President Truman
The Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings for a start.
That was Tsutomu Yamaguchi who was a survivor of both the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings during World War II. Although at least 160 people are known to have been affected by both bombings and he is the only person to have been officially recognized by the government of Japan as surviving both explosions. He was in Hiroshima the day the first bomb was dropped and he was injured by the blast and had major traumas and burns. He went to Nagasaki to recover and three days later, he was again injured by the second bomb.
In Hiroshima, a small community of Jesuit Fathers lived in a church house near the parish church, situated only eight blocks from the center of the bomb blast. When Hiroshima was destroyed by the atomic bomb, all eight members of the small Jesuit community escaped unscathed, while every other person who was within a radius of roughly one and a half kilometers from the center of the explosion died immediately. The church house where the Jesuits lived was still standing, while the buildings in every direction from it were leveled.
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Some non-Japanese died in the nuclear bombing like Koreans and some Americans who were war captives. The number for the victims go to 90,000-166,000 people in Hiroshima and 60,000-80,000 in Nagasaki.
Enola gay crew Colonel Paul Tibbets Captain Robert Lewis Captain Theodore Van Kirk Major Thomas Ferebee Lieutenant Jacob Beser Sergeant Joseph Stiborik Private Richard Nelson Staff Sergeant Wyatt Duzenbury Staff Sergeant Robert Caron Captain Deke Parson 2nd Lieutenant Morris Jeppson
The first atomic bomb dropped in World War II was dropped by the United States, on Hiroshima, Japan. The name of the plane that dropped the first atomic bomb is Enola Gay, and it was piloted by Colonel Paul Tibbets.
That was not a single person - many people contributed to the development of atomic energy.
Nobody. They were called Fatman (the Plutonium implosion MK-III bomb) and Little Boy (the Uranium gun MK-I bomb) because of their shapes. There is some mythology that the codenames Little Boy was named after FDR and Fatman was named after Winston Churchill to mislead spies into thinking that the "Silverplate" modified B-29s were being modified to transport those leaders, not a new type of bomb. But this is contradicted by the codename Thin Man (the Plutonium gun MK-II bomb) whose design was canceled before beginning work on the Fatman design. Thin Man would have fit FDR much better than Little Boy did and Little Boy could not have been named for Winston Churchill.
The person who commanded that is motecuhzoma. Hope dat answers ur question.
No religion has ever "commanded their respect". Religions are respected as part of individual rights that each person is allowed to have by grace of God or the inherent humanity in all people.
There was no such person. Note, the Japanese have never had a president.