From the AFP:
“Nagasaki marks 75 years since
atomic bombing”
The Japanese city of Nagasaki on
Sunday commemorates the 75th anniversary of its destruction by a US atomic
bomb, with the coronavirus pandemic forcing a scaling back of ceremonies. Nagasaki
was flattened in an atomic inferno three days after Hiroshima -- twin nuclear
attacks that rang in the nuclear age and gave Japan the bleak distinction of
being the only country to be struck by atomic weapons. Early Sunday, people attended
a mass held in memory of victims at Urakami Church, near the site of the
bombing, while others took part in a memorial service at the city's Peace Park.
The number of participants has been reduced to roughly one tenth the figure in
previous years, with proceedings broadcast live online in Japanese and English.
Terumi Tanaka, 88, who survived
the Nagasaki bombing when he was 13 at his house on a hillside, remembers the
moment everything went white with a flash of light, and the aftermath. "I
saw many people with terrible burns and wounds evacuating ... people who were
already dead in a primary school-turned shelter," Tanaka told AFP in a
recent interview, saying his two aunts died. Atomic bomb survivors
"believe that the world must abandon nuclear arms because we never want
younger generations to experience the same thing", he said. Tanaka
suspects people have become complacent, believing another nuclear weapon will
not be used. "Human beings possess about 13,000 nuclear bombs now. Our
question is how on Earth are we allowing that?" he said. "Do people
think they will never be used at all? You never know, really you never
know." The remembrance ceremonies come as worries linger over the nuclear
threat from North Korea and growing tensions between the US and China over
issues including security and trade.
The US dropped the first atomic
bomb on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, killing around 140,000 people. The toll
includes those who survived the explosion itself but died soon after from
radiation exposure. Three days later, the US dropped a plutonium bomb on the
port city of Nagasaki, killing 74,000 people. Japan announced its surrender in
World War II on August 15, 1945. The United States has never acceded to demands
in Japan for an apology for the loss of innocent lives in the atomic bombings,
which many Western historians believe were necessary to bring a quick end to
the war and avoid a land invasion that could have been even more costly. Others
see the attacks as unnecessary and even experimental atrocities. Last year,
Pope Francis met with several survivors on visits to Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
paying tribute to the "unspeakable horror" suffered by the victims. In
2016, Barack Obama became the first sitting US president to visit Hiroshima. He
offered no apology for the attack but embraced survivors and called for a world
free of nuclear weapons.
^ The Japanese of today (as well
as everyone else around the world who tries to spin this into a martyrdom example)
need to remember that the US would not have dropped the Atomic Bomb on Nagasaki
if the Japanese Government had surrendered following the Atomic Bombing of
Hiroshima several days earlier. The 80,000 dead in Nagasaki is due to the
brainwashed, zealot and suicidal attitudes of the Japanese people in 1945. They
saw surrender as weak and killed many foreigners (civilians and soldiers) that
surrendered to them. I said it before and I will continue to say it: the US was
100% in the right to drop the Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima on August 6th
and then again on August 9th on Nagasaki when the Japanese refused
to surrender. The Japanese were just lucky that we didn’t drop a third Atomic
Bomb on them since it took them so long to eventually surrender (August 15th.)
The only victims in all of this are the Forced Laborers, the Forced Sex Slaves,
the Foreign POWs and the Foreign Civilian Prisoners that were killed or wounded
during the bombings – not the Japanese people themselves. No matter how many
years go by you can not try and spin history to make the aggressor the victim.
^
https://news.yahoo.com/nagasaki-marks-75-years-since-033852438.html
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