QUESTION: You said you did your own research on the two atomic bombs dropped on Japan and you saw gaps. Would you reveal what those gaps were for those of us who are curious?
EG
ANSWER: What I discovered was that there were no specific orders from Truman. The initial authorization was given in late July 1945 while Truman was at the Potsdam Conference. There was no presidential order to drop two specific, individual attacks. Truman granted the military authority to use atomic bombs as they became available, and at their discretion. They were to target military and industrial war facilities. The timing and specific targets were left to the military, primarily to General Carl Spaatz (1891-1974), the commander of the U.S. Army Strategic Air Forces at that time, not Truman.
This statement was propaganda at at best highly misleading. Hiroshima was a city with a significant civilian population, though it did contain military headquarters. To me, Truman lied to the world. Shortly after the bombing of Nagasaki, he famously ordered a halt to further atomic attacks without his express permission. I believe this confirmed the discretionary gap that military made the decision not Truman. In a memo to his cabinet, he wrote, “The thought of wiping out another 100,000 people was too horrible. He didn’t like the idea of killing, as he said, ‘all those kids.'” This is one of the clearest indications that the human cost weighed on him but he covered his ass.
In a response to a critique from religious leaders, in a letter to Federal Council of Churches (1946), Truman wrote:
“I was greatly disturbed over the unwarranted attack by the Japanese on Pearl Harbor… I was disturbed over the loss of life but not any more than I was over the loss of life in the attacks on the Normandy beaches… The atomic bomb ended the war and thereby saved the loss of millions of lives… It was a terrible decision. But I made it. And I made it to save 250,000 boys from the United States.“
Here, he acknowledges the loss of life but immediately contextualizes it within the broader, and bloodier, framework of total war. If we look at his private journals and later life, he occasionally expressed more somber reflections. For example, in a 1958 diary entry, he referred to the atom bomb as “the worst thing ever discovered,” and pondered the need to control it for the sake of peace. However, he never retreated from his core position that using it in 1945 was the correct decision for no politicians will EVER admit a mistake of in this case he gave discretion that should NEVER have been granted.


