Bombs Over Tokyo: The Night The US Air Force Incinerated 100,000 Civilians

 

All war is a crime. There is no such thing as a “good war.” As the great Benjamin Franklin said, “there is no good war; and no bad peace.”

We are now in the midst of the annual debate over the atomic bombing of Japan by the United States. Seventy years ago this week, the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, killing or injuring some 140,000 people. A few days later, a second atomic weapon was dropped on Nagasaki,  causing 80,000 casualties. Most of the dead in both cities were civilians.

Passionate debate has raged ever since between those who condemn the nuclear bombing of almost defenseless Japan as a war crime, and those who insist the attacks spared the US and its allies having to invade fight-to-the-death Japan.

I don’t know the answer to this question.

In 1945,  my late father, Henry Margolis, was serving in the Pacific with US Fifth Marine Amphibious Division. The Fifth was slated to lead the amphibious invasion of Japan. After witnessing the fanatical Japanese defense of Okinawa, it appeared that invading Japan’s mainland would be a very bloody affair. My father could have died on Japan’s beaches.

But what was left of Japan by August, 1945? By spring, 1944, almost all of its maritime commerce, and all of its oil and other strategic material, had been cut off by American submarine packs and intensive coastal mining. In effect, the US did to Japan what Germany had never been able to do to that other island realm, Britain.

Japan’s air force was grounded by lack of fuel (as was Germany’s), its fleet could not leave port because of oil scarcity,  the nation’s factories were shut down due to lack of raw materials, and Japan’s people faced starvation.

In March, 1945, the US Army Air Force bomber command under Gen. Curtis LeMay began carpet bombing Japan’s cities from bases in the Mariana Islands. American war planners sought to destroy Japan’s industries and will to resist.   It’s from this period that LeMay’s famous quote came: ‘We’ll bomb’em back to the Stone Age.”

In the ensuing nine months of massive bombing, the US Army Air Force destroyed 40% of Japan’s cities and large towns. On 9/10 March, 1945, in a mass raid code-named “Meetinghouse,” 346 US B-29 heavy bombers showered Tokyo with bombs and incendiary devices made from jellied gasoline.

Most of Tokyo and other Japanese cities were made up of wooden structures.  Intensive firestorms engulfed Tokyo, sucking up all the air and burning it.  This same fire spreading technique had been perfected in bombing German cities such as Dresden, Hamburg, Berlin and Stuttgart.

Terrified civilians ran through the burning chaos. Many jumped in the Tokyo River to avoid being burned alive, or to quench their bodies, burning from jellied gasoline. In this one hideous night, an estimated 100,000 Japanese civilians were burned to death in Tokyo alone.  This is believed to have been the single most destructive air raid in history.

Soon after, the rest  of Japan’s cities and towns came under massive fire-bombing attacks. Special attention was paid to Kobe, Nagoya and Osaka: 8.1 square miles of Osaka were turned into smoking heaps of rubble.

In all, the US strategic bombing campaign against Japan (including the nuclear attacks) in which 656,000 tons of bombs were dropped (killed an estimated 800,000 to one million civilians). Forty percent of Japan’s cities and towns were left in ruins. A third of Japanese were left homeless.

Germany had been hit with 1.3 million tons of bombs.

As if Japan’s woes could not get worse, on 9 August, 1944  1.7 million Soviet troops invaded Japanese-held Manchuria and Korea, slicing through the depleted Japanese Kwantung Army.  Washington feared the Red Army might land in Japan before the US did.

So was President Harry Truman justified in ordering A-bombs dropped on prostrate Japan? With the wisdom of hindsight, one can probably conclude that he was not. General Dwight Eisenhower, one of America’s finest soldiers, was totally opposed to using the A-bomb.  Ike was overruled by Truman.

Why two bombs and not just one? Why not offshore? Or far in Japan’s north?

War turned sane, decent men into monsters and criminals. What if Japan had a nuclear weapon? It certainly would have used it against US forces.

My father landed and fought on Iwo Jima. He survived. But he never spoke ill of  the Japanese, and went on to become a great admirer of Japan. My own view: using the bomb, as the wicked Tallyrand said, “was worse than a crime;  a mistake.”

https://www.lewrockwell.com/2015/08/eric-margolis/whats-worse-2/

 

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
58 Comments
Sensetti
Sensetti
August 12, 2015 11:02 am
Desertrat
Desertrat
August 12, 2015 11:21 am

@AnarchoPagan. I’m fully aware of, “Underneath a starry flag, civilize them with a Krag.” That was mostly down in Zamboanga (song, “The monkeys have no tails in Zamboanga”.) and not in Luzon. WW II interrupted the deal for full freedom for the Philippines which was to have occurred in 1942.

I was born around 6AM on Friday, July 6, 1934, in St. David’s Hospital in Austin, Texas (Take that, Obama!) into a long-time Texas family.

From what I saw in Manila, MacArthur could have been elected as “King for Life”.

The Kempeitai tortured many people. The Manila commander, a colonel, punished one of the Philippines most-loved actresses/singers, for protesting Kempeitai brutality. Tied her ankles via rope to his saddle pommel and rode around Manila, dragging her until she died.

TE
TE
August 12, 2015 11:38 am

@Desertrat, so you are stating that “their” torture is somehow evil, but OUR torture is a blessing?

We’re only killing and starving and demeaning you to make you better?

Drugs will ruin your life, so we as a society are going to DESTROY you to not ruin you?

Yes, brutal, but I’m sure natives the world round, including the Natives HERE, don’t feel any different about the US than the Philippinoes felt about Japan.

Two wrongs have never made a right, no matter how badly America believes it to be true.

Bea Leaver
Bea Leaver
August 12, 2015 11:43 am

TE

The EVIL on this planet are the owners who use us as pawns in a chess game that we can never escape, they have a blood lust that will never be satisfied. They thrive on our fear and rejoice in the carnage.

Lysander
Lysander
August 12, 2015 8:24 pm

My father fought the Pacific War while in the 24th Infantry, 19th Regiment. He hated the japs his entire life, never forgot nor forgave. He said his only regret about the nuking of those two jap cities was that we only had two working bombs. He wished that Japan had been carpetbombed with atomic weapons.

The japs were fiends who took delight in torture, rape, murder and oppression. They committed so many atrocities against so many countries, it is mind-boggling.

So now I’m supposed to boo-hoo over those animals? FUCK THEM.

Leroy Cam
Leroy Cam
August 30, 2015 4:38 pm

Intensive firestorms engulfed Tokyo, sucking up all the air and burning it.  This same fire spreading technique had been perfected in bombing German cities such as Dresden, Hamburg, Berlin and Stuttgart. In this one hideous night, an estimated 100,000 Japanese civilians were burned to death in Tokyo alone.