The Pros And Cons Of The Enola Gay Controversy

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Enola Gay Controversy Throughout the devastating years of World War II, hundreds of thousands of people lost their lives on the western front. Although there were numerous casualties, nothing can compare to the incidents that ended World War II, the dropping of the most destructive weapon known to mankind, the atomic bomb in Japan. In the years following the incident, much controversy had begun to arise when historians decided to construct an exhibit to commemorate the United States’ victory over the Japanese empire by displaying the air plane that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Enola Gay. As Linenthal stated, “For fifty years, these two stories – of a weapon that brought peace and victory, and of a weapon that brought destruction and fear to the world – rested uneasily in American consciousness” (Linenthal 2). Linenthal, throughout his writing, displays …show more content…

The Enola Gay represents the effort it took for the United States to defeat Japan. As one gentleman from North Carolina stated “that he also owed his life to the atomic bomb, since if his future father had died in an invasion of Japan, he, the son, would have never been conceived” (Linenthal 137). The caller further on argued that “the bomb saved not only the lives of untold thousands of American soldiers who might have perished in the invasion, had it occurred, but also the lives of all the children they subsequently fathered, and by now presumably their grandchildren and even great grandchildren” (Linenthal 137). Even though President Truman did not possess the same ideas on foreign policy when compared to FDR, in the eyes of veterans, the President’s use of the atomic bomb not only saved the lives on many Americans, but also many Japanese who could have potentially died from continuing the

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