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https://i.rdrama.net/images/17229563215336077.webp

The manchuria myth seems to be in full rampant spring in the modern consciousness - there sheer magnitude and scope of the island hopping warfare, in terms of naval combat, the British involvement in Burma, the island hopping campaigns in the philippines and surrounding islands is not appreciated, even by yanks

But most of all was the manner in which USA subs choked the very life out of Japan via their blockade in a far more successful variant that that of the Kraut U-boats in the Atlantic theatre,

by the time the mere 80 000 Soviets started their pronged assault into Manchuria from Siberia, the remnants of Japs garrisons there had been depleted to serve as island guardians against the Anglo-American island campaigns, additionally Japan's inability to reinforce their land armies in china, because of relentless American submarine warfare, made for the lionshare of the effort to cripple Japan's presence prior to the Soviet forces engaging in shitty remnants of the Imperial Army, which by this time had also exhausted themselves against the Bongs in Burma, and the crap but still numerous forces of the communist Mao and Warlords under Kai-shek ALLLLL of which had been primarily supplied by yank/bong material and supplies

pin this neocon

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Reported by:

Don't forget about strategic bombing. Just like the RAF during the Ruhr campaign, the USAAF crippled the Japanese Industry (which was already lacking materials and oil due to the Naval blockade).

The United States wrecked Imperial Japan and that was the biggest reason they surrendered. The war was militarily won by august 1945, the A Bombs were a bucket of cold water so the Japanese High Command could have a grasp of reality and understand that "conditional surrender" was a fantasy.

Also, the Soviets had no Navy to invade Japan. The US was the only country which could pull out a ground invasion and "Operation Downfall" would have been an absolute bloodbath.

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What angers me about this talk about the A-bombs, is that the people who screetch loudest about them armor themselves in compassion, when in reality they veil themselves in hatred

They do not truly care about the suffering of Japanese civs, rather these events are taken s ammunition in their campaigns against the US, which is why i made the pithy comment in this thread about nobody giving a darn about the firebombing victims, because their suffering cannot be weaponized in the same way as that of the A-bomb victims, you said it yourself they had a profound psycological effect - when the firebombings or conventional bombings were utilized by ALL belligerents of the war, and thus singling out the US would be hypocritical

Over a million jap civs died in total from the Abombs, firebombings and conventional strategic bombing, but you always only hear about the sacred 250 000 of the Abombs, THE most evil america had comitted, not the 1000 000 who perished just as badly in fire in Tokyo or from shrapnel in their fricking guts dying slowly and just as cruelly as from radiation, because that 250 000 in the Abombs is highlighted from their hatred of Amerika/west rather than from compassion

Additionally, the manchuria myth is motivated by the exact same types, because they want to inflate the importance of the Soviet contribution to the defeat of Japan, while deflating thatt of the Yanks/anglos, Tankies also wish to inflate the importance of communist forces,

while also trying to heighten the depravity of America, if it could be deemed or proven that the Atomic bombings had been needless

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In ww2 the soviet union was a subsidiary of the united states. Literally.

This burns reddit's butt.

The US supplied them with nearly all the materiel that they needed to fight. This is described as "aid" but that's misleading. The US "aided" the Soviets in the same way I "aid" Marsey by supplying her with cat food.

So when Reddit prattles on about August Storm being more decisive than the bombs, even if that's true (which it isn't), the in vasion of Manchuria was conducted with American food and money. The invasion of Manchuria was, for all severe dolphins, an American operation.

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Worse than that actually, the five year plan to industrialize the Soviet Union was only accomplished because there were a lot of American engineers sitting around during the depression with no factories to build in America. The Soviets were able to pump out more tanks than the Germans because they were built in American factories that happened to be in Russia.

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When you look in the mirror, can you tell that you're stupid?

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Longpostbot jap warcrime apologist confirmed.

https://i.rdrama.net/images/1722959220787112.webp

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And here I thought it was abundantly clear that the Soviets were just trying to grab some land for themselves since they knew Japan at the time couldn't possibly mount a proper defense and that the US wasn't going to be able to actually stop them in Manchuria. Didn't they even continue taking land a couple days after Japan's unconditional surrender?

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Yes, and after 1949 Mao told Stalin the USSR should give back the old Manchuria (including Vladivostok) to the chinks as those treaties were signed by Tsarist Russia and the Qing Dynasty, and as a sign of communist solidarity and brotherhood.

Then Stalin went just Nope.

:maojak#: :#chadstalin:

Stalin also refused to send troops during the Korean War despite Mao's request and charged the chinks for using Soviet Equipment lmao.

Stalin was the only Soviet leader to cuck the chinks.

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Stalin also had a 13 year-old baby momma (that he abandoned)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Davydov_(soldier)

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/secret-grandchild-joseph-stalin-whose-7696450

The relationship between Lidia Pereprygina and Josef Stalin has been substantiated through primary research of various Russian archives such as the Presidential Archive.

According to Simon Sebag Montefiore, the writer of Young Stalin, the affair was investigated by the head of the KGB, Ivan Serov, on behalf of Nikita Kruschev and the Politburo.1 Montefiore asserts that Serov confirmed the rumours were true in an archived report of 1956, which was signed by Vyacheslav Molotov and Serov. He also states that Lidia's memoirs are located in the Presidential Archives and further detail her relationship with Stalin. In an Evening Standard article of 2007, Montefiore claims that he corroborated Lidia's account with the stories of Siberian villagers who were children at the same time as Lidia.

2 You can also find a Siberian Times article alleging that a DNA test has proven Lidia's descendants were related to Stalin although this should be approached with a healthy dose of skepticism.

3. provides greater detail of his archival research in the source notes at the back of Young Stalin, although the vast majority of these sources have never been published outside of Russian archives.

4 Also bear in mind that, although Montefiore's research is impressive, he was writing Young Stalin for a popular audience and so he may not present the relationship between Lidia and Stalin in the most academically rigorous light. Nonetheless academic historians such as Charters Wynn have praised the depth and breadth of Montefiore's research.

1 Simon Sebag Montefiore. Young Stalin. New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 2007.

2 Simon Sebag Montefiore. "Stalin and His Lover Aged 13." Evening Standard, May 11, 2007. https://www.standard.co.uk/hp/front/stalin-and-his-lover-aged-13-6581841.html.

3 "Siberian Pensioner Is Grandson of Jtalin DNA Test Reveals" Siberian Times, April 6, 2016. https://siberiantimes.com/other/others/news/n0635-siberian-pensioner-is-grandson-of-josef-stalin-dna-test-reveals/

4 Montefiore. Young Stalin. 330.

5 Wynn C, "Young Stalin. By Simon Sebag Montefiore" (2010) 69 Slavic Review 1009.

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And yet it wasn't until Krushchev that the chicoms and Soviets started beefing.

:marseyxd:

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:#marseystalin:

NO REFUNDS

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The perfidious Cossack drooling at the thought of Hokkaido.

They already took Sakhalin, much as a theft of opportunity, since the Japs b-word slapped them when they tried to get froggy in 1905. There were also 500k Japanese and White Russians living in Sakhalin before the end of WW2, they all popped smoke to Hokkaido when the Sovioids came to loot.

There were over 400,000 people living in Karafuto when the Soviet offensive began in early August 1945. Most were of Japanese or Korean extraction, though there was also a small White Russian community as well as some Ainu indigenous tribes. By the time of the ceasefire, approximately 100,000 civilians had managed to escape to Hokkaidō. The military government established by the Soviet Army banned the local press, confiscated cars and radio sets and imposed a curfew. Local managers and bureaucrats were made to aid Russian authorities in the process of reconstruction, before being deported to labor camps, either on North Sakhalin or in Siberia. In schools, courses in Marxism–Leninism were introduced, and Japanese children were obliged to sing songs in praise of Stalin.

Step by step Karafuto lost its Japanese identity. Sakhalin Oblast was created in February 1946, and by March all towns, villages and streets were given Russian names. More and more colonists began to arrive from mainland Russia, with whom the Japanese were obliged to share the limited stock of housing. In October 1946 the Soviets began to repatriate all remaining Japanese. By 1950 most had been sent, willing or not, to Hokkaidō. They had to leave all of their possessions behind, including any currency, Russian or Japanese. Today some keep alive the memory of their former home in the meetings of the Karafuto Renmei, an association for former Karafuto residents.

Not to mention the godless Russoid deportation of hundred of thousands of Germans/Swabians in the Vojvodina by mass execution or sending the women and children to work in the coal mines of the Donbass after WW2

For all the US' faults, we never mass executed Germans or Japanese

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Manchuria did have a large effect on Japanese leadership. I think you're underestimating what level of delusion they operated under in the best of times. They had fully convinced themselves that Stalin was going to broker a peace and they would negotiate down to only keeping SOME of their gains. Soviets invaded and the only alternative was a hundred million broken jewels

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At no point in your rambling, incoherent post were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone on this site is now dumber for having read it. May God have mercy on your soul.

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:marseynuke#goggles:

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Nobody, not even the japs seem to give a shit about the 100 000 japs firebombed in Tokyo, cuz all the war's belligerents acted so

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The japs are the only ones to portray firebombings on their media (see Grave of the Fireflies), the rest of the world on the other hand seems to forget. The Atom bomb had a powerful psychological effect on the general public.

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they have their own brand of holocaust survivors that go around talking about the nukes too

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cuz all the war's belligerents acted so

especially the fricking japs lmao

make no mistake, the japs would not have hesitated for even a moment if they were capable of unleashing the destruction that the US dealt them

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>le war crimerinos! :chudseethe: :asianchud:

People crying over Hiroshima or the Dresden bombings always make me lol. Imperial Japan and Nazi Germany were ruthless against civilians and never displayed an ounce of mercy.

The Japs actually had weapons of mass destruction (chemical and bio weapons) which they used in China.

>BUT, BUT THEY NEVER DID IT TO THE US!

https://i.rdrama.net/images/17229558729870956.webp

!neolibs

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I've never :marseyitsover: heard :marseyjacksparrow: of another modern :marseywarhol: battle :marseywhiteflag: for a city be called a r*pe

The r*pe of Nanking makes me lose any sympathy for the japs (not to mention all the other shit)

Unironically the bombs killed :marseycoldtwinge: less people than a land invasion :marseyufo: would :marseywood: have and stopped many more deadly direct wars between :marseyzeldalinkpast: great :marseybigthumbsup: powers.

And we warned :marseyitoldyoudog: them directly to gtfo that's on them for staying

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I recently read a book about the Japanese occupation of the Philippines. "In signing the surrender King asked for assurances that his men would be accorded fair and humane treatment as prisoners of war. "We Japanese are not barbarians," Homma's representative replied."

This is prior to the Bataan death march, by the way.

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We Japanese :marseymononoke: are not barbarians

:#marseysurejian:

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:#marseynew:

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Not to mention that the Jap government was already prepared to throw their own citizens into the meat grinder just to bog down an American invasion and deny unconditional surrender. They didn't give a shit about their citizens' lives. All the bomb did was take that strategy away since now Americans could kill thousands and thousands of Japs with basically very little risk to American lives.

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Hmm wheres the lie tho

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https://i.rdrama.net/images/17229551771591012.webp

Dramatards, it's your duty to shit up the comments with drama :marseytroublemaker: :carptroublemaker: :carptroublemakerpenisshadow:

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By the way, you wrote a lot about South African kinos but you haven't posted the apartheid kinos yet so we can watch.

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they are all shit - remember, even the euros had to compete against Hollywood in the 1980s, Safricans legitimately didn't realize how fricking trash their TV and film was because of their near blanket censorship

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Then let's watch apartheid slop and give a good laugh

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I'd be interested, not so much to watch them, but just to see what it was like. Media under authoritarian regimes are fascinating.

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One of my favorite facts about the bombs (which are morally reprehensible and unjustifiable to Catholic ethics) is that St. Maximillian Kolbe, who voluntarily martyred himself in the Holocaust in trade to save the life of a Polish prisoner, had previously founded a monastery of Franciscans in Nagasaki that survived the bomb. https://aleteia.org/2019/08/21/the-two-churches-that-survived-the-atomic-bombs-in-hiroshima-and-nagasaki !Catholics

St. Maximilian, amidst the hate and lonely misery of Auschwitz, you brought love into the lives of fellow captives and sowed the seeds of hope amidst despair. You bore witness to the world by word and deed that 'Love alone creates.' Help me to become more like you.

St. Kolbe, pray for us, that we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ. :marseykneel:

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>which are morally reprehensible and unjustifiable to Catholic ethics

That's an awfully strong claim when jus bellum considerations had been part of Catholic ethics since Augustine.

Strategic bombings were cruel and deadly to civilians, but not so dissimilar if compared to common elements of siege warfare of the time. And atomic bombings are objectively one of the less cruel and more effective of strategic bombing campaign by any metric beyond emotional.

IMO, most of opposition to Hiroshima stands from the fact that it is not judged as and part of ww2 in the context of ww2, but as the part of Cold War nuclear competition that was a constant fear for generations of people across the world. (a fear that probably shouldn't have been discarded as easily afterwards, modern lack of interest in stopping nuclear proliferation will have deadly consequences in our lifetimes)

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In addition to this operation downfall had an estimated death :marseyaborted: toll 10 or more times the death :marseyrave: toll of the bombs

Depending on the scope :marseypedosnipe: and context, casualty estimates for American :marseychingchongmutt: forces ranged from 220,000 to several million, and estimates of Japanese :marseymononoke: military :marseycruisemissile: and civilian casualties ran from the millions to the tens of millions.

A bombs

The bombings killed :marseycoldtwinge: between :marseyzeldalinkpast: 150,000 and 246,000 people, most of whom were civilians, and remain the only use of nuclear :marseyreactor: weapons :marseytf2heavy: in an armed conflict

Unironically the least deadly option for both military :marseysaluteccp: and civilians

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Soon after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, U.S. military leaders, writing in private and thus having no reason to distort estimates, agreed that any claim of 500,000 American lives saved was exorbitant. In September 1945, even though some U.S. military leaders feared that the Japanese were conducting "an intensive propaganda campaign concerning the bombing of their cities" to make the United States seem bloodthirsty, top generals in Washington argued that the invasions of Japan, if carried out, would have cost fewer than 200,000 American lives and maybe only "tens of thousands:" Such were the postwar estimates of Lt. General John E. Hull, assistant chief of the Army's operations division, and of Lt. General Ira C. Eaker, deputy commander of the Air Force, and endorsed by General Henry ("Hap") Arnold, commander of the Air Force.

Or if those numbers sound too low, we could ask Gen. MacArthur's opinion:

It was not simply most top military men in Washington but also General Douglas MacArthur, U.S. commander in the Pacific, who believed that the casualties and deaths would not be as high as the rate at Normandy and Okinawa. MacArthur's plans for the first stage, the November invasion of southern Kyushu, estimated total casualties (dead plus wounded) in the first three months at well under 100,000. When he discovered that some of his staff, in putting together "purely academic" estimates, had forecast possibly 110,000 casualties, he cabled Marshall on. June 18, "I do not anticipate such a high rate of loss."

https://sci-hub.se/https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00963402.1986.11459388

!historychads @BushWasRight

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Counterpoint, nuking the Japs was based

:#marseynukegoggles: :#chudjakasiangenocide:

But now seriously, 100k japanese troops died in Okinawa alone, and the reconquest of the Philippines took the lives of 420k japs.

No way a full invasion of Japan would have ended with just 100k casualties for Japan and a few dozen thousands for the US. Even during Operation Overlord the US suffered 120k casualties.

Also, your link doesn't work.

!historychads

The U.S. Sixth Army, which would invade and occupy Kyushu, estimated 124,935 U.S. battle casualties, including 25,000 dead, plus 269,000 non-battle casualties (disease, accident, etc.) for Kyushu alone. The JCS came up with an estimate that a 90-day campaign on Kyushu would cost 156-175,000 battle casualties, with 38,000 killed in action. By late July, the JCS was forecasting 500,000 casualties at the high end and 100,000 at the low end. In late July 1945, the War Department provided an estimate that the entire Downfall operations would cause between 1.7 to 4 million U.S. casualties, including 400-800,000 U.S. dead, and 5 to 10 million Japanese dead. (Given that the initial Downfall plan called for 1,792,700 troops to go ashore in Japan, this estimate is indeed most sobering, and suggests many more troops than planned would need to be fed into a meat grinder). Other estimates in the U.S. government indicated U.S. deaths at 500,000 to 1 million. Which of these and other estimates would be the most accurate has been hotly debated over the years (and are caught up in the debate about whether the atomic bomb should have been used), and I'm not going to solve it. But it is clear that the cost of invading Japan would have been staggering for both the U.S. and the Japanese.

https://www.history.navy.mil/about-us/leadership/director/directors-corner/h-grams/h-gram-057/h-057-1.html

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https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00963402.1986.11459388 plug into sci-hub.se which I think you know but some might not !historychads

>Sidevoteceling to signal disagreement when given engagement

:marseyno:

But I'm glad that you're enthusiastic about knowing better than the actual generals, and it's definitely "based" that Truman ignored Secretary of War Stimson's recommendations to offer the Emperor immunity from war crime trials prior to Potsdam only to... turn around and offer the same provision after killing a few hundred thousand civilians and leaving relevant military industrial infrastructure intact in the process. :marseyjerkoffsmile:

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https://www.history.navy.mil/about-us/leadership/director/directors-corner/h-grams/h-gram-057/h-057-1.html

Here, from the Navy history and heritage command.

But I'm glad that you're enthusiastic about knowing better than the actual generals

None of the estimates you posted about operation Downfall correspond to what the army and navy estimated at the time.

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8. MacArthur to Marshall, June 18, 1945, file OPD 704 TS, War Department General Staff.

9. Minutes of June 18, 1945, meeting in Department of State, Foreign Relations of the United States: Berlin (Potsdam) (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1960), pp. 904-9; for unprinted parts, see file CCS 381 Japan (6-14-45), Records of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Record Group 218, National Archives.

10. Joint Staff Planners, 697/2, July 9, 1945, file 384 Japan (5-3-44), War Department General Staff.

11. J.E. Hull to Ira Eaker, Sept. 13, 1945; Eaker to Hull, Sept. 14, 1945; Arnold to FEAF [Far Eastern Air Force], Sept. 14, 1945, all in file OPD 704 PTO, War Department General Staff.

Are you planning another thread on this? Pulling up the original documents is gonna take a bit but I'm not just pulling numbers out of nowhere and I'd hope the journal article wasn't either.

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I never said you were making shit up. But McArthur's estimates were not the final ones made by the War Department and they're not fully authoritative either as @BushWasRight said. If you read about the World Wars you'll see that generals always underestimated potential casualties.

Truman didn't have the benefit of hindsight to risk hundreds of thousands of American troops. If the invasion became like Okinawa but on a large scale it would have been a terrible bloodbath and the Invasion of Normandy was the closest comparison point the Army could use. Plus more people died during the firebombing of Tokyo in march 1945 than on Hiroshima.

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I can't imagine not upcarping :marseyupvote2:someone who took the time to respond to you. It should be a bannable offense. :marseyindignant:

Why isn't there an upcarp emoji :carpsad:

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OTOH it does make all of @nuclearshill's political views transparent in a way even many of our :marseywingcuck: users manage to avoid :marseyinvestigate:

:#marseystalker:

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All right then :#marseydownvote:

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Did macarthur make those predictions knowing just how many japanese civilians were ready to die for their emperor? A land conquest from the shore to the capital would've claimd hundreds of thousands of (japanese) civilian lives guaranteed.

Maybe america would've only lost ten thousand men but surely Japan would've lost more than the 150k they lost to the atomic bombs.

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Taking one generals opinion over others as authoritative source isn't a strong argument. Especially when we know many things in hindsight they didn't.

There are many reasons to assume invasion would have been bloody.

It was naval invasion on a scale larger than D day, without a friendly island 30 miles away riddled with air fields to support it from.

Kyushu has a hilly terrain that aids defenders, doubly in hiding airplanes and like. On this topic, kamikaze attacks are essentially guided bombs in an era of dumb bombs, a normal bomber has a ~15% chance of hitting a ship and kamikaze has more than 90%+ chance. Which is worrying when you have to ferry relatively slow troop transports full of soldiers across an ocean.

D day benefited from effective allied deception, with more troops tied around Calais to defend against phantom invasion than fighting in Normandy. Attempts at same deception failed in Japan, Japanese army leaders knew Kyushu is an obvious target and deployed troops accordingly.

On the other hand, apart from kamikaze tactics Japanese were less well equipped than German army.

Ultimately it falls down to the question of Japanese morale, which was impossible to argue for sure then and is impossible to argue now. The Japanese fought savagely and to the last soldier (and civilian) on multiple occasions, but at the same time there situation would have been more desperate. It is possible invasion would have been less bloody than predicted, but it could also have been way worse. And thank God we never found out.

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OUT!

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That's U.S. casualties not japanese. A field :marseytradwifedaisy: general :marseyjamesironwood: does not want to play up the death :marseymissile: toll of his troops it's actively against their interests to do so.

The issue is that many more Japanese :marseyfatswordsman: would :marseywood: die. They were prepping to send civies with spears against a modern :marseyartbasel: military :marseysaluteccp: force. In addition to starvation, exposure, disease, and additional bombing campaigns that would :marseymid: come with a ground invasions.

The idea that a ground invasion :marseyufo: would :marseymid: result in less death :marseygunshotsuicide: is asinine

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The numbers he posted are not the Army's estimates for the ground invasion.

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I know but I was making a point :marseytedsimp3: that even if you take that low estimate as the U.S. causality rate that it would :marseymid: still result in more death :marseyironmaiden: than the bombs themselves

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Okinawa and Iwo Jimma gave a display of how brutal a ground invasion of the Main Islands would have been, especially for the Japanese.

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Still a misleading comparison since Downfall plans involved nuclear bombs as soon as its planners were informed nuclear bombs exist.

Fair comparison is between using nukes and starving Japan into surrender, or abandoning war without a victory. Or between strategic bombing campaign at large and letting Japan wage war on China with more or less impunity (and same for Germany and USSR)

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:platy#rich:

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abandoning war without a victory.

Literally was never :marseyitsover: an option

starving Japan :marseysamurai: into surrender

Again resulting in a death :marseyrave: toll of millions/tens of millions

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The average person knows nothing about fission/fusion/nuclear energy in general, that's why you have redditoids who oppose Thorium reactors because they're scared they'll go boom. Like literally explode.

But yes, in general terms, letting unstable (Pakistan) obtain (or retain, in the case of Russia) Nuclear weapons is a recipe for disaster.

Israel may prove to be a disaster, but idk, lsince I think the Ay-rabs know better, but have proven to be r-slurred in the past. And I fully believe that Israel should also know better but will screw everyone else in the world over if their back is pushed against the wall.

>"What if we had 9/11 but it was a hundred thousand times worse?"

If anything, just making Pakiland clamp down on Abdul Khan would have stopped like 90% of the proliferation

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I wish Brazil had developed nukes back in the 60s and 70s while it still could :#marseysad: :#marseynukegoggles:

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Paraguay would finally get what's coming to them

:#!marseymacarthur: :#marseymushroomcloud:

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No need, they're our most valuable colony/protectorate right now (I mean that unironically).

Caracas is a better target.

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why are you frickers making me get a Visa to vacay now?

We'll launch :marseycruisemissile: a retaliatory nuke

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The bombs have been consistently condemned from the outset, even when 85%+ of Americans were in support. Bishop Sheen even did a number of sermons on it starting in the late 40s.

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TIL bishop something is speaking autoritarily for entirety of Catholic Church.

Regardless, if you want to argue an act of war is inherently amoral you need to argue either how the war could have been fought without it (whilst being less harmful), or how the war shouldn't have been thought in this case. If some act is necessary to efficiently wage war then refusing to do it is morally equal to allowing whatever evil was worth fighting a war in the first place to continue.

Arguing against atomic bombs alone fails the () part easily, as atomic bombs caused a small fraction of deaths (and property damage) strategic bombing campaign as a whole did, while achieving more than any individual raid (ending the war). And as I said in other comment here, bombs vs invasion is false distinction as bombs would have been used in any invasion anyway. Especially in its early 30kt form nuclear bombs are just weapon like any other, only thing worth discussing in terms of morality is deciding to use weapons against (mostly) civilian cities, be they thermite, phosphorus or plutonium.

Arguing over strategic bombing doctrine is more interesting, and it caused a lot of death and destruction for often little gain. But I'd argue at the time there was little other ways to wage war against Japan (Germany) in a manner speedy enough to limit the harm they were doing to China (Eastern Europe). And since the harm they were doing was great indeed, then measures necessary to stop them where indeed, Necessary Evil.

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The relevant counterfactuals to consider would be if they'd further pursued peace negotiations prior to an invasion/bombing campaign, and there were people involved advocating for it at the time.

TIL bishop something is speaking autoritarily for entirety of Catholic Church.

I was bringing up the historical position of Church leaders in America (one of condemnation) but here are some quotes from the Popes since WW2:

"The use of atomic energy for purposes of war is immoral, just as the possessing of nuclear weapons is immoral…"

But since Pope Francis is famously "not based" here's Pius XII:

The atomic bomb, as Pope Pius XII pointed out on 8 February 1948, is "the most terrible weapon that the human mind has ever conceived." On 24 December 1955, in his Christmas radio message to the world, Pope Pius forcefully described "the spectacle that would be presented to the horrified eye" after the use of nuclear weapons: "Entire cities, even the largest and richest in history and art, annihilated; a black blanket of death over the pulverised matter, covering countless victims with limbs burnt, twisted, scattered, while others groan in spasms of agony."

and here's the Catechism:

Every act of war directed to the indiscriminate destruction of whole cities or vast areas with their inhabitants is a crime against God and man, which merits firm and unequivocal condemnation [cf. Vatican II, Gaudium et Spes, 80 §3]. A danger of modern warfare is that it provides the opportunity to those who possess modern scientific weapons—especially atomic, biological, or chemical weapons—to commit such crimes (CCC 2314).

Are you seriously arguing that the Church has ever been in favor or unclear on a position regarding the use of the atom bombs? !Catholics since I'm talking to three of you now lol

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The atomic bomb, as Pope Pius XII pointed out on 8 February 1948, is "the most terrible weapon that the human mind has ever conceived." On 24 December 1955, in his Christmas radio message to the world, Pope Pius forcefully described "the spectacle that would be presented to the horrified eye" after the use of nuclear weapons: "Entire cities, even the largest and richest in history and art, annihilated; a black blanket of death over the pulverised matter, covering countless victims with limbs burnt, twisted, scattered, while others groan in spasms of agony."

Too late for me to look up whole quote, but it sounds to be in context of full nuclear war ie ww3 and not ww2 ("would"). And in this way modern nuclear doctrine kinda agrees with him, as its build under the assumption that not having your cities nuked is infinitely more valuable than nuking someone else's cities. Thus nukes are used to strike other nukes to prevent them from nuking you. And static silos become "shields" by presenting a target so valuable to your enemy that they would be hit instead of something else. And it is a terrifying game where the only real winning strategy is not to play. And conveniently, this is the strategy we had taken ever since. Although nuclear proliferation, made more and more inevitable by lack of interest in stopping it, puts very worrying risks to this.

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But I'd argue at the time there was little other ways to wage war against Japan (Germany) in a manner speedy enough to limit the harm they were doing to China (Eastern Europe

I honestly know nothing about what the catholic position on war is, but regardless of that, let's take a look at Germany and Japan of the time.

These countries were genocidal warmongering dictatorships, it is no surprise they weren't treated with kid's gloves.

Even the strategic bombing over Germany was no match to what the nazis did to Poland of the atrocities they committed in the Eastern Front. If any of the axis countries had had access to nukes they wouldn't twice about using them.

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"He did worse things" isn't a moral argument though. By that logic we should be shooting any murderer on sight even if they surrender to police and offer no resistance.

The question is whether the price was worth the military gain, or whether there was a less disagreeable way to achieve it.

And in some ways strategic bombing fails both tests, as it was still a novel way of war that was ill understood. Hence for example campaign against synthetic fuel wasn't waged until 1945, battle of the Ruhr was abandoned instead of largely ineffective bombings of Berlin etc. But then again, if we judged every war based on how we know after about how it should have been fought then all leaders anywhere and anytime fall short.

So I'm just happy we have developed precision weapons and accurate recon that lets us wage air campaigns of much greater military impact, with less than a % of civilian cost. At least when you're a western power.

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"He did worse things" isn't a moral argument though. By that logic we should be shooting any murderer on sight even if they surrender to police and offer no resistance.

Yes, I agree it's not a moral argument. But generals and officers are human beings, prone to human errors and biases. If a country is brutalized, don't expect its inhabitants will make rational moral decisions.

Take the strategic bombing of Berlin by the RAF (diverging from the Ruhr campaign), it wasn't rational, but it was an intrinsically human decision made by people without hindsight. London was bombed by the Luftwaffe so the Germans should suffer the same, that was the general sentiment in Britain.

War is incredibly messy and brings up the worst in people, in the case of WW2 the best course of action was to defeat the Axis at any cost because their goals were unarguably evil. I'll not pass moral judgements on those generals and political leaders who were forced to deal with that awful situation.

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I'm just doing my normal thing (Catholic fun fact posting about a monastery and Saint :marseypraying:) and you and @BushWasRight decided to be all serious about war. He is correct that the traditional "just war" doctrine dates back to Augustine who I think nicked it from a Roman.

Ecumenical councils are the highest authority in Tradition, and Vatican II did not mince words in condemning the bombs. Obviously the decision at the time and the postwar culture influence these things in how we view them, but Gaudium et Spes sections 80-82 are the newest entry in Catholic teaching on the subject. It's too long to quote but would only take a minute to read.

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Sometimes I forget most of your arguments and posts are of ecclesiastical nature.

By the way, I have some LATAM church related news for you. The commie sandinista dictator and Maduro ally, Daniel Ortega is imprisoning priests again (he did a Church crackdown a few years ago) while launching new attacks against the church for not submitting to his rule.

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I think the main claim is the view of the atomic bomb as an indiscriminate weapon versus a "directed" strategic bombing campaign on key military industries of an enemy i.e. bombing Dresden to knock its rail lines out of existence versus bombing Hiroshima to knock it out of existence. Of course, when you then consider something like the firebombing of Tokyo the issue turns into one of its total "success" versus one of the actions itself i.e. assuming all bombs that hit Tokyo are always successful in doing the most damage individually you'll get a wiped out Tokyo much the same.

Of course again, this all falls under the very idea of a strategic bombing campaign in the first place, in whether it was successful and to what degree in the first place.

For Hiroshima and Nagasaki while I don't think they've ever been condemned due to the fact that even in popular culture they're viewed, quite frankly, as terror bombings (surrender as you can see what weapons we have at our disposal) I think it's hard to support them without resorting to some sort of lesser of two evils as even the smallest terror weapon no matter how small is condemned by the catechism.

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I think it's hard to support them without resorting to some sort of lesser of two evils as even the smallest terror weapon no matter how small is condemned by the catechism.

I mean, if you're gonna follow everything the Church says and teaches by the book you might as well have surrendered and yielded to the Japs and the Nazis. Turning the other cheek doesn't win wars, historically the Church understood this very well.

Hiroshima was selected because it was one of the few intact urban centres and the purpose of the bombing was to cause a psychological to force surrender. It took hundreds of b-29s throwing thousands of tons of explosives to wreck Tokyo, now a single one could do the job.

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You do this a lot man where you have a point and you don't read what you're responding to instead trying to force the point. Though I guess this is a more Reddit argument thing that rDrama inherited than you in particular.

Hiroshima was selected because it was one of the few intact urban centres and the purpose of the bombing was to cause a psychological to force surrender.

This is literally the definition of terror bombing. You wrote an extra paragraph relating what terror bombing is after I already "dealt with it" so to speak. As I said you can result to lesser evilism very easily by pointing out the bombings of Tokyo were worse/the same and an invasion would be even worse but it's still lesser evilism.

I mean, if you're gonna follow everything the Church says and teaches by the book you might as well have surrendered

And this is blatantly not true. @Corinthian and @BushWasRight are sperging about Just War elsewhere in the thread.

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:marseyshrug: I don't believe @nuclearshill cares about moral arguments in general, I think (?) he's a consequentialist and his mind's made up that the only options were bomb civilian centers or invade (in fairness, that is how it's presented in most books/discussions).

If you accept that peace negotiations could have happened or that bombing a different location could have yielded the same results it's hard to justify which is why most Americans refuse to entertain the idea.

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If you accept that peace negotiations could have happened or that bombing a different location could have yielded the same results it's hard to justify which is why most Americans refuse to entertain the idea.

Peace negotiations implied a conditional surrender. The Japanese didn't want solely to preserve the monarchy, they wanted to preserve their government as it was. And most of the Japanese high command wanted to keep at least Korea and Formosa, these weren't acceptable terms. Even if the US didn't abolish the monarchy out of pragmatism they wrote Japan's new constitution and effectively putted an end to Japanese imperialism making Japan a democracy. Germany was given an armistice in 1918 and the end result was bad, that's why the allies were so focused on demanding unconditional surrender.

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If you accept that peace negotiations could have happened

To be fair I don't either.

that bombing a different location could have yielded the same results

Interesting idea. Like bomb the middle of nowhere and show what could be done to your cities if we wanted?

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You do this a lot man where you have a point and you don't read what you're responding to instead trying to force the point

:#marseyhesright:

Usually I don't read long comments entirely unless they're @kaamrev comments, especially when there are many of them as in this thread.

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https://i.rdrama.net/images/1701695785632276.webp

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Why?

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I'm tired of defending the bombs seriously so I will just say Truman was a little coward and be should've dropped more.

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Truman ordered to stop further bombing to the give the Japs a time to reconsider, however even if he didn't do that, the third bomb would only have been ready to drop on August 19th at the earliest while the Japs surrendered on August 15th.

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Should've waited longer to start so he could've bombed more right away

Should've dropped one right in the imperial palace, break the Japanese spirit for a million years

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Reported by:

I take the !grillers position on the bombs:

  • Nagasaki was a shameful and horrific crime against humanity.

  • Hiroshima was 100% morally justified and the Japanese should thank us for it.

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I don't know. But surely there was a lot of grilling happening :marseygrilling2:

!grillers

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Knowing that anime exists makes me feel like we needed to nuke every city twice

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