To What Extent Was Truman Right In Dropping The Atomic Bomb

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Was Truman right in dropping the Atomic Bomb? After the war in the ETO had ended, the U.S and Soviet Union could focus on the PTO side, where Japan threatened. In order to stop the Japanese from attacking, the U.S had two options; Operation Olympic or drop the Atomic bomb. In the final decision that Truman made, he was wrong. It was immoral in using an atomic bomb since it killed many innocent Japanese. During the PTO war, a common pattern was made by the Japanese. While they had a strong will to fight, they died in vain. This was due to the Japanese to killing themselves rather than being captured and tortured. Unlike the rest of the world, the Japanese thought that the soldiers were gallant and praised them. “The Japanese thought of their Kamikaze pilots as heroes and worshiped them like rock stars (Kamikaze Mission. 1945).” But their duty as a soldier was to either become victorious or to die honorably, which led them to suicide. In order to stop the mass suicide, Truman had decided to use the Atomic bomb which was something that the soldiers could not fight or touch. …show more content…

“The dead from that one night’s bombing numbered 80,000 to 100,000- more than later died at Nagasaki and more than half the number who died in Hiroshima (The Atlantic Monthly July 2002: 22.).”It also turned everything to rubble as 7 to 15 square miles of Hiroshima was burnt. But the U.S had only tested the atomic bomb once and they were unknowing of the long term effects. In which they saw it as killing two birds with one stone. Which was ending the PTO war with the Japanese surrender and also putting the newly made atomic bomb to use. Though the U.S might have stopped the war, the bomb caused many casualties and destroyed a part of the Japanese cities. It also caused a long term effect of illness which had claimed 200,000 lives over the next few