AP/Shizuo Kambayashi |
August 6 marks 68 years since the United States committed what
is arguably the single gravest act of terrorism that the world has ever
known.
Terrorism means the deliberate targeting of innocent civilians,
and targeted they were, with the cutely named “Little Boy” atomic bomb
dropped on Hiroshima at a location and time of day when, as the
Strategic Bombing Survey commissioned by President Harry Truman
conceded, “nearly all the school children ... were at work in the open,”
a perfect opportunity for mass incineration.
“That fateful summer, 8:15,” the mayor of Hiroshima recalled at a
memorial service in 2007, “the roar of a B-29 breaks the morning calm. A
parachute opens in the blue sky. Then suddenly, a flash, an enormous
blast—silence—hell on earth. The eyes of young girls watching the
parachute were melted. Their faces became giant charred blisters. The
skin of people seeking help dangled from their fingernails. ... Others
died when their eyeballs and internal organs burst from their bodies.
Hiroshima was a hell where those who somehow survived envied the dead.
Within the year, 140,000 had died.”
It was followed three days later by the “Fat Man” bomb leveling
Nagasaki, with a comparable disastrous impact on a largely civilian
population that had no effective control over the decisions of the
emperor who initiated the war. Nagasaki was a last-minute substitute for
Kyoto, which Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson ordered spared because
he had fond memories of his honeymoon in that city a couple of decades
earlier. The devastation of those two cities was so gruesome that our
government banned the showing of film footage depicting the carnage we
had caused.
We have never been very good at challenging our nation’s own
reprehensible behavior, but if we don’t take proper measure of the
immense extermination wrought by two small and primitive nuclear weapons
as compared with today’s arsenals, we lose the point as to why they
must be banned. We are the country that designed and exploded these
weapons that are inherently implements of terrorism in that, as the
nuking of Japan amply demonstrated, they cannot distinguish between
civilian and combatant.
For those who believe that honorable ends absolve a nation of evil
means, there is the argument that the bombings shortened the war,
although the preponderance of more recent evidence would hold that the
Soviet entrance into the war against Japan two days after Hiroshima was a
more decisive factor.
Why, then, on this anniversary, do we not acknowledge our
responsibility as the nation that first created these weapons, has been
the only country to use them, and is still in possession of the biggest
repository of such weapons of mass destruction on earth? Is it not
unwise, as well as wrong, for Aug. 6 to pass, as it generally does,
without any widespread discussion of our culpability for the vast death
in Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
Indeed, in Santa Monica, Calif., home of one of the rare reminders of
the catastrophe we unleashed, a sculpture of a mushroom cloud, designed
by three-time Pulitzer Prize-winner Paul Conrad, is slated for
destruction by a city council that claims it does not have funding for
needed repairs.
That sculpture, called “Chain Reaction,”
was given to the city in 1991 thanks to the beneficence of Joan Kroc,
the widow of the founder of McDonald’s, who used her fortune to advance
the cause of public enlightenment. It is a grim warning that the best
educated can commit the most heinous of crimes, and its placement
opposite the RAND Corp., a faux intellectual outpost of the
military-industrial complex, adds historic significance to a landmark
designated municipal work of art that is now threatened with extinction.
Conrad, world famous as the editorial cartoonist for The Denver Post
and Los Angeles Times for four decades, was himself a veteran of the war
in the Pacific, one of those whose life the bomb was ostensibly
designed to save. Conrad joined the Army in 1942 and participated in the
invasions of Guam and Okinawa, where he was stationed at the time of
the Hiroshima bombing.
His sentiment about that horrific event is inscribed on his powerful
sculpture:
“This is a statement of peace. May it never become an
epitaph.”
Conrad’s critically important sculpture might soon be gone.
As a nation, we excel at obliterating reminders of our own failings.
Editor’s Note: For more information on the “Chain Reaction” controversy, read Bill Boyarsky’s “Why Chain Reaction Must Be Preserved” and Peter Z. Scheer’s post, “On His Birthday, a Famed Artist’s Masterpiece Faces a Bulldozer.”
Posted on Aug 6, 2013: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/a_statement_of_peace_or_an_epitaph_20130806/
Robert Scheer, editor in chief of Truthdig, has built a reputation for strong social and political writing over his 30 years as a journalist.
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