Dropping the Ultimate Lead No other choice so believed. World War II was coming to an end with the surrender of the Germany and Italy, two of the three “Tripartite Pact” powers along with Japan. The United States and the allies were effectively finished with the western front leaving so much devastation in its aftermath from the countless blitzkriegs, invasions, fire bombings, etc. Thunderstriking the nation, the beloved U.S president of four terms Franklin D. Roosevelt died suddenly of a stroke and left the secret to the succeeding Vice President of the time Harry S. Truman. Nonetheless, there was still fighting on-going within the pacific theatre as Japan chose to continue fighting with a majority of American casualties ensuing as a result. FDR had a great secret in his arsenal left for Truman, this was the “destroyer of worlds” weapon newly developed from the Manhattan project: the atomic bomb. The new development had the potential to destroy life as known to be for miles with a deathly combination of heat, shockwaves, and radiation that could end war conclusively from fear of further use. The newly …show more content…
This albeit came with much thought as the implications from utilizing the weapon would come at great cost to opponent civilian lives. However, Truman made his hard decision as he weighed his option in terms of the amount of U.S soldiers it would take to invade Japan and end the war similarly to the D-Day invasion. The D-day invasion took a multitude of allied lives and the Japanese would show no fear to an invasion to their mainland as their loyalty to the emperor of Japan was unwavering. Coming to terms with the implications, Truman was prepared to win and at the right time as would reveal his good leadership qualities of high integrity and commitment to his people of the military and the general U.S