Not many really. Japan had bombed the territory of the United States in an attempt to put the entire Pacific Ocean under the control of the Japanese Emperor. As such, the Emperor and his military had to be NOT JUST STOPPED, but also prevented from ever making such an attempt again. The war had been won, but the Emperor refused to surrender and sign an agreement to stop the aggression. Japan had been surrounded, the Japanese navy had been destroyed, the Japanese people were starving and there was no possibility of getting resources to prevent the death of their people. The emperor was willing to let millions die rather than surrender. The emperor felt that the Allied forces could not endure the killing of so many people, so the Japanese citizens had been given sharpened sticks, axes, pitchforks and anything else that might cause harm, and they were told to defend the shores of Japan against invasion. Many millions of innocent citizens would have been killed and were already dying from disease and malnutrition, and still the Emperor refused to surrender. Manufacturing centers were bombed using conventional bombs causing wildfires that burned entire cities and killed hundreds of thousands every time we tried to convince them to surrender. Truman claims that he warned the Japanese that he had a weapon of incredible power and gave a time limit to the surrender, but there is no evidence that this actually occured. When the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan was stunned, but the Emperor still refused to surrender. Truman told him that we have more, but the Emperor still refused to surrender. When the bomb was dropped on Nagasaki, the Emperor finally agreed. In reality, the Emperor wanted the option to regroup and still take on the islands of the pacific and surrender prevented that option. No, there weren't very many options. Estimates were that had the Allied forces invaded Japan in a conventional way, we would have lost as many as a million soldiers, and possibly more. Yes, we would have eventually won, but here is a thought for you to consider. Imagine that your father, brother or uncle or possibly even two or three of your loved ones had been killed trying to stop someone who had attacked your nation. Then imagine how you would feel if you found out that your nations President had a weapon that would have stopped the war and your father, brother, uncle or neighbor died for absolutely no reason. That the war could have been stopped and OUR people did not need to die. How would you have felt? There were alternate plans to droping the atomic bomb. One plan was a diplomatic approch where if Japan surrendered the US would let them keep their "sacred emperor". The emperor was considered a god in Japan. The Japanese people were fighting so hard to the bitter end because they did not want to US to take their emperor away from them. Another plan to end the war involved Russia. If Russia would join the US in the invasion of the mainland the extra man power could be enough to defeat Japan without as many casualties. At the Potsdam conference in Berlin Russia agreed to help the US. But Truman, being pressured by those around him, chose to use the atmoic bomb.
If you means BESIDES America- in 1945, no one.
The atomic bomb ended the war with Japan quickly and changed modern warfare.
the u.s dropped an atomic bomb on japan
The dropping of the Atomic bomb
It ended the war and collapsed Japan's means to make war so most people favor the use of the atomic bomb in ww2
It was the Atomic bomb.
ended WW2.
The world was going through world war two. The atomic bomb ended the war.
It ended the war!
Atomic bomb
It ended WWII.
Atomic bomb
It ended WWII & the world entered the "Atomic Age."
It ended World War 2.
Sigh. The atomic bomb.
Besides ending WWII. The world had entered the atomic age.
If you means BESIDES America- in 1945, no one.