One of the difficulties in talking with Americans in particular about the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki is that many of them have, at best, a half-remembered high-school version of that history in their head, and the subject is typically not covered well in high school.
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But beyond that — it is worth noting that Stimson in particular, the Secretary of War, thought even the firebombings were morally problematic. He warned Truman that the US would gain the reputation of outdoing Hitler in atrocities if they did hold back in that area.pic.twitter.com/4svAmCkI7J
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Which I only point out to push back a little against the narrative of, "oh, at that time, people were totally inured to the idea that killing civilians en masse with bombs." Some people were (Curtis LeMay, for example), but some very highly-ranked people were not (e.g. Stimson).
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Sorting out historical attitudes is very tricky. Even Truman lamented killing "all those kids." He would in December 1945 call the atomic bomb "the most terrible of all destructive forces for the wholesale slaughter of human beings."pic.twitter.com/gFQNRIJixC
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