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.
The American Joint Chiefs were super divided on whether Iwo Jima and Okinawa were actually representative in any way, and argued with each other (in front of Truman) about this. As an aside. But the general point, that Germany was not Japan, again, is true, and was understood.
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One small thing: nothing lends to historical error so much as saying "they should have understood X." I mean, maybe that's true. But *did they* understand X? That's a research question.
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One thing that is almost always true: people in the past tended to see themselves, and their time, and their options, WAY differently than we people of the future do. The job of a historian, in part, is to really try and resurrect those lost ways of seeing things. It's hard!
End of conversation
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Interesting. Wanted to mention that I followed you after reading your 2013 post on why Truman dropped two (and why not three?) bombs. I had always understood (erroneously) that they didn’t have enough enriched uranium to make many more quickly.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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