15 january 2008 Racing Towards The Abyss: The
U.S. Atomic Bombing of Japan
By: David Cromwell
Introduction
One of the major events of the twentieth century, with reverberations that
reach today, is the dropping of the atomic bomb on Japan in 1945. Before
the bomb was used, the top officials who led the Manhattan Project told
U.S. president Harry S. Truman:
“The world in its present state of moral advancement compared with
its technical development would be eventually at the mercy of such a weapon.
In other words, modern civilization might be completely destroyed.”[1]
Many people, and I concur, believe that the moral ‘justification’
of using the atomic bomb in World War II, and the threatened use of nuclear
weapons in succeeding decades, has no basis in civilised society. But what
about the conventional argument that the two atomic bombs dropped on Japan
did, nonetheless, bring about the end of the war? This essay examines critically
that view.
The first of the bombs was dropped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945 and the
second on Nagasaki three days later. Soviet armed forces invaded Japanese-occupied
Manchuria on August 8. On August 15, Emperor Hirohito announced the surrender
of Japan in a radio address to the nation.
Broadly speaking, there are three different schools of thought as to why
the U.S. government used the bomb. We may refer to these as the orthodox,
the revisionist, and the neo-orthodox or anti-revisionist schools.
Orthodox historians argue that dropping the atomic bombs was necessary
and justified because this led directly to Japan’s surrender, thus
saving millions of American and Japanese lives that would have been otherwise
lost during the U.S. invasion of Japan, planned to begin on November 1,
1945. Revisionists disagree: the bombing was neither necessary nor justified,
they say; Japan had already been comprehensively defeated. Some revisionists
even argue that the United States used the bombs to intimidate the Soviet
Union.
In recent years, anti-revisionists have challenged the revisionist view
and argued, as did the original orthodox historians, that the bomb was used
to end the Pacific War by directly prompting Japan’s surrender. They
contend that the Soviet entry into the war against Japan played a minor
role in surrender, and certainly less than the decisive ‘shock’
factor of the bombs.
The above is necessarily a sketchy summary but captures the essence of
divergent views on the end of the Pacific War. In what follows I intend
to show that while there continues to be vibrant, sometimes heated, debate
among historians, the revisionist view most closely accords with the evidence.
Racing The Enemy
Western historians debating the reasons for the end of the war have focused
heavily on the U.S. ‘decision’ to drop the atomic bomb.[2] But
there has been relatively little attention devoted to the deliberations
among the Japanese wartime ruling elite which led to surrender. Even less
has been known about Soviet decision-making and the Soviet entry into the
Pacific War against Japan.
A stumbling block until recently has been that no historian has been sufficiently
fluent in English, Japanese and Russian to investigate the primary archival
material – including internal government documents, military reports
and intelligence intercepts - in all three languages. This partly explains
why historical debate in the West has been so focused on the Truman administration’s
motives and policy-making: this, after all, could be pursued on the basis
of English-language material. For example, in 1965, ‘revisionist’
historian Gar Alperovitz published an influential book, ‘Atomic Diplomacy’,
in which he argued that use of the atomic bombs was militarily unnecessary
and was intended as a show of U.S. strength against Soviet power. There
has been furious debate about this for several decades.[3]
In 2005, Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, professor of history at the University of California
at Santa Barbara, published a landmark study, ‘Racing The Enemy: Stalin,
Truman, and the Surrender of Japan.’[4] Hasegawa, born and raised
in Japan but now a U.S. citizen, appraised seriously the trilateral wartime
relationships between the United States, the Soviet Union and Japan. His
study has been critically acclaimed and has generated considerable scholarly,
as well as journalistic, debate. Barton Bernstein, professor of history
at Stanford University and one of the world’s foremost commentators
on A-bomb issues, warmly praised the book as “formidable”, “a
major volume in international history” and “a truly impressive
accomplishment, meriting prizes and accolades.”[5] The book has also
delivered a huge jolt to anti-revisionists.
So why the title, ‘Racing the Enemy’? At Potsdam, the Soviet
leader Joseph Stalin had given Truman a date for the Soviet attack on Japan
- August 15, 1945. If the U.S. was to force Japan to surrender without Soviet
help, and thus avoid making any geostrategic concessions to its ostensible
ally, it would have to do so before that date. Hasegawa takes up the story:
“The only remaining factor was the atomic bomb. Contrary to historians’
claim that Truman had no intention to use the atomic bomb as a diplomatic
weapon against the Soviet Union, it is hard to ignore the fact that the
Soviets figured into Truman’s calculations. The date for the Soviet
attack made it all the more imperative for the United States to drop the
bomb in the beginning of August, before the Soviets entered the war. The
race between Soviet entry into the war and the atomic bomb now reached
its climax.”[6]
Hasegawa’s diligent research has strengthened the revisionist challenge
to the orthodox view that the atomic bombs delivered decisive blows to Japan’s
will to fight, and resulted in surrender. He cautions:
“Americans still cling to the myth that the atomic bombs dropped
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki provided the knockout punch to the Japanese
government. The decision to use the bomb saved not only American soldiers
but also the Japanese, according to this narrative. The myth serves to
justify Truman’s decision and ease the collective American conscience.”
Hasegawa shows that “this myth cannot be supported by historical
facts. Evidence makes clear that there were alternatives to the use of the
bomb, alternatives that the Truman administration for reasons of its own
declined to pursue.”[7]
The Potsdam Proclamation
In order to more fully understand the nature of the ‘race’[8]
between the Soviet Union to enter the Pacific war and the American use of
the atomic bomb, we need to go back to the Potsdam Proclamation issued by
the leaders of the United States, the United Kingdom and China [9] on July
26, 1945. This set out the terms for “the unconditional surrender
of all Japanese armed forces.” If the terms were not met, Japan would
be faced with “prompt and utter destruction.”
Hasegawa, and other historians, argue that Truman was deeply worried that
Stalin would shortly enter the war in the Pacific region against Japan and
make important strategic gains in Asia, thus posing a threat to U.S. interests.
How could the U.S. force Japan’s surrender before the Soviets made
such gains? The atomic bomb provided a solution to the dilemma that confronted
Truman. To trigger Japan’s unconditional surrender before the Soviet
Union could enter the Pacific war, argues Hasegawa, Truman issued the Potsdam
Proclamation. This was intended not as a warning to Japan, but to justify
the use of the atomic bomb.
The standard history, believed widely in the West, is that Japan’s
rejection of the Potsdam Proclamation led to the U.S. decision to drop the
bomb. Hasegawa notes bluntly that this myth, too, “cannot be supported
by the facts.”[10] Truman wrote that he issued the order to drop the
bomb after Japan rejected the Proclamation. The truth is quite the opposite,
however: the order to drop the atomic bomb was given to General Carl Spaatz,
commander of the U.S. Army Strategic Air Forces, on the morning of July
25. The Proclamation was not issued until the evening of July 26. Japan’s
supposed rejection of the Potsdam Proclamation was required to justify the
dropping of the bomb.[11]
Although Japan had not yet agreed to surrender, its rulers had already
seen defeat staring it in the face as early as February 1945. In a careful
account of events leading up to the atomic bombing, historian Peter Kuznick
cites the Pacific Strategic Intelligence Summary for the week of the Potsdam
meeting:
“[I]t may be said that Japan now, officially if not publicly, recognizes
her defeat. Abandoning as unobtainable the long-cherished goal of victory,
she has turned to the twin aims of (a) reconciling national pride with
defeat, and (b) finding the best means of salvaging the wreckage of her
ambitions.” [12]
Colonel Charles Bonesteel, chief of the War Department Operations Division
Policy Section, recalled: "the poor damn Japanese were putting feelers
out by the ton so to speak, through Russia.”[13] Allen Dulles of the
Office of Strategic Services (precursor to the CIA) briefed Henry Stimson,
the U.S. Secretary of War, at Potsdam. He wrote:
"On July 20, 1945, under instructions from Washington, I went to
the Potsdam Conference and reported there to Secretary Stimson on what
I had learned from Tokyo--they desired to surrender if they could retain
the Emperor and the constitution as a basis for maintaining discipline
and order in Japan after the devastating news of surrender became known
to the Japanese people."[14]
It is important to recall that the Japanese people revered the Emperor
as a living god. He stood at the pinnacle of power: political, legislative,
executive, cultural, religious and military. Indeed, the Emperor embodied
the very essence of Japan. Hence his fundamental importance, for the Japanese,
to the surrender terms.
President Truman and Secretary of State James Byrnes, one of Truman’s
most trusted advisors, must have known that Japan was putting out feelers
to end the war. This can be seen in Truman's July 18, 1945 diary entry referring
to "the telegram from the Jap Emperor asking [the Soviets to mediate]
for peace." There is also the August 3 diary entry by Walter Brown,
Byrnes's assistant, who noted, "Aboard Augusta/ President, Leahy, JFB
[Byrnes] agrred [sic] Japas [sic] looking for peace.”[15]
Byrnes publicly admitted this when he spoke to the press shortly after
the end of the war. The New York Times reported on August 29, 1945 that
Byrnes “cited what he called Russian proof that the Japanese knew
that they were beaten before the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima.”[16]
Kuznick notes that similar comments were made by Secretary of the Navy James
Forrestal, Assistant Secretary of War John McCloy and Secretary of War Stimson,
showing how widespread was this realization. Kuznick adds:
“But, at Potsdam, when Stimson tried to persuade Truman to alter
his approach and provide assurances on the emperor in the Potsdam Proclamation,
Truman told his elderly Secretary of War that, if he did not like the way
things were going, he could pack his bags and return home.”[17]
In short, as Hasegawa says:
“Justifying Hiroshima and Nagasaki by making a historically unsustainable
argument that the atomic bombs ended the war is no longer tenable.”[18]
Crucial Questions Left Unanswered
Here in the UK, Oliver Kamm, a blogger and occasional newspaper columnist,
has written about the above issues from an anti-revisionist perspective.
In a Guardian comment piece on the 62nd anniversary of the atomic bombing
of Hiroshima, he claimed that “New historical research […] lends
powerful support to the traditionalist interpretation of the decision to
drop the bomb.” While acknowledging the terrible nature of the bombing,
he claimed that there is “a high degree of probability that abjuring
the bomb would have caused greater suffering still.”[19] This, to
say the least, is a highly contentious assertion.[20]
Kamm has written at length about the end of the Pacific war in his blog,
citing anti-revisionist historians such as Robert Maddox, Robert Newman,
Sadao Asada and D. M. Giangreco.[21] Giangreco is a military historian based
at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth,
Kansas. He is an advocate of the “high-estimate casualties”
thesis: the argument that hundreds of thousands, perhaps more than a million,
U.S. lives would have been lost in Operation Olympic, the invasion of Japan
that was scheduled for November 1, 1945. Kamm adheres to the orthodox/anti-revisionist
script that the two atomic bombs were necessary to bring about Japan’s
surrender, citing a Japanese historian at Doshisho University in Kyoto:
“Sadao Asada has shown from primary sources that the dropping of
both bombs was crucial in strengthening the position of those within the
Japanese Government who wished to sue for peace.”
I contacted Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, author of ‘Racing the Enemy’,
and pointed out the above arguments. Referring to several anti-revisionist
historians, and to Kamm, Hasegawa responded:
“I am familiar with the criticisms raised by Giangreco, Asada,
Newman, and Kamm. I would also add Michael Kort in the same category.
Their line of arguments are very similar.”
Not only are they similar, but they have been refuted by serious historians
including Bernstein, Alperovitz and Hasegawa himself. Significantly, Hasegawa
notes that Giangreco, Newman, Kamm and Kort do not read Japanese, and therefore
have to “rely exclusively on Asada to make their judgement on the
crucial question: how the atomic bombings and the Soviet entry influence[d]
the Japanese decision to surrender.”[22]
As we have seen, Hasegawa addressed this question rigorously in ‘Racing
the Enemy’ and demonstrated from archival sources that the Soviet
entry had the larger, indeed, decisive shock impact on Japan's leaders.
In ‘The End of the Pacific War: Reappraisals’, published in
2007 and edited by Hasegawa, he marshals further evidence for his argument
in an incisive chapter that includes further powerful analysis of Japanese-language
documents, and rebuts Sadao Asada comprehensively.
Hasegawa notes, for example, that telegrams between Foreign Minister Togo
and the Japanese ambassador Sato in the Soviet Union show that Japan was
clinging to the hope that the termination of the war was possible and desirable
through Moscow’s mediation. The Soviet Union and Japan had signed
a Neutrality Pact in 1941 which Japan hoped to utilise to bring about favourable
terms to end the war. This was the position that Togo had adhered to since
the Allies had issued the Potsdam Proclamation on July 26, 1945. The Hiroshima
bomb on August 6 did not change this policy, as is clear from Japanese archival
documents. Indeed, from these primary sources, Hasegawa has shown that the
Japanese ruling elite pinned their hopes even more desperately on Moscow’s
mediation after the Hiroshima bomb.
Hasegawa has studied closely the original-language testimony of Japan’s
military leaders, in particular, and presented numerous examples which reinforce
the view that their shock at Soviet entry into the Pacific War was significantly
more than when the atomic bombs were dropped. As the Japanese Army Ministry
stated categorically shortly after the war:
“The Soviet participation in the war had the most direct impact
on Japan’s decision to surrender.”[23]
Hasegawa notes that:
“Asada ignores all this overwhelming evidence that stresses the
importance of the Soviet entry into the war.”[24]
Hasegawa concludes reasonably:
“My major criticisms to those who claim that Truman had no choice
but to use the A-bomb in order to save lives is: If that is so, why did
he consciously avoid two alternatives available to him that might have
hastened Japan's surrender: (1) to assure Soviet entry into the war; and
(2) to revise the unconditional surrender demand in such a way to assure
the retention of the emperor system? My critics do not answer these crucial
questions.”[25]
“Deeply Flawed” Casualty Claims
The likely number of Allied, and Japanese, lives that would have been lost
in the planned invasion of Japan can, of course, never be known with certainty.
Moreover, any number would arguably be ‘too high’ and wholly
regrettable. However, it is known that the predicted number of U.S. combat
deaths in the planned invasion escalated enormously among pro-bomb commentators
from the U.S. War Department's 1945 prediction of 46,000 dead. In 1955,
Truman insisted that General George Marshall feared losing a half million
American lives. Secretary of War Stimson made a claim of over 1,000,000
casualties (dead, wounded and missing) in 1947. And, in 1991, President
George H.W. Bush defended Truman's “tough calculating decision, [which]
spared millions of American lives.” In 1995, a crew member on Bock's
Car, the plane that bombed Nagasaki, asserted that the bombing saved six
million lives - one million Americans and five million Japanese.[26]
Michael Kort, like D. M. Giangreco, is an advocate of the “high-estimate
casualties” thesis. In 2003, Kort published a piece titled ‘Casualty
Projections for the Invasion of Japan, Phantom Estimates, and the Math of
Barton Bernstein’.[27] This was an attempted rebuttal of the work
of Bernstein, mentioned above, whose careful study of the evidence had led
him to reject projections of casualties at the high end of the scale favoured
by orthodox and anti-revisionist historians. Bernstein responded [28] to
Kort in a piece that, to quote Hasegawa, “completely demolishes”
[29] the high-estimate claims of a million casualties or more.
Bernstein argued, with numerous examples, that anti-revisionist Kort: “relies
upon strained readings, omission of crucial material, severely limited research,
unfair and facile resolution of complicated matters, and invidious language
and interpretations. He also mixes large issues with trivial ones and neglects
relevant archival sources and much of the published work upon the casualty
issue. Finally, he has serious problems with quoting accurately, revealing
fundamental problems as a craftsman.”
Bernstein showed that Kort “often fails to delve deeply enough into
issues”, displays “remarkable carelessness” and, in summary,
has produced a “deeply flawed essay [that] seldom, if ever, meets
the standards for serious, responsible academic discourse.”
In a separate article, Bernstein turned to Giangreco, the military historian
already mentioned:
"For a deeply flawed recent article which strains in interpreting
sources, makes dubious connections, uncritically and self-servingly uses
post-Hiroshima recollections, briefly makes a factually incorrect claim
for newness, and avoids some earlier contrary scholarship, see D. M. Giangreco,
‘ “A Score of Bloody Okinawas and Iwo Jimas”: President
Truman and Casualty Estimates for the Invasion of Japan,’ Pacific
Historical Review 72 (February 2003): 93-132."[30]
This “deeply flawed” analysis by Giangreco is the very article
upon which Kamm’s repeated assertion of projected high casualties
relies so heavily.
Careful historians do not deny that Truman was concerned at the prospect
of many U.S. lives being lost in an invasion of Japan, but the predicted
numbers were far less than the inflated figures provided postwar to ‘justify’
the atomic bombings. Such figures, along with Japan’s “rejection”
of the Potsdam Proclamation, form part of the conventional narrative that
the atomic bombs were sadly necessary. But as Hasegawa observes astutely:
“Evidence makes clear that there were alternatives to the use of
the bomb, alternatives that the Truman administration for reasons of its
own declined to pursue. And it is here, in the evidence of roads not taken,
that the question of moral responsibility comes to the fore. Until his
death, Truman continually came back to this question and repeatedly justified
his decision, inventing a fiction that he himself came to believe. That
he spoke so often to justify his actions shows how much his decision to
use the bomb haunted him.”[31]
What Compelled The Japanese Surrender?
The ‘United States Strategic Bombing Survey’, based on postwar
interviews with hundreds of Japanese military and civilian leaders, concluded
that Japan would have surrendered before November 1 – the date set
for the U.S. invasion of Japan - without the atomic bombs and without Soviet
entry into the war. For years, this conclusion underpinned the arguments
of revisionist historians who stated that the atomic bombs were not necessary
for Japan’s surrender.
However, some historians, notably Bart Bernstein, have argued that the
survey’s conclusion is not supported by its own evidence. Bernstein
has shown that the evidence is, in places, contradictory and cautions that
the ‘Survey’ is “an unreliable guide.”[32] For example,
Prince Konoe Fumimaro, Hirohito’s envoy to Moscow, had stated in his
postwar interrogation that the war would probably have gone on throughout
1945 (i.e. beyond the anticipated U.S. invasion date of November 1) if the
atomic bomb had not been dropped on Japan.
Although Bernstein concluded that Paul Nitze, author of the ‘Survey’,
had been “far too optimistic about a pre-November surrender,”
Bernstein sought to address Nitze’s counterfactual assertion that
Japan would “certainly” have surrendered without the A-bombing,
Soviet entrance into the war, or modified surrender terms allowing an emperor-as-figurehead
system. The use of “certainly”, concluded Bernstein, was an
exaggerated judgment. However, as Hasegawa has demonstrated, the Soviet
entry into the Pacific war was a massive shock to Japanese leaders –
Japan was still strenuously seeking Moscow’s help to bring about an
end to the war.[33]
Given the huge impact of Soviet entry into the war, Bernstein’s view
is that under heavy U.S. bombing and the Allied air-naval blockade that
was strangling the country, it was “far more likely than not”
that Japan would have surrendered before any invasion. Bernstein rues the
serious “missed opportunity” to avoid the costly invasion of
Japan without dropping the atomic bomb by awaiting Soviet entry into the
war. [34]
Gar Alperovitz notes that “the issue of the accuracy of the Strategic
Bombing Survey is quite secondary” to the decisive impact of the Soviet
entry into the war.[35] Alperovitz, whose 1995 book, ‘The Decision
to Use the Bomb’, extensively updated the revisionist arguments of
his classic book thirty years earlier has, like Bernstein, welcomed Hasegawa’s
groundbreaking research.
Asperovitz, in common with many other historians, is impressed by Hasegawa’s
ability to draw diligently and exhaustively from primary archival sources
in English, Japanese and Russian. For instance, one of the important subjects
dealt with by Hasegawa is the Japanese intelligence communications which
were intercepted and decoded by the Americans. As mentioned above, these
so-called Magic intercepts revealed that leading Japanese figures, including
Foreign Minister Togo, were contemplating the Potsdam Proclamation as the
basis of surrender terms. Truman, Byrnes, and Stimson were likely “paying
close attention to the Magic intercepts to see Japan’s reaction to
the Proclamation.”
As Hasegawa observes of U.S. leaders:
“If they wanted Japan’s surrender at a minimal cost in American
lives, if they wished to prevent Soviet entry into the war, and if they
wanted to avoid the use of the atomic bomb, as they claimed in their postwar
memoirs, why did they ignore the information obtained by the Magic intercepts?
[…] one cannot escape the conclusion that the United States rushed
to drop the bomb without any attempt to explore the readiness of some
Japanese policymakers to seek peace through the ultimatum.”[36]
Truman, argues Hasegawa, “was bent on avenging the humiliation of
Pearl Harbor by imposing on the enemy unconditional surrender.”[37]
Peter Kuznick notes that: “highlighting the decisive role of atomic
bombs in the final victory […] served American propaganda needs by
diminishing the significance of Soviet entry into the Pacific War, discounting
the Soviet contribution to defeating Japan, and showcasing the super weapon
that the United States alone possessed.”[38]
Based on careful analysis of Japanese archives, Hasegawa emphasises that
although the Hiroshima bomb “heightened the sense of urgency to seek
the termination of the war, [it] did not prompt the Japanese government
to take any immediate action that repudiated the previous policy of seeking
Moscow’s mediation.” Moreover, Hasegawa has found no evidence
to show that the Hiroshima bomb led either Foreign Minister Togo or Emperor
Hirohito to accept the Potsdam terms. In this respect, the effect of the
second bomb on Nagasaki was “negligible.” Even the scarcely
credible suggestion by Japan’s Army Minister Anami Korechika that
“the United States had more than 100 atomic bombs and planned to bomb
Tokyo next did not change the opinions of either the peace party or the
war party at all.”[39]
The decisive event that changed the views of the Japanese ruling elite
was the Soviet entry into the war. This “catapulted the Japanese government
into taking immediate action. For the first time, it forced the government
squarely to confront the issue of whether it should accept the Potsdam terms.”[40]
Hasegawa does not deny completely the effect of the atomic bomb on Japan’s
policymakers. Koichi Kido, emperor Hirohito’s most trusted advisor,
stated after the war that the atomic bomb helped to tip the balance in favour
of those referred to as “the peace party” within the Japanese
ruling elite. However, on the basis of the extensive archival evidence he
has gathered and critically appraised, Hasegawa concludes that:
“It would be more accurate to say that the Soviet entry into the
war, adding to that tipped scale, then completely toppled the scale itself.”[41]
The dropping of the atomic bombs, the Soviet entry into the Pacific War,
and the ending of World War II, will doubtless generate endless historical
research and debate. But the available evidence - in particular, the thoroughly
scrutinised archival collections in English, Russian and Japanese - strongly
suggests that the analysis of revisionist historians is the one best supported
by the facts.
Finally, what really matters is the moral argument that there can be no
justification for the use, or threatened use, of nuclear arms. Despite the
topic’s near-disappearance from news agendas and contemporary debate,
the threat of nuclear annihilation sadly remains. Humanity still stands
at the edge of the abyss.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank Gar Alperovitz, Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, Peter Koznick
and Uday Mohan for their helpful comments.
References and Notes
[1] Memo to President Truman from Secretary of War Henry Stimson
and Brigadier General Leslie Groves, April 25, 1945; cited in Tsuyoshi Hasegawa,
‘Racing the Enemy: Stalin, Truman, and the Surrender of Japan’,
Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 2005, p. 66.
[2] There is significant doubt as to whether a single identifiable formal
U.S. ‘decision’ to use the atomic bomb was taken, rather than
the momentum of the Manhattan Project and war itself leading almost inexorably
towards the tragedies of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Brigadier General Groves, the head of the Manhattan Project, described
Truman as “a little boy on a toboggan,” the headlong rush carrying
the president along until the bomb was dropped. (Cited in Peter J. Kuznick,
‘The decision to risk the future: Harry Truman, the Atomic Bomb and
the Apocalyptic Narrative’, Japan Focus, July 23, 2007; http://japanfocus.org/products/details/2479).
Historian Barton J. Bernstein writes that: “The reason careful historians
cannot find records of a top-level A-bomb ‘decision’ is not
because there was a fear by US policymakers and advisers of keeping records
or mentioning the bomb (quite a few diaries of the time mention it, usually
in now-easy-to decipher code), but, rather, because there was no need for
an actual ‘decision’ meeting. Such a meeting would have been
required if there had been a serious question about whether or not to use
the bomb on Japan. No one at or near the top in the US government raised
such a question; no one at the top objected before Hiroshima and Nagasaki
to use of the weapon on the enemy.” (Bernstein, H-Diplo Roundtable
Reviews, Volume VII, No. 2 (2006), Tsuyoshi Hasegawa. 'Racing the Enemy:
Stalin, Truman, and the Surrender of Japan,' Review (Barton J. Bernstein,
Stanford University), p. 15; http://www.h-net.org/~diplo/
roundtables/PDF/Bernstein-HasegawaRoundtable.pdf).
[3] For a careful review of the relevant historical literature, see Barton
J. Bernstein, Chapter 1: ‘Introducing the Interpretative Problems
of Japan’s 1945 Surrender’, in ‘The End of the Pacific
War: Reappraisals’, edited by Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, Stanford University
Press, 2007.
[4] For a summary of the book and further details, see: http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/HASRAC.html.
The most comprehensive discussion to date on the issues raised by Hasegawa’s
book, featuring exchanges with several critics, are to be found in the H-Diplo
Book Roundtable Reviews session at http://www.h-net.org/~diplo/roundtables/#hasegawa.
[5] Bernstein, H-Diplo Roundtable Reviews, op. cit., pp. 1-2.
[6] Hasegawa, ‘Racing the Enemy’, p. 140.
[7] Ibid., pp. 298-299.
[8] Not all A-bomb historians, or even revisionist historians, subscribe
to the ‘race’ framework for interpreting the evidence. Bernstein,
notably, dissents from this view, at least as expressed in the H-Diplo Roundtable
Reviews. See note 2 above for full reference.
[9] China was not invited to Potsdam, which was a meeting between the Big
Three of the United States, the Soviet Union and the UK. However, the approval
of Chiang Kai-shek, China’s Nationalist leader, was sought for the
Potsdam Proclamation and his name, unlike Stalin’s, appears on the
Proclamation. Truman flatly rejected Stalin’s request to add the Soviet
leader’s name to the Proclamation after it had been issued. See Chapter
4 of ‘Racing the Enemy’ for further details.
[10] Hasegawa, ‘Racing the Enemy’, p. 152.
[11] I note “supposed” because there is an argument, given
at greater length in ‘Racing the Enemy’, that Japan did not,
in fact, reject the Proclamation. See, in particular, p. 211 of ‘Racing
the Enemy’, where Hasegawa writes: “He [Kiichiro Hiranuma, chairman
of the Privy Council], asked [Foreign Minister] Togo whether it was true
as the Soviet declaration stated, that the Japanese government had formally
rejected the Potsdam Proclamation. Togo said that it was not true. Baron
Hiranuma asked: ‘What, then, is the basis for their claim that we
rejected the Potsdam Proclamation?’ Togo simply replied: ‘They
must have imagined that we did.’ ”, p. 211.
[12] Peter J. Kuznick, ‘The decision to risk the future: Harry Truman,
the Atomic Bomb and the Apocalyptic Narrative’, Japan Focus, July
23, 2007; http://japanfocus.org/products/details/2479.
[13] Ibid., cited.
[14] Ibid., cited.
[15] Ibid., cited.
[16] Ibid., cited.
[17] Ibid., cited.
[18] Hasegawa, ‘Racing the Enemy’, pp. 299-300.
[19] Oliver Kamm, 'Terrible, but not a crime', Guardian, August 6, 2007;
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,2142224,00.html
[20] For a more careful and authoritative discussion, see Barton J. Bernstein,
Chapter 1: ‘Introducing the Interpretative Problems of Japan’s
1945 Surrender’, p. 15, who argues that the likelihood goes the other
way.
[21] ‘Media Lens once more’, October 17, 2007;
http://oliverkamm.typepad.com/ blog/2006/10/media_lens_once.html; ‘Media
Lens vs. historical understanding’, December 13, 2006; http://oliverkamm.typepad.com/
blog/2006/12/media_lens_vs_h.html.
[22] Email from Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, December 5, 2007.
[23] Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, ‘The End of the Pacific War: Reappraisals’,
Stanford University Press, 2007, p. 129. Chapter 4 of this book is a contribution
by Hasegawa which is a comprehensive critique of anti-revisionist arguments
made by Sadao Asada and Richard Frank, author of ‘Downfall’
(1999).
[24] Op. cit., p. 131.
[25] Email from Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, December 5, 2007.
[26] Kuznick, op. cit.
[27] Passport, Newsletter of the Society for Historians of American Foreign
Relations, December 2003; http://www.shafr.org/newsletter/2003/december/kort.htm.
[28] Barton Bernstein, ‘Marshall, Leahy, and Casualty Issues - A
Reply to Kort's Flawed Critique,’ Passport, SHAFR newsletter, August
2004, http://www.shafr.org/newsletter/2004/august/bernstein.htm.
[29] Email from Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, December 5, 2007.
[30] Barton Bernstein, ‘Reconsidering the “Atomic General”:
Leslie R. Groves’, Journal of Military History 67 (July 2003): 883-920;
footnote 46 on page 910.
[31] Hasegawa, ‘Racing the Enemy’, p. 299.
[32] Barton Bernstein, 'Compelling Japan’s Surrender without the
A-Bomb, Soviet Entry, or Invasion: Reconsidering the U.S. Bombing Survey’s
Early-Surrender Conclusion,' Journal of Strategic Studies, vol. 18, no.
2 (June 1995), pp. 101-148.
[33] Japan’s top military and civil leaders, the so-called ‘Big
Six’, gambled heavily, and disastrously, on maintaining neutrality
with the Soviet Union. Their reason for this policy was that Japan was “waging
a life-or-death struggle against the United States and Britain.” Should
the Soviets enter the war, it would “deal a death blow to the Empire.”
(‘Racing the Enemy’, Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, pp. 71-72).
[34] Bernstein, cited in Hasegawa, ‘Racing the Enemy’, p. 295.
[35] Email from Gar Alperovitz, December 5, 2007.
[36] Hasegawa, ‘Racing the Enemy’, pp. 172- 173.
[37] Ibid., p. 99.
[38] Kuznick, op. cit.
[39] Hasegawa, in ‘The End of the Pacific War: Reappraisals’,
p. 144.
[40] Ibid., p. 144.
[41] Ibid. p. 144.
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