- A very popular movie in Japan was Pride, The Fateful Moment,
which shows Prime Minister General Hideki Tojo in a favorable light. With six
others, he was hanged in 1968 as a war criminal. During his trial, his lawyers
stated to the International Tribunal for the Far East, the Asian version of
Nuremberg Trials, that Tojo's war crimes could not begin to approach the
dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The prosecutors
immediately objected, and censored their statements. That was the last time
there was any official recognition of the atomic bomb massacres in Japan.
Japanese officials have been effectively prevented from taking any stand on
this matter because the American military occupation, which officially ended in
1952 with the Treaty with Japan, was quietly continued. Today, 49,000 American
troops are still stationed in Japan, and there is no public discussion of the
crimes of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
-
- Cast of Characters
-
- The House of Rothschild; international bankers who made
enormous profits during the nineteenth century, and used their money to take
over governments.
-
- Bernard Baruch: New York agent of the Rothschilds who at the
turn of the century set up the tobacco trust, the copper trust and other trusts
for the Rothschilds. He became the grey eminence of the United States atomic
bomb program when his lackey, J. Robert Oppenheimner, became director of the
Los Alamos bomb development, and when his Washington lackey, James F. Byrnes,
advised Truman to drop the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
-
- Albert Einstein; lifelong Zionist who initiated the United
States' atomic bomb program with a personal letter to President Franklin D.
Roosevelt in 1939.
-
-
-
- The Secret History Of The Atomic Bomb
-
- SUBTITLE Why Hiroshima Was Destroyed - The Untold
Story
-
- By Eustace C. Mullins
-
- June 1998
-
- The world was stunned to learn that India has now tested
nuclear weapons. For many years, all nations have been concerned about the
proliferation of atomic explosives. Even in their distress, no one seems to be
interested in the historic or the psychological record of why these weapons
were developed, and what special breed of mankind devoted themselves to this
diabolical goal.
-
- Despite the lack of public interest, the record is clear, and
easily available to anyone who is interested. My interest in this subject,
dormant for many years was suddenly rekindled during my annual lecture tour in
Japan. My hosts had taken me to the city of Nagasaki for the first time.
Without telling me their plans, they entered the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum. I
thought it would be an interesting experience, but, to my surprise, when I
walked into the exhibition rooms, I was suddenly overcome by sadness. Realizing
that I was about to burst into tears, I moved away from my companions, and
stood biting my lip. Even so, it seemed impossible to control myself. I was
surrounded by the most gruesome objects, the fingers of a human hand fused with
glass, a photograph of the shadow of a man on a brick wall; the man had been
vaporized in the explosion .
-
- A NEW MISSION
-
- When I returned to the United States, I knew1 had to unearth
the sinister figures behind greatest of human catastrophes. It took many weeks
of research to uncover what turned out to be the most far-reaching conspiracy
of all time, the program of a few dedicated revolutionaries to seize control of
the entire world, by inventing the powerful weapon ever unveiled.
-
- The story begins in Germany. In the 1930s, Germany and Japan
had a number of scientists icing on the development of nuclear fission. In both
of these countries, their leaders sternly forbade them to continue their
research. Adolf Hitler said he would never allow anyone in Germany to work to
work on such an inhumane weapon.
-
- The Emperor of Japan let his scientists know that he would
never approve such a weapon. At that time the United States had no one working
on nuclear fission. The disgruntled German scientists contacted friends in the
United States, and were told that there was a possibility of government support
for their work here. As Don Beyer tells these immigrants to the United States
pushed their program.
-
- "Leo Szilard, together with his long time friends and fellow
Hungarian physicists, Eugene Wigner and Edward Teller, agreed that the
President must be warned; fission bomb tehnology was not so farfetched. The
Jewish emigres, now living in America, had personal experience of fascism in
Europe. In 1939, the three physicists enlisted the support of Albert Einstein,
letter dated August 2 signed by Einstein was delivered by Alexander Sachs to
Franklin D. Roosevelt at the White House on October 11, 39."
-
- CRIMINALS ON DISPLAY
-
- At the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum, photographs of two men are
prominently displayed; Albert Einstein, and J. Robert Oppenheimer, who
developed the atomic bomb at Los Alamos laboratories, New Mexico. Also on
display is a statement from General Eisenhower, who was then supreme Military
Commander, which is found in number of books about Eisenhower, and which can be
found on p.426, Eisenhower by Stephen E. Ambrose, Simon & Shuster, NY,
1983.
-
- "Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson first told Eisenhower of
the bomb's existence. Eisenhower was engulfed by "a feeling of depression'.
When Stimson said the United States proposed to use the bomb against Japan,
Eisenhower voiced 'my grave misgivings, first on the basis of my belief that
Japan was already defeated and that dropping the bomb was completely
unnecessary, and secondly because I thought that our country should avoid
shocking world opinion by the use (of atomic weapons).' Stimson was upset by
Eisenhower's attitude 'almost angrily refuting the reasons I gave for my quick
conclusion'. Three days later, Eisenhower flew to Berlin, where he met with
Truman and his principal advisors. Again Eisenhower recommended against using
the bomb, and again was ignored.
-
- Other books on Eisenhower state that he endangered his career
by his protests against the bomb, which the conspirators in the highest level
of the United States government had already sworn to use against Japan,
regardless of any military developments. Eisenhower could not have known that
Stimson was a prominent member of Skull and Bones at Yale, the Brotherhood of
Death, founded by the Russell Trust in 1848 as a bunch of the German
Illuminati, or that they had played prominent roles in organizing wars and
revolutions since that time. Nor could he have known that President Truman had
only had one job in his career, as a Masonic organizer for the State of
Missouri, and that the lodges he built up later sent him to the United States
Senate and then to the presidency.
-
- ATOMIC TERRORISM
-
- The man who set all this in motion was Albert Einstein, who
left Europe and came to the United States in October 1933. His wife said that
he "regarded human beings with detestation". He had previously corresponded
with Sigmund Freud about his projects of "peace" and "disarmament", although
Freud later said he did not believe that Einstein ever accepted any of his
theories. Einstein had a personal interest in Freud's work because his son
Eduard spent his life in mental institutions, undergoing both insulin therapy
and electroshock treatment, none of which produced any change in his
condition.
-
- When Einstien arrived in the United States, he was feted as a
famous scientist, and was invited to the White House by President and Mrs.
Roosevelt. He was soon deeply involved with Eleanor Roosevelt in her many
leftwing causes, in which Einstein heartily concurred. Some of Einstein's
biographers hail the modern era as "the Einstein Revolution" and "the Age of
Einstein", possibly because he set in motion the program of nuclear fission in
the United States. His letter to Roosevelt requesting that the government
inaugurate an atomic bomb program was obviously stirred by his lifelong
commitment to "peace and disarmament". His actual commitment was to Zionism;
Ronald W. Clark mentions in Einstein; His Life And Times, Avon, 1971, p.377,
"He would campaign with the Zionists for a Jewish homeland in Palestine." On
p.460, Clark quotes Einstein, "As a Jew I am from today a supporter of the
Jewish Zionist efforts." (1919) Einstein's letter to Roosevelt, dated august 2,
1939, was delivered personally to President Roosevelt by Alexander Sachs on
October 11. Why did Einstein enlist an intermediary to bring this letter to
Roosevelt, with whom he was on friendly terms? The atomic bomb program could
not be launched without the necessary Wall Street sponsorship. Sachs, a Russian
Jew, listed his profession as "economist" but was actually a bagman for the
Rothschilds, who regularly delivered large sums of cash to Roosevelt in the
White House. Sachs was an advisor to Eugene Meyer of the Lazard Freres
International Banking House, and also with Lehman Brothers, another well known
banker. Sachs' delivery of the Einstein letter to the White House let Roosevelt
know that the Rothschilds approved of the project and wished him to go full
speed ahead.
-
- A UNITED NATIONS PROJECT
-
- In May of 1945, the architects of postwar strategy, or, as
they liked to call themselves, the "Masters of the Universe", gathered in San
Francisco at the plush Palace Hotel to write the Charter for the United
Nations. Several of the principals retired for a private meeting in the
exclusive Garden Room. The head of the United States delegation had called this
secret meeting with his top aide, Alger Hiss, representing the president of
the United States and the Soviet KGB; John Foster Dulles, of the Wall Street
law firm of Sullivan and Cromwell, whose mentor, William Nelson Cromwell, had
been called a "professional revolutionary" on the floor of Congress; and W.
Averill Harriman, plenipotentiary extraordinary, who had spent the last two
years in Moscow directing Stalin's war for survival. These four men represented
the awesome power of the American Republic in world affairs, yet of the four,
only Secretary of State Edward Stettinius Jr., had a position authorized by the
Constitution. Stettinius called the meeting to order to discuss an urgent
matter; the Japanese were already privately suing for peace, which presented a
grave crisis. The atomic bomb would not be ready for several more months. "We
have already lost Germany," Stettinius said. "If Japan bows out, we will not
have a live population on which to test the bomb."
-
- "But, Mr. Secretary," said Alger Hiss, "no one can ignore the
terrible power of this weapon." "Nevertheless," said Stettinius, "our entire
postwar program depends on terrifying the world with the atomic bomb." "To
accomplish that goal," said John Foster Dulles, "you will need a very good
tally. I should say a million." "Yes," replied Stettinius, "we are hoping for a
million tally in Japan. But if they surrender, we won't have anything." "Then
you have to keep them in the war until the bomb is ready," said John Foster
Dulles. "That is no problem. Unconditional surrender." "They won't agree to
that," said Stettinius. "They are sworn to protect the Emperor." "Exactly,"
said John Foster Dulles. "Keep Japan in the war another three months, and we
can use the bomb on their cities; we will end this war with the naked fear of
all the peoples of the world, who will then bow to our will."
-
- Edward Stettinius Jr. was the son of a J.P. Morgan partner who
had been the world's largest munitions dealer in the First World War. He had
been named by J.P. Morgan to oversee all purchases of munitions by both France
and England in the United States throughout the war. John Foster Dulles was
also an accomplished warmonger. In 1933, he and his brother Allen had rushed
to Cologne to meet with Adolf Hitler and guaranteed him the funds to maintain
the Nazi regime. The Dulles brothers were representing their clients, Kuhn Loeb
Co., and the Rothschilds. Alger Hiss was the golden prince of the communist
elite in the united States. When he was chosen as head of the prestigious
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace after World War II, his nomination
was seconded by John Foster Dulles. Hiss was later sent to prison for perjury
for lying about his exploits as a Soviet espionage agent.
-
- This secret meeting in the Garden Room was actually the first
military strategy session of the United Nations, because it was dedicated to
its mission of exploding the world's first atomic weapon on a living
population. It also forecast the entire strategy of the Cold War, which lasted
forty-three years, cost American taxpayers five trillion dollars, and
accomplished exactly nothing, as it was intended to do. Thus we see that the
New World Order has based its entire strategy on the agony of the hundreds of
thousands of civilians burned alive at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, including many
thousands of children sitting in their schoolrooms. These leaders had learned
from their master, Josef Stalin, that no one can rule without mass terrorism,
which in turn required mass murder. As Senator Vandenberg, leader of the
Republican loyal opposition, was to say (as quoted in American Heritage
magazine, August 1977), "We have got to scare the hell out of "em."
-
- THE JEWISH HELL-BOMB
-
- The atomic bomb was developed at the Los Alamos Laboratories
in New Mexico. The top secret project was called the Manhattan Project, because
its secret director, Bernard Baruch, lived in Manhattan, as did many of the
other principals. Baruch had chosen Maj. Gen. Leslie R. Groves to head the
operation. He had previously built the Pentagon, and had a good reputation
among the Washington politicians, who usually came when Baruch beckoned.
-
- The scientific director at Los Alamos was J. Robert
Oppenheimer, scion of a prosperous family of clothing merchants.
In Oppenheimer; the Years Of Risk, by James Kunetka, Prentice Hall, NY, 1982,
Kunetka writes, p. 106, "Baruch was especially interested in Oppenheimer for
the position of senior scientific adviser." The project cost an estimated two
billion dollars. No other nation in the world could have afforded to develop
such a bomb. The first successful test of the atomic bomb occurred at the
Trinity site, two hundred miles south of Los Alamos at 5:29:45 a.m. on July 16,
1945.
-
- Oppenheimer was beside himself at the spectacle. He
shrieked, "I am become Death, the Destroyer of worlds." Indeed, this seemed to
be the ultimate goal of the Manhattan Project, to destroy the world. There had
been considerable fear among the scientists that the test explosion might
indeed set off a chain reaction, which would destroy the entire world.
Oppenheimer's exultation came from his realization that now his people had
attained the ultimate power, through which they could implement their
five-thousand-year desire to rule the entire world.
-
- THE BUCK PASSES TO TRUMAN
-
- Although Truman liked to take full credit for the decision to
drop the atomic bomb on Japan, in fact, he was advised by a prestigious group,
The National Defense Research Committee, consisting of George L. Harrison,
president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; Dr. James B. Conant,
president of Harvard, who had spent the First World War developing more
effective poison gases, and who in 1942 had been commissioned by Winston
Churchill to develop an Anthrax bomb to be used on Germany, which would have
killed every living thing in Germany. Conant was unable to perfect the bomb
before Germany surrendered, otherwise he would have had another line to add to
his resume. His service on Truman's Committee which advised him to drop the
atomic bomb on Japan, added to his previous record as a chemical warfare
professional, allowed me to describe him in papers filed before the United
States Court of Claims in 1957, as "the most notorious war criminal of the
Second World War". As Gauleiter of Germany after the war, he had ordered the
burning of my book, The Federal Reserve Conspiracy, ten thousand copies having
been published in Oberammergau, the site of the world-famed Passion
Play.
-
- Also on the committee were Dr. Karl Compton, and James F.
Byrnes, acting Secretary of State. For thirty years, Byrnes had been known as
Bernard Baruch's man in Washington. With his Wall Street profits, Baruch had
built the most lavish estate in South Carolina, which he named Hobcaw Barony.
As the wealthiest man in South Carolina, this epitome of the carpet-bagger
also controlled the political purse strings. Now Baruch was in a position to
dictate to Truman, through his man Byrnes, that he should drop the atomic bomb
on Japan.
-
- LIPMAN SIEW
-
- Despite the fact that the Manhattan Project was the most
closely guarded secret of World War II, one man, and one many only, was allowed
to observe everything and to know everything about the project. He was Lipman
Siew, a Lithuanian Jew who had come to the United States as a political refugee
at the age of seventeen. He lived in Boston on Lawrence St., and decided to
take the name of William L. Laurence. At Harvard, he became a close friend of
James B. Conant and was tutored by him. When Laurence went to New York, he was
hired by Herbert Bayard Swope, editor of the New York World, who was known as
Bernard Baruch's personal publicity agent. Baruch owned the World. In 1930,
Laurence accepted an offer from the New York Times to become its science
editor. He states in Who's Who that he "was selected by the heads of the atomic
bomb project as sole writer and public relations." How one could be a public
relations writer for a top secret project was not explained. Laurence was the
only civilian present at the historic explosion of the test bomb on July 16,
1945. Less than a month later, he sat in the copilots seat of the B-29 on the
fateful Nagasaki bombing run.
-
- WILL JAPAN SURRENDER BEFORE THE BOMB IS DROPPED?
-
- There were still many anxious moments for the conspirators,
who planned to launch a new reign of terror throughout the world. Japan had
been suing for peace. Each day it seemed less likely that she could stay in the
war. On March 9 and 10, 1945, 325 B-29s had burned thirty-five square miles of
Tokyo, leaving more than one hundred thousand Japanese dead in the ensuing
firestorm. Of Japan's 66 biggest cities, 59 had been mostly destroyed. 178
square miles of urban dwellings had been burned, 500,000 died in the fires, and
now twenty million Japanese were homeless. Only four cities had not been
destroyed; Hiroshima, Kokura, Niigata, and Nagasaki. Their inhabitants had no
inkling that they had been saved as target cities for the experimental atomic
bomb. Maj. Gen. Leslie Groves, at Bernard Baruch's insistence, had demanded
that Kyoto be the initial target of the bomb. Secretary of War Stimson
objected, saying that as the ancient capital of Japan, the city of Kyoto had
hundreds of historic wooden temples, and no military targets. The Jews wanted
to destroy it precisely because of its great cultural importance to the
Japanese people.
-
- THE HORROR OF HIROSHIMA
-
- While the residents of Hiroshima continued to watch the B-29s
fly overhead without dropping bombs on them, they had no inkling of the
terrible fate which the scientists had reserved for them. William Manchester
quotes General Douglas MacArtbur in American Caesar, Little Brown, 1978,
p.437
-
- [quoting:] There was another Japan, and MacArthur was one of
the few Americans who suspected its existence. He kept urging the Pentagon and
the State Department to be alert for conciliatory gestures. The General
predicted that the break would come from Tokyo, not the Japanese army. The
General was right. A dovish coalition was forming in the Japanese capital, and
it was headed by Hirohito himself, who had concluded in the spring of 1945 that
a negotiated peace was the only way to end his nation's agony. Beginning in
early May, a six-man council of Japanese diplomats explored ways to accommodate
the Allies. The delegates informed top military officials that "our resistance
is finished". [End quoting]
-
- On p.359, Gar Alperowitz quotes Brig. Gen. Carter W. Clarke,
in charge of preparing the MAGIC summary in 1945, who stated in a 1959
historical interview, "We brought them down to an abject surrender through the
accelerated sinking of their merchant marine and hunger alone, and when we
didn't need to do it, and knew we didn't need to do it, we used them as an
experiment for two atomic bombs."
-
- Although President Truman referred to himself as the sole
authority in the decision to drop the bomb, in fact he was totally influenced
by Bernard Baruch's man in Washington, James F. Byrnes. Gar Alperowitz states,
p. 196, "Byrnes spoke with the authority of-personally represented-the
president of the United States on all bomb-related matters in the Interim
Committee's deliberations." David McCullough, in his laudatory biography of
Truman, which was described as "a valentine", admitted that "Truman didn't know
his own Secretary of State, Stettinius. He had no background in foreign
policy, no expert advisors of his own."
-
- The tragedy of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was that a weak,
inexperienced president, completely under the influence of Byrnes and Baruch,
allowed himself to be manipulated into perpetrating a terrible massacre. In
the introduction to Hiroshima's Shadows, we find that "Truman was moving in
quite the opposite direction, largely under the influence of Byrnes. The atom
bomb for Byrnes was an instrument of diplomacy-atomic diplomacy." (p.ix)
-
- MASS MURDER
-
- On August 6, 1945, a uranium bomb 3-235, 20 kilotons yield,
was exploded 1850 feet in the air above Hiroshima, for maximum explosive
effect. It devastated four square miles, and killed 140,000 of the 255,000
inhabitants. In Hiroshima's Shadows, we find a statement by a doctor who
treated some of the victims; p.415, Dr. Shuntaro Hida: "It was strange to us
that Hiroshima had never been bombed, despite the fact that B-29 bombers flew
over the city every day. Only after the war did I come to know that Hiroshima,
according to American archives, had been kept untouched in order to preserve it
as a target for the use of nuclear weapons. Perhaps, if the American
administration and its military authorities had paid sufficient regard to the
terrible nature of the fiery demon which mankind had discovered and yet knew so
little about its consequences, the American authorities might never have used
such a weapon against the 750,000 Japanese who ultimately became its
victims."
-
- Dr. Hida says that while treating the terribly mangled and
burned victims, "My eyes were ready to overflow with tears. I spoke to myself
and bit my lip so that I would not cry. If I had cried, I would have lost my
courage to keep standing and working, treating dying victims of
Hiroshima."
-
- On p.433, Hiroshima's Shadows, Kensaburo Oe declares, "From
the instant the atomic bomb exploded, it became the symbol of all human evil;
it was a savagely primitive demon and most modern curse.... My nightmare stems
from a suspicion that a 'certain trust in human strength' or 'humanism'
flashed across the minds of American intellectuals who decided upon the project
that concluded with the dropping of the bomb on Hiroshima."
-
- In the introduction to Hiroshima's Shadows, we find that "One
of the myths of Hiroshima is that the inhabitants were warned by leaflets that
an atomic bomb would be dropped. The leaflets Leonard Nadler and William P.
Jones recall seeing in the Hiroshima Museum in 1960 and 1970 were dropped
after the bombing. This happened because the President's Interim Committee on
the Atomic Bomb decided on May 31 'that we could not give the Japanese any
warning'. Furthermore, the decision to drop 'atomic' leaflets on Japanese
cities was not made until August 7, the day after the Hiroshima bombing. They
were not dropped until August 10, after Nagasaki had been bombed. We can say
that the residents of Hiroshima received no advance warning about the use of
the atomic bomb. On June 1, 1945, a formal and official decision was taken
during a meeting of the so-called Interim Committee not to warn the populations
of the specific target cities. James Byrnes and Oppenheimer insisted that the
bombs must be used without prior warning."
-
- "Closely linked to the question of whether a warning of an
atomic bomb attack was given to the civilian populations of the target cities
is the third 'article of fifth' that underpins the American legend of
Hiroshima; the belief that Hiroshima and Nagasaki were military targets. The
Headquarters of the Japanese Second army were located in Hiroshima and
approximately 20,000 men-of which about half, or 10,000 died in the attack. In
Nagasaki, there were about 150 deaths among military personnel in the city.
Thus, between the two cities, 4.4% of the total death toll was made up of
military personnel. In short, more than 95% of the casualties were
civilians."
-
- On p.39 of Hiroshima's Shadows we find that (at Hiroshima)
"strictly military damage was insignificant." How are we to reconcile this
statement with Harry Truman's vainglorious boast in Off The Record; the Private
Papers of Harry S. Truman Harper, 1980, p.304, "In 1945 I had ordered the
Atomic Bomb dropped on Japan at two places devoted almost exclusively to war
production." In fact, many thousands of the Hiroshima casualties were children
sitting in their classrooms.
-
- The bomb was dropped because (p.35) "The Manhattan Project's
managers were lobbying to use the atomic bomb. Byrnes sat in on these meetings.
Maj. Gen. Groves seems to have been the author of the claim that the use of the
bomb would save a million American lives--a figure in the realm of
fantasy."
-
- Truman himself variously stated that the use of the use of the
atomic bomb saved "a quarter of a million American lives", a "half-million
American lives", and finally settled on the Gen. Groves figure of "a million
American lives saved."
-
- Meanwhile (p.64) William L. Laurence, who was writing for the
New York Times at full salary while also receiving a full salary from the War
Department as the "public relations agent for the atomic bomb" published
several stories in the New York Times denying that there had been any radiation
effects on the victims of the Hiroshima bombing (Sept. 5, 1945 et seq.) in
which he quotes General Groves' indignant comment, "The Japanese are still
continuing their propaganda aimed at creating the impression we won the war
unfairly and thus attempting to create sympathy for themselves."
-
- (p.66) "The Legation of Switzerland on August 11, 1945
forwarded from Tokyo the following memorandum to the State Department (which
sat on it for twenty-five years before finally releasing it): 'The Legation of
Switzerland has received a communication from the Japanese Government.' On
August 6, 1945, American airplanes released on the residential district of the
town of Hiroshima, bombs of a new type, killing and injuring in one second a
large number of civilians and destroying a great part of the town. Not only is
the city of Hiroshima a provincial town without any protection or special
military installations of any kind, but also none of the neighboring regions or
towns constitutes a military objective."
-
- The introduction to Hiroshima's Shadows concludes that
(p.lxvii) "The claim that an invasion of the Japanese home islands was
necessary without the use of the atomic bombs is untrue. The claim that an
'atomic warning' was given to the populace of Hiroshima is untrue. And the
claim that both cities were key military targets is untrue."
-
- A PILOT'S STORY
-
- Corroboration of these statements is found in the remarkable
record of Ellsworth Torrey Carrington, "Reflections of a Hiroshima Pilot",
(p.9) "As part of the Hiroshima atomic battle plan my B-29 (named Jabbitt III,
Captain John Abbott Wilson's third war plane) flew the weather observation
mission over the secondary target of Kokura on August 6, 1945." (p. 10) "After
the first bomb was dropped, the atom bomb command was very fearful that Japan
might surrender before we could drop the second bomb, so our people worked
around the clock, 24-hours-a-day to avoid such a misfortune." This is, of
course, satire on Carrington's part. (p. 13) "in city after city all over the
face of Japan (except for our cities spared because reserved for atomic
holocaust) they ignited the most terrible firestorms in history with very light
losses (of B-29s). Sometimes the heat from these firestorms was so intense that
later waves of B-29s were caught by updrafts strong enough to loft them upwards
from 4 or 5,000 feet all the way up to 8 or 10,000 feet. The major told us that
the fire-bombing of Japan had proven successful far beyond anything they had
imagined possible and that the 20th Air Force was running out of cities to
burn. Already there were no longer (as of the first week in June 1945) any
target cities left that were worth the attention of more than 50 B-29s, and on
a big day, we could send up as many as 450 planes!" "The totality of the
devastation in Japan was extraordinary, and this was matched by the
near-totality of Japan's defencelessness." (as of June 1, 1945, before the
atomic bombs were dropped.) (p. 14) "The Truman government censored and
controlled all the war information that was allowed to reach the public, and of
course, Truman had a vested interest in obscuring the truth so as to
surreptitiously prolong the war and be politically able to use the atom bomb.
Regarding the second element of the Roosevelt-Truman atomic Cold War strategy
of deceiving the public into believing that Japan was still militarily viable
in the spring and summer of 1945, the centerpiece was the terribly expensive
and criminally unnecessary campaign against Okinawa.
-
- Carrington quotes Admiral William D. Leahy, p. 245, I Was
There, McGraw Hill: "A large part of the Japanese Navy was already on the
bottom of the sea. The combined Navy surface and air force action even by this
time had forced Japan into a position that made her early surrender inevitable.
None of us then knew the potentialities of the atomic bomb, but it was my
opinion, and I urged it strongly on the Joint Chiefs, that no major land
invasion of the Japanese mainland was necessary to win the war. The JCS did
order the preparation of plans for an invasion, but the invasion itself was
never authorized."
-
- Thus Truman, urged on by General Groves, claims that "a
million American lives were saved" by the use of the atomic bomb, when no
invasion had ever been authorized, and was not in the cards. Carrington
continues, p. 16, "The monstrous truth is that the timing of the Okinawa
campaign was exclusively related to the early August timetable of the atomic
bomb. J'accuse! I accuse Presidents Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman of
deliberately committing war crimes against the American people for the sole
purpose of helping set the stage for the criminally unnecessary use of atomic
weapons on Japan."
-
- Carrington further quotes Admiral Leahy, from I Was There, "It
is my opinion that the use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagaski
was of no material assistance in our war against Japan. The Japanese were
already defeated and ready to surrender because of the effective sea blockade
and the successful bombing with conventional weapons."
-
- Carrington concludes, p.22, "Truman's wanton use of atomic
weapons left the American people feeling dramatically less secure after winning
World War II than they had ever felt before, and these feelings of insecurity
have been exploited by unscrupulous Cold War Machine Politicians ever since."
As Senator Vandenberg said, "We have to scare the hell out of 'em" in order to
browbeat the American people into paying heavy taxes to support the Cold
War.
-
- DID THE ATOMIC BOMB WIN THE WAR AGAINST JAPAN?
-
- Admiral William Leahy also stated in I Was There, "My own
feeling is that being the first to use it (the atomic bomb) we had adopted an
ethical standard common to the Barbarism of the Dark Ages. I was not taught to
make war in that fashion, and wars cannot be won by destroying women and
children."
-
- Gar Alperowitz notes, p. 16, "On May 5, May 12 and June 7, the
Office of Strategic Services (our intelligence operation), reported Japan was
considering capitulation. Further messages came on May 18, July 7, July 13 and
July 16."
-
- Alperowitz points out, p.36, "The standing United States
demand for 'unconditional surrender' directly threatened not only the person of
the Emperor but such central tenets of Japanese culture as well."
-
- Alperowitz also quotes General Curtis LeMay, chief of the Air
Forces, p.334, "The war would have been over in two weeks without the Russians
entering and without the atomic bomb. PRESS INQUIRY: You mean that, sir?
Without the Russians and without the atomic bomb? LeMay: The atomic bomb had
nothing to do with the end of the war at all." September 29, 1945,
statement.
-
- THE NAGASAKI BOMB
-
- When the Air Force dropped the atomic bomb on Nagasaki, with
William Laurence riding in the co-pilot's seat of the B-29, pretending to be
Dr. Strangelove, here again the principal target was a Catholic church. P.93,
The Fall Of Japan, by William Craig, Dial, NY, 1967, "the roof and masonry of
the Catholic cathedral fell on the kneeling worshippers. All of them died."
This church has now been rebuilt, and is a prominent feature of the Nagasaki
tour.
-
- After the terror bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the
victorious Allies moved promptly to try Japanese officials for their "war
crimes". From 1945-51 several thousand Japanese military men were found guilty
of war crimes by an International Military Tribunal which met in Tokyo from
1946 to 1948. Twenty-eight Japanese military and civilian leaders were accused
of having engaged in conspiracy to commit atrocities. The dissenting member of
the Tokyo tribunal, Judge Radhabinod of India, dismissed the charge that
Japanese leaders had conspired to commit atrocities, stating that a stronger
case might be made against the victors, because the decision to use the atomic
bomb resulted in indiscriminate murder.
-
- A very popular movie in Japan today is Pride, The Fateful
Moment, which shows Prime Minister General Hideki Tojo in a favorable light.
With six others, he was hanged in 1968 as a war criminal. During his trial,
his lawyers stated to the International Tribunal for the Far East, the Asian
version of Nuremberg Trials, that Tojo's war crimes could not begin to approach
the dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The prosecutors
immediately objected, and censored their statements. That was the last time
there was any official recognition of the atomic bomb massacres in Japan.
Japanese officials have been effectively prevented from taking any stand on
this matter because the American military occupation, which officially ended in
1952 with the Treaty with Japan, was quietly continued. Today, 49,000 American
troops are still stationed in Japan, and there is no public discussion of the
crimes of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
-
- AMERICAN MILITARY AUTHORITIES SAY ATOMIC BOMB
UNNECESSARY
-
- The most authoritative Air Force unit during World War II was
the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey, which selected targets on the basis of need,
and which analyzed the results for future missions. In Hiroshima's Shadow, the
U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey report of July 1, 1946 states, "The Hiroshima and
Nagasaki atomic bombs did not defeat Japan, nor by the testimony of the enemy
leaders who ended the war did they persuade Japan to accept unconditional
surrender. The Emperor, the lord privy seal, the prime minister, the foreign
minister, and the navy minister had decided as early as May 1945 that the war
should be ended even if it meant acceptance of defeat on allied terms.... It is
the Survey's opinion that certainly prior to December 1, 1945 and in all
probability prior to November 1, 1945, Japan would have surrendered even if the
atomic bombs had not been dropped and even if no invasion had been planned or
contemplated."
-
- Both military, political and religious leaders spoke out
against the atomic bombing of Japanese civilians. The Federal Council of the
Churches of Christ in America issued a formal statement in March 1946 (cited by
Gar Alperowitz):
-
- "The surprise bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki are morally
indefensible. Both bombings must be judged to have been unnecessary for winning
the war. As the power that first used the atomic bomb under these
circumstances, we have sinned grievously against the laws of God and against
the people of Japan."-Commission on the Relation of the Church to the War in
the Light of the Christian Faith.
-
- On p.438, Gar Alperowitz quotes James M. Gillis, editor of
Catholic World, "I would call it a crime were it not that the word 'crime'
implies sin, and sin requires a consciousness of guilt. The action taken by the
Untied States government was in defiance of every sentiment and every
conviction upon which our civilization is based."
-
- One of the most vociferous critics of the atomic bombings was
David Lawrence, founder and editor of U.S. News and World Report. He signed a
number of stinging editorials, the first on August 17, 1945.
-
- "Military necessity will be our constant cry in answer to
criticism, but it will never erase from our minds the simple truth, that we, of
all civilized nations, though hesitating to use poison gas, did not hesitate to
employ the most destructive weapon of all times indiscriminately against men,
women and children." On October 5, Lawrence continued his attack, "The United
States should be the first to condemn the atomic bomb and apologize for its
use against Japan. Spokesmen for the Army Air Forces said it wasn't necessary
and that the war had been won already. Competent testimony exists to prove that
Japan was seeking to surrender many weeks before the atomic bomb came." On
November 23, Lawrence wrote, "The truth is we are guilty. Our conscience as a
nation must trouble us. We must confess our sin. We have used a horrible weapon
to asphyxiate and cremate more than 100,000 men, women and children in a sort
of super-lethal gas chamber- and all this in a war already won or which
spokesman for our Air Forces tell us we could have readily won without the
atomic bomb. We ought, therefore, to apologize in unequivocal terms at once to
the whole world for our misuse of the atomic bomb."
-
- David Lawrence was an avowed conservative, a successful
businessman, who knew eleven presidents of the United States intimately, and
was awarded the Medal of Freedom by President Richard M. Nixon, April 22,
1970.
-
- ANOTHER EISENHOWER SPEAKS
-
- Although Eisenhower never changed his opinion of the use of
the atomic bomb, during his presidency he repeatedly voiced his opinion, as
quoted by Steve Neal, The Eisenhowers Doubleday, 1978. P.225, "Ike would never
lose his scepticism of the weapon and later referred to it as a 'hellish
contrivance'."
-
- His brother, Milton Eisenhower, a prominent educator, was even
more vocal on this subject. As quoted by Gar Alperwitz, p.358, Milton
Eisenhower said, "Our employment of this new force at Hiroshima and Nagasaki
was a supreme provocation to other nations, especially the Soviet Union.
Moreover, its use violated the normal standards of warfare by wiping out entire
populations, mostly civilians, in the target cities. Certainly what happened at
Hiroshima and Nagasaki will forever be on the conscience of the American
people."
-
- During his Presidency, Dwight Eisenhower tried to find
peaceful uses for atomic energy. In The Eisenhower Diaries, p.261, we find that
"The phrase 'atoms for peace' entered the lexicon of international affairs with
a speech by Eisenhower before the United Nations December 8, 1953." Control of
atomic energy had now given the New World Order clique enormous power, and
Eisenhower, in his farewell speech to the American people on leaving the
Presidency In Review (Doubleday, 1969), on January 17, 1961, warned, "In the
councils of government we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted
influence, whether sought or unsought, by the miliary-industrial complex. The
potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will
persist."
-
- By failing to name the power behind the military-industrial
complex, the international bankers, Eisenhower left the American people in the
dark as to he was actually warning them against. To this day they do not
understand what he was trying to say, that the international bankers, the
Zionists and the Freemasons had formed an unholy alliance whose money and power
could not be overcome by righteous citizens of the United States.
-
- MACARTHUR'S WARNING
-
- General Douglas MacArthur also tried to warn the American
people of this threat, as quoted in American Ceaser, by William Manchester,
Little Brown, 1978, p.692, "In 1957, he lashed out at large Pentagon budgets.
'Our government has kept us in a perpetual state of fear-kept us in a
continuous stampede of patriotic fervor-with the cry of grave national
emergency. Always there has been some terrible evil to gobble us up if we did
not blindly rally behind it by furnishing the exorbitant funds demanded. Yet,
in retrospect, these disasters seem never to have happened, seem never to have
been quite real."
-
- This was the restatement of Senator Vandenberg's famous
comment, "We have to scare the hell out of 'em."
-
- THE NEW ATOMIC AGE
-
- The scientists who had built the atomic bomb were gleeful when
they received the news of its success at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In the book,
Robert Oppenheimer, Dark Prince, by Jack Rummel, 1992, we find, p.96, "Back in
the United States the news of the bombing of Hiroshima was greeted with a
mixture of relief, pride, joy, shock and sadness. Otto Frisch remembers the
shouts of joy, 'Hiroshima has been destroyed!' 'Many of my friends were rushing
to the telephone to book tables at the La Fonda Hotel in Santa Fe in order to
celebrate. Oppenheimer walked around "like a prizefighter, clasping his hands
together above his head as he came to the podium".'"
-
- Oppenheimer had been a lifelong Communist. "He was heavily
influenced by Soviet Communism ": A New Civilization, by Sidney and Beatrice
Webb, the founders of Fabian Socialism in England. He became director of
research at the newly formed U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, with his mentor,
Bernard Baruch, serving as chairman. Oppenheimer continued his many Communist
Party Associations; his wife was Kitty Peuning, widow of Joe Dallet, an
American Communist who had been killed defending Communism with the notorious
Lincoln Brigade in Spain. Because Oppenheimer was under Party discipline, the
Party then ordered him to marry Kitty Peuning and make a home for her.
-
- Baruch resigned from the Atomic Energy Commission to attend to
his business interests. He was replaced by Lewis Lichtenstein Strauss, of Kuhn,
Loeb Co. Strauss was apprised of Oppenheimer's many Communist associations, but
he decided to overlook them until he found that Oppenheimer was sabotaging
progress on developing the new and much more destructive hydrogen bomb. It
seemed apparent that Oppenheimer was delaying the hydrogen bomb until the
Soviet Union could get its own version on line. Furious at the betrayal, he
asked Oppenheimer to resign as director of the Commission. Oppenheimer refused.
Strauss then ordered that he be tried. A hearing was held from April 5 to May
6, 1954. After reviewing the results, the Atomic Energy Commission voted to
strip Oppenheimer of his security clearance, ruling that he "possessed
substantial defects of character and imprudent dangerous associations with
known subversives".
-
- Oppenheimer retired to Princeton, where his mentor, Albert
Einstein, presided over the Institute for Advanced Study, a think tank for
refugee "geniuses", financed by the Rothschilds through one of their many
secret foundations. Oppenheimer was already a trustee of the Institute, were
he remained until his death in 1966.
-
- THE REBIRTH OF ISRAEL
-
- Einstein considered the atomic age merely as a stage for the
rebirth of Israel. On p.760 of Einstein; His Life And Times we find that Abba
Eban, the Israeli Ambassador, came to his home with the Israeli consul, Reuben
Dafni. He later wrote, "Professor Einstein told me that he saw the rebirth of
Israel as one of the few political acts in his lifetime which had an essential
moral quality. He believed that the conscience of the world should, therefore,
be involved in Israel's preservation." by Ronald W. Clarke, Avon Books
1971.
-
- On March 1, 1946, Army Air Force Contract No. MX-791 was
signed, creating the RAND Corporation as an official think tank, defining
Project RAND as "a continuing program of scientific study and research on the
broad subject of air warfare with the object of recommending to the Air Force
preferred methods of techniques and instrumentalities for this purpose." On May
14, 1948, RAND Corporation funding was taken over by H. Rowan Gaither, head of
the Ford Foundation. This was done because the Air Force had sole control of
the atomic bomb, RAND Corp. developed the Air Force and atomic bomb program for
the Cold War, with the Strategic Air Command, the missile program, and many
other elements of the "terror strategy". It became a billion dollar game for
these scientists, with John von Neumann, their leading scientist, becoming
world famous as the inventor of "game theory", in which the United States and
the Soviet Union engaged in a worldwide "game" to see which would be the first
to attack the other with nuclear missiles. In the United States, the schools
held daily bomb drills, with the children hiding under their desks. No one told
them that thousands of schools children in Hiroshima had been incinerated in
their classrooms; the desks offered no protection against nuclear weapons. The
moral effect on the children was devastating. If they were to be vaporized in
the next ten seconds, there seemed little reason to study, marry and have
children, or prepare for a steady job. This demoralization through the nuclear
weapons program is the undisclosed reason for the decline in public
morality.
-
- In 1987, Phyllis LaFarge published The Strangelove Legacy, The
Impact Of The Nuclear Threat On Children, chronicling through extended research
the moral devastation wreaked on the children by the daily threat of
annihilation. She quotes Freeman Dyson, who stated the world has been divided
into two worlds, the world of the warriors, and the world of the victims, the
children. It was William L. Laurence, sitting in the co-pilot's seat of a B-29
over Nagasaki, and the children waiting to be vaporized below. This situation
has not changed.
-
- THE LEGAL ASPECTS OF NUCLEAR WARFARE
-
- Because Japan was occupied by the U.S. Military in 1945, the
Japanese Government was never allowed any opportunity to file any legal charges
about the use of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Although Japanese
leaders were tried and executed for "war crimes" no one was ever charged for
the atomic bombings. It was not until 1996 that the World Court delivered an
opinion on the use of nuclear weapons, (p.565, Hiroshima's Shadows) "In July
1996, the World court took a stand in its first formal opinion on the legality
of nuclear weapons. Two years earlier, the United Nations had asked the Court
for an advisory opinion. The General Assembly of the United Nations posed a
single, yet profoundly basic, question for consideration. It the threat of use
of nuclear weapons on any circumstances permitted under international law? For
the first time, the world's pre-eminent judicial authority has considered the
question of criminality vis-a-vis the use of a nuclear weapon, and, in doing
so, it has come to the conclusion that the use of a nuclear weapon is
'unlawful'. It is also the Court's view that even the threat of the use of a
nuclear weapon is illegal. Although there were differences concerning the
implications of the right of self-defense provided by Article 51 of the U.N.
Charter, ten of the fourteen judges hearing the case found the use of threat to
use a nuclear weapon to be illegal on the basis of the existing canon of
humanitarian law which governs the conduct of armed conflict. The judges based
their opinion on more than a century of treatise and conventions that are
collectively known as the 'Hague' and 'Geneva' laws."
-
- Thus the Court ruled that nuclear weapons are illegal under
the Hague and Geneva conventions , agreements which were in existence at the
time of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. They were illegal then, and they
are illegal now.
-
- GANDHI SPEAKS
-
- Among world leaders who spoke out about the United States' use
of atomic weapons in Japan, Mahatma Gandhi echoed the general climate of
opinion. P.258, Hiroshima's Shadow: "The atomic bomb has deadened the finest
feelings which have sustained mankind for ages. There used to be so-called laws
of war which made it tolerable. Now we understand the naked truth. War knows
no law except that of might. The atomic bomb brought an empty victory to the
Allied armies. It has resulted for the time being in the soul of Japan being
destroyed. What has happened to the soul of the destroying nation is yet too
early to see. Truth needs to be repeated as long as there are men who do not
believe it."
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHY:
-
- The Private Lives Of Albert Einstein, by Roger Highfield, St.
Martins Press, NY, 1993.
-
- The Wizards Of Armageddon, by Fred Kaplan, Simon &
Shuster, NY, 1993.
-
- Albert Einstein, by Milton Dank, Franklin Watts, 1983.
-
- Off The Record; The Private Papers Of Harry S. Truman, Harper
& Row, 1980.
-
- The Eisenhowers, by Steve Neal, Doubleday, 1978.
-
- The Eisenhower Diaries, W.W. Norton, 1981.
-
- In Review, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Doubleday, 1969.
-
- Eisenhower, Stephen E. Ambrose, Simon & Schuster,
1983.
-
- The Strangelove Legacy, Phyllis LaFarge, Harper & Row,
1987.
-
- Einstein, His Life & Times, Ronald W. Clark, Avon books,
1971.
-
- Robert Oppenheimer, Dark Prince, by Jack Rummel, 1992.
-
- The Manhattan Project, by Don E. Beyer, Franklin Wat,
1991.
-
- The Great Decision, The Secret History Of The Atomic Bomb,
Michael Amrine, Putnams, NY, 1959.
-
- Eisenhower At War, by David Eisenhower, Random House, NY,
1986.
-
- The Fall Of Japan, by William Craig, Dial, NY, 1967.
-
- Oppenheimer, The Years Of Risk, Jas W. Kunetka, Prentice Hall,
1982.
-
- Target Tokyo, Gordon W. Prange, McGraw Hill, 1984.
-
- Hiroshima's Shadow, edited by Kai Bird, Pamphleteer Press,
1998.
-
- The Decision To Use The Atomic Bomb, by Gar Alperowitz, Knopf,
NY, 1995.
-
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