The Decision That Launched the Enola Gay
By John T. Correll, Editor in Chief
Air Force Magazine - April, 1994, Pg. 30
AS VICE PRESIDENT, Harry Truman had not known about
the development of the atomic bomb. On the day he
assumed the presidency at the death of Franklin D.
Roosevelt, Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson had spoken
to him briefly and told him that the United States was
working on a weapon of extraordinary power. Twelve days
later, on April 25, 1945, Stimson and Maj. Gen. Leslie
R. Groves, director of the Manhattan Project, briefed
President Truman in detail on the secret of the atomic
bomb.
The bomb had not yet been tested. Once it was proved
to work, Truman would consult with allies and advisors,
but the decision on whether to use it would be his.
Truman said later that he had no great difficulty in
reaching the decision. The question before him was how
to end the war and save lives. He regarded the atomic
bomb as a weapon -- an awe-some one, to be sure
-- but still a weapon to be used. On Truman's orders,
the B-29 Enola Gay dropped the first atomic bomb
on Hiroshima August 6. Another B-29, Bockscar,
dropped the second bomb on Nagasaki August 9.
The unconditional surrender of Japan followed on
August 15. For the next fifty years, however, Truman's
decision to use the atomic bomb would be questioned
again and again, and the retroactive judgment would
often be harsh. To understand the decision, it is
necessary to examine the circumstances and the options
as Truman saw them in the summer of 1945.
World War II would eventually cost the United States
more than a million casualties. It consumed the nation's
energies and resources to an extent never experienced
before or since. When Truman became President in April
1945, US casualties were averaging more than 900 a
day. In the Pacific, the toll from each successive
battle rose higher.
The war ended in Europe on V-E Day, May 9, but Japan
fought on. The eventual military outcome of the Pacific
war had been effectively sealed since the US took the
Marianas in 1944, but the Japanese refused to accept
defeat.
In 1945, the war had finally come home to Japan.
B-29s from Guam, Saipan, and Tinian were striking the
Japanese homeland regularly, systematically destroying
the industrial cities on Honshu and Kyushu. The US Navy
and the Army Air Forces had cut off Japan's supply
lines. Nevertheless, the war threatened to drag on into
1946. US and Allied forces prepared for a difficult and
costly invasion of the Japanese islands.
Bushido and Kamikaze
As Japan's desperation worsened, the ferocity of the
fighting intensified. The code of bushido -- "the
way of the warrior" -- was deeply ingrained. Surrender
was dishonorable. Defeated Japanese leaders preferred to
take their own lives in the painful samurai ritual of
seppuku (called hara kiri in the West.
Warriors who surrendered were not deemed worthy of
regard or respect. This explains, in part, the Japanese
mistreatment, torture, and summary execution of POWs).
There was no shortage of volunteers for kamikaze
missions or of troops willing to serve as human
torpedoes or to ride to honorable death on piloted buzz
bombs.
Japan was dead on its feet in every way but one: The
Japanese still had the means -- and the determination --
to make the invading Allied forces pay a terrible price
for the final victory. Since the summer of 1944, the
armed forces had been drawing units back to Japan in
anticipation of a final stand there.
The Japanese were prepared to absorb massive
casualties. According to Gen. Korechika Anami, the War
Minister, the military could commit 2.3 million troops.
Commanders were authorized to call up four million civil
servants to augment the troops. The Japanese Cabinet
extended the draft to cover most civilians (men from
ages fifteen to sixty and women from seventeen to
forty-five).
The defending force would have upwards of 10,000
aircraft, most of them kamikaze. Suicide boats
and human torpedoes would defend the beaches. The
Japanese Army planned to attack the Allied landing force
with a three-to-one advantage in manpower. If that
failed, the militia and the people of Japan were
expected to carry on the fight. Civilians were being
taught to strap explosives to their bodies and throw
themselves under advancing tanks. Construction
battalions had fortified the shorelines of Kyushu and
Honshu with tunnels, bunkers, and barbed wire.
As late as August 1945, the Japanese Army thought it
could destroy most of the invading force and that there
was a fair chance the invasion could be defeated.
Invasion Plans and Casualty Estimates
US military opinion was divided on what it would
require to induce Japan's surrender and finally bring
the war to an end. Gen. George C. Marshall, Army Chief
of Staff, and Gen. Douglas MacArthur, commanding US
forces in the western Pacific, believed an invasion of
the Japanese home islands would be necessary.
Gen. H. H. Arnold, commander of the Army Air Forces,
and Maj. Gen. Curtis E. LeMay (whose XXI Bomber Command
in the Marianas was pounding Japan relentlessly)
believed that B-29 conventional bombing could do the
job. Adm. William D. Leahy, the President's Chief of
Staff, and Adm. Ernest J. King, Chief of Naval
Operations, were not fully in accord with Marshall and
MacArthur, either.
Truman was aware of the differences among the
military leaders but was satisfied that they had been
reconciled with Marshall. Furthermore, Truman respected
Marshall deeply and regarded him as the nation's chief
strategist, so Marshall's opinion carried particular
weight.
The plan called for an invasion in two stages.
Operation Olympic, a land invasion of Kyushu,
southernmost of the Japanese main islands, was to begin
November 1, 1945. Operation Coronet, planned for March
1, 1946, would be an invasion of Honshu, the largest
island. The Joint Chiefs expected the two-stage invasion
to involve some five million troops, most of them
American. The invasion was to be preceded by a massive
aerial bombardment, reaching maximum intensity before
troops went ashore on Honshu.
Casualty estimates varied. Military planners figured
the invasion of Kyushu alone would take between 31,000
and 50,000 US casualties in the first thirty days and
that the combined US losses from Operations Coronet and
Olympic would exceed 500,000. President Truman believed
that, unless he used the atomic bomb, an invasion was
necessary and that the casualties would be enormous.
Strategic Bombing
The capture of the Marianas in the summer of 1944 had
given the AAF bases 1,300 miles from Tokyo. B-29s from
Guam, Saipan, and Tinian could reach all the major
cities in Japan, including the big industrial cities on
Honshu. B-29s operated at altitudes too high for
Japanese fighters to stop them.
In January 1945, General LeMay took over XXI Bomber
Command. On the night of March 9-10, he launched a
massive mission -- 334 B-29s -- to drop incendiary bombs
on Tokyo. It was the most destructive raid in history.
The official casualty report listed 83,793 dead and
40,918 wounded. Sixteen square miles of Tokyo were
destroyed that night. In Operation Starvation, conducted
concurrently with the bombing campaign, B-29s mined the
waters along the Japanese coast, cutting off maritime
transportation and the import of food and raw materials.
The long-range B-29, which first struck Japan in June
1944 from bases in China, inspired fear and awe. The
Japanese called it "B-san," or "Mr. B." General
Arnold, on a visit to Guam in June 1945, expressed his
belief that the B-29 campaign "would enable our
infantrymen to walk ashore on Japan with their rifles
slung."
The B-29s systematically laid waste to Japan's large
industrial cities. LeMay told Arnold there would soon be
nothing left to bomb or burn, except for Kyoto (the old
capital) and four other cities -- Hiroshima, Nagasaki,
Niigata, and Kokura -- that were barred for routine B-29
missions. These four were, of course, on the target list
for the "special bomb."
The Emperor Takes a Hand
By the summer of 1945, the Japanese government had
split into a peace faction (including Prime Minister
Kantaro Suzuki) and a war faction (General Anami and the
military). The war faction was powerful, but the peace
faction was gaining an extraordinary ally: the Emperor,
Hirohito. Regarded as divine and the embodiment of the
Japanese state, the Emporer supposedly "lived beyond the
clouds," above politics and government. In fact, he was
interested and well informed. While he did not
interfere, he was often present at important meetings.
The B-29 missions strengthened Hirohito's growing
belief that Japan should not be devastated further in a
losing cause. On March 18, he toured areas of Tokyo that
had been firebombed March 9-10. The experience persuaded
him that the war must end as quickly as possible.
Hirohito shattered precedent at a meeting of the
Supreme War Council June 22, openly stating his
criticism of the military: "We have heard enough of this
determination of yours to fight to the last soldiers. We
wish that you, leaders of Japan, will now strive to
study the ways and means to conclude the war. In so
doing, try not to be bound by the decisions you have
made in the past."
Anami and his faction managed to sidestep the
Emperor's rebuke. All concerned -- including the Emperor
-- hoped that the Soviet Union could be persuaded to act
as an intermediary and help end the war on a more
acceptable basis than unconditional surrender. The
rationale for this, as the Japanese saw it, was that
Japan's neutrality had allowed the Russians to
concentrate on their real enemy, the Germans, and that
in the postwar world, the Soviet Union would find a
strong Japan useful as a buffer between its Asian
holdings and the United States.
Through July and into August, Japan continued to hope
it could negotiate terms, including concessions for
control of the armed forces and the future of its
military leaders. The passage of time and the repeated
publication of pictures from Hiroshima and Nagasaki have
transformed Japan's image to that of victim in World War
II. In the 1940s, Japan's image was different.
The Allies had imposed unconditional surrender on
Germany. The United States was not inclined to make
deals with the Japanese regime responsible for Pearl
Harbor, the Bataan death march, the forced labor camps,
habitual mistreatment of prisoners of war, and a
fifteen-year chain of atrocities stretching from
Manchuria to the East Indies.
Options
Basically, President Truman and the armed forces had
three strategic options for inducing the Japanese
surrender:
Continue the firebombing and blockade. After
the war, the Strategic Bombing Survey would conclude
that without the atomic bomb or invasion, Japan would
have accepted unconditional surrender, probably by
November and definitely by the end of the year. In 1945,
however, the AAF was not able to persuade General
Marshall that this strategy would work.
Invasion. Neither Marshall nor Truman was
convinced that LeMay's B-29 bombing campaign could bring
a prompt end to the war. In their view, the only
conventional alternative was invasion.
Use the atomic bomb. Within a few years after
World War II, the specter of global nuclear war
(combined with visions of Hiroshima) would imbue the
bomb with special horror. In 1945, the perspective was
different. Doubts about use of the atomic bomb were
mostly of a strategic nature, reflecting the belief that
an invasion might not be necessary or that bombing and
blockade would be sufficient. (Use of the bomb to end
the war eventually saved Japanese casualties, too. The
incendiary bombs from B-29s were taking a terrible toll.
The attack on Tokyo in March killed more people than
either the Hiroshima or Nagasaki bombs.)
Truman was acutely aware that hesitation would be
paid for in blood. The Japanese refusal to surrender led
to 48,000 American casualties in the battle for Okinawa
between April and June. Kamikaze attacks in that
battle sank twenty-eight US ships and did severe damage
to hundreds more. The Japanese force on Okinawa was only
a fraction the size of the one waiting in the home
islands.
Advice About the Bomb
As discussions continued, US authorities made
preparations for the decision that seemed most likely.
In May, a special committee in Washington nominated four
urban industrial centers -- Kokura, Hiroshima, Niigata,
and Kyoto -- as targets. Secretary of War Stimson struck
Kyoto (Japan's capital for more than 1,000 years) from
the list. The military picked Nagasaki as the fourth
potential target.
The Interim Committee on S-1 (a code term for the
Manhattan Project) told the President that the bomb
should be used against Japan and that a demonstration
explosion would not be sufficient. Reasons included the
possibility that the bomb might not work, that the
Japanese might think the demonstration was faked, and
that there was no way to make the demonstration
convincing enough to end the war.
Military leaders accompanied the President to the Big
Three meeting at Potsdam in July, and discussions
continued there. In his memoirs, Truman said that
Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, Mr. Stimson, Admiral
Leahy, General Marshall, and General Arnold reached a
consensus at Potsdam that the bomb should be used. In
fact, the advice was not so clear-cut. Although Arnold
supported the decision, he repeated his view that use of
the bomb was not a military necessity.
Casualties were increasing with every day that Japan
refused to surrender. Truman's biographer, David
McCullough, writes, "Had the bomb been ready in March
and deployed by Roosevelt, had it shocked Japan into
surrender then, it would have already saved nearly fifty
thousand American lives lost in the Pacific in the time
since, not to say a vastly larger number of Japanese
lives."
During the Potsdam conference, Truman received word
that the "Fat Man" bomb had been tested successfully at
Alamogordo, N.M., on July 16. On July 25, the War
Department relayed Truman's order that the 509th
Composite Group should deliver the first "special bomb"
as soon after August 3 as weather permitted on one of
the four target cities.
Among those at Potsdam staunchly supporting the
decision to use the bomb was British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill. Years later, Churchill still believed
that Truman's decision had been right.
The Potsdam Proclamation, issued July 26 by the heads
of government of the US, UK, and China, warned of "utter
devastation of the Japanese homeland" unless Japan
surrendered unconditionally. "We shall brook no delay,"
it said. The same day, the cruiser Indianapolis
delivered the U-235 core of the "Little Boy" bomb to
Tinian.
On July 28, Prime Minister Suzuki declared the
Potsdam Proclamation a "thing of no great value" and
said "We will simply mokusatsu it." Literally,
mokusatsu means "kill with silence." Suzuki said
later the meaning he intended was "no comment." The
Allies took the statement as rejection of the Potsdam
Proclamation.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
The unit that would deliver the atomic bombs, the
509th Composite Group, had been organized in 1944. Crews
were hand-picked by the commander, Col. Paul W. Tibbets,
Jr. In the early morning hours of August 6, the Enola
Gay, flown by Tibbets, took off from Tinian. The
primary target was Hiroshima, the seventh largest city
in Japan, an industrial and military shipping center on
the Inland seacoast of Honshu. At precisely 8:16 a.m.,
the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima. More than half of the
city was destroyed in a flash, and about 80,000 people
were killed.
Reaction by the Japanese Cabinet was split between
the war faction and the peace faction. With the cabinet
at an impasse, Hirohito took a more assertive position.
On August 8, the Emperor instructed Foreign Minister
Shigenori Togo to tell Prime Minister Suzuki that Japan
must accept the inevitable and terminate the war with
the least possible delay and that the tragedy of
Hiroshima must not be repeated.
Anami could not bring himself to flatly defy the
Emperor, but he continued to argue his position
passionately. Hard-liners in the military were plotting
to kill Suzuki and others of the peace faction. Anami
was not part of the plot -- although his brother-in-law,
Masahiko Takeshita, was a ringleader.
The Soviet Union, seeing an opportunity for easy
pickings with limited risk, declared war on Japan August
8. Despite the desperation of a war suddenly active on
two fronts, the Japanese were not quite ready to
capitulate.
The primary target for the second atomic bomb mission
on August 9 was Kokura, but the aimpoint was obscured by
smoke drifting from a nearby city that had been bombed
two days earlier. Bockscar diverted to Nagasaki
on the western coast of Kyushu. Nagasaki was heavily
industrialized. The Mitsubishi conglomerate operated a
shipyard, electric equipment production facilities,
steel factories, and an arms plant there. The aimpoint
for Bockscar was the Mitsubishi Steel and Arms
Works. The bomb exploded on Nagasaki at 11:02 a.m.,
killing 40,000.
In his radio address August 9, President Truman said
the United States had used the atomic bomb "against
those who attacked us without warning at Pearl Harbor,
against those who have starved and beaten and executed
American prisoners of war, against those who have
abandoned all pretense of obeying international laws of
warfare. We have used it to shorten the agony of war, in
order to save the lives of thousands and thousands of
young Americans. We shall continue to use it until we
completely destroy Japan's power to make war. Only a
Japanese surrender will stop us."
"Bear the Unbearable"
Japanese deliberation on August 9 lasted all day and
into the night. At a cabinet meeting that began at 2:30
p.m. -- hours after the second atomic bomb had fallen --
Anami said, "We cannot pretend to claim that victory is
certain, but it is far too early to say the war is lost.
That we will inflict severe losses on the enemy when he
invades Japan is certain, and it is by no means
impossible that we may be able to reverse the situation
in our favor, pulling victory out of defeat." Finally,
at 2:00 a.m. on August 10, the Emperor told the Big Six
meeting (the Supreme War Council) that "the time has
come to bear the unbearable" and that "I give my
sanction to the proposal to accept the Allied
Proclamation on the basis outlined by the Foreign
Minister."
At 4:00 a.m., the cabinet adopted a message for radio
transmission to Allied powers, saying in part: "The
Japanese Government [is] ready to accept the terms
enumerated in the joint declaration which was issued at
Potsdam on July 26th, 1945, by the heads of the
Governments of the United States, Great Britain, and
China, and later subscribed to by the Soviet Government,
with the understanding that the said declaration does
not comprise any demand which prejudices the
prerogatives of His Majesty as a Sovereign Ruler."
The Allied response August 11 said that the
"authority of the Emperor and the Japanese Government to
rule the state shall be subject to the Supreme Commander
of the Allied Powers" and that "the Emperor shall
authorize and ensure the signature by the Government of
Japan and the Japanese General Headquarters of the
surrender terms."
V-J Day
The Anami faction continued to haggle, but at noon on
August 14, the Emperor asked the cabinet to prepare an
Imperial Rescript of Surrender. He said that "a peaceful
end to the war is preferable to seeing Japan
annihilated." The plotters engaged in various disruptive
actions in the hours that followed, but it was over. At
11:30 p.m. the Emperor recorded his radio message for
broadcast the following day. General Anami, preferring
to die rather than see Japan surrender, committed
seppuku at 5:00 a.m., August 15.
In the Imperial Rescript of Surrender, broadcast at
noon on August 15, Emperor Hirohito said, "Despite the
best that has been done by everyone -- the gallant
fighting of the military and naval forces, the diligence
and assiduity of Our servants of the State, and the
devoted service of Our one hundred million people -- the
war situation has developed not necessarily to Japan's
advantage, while the general trends of the world have
all turned against her interest.
"Moreover, the enemy has begun to employ a new and
most cruel bomb, the power of which to do damage is,
indeed, incalculable, taking the toll of many
innocent lives. Should We continue to fight, not only
would it result in an ultimate collapse and obliteration
of the Japanese nation, but also it would lead to the
total extinction of human civilization. [Emphasis
added.]
"Such being the case, how are We to save the millions
of Our subjects, or to atone Ourselves before the
hallowed spirits of Our Imperial Ancestors? This is the
reason why We have ordered the acceptance of the
provisions of the Joint Declaration of the Powers."
V-J Day was celebrated August 15. General MacArthur
accepted Japan's formal surrender September 2 on the
battleship Missouri in Tokyo Bay. The atomic bomb
did not win the war. Japan had been defeated already by
the land, sea, and air campaign that went before. It is
reasonable to conclude, however, that the bomb did force
the Japanese surrender -- and considerably sooner than
it would have occurred otherwise.
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