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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1040594)11/28/2017 2:30:39 PM
From: Tenchusatsu  Read Replies (1) of 1575981
 
BC,
Eisenhower, MacArthur, Lemay all on record saying the nukes were not necessary.
From Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org

Another myth that has attained wide attention is that at least several of Truman's top military advisers later informed him that using atomic bombs against Japan would be militarily unnecessary or immoral, or both. There is no persuasive evidence that any of them did so. None of the Joint Chiefs ever made such a claim, although one inventive author has tried to make it appear that Leahy did by braiding together several unrelated passages from the admiral's memoirs. Actually, two days after Hiroshima, Truman told aides that Leahy had 'said up to the last that it wouldn't go off.'

Neither MacArthur nor Nimitz ever communicated to Truman any change of mind about the need for invasion or expressed reservations about using the bombs. When first informed about their imminent use only days before Hiroshima, MacArthur responded with a lecture on the future of atomic warfare and even after Hiroshima strongly recommended that the invasion go forward. Nimitz, from whose jurisdiction the atomic strikes would be launched, was notified in early 1945. 'This sounds fine,' he told the courier, 'but this is only February. Can't we get one sooner?'

The best that can be said about Eisenhower's memory is that it had become flawed by the passage of time.

Notes made by one of Stimson's aides indicate that there was a discussion of atomic bombs, but there is no mention of any protest on Eisenhower's part.

Tenchusatsu

P.S. - I might add that MacArthur was the one who wanted to nuke China in response to their entrance into the Korean War. Meanwhile Lemay was the architect of the firebombing of Japan, so he was no saint when it came to body counts.
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