Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki

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    You stand in the midst of everything. Not quite coherent and in a daze, but awake enough to know that this was a moment of true tragedy. The bombing of Hiroshima was a gloomy day. It wasn’t just a bomb it was an Atomic Bomb. World War II just entered the sixth year of battle. The United States decided that now was the time to end the war. They bombed Hiroshima, Japan and then invaded the mainland with their allies. The bomb killed between 90,000 – 166,000 people in a course of four months. Over…

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    possible much less successful without unyielding leadership. Powerful men, who refused to stay within the boundaries given to them by the Army or Washington itself. One such man was Major General Curtis E. LeMay. During his period leading the XXI bombing command proceeding General Haywood Hansell was a time where his expertise was essential in crippling Japan. General LeMay was an advocate for the effectiveness of Airpower in winning the war. His intelligence and tendency to take highly…

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    Harry S. Truman had a lot of moral dilemmas to face we he was trying to decide if he wanted to drop the atomic bombs. He had to think of the innocent people he would kill with the atomic bomb and he also had to worry about the Soviet Union feeling threating by the attacks. The reason Harry S. Truman wanted to bomb Japan was because on December 7, 1941 Japan decided to attack and bomb the Pearl Harbor. Japan destroyed twelve ships with a hundred sixty airplanes included, of those twelve ships was…

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    Truman Petition

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    This paper will show to the reader why Physicist Leo Szilard’s “Petition to the President of the United States” was unsuccessful in persuading President Truman to not use the atomic bomb in Japan during the second world war. The petition drafted by Mr. Szilard and his colleagues lacked empathy, showed no sympathy and failed to convey the evidence needed to persuade Truman. If the petition would have been written in a way to emotionally connect with the President’s difficult decision to use a…

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    Chapter one opens with a background on what the current time and situation was in Hiroshima, Japan. The start of something so horrific that would impact the lives of an entire nation. The atomic bomb that was dropped early morning on August 6, 1945 would affect the lives of the six individuals that the story revolves around. These six individuals are only miles away from each other but survive due to chance, fate, and quick decisions. The first person we meet is Reverend Kiyoshi Tanimoto he is…

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    Dyck, B. Dyck, Brent. "Hiroshima and Nagasaki." Historian, no. 99, 2008., pp. 26-28 search.proquest.com.cyrano.ucmo.edu:2048/docview/275019126?pq-origsite=summon Accessed 21 Oct. 2016. This article provides insight on the operations launched against Japanese forces and the issued beliefs held by President Truman that he had saved a quarter-million Americans from being killed by dropping atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This source will be utilized as a tool to portray the well-known…

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    and if they did not agree complete destruction of Japan was coming. The United States dropped two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki within a few days of each other. Japan did not surrender after the first bomb, but a day after the second bomb dropped Japan surrendered. A lot of conflict and controversy circles around if the U.S. should or should not have dropped the atomic bomb. Dropping the atomic bomb helped Americans in many ways and put an end to the Second World War. By dropping the…

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    publicized during the era. Propaganda, more specifically the film Duck and Cover, reveals the sense of American vulnerability and fear of a nuclear attack. In 1945, the United States possessed a monopoly over the atomic bomb it was dropped for the first time in Hiroshima and in Nagasaki.…

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    Franklin D Roosevelt (32) giving hope to the American people being elected to president. Or Joseph Stalin (39) and his Non-aggression Pact with Germany. As well as Harry Truman ending the war in the Pacific with dropping the Nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. These people all contributed to the world one way or another and Time acknowledged them with giving them the award. In 1932 Franklin D. Roosevelt beat Herbert Hoover becoming the 32nd president with 57.4% of the popular vote. While…

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    It all started in 1938 when the first discovery of the atomic bomb was found known as fission. Top physicists from different countries were gathered to help make the deadliest weapon in the world. The government entrusted these physicists with the secret of constructing the atomic bomb so other countries like the Soviet Union and Germany would not figure out their detailed plan. Although they were given that oath to secrecy, inside the walls of Los Alamos the Laboratory used for the building of…

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