In the early morning hours of July 16, 1945, great anticipation and fear ran rampant at White Sands Missile Range near Alamogordo, New Mexico. Robert Oppenheimer, director of the Manhattan Project, could hardly breathe. Years of secrecy, research, and tests were riding on this moment. I think it is obvious that this Q is as difficult to rationalise as the one Truman was asked. There can be no right answer: Either way many people are going to die. I suppose the simple truth is that using the Atomic Bomb Truman ensured that the deaths would be those of the Japanese & not those of invading US forces. The straight answer to the question has to be yes: But it is not something one would wish on ones worst enemy.
It was not limited to 2 cities!
The US was going to drop atomic bombs on Japan as fast as the bombs could be made available for use.
There were already plans in place even before the first atomic bomb was tested in New Mexico to make and drop 23 atomic bombs on Japan before the end of 1945. Had Japan not surrender after the first 2, the atomic bombing would have continued as planned and plans for additional atomic bomb production for 1946 would have been prepared. (an estimate of the number of atomic bombs in the 1946 plan would have likely been about 84, extrapolating from the 1945 plan)
hiroshima and nagasaki
The United States dropped an atom bomb on Hiroshima, a major Japanese city. This did not result in surrender. So the United States dropped a second atom bomb on Nagasaki, another major Japanese city. This was finally enough to force the Japanese into surrendering.
The United States has used atomic bombs as weapons .
The Enola Gay, a B-29 bomber, dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima during World War II as part of a strategic decision by the United States to force Japan's surrender. The aim was to end the war quickly and avoid a costly invasion of the Japanese mainland. The decision to use the atomic bomb remains a controversial topic, with arguments centered around the morality and necessity of its use.
President Harry S. Truman personally made the decision to use the atomic bombs on Japan, a decision that effectively ended World War 2, saving millions of civilian and military lives.
Hiroshima & Nagasaki .
hiroshima and nagasaki
United States Atomic Energy Commission ended in 1975.
The United States dispatched the mission to launch two Atomic bombs against the Japanese mainland in August of 1945 ... roughly 41/2 years after the bombing of Pearl Harbor by the Japanese. Note: I had nothing to do with the decision. I was not even 6 years old yet, and President Roosevelt negleted to consult me.
When the United States dropped atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the action brought about the surrender of Japan, and the end of World War II. The decision to drop the bombs was ordered by President Harry S. Truman.
united states
The United States dropped an atom bomb on Hiroshima, a major Japanese city. This did not result in surrender. So the United States dropped a second atom bomb on Nagasaki, another major Japanese city. This was finally enough to force the Japanese into surrendering.
The United States has used atomic bombs as weapons .
United States Atomic Energy Commission was created in 1946.
Nagasaki and Hiroshima in Japan.
In the United States.
The only nuclear bombs ever used on targets in a war were by the united states on the Japanese cities of hiroshima and nagasaki.