One of the most controversial issues right now is the morality of the usage of nuclear weapons. Many people completely write off the engagement of nuclear weapons, believing only bad could ever come from the utilization of nuclear weapons. This belief also comes with the stance that nuclear weapons should be banned. Contrary to this increasingly popular belief, there are times when nuclear weapons are the best choice. The only event in which nuclear weapons, specifically atomic bombs, were used, was the World War II bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Conveniently, this one time where nuclear options were used proved to be the most reasonable, because it brought peace by ending WWII. However we are not in the same situation of continual, seemingly …show more content…
The earlier parts of World War II were desecrating to our troops’ morale and to the ability to sustain a multi-fronted attack. This drove the U.S. military, who were already desiring a weapon that would give them the upper hand. But the U.S. knew it was not alone and that the Germans were seeking a similar tactic. The path to nuclearize was initially seen simply as a race with Germany. However, as the war progressed, the status of America’s main enemy shifted from Germany to Japan. The practice of civilian killings had already been put into action during the Japanese air attacks on Hawaii in 1941 (History.com Staff). The Axis powers, containing Germany and Japan, regularly bombed civilians in an attempt to take out strategic military areas in Allied territories. Despite President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s calls for nonviolence on innocents, the American government still pressed forward in its atomic bomb research. During the research and testing of the bomb, the scientists never questioned if the bomb would be used on Japan. The United States government “might have had some slight doubts about actually using the bomb, for they agreed that ‘it might perhaps, after mature consideration, be used against the Japanese’” (Bernstein 136). The government's statement shows the intense consideration put into the study of the atomic bomb and the employment of