US bombings on Hiroshima & Nagasaki were not to end WWII but to frighten Soviet Union
Dave Lindorff is an award-winning US
journalist, former Asia correspondent for Business Week, and founder of the
collectively-owned journalists' news site ThisCantBeHappening.net.
Published time: 9 Aug, 2019 15:56
Devastated city of Nagasaki after an
atomic bomb was dropped by a US Air Force B-29 on August 9, 1945. © AFP
Almost three-quarters of a century
ago on August 9, 1945, the United States dropped a 22-kiloton plutonium bomb
called the “Fat Man” on Nagasaki.
The total destruction of that city,
and the instant incineration of 40,000 mostly civilian people, occurred just
three days after the destruction of Hiroshima by a 15-kiloton uranium bomb,
which instantly killed 70,000. This criminal one-two punch by the US launched
the atomic age.
The bombings have always been
presented to young Americans in school history texts, and to Americans in
general by government propaganda, as having been “necessary” to end the
war quickly and to avoid American ground troops having to battle their way
through the Japanese archipelago. But later evidence – such as frantic efforts made in vain by the
Japanese government to surrender through the Swiss embassy, and later reports
that Japan’s real concern was not the destruction of its cities, but rather
fear that Soviet forces, victorious in Europe, had joined the Pacific war and
were advancing on Japan from the north and into Japanese-occupied Korea – has
undermined that US mythology.
In fact, it would appear that
President Truman and his war cabinet didn’t really want a Japanese surrender
until the two bombs that the Manhattan Project had produced had been demonstrated on two Japanese cities. The target audience of
those two mushroom clouds were not Japanese leaders in Tokyo, but rather Stalin
and the Soviet government.
At the war’s end, the US government
was almost giddy, feeling that it had come out on top – its industry humming,
its homeland unscathed, its military now built up and hardened by battle
experience, and a super weapon that no other nation had in its arsenal. Germany
and Japan were vanquished and it was felt that the Soviet Union, which had
suffered heavy human and infrastructural damage during the war, was a good 10
years away from developing its own bomb. The Soviet spy network inside and
around the Manhattan Project had not yet been discovered.
There was talk in the Pentagon and
President Truman’s war room of taking advantage of America’s monopoly on
nuclear weapons to attack the USSR and make sure it could never
develop a bomb. In fact, there was talk of using atom bombs to destroy Russia
as an industrial nation.
The problem, as physicists Michio
Kaku and Daniel Axelrod wrote in a well-researched and documented book called ‘To Win a Nuclear War: The Pentagon’s
Secret War Plans’ (South End Press, 1987), was that Pentagon strategists felt
300 A-bombs would be required to destroy Russia, but as of December 1945, the
US atomic stockpile was two bombs.
Production was painfully slow and
even by 1948, there were only 50 bombs. But the pace of construction was
accelerating and, by January 1949, there were 133 bombs. It was looking like
there would be the needed 300 bombs to launch what was called “Operation
Dropshot” – an all-out first-strike on 200 Soviet targets – by the end of the
year.
Then in August 1949, to the
astonishment of the US government, the Soviet Union exploded its first bomb, a
plutonium device remarkably similar
to the “Fat Man” that
destroyed Nagasaki.
There was a reason for that
similarity. During the years of the Manhattan Project, a remarkable assemblage
of Nobel and other prominent physicists – Americans and European exiles –
worked in what was supposed to be absolute secrecy in a carefully secured
scientific enclave called Los Alamos in the New Mexico desert. Every effort was
made to keep out German – and Russian – spies. But the effort, especially when
it came to the Soviets, was a failure.
Two of those spies, Klaus Fuchs and
Ted Hall, were particularly important. Fuchs, a young German physicist and
German Communist Party member, fled to Britain in 1933 as Hitler and the Nazis
came to power. He became employed during the war as part of a British program
to develop an atomic bomb, later being transferred to Los Alamos, where his
focus was working on the implosion device of the plutonium bomb.
Ted Hall, the son of two Russian
Jewish immigrants to the US, was a brilliant young man who went to college in
New York at 15, transferring to Harvard at 18 as a junior, where he majored in
physics. Recommended to the Manhattan Project by Prof. John Hasbrouck Van
Vleck, he ended up at Los Alamos before even receiving his bachelor’s degree
from Harvard, and was put to work helping to get the plutonium implosion
mechanism to work.
While Fuchs almost immediately made
contact with Soviet intelligence in Britain, motivated by a desire to defeat
the Nazis in his home country, and to help the embattled Soviet Union, Hall
only slowly came to the decision, on his own, that the US emerging from World
War II with a monopoly on the atom bomb would be a menace both to Russia, and
to the rest of the world. In an almost comical effort in 1944 during a visit to
his family in New York City, he and his friend and former Harvard roommate
Saville Sax went around the city trying to locate a Soviet agent to whom they
could give information about the bomb project.
Their initial efforts, such as a
visit to the US Communist Party headquarters and to the Soviet Consulate, were
met with understandable skepticism. But Hall’s visit to the offices of Amtorg,
the Soviet government’s import/export agency, worked better. There, he was put
in touch with Sergei Kurnakov, a Soviet intelligence agent who met with Hall,
and forwarded his information about the plutonium bomb to Moscow, where top
scientists working on the Soviet bomb project recognized its accuracy. They
also saw that it comported with what Fuchs was sending them. The information
was bolstered by the fact that the two scientists, who didn’t know each other,
were providing the same details. The Soviet bomb project was soon altered to
ignore, for a time, development of a uranium bomb, and to put all efforts into
developing a plutonium bomb.
That decision led to rapid success,
and according to Kaku, Axelrod and others, may well have saved the Soviet Union
from a massive US nuclear attack as early as 1949 or 1950.
The ultimate death toll in Hiroshima
and Nagasaki eventually exceeded 300,000, including those who died of radiation
sickness, burns and later of cancers from the radiation – all from what by
today’s standards were two tiny atom bombs. As we look back, it’s worth noting
that the spying efforts of Fuchs, Hall and many other lesser figures –
including Julius Rosenberg and his wife Ethel, who were both executed in 1953
for treason – which helped accelerate the development of a Soviet bomb, not
only saved the USSR, but also gave the world 74 years (so far!) free of atomic
bombs exploding in war. Those years have also been free of head-to-head battles
between great powers, since no nation would attack another nation that
possessed nuclear weapons knowing that such an attack would quickly result in a
nuclear war.
Of course, instead of war, we’ve had
decades of sometimes terrifying Cold War and massive spending on an endless
arms race, one that has come to include many nations including the US, Russia,
China, North Korea, Israel, Britain, France, Pakistan, India and Iran.
Now that madness is coming back with
a vengeance after the US pulled out, during the Bush/Cheney administration,
from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty that was negotiated by US President
Nixon and Soviet General Secretary Brezhnev; and now in 2019, under President
Trump, from the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty that was negotiated in 1987
by President Reagan and General Secretary Gorbachev. Adding to the new weapons
competition is President Trump’s call for a US Space Force and Russia’s
development of hypersonic cruise missiles with intercontinental range.
We were lucky that volunteer spies
inside the US Manhattan Project prevented the achievement by one country – in
that case the US – of a nuclear monopoly. We’ll have to hope that some new
miracle prevents one country from achieving a similarly huge technological
breakthrough in weapons development that would give it a similar monopoly
position.
Either that or we need saner heads in
both countries, and in China, to decide it’s a better idea to wind down the
competition in weapons of mass destruction and seek peace or at least what used
to be called peaceful co-existence.
Otherwise, that 74-year hiatus in
nuclear bombing and global war may not endure much longer.
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