Did Japan Surrender Because of the Atomic Bomb?

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It's common wisdom that the nuclear bombs dropped over Hiroshima and Nagasaki caused the Japanese surrender at the end of the 2nd World War. However, there has been a fierce historical debate if this narrative omits the role of the Soviet invasion of Manchuria in August 1945 - or if this invasion was actually the main cause for the surrender.
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» SOURCES
Cook, Haruko Taya & Cook, Theodore F., Japan at War: An Oral History, (New York, NY : The New York Press, 1992)
Frank, Richard B, Downfall: The End of the Imperial Japanese Empire, (New York, NY ; Random House, 1999)
Glantz, David M., “August Storm: The Soviet 1945 Strategic Offensive in Manchuria”, Leavenworth Papers No. 7, Combat Studies Initiative, (February 1983)
Grew, Joseph C., “Report from Tokyo: An Ambassador warns of Japan’s strength”, in LIFE Magazine, (December 7, 1942)
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi, Racing the Enemy: Stalin, Truman, and the Surrender of Japan, (Cambridge, MA : Belknap Press, 2005)
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi (ed.), The End of the Pacific War: Reappraisals, (Stanford, CA : Stanford University Press, 2007)
Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi, “The Atomic Bombs and the Soviet Invasion: Which Was More Important in Japan’s Decision to Surrender” in Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi (ed.), The End of the Pacific War: Reappraisals, (Stanford, CA : Stanford University Press, 2007)
Hatano, Sumio, “The Atomic Bomb and Soviet Entry into the War: Of Equal Importance” in Hasegawa, Tsuyoshi (ed.), The End of the Pacific War: Reappraisals, (Stanford, CA : Stanford University Press, 2007)
Kort, Michael, “Racing the Enemy: A Critical Look”, in Maddox, James, Hiroshima in History: The Myths of Revisionism, (Columbia, MO : University of Missouri Press, 2007)
Maddox, James, Hiroshima in History: The Myths of Revisionism, (Columbia, MO : University of Missouri Press, 2007)
Pape, Robert A., “Why Japan Surrendered”, International Security, Vol. 18, No. 2 (Fall, 1993)
»CREDITS
Presented by: Jesse Alexander
Written by: Mark Newton, Jesse Alexander
Director: Toni Steller & Florian Wittig
Director of Photography: Toni Steller
Sound: Above Zero
Editing: Toni Steller
Motion Design: Toni Steller
Mixing, Mastering & Sound Design: above-zero.com
Research by: Mark Newton
Fact checking: Florian Wittig
Channel Design: Simon Buckmaster
Contains licensed material by getty images
Maps: MapTiler/OpenStreetMap Contributors & GEOlayers3
All rights reserved - Real Time History GmbH 2023

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  • @realtimehistory
    @realtimehistory Жыл бұрын

    Support us on Nebula: nebula.tv/realtimehistory

  • @TimothySielbeck

    @TimothySielbeck

    Жыл бұрын

    Okay, the USSR declares war (starts hostilities, whatever) on the SAME DAY the US drops the SECOND bomb. Only someone who has 20/20 hindsight can see that the decision to drop the bombs in the first place was unnecessary.

  • @zacharylovelady9265

    @zacharylovelady9265

    Жыл бұрын

    Is this a side channel? I've noticed that you take quite a long time to release new videos for this channel. If so, what is you main channel?

  • @TimothySielbeck

    @TimothySielbeck

    Жыл бұрын

    @Benson Caisip Lots more dead people. Possibly millions of Japanese and tens, if not hundreds of thousands of Allied troops.

  • @TimothySielbeck

    @TimothySielbeck

    Жыл бұрын

    @Benson Caisip Same answer.

  • @renoramadhanalmaghribi

    @renoramadhanalmaghribi

    Жыл бұрын

    after carefully looking at certain manga genre and socialist realism, in my opinion communist manga will mostly looked something like shindoL's metamorphosis in style. but many will be k-on fun like that's not in highschool but office work and farm themed manga.

  • @KinslayerOfDoom
    @KinslayerOfDoom Жыл бұрын

    What never ceases to amaze me is that there's basically no middle ground in this debate. It's either bomb or Soviets. Why both can't be factors of the same magnitude?

  • @Masada1911

    @Masada1911

    Жыл бұрын

    You make a decent point.

  • @briankearney5994

    @briankearney5994

    Жыл бұрын

    I don’t think the orthodox position is that the Soviets are irrelevant. It is the opposing position that says the bombs are.

  • @derrickthewhite1

    @derrickthewhite1

    Жыл бұрын

    The Video points this out at about 22:00. No single person made the decision, which means the "reason" is the sum of a bunch of people making different decisions for different reasons.

  • @jonhall2274

    @jonhall2274

    Жыл бұрын

    This is how I feel too, I feel that if Japan had to face one or the other solo, then they would have attempted to do so, especially since their culture was super radicalized. Yet when faced with *BOTH* that they would have absolutely *NO WAY* to be able to dish out enough death & suffering to their opposition that the opposition would change peace agreement negotiations, if not even more resolve of complete annihilation &/or unconstitutional surrender. (They especially wouldn't have been able to dish out enough damage to the Soviet into changing their minds, if the Germans couldn't do it when Soviet k/d ratio was astounding, then Japan for sure couldn't at that time)

  • @AntonioAkaPablo

    @AntonioAkaPablo

    Жыл бұрын

    Because they’re not? The only reason anyone plays down the atomic bomb attacks is to big up the Soviet Unions importance.

  • @Chiller01
    @Chiller01 Жыл бұрын

    US casualties on Okinawa were around 49,000 including 12,000 dead. US casualties on the little island of Iwo Jima were 24,000 including 6,000+ dead. An estimate of only 20,000 US casualties during an invasion of the Japanese mainland seems ridiculously low. Kyushu is just one of four islands that make up the bulk of the Japanese mainland.

  • @nvelsen1975

    @nvelsen1975

    Жыл бұрын

    That estimate basically assumes Japan suffers mass-surrender of troops shortly after the invasion. Which is quite unrealistic in and of itself, and ignores the fact that, you know, it's flipping Japan in 1945 and significant chunks of the population would've fought a hideous guerilla war.

  • @bingobongo1615

    @bingobongo1615

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nvelsen1975 it is however what happened when the Soviets invaded Manchuria - the Japanese army simply disintegrated with little resistance To everyone replying that Manchuria and Okinawa arent comparable - maybe, maybe not but you need to seriously have another look at the history of the Japanese Empire... By 1945 MORE JAPANESE lived in Manchuria than in Okinawa... And even if you somehow give Okinawa the status of "Japanese home island" (which is debatable at the time) then the Japanese army / navy still fought even more vicious on previous much less important Islands. Okinawa also was the first time the US saw mass surrender of Japanese troops even if it was not on the scale the Soviets saw. Its in the end its all speculation but maybe dont jump to conclusions without knowing some of the facts first...

  • @ShubhamMishrabro

    @ShubhamMishrabro

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bingobongo1615 that's Manchuria opposite happened on Okinawa and jima which are more important. Population was brainwashed to fight till last breath

  • @thelordofcringe

    @thelordofcringe

    Жыл бұрын

    @Bingo Bongo Manchuria isn't Japan and if you don't understand the importance of home, no wonder you love commie propaganda.

  • @nvelsen1975

    @nvelsen1975

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bingobongo1615 Yep, they did. Turns out fighting untrained forced-conscripts who see themselves as Chinese or Korean, fight less hard than Japanese who've been brainwashed from childhoood to regard racist murder as the highest virtue and victory through extermination of 'lesser races' as a minimum. We're going to be seeing kids like that if within the next 5 years Putin is not eliminated and continues preparing children for the 'führer's war agaist Ukraine'

  • @raisingcane225
    @raisingcane2252 ай бұрын

    In the casualty estimates of an invasion of the Japanese home islands, you left out a critical element: There were over 400,000 allied POWs still in Japanese camps, having endured years of torture and starvation. The Americans had decoded Japanese military codes for comms several years prior, and had decoded messages with orders to all the POW camps that ALL of the prisoners were to be summarily executed as soon as the invasion of the Japanese mainland started. So, regardless of the debate on civilian and military casualties of the invaders and defenders, well over 400,000 would have died at the outset.

  • @RollTide1987

    @RollTide1987

    12 күн бұрын

    @@danwarb1 As the video clearly states, Japan had not been trying to surrender. They had made informal overtures to the Soviet Union asking if they could get better terms than unconditional surrender but that was the extent of it.

  • @WeAreDraper

    @WeAreDraper

    8 күн бұрын

    @@danwarb1they definitely were not trying to surrender. We have minutes of the meetings of the ministry cabinet before and after the first atomic bomb, and in both cases they deadlocked. They couldn’t reach an agreement and only after the emperor himself intervened (which was something that had no precedent) could the stall be resolved. By that time Nagasaki had already been bombed and the soviets had invaded Japanese territory.

  • @Robertius926
    @Robertius9269 ай бұрын

    I think the estimation of just 20,000 US casualties to take the Japanese islands is very very much underestimated since it cost 5000 USMC to take Iwo Jima alone.

  • @supportgap7748

    @supportgap7748

    9 ай бұрын

    But military casualties and civilian casualties are not the same. 10 dead fully armed soldiers who die in a battle are not the same as 10 children dying in a school in there hometown.

  • @dennismiddlebrooks7027

    @dennismiddlebrooks7027

    9 ай бұрын

    Try 24,000, including over 7,000 dead.

  • @Warfoki

    @Warfoki

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeah. Nobody in the US military expected that. There's a reason they minted like half a million Purple Heart medals, so many, that they are still using them.

  • @Warfoki

    @Warfoki

    9 ай бұрын

    @@supportgap7748 You do realize that the Tokyo firebombing raid alone killed more civilians than the nukes, yeah? Bombing civilian city centers was par for the course throughout the war, on all sides, in an attempt to break the home-front morale. The only reason the US did not suffer from this, is that neither the Germans nor the Japanese had the means to reach the US mainland with bombers. The nukes are in no way special in this regard. If anything, they hastened the end of the war way more, for way less casualties than the fire bombing campaign.

  • @KIDFLIX_IDN

    @KIDFLIX_IDN

    9 ай бұрын

    50.000

  • @mangosaurusrex3416
    @mangosaurusrex3416 Жыл бұрын

    I think mainly because Japan knew they had a much better chance of keeping their emperor under an American occupation than a Soviet occupation.

  • @fanily4072

    @fanily4072

    9 ай бұрын

    None of these videos ever discuss how Japan is today and what kind of country Japan would be in those other scenarios. As terrible as the tragedy of the atomic bombs were, many more civilians were killed by conventional bombs. Japan ended up becoming one of the most economically dominant free democracies in the '90s and would have kept going except for their country's lack of natural resources and aging population.

  • @elmohead

    @elmohead

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@fanily4072plaza accord left the chat

  • @randomami8176

    @randomami8176

    9 ай бұрын

    @@fanily4072it’s been said, if you want a better future, lose a war against the US…look at Japan and Germany! Only US helps its enemies after winning wars against them.

  • @goodfractalspoker7179

    @goodfractalspoker7179

    9 ай бұрын

    And now Japan is a proxy country of America and extremely docile and whimsical as a whole.

  • @scottgarner8270

    @scottgarner8270

    9 ай бұрын

    Revisionist history.. BS The US was the deciding factor NOT the USSR. The USSR defeated a bunch of Japanese in Manchuria when the US already completely destroyed the merchant Japanese fleet.. they didn't have enough supplies.. That was thanks to the US NOT the USSR. In 1945 the US was a 13 million man military. Japan also removed their elite troops in Manchuria much earlier to help the war effort in the Pacific.

  • @jaegerbomb269
    @jaegerbomb269 Жыл бұрын

    I think the Allies had something to do with Japan surrendering.

  • @DOSFS

    @DOSFS

    Жыл бұрын

    Ah yes, Potential History bros.

  • @indianajones4321

    @indianajones4321

    Жыл бұрын

    Might be a long shot

  • @jaegerbomb269

    @jaegerbomb269

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DOSFS So glad you got the reference.

  • @frictionhitch

    @frictionhitch

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah. "We are going to lose. We get to decide to who lose." The bombs were a threat to the USSR which is the only reason that Stalin haulted hostilities without taking more real estate.

  • @geezz99

    @geezz99

    Жыл бұрын

    well the Japanese generals came the realization , IT WAS ONE BOMB .. THEN TWO .. the risk was to great to chance it , since every error , costed another 100,000 dead . in a blinding flash ..

  • @SaintSavageProd
    @SaintSavageProd7 ай бұрын

    I’ve read several memoirs of marines and soldiers who fought on Okinawa and were told to prepare for the invasion of Japan itself that they could expect well over a million casualties and that they were expected to kill every man, woman, and child and that it was either the whole Japanese civilization would perish or they would eventually surrender. Not one marine or soldier wanted to do that and they saw the bombs as saving not only them but Japan as a whole

  • @brysonwest93

    @brysonwest93

    4 ай бұрын

    My dad was about five years too young to enlist. So he lived through the war and the bombing. His view was exactly this. Very sad at the loss of life but given Japan's resolve to fight, it was the least bad of all the options.

  • @Ancient_Entity

    @Ancient_Entity

    3 ай бұрын

    Except noone has that level of resolve... this comes from the inhuman way the japanese were viewed as mindless killing machines for the emperor and is laughably silly and childish way to view a rival culture.

  • @SaintSavageProd

    @SaintSavageProd

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Ancient_Entity the soldiers and marines hated the Japanese soldiers not the citizens why kill the populous when they could surrender

  • @abdurrahmanqureshi3030

    @abdurrahmanqureshi3030

    3 ай бұрын

    So then why wasn't this enacted during the allied invasion of Germany? This is a justification for the bombing but it isn't exactly true. More likely was that the Marines would have to lose many soldiers in order to complete the full invasion of Japan which was not something they wanted.

  • @fumed2346

    @fumed2346

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@Ancient_Entitythey earned their reputation.

  • @chickencurry420
    @chickencurry4209 ай бұрын

    A Japanese friend of mine was telling me all about Japanese history one day. He kept telling me about how the Emperor at the time had big plans for gaining new land and conquering neighboring countries and stuff. Really grow and become a massive empire, resolve their own cultural issues and become a global superpower. When he told me about these big plans I kept asking "what happened next?" and he kept answering "Hiroshima"

  • @deodrasshelios7957

    @deodrasshelios7957

    9 ай бұрын

    They didn't surrender after Hiroshima though did they?? So that view is wrong. Use common sense.

  • @mostevil1082

    @mostevil1082

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@deodrasshelios7957 A week after Nagasaki, which was 3 days after. There was also a threat to use more. That showed the USA had more than one. They might well have surrendered in the face of conventional attack but they did surrender due to the nuclear attacks. You're comment about common sense is rude, childish and you're clearly wrong.

  • @Yamulo

    @Yamulo

    9 ай бұрын

    Did he mention any of the Japanese atrocities committed while doing this? Probably not

  • @chickencurry420

    @chickencurry420

    9 ай бұрын

    @@Yamulo He did, actually. The atrocities didn't come up often but when it did, he didn't try to shy away from it or excuse or justify anything, he just told it like it was, as he understood it. He's proud to be Japanese but he's not so proud that it compromises his own moral compass. "It's not ok but that's how it happened" was basically how he felt.

  • @chickencurry420

    @chickencurry420

    9 ай бұрын

    @@deodrasshelios7957 They might not have immediately surrendered but having two entire cities blown to bits in the blink of an eye is not the best way to keep your plans on track. I obviously oversimplified the specifics of that conversation in my comment but whenever he said "they planned this" or "they were about to do that", Hiroshima was usually the reason it didn't end up happening that way. Also, my comment never said "Hiroshima happened so they immediately surrendered that day", cuz that's obviously not how history works. He just meant that it was a catalyst in Japanese history and that things would've turned out very differently if it weren't for that. Didn't think I had to spell that out but here we are.

  • @thurin84
    @thurin84 Жыл бұрын

    i dont know who came up with the 20,000 casualty figure but its laughable. more than 2.5 times that were suffered during the okinawa invasion alone. the us procured so many purple heart medals in expectation of the invasion of japan, that they were still being issued during the war on terror 70 years later.

  • @jacksons1010

    @jacksons1010

    Жыл бұрын

    Agree - it's ludicrous to think an invasion of Kyushu or Honshu would be nearly unopposed as implied by that 20K figure. That's an absurd estimate and damages the credibility of this video.

  • @erminos8628

    @erminos8628

    Жыл бұрын

    Perhaps a typo? 8:10

  • @cplpuddingpop

    @cplpuddingpop

    Жыл бұрын

    @@erminos8628 that's the only thing I can think of. 20k is 7k less casualties than Iwo Jima, which was a pebble in size compared to mainland Japan, with no civilians on it.

  • @jamesdellaneve9005

    @jamesdellaneve9005

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes. Watch some history on the battle for the island. The carnage was horrific. Those high death estimates for an invasion of Japan from the US military were not crazy. Plus, the US entered the war late. The Brits and other allies were completely exhausted. The US would have had to go it alone.

  • @elasticharmony

    @elasticharmony

    Жыл бұрын

    When you kill people to save soldiers you lose in the worse possible way.

  • @muddybootknight6319
    @muddybootknight6319 Жыл бұрын

    As I’ve heard before “history does not happen in a vacuum”, it is rarely just one thing that causes things to happen

  • @digits001
    @digits0019 ай бұрын

    My Japanese grandma was saved because a bomb that fell on her house was a dud. She was running out of her house at the sound of air raid sirens, felt a thud on her roof and always told me she remembers the clacks and scraping of the metal bomb sliding down along her clay roof tiles. She was carrying my uncle who was a baby at the time on her back. If that bomb had gone off, I would not be here, my wife would be married to someone else, and my children would not have been born. Here’s to hoping we can minimize any future war to the bare minimum 🙏🙏

  • @Garettteh

    @Garettteh

    8 ай бұрын

    Too much religious nutcrack around for your hope.

  • @billywatson9821

    @billywatson9821

    8 ай бұрын

    Wow. Hopefully, we don't ever have another war like this!

  • @sria1719

    @sria1719

    7 ай бұрын

    And i would have never got a chance to read this comment

  • @gianluca.g

    @gianluca.g

    7 ай бұрын

    Who knows, maybe I would not be here either. I'm from Italy but causality moves and spreads pretty quick over time.

  • @user-ev1dp4pf5z

    @user-ev1dp4pf5z

    7 ай бұрын

    What your wife look like? Too bad

  • @swordofstmichael007
    @swordofstmichael0078 ай бұрын

    I have lived in Japan for about 18 years and have had discussions with some of my Japanese friends over this-- they were more afraid of Japan being divided between the US and Russia more than the nuclear/atom bombs. Of course, the atom bombs were part of that decision, but not the main reason. When Russia entered the war and it became clear that they do not have the military capability to stop them and the US with atom bombs decimating their industrial military bases, surrender to the US seemed to be the best course.

  • @totoitekelcha7628

    @totoitekelcha7628

    6 ай бұрын

    Ok Commie bot. Soviet single handedly defeated japan and they handed over to US for occupation right?

  • @swordofstmichael007

    @swordofstmichael007

    6 ай бұрын

    @@totoitekelcha7628 Seriously? Read it again and again until you get what Im trying to say (and its not what you now think). Some people just dont know how to read...

  • @totoitekelcha7628

    @totoitekelcha7628

    6 ай бұрын

    @@swordofstmichael007 Some stupid peoples assume that talking with one or two private soldiers and take their opinion as the main cause. If you really wanted to know go and ask the emperor he is the one deciding the outcome. The emperor says because their enemy possess a devastating bomb thats why they need to surrender.

  • @swordofstmichael007

    @swordofstmichael007

    6 ай бұрын

    @@totoitekelcha7628 Again, you are showing that you do not know how to read. I did not say it as a matter of fact. I am saying that is the opinion of my Japanese friends. Try again.

  • @totoitekelcha7628

    @totoitekelcha7628

    6 ай бұрын

    @@swordofstmichael007 You take it as a fact

  • @domesticonion8026
    @domesticonion8026 Жыл бұрын

    8:50 The problem with this argument is that, as you said, the US didn't know any of that at the time of their decision. They couldn't time travel to find out that some random college professor from 2023 said that their estimates were wrong. At the time, they worked with the information they had, and that pointed to massive US casualties in an invasion of Japan.

  • @kalashnikovdevil

    @kalashnikovdevil

    Жыл бұрын

    I've never heard that argument before now. Ever. If anything I've heard the US had underestimated it's casualties.

  • @minerran

    @minerran

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you DomesticOnion! I also don't accept modern judgements from Historians who are not limiting conclusions to facts known to Truman at the time.

  • @wolf310ii

    @wolf310ii

    Жыл бұрын

    Befor the bombs, the estimated casualties werent that high, after the bombs the estimated casualties get much much higher, so that dropping the bombs looked less unethical

  • @wilfred8326

    @wilfred8326

    Жыл бұрын

    Modern Professors=Apologize for Anything America 🇺🇸 has Done. Ask them, are they Veterans, the Children or grandchildren of Veterans of and you find out 👎 NO. Multi-Generational Professorship.... i.e. Never been outside of Academia. Myself I actually got an A writing ✍️ a Paper on "Japan Deserved to Be Bombed"

  • @CedarHunt

    @CedarHunt

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@wolf310ii In July of 1945, "before the bombs" as you put it, the US War department put the eatimate casualties of operation downfall at 2 to 4 million US service members and 5 to 8 million Japanese dead.

  • @PhillyPhanVinny
    @PhillyPhanVinny Жыл бұрын

    This is such an easy question to answer. I've had to write many papers about this. The 100% undeniable proof can be found in the logs of the Imperial Cabinet Meetings (the big 6) during the last months of the war up until the end of the war. Those meetings were all recorded and recorded before the droppings of the atomic bombs and are then not influenced by what the Japanese thought after the US occupied them. In those meetings months before the atomic bombs are dropped the Japanese are doing everything they can to move as many troops and supplies out out China/mainland Asia back to Japan to defend the home islands. This was because the Japanese knew under no peace terms would they be allowed to keep their empire. Their whole goal was to make an invasion of the Japanese mainland so painful that the US and allies would ease off the unconditional surrender terms. During those meetings where they are moving troops from China back to Japan they say how that makes them weak to an invasion by the USSR and the Big 6 don't care. This is again because they knew that land was already lost to them. Once the first nuke then hit Japan the Big 6 had a meeting and were told by the Japanese Nuclear scientists that the US atomic bomb was just a one time weapon and that there was no way the US could have made more then one of them based on their knowledge of how an atomic weapon could be built. It wasn't then until the second bomb that the Big 6 voted in a 3 to 3 split to surrender with the Emperor needed to break the tie. During that meeting they didn't once talk about the USSR having invaded China. They just talked about how the US having their new bomb completely destroyed their strategy of trying to defend the home islands to the point that the allies gave them better terms. The Emperor and the 3 members of the Big 6 who voted for surrender did so because the knew if the US could just keep atomic bombing them every week that the US would never have to invade them and they could do that until the whole Japanese population was destroyed if they wanted to. Thus they agreed to surrender because of the atomic bombs and not at all to do with the USSR invasion of China (which again they already knew was lost to them). It is so simple and easy to understand. It blows my mind that people still think otherwise.

  • @dovantien713

    @dovantien713

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed, people just need to read the logs of the Imperial Cabinet Meetings to see that the USSR invasion of China had no effect on why Japan surrendered. The USSR just rushed up their invasion to get what they could out of of Japan which they knew would be surrendering shortly.

  • @rayferrone4518

    @rayferrone4518

    Жыл бұрын

    I find it so silly when people try to make the argument that Japan surrendered because the USSR invaded the territory they held in China. As the OP said, Japan already knew all of their Imperial holding were going to be gone in any peace deal they got. They were just fighting on to try to get a better peace deal. The atomic bombs made that impossible because it broke the Japanese strategy of just trying to make any Allied invasion of Japan to costly. Since the invention of the atomic bomb made and invasion of Japan not needed. The Allies could just keep starving Japan out and dropping atomic bombs and regular bombs on it until it surrendered or the whole Japanese population was destroyed.

  • @ShubhamMishrabro

    @ShubhamMishrabro

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree too. Japanese didn't care about their own life they wanted to inflict pain as deep they can on allies. But their plan failed why? Cause atomic bombs. The Americans without a single casualty are killing hundred thousands of Japanese so how will you convince your population who have been brainwashed to fight allies till their last breath to remain calm as no allied soldier is dying due to bomb.

  • @dasurmel1424

    @dasurmel1424

    Жыл бұрын

    if i remember correctly the us first asked for an unconditional surrender. but then they allowed hirohito to stay at his position. this probably had a huge impact cause the japanese knew how the allies treated the germans and their high ranking party members.

  • @PhillyPhanVinny

    @PhillyPhanVinny

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dasurmel1424 Sorry, you don't remember correctly. The US and Allied terms were always unconditional surrender and that is what Japan and Germany agreed to. It was hinted to the Japanese that if they agreed to surrender through 3rd party nations that if they did surrender that the US maybe willing to allow the Emperor to stay in ceremonial power but that was it, no guarantee was ever made. That hint allowed the Japanese to start trying to clear the emperors name from documents related to the war as well. Or so the claim goes. The Japanese claim most if their records before 1943 were destroyed in US fire bomb raids.

  • @peterjackson2666
    @peterjackson26669 ай бұрын

    On August 15, the emperor cited specifically the ‘new and most cruel bomb’ in his surrender speech, as well as a highly unfavorable military situation, but without mentioning the Soviets specifically.

  • @115islandscompass6

    @115islandscompass6

    9 ай бұрын

    True, there are no specific words about the USSR. However, just before the sentence about the new weapon, there is a sentence that says, "The world situation is also working against us." Since there was no new disadvantageous situation for Japan other than the invasion of the Soviet Union, it is thought that this refers to the invasion of the Soviet Union.

  • @LordDirus007

    @LordDirus007

    Ай бұрын

    It was the Bomb. Japan had no clue how Big the Bombs could be. For all they knew, the US had a Bomb that would turn all of Japan into a crater

  • @gandydancer9710

    @gandydancer9710

    Ай бұрын

    It was the Bomb. The USSR wasn't going to invade the Home Islands and end the Japanese government. Only the US could do that, and the Japanese knew it.

  • @eduardochiscuet3146

    @eduardochiscuet3146

    Ай бұрын

    The emperor gave two speeches one for the home islands where he mentions the bomb and one for the military abroad where he only mentions the soviet invasion of Manchuria and says literally nothing about the bomb

  • @eduardochiscuet3146

    @eduardochiscuet3146

    Ай бұрын

    ​​@@LordDirus007the japanese had their own nuclear research they knew exactly what It was and that It was a really expensive and complex bomb to produce, also the home islands had been wrecked by firebombing in the months before they were literally used to it and not only they didnt react they were already set for the invasion even after the also warcriminal firebombings, moreover the military and navy outside the home islands expected the home islands to resist even after the bombings they tried to coup the japanese to keep fighting, army denied it was a nuclear hit saying It was too weak as It was the same size of a regular firebombing the Navy actually knew it was nuclear and went welp idefc

  • @Gage55063
    @Gage550639 ай бұрын

    I do argue that the atomic bombs were necessary. The US military were predicting 5-8 million dead Japanese if we were to invade the main islands, including 2 million dead American service members. The Japanese also had around 3,000-5,000 aircraft available, a lot of which were converted to Kamikaze bombers. The atomic bombs resulted in around 150,000 dead Japanese immediately and around another 80-100,000 dead years afterwords. In the end, millions of lives were saved and a full invasion would’ve been worse I feel like.

  • @christopherl4249

    @christopherl4249

    9 күн бұрын

    The war could have ended in July 1945, making the use of the atomic bombs as well as Soviet entry into the war unnecessary. As my source I will use "The Making of the Atomic Bomb", by Richard Rhodes, who won the Pulitzer prize for this great work. One of the most important sections of the book describes a meeting between Allen Dulles and President Truman in Potsdam on July 15. At that meeting Allen Dulles (then an OSS officer serving in Switzerland) told Truman that he had been approached by the Japanese directly and that "the Japanese might be willing to surrender if they can keep their emperor". Unfortunately, Truman listened to his secretary of State James Byrnes who convinced Truman that it was better to make no concessions and use the bomb. More over, Byrnes felt the use of the bomb would impress the Russians and make them "more manageable", and give the US a leg up in the future post war world. Ironically, the US ended up conceding, letting the Japanese keep the emperor, after August 15, when Hirohito accepted the Potsdam declaration. It was felt it would make occupation easier, which it did. Secondly, by not potentially ending the war with the Japanese in July it allowed the Russians to invade and fight Japanese forces in Northern China on August 9 (in fact honoring a previous promise made to Roosevelt to join the war 3 months after the German surrender). As a result the Russians were allowed to occupy North Korea. Had the Japanese surrendered before that date the Americans would have occupied all of Korea. In that case, the Korean war would have never happened. The decision to wait and use the atomic bomb did not save lives, it cost over 50,000 lives of American servicemen who fought in Korea. In the longer run the bomb never deterred Stalin and the Soviet Union. In fact, it motivated them even more to develop and build their own atomic bombs. I might also add some very prominent Americans of that time were against the use of the bomb including General Eisenhower, and Admiral Leahy who both felt that use of the bombs was unnecessary and would hurt America's image. Even the comment about operation downfall (the invasion) is not true. Truman knew that ordering an invasion of Japan costing up to one million US casualties was not his only option. It is highly probable that Truman , already troubled by the casualties in Okinawa would have continued the blockade and conventional bombing. And these other options had the backing of some leaders in the military.

  • @metroidhunter965
    @metroidhunter965 Жыл бұрын

    My belief is that the Japanese either didn’t believe that America had more than 1 sun available to drop on them, or didn’t want to concede. After another sun was dropped on the Land of the Rising Sun (ironic), methinks that Hirohito thought Americans (and maybe the Soviets too) were just crazy enough to erase Japan off the map in irradiated fire.

  • @lookoutforchris

    @lookoutforchris

    Жыл бұрын

    You don’t have to believe that, we know it. He said so in his surrender speech: “Moreover, the enemy has begun to employ a new and most cruel bomb, the power of which to do damage is, indeed, incalculable, taking the toll of many innocent lives. Should we continue to fight, not only would it result in an ultimate collapse and obliteration of the Japanese nation, but also it would lead to the total extinction of human civilization.”

  • @snapdragon6601

    @snapdragon6601

    Жыл бұрын

    I think that was even discussed by the Japanese war cabinet after the first bomb. Regardless, they found out the answer a few days later.

  • @undercoverAlly

    @undercoverAlly

    Жыл бұрын

    No landing operations or atomic bombs were required for the end of the war. The CIA website has a PDF file which shows that the Government of Japan was asking the United States to talk the end of the war from the beginning of 1945. And it was recorded that Japanese government admitted defeat and argued that retention of the Emperor was the only condition for surrender, because it was necessary to prevent Japan from becoming a communist nation. The draft of the Potsdam Declaration was supervised by Joseph Grew, the former ambassador to Japan. The draft included a sentence authorizing the guarantee of the emperor's retention. Because Grew was known the above information, also knew well why Japan wanted the retention of the Emperor, and knew that Japan would surrender as soon as the Potsdam Declaration allowed the retention of the Emperor. This Grew’s effort is proven by the Truman memoir. It says: "Grew arrived at the end of May and suggested to make a declaration urging Japan to surrender. The declaration provided Japan with a guarantee that the United States would allow the Emperor to remain head of state." "I told him that I had already considered this issue and that (Grew's suggestion) seemed like a sound opinion." However, when Truman annouced the Potsdam Declaration, the sentence that allowed the retention of the Emperor had removed from the declaration. It was because the atomic bomb was completed shortly before the declaration. And the guarantee of the Emperor's status would likely have done Japan's immediate surrender, which meant the loss of the opportunity and the place to test atomic bombs. Therefore, it was clear that the US purpose of dropping the atomic bomb on Japan was not to end the war, and it was as follows. 1. Experiments on how the atomic bomb destroys and kills living cities and people 2. Experiments on contamination by radioactivity and its effects on the human body 3. Demonstration to the Soviet Union In addition, it seems that it is not well known, but in fact, after the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, the US nuclear bomb development agency announced that it had "successfully conducted an atomic bomb drop experiment."

  • @silencemeviolateme6076

    @silencemeviolateme6076

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@undercoverAlly you completely ignored the Japanese military. They did not want to surrender.

  • @undercoverAlly

    @undercoverAlly

    11 ай бұрын

    @@silencemeviolateme6076 @Silence me Violate me the bombs weren't dropped on the military were they? Also, the military resided under the emperor and i did address that they were READY TO SURRENDER, Emperor and military. Edit: at the time of potsdam declaration, Japan had already stopped occupying further territory and had started defending it's occupied territory. This was why they were willing to surrender through diplomacy.

  • @TheRealMjb2k
    @TheRealMjb2k Жыл бұрын

    The orthodox & revisionists mindset and viewpoints are not mutually exclusive. It is fair to say that the bombs were a large contributing factor to ending the war sooner than a traditional invasion in Japan and overall cost less lives, while also saying that the Soviets invasion was another factor in Japans surrender calculus. It’s also fair to say that this was in fact the last major act of the war to end it, and the first major act of the Cold War, though I would disagree with this because the Cold War had already begun by now.

  • @pax6833

    @pax6833

    Жыл бұрын

    I would say the orthodox mindset isn't mutually exclusive (IE there is room to say both were signifigant factors) but the revisionist mindset is, because revisionist historians want to portray the atomic bombings as a crime against humanity and vilify the US.

  • @martijn9568

    @martijn9568

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@Pax That really depends on the revisionists story. As far as I'm aware there are multiple and I think, that we can even create our own during a brainstorm session.

  • @wuhaninstituteofvirology5226

    @wuhaninstituteofvirology5226

    Жыл бұрын

    But, no one takes into account the KMT contribution, Japanese forces were also already being defeated by KMT forces.

  • @janinasimons8533

    @janinasimons8533

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pax6833 Vilify the US??? you gotta be dreaming.. USA vilified itself with every action is has made from Day one of freedom as UK colony to today, USA has done so much We have an abundance that there is no vilification.

  • @davidpnewton

    @davidpnewton

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@wuhaninstituteofvirology5226 Chinese contribution to defeating Japan was negligible in military terms. China kept a lot of Japanese soldiers tied down but numbers of Japanese soldiers would not have made a difference in the Pacific. That was where Japan was beaten and that was a naval war. Japan lacked the infrastructure to even move significantly more troops around the Pacific, let alone to supply them. In Burma a bit of a difference was made but Japan was only in Burma because they were trying to cut China off from supplies. Chinese forces made a bit of a difference in the fighting in the very north of Burma but did nothing with Kohima and Imphal or the decisive counterattack campaign thereafter. China was a place where the Japanese could kill a lot of people. That was basically the real Chinese contribution to the war. It's horrifying but it's reality.

  • @corey2232
    @corey22329 ай бұрын

    8:53 - If recent "research" suggests casualty estimates "as low as 20,000" for a full-scale invasion of Japan, you may as well throw that research out the window. That's one of the most idiotic things I've ever heard, and should outright nullify the legitimacy of such research.

  • @johnilkhani-lg2ks
    @johnilkhani-lg2ks9 ай бұрын

    Thank you it was a great information.

  • @CigarRegal
    @CigarRegal Жыл бұрын

    The HQ of the Second General Army (The army group responsible for the defence of the southern half of Japan) was located at Hiroshima castle. If you look at the pictures of 1945 Hiroshima, you can see the square moat in the top right. The destruction of the HQ was so complete that it was unable to even report on its own condition as it had lost all ability to communicate beyond bicycle messengers. Japan was governed by general officers, and I can't help but wonder what the effect was when they realised that a single American bomber dropping a single bomb could cut them off from any control they might have exerted upon the battle for the Japanese home islands for weeks at a time. This would be especially unsettling to them given that they had no idea how many nuclear bombs the Americans had. I don't think they would write it down, but I can't help but wonder if the leadership found domestic chaos a more frightening prospect than going down fighting.

  • @danielschick7554

    @danielschick7554

    Жыл бұрын

    It's funny that even after getting nuked the officers up the chain still saved face about what happened, which is comforting b/c officers the world over still do this.

  • @Michael75579

    @Michael75579

    Жыл бұрын

    I've read a theory that after the first bomb Japanese scientists assumed that the Americans could have only a tiny handful of such weapons as it was a uranium bomb and they knew how difficult uranium separation was. The second bomb was a plutonium bomb, which meant that the Americans had worked out how to build a breeder reactor and could therefore produce nuclear weapons in substantial numbers; it's now believed that the Americans would have been able to produce about three Nagasaki-sized bombs per month. In light of this, it became clear that a US invasion of Japan wasn't going to happen; Japanese alternatives were surrender or slow annihilation.

  • @davidk7324

    @davidk7324

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Michael75579 I've never heard this before, but I guess you have your sources. I am highly skeptical that Japanese scientists knew the precise construction materials of either bomb. We didn't advertise their specific makeup until later.

  • @Mgl1206

    @Mgl1206

    11 ай бұрын

    @@davidk7324 i think the prospect of nuclear weapons was kind of an open secret at this point. We already know that the Germans knew of the possibility of nuclear weapons even if they never had the capability to make in’s. In fact its this fact that kicked the Manhattan Project into high gear. We wanted it done before the Germans. So its not so far fetched to believe the Japanese knew either.

  • @senecaflint6853
    @senecaflint6853 Жыл бұрын

    I question modern historians and have a very hard time believing that estimated casualties of Downfall at the time were “greatly exaggerated”. There were still hundreds of thousands of Japanese troops in the home islands. Even with depleted munitions, I can’t see only 20,000 allied casualties being in any way realistic.

  • @fishy0929

    @fishy0929

    11 ай бұрын

    I also found that estimate extremely low. The United States had made so many purple hearts in preparation for the mainland invasion that we were still giving them out to our soldiers into 2020. So when I heard that estimate I laughed at how low it was.

  • @julioe.martinez4606

    @julioe.martinez4606

    11 ай бұрын

    Another conspirator …

  • @bangyahead1

    @bangyahead1

    10 ай бұрын

    20,000 per blade of grass captured, might be more accurate.

  • @ScooterinAB

    @ScooterinAB

    9 ай бұрын

    Whereas I have a hard time believing that a country that already knew it was defeated and had been trying to surrender was going to fight to the death. Japan went into the war knowing they were going to lose. The idea of an absolute massacre simply match primary documents.

  • @manleyfgc7981

    @manleyfgc7981

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@ScooterinAByou knew nothing of Japanese nationalism then.

  • @radoviddrobnjak3692
    @radoviddrobnjak36929 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the interesting and balanced video, very professional.

  • @akfrost
    @akfrost7 ай бұрын

    The third minister for peace mentioned was an active duty military officer, Admiral Yonai Mitsumasa, Minister of the Navy. Suzuki himself was also an retired Admiral.

  • @johannlatimer
    @johannlatimer Жыл бұрын

    It's crazy how I had one grandfather on the eastern front in Europe, Army, and the other on the western front, Navy, both fought for the U.S. watching this reminds me of the story's they told me, I miss them both. 😢

  • @YourTypicalAirConditioning

    @YourTypicalAirConditioning

    9 ай бұрын

    I'm sure they were legends

  • @williamschnl

    @williamschnl

    9 ай бұрын

    grandson of the heroes

  • @angusmckenzie9622

    @angusmckenzie9622

    9 ай бұрын

    @johannlatiner. It’s crazy how I had…”. That you miss them both says they survived. I bet you wish you’d asked them lots of questions you didn’t think of when they are alive.

  • @YourTypicalAirConditioning

    @YourTypicalAirConditioning

    9 ай бұрын

    @@angusmckenzie9622 ofc

  • @antihypocrisy8978

    @antihypocrisy8978

    9 ай бұрын

    Germans and Japanese were enemies back then. They still are.

  • @brettkihlmire573
    @brettkihlmire573 Жыл бұрын

    One amazing fact about the canceled home island invasion is that the US has issued purple hearts meant for that operation into at least 2020.

  • @huntclanhunt9697

    @huntclanhunt9697

    Жыл бұрын

    We still are as of 2023.

  • @robert9595

    @robert9595

    11 ай бұрын

    There was supposed to be 3 bombs dropped, the third got jammed in the bomb bay after prematurely dropping from the carrier housing to the belly of the plane enroute.

  • @user-gl5dq2dg1j

    @user-gl5dq2dg1j

    11 ай бұрын

    @@robert9595 No. The third bomb was delivered to the Marianas but never loaded onto a plane. It was tentatively scheduled to be dropped on August 19th, proposed target was Tokyo. The ceasefire was the 16th.

  • @johnthegametologist

    @johnthegametologist

    11 ай бұрын

    @@user-gl5dq2dg1j prolonged ceasefire for another 3 more days and Japan would be DONE! dang, mindblown!

  • @user-gl5dq2dg1j

    @user-gl5dq2dg1j

    11 ай бұрын

    @@johnthegametologist Some officers in the army did try to arrest/kidnap Hirohito to prevent the surrender. Luckily their coup failed. Nimitz was worried enough that it could all be a trick or otherwise fall apart, he had Adm. Spruance offshore with the 5th fleet to resume the fighting.

  • @mizzury54
    @mizzury549 ай бұрын

    This guy grossly oversimplifies the coup on August 15 which was not organized by just " junior officers ". I suggest reading the great book " Japan's Longest Day" which details the day and the events leading up to it. My uncle , who was a fighter pilot in the Pacific theater, recommended it to me. It does however lend credence to the idea that there was definitely a fight to the death mindset among military leaders .

  • @harrypitt
    @harrypitt9 ай бұрын

    Great documentary. Interesting note that the Bomb gave Japan an "excuse" to surrender. Never thought of that before, but totally possible. It seems pretty clear that the answer to all the questions at the end is "All of the Above." No doubt the Americans wanted to use the bomb to show the Soviets, and wantef to use it to end the war before the Soviets had much stake in the Japan war, but also there is no doubt that it was instrumental in bringing the war to a quick end under US auspices. The Soviet invasion alone would not have shortened a protracted war much more than the threat of a US invasion. Maybe in hindsight an Allied invasion would have crushed Japan in weeks, rather than months, but there was no reason to waste anymore Allied lives at all simply because the Japan government would not capitulate.

  • @timtom9503

    @timtom9503

    9 ай бұрын

    Was it necessary to drop them on two population centers?

  • @theflyingempanada

    @theflyingempanada

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@timtom9503they didn't surrender after the first one

  • @angusmckenzie9622

    @angusmckenzie9622

    9 ай бұрын

    Apparently surviving vets of Okinawa, horrendous US fatalities, were outraged that the Bomb was available but not used earlier. Not much sympathy for Japan in Britain, US, NZ or Aus after what happened in Changi and other POW camps.

  • @treyhelms1917

    @treyhelms1917

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeah. In the Emperor's announcement of surrender, he specifically cited the atomic bomb, not the Soviet attacks.

  • @love2scoobysnack

    @love2scoobysnack

    9 ай бұрын

    I don't think the West fully understands just how important "saving face" is in Asian cultures. Also, to deny the impact of any of these factors presented (Soviet invation, already decimated cities, Hiroshima and Nagasaki) is just an argument of which straw broke the camel's back. All of these were factors before the decision to surrender they were all instrumental in some way. I do favor the idea that Japan didn't want to be split like Germany between the US and the Soviets so it may have been a bigger straw...

  • @WalterReimer
    @WalterReimer Жыл бұрын

    Complicating things further is that the Japanese government and military destroyed a lot of their secret papers and records. For example, there are no existing blueprints for the battleships of the Yamato class.

  • @nemiw4429

    @nemiw4429

    Жыл бұрын

    So I bought all that scrap metal for nothing?!

  • @RogueDragon05

    @RogueDragon05

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nemiw4429 Maybe you can find the plans for the Bismarck?

  • @abhirajsinghkushwah1603

    @abhirajsinghkushwah1603

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@RogueDragon05get the plans . I will get the scraps

  • @ScooterinAB

    @ScooterinAB

    9 ай бұрын

    They also destroyed the economic report that led to Japan invading mainland Asia for resources. We don't know everything that was in that report, but we know that Japan knew they couldn't win even before the war took place.

  • @talkingmuffins9560
    @talkingmuffins9560 Жыл бұрын

    I watched a video where they talked about target selection, and Tokyo was on the original list. However, due to the fact it had already been fire bombed to h-ll and back, it was not considered an appropriate target to demonstrate the power of the bomb, since there would be few buildings to destroy. So on one hand, it is true they were not a target, but it was because by this time the city was pretty much leveled already. And the reason we know that tidbit is the reason we know it was at point considered a target.

  • @truthonly-

    @truthonly-

    11 ай бұрын

    So drop the bombs on civilian people got it

  • @insideoutsideupsidedown2218

    @insideoutsideupsidedown2218

    9 ай бұрын

    They had considered detonating it in Tokyo bay.

  • @sgttibbz297

    @sgttibbz297

    9 ай бұрын

    I’m pretty sure both cities were on a no bombing list to maximise the impacts of the nuclear bombs

  • @hydroking2969

    @hydroking2969

    9 ай бұрын

    bombing tokyo would be dumb, they need the governent to listen to them, america isn't gonna lead japan, what america wants is japan's government to follow them and not russia. If they destroyed the government it would mean america would have to rebuild the government themself which would be unescssarily costly and conflicting.

  • @simonhauser3104

    @simonhauser3104

    9 ай бұрын

    @@hydroking2969 buddy we leveled the city before we even thought of making the atom bomb, that’s why they never bombed it. They couldn’t anymore

  • @lickard84
    @lickard849 ай бұрын

    Great video. Thanks

  • @fuyu5979
    @fuyu59799 ай бұрын

    Very informative n interesting debate on what really caused Japan to ultimately surrender. We may never know but speculate. Kudos for the various points of views. Archival films n still pics were most effective in ur presentation. New subscriber because of this vid. Anticipating ur next one. Peace

  • @emitindustries8304
    @emitindustries8304 Жыл бұрын

    There is a slight (rare) mistake in this video. At 12:30, the caption reads "Nagasaki", when that is actually Hiroshima. The "T" bridge was one of the landmarks to be used as an aim point. Above the bridge, and to the right of the river, is the "Atomic Dome", a building partially crushed by the blast. This building stands today as a reminder of the event.

  • @rangerrick2246

    @rangerrick2246

    9 ай бұрын

    I think it was just representation of visual footage so people could see the end result, not trying to trick anyone that it was not the same city. Why do you think these channels use the same footage over and over and over....... it's a video reference only

  • @allendracabal0819

    @allendracabal0819

    9 ай бұрын

    @@rangerrick2246 He's not implying that anyone is deliberately playing tricks. He's just stating that it's an honest mistake. And it's not "a video reference only"; the label at the bottom clearly states "ruins of Nagasaki". It's a legit mistake.

  • @Engine33Truck
    @Engine33Truck Жыл бұрын

    I’ve never understood why it’s believed that the reasons have to be one or the other. Realistically, Japan lost the war the moment they decided to go to war. Just as realistically, there were multiple reasons for Japan’s surrender, two of which being the bombs and the Soviet invasion. Though the Soviets didn’t really have the naval logistics to threaten the main islands.

  • @wootle
    @wootle8 ай бұрын

    The way the japanese treated POWs was dispicable.

  • @maestroofamore8948
    @maestroofamore89489 ай бұрын

    Let's read Hirohito's explanation for Japan's surrender: *"Moreover, the enemy has begun to employ a new and most cruel bomb, the power of which to do damage is indeed, incalculable, taking the toll of many innocent lives. Should we continue to fight, not only would it result in an ultimate collapse and obliteration of the Japanese nation, but it would also lead to the total extinction of human civilization."* Sounds about right.

  • @nextworld9176

    @nextworld9176

    9 ай бұрын

    Yep, that was the speech. What did he NOT say. What Hirohito did not say was that he and his government had been seeking a way to surrender, for months, and the whole time, they had been telling the JN people and soldiers never to give up, never surrender, suicide before dishonor. The bomb was a convenient excuse to save their hides.

  • @wicklash9065

    @wicklash9065

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@nextworld9176 yes and no, up until the bombs went off they were still looking to launch "operation cherry blossoms at night" where theyd drop plague infested fleas on san francisco. It was thought up by unit 731. Look it up its scary stuff. They can say what they want, but they dropped infected fleas on civillians.

  • @garysanders8350

    @garysanders8350

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@nextworld9176nitwit.

  • @maestroofamore8948

    @maestroofamore8948

    9 ай бұрын

    @@nextworld9176admits: *"What Hirohito did not say was that he and his government had been seeking a way to surrender, for months,.."* Nope, he certainly never said that - leaving history to accept Hirohito's stated surrender rationale in the absence of any evidence to the contrary.

  • @nextworld9176

    @nextworld9176

    9 ай бұрын

    @@maestroofamore8948Leaving historians to review the diaries of the Imperial War Council, to discover the real reason they surrendered.

  • @jamestonbellajo
    @jamestonbellajo Жыл бұрын

    My dude! Didn’t know you narrated any videos outside of The Great War. What a pleasant surprise. I’ve read a lot about the reasoning behind Japan’s surrender so I wasn’t sure I wanted to watch a long video about it but once I heard your voice, I was locked in.

  • @jessealexander2695

    @jessealexander2695

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @WalterReimer
    @WalterReimer Жыл бұрын

    I appreciate that you narrowed the focus of this video to the two largest prevailing schools of thought. To cover all of the various arguments would likely result in a video lasting a full day.

  • @zuikis
    @zuikis9 ай бұрын

    I wonder what is the background music at the end of this video. If you could remind me from what game or movie or other sources this music is i would be very thankful. Anyway nice video also, Thank You!

  • @simplexhuman
    @simplexhuman9 ай бұрын

    This is awesome history lesson, thank you🙏🏼😇🩶✨

  • @jimparker7778
    @jimparker7778 Жыл бұрын

    By summer 1945 the mining of Japan's coastal waters by the Allied forces meant that Japan couldn't easily supply and reinforce their troops. They were almost entirely unable to get sufficient aviation fuel to the remote airfields that might have been more effective in defending the skies over Japan's main islands. Many enemy vessels went to the bottom. Admiral Nimitz does not receive enough credit for this strategy.

  • @Mr9Guns
    @Mr9Guns11 ай бұрын

    The Japanese themselves even mentioned the new use of "cruel weapons" (referring to the bomb) in the surrender. The pending Soviet invasion must have had a major impact as well but I still think the bomb was the most significant. The Japanese probably figured the Soviet's wouldn't want to invade the mainland and might be satiated by taking the Manchurian mainland and taking some historically contested areas like the Kuril islands and still possibly come to a negotiated peace.

  • @samthesuspect

    @samthesuspect

    11 ай бұрын

    Not that they could have invaded the mainland. The USSR at that point did not have much of a Navy, and the majority of their vessels were in the Mediterranean, Baltic, and black sea, as I'm sure you know they had almost zero focus on the eastern front, and those naval vessels would have had to go all the way around Africa since going around Asia could have been frozen over at some points and damaged the vessels.

  • @rbh513

    @rbh513

    10 ай бұрын

    USA won't use on Germany but willing to drop A bomb on Japan because recial bias.

  • @hoppermantis7615

    @hoppermantis7615

    10 ай бұрын

    And yet they tested their own nuke, just before. ... 😶

  • @nedkelly9688

    @nedkelly9688

    10 ай бұрын

    Japanese didn't care that much about the Russian invasion their records even state that they sent their most elite soldiers to where Australia and Americans would land for a invasion since it was the Australian and Americans who beat them from Papua New Guinea to Japan mainland. Russia and Japan had signed a peace pact and even up to the day Russia invaded Russia said they were sticking to that pact. Japan had a incling it might happen but believed it might not also.

  • @bangyahead1

    @bangyahead1

    10 ай бұрын

    Once wthe Japanese were able to assess the situation after the second bomb was confirmed dropped, it didn't take them long to realise "There is no way to defend against this." It might have taken 6 months for the US to ready another bomb, and it wouldve been a stream of them at that point, but regardless, six months later the US wouldve been able to drop 20 of them, one after another, until Japan surrendered or was utterly annihliated.

  • @mmagnusol
    @mmagnusol9 ай бұрын

    Read "A Torch to the Enemy!" and you will find that we firestormed Tokyo destroying 18 square miles and 300,000 died. We also had burned 78 others of Japan's major cities. Hiroshima and Nagasaki were generally smaller but were a few of the remaining cities.

  • @akun50
    @akun509 ай бұрын

    Honestly, it's likely a mixture of both. The first bomb was likely met with incredulity, a sort "What sort of nonsense are you spouting? A single bomb wiped out a city? They probably just dropped a bunch of bombs like last time." But when met with the second bomb AND the active invasion by Russia, defeat was definitely inevitable. At that point, they just had to ask what level of disrespect they were willing to put up with.

  • @FUnzzies1

    @FUnzzies1

    9 ай бұрын

    The leadership in Tokyo were more than likely unaware of the scale of the Soviet invasion. The Soviet invasion would have put pressure on Chinese from leadership to surrender more than the bomb, but the bomb most definitely forced Tokyo leadership to surrender much more so than the Soviet invasion. You have to remember this was the 40s and imperial Japan. A very different time.

  • @nextworld9176

    @nextworld9176

    9 ай бұрын

    BS! The Imperial War Council was fully informed by their own A-Bomb Project scientists that the A-bombs could only be produced at a low rate (2-3 per month). And so the A-Bombs were not a factor.

  • @Marcinmd1

    @Marcinmd1

    9 ай бұрын

    Once we occupied Japan and debriefed their officers,we bacame clear on the role Saving Face has on their mindset. They would have fought to the last man were it not for Hirohito's command to stop. The A Bomb gave him a way out without loss of honor.

  • @paulkornreich9806

    @paulkornreich9806

    8 ай бұрын

    @@FUnzzies1 This is an underrated comment. Japanese did their best to hide and/or play down military losses. However, since the Atomic Bombings occurred on the mainland, they were much harder to cover up.

  • @user-lx1gy7vl9w

    @user-lx1gy7vl9w

    3 ай бұрын

    人家有满洲国,日本炸没了都无所谓

  • @gordonduffett5138
    @gordonduffett5138 Жыл бұрын

    Any estimate of 20 000 American casualties from an invasion of the Japanese mainland, is a supreme example of wishful thinking. The Japanese were ideologically opposed to surrender and hated Americans, with this in mind, one feels the 1mil casualty estimate for such an invasion would also have been on the low side.

  • @pdxcorgidad

    @pdxcorgidad

    10 ай бұрын

    Japanese propaganda about what the US troops would do to captured Japanese women and children, some of it true, incredibly effective, made most evident by the horrible self-inflicted Japanese civilian casualties (suicides) on Okinawa. Though some civilians would fight, many more would engage in subterfuge, though the majority, especially women, would flee and/or kill themselves and their children. It isn't to say you're incorrect. You aren't. Japanese culture, including a dictate from the Emperor, would thrust many into battle.

  • @pax6833
    @pax6833 Жыл бұрын

    I think it was well done on RTH to use Japanese sources. I notice that many revisionist historians avoid quoting Japanese sources to a suspicious degree, typically relying only on statements of US generals who concurred with their opinion (ignoring the ones who don't). One thing I found strange was the claim that the US overestimated Japanese defenses in its casualty projections. I have never seen such a claim before and the evidence I have found on the topic suggests the opposite, that US intelligence badly underestimated the troop strength, equipment stockpiles of the IJA, and had assumed the imperial air force would be non-existent. The US would be going into Kyushu in much more unfavorable circumstances compared to Okinawa and an invasion would likely have been an American bloodbath. Also, it should be noted that Japan was, before August, still seeking a white peace, not surrender, as some claim.

  • @TheEvilmooseofdoom

    @TheEvilmooseofdoom

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, their goal was to make it so bloody they could get a negotiated peace vs. a surrender.

  • @richardmalcolm1457

    @richardmalcolm1457

    Жыл бұрын

    "I notice that many revisionist historians avoid quoting Japanese sources to a suspicious degree, typically relying only on statements of US generals who concurred with their opinion (ignoring the ones who don't)." I generally am skeptical of the revisionist school, but I think in fairness the lack of English translations (even today) for many Japanese primary sources for the war is probably partly at fault here.

  • @bingobongo1615

    @bingobongo1615

    Жыл бұрын

    The conservative historians dont quote the Japanese either… And the lower estimates are based on the Kantogun in Manchuria disintegrating on impact when the Soviets attacked. More troops than the Americans faced so far and they simply were beaten with little effort in a week. Also, many do not even assume that the US would ever have invaded Japan… i mean why would they? japan was close to starvation, running out if fuel and had bo fleet anymore. It was simply neutralized

  • @richardmalcolm1457

    @richardmalcolm1457

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bingobongo1615 "More troops than the Americans faced so far and they simply were beaten with little effort in a week." You might want to look at David Glantz's work on August Storm. It was anything but a cakewalk for the Soviet Army.

  • @noobster4779

    @noobster4779

    Жыл бұрын

    @@richardmalcolm1457 David Glanz is a very questionable historian. He primarily relies on non soviet sources and I heavily doubt he was deep into japanease sources eather. For his eastern front books he basically only used german sources including post war memoirs by german generals.....which I propably dont have to explain are more then questionable and unreliable Truth is we dont know how hard August Storm was for the simple fact that the soviet/russians would tell us. The soviet archives are closed to historians and were only very briefly opened after the soviet union collpased. I mean for example we know nowadays that the Battle of Kursk wasnt this heroic struggle, it was a one sided slaughter. The soviets lost redicilous ammounts of vehicles compared to the germans and the infamous tank battle at Prochorovka was no battle at all, it was a massacre. The soviet commisar in charge paniced and ordered a soviet guards tank army to counter attack near the village, far earlier then planned. They drove into their own defenses and were stuck before their own tank ditch resulting in the german tanks on the other side pcking them off on mass do to outranging them. The famous battle of Prochorovka and the "tank ramming" bullshit was compleatly made up by this commisar because shortly after Stalin summoned him in person to Moscow to explain what happened (a death sentence) so he faked the documents and told a story of heroic fighting and destroying countless enemy forces to safe his own life. Unless the russians reopen their soviet archives all we have is one sided guessing, especially as the japanease sources arent exactly trustworthy eather. The only thing we know for sure is that the japanease army in Manchuria was destroyed

  • @ganbayargankhuyag1309
    @ganbayargankhuyag13099 ай бұрын

    such a great explanation and well organized content. thanks

  • @alanwrobel8455
    @alanwrobel84559 ай бұрын

    Excellent professional video!! You've covered a difficult topic as well as could have been done. It's extremely difficult if not impossible to analyse a point in time because we know what happened after.

  • @kilianklaiber6367
    @kilianklaiber6367 Жыл бұрын

    This was one of your best episodes. I find a fair discussion of these points of view more enlightening than just listening to one narrative.

  • @ltzp2
    @ltzp29 ай бұрын

    the whole "conventional bombing killed more, shock value wasn't that big" is ridiculous. Its not the death toll, its the fact that only 2 bombs were able to decimate that much land and that many people instantly. There was huge shock value, as there was definitely speculation about what would happen if many more bombs like that were used against their homeland. Like the quote from earlier in the video from a Japanese military person, it was beyond their wildest dreams.

  • @nextworld9176

    @nextworld9176

    9 ай бұрын

    The bomb was a shock to the population, who lived under a fascist military regime for a century. But the bomb was already known to the decision makers in the Imperial War Council. There's no need for commenters to have "opinions" on why the Japanese surrendered. The Imperial War Council documented their meetings, and the answer is clear. The A-bombs were not a factor.

  • @deodrasshelios7957

    @deodrasshelios7957

    9 ай бұрын

    That's just one of the stupidest arguments supporting US propaganda. "Shock value" really? You think Imperial Japan were scared by shock tactics? The same people that approved of horrific abuses and unspeakable torture? Get a grip!

  • @bdleo300

    @bdleo300

    8 ай бұрын

    What's the difference between killing 200.000 in Tokyo in a 2 hours or 100.000 in Hiroshima in 15 minutes? Shock value? Seriously? 1000 heavy bombers over your head are not shocking enough? Now that's "ridiculous".

  • @nextworld9176

    @nextworld9176

    8 ай бұрын

    My, my, my. No one ever listens, it seems. The question is "Did Japan surrender because of the atomic bomb?" To get the answer, one need only ask the Imperial War Council, which made the actual decision to surrender at Hirohito's orders. (The power of the emperor was not as absolute as many think,) After Hiroshima, the IWC inquired of their own atomic bomb program how many more could the US produce. The Japanese A bomb scientist advised the IWC that the Americans could deliver 2-3 more bombs each month. The IWC knew that 60 cities were already destroyed by Curtis LeMay's napalm firebombing, and millions of refugees clogged the infrastructure. Two or three more cities per month just was not a factor. Also, given their knowledge that the American invasion would occur in November, the IWC had no reason to change its deliberations. The IWC were not shocked. The IWC plan was to absorb the American invasion and make it last awhile. They knew that America would tire of taking casualties on the main island, and expected the US government would thus accede to better surrender terms. To this end, they equipped the common people with crude weapons, barricaded streets, etc. They told the people to DIE with honor. They told the JN soldiers to NEVER surrender. Yet, all along, since February 1945, the IWC had, in fact, secretly been planning surrender as ordered by the Emperor. They were lying to the people. They were calling for suicide attacks, to fight to "extinction." but all along, intending to surrender! 9 August 1945: Now, the Japanese received a real SHOCK! At 4 am, the IWC learns that Stalin has betrayed them, and Soviet troops had taken Manchukuo with ease. Stalin had invaded first by taking Sakhalin Island. The Japanese main island was within sight. The IWC knew the Soviets would be in Tokyo within days. The Japanese people would soon be exterminated or enslaved. 10 am. Hirohito ordered the IWC to speed up their deliberations. He told them the existence of the Japanese people was in peril. 11 am. News of the Nagasaki bombing reached the IWC. Just read the historical documents, folks.

  • @Bjswac

    @Bjswac

    8 ай бұрын

    Also, the terrorific testimony of the people from Hiroshima, some days after the bombing, made Tokio realized what was at stake. They knew what happened during conventional bombings, they had systems for defense and interceptors. For the A-Bomb, they were completely defenseless.

  • @riffgroove
    @riffgroove3 ай бұрын

    A couple of years ago, a man by the name of Conrad Crane ( who was an expert on Curtis Lemay ) did a presentation in Tokyo. At the end of it, one of the Japanese historians in atrendance stood up and said "At the end of the day, we Japanese must thank the U.S. fpr the firebombings and the use of the aromic weapons." "They accomplished two very imprtant things. Firstly, it ended the war in August, which allowed General McArthur to immediately bring in humanitarian aid to Japan, otherwise millions more would have frozen and starved to death in the rapidly approaching Winter." "The other thing it did was it allowed Japan to remain it's own nation. Otherwise the U.S. would have invaded, Russia would have invaded, and Japan would have ended up carved into warring factions just like Germany and Korea did."

  • @AReardon14
    @AReardon143 ай бұрын

    I really appreciate the captions :) thank you!

  • @bingobongo1615
    @bingobongo1615 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing work! 10/10 points. I studied the topic for two decades now and my conclusion is simply inconclusive- we will never know. However- just for the point that sources are problematic for August 45 - Japanese historians have released an amazingly detailed work on the days surrounding the surrender called Japan‘s longest day (unrelated to the crappy movie). It is absolutely unbiased and everyone should read it if they are interested into what was going on in the Japanese government. It doesnt give a definitive answer of course but it does support the theory of multiple factors for sure.

  • @MultiPhoenix06

    @MultiPhoenix06

    Жыл бұрын

    Did you mean to say that it WAS biased? I am a bit confused😅

  • @richardmalcolm1457

    @richardmalcolm1457

    Жыл бұрын

    At one point in his book, Richard B. Frank contends that the one thing we can be certain of is that it was the *combined* simultaneous impact of the atomic bombs and the Soviet entry into the war that triggered the decision to surrender - because that is what actually happened. What's harder to make out is how to weight each factor (though Frank does lean harder on the bombs).

  • @eduarddoornbos2409

    @eduarddoornbos2409

    Жыл бұрын

    anybody care to ask the japanese about this?

  • @danielschick7554

    @danielschick7554

    Жыл бұрын

    I am under the belief that was never a question of if, but when the first nuke would be used in war. Makes you wonder which conflict it would have been used in. Had a ground invasion occurred both the US and Red Army might have been too exhausted and war weary to given play a game of Risk on the Korean Peninsula.

  • @danielschick7554

    @danielschick7554

    Жыл бұрын

    @@richardmalcolm1457 The decision to fight a war on two fronts to the bitter end gets humbled when cities can get wiped out in a blink. Plus while you're fighting to the death the side with that make bomb-go-blinky can build another one while they keep you penned up.

  • @mrmr446
    @mrmr446 Жыл бұрын

    Widespread mines deployed around the main islands of Japan had already been so effective that it was the conclusion of an assessment of its' efficacy that had Operation Hunger began months earlier the surrender could have come sooner.

  • @Tarage
    @Tarage9 ай бұрын

    What is missing from the argument is the fog of war. Even assuming that the Soviet Union entering the war caused Japan to surrender, no one knew that aside from the Japanese. There was zero indication that the Japanese were going to stop. It's very easy to know the answer to questions when you have perfect information. Regardless of if it actually mattered, it was required and justified due to everything Japan had shown up to that point.

  • @nelsonprestan3
    @nelsonprestan39 ай бұрын

    What a great video. #Quality.

  • @darthcheney7447
    @darthcheney7447 Жыл бұрын

    Very well done. Also, probably "All of the Above" especially the one about "saving face". That is an inherently Japanese trait.

  • @PsychoHaro
    @PsychoHaro Жыл бұрын

    Great video. I actually did this topic as my final paper to graduate university and it was interesting to see how almost none of the people in the class thought it was a combination of both factors that led to the surrender when it did during the presentations we had to do throughout the semester.

  • @lookoutforchris

    @lookoutforchris

    Жыл бұрын

    Shows how uneducated and unthinking college graduates are.

  • @correiaivan

    @correiaivan

    9 ай бұрын

    That's nice ! What was your conclusion?

  • @alfredlu7228

    @alfredlu7228

    9 ай бұрын

    Always, when you have no absolute conclusion between two things, choose the middle one.

  • @Turf-yj9ei
    @Turf-yj9ei9 ай бұрын

    Hirohito said it was because of the bomb in his nationwide broadcast ordering the people to surrender. Disputing this is the largest longest running fishing expedition in modern history

  • @SkyHighMelody
    @SkyHighMelody6 ай бұрын

    Some extra context. The firebombing campaigns against japan was 29 times as destructive as the 2 attomic bombs. Japan had been nearly completely bombed into submission. The only cities still standing at the time was Kyoto (emperors city), Natgasaki and Hiroshima. The latter two was obliterated. So it follows that this shock would have some effect on their descision making

  • @markhamstra1083

    @markhamstra1083

    3 ай бұрын

    This is very inaccurate. Japan had not been nearly completely bombed into submission before the atomic bombings. Kyoto, Hiroshima and Nagasaki were not the only cities still standing. Nagasaki wasn’t even the primary target on the day it was bombed - Kokura was. Part of the selection criteria for the first two atomic bombing targets was that cities on the target list could not have been heavily bombed previously, allowing the effects of the atomic bombs to be accurately assessed. After that, there was still a long list of potential atomic bombing targets, a third bomb was already being assembled on Tinian island and could have been used as soon as August 19, and there was planning for use of as many as 12 more bombs as they became available over the next several months.

  • @dahgou3
    @dahgou3 Жыл бұрын

    There are 3 other factors that were very important in the US decision to drop the bombs: 1. The American public was shocked by the casualty rate at Iwo Jima and Okinawa and sickened by the kamikaze carnage. 2. Vast swathes of China and SE Asia were still in Japanese hands and the people there subject to horrific cruelty every day. And 3, during the liberation of the Philippines it became known that Japan planned to murder Allied POWs before allowing their liberation. Thousands of Americans, Brits, Aussies and others were interned by the Japanese in horrific conditions dying every day. Time was of the essence. The sooner we forced Japan to surrender, the sooner that suffering would end.

  • @thulomanchay

    @thulomanchay

    Жыл бұрын

    The Japanese were about to surrender, and the US hurried up the atomic strike before they could do so. Period.

  • @JohnSmith-ct5jd

    @JohnSmith-ct5jd

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! That point was not brought up in this video.

  • @semiramisubw4864

    @semiramisubw4864

    Жыл бұрын

    and that justifies dropping nuclear bombs into civillians ? i wouldve understood that if they were dropped in Ports or military complexes.

  • @JohnSmith-ct5jd

    @JohnSmith-ct5jd

    Жыл бұрын

    @@semiramisubw4864 Yes. It ended the damn war. Japan brought this on herself. I have no sympathy. Remember the Nanking Massacre, to say nothing of numerous other atrocities that we do not discuss anymore, for political reasons. Today, we are brainwashed by political correctness.

  • @cfisher11

    @cfisher11

    Жыл бұрын

    Not to mention the Rape of Nanjing

  • @justindunlap1235
    @justindunlap123511 ай бұрын

    I was driving past the Hanford reactor site yesterday think that its crazy how a softball sized chunk of metal that was refined in the middle of nowhere in Washington State would completely destroy an entire city and snuff out thousands of lives in an instant.

  • @doghouse6413
    @doghouse64139 ай бұрын

    Amazingly balanced video. Thanks for leaving the decision of opinion to us, your audience! You are getting a sub from me 😊

  • @huskyinexile5
    @huskyinexile57 ай бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @Dog.soldier1950
    @Dog.soldier1950 Жыл бұрын

    The final stand was on the Island of Kyushu which had been reinforced to create as many casualties to the allied forces as possible. The A bomb showed that the US could just turned the island into a cinder and casualties would be limited. Gen G. Marshall had the same idea with persistent poison gas as a add on to isolate the allied landing beaches. Admiral Nimitz wanted to isolate and wait until they starved to death, which except for th intervention of McArthur they would have in 45-46.

  • @danielch6662

    @danielch6662

    Жыл бұрын

    And while the last Japanese troops were grinding down the invading Americans, the Red Army would be waltzing down Hokkaido and half of Honshu because they had nobody defending in that direction. It's not like they could quickly reposition their defenses, what with the infrastructure being completely wrecked, thanks to American bombing.

  • @MyLife-og2kr

    @MyLife-og2kr

    11 ай бұрын

    You call hundreds of thousands of lives limited? In what world are you living in? More than half of those were civilians. They could've dropped it on military bases and called it a day, instead they dropped it on civilians. There were no bases there.

  • @hammiranda

    @hammiranda

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@MyLife-og2kr I believe that was the point

  • @nedkelly9688

    @nedkelly9688

    10 ай бұрын

    @@MyLife-og2kr so what Japanese didn't care about civilians. do you know how many civilians Japanese dropped bombs on etc. Japan started that war and are to blame for every death and if stayed in their own country no one would of died. Add up every civilian killed throughout Asia Pacific and even on Australian soil because of Japanese.'Japanese even fired torpedoes in to Sydney Harbour Australia at civilians.' Japan bombed Darwin Australia even more then Pearl Harbour

  • @angusmckenzie9622

    @angusmckenzie9622

    10 ай бұрын

    POWs added urgency

  • @battlements7649
    @battlements764911 ай бұрын

    I appreciate the topic of this video and the question even being asked for one important reason and that is that this topic is never even remotely approached.

  • @lapisdust
    @lapisdust9 ай бұрын

    Also, there were stories that Japanese scientists, upon examining the residue from Hiroshima, knew it was a Uranium bomb. The scientists told the military that they didn't believe the US had enough Uranium 235 to drop another bomb or two as they understood how hard it was to refine. Well, the Nagasaki bomb was determined to be a Plutonium bomb, and they knew Plutonium was easier to produce in larger quantities by reactor breeding.

  • @tomhill2376
    @tomhill23769 ай бұрын

    A lot of my perspective on this issue was influenced by my civilian supervisor when I was in the Army in the early 70's. He was a US born Japanese who was stuck in Hiroshima when visiting there with his mother when the war began. He lived in the outskirts of the city but was inside his schoolhouse when the bomb landed. He was not hurt but he said some others who were outside for PE were. Despite this experience, he was firmly of the opinion that the bomb was a necessity. If that is how he felt, who would I have been to say otherwise.

  • @peewee102100
    @peewee102100 Жыл бұрын

    There were 24,053 casualties on Iwo Jima alone. So I think an estimate of 20,000 casualties on the mainland is an idiotic guess. And looking at information that's unearthed now doesn't take into account that information wasn't available to the Allies then.

  • @erminos8628

    @erminos8628

    Жыл бұрын

    8:11 I think you have a typo

  • @stevenobrien557

    @stevenobrien557

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@erminos8628 I think you need to watch again

  • @richardsejour7731

    @richardsejour7731

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@stevenobrien557 the video clearly states that the orthodox estimates of hundreds of thousands casualties were gross overestimations and that modern perspectives puts this as low as 20,000, which is how ranges work. In this mindset, it seemed unlikely that the Japanese could even stall long enough for the casualties to be so high since their military was in shambles.

  • @spearfisherman308

    @spearfisherman308

    11 ай бұрын

    @@richardsejour7731 buts it’s false.

  • @spearfisherman308

    @spearfisherman308

    11 ай бұрын

    @@richardsejour7731 also they studied Japanese defensive strategy during the occupation and they vastly underestimated the causality count.

  • @Cravatron
    @Cravatron Жыл бұрын

    Tokyo was never going to be a target for atomic weapons due to the fact it was already destroyed by firebombing.

  • @NaumRusomarov
    @NaumRusomarov9 ай бұрын

    superb video.

  • @cwolf8841
    @cwolf88414 ай бұрын

    The US planners wanted a ‘clean’ city to see the bomb’s effects. The problem was the AF had fire bombed almost everything. Given paper and wood houses, there was significant devastation. Otherwise neither city really had any military significance. The Japanese viewed America as being the better post-war agent. So if you were the leader, how would you decide?

  • @vernebattig2389
    @vernebattig2389 Жыл бұрын

    After the 2nd nuke, there was a 3rd bombing of 126 B-29s targeting factories in Northern Japan and on the way home with no loss of planes those air crews heard of the surrender over the radio. That had to of had some impact or urgency on the surrender decision.

  • @TalibanSymphonyOrchestra
    @TalibanSymphonyOrchestra Жыл бұрын

    My dad was there just after the war. He had a Japanese interpreter, a woman, who visited him around 2010 when he was 85. We went to Niagara Falls. She was working at NYC Met. Museum of Art. I have a tea cup she gave as a present. Her family owned Nakamura pottery company.

  • @119jle

    @119jle

    Жыл бұрын

    So what

  • @TalibanSymphonyOrchestra

    @TalibanSymphonyOrchestra

    Жыл бұрын

    @@119jle So there.

  • @YXL36

    @YXL36

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@119jle so, shut up and respect others

  • @jorgeyamane6655
    @jorgeyamane66559 ай бұрын

    In 1943, the URSS and Japan signed a pact of no agression, After the atomic bombs were exploded with the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Stalin decided to invade Japan and the reason of this treacherous attack is to keep strategic parts of land such Manchuria where Vladivostok is located, Korea, South of Sajalin y the Kuriles. Then Japan surrender to the Americans

  • @Fisher_Films
    @Fisher_Films9 ай бұрын

    Something that I think is insanely important that didn’t get mentioned at all is that the lives lost in the bombing, even if less than what would’ve been in a continued war, were mostly civilian, not military. And that’s wrong no matter which way you slice it.

  • @MajorCoolD

    @MajorCoolD

    9 ай бұрын

    Not to forget: The 'greater casualties' over a prolonged Conflict is only natural, but the fact that thousands of lives were litterally wiped out on an ATOMIC LEVEL in the blink of an eye. Now THAT is truely horrifying and a crime against humanity in my opinion. That said the whole: 'It was to make them surrender to avoid greater loss of life' - argument is a slippery slope that would/could justify ALL SORTS of terrible acts.

  • @davidpowers9178

    @davidpowers9178

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@MajorCoolDyeah no not when it comes to our soldiers lives. I pick our soldiers any day over foreigners lives.

  • @DoYouLiekMudkipz_

    @DoYouLiekMudkipz_

    9 ай бұрын

    @@davidpowers9178 Calling people killed on their home soil foreigners... Just say you value US nationals over those other nationals.

  • @johnvitalis2656

    @johnvitalis2656

    9 ай бұрын

    Easy for you to say.....you are not in the areas occupied by the Japanese. You did not suffer in the Bataan death March...or the terror and death the civilians suffered in Manila. A sudden death by a bomb is better than a prolonged torture by the Japanese Army.

  • @Warfoki

    @Warfoki

    9 ай бұрын

    Not sure about this. Invading the Japanese main islands would put US soldiers in direct conflict with Japanese civilians. And the reality is, said civilians were deeply indoctrinated into either opposing the invaders with any weapon they had, or taking their own lives, and the lives of their children, to prevent falling into the hands of the "brutal and bestial" Americans. I'd argue that a full on military invasion of the main islands combined with a continued fire bombing campaign, would have had way, WAY more civilian casualties on the Japanese side that what the two bombs left behind.

  • @TheMightyThor83
    @TheMightyThor83 Жыл бұрын

    Yes. Hirohito clearly says it in his surrender. I think he knows why he surrendered.

  • @robertortiz-wilson1588

    @robertortiz-wilson1588

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly.

  • @kalashnikovdevil

    @kalashnikovdevil

    Жыл бұрын

    The man himself was pretty clear spoken on the subject.

  • @harbingerofsalt

    @harbingerofsalt

    10 ай бұрын

    He clearly says that he's doing the world a favor by surrendering before the Americans potentially end the entirety of human existence. He was making his imperial army look like the victims so they could accept surrender without committing seppuku or throwing the high-command military hardliners under the bus. He also clearly says in a separate speech to his surviving troops that the Manchurian invasion was the cause for surrender, while not mentioning the nukes once

  • @ScooterinAB

    @ScooterinAB

    9 ай бұрын

    It's easier to blame a witch for your problems than the real source. Hirohito said a lot of things, but there are also a lot of things he didn't say.

  • @TheMightyThor83

    @TheMightyThor83

    9 ай бұрын

    @@ScooterinAB except this is a nuclear weapon, not a watch

  • @booboobumbum6602
    @booboobumbum66024 ай бұрын

    It was to show Russia, they knew Russia would be the next enemy

  • @TomFynn

    @TomFynn

    4 ай бұрын

    No need to show Russia. Truman told Stalin at Potsdam.

  • @carlcarlington7317
    @carlcarlington731711 ай бұрын

    The point at 5:39 is extremely important to consider that between the Soviet Union declaring war on Japan and the dropping of the 2nd atomic bomb there was no real argument amongst ministers in the Japanese government as to wether or not Japan should surrender only what terms Japan would accept for surrender. Inversely after the us dropped the first bomb the Japanese government responded by reaching out to the Soviets 5:12. The invasion of Manchuria convinced the Japanese government that they couldn’t win the war and that they should surrender, the 2nd bombing convinced the Japanese government to surrender unconditionally.

  • @williamwigley2240

    @williamwigley2240

    9 ай бұрын

    It cannot be one or the other. Honestly think about the supply and merchant shipping situation. The US Navy sank so much imperial Japanese shipping that the home islands were starving and her industry ground to a halt in 1944. It may have taken a year for the emperor to discover that important piece of information. I believe that if the shipping situation continued throughout 1945 and the US decided to invade Japan in spring of 1946 the Japanese army couldn't have put up much of a resistance unless they had found a way to reroute all of their shipping over land from SE Asia across China to Manchuria for industrial use and get a grip on their food problem they would have starved before we could have bombed them into extinction.

  • @koharumi1

    @koharumi1

    9 ай бұрын

    Remember communication was totally trash back then especially with all the bombing going on. They could of not heard about it til a lot later.

  • @user-gl5dq2dg1j

    @user-gl5dq2dg1j

    9 ай бұрын

    @@williamwigley2240 Operation downfall was scheduled to begin in November 1945.

  • @alexyoon-sungcucina7895

    @alexyoon-sungcucina7895

    9 ай бұрын

    The fact much of the Japanese higher-ups stayed in power to some extent strongly suggests that there were understandings about the extent of War Crimes tribunals. If we imposed harsh terms the Japanese could have surrendered to the Soviets and started shuttling Russian troops over. Neither us nor the Japanese wanted that, thus the motivation to sign a treaty. I think many Americans dont really grasp the threat of the Soviets coming in and what that means to people in power. Notice we never took down Krupp, Rheinmetall, Volkswagen, Mitsubishi, Kawasaki, Yokohama, Isuzu, Subaru (from Nakajima), Aichi, etc. They all continued to exist. That DID NOT happen under the Soviets.

  • @williamwigley2240

    @williamwigley2240

    9 ай бұрын

    @@user-gl5dq2dg1j thanks for that I'm not sure it would have mattered by September '45 with the Soviet entry and invasion of Manchuria they had no supplies or food it was a hopeless situation for the Empire of Japan. Even if the Soviets didn't invade Manchuria it would take at least a year to create some sort of improvement for shipping over land. In that timeframe much if not all of operation downfall would likely be different including the schedule. To add insult to injury the US and Soviets were already thinking of the post war and the cold war was already being formed. Without Soviet intervention it's possible the US could have decided to keep the war going just to have an outlet to test weapons and tactics on the world stage and justify it all.

  • @briankearney5994
    @briankearney5994 Жыл бұрын

    It’s probably always going to be hard to pinpoint a reason. I do think it is strange to suggest that the atomic bombs were to “intimidate” the Soviets (and yet also simultaneously useless, and built in large numbers postwar) or that an invasion of Hokkaido by Stalin would have gone well. We have the historical invasion of the Kurils right before the surrender signing and that was as bloody as anything. The whole thing smells more like Soviet propaganda (similar to Dresden). Why not instead argue the fire bombing of Tokyo was unnecessary as the bombs + invasion caused surrender? Well, I think you have to understand Cold War politics and perspective to understand that.

  • @pax6833

    @pax6833

    Жыл бұрын

    There has never been any evidence prior to August 1945 the US considered political optics with the soviets in the decision, so that whole angle is just made up nonsense. And we know from Soviet records that the idea of invading Hokkaido was brought up and scrapped due to infeasibility.

  • @ShubhamMishrabro

    @ShubhamMishrabro

    Жыл бұрын

    Some of the claims of revisionist is very strange too like only 20k death from us side under invasion of japan mainland is very ridiculous

  • @dane1234abc1
    @dane1234abc13 ай бұрын

    The Emperor’s broadcast to his subjects explicitly mentioned use of a “most cruel weapon.” No question that dropping nukes on Japan triggered their surrender.

  • @germancuervo945
    @germancuervo9459 ай бұрын

    "But now the war has lasted for nearly four years. Despite the best that has been done by everyone - the gallant fighting of the military and naval forces, the diligence and assiduity of our servants of the state, and the devoted service of our one hundred million people - the war situation has developed not necessarily to Japan's advantage, while the general trends of the world have all turned against her interest. Moreover, the enemy has begun to employ a new and most cruel bomb, the power of which to do damage is, indeed, incalculable, taking the toll of many innocent lives. Should we continue to fight, not only would it result in an ultimate collapse and obliteration of the Japanese nation, but also it would lead to the total extinction of human civilization". - Hirohito surrender broadcast

  • @landsea7332

    @landsea7332

    9 ай бұрын

    The Japanese invaded Korea , invaded Manchuria in 1931 , China in 1937 , Indonesia , Formosa , Hong Kong , the Philippines , Burma , Indonesia , Vietman and attacked the US and even Australia . Hirohito was misleading people by stating it was 4 years . .

  • @epa316
    @epa316 Жыл бұрын

    Both the atomic bombs and the Soviet declaration of war were factors, but the atomic bombs were the larger factor. The Soviets had never carried out an amphibious invasion from the sea. Their entire war with Germany had been on land, other than crossing rivers. The Soviets had no amphibious landing craft. They couldn't have threatened the Japanese islands with invasion for a long time. Also, the conventional firebombing of Tokyo in 1945 actually killed more than the atomic bombs of either city. This, combined with the Potsdam declaration, did NOT force the surrender. PS: The Battle of Iwo Jima resulted in 27,000 US casualties, and the Battle of Okinawa resulted in 50,000 US casualties, Does anyone seriously believe that the Japanese home islands would not result in horrific casualties on both sides? With their backs literally to the wall, and foreign invaders on their sacred home soil?

  • @danwest3825
    @danwest38259 ай бұрын

    An excellent summation and overview of the various reasonings behind the surrender of Japan. I have tried to answer this question myself for 40 years and still can't say for certain.

  • @Vetionarian

    @Vetionarian

    9 ай бұрын

    It's both. That's why. Japan had so many reasons to surrender earlier even but due to their radical kamikaze culture it was inevitable to be a drawn out fight.

  • @johnhill762

    @johnhill762

    9 ай бұрын

    @@Vetionarian There’s no way to know anything was “inevitable”. Dumb af. We can only know what did happen - not what would happen in other circumstances. Comment with intelligence please. Think before typing.

  • @christophertaylor3150
    @christophertaylor31505 ай бұрын

    Interesting how we are asked to doubt the honesty and integrity of those who were there, a generation with deep faith and integrity, by a generation who wasn't there and largely doesn't believe in anything and has shown very little integrity.

  • @andrewpyle4936
    @andrewpyle49369 ай бұрын

    Yes, it was the bomb that was the final straw. It is well documented. After the 2nd bomb dropped, the military and the majority of the government cabinet wanted to fight on. The emperor did not because he did not want any more of his people to die. He addressed the Japanese civilian and military leadership and told them as much. They secretly refused and then limited the Emperor's ability to communicate to the people because they knew if his message of surrender became public, the people would lay down arms and stop fighting. To great risk to the monarchy and Imperial guard, they captured a radio station where the emperor addressed the people that Japan would surrender. This is what effectively ended the war.

  • @thatguyfrommars3732
    @thatguyfrommars3732 Жыл бұрын

    8:40 - "The estimated average rate of replacements required for dead and evacuated wounded during the 18 months of the redeployment period [July 1945 to December 1946] is 43,000 per month." - "Redeployment of the United States Army after the Defeat of Germany, 15 January 1945." This only covers the Army alone, not the Navy and Marine Corps. Additionally, Japanese defenses, as discovered by Allied forces when they occupied Japan after the war, were stronger - not weaker - than previously expected.

  • @landsea7332

    @landsea7332

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes , after the casualty rate in Okinawa , this estimate is very realistic . 774,000 US causalities = 43,000 x 18 months . ... and this is just the US casualty rate , it doesn't include Japanese civilians and combatants . Harry Truman's estimate sounds accurate too . It would have been an " Okinawa from one end of Japan to the other." .

  • @thatguyfrommars3732

    @thatguyfrommars3732

    9 ай бұрын

    @@landsea7332 Bear in mind that number doesn't include men with light wounds who would be treated in theater or casualties to the Navy and Marine Corps. Add those back in and you're easily over a million in total, though the scope of the forecast includes both preliminary and concurrent operations to the actual landings in Japan itself, for example conquest of the remaining Ryukyu islands and Army operations in China-Burma-India.

  • @pastorofmuppets4552
    @pastorofmuppets4552 Жыл бұрын

    Japan didn’t surrender because of the atomic bomb, Japan surrendered because of the atomic bombs.

  • @ScooterinAB

    @ScooterinAB

    9 ай бұрын

    Except it didn't. We've known this for nearly 100 years. Japan was already defeated. It already tried to surrender. And when the USSR's nonaggression pact ended, time ran out. Japan could keep lying to itself about the US, but it couldn't lie about a largely unexhausted Russian army entering the war. The war was over long before that happened. It's just the fighting that hadn't ended yet.

  • @Rastlov
    @Rastlov9 ай бұрын

    I was taught that if Operation Downfall (amphibious assault of Japan) proceeded, the US fleet would have taken heavy casualties from a typhoon. I had never heard that Russia figured into the surrender. Thank you for the information.

  • @corey2232
    @corey22329 ай бұрын

    You should also remember that American scientists developing the bomb suggested to the president that they share the information with other allies, including the Soviet Union, but Winston Churchill was furious about it. Though the US was very much aware of the post war realities facing them with the USSR, they weren't yet at a point where they were seen as enemies. But from Japan's perspective, the non-military leadership voiced concern about a USSR occupation, and wanted to accept US surrender terms to avoid it. The US was also aware of what would happen if the Soviets committed to a mainland invasion, and what their demands would be for their contributions. Even if you disagree with the use of the atomic bombs, a Japan divided between the US & USSR occupations would inevitably lead to an ever worse Cold War conflict like in Germany or Korea, or possibly even Vietnam down the line (a front for another proxy war). At the very least, Japan was allowed to reorganize & rebuild into what it has become today, which is very fortunate for everyone.

  • @peterc4082

    @peterc4082

    3 ай бұрын

    The USSR was just as evil as Japan and Germany.

  • @d.e.b.b5788
    @d.e.b.b5788 Жыл бұрын

    I find it absolutely amazing, that anyone believes that the party which was the initial aggressor, and guilty of so many atrocities, should, at the moment of surrender, be the one to dictate the terms of surrender.

  • @michaelebbage9166

    @michaelebbage9166

    Жыл бұрын

    You haven't studied much history, if you can point to one side as the initial aggressor. It always depends how far back you choose to go. Was an oil embargo an act of aggression? Was Commodore Perry's gunboat diplomacy an act of aggression? Japan was far from innocent, but it didn't just decide to bomb pearl harbour for no reason.

  • @Johnny-ew4dg

    @Johnny-ew4dg

    Жыл бұрын

    Solely due to how the Japanese treated people who were not Japanese during the second world war is why I have no issues with Japan being nuked twice at that time. The Japanese are really cool now tho.

  • @BenDver

    @BenDver

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Johnny-ew4dg imagine thinking that the death of many innocent people is justified because of their government’s decisions. You’re disgusting.

  • @DougieFrank

    @DougieFrank

    9 ай бұрын

    @@michaelebbage9166 I wonder how much you have studied when you seem to be confusing economic sanctions with an act of war.

  • @michaelebbage9166

    @michaelebbage9166

    9 ай бұрын

    @@DougieFrank the Pacific fleet moved to Pearl Harbor in direct response to Japan - otherwise they wouldn't have been there to attack. At the time, 80% of Japan's oil imports came from the US. The US, even today, will happily bomb a country to protect 5% of its oil supply....

  • @TheRealMjb2k
    @TheRealMjb2k Жыл бұрын

    In addition to my previous comment, while the military leaders might have been shocked more so by the Soviets than the bombs (although unclear how much so or if at all), the personal decision by Hirohito almost certainly makes me believe the bombs had an emotional affect on him in a way the invasion of Manchuria couldn’t. It’s clear from his quotes that he felt the gravity of the situation, and that he also knew that there was a strong possibility of Soviet invasion given their allegiance with the US and UK.

  • @jona.scholt4362

    @jona.scholt4362

    Жыл бұрын

    I think a way to look at it would be; How much does the outcome change if one happened but not the other? I agree with your previous post the they are not mutually exclusive. But if you look at it with the question I posted I think it is pretty clear that the Soviet invasion was the greater factor. I'd also say that the bombs were used more as a message to the Soviets than as a weapon with practical purposes. We did after all more thoroughly destroy Japanese cities with incendiaries than we did with the bomb. The threat of a Soviet Hokkaido, even if the Russian amphibious capabilities in the Pacific were absolutely pathetic, gave the bombs a political use. Just one small group of soldiers on Hokkaido would've created North Japan and South Japan. Not saying that justifies their use; I think the whole, "It will save American lives in a invasion" as a reason is pretty much just a line to make their use more acceptable to the American public.

  • @TheRealMjb2k

    @TheRealMjb2k

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jona.scholt4362 the thing about the message argument is that Truman had already hinted to Stalin (and Stalin already knew anyhow) about the bomb. I don’t deny that could have been flowing through Truman’s head when he made the ultimate decision, but I believe he made the decision to end the war over sending a message to the Soviets.

  • @pax6833

    @pax6833

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jona.scholt4362 Before the war was over Stalin proposed landing on Hokkaido and Zhukov stated it was simply not even possible to do it. So that was never really going to happen.

  • @ernestcline2868

    @ernestcline2868

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jona.scholt4362 You have to look at things from an ahistoric perspective to think many Americans in 1945 would have found using the atomic bomb against Japan unacceptable. Indeed, I'd be willing to say that if anything, more were disappointed that rather than Tokyo or Kyoto, two relatively unimportant cities got nuked. It was more a case of "build it and they will come" than anything else that led to their use.

  • @ResidentEyebrowAppreciator

    @ResidentEyebrowAppreciator

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the nuke sobered Japanese leadership to he fact that they are indeed not immortal and could lose the war; this sober mindset now looked to Manchuria and realized how screwed they really were.

  • @dellcruz2818
    @dellcruz28186 ай бұрын

    My father a filipino.. Bataan veteran USAFEE was recalled and retrained.. for japan invation... Philippine Army will join forces with US. Today .. though philippine govt or president change every election.. the Philippine Army remains an allly of US army because somewhere in the past 1942 compact of friendship sealed in blood in Bataan will never be forgotten.

  • @brianholloway1451
    @brianholloway14519 ай бұрын

    I am now old and have been extremely lucky to have a talk to one of the people involved in dropping the bomb at Hiroshima. He was an amazing photographer of hummingbirds. As we spent a fair amount of time at Atherton tablelands also with Norman chatter and wildlife photographer. We got onto the subject of dropping the bomb and because he was a nuclear scientist he gave us some very interesting insights. And what actually went on. This nuclear bomb was a little different than the others. They made it a little different it had more power and Eric suggested that they didn't really know if this was going to actually cause a complete chain reaction and burn the planet. The people that were around the conversation were absolutely in shock. We could not believe that they dropped this bomb not knowing what it really could do I was absolutely shocked. But recently what shocked me even more is what's coming after the cashless society it is called the Sunday law which is probably more destructive than the atomic bomb and who is behind the Sunday law has also killed more than 50 million people already

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge2085 Жыл бұрын

    Intriguing. Why not a combination of both factors; the Atomic bombs AND the Soviet invasion, plus a host of other factors as well?

  • @TheEvilmooseofdoom

    @TheEvilmooseofdoom

    Жыл бұрын

    That's likely closer to the reality.

  • @jonmcgee6987

    @jonmcgee6987

    Жыл бұрын

    I would add the blockade caused by mines and the U.S submarine force. Cutting off nearly all imports to Japan.

  • @nvelsen1975

    @nvelsen1975

    Жыл бұрын

    The Russian argument (here called revionist) proposes that this was the MAIN reason, and everything else was secondary. The 'revionists' argue that for Japan's leadership 'The Russians have beaten up a handful of Korean forced-conscripts in a wasteland far away but will be confined to the continent since Russians have no navy' was more of a shock to them than everything else that had happened to Japan. Things like Japanese losing more to strategic bombing in 6 months, than Germany did in 5 years.

  • @Rayden440

    @Rayden440

    Жыл бұрын

    Because USSR had very limited naval power in the Pacific, and they have no experience with any amphibious landing during their war with Germany. So tell me how would the USSR ever invade Japan's mainland?

  • @emilybaxterthecartoonywitc1805
    @emilybaxterthecartoonywitc180511 ай бұрын

    I heard the Emperor had recorded Japan's surrender days before the bombing, but his General's delayed its delivery, because they didn't want to surrender

  • @ScooterinAB

    @ScooterinAB

    9 ай бұрын

    That appears to be correct. The failed coup on the Emperor's seems to have been to destroy that recording and the seize the Privy Seal.

  • @shannonfreeman3655

    @shannonfreeman3655

    9 ай бұрын

    @@campbellpaul I think the second bomb was dropped to show Russia that we have the bombs in quantity, and to not push further in Europe.

  • @s.henrlllpoklookout5069

    @s.henrlllpoklookout5069

    8 ай бұрын

    Hirohito specifically mentioned the atomic bombs in his surrender broadcast

  • @emilybaxterthecartoonywitc1805

    @emilybaxterthecartoonywitc1805

    8 ай бұрын

    @@s.henrlllpoklookout5069 yes true, but the documentary I watched, said the first one was done days before, which was intercepted by high command, so it wouldn't be delivered. Not sure how accurate it is, but had compelling evidence offered

  • @yapolloable

    @yapolloable

    7 ай бұрын

    source: trust me bro

  • @anthonyhughes8026
    @anthonyhughes80269 ай бұрын

    This is amazing reporting/history. Bravo. Thank you.

  • @ragazziita
    @ragazziita9 ай бұрын

    "Think of the rivers of blood spilled by all those generals and emperors so that in glory and in triumph they could become the momentary masters of a fraction of a dot. Think of the endless cruelties visited by the inhabitants of one corner of the dot on scarcely distinguishable inhabitants of some other corner of the dot. How frequent their misunderstandings, how eager they are to kill one another, how fervent their hatreds"

  • @donaldsmith3048
    @donaldsmith304811 ай бұрын

    The belief of most people at the end of the war was that the Japanese would fight to the last man woman and child. I lived as a child in Japan in 1949-1950. All the American people I know of at that time believed that Japan would not give up as long as they had any fight left. The Fight on the islands showed this. Most did not surrender, but fought to the death or killed themselves rather than surrender! Women and children jumped off cliffs rather than surrender!

  • @mizzury54

    @mizzury54

    9 ай бұрын

    If you read up on those events , those women and children jumped because of propaganda that they would be tortured and abused by the Americans if they did surrender. And why wouldn't they keep that suicidal attitude when the country actually surrendered ? I haven't read any accounts of mass suicides of civilians in Japan prior to or after occupation.