Bill Greenwood wrote:
Mike, I don't mean this as an insult, but if you have read all the info and opinions on this site and not changed your views even slightly, you must either be the brightest and best informed person around; or else so set in your ways that you don't want to allow anything outside your mindset to enter. For instance I wrote we could have used several thngs as negotiating points for peace(like leaving the Emperor in power)and Lance wrote that the Allies had a pact to demand unconditional terms. So I learned something. I could also sense how strong the desire for revenge against the Japanese is, even extending to civilans.
Bill,
I said, "I haven't", not that I wouldn't.
With all the facts, figures, quotes & theories that have been posted, you haven't changed your view to pro bomb have you? Didn't think so.
You interpret the facts in your own way, nothing wrong with that. Thats what we all do.
We sit here after the fact and look at who, what, when, where and why all compiled together in a nice little bundle and try to come up with an answer.
One of the quotes was from Ike (who never fought against the Japanese), "the Japanese are defeated" or something along those lines. Thats from his book, post war. Did Truman hear this by Aug. 5th??? Who knows?
My point is that you can't use all the facts, figures, etc. that were compiled post war to come up with a conclusion. We should only use what was known on Aug. 5th and by whom to come to an understanding. The "A" bomb was top secret at the time, it wasn't the talk of the town like it is today. "Who" knew "what and when" makes a huge difference in this discussion.
Remember, there were no cell phones, embedded reporters, instant messaging, text messaging availible back then. Just because a General or Sec. of Defense said something back then, doesn't mean that everyone was privvy to it the next day.
I feel Truman made the best decision that he could, with the information that was availible to him by Aug. 6th.. I can't be 100% sure of what he did or did not know at that time.
Regards,
Mike