"Little Boy" and "Fat Man"

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The bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki proved to be fatal for the Japanese; the loss of the war and the irreplaceable loss of over 100,000 innocent lives. Prior to the bombing that occurred in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the U.S. had to develop the fatal weapon that would end the war against Japan. In the Manhattan Project (1940) the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers were tasked with the construction of the facilities needed for the top-secret project. Over the next several years the scientists worked on producing the key materials for the nuclear fission- Uranium and Plutonium. In the early morning of July 16, 1945, the Manhattan Project had its first successful test at the Trinity site at Alamogordo, New Mexico.
By this time the war in Europe had ended and America could focus on the war against Japan. However, Japan vowed to fight till the bitter end and refused to surrender despite clear indications that there was little to no chance of winning. Between mid-April 1945 and mid-July the Japanese forces managed to inflict Allies with casualties that measured to nearly half the casualties dealt in the three full years of war in the Pacific. Japan was a cornered animal and all animals are more deadly when cornered. General Douglas MacArthur and other top officers were in favor of bombing Japan and codenamed the plan “Operation Downfall”. They felt that if the war continued on its path then the casualties would skyrocket to over a million deaths. In order to avoid the predicted high casualty rate President Truman decided, against Secretary of War Henry Stimson, General Dwight Eisenhower and other Manhattan Project scientists, that using the atomic bomb would bring the war to a quick end. Truman’s Secretary of State believed that the devastat...

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...ns and would prove America’s military dominance in the postwar world, and lessened casualties among the Allied nations. Japan had their chance to surrender; the first was before the bombing in Hiroshima and the second occurred after. America and Japan are stubborn and proud nations, neither was willing to surrender which was understandable. If everyone wanted to avoid casualties then they wouldn’t have entered the war in the first place, war comes with the loss of lives for both sides, all nations involved in the war knew of the risks they had to take to win. Had Japan decided to surrender, even after the first bombing, then there wouldn’t have been so many casualties on their part. Therefore, America was justified in their reasoning, the dropping of the Atomic bomb prevented the estimated loss of over a million lives compared to the 135,000 lost due to the bombing.

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