It is worth noting that by this point in the war there wasn't that much of Tokyo left to bomb. More than 44km², or more than 50% of the city was destroyed. Estimates of deaths vary however we can assume they were well over 100,000.
Wiki. Imo the incindiary bombings of Tokyo and Dresden are much closer to war crimes than Hiroshima+Nagasaki.
I think that we have a duty to uphold our own morals even in the face of an enemy which doesn't. This is important to maintain our own moral legitimacy, if we don't do this then are we any better than them? Having said that, I believe that the A-bombings were moral.
While I believe in universal morals I am also a firm utilitarian. As a moral absolutist what would you do? Not go to war at all? Go to war but baulk at actually being victorious? I am genuinely interested.
The HSC is not a arbiter. It is (rightly or wrongly) routinely criticised as having a left-wing/revisionist bias, but more importantly it is high school.
Kudos for digging out some sources but tbh I've never heard of umbc before which does somewhat reduce it as an effective 'appeal to authority'.
The key here seems to be what compromise would be required. Even after the A-bombs and the Soviet invasion of Manchuria the hardliners were proposing a conditional surrender which specified: that Japan handle her own disarmament, that Japan deal with any Japanese war criminals, and that there be no occupation of Japan.
These terms were clearly unacceptable because they do not address the threat of Japan as a state. The hardliners version of conditional surrender was equivalent to saying "Lets create Weimar Germany". The Allies having been badly burnt by this once before (refer to Nazi Germany) were understandably never going to accept this. I feel that I need to reiterate that this was their version of conditional surrender
after the a-bombs and soviet entry.
Also as Iron mentioned earlier there was an attempted military coup to prevent surrender.
Seems to make the case for Japan being unwilling to surrender in an acceptable manner without a-bombing.
Documents could include books, journal article, primary material etc. The key would be that these should be from respected sources. I don't think that Iron really needs to provide sources to back-up his statement that Japan had an underlying philosophy of Imperialism, militarism, violence and genocide. Their bushido code, war crimes in China and treatment of POW really speak for themselves. However you feel about America it is plainly ridiculous to compare their actions to Imperial Japan.
War is the final way to resolve disputes, it should never be the first option however should always be available as the option of last resort. There are simply some circumstances in which it is required. While I don't necessarily agree with Iron's larger philosophy the guide he provides for casus belli is a good one.
Agreed that people need to bury the hatchet and I think it is reasonable to say that there is not a great deal of animosity between Australia and Japan today. I don't believe that anyone here has suggested that we bomb present day Japan into the stone age. There is however a difference between not holding a grudge and not acknowledging past transgressions. Japan has not sufficiently acknowledged it's war crimes and is not sufficiently educating it's citizens regarding them.
'We' as people are a product of our society, our society is a product of our collective history. Iron is correct that our history, including but not limited to wars, shape who we are today.
Reference?
Warning a city of an impeding bombing is not a particularly good strategy. What does the warning say? "To the authorities: could you please evacuate civilians but leave behind military-industrial targets. PS: please do not increase air defences."