Partager l'article ! Hiroshima-Nagazaki: "Truman Haunts Us" by E. Jarecki: AntiWar.com ...
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AntiWar.com |
| by Eugene Jarecki |
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I recognize this is a matter of intense historical debate that I do not intend to settle here, but I encourage skeptics to investigate the deep reservations expressed at the time by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Adm. William Leahy, Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Brig. Gen. Carter Clarke, Gen. Carl Spaatz, Adm. Ernest King, and Fleet Adm. Chester Nimitz. I also urge readers to consult Truman's own diaries, in which he reveals his awareness both of Japan's intention to surrender as well as the strategic importance of nuclear power to the growing prospect of competition with Stalin's Russia in a postwar world. His diary entries betray an almost playful sense of rivalry with Stalin over America's possession and planned use of the bomb.
I know proponents of the bombings will argue that the Japanese sought conditional surrender while Truman sought unconditional. To this I would note that
the key condition sought by the Japanese was that their emperor (seen by them as a direct descendant of their god) be left in power and not be subject to a war crimes tribunal following
the war, a condition ultimately granted them in any event by the U.S. I am also aware that, following the bloodbath at Okinawa, there was reason to fear another ground battle in which
American lives would be lost. Internal communications between the Japanese emperor and his advisers suggest he indeed hoped to inflict such losses to strengthen Japan's leverage in any
surrender negotiations.
Still, the use of weapons of mass destruction (and the implicit launching of the nuclear age) is an action so extreme as to demand an extreme burden of
proof. Proponents have long held it was a last resort, the only way finally to stop the Japanese war machine. Well, was it? I don't know about you, but when men in positions of military
leadership (particularly men unafraid of inflicting significant losses themselves) dissent, I listen. This means that, 61 years later, their voices suggest, at minimum, that there is
reason to doubt the simple claim that the bombs were necessary to compel Japanese surrender. This doubt in turn challenges the moral underpinnings that have been historically used to
justify the mass killing of civilians.
But if such an elite group of advisers objected, why did Truman do it? And more importantly, what message does it send to us today? Truman's bombs indeed
send two messages at once – one that undervalues civilians on the ground by making them a morally defensible target in war and the other that overvalues civilian decision-makers in
Washington by presuming that their voices should dominate the formulation of foreign and defense policy.
The first message haunts the crisis in Lebanon. Ehud Olmert's choice to launch a war against a nation in response to an action by non-state actors follows
Truman's example that targeting civilians is an acceptable form of warfare. His further choice to bomb roads through which humanitarian assistance could be provided to those civilians
(explained as a tactic to thwart Syrian support to Hezbollah), underscores Olmert's willingness, after less than six short months in office, to join Truman (and Hassan Nasrallah, for
that matter) on that dark rampart of history. "War is too important to be left to the generals," Georges Clemenceau famously warned, suggesting that the interplay of states was too delicate a task to be handled by men inclined toward military action. The playful irony of the phrase masks a clear suggestion that civilians ought to lead the hierarchy. Certainly there is merit in the notion that civilians can bring to foreign policy decisions a measure of non-military thinking that challenges the tendency to solve all problems through force. Yet Truman's decision to drop the bombs against the wisdom of his military advisers (but heavily influenced by his civilian foreign policy guru, James Byrnes) demonstrates the equal and opposite danger of undue civilian dominance of the defense establishment.
So as the events of 61 years ago haunt us today, perhaps the lesson that lies between Clemenceau and Truman may well be that whenever either sector –
military or civilian – makes decisions in isolation from the sunlight and transparency of a democratic process, those decisions suffer from such withdrawal with potentially disastrous
results. |
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