KichiVerde said:
True. The second bomb should not have been dropped. The threat of a second bomb following the Hiroshima blast would have been enough to force the surrender. But the Americans were not willing to risk it. They wanted to end the war ASAP before the Russian took more control of Asia. Once the war ended, the first thing the US Navy did was land in Incheon to keep the Russians from taking all of the Korean Peninsula. Had the Russians been given a few more weeks Korea as a whole would suck right now. But even so I think the war would have ended before then. Once the reports of Japanese losses in Manchuria to the Russians (assault took place directly after Hiroshima bombing) would have been confirmed they would have thrown in the towel. The triple whammy of Hiroshima A-bomb, Manchurian military losses and second possibility of A-bomb would have been enough. It was all a power play between Russia and the US and Japan got caught in the middle. The US wanted to end the war and flex their military might. Russia wanted to take advantage of Japan's weakening position to take control of all their North Eastern Asian possessions. But Japan was not the victim. They created that situation. As for the Hiroshima bomb, it was a must. America made the right call. Anyone who thinks otherwise is either a naive tree hugging liberal hippie or, someone who chooses to misinterpret the facts.. |
Thank you. Finally, someone else in this thread that understands the importance of stopping the Russians from swarming over China, taking the entirety of Korea, and possibly even claiming a portion of Japan. It was of utmost importance to draw a line in the sand after tension started building up after Potsdam when the true horror of an expansionist Stalin-ruled USSR became obvious to everyone.
Because, as bad as the Japanese were to the Chinese and Hitler was to the Jews, Stalin made them look like Boy Scouts with his paranoia and quest for unbridled power. And no, that's not hyperbole. He was far and away the most terrifying force of WWII.

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