitored the pregnant women who came from nagasaki and hiroshima while handing out rations, only less than 10% experienced birth defects, around 1% was correlated to radiation (rerf.or.jp). Birth defects is surprisingly pretty common, especially in poor countries, which post-war occupation Japan used to be.
      Don't mix up the bombs which just caused a big ass explosion, where the dangerous radiation levels only lasted for a couple months at most, to disasters like Chernobyl and Fukushima.

    • @tjen7929
      @tjen7929 Před rokem +20

      @@madensmith7014 according to Columbia University studies, there were dramatic and long lasting effects. Aside from the nearly 200k people that died within the first few months after the bombing (as per the Radiation Effects Research Foundation) leukaemia rates skyrocketed over the next 6yrs, predominantly in children. For all other cancers, the effects from the bombing were noticed 10 years later. The problems facing the generation after the bombing (in utero during the bombing) include small head size, mental disability, and physical growth impairment.

    • @gordonpeden6234
      @gordonpeden6234 Před rokem +2

      Damn right!

    • @sanjsha7963
      @sanjsha7963 Před rokem

      IF THE BOMB WAS TO STOP THE JAPANESE FROM FIGHTING WHY WAS IT USED ON INNOCENT CIVILIANS?
      IT WAS A EXPERIMENT AGAINST A NON-WHITE POPULATION AND HAD LITTLE TO DO WITH WAR!!!
      COMPARED TO AMERICA THE NAZIS WERE ANGELS!

  • @SaschaEderer
    @SaschaEderer Před 10 měsíci

    I like your stance. And you managed to extrapolate a topic without making it obnoxious. Thumbs up.

  • @renonyxum3966
    @renonyxum3966 Před 9 měsíci

    great video, Johnny

  • @bcbitchkkv
    @bcbitchkkv Před 10 měsíci +870

    For anyone interested in seeing how harsh WWII was from Japanese civilians' side, watch the movie "Grave of the Fireflies" (1988).

    • @kawaranai9743
      @kawaranai9743 Před 10 měsíci +120

      The craziest and most difficult to watch Ghibli film I've seen.

    • @menaceclan
      @menaceclan Před 10 měsíci +8

      Thanks man, will do !

    • @shadowmonarch3155
      @shadowmonarch3155 Před 10 měsíci +29

      barefoot gen

    • @ottomellar6774
      @ottomellar6774 Před 10 měsíci +18

      I've got it, but still can't bring myself to watch it.
      I will, one day, but I have to be in a really good place before I do. The first five minutes are sublime brilliance.

    • @totorosghost
      @totorosghost Před 10 měsíci +88

      For anyone interested in learning about Imperial Japan's colonization and plans for complete obliteration of Korean language and culture read ''When My Name Was Keoko'' by Linda Sue Park. (2002) It's a well written and researched novel from the perspective of a young Korean girl and her family. Complete with academic references. Try to read it and not cry. I can't.

  • @gustavoabdala9936
    @gustavoabdala9936 Před rokem +779

    A superb analysis. I wish I had the ease of talking to a camera like you do. From historian to historian, your work is of perfect historiographic content. And it demonstrates very well, in a short amount of time, how history is an interdisciplinary discipline and, above all, human.

    • @ThePresentPast_
      @ThePresentPast_  Před rokem +49

      Thanks Gustavo, that means a lot!

    • @ralphebrandt
      @ralphebrandt Před rokem

      If I was someone who wants to see the sensational, this is great. As a historian, a piece of crap.

    • @haydnlovie3855
      @haydnlovie3855 Před rokem

      History is remembered threw the Victor's eyes
      This will not be the real reason just the reason 2 justify American tyranny like every other country they invade
      My grandfather was there after the bomb to help japan recover
      His words don't align with anything America has 2 say

    • @peternilsen5134
      @peternilsen5134 Před rokem +1

      A lot is left out tho. 1 year ahead of the bombing. Spies traveled across the country to find the most suitable cities.
      Hiroshima was chosen coz of its historical military meaning in Japan but above all of.... it was the perfect target because the city is surrounded by mountains so the blast will have the most impact.
      Nothing about this bomb was left to coincidences. As an example the bomb was designed to go of 60feets above ground.
      Nagasaki is also surrounded by mountains and have in many ways the same topography.

    • @truthadvocacy
      @truthadvocacy Před rokem

      😂😂😂

  • @trigmusicnz
    @trigmusicnz Před 9 měsíci

    excellent points mate thank you.

  • @dunnkenny
    @dunnkenny Před 9 měsíci

    Thanks for video, I have always wondered too

  • @coffeebreak7668
    @coffeebreak7668 Před rokem +244

    High quality as usual, I appreciate the perspective you took in this video. also wasn't expecting to be reminded of my time playing battlefield 1943 back in the day.

    • @ThePresentPast_
      @ThePresentPast_  Před rokem +14

      Twas a quality game

    • @matpk
      @matpk Před rokem +1

      @@ThePresentPast_what about Nazi Chi Na ?

    • @IndyJay53
      @IndyJay53 Před rokem

      That theme got me

    • @totorosghost
      @totorosghost Před 10 měsíci

      Playing Resident Evil and Evil Within reminds me of Unit 731.

  • @spydude38
    @spydude38 Před rokem +777

    The strategy used by the allies was known as one of "Total War". Its always easy for those looking back on history to pick and choose the history they want to remember in order to justify what they believe. In Japan, you spoke of the fact that Tokyo had been fire bombed and 100,000 people were killed. When you add up all those minus those killed in the two atomic bombings, one thing that isn't discussed is that Tojo and the military that was ruling Japan still would not surrender. They wanted a warriors death. It took the atomic bombings to prompt Emperor Hirohito to force the military leaders to unconditionally surrender. My Mother remembers when the Emperor addressed the people of Japan after it's capitulation. For them it was the first time they had heard the voice of the Emperor. To them, he was a God. The fire bombings killed many Japanese and destroyed their cities, but it was the atomic bombs that forced them to accept defeat.

    • @bryannicholas2130
      @bryannicholas2130 Před rokem +19

      Yeah I guess don’t think of your “Emperor” as a “God” 😂

    • @abc0to1
      @abc0to1 Před rokem +19

      Then, if there is an enemy that does not surrender easily, we can use nuclear weapons.

    • @gus91343
      @gus91343 Před rokem +74

      Indeed. My coworker's mother is Japanese and has memories of being trained at 4 years old (!) to use sharpened stick weapons to kill any Allied soldier that would land on the island.

    • @gus91343
      @gus91343 Před rokem +56

      @@abc0to1 As opposed to what? The Japanese army used biological weapons in Manchuria in the 1930s against an enemy that wouldn't surrender easily.

    • @abc0to1
      @abc0to1 Před rokem +27

      @@gus91343 If someone else has done something similar, is it ok for other people to do it too? Is it okay to judge the war crimes of the Japanese people while not judging the war crimes of the victorious people? If international law protects only the winners and not the losers, how can there be justice? If justice is not about upholding international law but about winning wars, why are the attack on Pearl Harbor and the use of weapons of mass destruction condemned?

  • @fdbkfdbk1088
    @fdbkfdbk1088 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you for this vid.

  • @Ace_Galton
    @Ace_Galton Před 8 měsíci

    Love your balanced approached to history

  • @chacmool2581
    @chacmool2581 Před rokem +391

    2:35 An often overlooked or ignored point, overlooked in this video too, is that the Pacific War was one of Japan's making. And it didn't start in 1941. Japan had been on the make since the late 19th century and started its conquest and subjugation of Asia in 1905 when it acquired Korea. Thirty six years later it was Japan that brought the war to U.S. shores. Again, a war wholly of Japan's making. And what a war! Here in Indonesia, the real bitter memories of foreign oppression is not 300 of Dutch colonization, but rather the four years of Japanese occupation.

    • @abc0to1
      @abc0to1 Před rokem +60

      It is estimated that 4 million Indonesians died as a result of forced labor, food extortion, and logistical failures by the Japanese military. Food shortages were particularly severe on the island of Java, where 2.4 million people died of starvation.
      Having caused so much damage, it is only natural that the Japanese should be resented by the Indonesians. I personally can only pray for the repose of the souls of the victims.

    • @michaelchevreaux7780
      @michaelchevreaux7780 Před rokem +1

      @@abc0to1
      Thanks For That Post.
      Many Here Have NO Concept How Ruthless And Evil Imperial Japan Was.
      Most Know Of Rape Of Nanking, But Few Know About Unit 731, Started Years Before Pearl Harbor.
      UNIT 731 Was a Highly Secret Bio-Weapons War Project In China, That China (To It's Credit) Stil Remembers, And Has a Museum Dedicated To.

    • @keamu8580
      @keamu8580 Před rokem +32

      @@abc0to1 In many ways, the Japanese people were also victims of their emperor and his cabinet. Too much power in too few hands.

    • @southern04man
      @southern04man Před rokem

      Woke Americans seem to forget what the Japanese did to millions of people.

    • @jeraldbottcher1588
      @jeraldbottcher1588 Před rokem +38

      And even today, ask the average Korean how they feel about Japan. When I was stationed there in the 70's and 80's there was still real hatred for them

  • @XmarkedSpot
    @XmarkedSpot Před rokem +328

    German here. Thanks for tackling these ambiguities within the rationale behind warfare. Sadly these topics are taught with an intentional aura of taboo (say false dichotomy) here. In the end the question remains: war, what is it good for?

    • @gavinathling
      @gavinathling Před rokem +6

      As I get older, the words of John Lennon's songs get more and more poignant...

    • @strasbourgeois1
      @strasbourgeois1 Před rokem +1

      Yes

    • @QuantumRift
      @QuantumRift Před rokem

      It's good for stopping pricks like Hitler and Tojo. Unfortunately, INNOCENT people get caught up in it. Unfortunately, unless the ENTIRE worlds stands up tp Putin and Xi, it will be repeating history all over again.

    • @personman8404
      @personman8404 Před rokem +2

      How is it taught?

    • @XmarkedSpot
      @XmarkedSpot Před rokem +19

      ​@@personman8404 Where to begin... I'll try summarizing to my best ability, for what it's worth.
      The good: the core principle of all lessons being the sentiment "Never again!".
      The bad: no acknowledgement of the anti-semitic zeitgeist as a global phenomenon.
      The ugly: no matter the particular epoch (be it antiquity or industrial revolution) every year from 5th grade on there will be at least one chapter about the Reich... after the 10th it's all there ever will be.
      tl;dr: the curriculum commands a collective responsibility of vigilance yet fails to illuminate the underlying human condition. Thus it regrettably renders itself another - admittedly rather civilized - dogma.

  • @RisingEagle
    @RisingEagle Před 10 měsíci +32

    Quite actually a good time for CZcams to recommend this video, as Oppenheimer just came out a couple of days ago, exploring the same scenario

    • @lpc9929
      @lpc9929 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Yes It's the reason the algorithm is recommending it

    • @snubnosedmonke
      @snubnosedmonke Před 10 měsíci +1

      yes and it sucks that people don’t know the full scale of the severity of these events, instead choosing to believe a one sided hollywood movie is just retelling history. i’ve even seen alot of jokes made about the bombing, in horrible taste :(

  • @BK-qp8zp
    @BK-qp8zp Před 9 měsíci

    I could listen to you talk all day, with that particularly beautiful soothing German accent! But the history lesson that you gave in this video was phenomenal and I learned some things. Thank you. I lived in your beautiful country for over a decade in the 80's/90's and miss it still to this day. Thus, the complete enjoyment of your accent.

    • @ThePresentPast_
      @ThePresentPast_  Před 9 měsíci

      Thats a very generous comment, thank you! It is a Dutch accent however ;)

    • @BK-qp8zp
      @BK-qp8zp Před 9 měsíci

      @@ThePresentPast_ Oh,dear god, I am so very sorry! I truly couldn't hear the difference, but that would explain why it was so enjoyable to listen to. While living in Germany, I did learn not to make the mistake of assuming that Dutch and German were the same. But, on a lighter note, I visited your beautiful country, as well. Thank you so much for letting me know of my error so I can hopefully try not to make it again! 😔

  • @LagunaL8
    @LagunaL8 Před rokem +177

    I remember in a lot of japanese documentaries and books they told stories of the tokyo bombing being way more destructive and killed way more than the nukes they experienced, the civilians told of the 'fire tornados'. I was wondering why it was so bad but now it makes sense.

    • @ayanomar1408
      @ayanomar1408 Před rokem +3

      hello thank you for sharing, can you share some of those documentaries? I always saw the pove of the allies but never the Japanese pov.

    • @keifuchan7265
      @keifuchan7265 Před rokem

      "The Firebombing of Tokyo." The same method was used in hundreds of cities across Japan. Almost every prefecture has a memorial to people lost to these incendiary bomb raids. My grandfather's house in Utsunomiya was burned to the ground.

    • @Sacto1654
      @Sacto1654 Před rokem +1

      The 9-10 March 1945 firebombing raid may have killed over 100,000 people because the city was still at that time mostly made of wooden structures. The combination of the fires plus the onshore winds that spread the fires in a deadly flame conflagration leveled 16 square miles of central Tokyo.

    • @PK-tu9kz
      @PK-tu9kz Před rokem

      We now can bomb Moscow and Beijing.

    • @truthadvocacy
      @truthadvocacy Před rokem

      There were no civilians left in the two nuked cities to "tell" about their "experience".

  • @brucesummers7448
    @brucesummers7448 Před 10 měsíci +176

    The bombing of Dresden was a military experiment to see if fire bombs would destroy the fire fighting capabilities of the locals. In this it exceeded expectations because the fire storm melted fire hydrants and destroyed fire fighting equipment as well as all the cities fire fighters.

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar Před 10 měsíci +8

      Hamburg had already taught that lesson in 1943. Look up Operation Gomorrah.

    • @freneticness6927
      @freneticness6927 Před 10 měsíci +1

      It was also due to the fact that the russians had just lost hundreds of thousands of men to take budapest so the allies were just trying to stop casualties on both sides.

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 Před 10 měsíci +30

      @brucesummers7448 Nonsense. The Dresden raids were a response to a Soviet request to restrict the movement of German troops and supplies. Dresden was a transportation hub. And by the way, just who began the war, who killed 10s of millions of civilians, and who began bombing civilians?. Harris was absolutely correct. "The Nazis entered this war under the rather childish delusion that they were going to bomb everyone else, and nobody was going to bomb them. At Rotterdam, London, Warsaw, and half a hundred other places, they put their rather naive theory into operation. They have sown the wind, and so they shall reap the whirlwind."

    • @chipsawdust5816
      @chipsawdust5816 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@dennisweidner288 My understanding as well, the Soviets requested Dresden to be leveled. So the Allies did.

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 Před 10 měsíci +9

      @@chipsawdust5816 I am not sure that the Soviets requested that Dresden be leveled, but they certainly did request the Allies prevent German troop movements through Dresden. There is much that the critics of America and Britain in their rush to condemn simply ignore.
      1. While the NAZIs were defeated, Western and Soviet forces were still taking substantial casualties.
      2. There was no city in NAZI Germany and Imperial Japan that was not supporting the war effort.
      3. The NAZIs and Japanese Militarists had caused America and Britain to ramp up their military power to an unprecedented level. It is not easy to change such a development on a dime. And the responsibility for this rests firmly on German and Japanese shoulders.
      4. By the time of Dresden, knowledge of NAZI atrocities had begun to become more fully understood. And this was far beyond the military atrocities such as bombing Rotterdam and English cities. Protecting German civilians was not high up on the Allies' list of priorities, largely because of German and Japanese conduct of the War.
      No thinking person wishes that Dresden had not occurred. But only the mathematically challenged make it a huge issue. World War II death tolls probably reached 70 million people, even low-ball estimates are about 50 million. And 90 percent of the civilian deaths were the work of the Axis powers. Killing civilians was actually a PRIMARY Axis goal. Read about the NAZI Generalplan Ost. The Allied strategic bombing campaign was hardly the major factor in the Civilian death toll.

  • @bonniechandler
    @bonniechandler Před 10 měsíci

    Fantastic video.

  • @alistairmonaghan6515
    @alistairmonaghan6515 Před 10 měsíci

    I never knew that, thanks for the good video

  • @davidransom4476
    @davidransom4476 Před rokem +161

    My father was young enough to be in the Army in time to stage in California for what would have been the invasion of Japan. He ended up as an occupation troop. He said they were told one million casualties. Now that I'm old and get to watch history shows a lot, one on the war in the Pacific said a goal of the Japanese general on Okinawa was to create a river of American blood so large that we would not invade the Japanese main island.

    • @kirkbrown2605
      @kirkbrown2605 Před rokem +15

      The Japanese general as well as the leaders of Japan got their wish. When Truman considered the river of blood the Japanese would inflict, he chose not to invade and dropped the bomb instead.

    • @michaelchevreaux7780
      @michaelchevreaux7780 Před rokem +3

      ​​@@kirkbrown2605
      2 A-Bombs, With #3., On The Way, Target 🎯 Tokyo!

    • @seanbrown9048
      @seanbrown9048 Před rokem

      Lol; don’t wanna get nuked? Don’t join Hitler and launch a sneak attack on Pearl Harbor!

    • @Burchie_
      @Burchie_ Před rokem +5

      whats crazy is that its 1million casualties for just a beach head and a bit more. The entire island would be about 2-3million, the japanese would've lost 6+million too.

    • @ninja.saywhat
      @ninja.saywhat Před rokem +15

      I read a book which estimates the overall casualties on both sides including Japanese civilians could have possibly gone as high as 15 MILLION! The Japanese were insanely fanatical at the time. They were planning to arm women even elementary kids with spears or whatever they could provide and send them to their deaths. Whenever someone tries to guilt trip someone over the US nuking of Japan, I always bring this up. The casualties would have been exponential and the war could have possibly dragged on for another year or two. To make matters worse, the subsequent occupation and rehabilitation of the country would have been bloody and extremely difficult. Guerrilla warfare and terrorism would have gone on for decades or so. Nuking them into submission and forcing the Emperor to sought for peace and having him acquitted of responsibilities and allowing him to retain his position greatly helped the occupation of the country.

  • @cunninr2
    @cunninr2 Před rokem +59

    Your comments on the morality of firebombing are definitely worthy of more discussion. I would guess that when you have entered Total war (as opposed to a limited conflict), then all the population are considered combatants. It would also have been almost impossible for any US president to argue that a more humane way to end the war was to sacrifice US men's lives in hand to hand combat. That would be an even more insane solution.

    • @IXMatthew
      @IXMatthew Před 10 měsíci +12

      right, thats the thing. They pretty much attacked civilians and attacked our soil initially. We gave them that same venom they had for everyone else lol, why keep sending teens on boats

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 Před 10 měsíci +19

      @cunninr2 The simple fact usually not mentioned is that there was not a more humane way to end the War, Those that criticize Trumn's decision never provide a possible alternative.

    • @chipsawdust5816
      @chipsawdust5816 Před 10 měsíci +9

      @@dennisweidner288 Agreed - war is inhumane. We sit here at our computers with running water and air conditioning and hand-wring about two bombs dropped towards the end of a world-wide war (OK except Antarctica maybe), judging people from what happened 80 years ago.

    • @dafyddthomas7299
      @dafyddthomas7299 Před 9 měsíci +6

      Not just the UK and US that did above total war and firebombing, Q Germany Airforce destroying lot of Poland, UK, Norway cities - this Video is tainted in this regard only considering Allies of doing wrong

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 Před 9 měsíci +5

      @cunninr2 Absolutely correct. It is important that it was the Axis which1) started the War and 2) started bombing civilians. It is absurd to think that the Allies should not respond when the Axis did these two things. It is also important to note that killing civilians was a major Axis war goal. And as a result, over 90 percent of the civilians killed in the War were killed by Axis forces. Focusing on the bombing is misleading. The bombing was responsible for a relatively small proportion of World War II civilian deaths.

  • @largeformat942
    @largeformat942 Před 9 měsíci

    excellent video

  • @kelleythompson5626
    @kelleythompson5626 Před 9 měsíci +15

    My biological father was a Gopher (go get the coffee etc) at Hanford. They were making plutonium for the bomb. He really didn't know what they were doing, but knew that it was top secret. Later he knew and realized that he was a part of that, but really a very small part. He went to College in Walla Walla and later went back, but this time more involved as an engineer and realized that the next step was the Hydrogen bomb. He left with my Mother, my sister and me (1 was 1 year old) and went to Concord ca. where they were working on developing computers. My mother and father divorced in 1955 and my mother remarried in 1959 to my step-dad.
    my step-dad was on one of the ships (airforce) and witnessed the testing of the bomb on Bikini island. I am a nuclear child and not the better for it. History is told in all its glory by the winners, the real truth is that there are no winners. As George Carlin said- the earth is going to be fine- it will heal eventually- the rest of us will be gone.

    • @anna-gt2mu
      @anna-gt2mu Před 9 měsíci +1

      Eareaeareaeareaeareaeareaeareacool.era

  • @coalcreeker583
    @coalcreeker583 Před rokem +41

    My father in law boarded a ship headed to Japan to be part of the invasion force. Fortunately by the time it arrived the war was over and he became part of the occupation force. He wound up liking his time in Japan.

    • @patrickbrady519
      @patrickbrady519 Před rokem +4

      Well makes sense, I bet downtown was lit up at night, for the next 50 th yrs

    • @michaelchevreaux7780
      @michaelchevreaux7780 Před rokem +7

      ​​@@patrickbrady519
      Oh Yeah!
      And Soon 🔜 American GIs Were Bringing 🔙 Back Cute
      Japanese War Brides.
      Japan Was a Soldier's Paradise For At Least 25 Years.

  • @crazycjk
    @crazycjk Před rokem +43

    Really enjoyed this. I've read about Dresden a long time ago but had no idea about Tokyo's state and how that influenced the nuclear bomb drops. Good and nuanced too - nobody comes out of a war without dirty hands.

    • @ThePresentPast_
      @ThePresentPast_  Před rokem +3

      It was a new topic for me too, super interesting

    • @KlodFather
      @KlodFather Před rokem

      @@ThePresentPast_ - Tokyo was not bombed because it is a bad idea to cut the head off the chicken... with No leader you will have a crazy war with small groups and never get control.

  • @kruger4967
    @kruger4967 Před 9 měsíci

    dopest video i seen, im in okinawa japan rn on deployment. very cool to learn the histroy

  • @dougmetcalf2895
    @dougmetcalf2895 Před 10 měsíci +391

    I think one important factor that needs to be remembered is that Japanese culture didn't allow for surrender as an easy option. Dan Carlin's Hardcore History podcast series, "Supernova in the East", provides some excellent context for understanding both sides.

    • @nikolai522
      @nikolai522 Před 10 měsíci +31

      Exactly. It’s one thing to fight a military that fights to the death, but it’s another to fight an entire civilization willing to do the same. Japanese civilians would’ve taken up arms to fight Americans with as much ferocity as their military. Especially since the idea that bombing a population would weaken the populous’ resolve was false. Add boots on the ground to mainland Japan, and the entirety of Japan would feel like their entire existence was at stake. As much as I hate that it took the atomic bombings and countless lives being lost leading up to that decision, I feel ultimately the decision to use the atomic bombs weren’t just a means of preemptively saving American lives, but also that of countless Japanese civilians who would’ve defended their homeland. It’s almost a question of would you rather take 100,000 lives to end the war, or have 100s of thousands, if not millions of lives be taken.

    • @freneticness6927
      @freneticness6927 Před 10 měsíci +21

      Considering what japan did to countries which surrendered maybe they were just expecting the same treatment.

    • @astoriastestkitchen
      @astoriastestkitchen Před 10 měsíci +8

      Supernova in the East does a much better job approaching this subject than this video. This video isn't bad but there are a lot of small inaccuracies and things left unmentioned that paint a somewhat distorted picture of the circumstances the allies were in, ie how it came to the point where nuclear weapons and strategic bombing were seen as the best course of action to end the war as soon as possible

    • @0j00n
      @0j00n Před 10 měsíci +2

      dan is the man

    • @counterculture10
      @counterculture10 Před 10 měsíci +5

      My grandfather served as a doctor on the Pacific stage. He said that there was so much hatred and suffering between and among the Japanese and Americans during the war that when the decision was made to drop the two big bombs, the American soldiers thought Truman was a hero. They were just so focused on ending the war. Good and bad is all a matter of perspective.

  • @Eragonking53
    @Eragonking53 Před rokem +3

    Japan attacked Pearl Harbor on Sunday morning when the sailors were chillin

  • @ettena93
    @ettena93 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thanks to all the commenters who recommend relevant books, movies and podcasts to us people who are not history buffs and wish to learn. Not to mention the personal stories re-told by children and grandchildren, shared in the comments section, to further educate us on the horrors of war. I have an interest in this part of our history, but I'm terrible with dates and there's so much cause and effect. I admire people who know details about the history of our world, especially those who see the world wars from different perspectives and the motivations of the participants.

  • @johndarby8030
    @johndarby8030 Před 9 měsíci +2

    That has to be a very controversial ad for brilliant I suppose

  • @americansailor7967
    @americansailor7967 Před rokem +57

    The last Japanese solider to surrender was in 1974. One can simply not imagine how fanatical they were. Even after two nuclear bombs they almost didn't surrender.

    • @sirridesalot6652
      @sirridesalot6652 Před rokem +7

      When the Soviet Union declared war on Japan and invaded a Japanese held area, Japan was convinced that between the atomic bombs and the Soviet Union's declaration of war, that surrender was the only option.

    • @jguenther3049
      @jguenther3049 Před rokem +1

      True.

    • @joshlampe3458
      @joshlampe3458 Před rokem +4

      @@sirridesalot6652 It almost didn't happen, Army took steps to overrule the emperor and were close to keeping the war going.

    • @FLAIR__
      @FLAIR__ Před rokem +3

      @Midget Yt idk about that mate

    • @abc0to1
      @abc0to1 Před rokem +1

      Your information is simply incorrect, Onoda, who surrendered in 1974, was an intelligence agency man, like the CIA, and was simply trained to carry out his mission as long as his life lasted.
      He was loyal to his mission, not a fanatic. Or would a CIA man abandon his mission without orders from his superiors?

  • @Salsacandela153
    @Salsacandela153 Před rokem +25

    They bombed those cities because Tokyo and Osaka have been bombed by raids
    And the nuclear team feared that when the bomba made the impact japan would think that the damage was not done by the atomic bombs but by the raids
    The point was to see the full damage of a single atomic bomb

    • @joelsalinas6905
      @joelsalinas6905 Před rokem

      They didn’t bomb Tokyo because if they did they wouldn’t have anyone to negotiate with to end the war

    • @hansgruber9685
      @hansgruber9685 Před rokem +1

      For Russia to see the full damage of an atomic bomb.

    • @truthadvocacy
      @truthadvocacy Před rokem

      The claim that those monstrous acts were to "save" American lives and put an end to the war, is a fraud, as during the whole war up to 1945, only a paltry 100,000 US servicemen died in the Pacific war, far less than in Europe. And Japan was close to surrender.

  • @sanchezjr13
    @sanchezjr13 Před 10 měsíci +3

    History is written by the victors.

  • @vainklutz3179
    @vainklutz3179 Před 4 měsíci

    man i learned a lot more than i expected

  • @jackbn9353
    @jackbn9353 Před rokem +70

    The problem with historians is that they rarely look at the future from the viewpoint of the participants. In 1942 the Allies did not know the eventual outcome of the war. Despite brave talk of the Allies, the Axis powers had many victories. It is much easier to pontificate now.

    • @tooterooterville
      @tooterooterville Před rokem +12

      These moralistic people who review history from their moral high ground are really sickening!

    • @jz55859
      @jz55859 Před rokem +11

      My Mother was 12 when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor and living in Kentucky. She said when the news broke there wasn't a man in the area that didn't go down to join the service that very day. She said from that point on there was great fear of an invasion by Japan, whose atrocities were well known, that never really eased up throughout the war. There is no doubt in her mind that the bombs were necessary to end the war. Thus was the climate and thinking of the day.

    • @Conn30Mtenor
      @Conn30Mtenor Před rokem

      Very few people do and "Woke" types NEVER do. It's called "Presentism".

    • @Conn30Mtenor
      @Conn30Mtenor Před rokem +3

      @@jz55859 there were many incidents of suicide when men were told that they were 4F and unsuitable for military service. Which is tragic, because they could have become welders or essential workers helping the war effort.

    • @jz55859
      @jz55859 Před rokem +1

      @@Conn30Mtenor Wow! I did not know this. Tragic indeed.

  • @SimCityEA1989
    @SimCityEA1989 Před rokem +5

    I'm hearing a lot of people say "Well, The Allies were just as bad as The Axis" which in some cases, were true. However, it's not like the Axis were being nice in the war and the Allies decided to employ some harsh tactics that were "Evil". People need to understand that the Allies had to return fire in the same order or more as the Axis did to them FIRST. At the end of the day, World War 2 was considered a Total War. Meaning all hands on deck, all resources, all people, are in this together to continue pushing and pumping out weaponry to the front, as well as MAXIMIZING as much damage as possible to the other enemy. It was literally kill or be killed, no conditional surrender but unconditional surrender.

    • @hxhdfjifzirstc894
      @hxhdfjifzirstc894 Před rokem

      Yes, trying to blame the Allied forced is actually evil (the twisting of reality, into the opposite of the truth). All moral blame must be placed on those that STARTED THE WAR. And when you look into the Rape of Nanking, or see film of prisoners in Dachau or Buchenwald, you really must be an evil dimwit to blame America.

  • @user-ry6ts2pq6f
    @user-ry6ts2pq6f Před 10 měsíci

    Nice Video

  • @noroy2
    @noroy2 Před 9 měsíci

    Great work and video, your country is beautiful. Greetings from Mexico.

  • @cetusz_maximus2
    @cetusz_maximus2 Před rokem +37

    Firebombs are crazy. My great grandmother told me that the front neighboring building was bombed and it burnt for two weeks. Also my grandma was born in the middle of the siege of Budapest and the hospital was in the middle of the front lines so she had to sneak across both sides.

  • @christiancanty2036
    @christiancanty2036 Před 10 měsíci +9

    "We were at war, and it was total war, and we HAD to win, because heaven known what would have happened if we hadn't" - british bomber crew member from Ewan McGreggor's bomber documentary

  • @BK-qp8zp
    @BK-qp8zp Před 9 měsíci

    Thanks!

  • @qazatqazah
    @qazatqazah Před 10 měsíci +41

    Thank you for this documentary. I actually learned something today. Sure, I knew about Dresden, but I had no idea how widespread firebombing was at the time in both Germany and Japan. This is a real eye-opener.

    • @dafyddthomas7299
      @dafyddthomas7299 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Apply that to UK, Polish, Norweagan cities as well - widespread destruction and death + also V1-V2 program conducted by Germans

    • @TheNelster72
      @TheNelster72 Před 9 měsíci

      @@dafyddthomas7299 The counter-argument, which is not mine incidentally, is that the demise of the Nazi regime was certain when Dresden was bombed and it was not a militarily important city.

    • @rationalgazer
      @rationalgazer Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@TheNelster72 ahh well... pay-back is a bitch.

  • @kschuman1152
    @kschuman1152 Před rokem +51

    I think this is a good analysis, but I think Germany's conduct during the war can quite reasonably be characterized as pure, undiluted 100% evil. Also, It is not commonly discussed, but Japan killed over 20 million human beings in China during the war, the vast majority of them civilians. Far short of Chairman Mao, but still, very dark deeds were committed by the Japanese armies in Asia.
    The allies brought the usual high percentage of human cruelty and stupidity to their conduct of the war, but the conduct of their forces do not bear equivocal comparison to that of either Germany or Japan. WWII was one of several occasions in history which involved a straightforward contest between good and evil. There are messy details to be sure, but that shouldn't obscure the true nature of the conflict.

    • @TheIntJuggler
      @TheIntJuggler Před rokem +4

      Definitely. Also it’s not like precision munitions existed at the time. A war was forced on us and our allies at the time and trying to create a moral equivalence between the two sides is simply wrong. Also had Japan not been totally defeated and we ended up with a negotiated peace, Japan would probably look more like North Korea today. Japan basically had a military first policy just like North Korea does.

    • @truthadvocacy
      @truthadvocacy Před rokem

      The claim that those monstrous acts were to "save" American lives and put an end to the war, is a fraud, as during the whole war up to 1945, only a paltry 100,000 US servicemen died in the Pacific war, far less than in Europe. And Japan was close to surrender.
      "Far short of Chairman Mao, ..."😂😂😂😂

    • @DefenestrateYourself
      @DefenestrateYourself Před 10 měsíci

      There was evil done by both sides, agreed

    • @markvandenberg4606
      @markvandenberg4606 Před 10 měsíci

      Great comment.

    • @g76agi
      @g76agi Před 10 měsíci

      no way, youre saying there are evil people in war!!! 😱

  • @87GP400
    @87GP400 Před 9 měsíci

    Thanks for the information. It answers some of my questions on why the Japanese attacked Pearl Arbor
    .

  • @thebeareatfood
    @thebeareatfood Před 9 měsíci

    My Great Step Fathers in laws son was a pilot in the Navy for US Air force during the Cold War and he had never flew a plane before. He drowned in the Pacific Ocean in 1704. I still remember his last words like it was yesterday.

  • @Sora0502
    @Sora0502 Před rokem +6

    WW2 wasn't about who was the good guys and the bad guys, it was about choosing the lesser of 2 evils.

    • @truthadvocacy
      @truthadvocacy Před rokem +1

      The "lesser" one being the US terror regime, of course.😂😂😂

  • @Mbonner73
    @Mbonner73 Před rokem +165

    After 20 years in the US Army, the death and destruction I had seen keeps me awake at night. I have found that there are 3 sides of the truth in every war, there is our side, their side and then there is the truth.
    The truth is only found after all the death and destruction of wars. We need more history channels like this to help us to understand what the truth is.
    As always, thank you for posting another amazing video

    • @damiencook3423
      @damiencook3423 Před rokem +3

      History is written by the survivors, if none of the *enemy* survive, then history/ or the truth can be whatever they want.

    • @cbuzz2371
      @cbuzz2371 Před rokem +7

      ​@@damiencook3423I think the correct phrase is "the victor writes history", few historical naratives seem to care about individual survivors, that the power and reach of winning nations and peoples makes their narrative far stronger

    • @stephenhipp7859
      @stephenhipp7859 Před rokem

      Family member was an RI and worked in DC, a free republic will do vicious shit to stay a free republic

    • @thomasjones4570
      @thomasjones4570 Před rokem

      But our side did not hide the fact that civilians were killed or targeted. Its in all the history books and documentaries...

    • @jjw3046
      @jjw3046 Před rokem

      @@cbuzz2371 "the victor writes history"
      Ironically Japan is the one counterexample to this. Sort of. They lost the war and yet no one really remembers their war crimes.
      Although that's in large part thanks to their being anti-Communist allies with the US. So I guess you could say the victors helped them whitewash their own history, indirectly.

  • @bernhardt1557
    @bernhardt1557 Před 10 měsíci

    Good video

  • @THEScottCampbell
    @THEScottCampbell Před rokem +107

    You made SEVERAL excellent points. The most important one was firebombing killed more people and in an indiscriminate and horrific way. The A-bomb was an effective way to convince Japanese leaders that they wouldn't have any Japanese lives left to throw away in their lust for power. Human life meant nothing to them. The A-bomb ended up saving both Japanese and American lives by ending the rule of Tojo and his generals. It would have been great if it could have been done without any loss of life. Nagasaki was bombed in a way that deliberately minimized deaths and destruction. To this day, Japan has never admitted to its people their hideous war crimes or even how the army murdered Japan's civilian government and then rampaged through Asia. The Japanese should hear the truth about what their government did throughout Asia.

    • @truthadvocacy
      @truthadvocacy Před rokem

      The claim that those monstrous acts were to "save" American lives and put an end to the war, is a fraud, as during the whole war up to 1945, only a paltry 100,000 US servicemen died in the Pacific war, far less than in Europe. And Japan was close to surrender.

    • @dawisegenie
      @dawisegenie Před rokem +7

      You should see how the Japanese GOVERNMENT lies. Japanese civilians are in fact quite polite and nice. In many American textbooks, they actually state that Japan helped grow the Korean economy. If you know how history truly went down, however, it would be quite different.

    • @mcfrisko834
      @mcfrisko834 Před rokem +8

      China will remind them

    • @gitminez
      @gitminez Před rokem +6

      Yea kinda like the American government 🤷🏾‍♂️

    • @jesse75
      @jesse75 Před rokem +2

      I wish they would have dropped the bomb on Iwo Jima first.
      I know . I know. The bomb wasn't ready yet. But that would have been a better target.

  • @Bartkonig
    @Bartkonig Před rokem +6

    Rather interesting take on the subject matter. It's nice to hear something refreshing that it wasn't all as easy and rosy as historybooks make it seem. Lekker bezig Jochem, ga zo door jongen!😉

  • @philoso377
    @philoso377 Před 10 měsíci

    Have you guys pickup the answer to the title question of the video? I failed after spent 19 minutes here. What a journalist.

  • @GoddamnAxl
    @GoddamnAxl Před 9 měsíci

    I love the fact that the segway to brilliant ad this time is “do you want to make atomic bombs” 😂😂

  • @mattmaxon7783
    @mattmaxon7783 Před 10 měsíci +28

    My father was on a troop ship for operation downfall. There is a pretty good chance I wouldn't be writing this now if the bombs where not used. Though I do think Japan was more interested in surrendering to the US than the Soviet Union

    • @stephenahancock
      @stephenahancock Před 10 měsíci +6

      My father was a glider pilot sitting in Okinawa waiting for the attack on Japan when the Bombs were dropped. Like you, I wouldn't have come to this earth by the same father if not for the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

    • @chipsawdust5816
      @chipsawdust5816 Před 10 měsíci

      As the saying goes, "If your parents didn't have any children, chances are you won't either."

    • @TanukiDigital
      @TanukiDigital Před 10 měsíci +1

      I get the sentiment but I would be cautious to start justifying such things simply for the fact that you wouldn't have been here. Think of the people who would have been saying similar things who never got the chance because of these same actions. It's better to recognize the full consequences of these horrible decisions made in the past so that we ensure that they are not repeated.

    • @chipsawdust5816
      @chipsawdust5816 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@TanukiDigital See, we differ in the term "horrible decisions." It would have been a far worse decision to launch an amphibious assault on the Japanese homeland. Far, far worse. For both sides.

    • @CheckThisOut77
      @CheckThisOut77 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Surrendering to us turned out to be the best thing the Japanese could do.

  • @AlexPeace246
    @AlexPeace246 Před rokem +20

    Firebombing could leave cities ablaze or smouldering for weeks, not just days. There’s cases of smouldering rubble reigniting nearly 2 weeks after the initial bombing (depending on local weather/season and humidity) although most of these small fires where generally contained quickly, some of them would start to spread again. For me it goes to show how terrifying living in a city where you could step through rubble and into a pit of embers days or weeks after you thought it was safe to walk around.

    • @seanbrown9048
      @seanbrown9048 Před rokem

      WWIII with the new nukes in service will cause the extinction of mankind.

    • @Skrenja
      @Skrenja Před 10 měsíci +2

      Fires can burn underground for a very long time.

  • @jiji7250
    @jiji7250 Před 4 měsíci +1

    it always saddens me just how much culture , infrastructure and beautiful landscapes were destroyed from this war , imagine how much beautiful the world would be without wars.

  • @TUMARK2
    @TUMARK2 Před 9 měsíci +2

    A book I read many years ago, the author fought the Pacific war all the way to the end. So inspite his personal involvement, I was surprised his opinion was the bomb wasn't necessary to effect a surrender.
    But Russia had just started fighting Japan and a quick surrender was needed to keep Russia from occupying Japan. In fact some of Japan's home island were not returned to Japan until the 1960s.
    We were already preparing for the next war with Russia

    • @f556784q3
      @f556784q3 Před 4 měsíci

      bro a random soldiers opinion of a theater wide war encompassing millions of people and deep cultural differences is not an especially reliable source of how necessary the bomb was in effecting surrender.

    • @TUMARK2
      @TUMARK2 Před 4 měsíci

      @@f556784q3 the navy captain ( I forget his name now) said we controlled the air and sea around the home islands and that they were dependant on inter island commerce to just survive. That we could have waited them out.
      We needed to rush the surrender to keep Russia from taking any more control than they did.
      This seems credible, we were concerned about Russia in Europe.
      Results on both fronts was the iron curtain across eastern Europe and some of Japan's home islands were not returned to Japan from Russia until the 1960s. I think the actions of Russia validates this navy Captain's assessment.
      I was just surprised because he had such a personal involvement .

  • @QuantumRift
    @QuantumRift Před rokem +8

    I was born in 1957. From the time of about 6th grade, we learned about WWII. I don't recall ever hearing that 'black and white argument' of "Allies Good, AXIX EVIL". From about the age or 10 I became an avid student, and I started reading all I could on WWII and I DO remember reading a book about the firebombings of Dresden and Hamburg. Today we have the internet and a thousand documentaries on it. But Hitler had the populace so completely brainwashed and convinced, as was the case with Tojo in Japan (which had been a militaristic society for hundreds of years) that they were not going to easily go down. Look, you barely mentioned the fact that the Soviets declared war on Japan, and had invaded Manchuria and were well on their way to invading Japan - and it's one thing the Japanese feared more than the Americans, it was the Russians. Even with the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japanese communications was in a shambles - there was no "BOOM" and instant surrender. The full extent of the power wasn't known, but the extent of the Soviet cruelty was known and that's what really prompted them to surrender SO quickly, and to US. You can never 'armchair quarterback' the decision to drop the bomb and you certainly cannot retcon today's morality and thinking into the past. I've stood in that blast crater that was created by the first atomic explosion at the White Sands Trinity site. I also loved in Honolulu for nearly 7 years in the 80's and had the opportunity to meet and speak to Japanese pilots who participated in the attack on Pearl Harbor. Its certainly not black and white, and it's certainly impossible to fully analyze the situation as we were not there, though there are many who try to do just that. We know that the truth lies somewhere in the middle. The truth about the war isn't LIED about here, and all it takes to find out more is to do your own research. Haw we allowed the Soviets to 'intervent' and invade, we'd very well be looking at N.Japan and S.Japan today...

    • @jaimeperez8247
      @jaimeperez8247 Před rokem +1

      Well said

    • @sierra1513
      @sierra1513 Před rokem

      truth is that the Japanese recognized the Americans as being far closer in them in terms of ideology than the soviets, they knew the soviets would not have whitewashed their crimes and pardoned their war criminals to work for major American companies, the exact same thing happened with the Nazi, America was not concerned about the rise of fascism or genocide or any of that nonsense(Germany was heavily inspired by the US treatment of Natives and was supported by many US industrialists such as Ford), they were simply concerned about the expansion of the axis into their own colonial territories

  • @TheTrainmobile
    @TheTrainmobile Před rokem +25

    The production of historical narratives is always a fascinating topic. If anyone wants to read more about this, I'd recommend Michel-Rolph Trouillot's book "Silencing the Past: Power and the Production of History"

  • @johnswanson217
    @johnswanson217 Před 4 měsíci +2

    When citizens can't elect their own representatives, people are always expendable.

  • @leboganglamola4512
    @leboganglamola4512 Před 10 měsíci +2

    3 days after watching Oppenheimer , my algorithm is just showing nuke content

  • @noonedude101
    @noonedude101 Před rokem +10

    Dresden had a MASSIVE rail yard. The notion that Dresden wasn’t an important military target is a myth.

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Před rokem +1

      well yeah but they could have dumped some bombs around the rails and knocked off back to base for a pint, yeh?

    • @noonedude101
      @noonedude101 Před rokem +2

      @@zimriel That’s unfortunately just not how bombing worked back then. You were aiming just to get your bomb within a few kilometers of the target.
      You either sent in light bombers with little chance of them coming back, let alone completely destroying the target AND coming back.
      Or you just wiped a whole area off the map.

    • @geistknight768
      @geistknight768 Před rokem +2

      Dresden absolutely did have military targets that were of value, but the thing is British bombers literally firebombed the residential areas. And that is not because they missed the military targets.

  • @sammiches6859
    @sammiches6859 Před rokem +26

    I think it's odd that the estimates of invasion casualties were sort of glossed over. There were estimates of up to 10 million if I remember right. That was based on the projections from Iwo Jima, and it brought on a logistical nightmare. They would need an invasion force of over a million men and Japanese casualties would be calculated in the millions as well, billions in bonds (that they already struggled to sell), food for that amount of men and those employed to get them to the island (it was possible they would have to resort to farming cat tail weeds for their starch content just to feed everyone), another year or two of war that everyone was mortally sick of, and somehow keep their holdings they were negotiating with the Reds in Germany. Ultimately, it was a numbers game, and they even ruled out Kyoto knowing that it would fortify their resolve. So they opted for Kokura as the primary target with Nagasaki as secondary. That wouldn't indicate the target were civilians primarily, but they were trying to get a surrender before USSR intervention, so they wouldn't have to split Japan like Germany. Imagine a traditional invasion between the US and the USSR, and half of Japan was subjugated to the Communist atrocities like China or East Germany. Things could have been a lot worse for the Japs, especially given what they had done. I honestly wish they hadn't been so stupid and attacked the US Navy in the first place.

    • @lafeeshmeister
      @lafeeshmeister Před rokem

      Check out the changes in what Truman said about those estimates. In the President's own words, after the war, they vary significantly. Some figures are astronomically high, others much more moderate.

    • @samm4258
      @samm4258 Před rokem

      It's against the video's narrative. "sure the nazis did some bad things but..." sure they were trying to wipe another population off the face of the earth but... It's like self defense, neither option is preferable but once you cross the line its the better of two evils

    • @raymondswenson1268
      @raymondswenson1268 Před 10 měsíci

      The estimate is based on the US pkan to throw Americans at Japanese kamikaze defenders as cannon fodder. A SMART invasion would have done a feint on Kyushu, but focused the real invasion on Sendai in the northeast wherr defenses were thin. Sendai is closer to the US mainland than Kyushu. It could be supported by B-17s launched from Okinawa and planes from hundreds of carriers plus battleships. Stupid, unimaginative US planners were careless about US soldiers' lives.

  • @GermanShepherd1983
    @GermanShepherd1983 Před 10 měsíci +2

    If Chuck Sweeney hadn't been totally incompetent on the second atomic mission they would have bombed Kokura instead of Nagasaki. Sweeney was ordered to wait no more than ten minutes for the observation plane at Iwo Jima. Instead he circled for almost an hour which meant cloud cover moved in at Kokura and he had to divert to Nagasaki. After the bombing run they barely had enough fuel left in the plane to get back to Okinawa and he almost lost the plane and killed the crew because of it. Totally incompetent. Even Tibbets was upset with Sweeney's screwup.

  • @conwayGAMES
    @conwayGAMES Před 9 měsíci

    my grandparents fled dredsten and moved to western Canada when they were young during the war. i can now see why 🥺

  • @s.h.y.g.h.o.s.t.d.o.l.l
    @s.h.y.g.h.o.s.t.d.o.l.l Před rokem +59

    Hiroshima was a city of considerable military importance. It contained the 2nd Army Headquarters, which commanded the defense of all of southern Japan. The city was a communications center, a storage point, and an assembly area for troop.
    The city of Nagasaki had been one of the largest sea ports in southern Japan and was of great war-time importance because of its many and varied industries, including the production of ordnance, ships, military equipment, and other war materials. The narrow long strip attacked was of particular importance because of its industries.
    And to put it plainly as an American, you started it. ¯⁠\⁠_⁠(⁠ツ⁠)⁠_⁠/⁠¯

    • @DPelicanGaming
      @DPelicanGaming Před rokem

      nukes are off the table. what made it any better then? you started it? they started a conventional war we started a nuclear war if we did that in todays time the entire world would be destoryed.

    • @MetalSnake6199
      @MetalSnake6199 Před rokem +2

      'Merica, PHUQ YEAH

    • @teclishighloremasterofhoet7488
      @teclishighloremasterofhoet7488 Před rokem +5

      The video is informative for sure, but I can’t help but get the impression that he wants to paint the US as the bad guy while glossing over a lot of the bullshit the Japanese did

    • @ronnies379peterbiltexperie2
      @ronnies379peterbiltexperie2 Před 10 měsíci

      @@teclishighloremasterofhoet7488of courae lol

  • @gibs7320
    @gibs7320 Před rokem +4

    this is a really fantastic companion piece for shaun's video on hiroshima and nagasaki. similar moral questions, but coming at it from a new angle. this was such a great vid!

    • @becauseimafan
      @becauseimafan Před rokem

      I forgot about that video! Thank you for sharing and reminding me of it

  • @dhagaa
    @dhagaa Před 7 měsíci +1

    ''when you bomb people,
    they dont become more compliant
    they become more rigid in their opposition to you.''
    this is so true for the Isreali and Gaza war right now

  • @mdb1239
    @mdb1239 Před 9 měsíci +1

    When the Imperial Japanese conquered an area/people they were savage and brutal and acted as deserving conquerors. The United States in Europe and Japan worked and spent monies and time to install wealth and democracy in both arenas of victory. From a HISTORICAL context of a victor, this was absolute NUTS/INSANITY. It was almost like pouring love on your enemy. But the United States did it. In WW I , Britain, France and the allies imposed incredible debilitating restrictions on Prussia/Germany as victors. The US did not do this after WW II.

  • @AndyMBurgess
    @AndyMBurgess Před rokem +5

    That intro gave me the shivers! Thanks for making this video, I've been interested to understand this topic in more depth for a long time

  • @milwaukeejt7483
    @milwaukeejt7483 Před rokem +32

    When estimating the casualties that would result from an invasion of Japan, we cannot forget to include the number of Japanese soldiers AND civilians. The civilian population, men, women, and children, was being trained trained to resist an invasion. Civilian mass suicides at Saipan and Okinawa would very likely have been replicated if/when resistance proved unsuccessful. The body count would have dwarfed the casualties from the A-bombs.

    • @michaelplunkett8059
      @michaelplunkett8059 Před 10 měsíci +2

      2 million Japanese casualties was the estimate.

    • @dennisweidner288
      @dennisweidner288 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @milwaukeejt7483 Absolutely correct. Notice those that who criticize Truman's decision, never provide a creditable alternative that would have resulted in fewer Japanese casualties.

    • @raymondswenson1268
      @raymondswenson1268 Před 10 měsíci

      Civillans did not believe in suicide. They were fed propaganda about rapacious Americans. The first US soldiers they saw handed out chocolate bars and made friends.

  • @levihernandez8229
    @levihernandez8229 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I know why they didn't bomb Kyoto. It's because the military brass liked to vacation there.

  • @NoxiousWitch
    @NoxiousWitch Před 3 měsíci

    My great-grandmother was visiting my great great grand father in Hiroshima a few days before the bombing of Hiroshima. She arrived home and then learned of the bombing, it was horrible. My family is from Osaka.

  • @LoveToMix
    @LoveToMix Před rokem +3

    Thanks. Great coverage of both sides while focusing on the two nuclear bombings.

  • @donmoufashorhe
    @donmoufashorhe Před 9 měsíci

    I never thought about that!