As many countries joined WWII, many of them were finding new ways to protect themselves. Thus the atomic bomb was born. The Germans found a way to split a uranium atom that created a huge explosion thanks to famous scientist, Albert Einstein. It wasn't long before the U.S. heard of this and started doing the same thing. In 1941, America hired a German physicist ad created a secret project called The Manhattan Project. The U.S. tested the first bomb on July 16, 1945 in Alamogordo, New Mexico. Once they saw the power this bomb had and what it was capable of, they decided to use it against Japan. On August 6, 1954 the first ever atomic bomb was dropped over Japan’s city Hiroshima. This explosion abolished 90 percent of the city and assassinated …show more content…
The U.S. carelessly made decisions about the atomic bomb and how it would be used. The United State’s main focal point was to assure that Japan will surrender but the U.S. never thought about the outcomes and how it would affect Japan. Doc A states, “Truman believed that it was his duty as president to use every weapon available to save American lives.” This reveals how the president selfishly made this decision thinking only about his nation’s safety while not even considering the lives that would be deeply affected in Japan. Document A again explains how American officials were already debating on how to use the atomic bomb without even knowing how this powerful bomb would work. This continues to show us how reckless and sloppy America was with its plan for the bomb. Document D talks about a story of a survivor who experienced the attack at an early age in his classroom. He states " It is hard to tell, his skull was cracked open, his flesh was hanging out from his head. He has only one eye left, and it was looking right at me...he told me to go away." This demonstrates how it was mentally scarring for their people to experience. Students were at loss since they were too young to understand what to do in a case like this. The bombing of Nagasaki caused 39,000 deaths and left 25,000 injured. The historical narrative, Hiroshima as Victimization argues that