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#1
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![]() JMO: The Enola Gay and Bockscar are valuable in that they remind us of how any war becomes a vicious cycle, the upgrading of weapons as the war occurs, and the willingness of even the "good guys" to justify increased atrocities to win that war. Atrocities by good guys often occur when the proponent becomes frustrated and/or tired. The dropping of the bombs was not the first of atrocities committed by the good guys in that the Brits were quite happy to massacre German innocents to win the war. The US generally resisted such tactics until the B-29's had difficulties in high altitude strategic bombing over Japan. Then they turned the B-29's into dump trucks and adopted the Brit strategy. There is no question that the Japanese and Germans committed far worse atrocities but they were the bad guys under anyones definition. The only legitimate military targets were industry and military. The good guys should have stuck to that. To me, there are good guys and bad guys, and the good guys should never become the bad guys. The massacre of innocents is never justified if civilization wishes to retain its values. The problem is history. I think society eventually will look back 100 years from now and shudder at the horror of it all and that will be the lesson of the war. Maybe it will do some good, but it will not be a good showing for the "greatest generation" in this regard. I personally think we should show a picture of the bomb with the Enola Gay as well as pictures of the women, children, and old people who were burnt up and terribly burned by the flash and radiation. I don't think it is something that we should be proud of. I think we should acknowledge we did what we did. To me the dropping of nuclear bombs is similar to Dachau, it should be preserved as a reminder of how horrible war and or racial/ethnic hatred becomes when it is allowed full rein. Both are symbols of atrocities committed for somewhat different reasons, but both a product of war and/or hatred. I don't think military aviation can be honestly discussed unless there is a recognition that warplanes are killing machines and sometimes the killing is justified, sometimes not, sometimes its a grey area. The use of B-29's to bomb strategic or tactical targets was certainly justfied, the firebombing and nukes were not, both should be acknowledged and remembered (the same goes for the Lanc). I think it should also be realized by the techies in the group that the smart bombs of today, which appear to be so good at protecting innocents by enabling the military to strike effectively at military targets, can be, if a situation gets out of hand, be equally effective in killing innocents when wielded by frustrated and/or tired "good guys". Al |
#2
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To me the dropping of nuclear bombs is similar to Dachau, it
should be preserved as a reminder of how horrible war and or racial/ethnic hatred becomes when it is allowed full rein. Both are symbols of atrocities committed for somewhat different reasons, but both a product of war and/or hatred. You cannot honestly compare Dachau to Hiroshima. Although Dachau was technically only a concentration camp I assume you equate with the death camps like Auschwitz-Birkenau. The entire reason for the bombs was entirely different from the Final Solution of the Jewish Problem. If Hitler had won the war he would not have stopped the camps but would have continued until every last Jew, Gypsy and Slav under his control was dead. He wouldn't have stopped there as Catholics and Christians of all sorts would have been next. When the war ended we did not continue to kill Japanese in an effort to destroy their race. Any discussion of racial attitudes in the Pacific during WW2 has got to include the Japanese point of view as well. They were then and remain today incredibly racist and chauvinistic and those attitudes permeated every aspect of their war making and administration of occupied territories. I will feel a lot more sympathy for Japanese victims of WW2 when the entire nation acknowledges that they started a war of aggression in China ten years before Pearl Harbor that was rife with racist attrocities and that such attrocities were continued throughout their war effort until VJ Day. That being said the NASM is still obviously running scared from the last time they exhibited the Enola Gay with an obviously anti American pro Japanese text. This time they have erred with too much caution. The Enola Gay and the bomb are inextricably linked and one cannot be understood without the other. The NASM should have had the guts to display the aircraft and the bomb together with a description of the results and estimates of Japanese and Allied lives saved by the ending of the war. Both the Enola Gay and the Bomb are excellent examples of American technology and ingenuity harnessed to single and worthy cause. The American way of war is to approach it not as glorious but as a piece of work to be done as efficiently and quickly as possible. The world is a much better place because the US developed and used the weapon first. Had the Japanese or German militarists developed them and used them first they would not have hesitated to use them again and again. John Dupre' |
#3
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....start of mild rant...
On equating dropping the A-bomb with Dachau: This type of liberal revisionist history drives me batty. - The purpose of the Nazi use of the concentration camps was genocide - to eliminate entire "undesirable" segments of the population, including Jews, homosexuals, gypsies, etc. No military goal or purpose. - The purpose of dropping the A-bomb (whether or not you agree with the statistics used to make the decision) was to shorten the war and save lives, both military and civilian, on both sides - both Japanese and Allied. To attempt to equate the two does serious disservice to all the Allies who fought and died in WWII as well as make yourself look seriously bonkers. The only legitimate military targets were industry and military. In case you've never bothered to research, both A-bomb cities were legitimate targets; both had industrial and military targets in them, as did Dresden. Get your facts right before you made such statements. as well as pictures of the women, children, and old people who were burnt up and terribly burned by the flash and radiation. How about pictures of the women, children and old people who had been killed by the Japanese during the past ten years or so? If you're going to try and say we should only show the damage done by the bomb on the Japanese populous, then you are being even more one-sided that what you claim is being done in the current exhibit. There is neither space nor it is appropriate to include perhaps a million words and a few thousand pictures detailing everything that led up to the abombing, including the Japanese atrocities, as part of the Enola Gay exhibit. If you want all that, read any reasonable history of WWII. the firebombing and nukes were not [justified] Another liberal revisionist history concept with no basis in reality. You are just as dead from a bullet, a grenade or a dumb iron bomb as you are from a firebomb or an A-bomb. There are just as many permanent disabilities from a bullet, a grenade or a dumb iron bomb as from a firebomb or an A-bomb. I had an uncle who was permanently disabled from gas in WWI and a grandfather was was permanently disabled from a sniper in the Battle of the Bulge; don't try and tell me that the only legitimate victims were those in firebombings or A-bomb attacks. a situation gets out of hand, be equally effective in killing innocents when wielded by frustrated and/or tired "good guys". And whereas I agree a smart bomb is still a bomb, I do not agree with your assumption that there were no legitimate military uses for either firebombings or the A-bombs and that we only did each because we became "frustrated" and "tired" and so became bad guys. I suggest if you really believe we are such "bad guys" you can go and live in North Korea or China for a few years; perhaps that will change your views. ....end of mild rant... |
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