How would have WW2 gone if the US had not used nuclear bombs on Japan?

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  • Опубліковано 4 жов 2024
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    Imagine if the US did not use the nuclear bombs on Japan in 1945. Instead, imagine it went through with the planned conventional attack on Japan. That called for a seaborne invasion more massive than D-Day. Operation Downfall - Allied invasion of Japan. This video will assume it actually happened.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 9 тис.

  • @Binkov
    @Binkov  2 роки тому +133

    Get the exclusive NordVPN deal here: nordvpn.com/binkov. It’s risk free with Nord’s 30 day money-back guarantee!

    • @yeasashikder3704
      @yeasashikder3704 2 роки тому +6

      Wow Awesome😍😍😍

    • @derekmoore8224
      @derekmoore8224 2 роки тому

      Just think this was all arranged by the same families as the shhh going on now.

    • @janrudnicki6111
      @janrudnicki6111 2 роки тому +2

      Japan tried to negotiate through Sweden's intermediaries, the Vatican only the US rejected the negotiations, such are the facts of Binkov.

    • @user-pn3im5sm7k
      @user-pn3im5sm7k 2 роки тому +7

      None of what this video says is true. They didn't surrender because of the atomic bombs OR the soviet invasion of Manchuria. In-fact Emperor Hirohito had sued for peace months before Hiroshima. His only condition? That the emperor state remained, and it remained anyway after the surrender. Japan had lost the moment they failed to achieve Air and Naval superiority over the Pacific, let alone Japanese waters. There was never going to be an "operation downfall", are you crazy? After what Americans saw in Iwo Jima and Okinawa it was out of the picture. This was purely designed as an excuse to sedate the populace into thinking that somehow nuking civilians was the "moral choice" when its really just an illusion because there was never going to be a full scale invasion of Japan when Japan had already surrendered BEFORE the nukes. The Soviet Union also had ZERO capability to invade mainland Japan. No navy whatsoever to support this. The nuclear bombs were a nasty, vile, disgusting show of force that resulted in the needless lives of hundreds of thousands children, women, and elderly people who were not involved with the war. We would have the same timeline without the atomic bombs dropped. It was not until after they dropped their new toy was when they accepted the peace terms offered by Japan and quite literally didn't change a thing about the terms. Stop trying to justify it. You can't in either a moral or logistical capacity. Also literally not a single US General or Admiral agreed with the nukes, so armchair historians need not apply:
      DWIGHT EISENHOWER:
      "During his recitation of the relevant facts, I had been conscious of a feeling of depression and so I voiced to him 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 a weapon whose employment was, I thought, no longer mandatory as a measure to save American lives. It was my belief that Japan was, at that very moment, seeking some way to surrender with a minimum loss of 'face'. The Secretary was deeply perturbed by my attitude..."
      In a Newsweek interview, Eisenhower again recalled the meeting with Stimson:
      "...the Japanese were ready to surrender and it wasn't necessary to hit them with that awful thing."
      - Ike on Ike, Newsweek, 11/11/63
      ADMIRAL WILLIAM D. LEAHY:
      "It is my opinion that the use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki 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.
      "The lethal possibilities of atomic warfare in the future are frightening. My own feeling was that in being the first to use it, we had adopted an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages. I was not taught to make war in that fashion, and wars cannot be won by destroying women and children."
      - William Leahy, I Was There, pg. 441.
      GENERAL DOUGLAS MacARTHUR (this guy got his shit kicked in by the japanese, mind you):
      Norman Cousins was a consultant to General MacArthur during the American occupation of Japan. Cousins writes of his conversations with MacArthur, "MacArthur's views about the decision to drop the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki were starkly different from what the general public supposed." He continues, "When I asked General MacArthur about the decision to drop the bomb, I was surprised to learn he had not even been consulted. What, I asked, would his advice have been? He replied that he saw no military justification for the dropping of the bomb. The war might have ended weeks earlier, he said, if the United States had agreed, as it later did anyway, to the retention of the institution of the emperor."
      Norman Cousins, The Pathology of Power, pg. 65, 70-71.
      I want to bring special attention to the last part of MacArthur's quote because it is nothing but the truth.

    • @Battleneter
      @Battleneter 2 роки тому +4

      None of this would have happened as Russia was already amassing 1 million+ soldiers for a Japan invasion when he US dropped the bombs, many believe Japan civilians were sacrificed to stop Russia taking Japan, and was the primary reason for the use of Nuclear weapons.

  • @tbmike23
    @tbmike23 2 роки тому +2463

    Here's a hint according to contemporary estimates: the US Government commissioned Purple Heart medals in anticipation of invading Japan, for soldiers wounded in battle. The invasion never happened, so they put them in storage. The Korean War, the Vietnam War, countless third world Incursions, Desert Storm, and over 50 years later they finally ran out of Purple Hearts for the Japanese Invasion and had to commission more.

    • @thecoolnerdplaysvr5674
      @thecoolnerdplaysvr5674 2 роки тому +438

      They ran out in 2006

    • @fierypickles4450
      @fierypickles4450 2 роки тому +140

      Thats insane

    • @lars1701again
      @lars1701again 2 роки тому +188

      My grandfather was in Europe for the war and was in the process of shipping him to the pacific, it makes me shudder that he could’ve earned one of those Purple Hearts. Luckily my mother was born in 1940

    • @bigballzmcdrawz2921
      @bigballzmcdrawz2921 2 роки тому +17

      Learn something new every day.

    • @scott3017
      @scott3017 2 роки тому +33

      I thought they were still going off of that stockpile.

  • @markmierzejewski9534
    @markmierzejewski9534 2 роки тому +368

    Japan had a large stock pile of chemical and biological weapons as well. While the United States swayed away from this. I am all but positive that Japan would have used everything by their means. From their perspective its us or them. Survival of our people or not?

    • @derpidius6306
      @derpidius6306 2 роки тому

      The Japanese didn't care about their survival by the end of the war, to them, it was better to kill the country than to surrender, in fact, even in our timeline, when word got out that Emperor Hirohito was going to surrender, the Japanese Army tried to do a coup to overthrow him so they could continue fighting to the bitter end

    • @dumbfkers
      @dumbfkers 2 роки тому +36

      Both countries had massive chemical stockpiles since neither signed the Geneva Protocol. The US had planned to use them as well.
      Edit: Geneva Protocol* not Geneva Convention

    • @paulus121212
      @paulus121212 2 роки тому +3

      @@dumbfkers they were part of the league of nations which probitied the use

    • @NickJaime
      @NickJaime 2 роки тому +1

      They did but thankfully none made it to any cities. Japan was very desperate and used balloons late in the war for many kinds of bombs.

    • @NickJaime
      @NickJaime 2 роки тому +5

      @@paulus121212 which is why they did use them and thankfully none hit any cities.

  • @jkasiron2275
    @jkasiron2275 2 роки тому +207

    The resulting alternate peace in this alternate timeline would have included much deeper and lasting anger and resentment between Japan and the US. Given the type of warfare required, the number of personal stories of horrific treatment on both sides would have dwarfed the results of using the two atomic weapons, imo. I hate that it was necessary to use such weapons, but I am grateful that the US and Japan are allies today.

    • @jpc443
      @jpc443 2 роки тому +1

      It wasn't necessary.

    • @dekardkain5469
      @dekardkain5469 2 роки тому +61

      @@jpc443 It stopped the war - didn't it? And if you don't think it was necessary, then go back and learn about the Battle of Okinawa. That's what we'd have been facing the entire way through Japan - and the death toll would have been astronomically higher than 2 city centers getting leveled.

    • @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022
      @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 2 роки тому +4

      Would it tho? Germany wasn't the best enemy to deal with and there's barely any resentment.

    • @dekardkain5469
      @dekardkain5469 2 роки тому +2

      @@chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 Of course there isn't - WE WON. There's little to no resentment when one wins a fight. Look at Germany after WW1 and tell me that LOSERS don't have resentment under the right circumstances?

    • @jpc443
      @jpc443 2 роки тому +2

      @@dekardkain5469 at the time, Japan was subject to a drum tight naval blockade and with no air force to speak of B29s were pummeling it unposed from the air. It was only a matter of time before Japan sued for peace. There was no need to drop the bomb and certainly not to save millions of US lives in a land invasion that there was equally no need for.

  • @Pippins666
    @Pippins666 Рік тому +36

    I probably owe my existence to the atomic bombs. In 1945 my father was part of the Royal Navy fleet assembling in Sydney in preparation for the invasion of Japan. Instead my father sailed home, having married my mother before he left the UK. I was born in 1947...and it is only recently that I realise the debt I owe to the atomic bombs

    • @Apollo536
      @Apollo536 Рік тому +3

      My grandfather (on my dad's side) had fought in Europe. When Germany had surrender, he was one of many who was told that they would be retrained in preparation for the invasion of the Japanese Home Islands. I'm fairly certain he would have been in the first wave. I owe my existence to the atomic bomb as well. As do many alive today, especially in Japan. It's sad but that's just the way it was.

    • @brianjones7660
      @brianjones7660 Рік тому +1

      the subtitle to "Dr.Strangelove" was 'How I learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb'......good reasons to be grateful, gentlemen.😁

  • @scottstewart5784
    @scottstewart5784 2 роки тому +65

    People rail on the cruelty of the atomic bomb, but gloss over the fire-bombings which killed way more civilians in a crueler way.

    • @gamevalor
      @gamevalor 2 роки тому

      and people gloss over the holocaust of 60+ native Americans when the European colonists stole North America.

    • @xarbinchaoticneutral1785
      @xarbinchaoticneutral1785 Рік тому +3

      ​@gamevalor okay bro 😂👍

  • @michaelmijares5547
    @michaelmijares5547 2 роки тому +246

    If Operation Downfall actually happened, the Japan we know today would have drastically been different. This is why I appreciate our own timeline despite its faults.

    • @icecold9511
      @icecold9511 2 роки тому +28

      Probably a dead race, or close to.

    • @gamevalor
      @gamevalor 2 роки тому +5

      @@icecold9511 false Vietnamese and Afghans won against the US despite having much less equipment and small budgets. The USA will fall like other empires, from within.

    • @gamevalor
      @gamevalor 2 роки тому +3

      The outcome would be the allied occupation forces driven out like the Vietnam War and Afghanistan. Note Japan would offer far more resistance than the Vietnamese. So the whole invasion would be for naught.

    • @icecold9511
      @icecold9511 2 роки тому +61

      @@gamevalor
      An insurgency war is always harder. And Vietnam wasn't fought for a victory. Rules of engagement hamstrung efforts and they had Russian support. Saying NV beat us is like saying Taiwan has held off China.

    • @jameswright2974
      @jameswright2974 2 роки тому

      Hitler gassed 3 million Jews Europeans turned a blind eye the same USA ideology Hitler stole all the Jews wealth their
      Properties usa and North Atlantic terrorist organisation NATO today Hitler ideology alive and well now steal Russia’s
      Wealth and property usa like Hitlers ideology how many Jewish children suffer from terrible deformities as in Vietnam Afghanistan slaughtered 5000in Hawaiians to use thier land as war base japan Australia New Zealand poisoned the Pacific Islanders land which today uninhabitable for eternity testing usa nukes now scream if the want to try a new empire colonialism slaughtered 90 million please reply how many slaughtered by Russia And China in 200 yrs Coloniali empire
      On its death bed usa citizens slaughtering their own children love assassinating their presidents trashed the White House
      Passed a law Granting the usa immunity for war crimes as thier puppets isreal Democracy ??????????

  • @Ghidorah_Stan64
    @Ghidorah_Stan64 2 роки тому +47

    Such a wasted opportunity to not call this campaign “Operation Sunset”

  • @sampsonroofing7377
    @sampsonroofing7377 Рік тому +26

    Years later, Harry Truman replied to a question about what a difficult decision it must have been to order the dropping of the bomb; "It took me one second to make the decision; can you imagine how I would have had to explain to all of the parents of the dead boys from an invasion of the home islands that we had this weapon and we didn't use it?!

    • @AoKodo
      @AoKodo Рік тому +10

      Pretty much, he had to.

  • @johndane9754
    @johndane9754 2 роки тому +35

    Operation Downfall would have made it an open debate on which part of WWII was worse. The Eastern Front or the Japanese Front.

    • @nickcharles1284
      @nickcharles1284 Рік тому

      No. 1. An invasion was not necessary: all the US had to do was continue bombing until the Japanese gave up. 2. The scale of the Battle of Russia encompasses all other fighting of WW2. No single campaign comes close to it.

    • @Privat2840
      @Privat2840 Рік тому +1

      The talk of invading home island seems to revolve around a flawed assumption that we would have in the fall of 1945. I argue that US was not stupid and would have waited to invade until spring or summer of 1946. An extended blockade and air campaign would have destroyed and crippled Japan. Cut off of imports of oil, minerals and food Japan would have had mass starvation. Shortages of fuel would have prevented any large and quick movement of Japanese troops. Fighter aircraft brought from Europe and stationed on smaller coastal island would be roaming non stop up and down Japan shooting anything moving. When invasion came US would be facing a weakened and potentially broken Japanese army. Time was on US's sides not Japan's.

    • @johndane9754
      @johndane9754 Рік тому

      @@Privat2840 We did take those into consideration and determined that the war should be ended sooner rather than later because
      a.) the Japanese were not giving up. Their industry, agriculture, infrastructure, etc. were already destroyed with our fire bombing campaign. Their navy was decimated, they were effectively cut off from receiving minerals, oil, etc. since their merchant fleet was sunk. Despite all of that and more, they would not surrender. In fact, Japanese High Command's plan, Operation Ketsugo, was, by their words, "The Glorious Death of One Hundred Million." That was their plan, to drown our forces in their blood and bury our forces beneath their bodies. They only stopped because the Emperor ordered them to do so and even then some still wanted to continue the war.
      b.) we were coming up to the end of our rope at home. Not just in moral but in resources and we were sick and tired of the war like everyone else. Our High Command was not stupid but we were on a time table. We wanted the war to end sooner than later. Dragging it out with a blockade and continuation of the air campaign only extended the pain for another five or ten years.
      You are not giving the fanaticism of the Imperial Japanese their proper respect.

    • @nickcharles1284
      @nickcharles1284 Рік тому +1

      @@Privat2840 Which is exactly why an invasion, or Atom bomb, was unnecessary. Once the Japanese saw that the food had run out, they would have surrendered, and have embraced occupation and rebuilding - just as they did historically.

  • @thearisen7301
    @thearisen7301 2 роки тому +44

    To counter the inevitable claim that the SU would of invaded Japan's mainland, with what sealift capacity? They lost most of their US provided LSTs taking the Kuril islands and they certainly didn't have the sealift capacity to invade beyind that.

    • @thewhiteknight6736
      @thewhiteknight6736 2 роки тому +37

      They would March so many men into the ocean to create a man bridge. Soviet Doctrine 😂

    • @PSL416
      @PSL416 2 роки тому +10

      All the Soviet theorizer fanboys keep forgetting the Soviet’s had little amphibious knowledge and a crappy navy compared to Japan who had a lot of practice defending islands by now. Loss of foreign holdings in Manchuria didn’t scare Japan into surrender either, it just further reminded them that they weren’t special and their empire was dead.

    • @RT-mm8rq
      @RT-mm8rq 2 роки тому +6

      I do believe that at I read somewhere that after the Japanese surrender the Soviet Union " strongly suggested " a partition of mainland Japan similar to what had happened in Germany.
      It may of been Truman, Churchill or both that said,
      " Oh hell no!" ( Ok they just ignored the request. )

    • @danlorett2184
      @danlorett2184 2 роки тому

      They didn't really fear the Soviets actually invading as much as the Soviets claiming they were in the war vs Japan too, and demand a partition of Japan similar to Germany.

    • @jameswright2974
      @jameswright2974 2 роки тому

      Japan did not go into Vietnam North Korea Will not send troops to Ukraine ?..

  • @bentencho
    @bentencho 2 роки тому +49

    This is sometimes a touchy topic as my wife is Japanese and her father is a survivor of Hiroshima. She has always felt that using nuclear weapons was unjust and the wrong choice taken. When we visit the Peace Memorial in Hiroshima, it's not just random names of people that died... some were my wife's extended family, included her grandmother that suffered from radiation-caused illnesses later in life.
    That being said, I explained that it was the "least destructive" option available. That an invasion would have meant the total destruction of Japan as we know it, potentially even a partition of it like East and West Germany, or North and South Korea if the USSR decided they wanted to invade Hokkaido.
    In war, there really isn't right or wrong choices... just choices with more or less destruction.

    • @mikycarney5779
      @mikycarney5779 2 роки тому +2

      @@Eringobragh1861 my great-uncle was shot down over the Aleutian Islands... Grappa was always an advocate for the bomb.. not out of vengeance but out of he didn't millions to die needlessly in a invasion

    • @shinydewott
      @shinydewott 2 роки тому +2

      I would say otherwise. The allies already got the soviets to perpare an invasion of Japanese territories in Manchuria and Korea; and the Japanese high command was more inclined to continue because they thought with the Soviet NAP, they can allocate more resources and hold off the allies. When the soviets did invade Manchuria, they reached Korea in a very short time, and Soviet influence in a following peace deal was something the Japanese were deathly afraid of. The "non-conditional surrender" part was also out of the question since while Truman had advertised nothing less than non-conditional surrender, they were quite happy with keeping the Japanese institutions unphased in the treaty. The nukes were less of a bomb saving american lives and more of a spectacle that was to scare the Soviet Union and to force the Japanese to agree to a surrender they already wanted.

    • @mikycarney5779
      @mikycarney5779 2 роки тому +7

      @@shinydewott a division of the country would have been a far worse fate than those two little firecrackers right? Especially with the North Korean model present

    • @shinydewott
      @shinydewott 2 роки тому

      ​@@mikycarney5779 the fate of Japan, both in and after the war, was sealed before the atomic bombs were even dropped. It didn't do anything to change this, because the Japanese still got all of their demands met in this "unconditional surrender" and the Soviets got as little as possible.

    • @weirdofromhalo
      @weirdofromhalo 2 роки тому

      @@shinydewott The Soviets didn't reach Korea overland. They only got there via naval/amphibious landings.
      And the Japanese knew the Soviets were going to invade. That's why they were redeploying the Kwantung Army. However, they didn't organize fast enough and were caught on the back foot.

  • @DD4SKYART
    @DD4SKYART Рік тому +10

    In earlier decades I asked numerous Veterans of the Pacific War about how they felt about the use of the Bomb. Every one said it was an immense personal relief, knowing they would have lived to raise their families etc.

  • @charlesdoesstuff7379
    @charlesdoesstuff7379 2 роки тому +147

    A few years ago, I had studied this in depth. After reading the casualty estimates for all sides, reading the admiralty's predictions and reading Japan's preparations, I can understand why people were and are against the use of nuclear weapons, but I cannot understand why people could read all the data I read and think Downfall was a better option than two nuclear weapons. There aren't often good options, only better and worse ones, and logically speaking, nuclear weapons were obviously the better, but still not ideal or good option.

    • @hungrymusicwolf
      @hungrymusicwolf 2 роки тому +38

      Most modern people in the west vastly underestimate the horrors of real war, yet they are thoroughly informed on the horrors of nuclear war and radiation so to them it is a nightmare compared to just something out of the history books (that they didn't really read anyways).

    • @darthmitsurugi
      @darthmitsurugi 2 роки тому

      I think we also have the benefit of hindsight to look back and say "Wow that was super fucked up that we nuked a country" because we now know just how devastating and terrible nukes are, not just the detonation itself but its aftereffects. The military and scientific communities probably did not have the same knowledge we do today and shouldn't be held to the same standards that we would put on a country using nuclear weapons would today. Not saying using nukes was OK then but, to the people of the time, it was just another weapon and not the complete shift in military doctrine it became

    • @KennyNGA
      @KennyNGA 2 роки тому

      @@hungrymusicwolf i bet you dont think the same about russias doctrine of targeting civilians it they use it also to make the war shorter i despise both

    • @hungrymusicwolf
      @hungrymusicwolf 2 роки тому +2

      ​@@KennyNGA You're wrong on both in what you think is true and on what I think to begin with, but even if you weren't it would be an apples and oranges comparison. This isn't the second world war and Russia had a choice not to fight and continue existing peacefully without ever needing to start a war. Their attacks are unprovoked and the attacks on civilians completely unnecessary.
      The strategy of demoralizing a country through attacking the citizens was tried multiple times during WW2 and frequently backfired, it did so in the exact same way it is happening in Ukraine right now, namely with a very angry Ukrainian population even more intend on resisting to the bitter end.
      So the doctrine of targeting civilians doesn't work to my knowledge for one, if it did end the war in a few days I could at least admit that it resulted in less overall suffering even if I didn't like it, but it doesn't so I disagree with it.
      Second of all you are an absolute as*hol$ for implying I have any positive view of war. War is simply a part of our reality, so you don't get to take the easy way out of "oh well I don't like any part of war!", newsflash nobody does you spoiled child, but given that it exists we're going to have to make the difficult choice of how we go about it and for once in their existence the US government made the right choice at the time. Considering the choice between the three options: "1. let Japan recover and repeatedly wage war against it until it hopefully collapses on itself a few hundred million deaths later. 2. Invade it directly and likely cause 4-5 million deaths and potentially up to tens of millions, or 3. drop two bombs with max 400 thousand - 500 thousand deaths and end the war in one go.

    • @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022
      @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 2 роки тому +1

      Well, I personally don't think nuclear weapons should not have been used. I think its use should have been much more restrained. There's nothing wrong with nuking an empty field (or the ocean) in Japan to demonstrate the power of the new weapon and state the weapon will be used on Japan's population if they don't surrender. If Japan surrenders then, great, no Hiroshima or Nagasaki resident had to die! If Japan doesn't surrender, much of the moral blame would fall on the Japanese government itself.
      And in the end, you would have achieved Japanese capitulation, but with much more of your moral intact.

  • @FieldTactics
    @FieldTactics 2 роки тому +25

    5:26 The 5 Japanese carriers you list were in no condition for any battle. Hōshō was a training carrier. Katsuragi, didn't have not enough personnel or planes to man her. Junyō, damaged in the Battle of Philippine Sea, was not repaired. Kasagi, Aso and Ikoma being constructed but not finished. Hōshō and Katsuragi were used to ship Japanese servicemen back to Japan. All lacked fuel, planes, and/or personnel, so Japan had no combat active carrier at the end of the war.

    • @brianlong2334
      @brianlong2334 2 роки тому +1

      They had 3 mouths before the start of this operation, now it's possible they could have had them all repaired/ completed by the time this invasion started.
      At lest in terms of how they would have been used probably not as aircraft carriers however....
      Also training or not doesn't mean they wouldn't have been used, not that I think the Japanese would have used them like people think, they would have used them by trying to beach them on landing sights, and or used them for last attempts at raming enemy ship's near or around landing sights.

    • @nickcharles1284
      @nickcharles1284 Рік тому +1

      the Japanese had essentially nothing left. Out of gas, food, ammo. The US could have simply waited until a starving Japan capitulated.

  • @lars1701again
    @lars1701again 2 роки тому +25

    I know it sounds insane but dropping the nukes was more humane than invading them

    • @jacobmott1944
      @jacobmott1944 2 роки тому

      While I wish that we didn't have to, I believe more civilians would have died in and invasion than died in the nuclear attacks, so I agree with you.

    • @lars1701again
      @lars1701again 2 роки тому +2

      @@jacobmott1944 Not to sound heartless but I'm more glad US service men didn't die taking the Island than civies being my grandfather was in Europe and they were going to ship his ass to the Pacific for the invasion.. Fun fact but they made so many Purple Heart medals for the invasion that they were used at least up until the first Gulf war

    • @irisbaez1972
      @irisbaez1972 2 роки тому

      AGREE WITH YOU 100%.

    • @nicholasprzeslawski
      @nicholasprzeslawski 2 роки тому +1

      @@lars1701again We ran out finally during the 2nd gulf war

    • @lars1701again
      @lars1701again 2 роки тому

      @@nicholasprzeslawski Thats a chilling fact isn't?

  • @charliescott2810
    @charliescott2810 2 роки тому +27

    What would happen is the same people upset we used the bombs would be upset we didn't use them 😂

    • @codenamehalo9847
      @codenamehalo9847 2 роки тому +13

      Accurate

    • @sambingham1196
      @sambingham1196 2 роки тому +1

      Spoken like an American. You're not the heroes you portray yourselves as.

    • @blakeoboyle3451
      @blakeoboyle3451 2 роки тому +11

      ​@@sambingham1196 Nobody said we were heroes...

    • @StormCatpounce
      @StormCatpounce 2 роки тому +23

      @@sambingham1196 compared to Imperial Japan almost anyone is a hero. Seethe and cope

    • @charliescott2810
      @charliescott2810 2 роки тому +11

      @@StormCatpounce ye for real Nanking wasn't exactly a picnic

  • @wilcalint
    @wilcalint 2 роки тому +47

    I was born on 4 Oct 1945 on the base hospital on the Marine Air Base, Cherry Point NC. My father was there being retrained for the coming invasion of Japan. Had the US not dropped nukes on Japan the invasion would have likely happened and I would have not had a father.

    • @LucidFL
      @LucidFL 2 роки тому +6

      You'd be statistically likely to have a father.

  • @AlreadyTakenTag
    @AlreadyTakenTag 2 роки тому +16

    15:45 'That damned typhoon...'
    -Some mongolian general

  • @PhillyPhanVinny
    @PhillyPhanVinny 2 роки тому +34

    This video exactly puts forth the point I always argue when people say the US should not have used the nukes on Japan. The actual cost of human life on both the US, Japanese and US Allied side would have been magnitudes greater then what the casualties were from the dropping of the atomic bombs. Those bombings which did not even kill as many people as the conventual bombing of Tokyo with fire bombs.

    • @marcelkuningas6941
      @marcelkuningas6941 2 роки тому +4

      But japan didn't surrender because of the bombings. They surrendered because they feared the soviet union would invade japan since they declared war on japan a couple of days before they surrendered.

    • @willswenson3169
      @willswenson3169 2 роки тому +18

      @@marcelkuningas6941 1) "a couple of days!" *Same with the nukes.* And we actually have the emperor referencing the nukes when they surrendered. No such reference exists for the Soviets. 2) the Soviets didn't have the capabilities to invade mainland Japan. Nor would the US have let it happen, as they were against even the UK and Australia joining.

    • @PhillyPhanVinny
      @PhillyPhanVinny 2 роки тому +20

      @@marcelkuningas6941 Not true at all. Just look at the recordings of the Japanese high command meetings after the first atom bomb until their surrender. They spend almost no time talking about the USSR attack in China. Japan by that point had already accepted that it was losing all of it's international territory after the war. Japan was just fighting on to avoid agreeing to unconditional surrender. As a result in the months and even up to a year prior to the end of the war Japan had been moving it's troops and equipment back from mainland Asia to Japan as is stated in this video. Everything to Japan by then relied on the defense of the home island and causing the Allies as much damage as possible to get them to move off the terms of unconditional surrender.
      After the first nuke hit Japan their nuclear scientists said it would be the only one to the Japanese high command based on their information that to produce enough nuclear material to build a nuke would take years. When the USSR attacked on August 8th it was talked about that day alone. And according to the Japanese leadership it played no role in their decision to surrender as they already accepted that mainland Asian territory as lost territory. It was after the second atom bomb dropped on Japan August 9th that they take the vote on if they should surrender or not. Even then the vote is split 3 to 3 so they need to call the Emperor in to make the decision of if they should surrender which he agrees to after hearing what is happening to his cities by the new American weapon.

    • @PhillyPhanVinny
      @PhillyPhanVinny 2 роки тому +14

      @Palpatine As I already replied to Marcel what you are saying is not true. Japan more then a year prior to their surrender had accepted they were going to lose all of their international territory at the end of WW2. All they were fighting for was to avoid unconditional surrender. And as a result they were moving all of their troops and equipment from main-land Asia back to Japan for about a year prior to their surrender. The Japanese goal was to make the invasion of Japan so costly to the US and allies that they would agree to give Japan some other surrender terms. But the nuclear bombings of Japan are what changed that opinion in the Japanese high leadership not the USSR invasion. The USSR invasion did nothing to Japan but prevent them from moving more troops back to Japan. Something they had already been having a hard time doing for months because of the destruction of their merchant ships by the US submarine force. The second atom bombing of Japan forced a vote by the leadership on if they should surrender then or not. The vote was split 3 to 3 on surrender vs continuing to fight. This forced the Emperor in to break the tie and he agreed to surrender not because of the USSR invasion even a little bit. But because he knew with the US atomic bombings it would allow the US to destroy his nation from the air without needing to use the landing force Japan was hoping to use to get better surrender conditions then the unconditional surrender conditions they agreed to.

    • @dovantien713
      @dovantien713 2 роки тому +12

      @Palpatine Incorrect. The Japanese leadership never talked about the USSR invasion when talking about if they should surrender or not. Japan had already accepted that it was losing all non-Japanese territory after the war. Japan was fighting on to avoid unconditional surrender and as this video points out was moving troops and equipment back from main-land Asia to Japan prior to their surrender to fight the last fight on their home land.

  • @jlinonis
    @jlinonis Рік тому +13

    Well shit looking at this video's comments they didnt need atomic bombs all they needed was some smug 14 year old youtube commentators who wouldve won the war with zero casualties pretty amazing

    • @Blox117
      @Blox117 Рік тому

      strange thing to call yourself out

  • @christaylor6654
    @christaylor6654 2 роки тому +25

    Those 2 bombs saved lives on both sides. The explosion is bigger but no less deadly than fire bombs over all the cities

  • @scott3017
    @scott3017 2 роки тому +18

    If this had happened, I doubt South Korea would be a thing. My guess is that with the Soviets occupying all of Korea, the DPRK would encompass the entire Korean peninsula.

    • @TheMrPeteChannel
      @TheMrPeteChannel 2 роки тому +1

      There would be no Korean war. There would of been a Japan war between the People's Democratic Republic Of Japan against "South Japan".

    • @Mayabichi
      @Mayabichi 2 роки тому

      The atomic bomb truly saved millions by preventing this and ww3

    • @scott3017
      @scott3017 2 роки тому +3

      @@TheMrPeteChannel i guess that would depend on if the Soviets were able to invade Northern Japan as Binkov suggested was a possibility.

    • @pko_2.0_pop7
      @pko_2.0_pop7 Місяць тому

      ​@@scott3017 That was their planned. While Western Allies invading mainland Japan, USSR would make their move on capturing the East Asia mainland from Japan that specifically include China, Korea & Manchuria. Soon as possible, when they finished their campaign in East Asia mainland, they would planned to invade Japan through the North (Hokkaido).

  • @BritIronRebel
    @BritIronRebel 2 роки тому +16

    I had to watch this because my Father was a USMC aviator in the Pacific Theatre. This topic was discussed in my highschool one day. So at dinner that night, I asked him what his opinion was. He just said: "Well, look at it this way.... if it wasn't for the bombs, you probably wouldn't be here today...."

    • @georgeniebling6566
      @georgeniebling6566 2 роки тому +4

      Yup ... my dad was a medic on Saipan ... he always said the same thing. He hated the bomb but was thankful for it

    • @LarryNiven226
      @LarryNiven226 2 роки тому +2

      My dad said something similar and thanked Paul Tibbets.

    • @davidhollenshead4892
      @davidhollenshead4892 2 роки тому

      Worse than that...
      The A-bombs prevented Operation Cherry Blossoms at Night, the use of Bio-Weapons on San Diego, San Francisco and Portland, which would have killed between 25% of the population of North America and 25% of the World. Had OCBatN happened, the Japanese People and Imperial Japan would only exist in the History Books, as the World response would be simply "KILL THEM ALL !!!!!!!!!"

  • @rossdawgsbrokenspirit9038
    @rossdawgsbrokenspirit9038 Рік тому +11

    Let this vid be a lesson to any silly unrealistic leftwinger that thinks the atomic attacks were mistakes

    • @anthonyn.9228
      @anthonyn.9228 Рік тому

      The US only had material to build three bombs for a year and a half. Numbnut.

    • @rossdawgsbrokenspirit9038
      @rossdawgsbrokenspirit9038 Рік тому +2

      Your statement makes no point. I blame your parents for your low IQ.@@anthonyn.9228

    • @zachariaszix7731
      @zachariaszix7731 Рік тому +1

      @@anthonyn.9228 incorrect, they have enough materials to create two bombs per month. In fact, the tactical deployment of the atom bombs were considered since there will be an estimated 15 bombs available by then.

  • @thearisen7301
    @thearisen7301 2 роки тому +41

    The Soviet Union declared war and invaded at the behest of the allies to further pressure Japan. It's also important to note that Japan wanted the USSR to help negotiate a peace deal but with them having declared war that wasn't an option so they had to accept unconditional surrender.
    I do hope people can look at the casualty figures and realize why the atomic bombs had to be used. It was better than millions of dead people.

    • @KennyNGA
      @KennyNGA 2 роки тому +2

      who tf shortens soviet union with SU instead of ussr

    • @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022
      @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 2 роки тому +1

      My personal opinion is that atomic bomb should have been used on an empty field or ocean near Japan (and this is not my idea, many scientists on Manhattan project advocated this), then broadcast the results to threaten Japan with a bomb on a populated area.
      It would have been a much more moral decision and would have wrought much of the blame of casualties on Japanese government, it's not like the US was lacking nukes, the next nuke was to be ready in about a week after Nagasaki and production was estimated to be 4 monthly from Sep onwards.
      To the idiots: yes, Japan committed war crimes during WW2, that doesn't mean you have to go eye for eye. Being the better person is a much better path, especially when it doesn't really cost anything.

    • @silverletter4551
      @silverletter4551 2 роки тому

      @@chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 we weren't that much better. We just won the war because Americans were better equipped and better fighters. Japanese were a second rate armed force brutalizing third rate nations.

    • @nicolivoldkif9096
      @nicolivoldkif9096 2 роки тому +3

      @@chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 highly doubt that would have changed anything besides the number of nukes dropped being changed from 2 to 3. Hell, it may have changed it to 4 or more. Not using a weapon on an actual target doesn't have nearly impact as actually using it on a target. It can also have the exact opposite reaction you desire as you now look to your enemy as unwilling to use it and an opportunity may be there exploit your morals to prevent you from using it later on. This is why human shield tactics are still used to this day.

    • @PerSon-xg3zr
      @PerSon-xg3zr 2 роки тому +1

      @@nicolivoldkif9096 Yup sometimes you just need to go eye for eye.

  • @BewareTheCarpenter
    @BewareTheCarpenter 2 роки тому +19

    I looked at the casualty estimates 19:23 and thought they were lower than I'd previously heard, then realized they were only for the US.
    'Volunteer fighting force was all healthy men and women of a certain age' If you weren't able to fight you were expected to commit suicide rather than be taken captive so really everyone.

  • @christosvoskresye
    @christosvoskresye 2 роки тому +14

    Also, IF this had happened, Japan would have been treated more harshly in the aftermath. The Imperial line would be extinct. Legend of Zelda would never have happened.

    • @MyChannelOnThisSite
      @MyChannelOnThisSite 2 роки тому

      Why would they have been treated more harshly?

    • @christosvoskresye
      @christosvoskresye 2 роки тому +1

      @@MyChannelOnThisSite Revenge. Even as things played out, MacArthur was pushing a lot of buttons being as generous as he was, but if you add another million casualties and there would be no patience with letting Hirohito off easy.

  • @meatpuppet2136
    @meatpuppet2136 Рік тому +14

    The Germans fought on until they were pretty well completely overrun. Berlin was bought by the Soviets at a high price. For some reason some people think Japan would have been less fanatical.

    • @hagamapama
      @hagamapama Рік тому +4

      Not less fanatical. Less capable. Japan was even more vulnerable to firebombing than Germany. Also unlike Germany, Japan never had a proper answer to the much-maligned M4 Sherman. They had no tanks that could really stand up against it, and their antitank weapons were designed to fight the kind of tanks they fielded. Even the old M3 Lee tanks with their bizarre layout would have posed a big problem for Japan due to the fact that the old tank bristled with machine guns and was a tough nut for infantry to crack.
      Not that the Japanese wouldn't have done a lot of damage but you need weapons that work in order to mount effective resistence, and Japan didn't have that many of those left by the time the war reached the home islands.

    • @stephenlang7870
      @stephenlang7870 Рік тому +1

      Japan was more realistic than Germany. They would have surrendered to the US to keep Russia out which was coming shortly.

    • @gorgonzillahthecheesemonst4273
      @gorgonzillahthecheesemonst4273 Рік тому +2

      The Allies could not have known that. It did not match with their experience fighting the Japanese in the previous 4 years.
      Russia could not invade Japan unless the US Navy provided taxi service, but it was a bigger problem that Russia might occupy ALL of western Europe and Korea, and China, and no one had the troops in place to stop them or to dislodge them once they occupied both continents.

    • @macmcgee5116
      @macmcgee5116 Рік тому

      ​@@hagamapamaless capable yes. But still dangerous. To US troops and themselves. There is no doubt in my mind that many Japanese soldiers would willingly turn themselves into human bombs, flinging themselves onto US tanks while strapped with explosives.
      Also, as was witnessed on many islands that had been held by Japan, the Japanese military had told civilians many horrifying stories about what the US soldiers would do to them. Including things like slex savery, and cannibalism. This had been enough to make civilians throw themselves off of cliffs when they saw US soldiers approaching. Soldiers witnessed it, but were too far away to intercede. Imagine how much worse that would have been on the Japanese homeland. Potentially millions of women and children committing suicide because they wrongly feared what they believed to be the alternative.

    • @AdamantLightLP
      @AdamantLightLP 8 місяців тому

      @@hagamapama They did though. Part of the reason they didn't on the islands is they were preparing for a defense of the mainland Japan.

  • @AidanS99
    @AidanS99 2 роки тому +16

    All of Japan was preparing for a fight to the death. I don’t think it’s an exaggeration to assume that a conflict on the Japanese mainland could’ve become the new Eastern front.

    • @Emilechen
      @Emilechen 2 роки тому

      if the Japanese refuses to surrender, finally their homeland will be occupied and divided by the US, USSR and China...

    • @gamevalor
      @gamevalor 2 роки тому

      Yep remember how Vietnamese won the Vietnam War. That's how the allies would lose in the long term.

  • @gregc247
    @gregc247 2 роки тому +15

    Pretty clear as bad as the a-bombs were it probably worked out for the best even for Japan historically, it also prevented ww3 and set the current taboo on their use

  • @internetexplorer7143
    @internetexplorer7143 2 роки тому +16

    The Japanese must have some kind of special relationship with typhoons

  • @markfocacci5174
    @markfocacci5174 Рік тому +24

    My father was at Iwo Jima with the 5th Division. He was on Guam, training for the invasion of Japan when the bombs were dropped in August 1945. He told me that all he could think was that he was going to live and get to go home.

    • @milt6208
      @milt6208 Рік тому +2

      Harry Truman was an artillery officer in World War I and he saw first hand the death and destruction in the trenches. I'm sure that had a direct effect on his decision to drop the bomb. How could he not use a weapon that would save millions of lives and stop the war. (And the cost of the Manhattan Project) So he did it. How could he look into the faces of all those people who lost loved ones if he decided not to use it. I'm happy because my Dad and Uncle were in Navy boot camp in Chicago and they got to be in a parade on VJ Day. Harry Truman was a real man. Your father was a real man too!!!

  • @jakovvodanovic9165
    @jakovvodanovic9165 2 роки тому +11

    While awful and horrible, there was very little option but to use the bombs.

    • @scottslotterbeck3796
      @scottslotterbeck3796 2 роки тому

      BS. Just firebomb city after city, after city. A nuclear bomb caused fewer deaths than Dresden.

  • @jamesm3471
    @jamesm3471 2 роки тому +41

    If the US had to actually invade just 2 of the Japanese home islands in 1945-46, the carnage for all parties involved, would’ve been so great, even if Downfall went relatively to plan, I highly doubt the US public would have had the stomach to even dabble in Korea or Vietnam in the coming years.

    • @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022
      @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 2 роки тому +3

      Well, the heavy intervention in Korea was motivated by the fact that Truman was being heavily blamed for "losing China" (which is a dumb argument imo, China wasn't Truman's to lose to begin with), so it was to show he wasn't soft on communism.
      So, probably still would've happened, especially as people see preventing spread of communism as preventing another Pearl Harbor.

    • @jamesm3471
      @jamesm3471 2 роки тому +4

      @@chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 You make some really great points, but this is generally the biggest issue w/ alternative history: if this had happened & not that, then… it’s just not possible to know even the extent what could change, let alone just what those changes would end up being.
      So if an US invasion of the Japanese home islands had to go down to end the war, what then?
      Well before even the first off-loading ramp crashed down into the surf, US forces would start taking casualties at rates never before seen in the nation’s military history. It’d start w/ the targeting the naval forces supporting the invasion, then the boots on the ground, & it wouldn’t let up, not in a week, not in a month. There’d be immediate & immense pressure to make big-time concessions to the Soviet Union, to get them to do more than just mop up in Manchuria, & good luck getting the Red Army to hand over territory for which they had to shed blood to take. To just say “What happened in Korea would then happen in Japan” would be a gross over-simplification, b/c there are way too many variables, but one would have to imagine a Japan divided by capitalism vs communism would take precedence over a similar conflict taking place on the Asian mainland.

    • @Lajos_Kelemen
      @Lajos_Kelemen 2 роки тому +1

      @@jamesm3471 You’re making a very good point about a subject I just wanted to bring up.
      People really oversimplify “what if” scenarios, when these events shaped and effected so many lives, whole nations for generations, you don’t just simply remove them from the equation and say “things would’ve ended up better that way.”

    • @eddiesanchez1899
      @eddiesanchez1899 2 роки тому

      I don’t thing there would have been a Korean War, as the Soviets would have ended up with all of Korea instead of half of it, with the whole country under Kim Il Sung, but there might have been a communist North Japan and capitalist South Japan.

    • @mrjockt
      @mrjockt 2 роки тому

      If the U.S. had gone ahead with this invasion I doubt very much if either Korea or Vietnam would have been of much concern later since it’s most probable that the Soviet Union would have taken the opportunity to spread their influence and assist their political allies in the region far earlier than in the real timeline, instead of Korea being split the entire country would have been taken over and the Soviets and China would probably have provided far more support to the Viet Minh allowing them to defeat the French far quicker and gain control over the entire area and not just in the north.

  • @isrisentoday
    @isrisentoday 2 роки тому +18

    This topic has long been overdue. Of all the hypothetical battles in Binkov, this has got to be the most real. Thanks, Binkov.

    • @gamevalor
      @gamevalor 2 роки тому

      it's not the most real, because it is too much a western take on the topic and not forgetting how the USA failed to win the Vietnam War who had far less money and equipment.

    • @hehe-jg8zz
      @hehe-jg8zz 2 роки тому

      @@gamevalor wasn't vietnam supported by the ussr?

  • @jamesherron9969
    @jamesherron9969 Рік тому +7

    So do you know what the rule of thumb is? It takes three invaders to remove one occupier so if Japan had 900,000 troops it would take almost 3,000,000 US troops to remove them. You would’ve been looking at the US death toll upwards to 1 1/2 million just for this island.

    • @slackdaddy1912
      @slackdaddy1912 Рік тому +2

      Don’t forget the civilian population who were also trained to die for the emperor, and surrender terms were not agreed to unless the emperor stayed in power. It was not an unconditional surrender.

    • @jamesherron9969
      @jamesherron9969 Рік тому +2

      @@slackdaddy1912 I didn't forget about the civilians but the surrender was unconditional it was MacArthur who allowed the emperor to stay in power for he knew if they were to arrest and try the emperor for war crimes that the civilian population would rise up in revolt causing a large problem for the transition of power at the time he was extremely scorn for his decision by the American people but I believe it was a wise decision at the time keep the war at hand and not let it transition into a rebel guerrilla warfare

    • @goosnavslakovic4908
      @goosnavslakovic4908 Рік тому

      The Japanese did have homeland advantage, so you're right there. But the americans had technological advantage and superior results in combat.
      Most of the Pacific war was the US on the attack and consistently netted a 3-5:1 KD ratio against the Japanese. There were almost 3 million Japanese casualties with less than 200k American.
      One of the most well defended (and arguably the most well defended) strongholds in the world, that being Iwo Jima, although was one of the only few battles where the Americans suffered more casualties, didn't have such a skewed ratio, with more Japanese soldiers dying and more US soldiers getting injured.
      This most certainly would've carried over into the invasion of the home islands as the best of the Japanese troops were either dead, exhausted and malnourished, lacking equipment, or on mainland China.
      The results still would've been catastrophic and seen well over 1 million American casualties, but in return you would've seen a near wipe out of the Japanese population.

  • @andycray8590
    @andycray8590 2 роки тому +14

    My father was in the 11 airborne division. They were trained for this invasion they excepted very high casualties
    Thanks president Truman for saving hundreds of thousands of American GIs

  • @ed056
    @ed056 2 роки тому +16

    Even if we tried to 'starve them out' the death toll would have been many times that of the nukes and the anti-nuke groupies would instead bemoaning the starvation policy. Had we invaded the same armchair generals would be declaring that it was unnecessary because japan was 'ready to surrender'. The simple fact is that the Japanese leadership was ready to allow the entire county to commit hari-kari rather than face the humiliation of surrender. Even the 'shock and awe' of the nukes did not deter them. They very nearly pulled off a coup when the Emperor ordered surrender.

    • @jeffreyerwin3665
      @jeffreyerwin3665 2 роки тому

      That's right, Japan surrendered because of Hirohito's order. But that ordered only came when Truman offered him amnesty.

    • @gamevalor
      @gamevalor 2 роки тому

      @@jeffreyerwin3665 That's right and Japan would continue a guerilla fight for however long necessary if an occupation is not beneficial. The allies would get drained over the course of years of money, equipment and casualties until they leave. Or even if they stayed, being an island country the occupiers would eventually assimilate and lose as well.

  • @KingsandGenerals
    @KingsandGenerals 2 роки тому +41

    Such an interesting topic!

    • @rainyvideos3684
      @rainyvideos3684 2 роки тому +1

      Don't forget to cover all the potential civilian casualties from fighting US forces with bamboo weapons and committing suicde when you get there. And don't forget to mention when you get to the Atom bombs that if they were not used, given everything we know about human history, what are the odds that you think we would've used them in any other conflict or crisis to see what they would do (IE cuban missile crisis for ex). In other words, the two bombings gave us a clear blueprint of what would happen making nuclear war less likely because people like Kennedy and Kruschev and so fourth would know exactly what to expect in a nuclear exchange as opposed to it being theoretical.

    • @gg_slayer_
      @gg_slayer_ 2 роки тому +1

      yoo

    • @jameswright2974
      @jameswright2974 2 роки тому

      Kings and generals at one time led their Troops int battle niw they use their troops as cannon fodder illegal wars leaders
      Retire on high salaries citizens fork out millions to Guard them against assisnnation in America A pastime slaughtering their own children and presidents Use lies and propaganda to their naive citizens ie USA And Uk saved Europe from the Natzi’s who now control North Atlantic terrorist organisation NATO Yugoslavia 5000 slaughtered 22 chines in their embassy

  • @fgrodriguezqac
    @fgrodriguezqac Рік тому +12

    In anticipation of this invasion the US Military ordered the production of hundreds of thousands of Purple Heart Medals. They ordered so many that decades later in wars like Korea, Vietnam, Dessert Storm the Purple Heart medals given to soldiers were the ones produced from back in WW 2. They were all leftovers.

    • @kencf0618
      @kencf0618 Рік тому +2

      The bean counters knew their stuff.

  • @lancehanrahan562
    @lancehanrahan562 2 роки тому +49

    My father was in the Australian army, and fought in the Borneo landings. He told me if it wasn't for the atomic bombs, he and his mates would have been in the invasion of Japan. He said none of them would have probably survived and I would not have born.

    • @jars6230
      @jars6230 2 роки тому +1

      The meeting that lead to the decision to surrender made virtually no mention of the bombs. Hiroshima and Nagasaki had no military significance, and air raids had been doing just as much damage to Japan for months. They had planned to fight relying on their army in China, but when Russia started destroying it, they ran out of options and surrendered. The bombs were irrelevant, the cities were chosen based on their usefulness as 'experiments' on how much damage the bombs would do, not on destroying Japanese military capacity.

    • @cashewnuttel9054
      @cashewnuttel9054 2 роки тому +7

      You know what I find bizarre is whenever some european or whatever gets angry whenever American contributions is brought up during the war? It's like they refuse to acknowledge this out of... I don't know... pride? Arrogance? And they never think of this:
      "none of them would have probably survived and I would not have born."
      To them it's more important that they prove who did the most instead of how important that the war ended as soon as it did.

    • @jars6230
      @jars6230 2 роки тому +3

      @@cashewnuttel9054 What do you mean? America won the war against Japan. I dont think I have ever heard anyone dispute that. But America won the war, not American atomic bombs. Japans insane exit strategy for the war just assumed many hundreds of thousands of dead civilians from bombing. Why would finding out it would only take a few planes, and not lots, have caused them to surrender?

    • @Regnbuesolv
      @Regnbuesolv 2 роки тому +5

      My grandfather was on a British Navy ship and did exercises with the Australian forces inSingapore. And he agrees with you; if the invasion had happened he and his comrades would have died.
      Instead, he transported several tonnes of supplies to Nagasaki. Supplies that were meant to be for the invasion.

    • @letsgowinnietheflu5439
      @letsgowinnietheflu5439 2 роки тому +8

      @@jars6230 You don't know what you are talking about. The decision to surrender was made only a couple of hours after the Soviets launched their offensive. The General staff thought it was just boarder incursions. The Japanese also knew that the USSR did not have the naval capabilities to launch any successful nivation of the home islands. did the Emperor mention the Soviets, no, did he mention the bomb when he broadcast to his people, yes. So stop learning history from video games and reading real books.

  • @CharliMorganMusic
    @CharliMorganMusic 2 роки тому +10

    The Pacific theatre was complete and total war. No holds barred on either side because both sides viewed the other as less than human.

    • @kilpatrickkirksimmons5016
      @kilpatrickkirksimmons5016 2 роки тому

      It truly was the mirror of the Eastern Front. "War Without Mercy" as one book put it. The nukes, and all that water, were the only things keeping the body count from Eastern Front levels.

  • @toobeast673
    @toobeast673 2 роки тому +29

    I see the lie that the Japanese were going to surrender anyway is still alive and well. After both Hiroshima and Nagasaki were atomized half of the Japanese cabinet still wished to continue the war and were continuing preparations to do so. The only reason the Emperor intervened to end the war is because he believed the US stockpile was large enough to wipe out the entire Japanese nation. The idea the Soviet invasion of a Japanese colony(Manchuria) scared them enough to lead to a surrender is laughable. Not to mention the Soviets lacked the naval capacity to seriously threaten Hokkaido.

    • @silverhawkscape2677
      @silverhawkscape2677 2 роки тому +10

      TY for pointing that out. It easy to look up on YT that the Soviets lacked the Proper navy for such an Invasion. Even they admitted as much.

    • @DonVigaDeFierro
      @DonVigaDeFierro 2 роки тому +9

      Exactly. In fact, many extremist generals attempted to assassinate _the emperor_ after he declared the surrender of Japan...
      The people spreading that lie are absolutely uninformed.

    • @ryansharpe3564
      @ryansharpe3564 2 роки тому +5

      Spot on. After Hiroshima, the emperor wanted to surrender but his split cabinet, especially the army, wanted to continue. There was no way the commies were capable of conducting an amphibious invasion

    • @migfire
      @migfire 2 роки тому

      I don't know, I think a powerful nation suddenly capturing your territory at an alarming rate at the north, would be scary if you ask me. Maybe it wasn't the top reason, but it was definitely adding fuel to the fire.

    • @Channel-23s
      @Channel-23s 2 роки тому

      Not to mention the military tried to stop the surrender by taking the message but it still went through they could’ve surrender early instead of arming civilians and making more military vehicles

  • @pasqualguigano6315
    @pasqualguigano6315 Рік тому +14

    One of the previous foreign ministers of Japan admitted that using the two nuclear weapons in Japan, actually saved more lives in the long run

  • @steveweidig5373
    @steveweidig5373 2 роки тому +8

    Fun fact about Operation Downfall: The US produced hundred of thousands of Purple Heart medals for the invasion, so many that they have still many left for wounded soldier to this day. Even the wars in Vietnam and Korea together could only use up half of them.

  • @HyperK7
    @HyperK7 2 роки тому +16

    Personally I think the Japanese casualties were lowballed. On pure military, sure those are probably accurate up to Japanese surrender. But there likely would’ve been a massive Guerilla campaign afterwards, see pockets of soldiers fighting for 20+ years for reference. As for civilians, we probably would’ve seen mass suicides like at Saipan. With the propaganda and all other factors, it really isn’t hard to see Japanese populations committing suicide on mass as American forces approach or for them to join the front in suicidal patterns.
    As for why this didn’t happen historically, MacArthur may be a madman but he knew how to truly capitulate a country. Firstly, circulating an image where he towered over the Emperor, showing how their Emperor was not really a god like figure. Second, having Hirohito proclaim the surrender himself to make sure his people knew it was over. Guy knew how to get a country under the start of an occupation to just be quiet.

    • @zerefsunlimitedshipworks
      @zerefsunlimitedshipworks 2 роки тому

      No wonder he wanted to have a big fucking line of irradiated wasteland in Manchuria. Two nukes shut Hirohito up, fifty would've shut Mao up.

    • @Mgl1206
      @Mgl1206 2 роки тому

      I read somewhere that when the surrender was announced the people couldn’t actually understand it because the Imperial palace was so separate from the people that it had different dialects and accents.

    • @gamevalor
      @gamevalor 2 роки тому

      The allied occupiers would have left in the long run if there was a VIetnam War guerilla war, but way worse in terms of casualties.

  • @fedos
    @fedos 2 роки тому +10

    My grandfather was an Avenger radioman/gunner on the Antietam. They were 3 days out from Hawaii en route for the invasion of Japan when they received word of the end of hostilities.

  • @charleslloyd4253
    @charleslloyd4253 Рік тому +13

    The 500 plane bombing raids would have turned into 1000 plane raids. Planes and ships would have transferred from the European theater to the pacific. millions of people in Japan would have died from the bombings and millions more would have starved to death. And you have to remember. Russia just declared war on Japan. If we had to invade from the south. Russia would have invaded from the north. Taking as much land as they could for themselves. And we would have had another divided Germany in Japan.

    • @MacTac141
      @MacTac141 Рік тому

      Even still Japan took so long to surrender Russia and it’s pathetic pacific naval capabilities of 1945 managed to snag the Kuril Islands which they still occupy today

  • @eskercurve
    @eskercurve 2 роки тому +14

    Both of my grandfathers fought in the Pacific theater. They knew how the Japanese would treat troops that managed to land on the mainland. "Holy war" sums it up. They would never have surrendered. They were teaching kids how to sharpen bamboo into spikes and how to stab soldiers and run away after they received candy or something. I wholly agree with using nukes to end the war to save millions more.

    • @Zogerpogger
      @Zogerpogger 2 роки тому +2

      Why assume Americans had to land on the island? They were already starving from American submarine campaign and the Soviet attack on Manchuria was very important in Japan's decision to surrender.

    • @cagdas135
      @cagdas135 2 роки тому

      Americans are always lovely when they are trying to justify turning children to ash. War crimes are not things to be proud of. They can at least have the decency to pretend they are sorry but instead they expect to be treated like heros.

    • @macmcleod1188
      @macmcleod1188 2 роки тому +5

      @@Zogerpogger the Russians didn't merit mention in Emperor hirohito's address to the Japanese Nation. He did specifically mention the nuclear bombs as the reason.
      Once a nation turns to total war, as Germany and Japan had done, they don't get to say "oops" and walk away.

    • @nonyabisness6306
      @nonyabisness6306 2 роки тому

      @@macmcleod1188 Except they totally did. Warcriminals where pardoned in exchange for research and assistance, the emporer got to stay...
      As for total war...you think the US and USSR didn't fight a total war? The us literally used weapons of mass destruction against cities and used unrestricted submarine warfare. By your logic the US needs to be destroyed, with bioweapons if necessary.

    • @macmcleod1188
      @macmcleod1188 2 роки тому

      @@nonyabisness6306 excuse me but are those Nations? You seem to have mixed up your nouns. A nation is made up of millions of human individuals.
      I agree with you that it sucks that a few humans got away with it.

  • @JRynecki-Music
    @JRynecki-Music 2 роки тому +10

    Call of duty or any shooter video game is really missing out by not making a game on this scenario

  • @oscaralbertomendozachavez5611
    @oscaralbertomendozachavez5611 2 роки тому +19

    People talking about how the nukes were "unnecesary" and forgetting how the Japanese treated their own people in Okinawa and how they battled to the death. UA-cam generals, nothing else and nothing more.

    • @missk1697
      @missk1697 2 роки тому +1

      Big talk for an america fanboy who can't cite any sources to back up his pathetic claims, and resorts to insulting people instead.

    • @airborneace
      @airborneace 2 роки тому

      Many Allied leaders at the time were against the A-bombs. Would you call Eisenhower, MacArthur, Halsey, Leahy and others "UA-cam Generals"?

    • @purplenurp5590
      @purplenurp5590 2 роки тому +1

      So true its painful

  • @PC4USE1
    @PC4USE1 2 роки тому +12

    6 million deaths for an invasion vs 120 thousand for the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. As hideous as an A-bomb may be,the scales tip drastically toward it in this scenario. Also ,remember that Dresden was fire bombed by conventional weapons with a loss of 35 thousand people. A bombing like that might have happened if the A bomb was never developed.

    • @johnf7683
      @johnf7683 2 роки тому +1

      There were bombings WORST than Dresden (the 35k number for Dresden is likely over-estimated, based on the German reports at that time) Japan. The bombing of Tokyo in March 1945 is estimated to have cost 90,000-100,000 lives en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Tokyo_(10_March_1945)

  • @jmen4ever257
    @jmen4ever257 2 роки тому +11

    Imagine the relief of the young Soldiers, just graduating from their basic training at the end of July 1945, who had been told that they were the ones who were going to have to invade Japan.

    • @prestonroberts2941
      @prestonroberts2941 2 роки тому +4

      My grandpa had just survived the invasion of Okinawa, and was scheduled to be part of Coronet; relief is not a strong enough word.

    • @timsharkey1993
      @timsharkey1993 2 роки тому +5

      A lot of the Army units who had just finished fighting in Europe were being told to prepare for training for the invasion of Japan. Included in that was my father’s artillery battalion. To say he was relieved would be an understatement as well.

    • @kentmitchell1510
      @kentmitchell1510 2 роки тому +4

      Imagine the relief of men like my uncle and my father, who had seen combat in Europe and were on the way to the Pacific.

  • @zTheBigFishz
    @zTheBigFishz 2 роки тому +12

    The Japanese military was a suicidal death cult, something we learned during Saipan. Whole families were jumping off cliffs, folks were killing their kids, then themselves, etc. The experience in the Marianas was what started the US thinking of alternatives. One of the major themes developed in the excellent book "The Fleet at Flood Tide"

    • @karlheinzvonkroemann2217
      @karlheinzvonkroemann2217 2 роки тому +3

      My father was in the 4th Marine Div. in assault on Saipan, Tinian, Roi Namur and Iwo Jima. He always said that for him Saipan was the worst.

    • @kentmitchell1510
      @kentmitchell1510 2 роки тому +1

      @@karlheinzvonkroemann2217 I tip my hat to your father. I *briefly* visited Saipan back in 1999. Saw Marpi Point.

    • @janus3555
      @janus3555 Рік тому

      One way to eliminate your enemy. They do it for you, lol. One of the many failings of the ideology.

  • @marcusaustralius2416
    @marcusaustralius2416 2 роки тому +11

    Nuking them seems a sick sort of mercy compared to this
    With casualties this high and fighting this brutal, it almost seems like genocide

  • @bmurr912
    @bmurr912 Рік тому +15

    I'm about as critical as anyone about US foreign policy over the years, but the use of atomic weapons saved not only hundreds of thousand of American lives, but also, without question, even more Japanese lives.

    • @arkwill14
      @arkwill14 Рік тому +7

      Agree. I would also add to that list:
      - All the civilians living in all Japanese-occupied land and islands throughout Asia who were suffering under their brutal administration.
      - All the Allied POWs who were wasting away in Japanese prisoner of war camps which had notoriously high death rates.
      - All the enslaved people who were pressed into brutal service for the Japanese war effort all over Asia.
      - All the Allied soldiers who were still fighting the Japanese on other fronts (Chinese, Soviets, Americans, and British Commonwealth)
      So basically every extra day the war lasted only added to the considerable death toll. It only made sense that the Japanese should be forced to pay such a high price because it was _they_ who brought about the war in the Pacific Theatre and it was _they_ who were prolonging it.

    • @baiwuli6781
      @baiwuli6781 Рік тому +3

      Yeah, today's kids are too emotional and out of touch with reality, they have no idea how savage the Japanese were.

    • @brunoalbano616
      @brunoalbano616 Рік тому

      @@baiwuli6781 just looking at a Japanese officer would make you lose your head with a katana strike. Ask the Chinese or hear the POW hearings.
      There are Chinese who say that the USA should thrown a third one at Tokyo.

    • @baiwuli6781
      @baiwuli6781 Рік тому +1

      @@brunoalbano616 The japanese were so brutal that even a Nazi officer (John Rabe) in Nanking tried to save people from the japanese army massacre. They were so brutal that they were no longer humans, they were beasts living in human skin.just like the Harkonnen in Dune.

    • @brunoalbano616
      @brunoalbano616 Рік тому

      It was a devilish option, but the nukes stopped a Korea under full soviet control, a divided Japan worse than Germany and one million k.i.a from the Allied side and even more from the Japanese side.
      If these kids had their parents or relatives killed in Iwo Jima or Okinawa (already Japanese territory), they wouldn't be talking like that. They don't know that the old Imperial Japanese Army despised surrender and those who surrendered.

  • @DonVigaDeFierro
    @DonVigaDeFierro 2 роки тому +34

    One thing is certain. It would have been a bloodbath and the nukes were preferable.
    Over 100,000 Japanese lost their lives when the US took the tiny island of Okinawa, more casualties than in Hiroshima or Nagasaki and only little less than in both cities combined (129,000-266,000)
    The American and British estimates were around one million casualties of American soldiers alone, with half a million British. The Japanese were mobilizing civilians including women and children to fight, what would have been the outcome? An unacceptable number of deaths.
    But of course, armchair historians would have preferred the invasion, and America bad, and the Japanese were totally ready to surrender... But they didn't because... reasons... Ignoring that the question was not whether Japan was ready to surrender. the question was whether they would accept the terms... Well, they did, and they were occupied by the US and of course, evil America turned the country into a disgusting peaceful democracy where peasants weren't starving to death, and in one of the most powerful economies of the late 20th century, ugh...

    • @anenticingsquid9219
      @anenticingsquid9219 2 роки тому +1

      When your problems get so immeasurably small, the only way to find them is with a fine toothed comb and a magnifying glass. The US is enjoying such a tremendous excess of wealth, yet our human nature will not let us enjoy it. We must seek out problems to overcome, if we cannot find any, we will make them.
      If hardship puts things into perspective, what then does ease do? You know what I find funny? Nobody complains at a funeral. And though it is a sad affair, I see more smiles and laughing and genuine interactions there than I do in the streets. Its almost as if difficulty brings out both the best and worst in people, but comfort only ever brings out the worst...

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 2 роки тому +3

      Finally a man who knows history not just someone who vitures signal when they hear the word nuke and 100k died without a understanding of the scale of the war and history.

    • @abba-Flammenfresser
      @abba-Flammenfresser 2 роки тому +1

      Amen, what a beautiful analysis but lbh, the people arguing against the nukes are Chinese WuMao and Russian bots, wanting to sow dissent amongst The West and their allies. They’ve been quieter lately because of how embarrassing Russia is performing in Ukraine, but never forget, anytime you see such comments to check their profile or previous comments. You’ll notice a pattern of anti-American/anti-British/western sentiments. Any person with common sense will tell you why it was necessary.

    • @jbyeats
      @jbyeats 2 роки тому

      You can say & think what you like but both Germany & Japan are VASSAL STATES of the USA
      They get their weapon systems from the USA and are told exactly how high to jump .
      ( Japan is the largest holder of US foreign debt .)

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 2 роки тому

      @@jbyeats Really? So is the Leopard tank a joke to you? Is the TYphoon fighter a joke for you? Is the Pz2000 a joke to you? Is the Hk G5 a joke to you? Your logic falls flat on its face.

  • @zeyuzhang2017
    @zeyuzhang2017 2 роки тому +11

    Compared with 2 A-Bombs, with no do doubt the conventional warfare in Japan would be much more fierce. The incendiary bombardments in Tokyo kills more people than the 2 atomic bombs combined.

  • @thecoolnerdplaysvr5674
    @thecoolnerdplaysvr5674 2 роки тому +19

    I don't think Russia could have invaded. They lacked the naval ability to do much other than a few small islands.

    • @43415uranium
      @43415uranium 2 роки тому +2

      Exactly whenever anyone brings up Russia invading mainland Japan I always reply with what navy? The Russians would need years just to design and build the fleet to do it.

    • @thecoolnerdplaysvr5674
      @thecoolnerdplaysvr5674 2 роки тому

      @@43415uranium Russia never really focused on its navy like Britain and the US because it's main goals enemies are land based. And any supplies are mostly land too.
      A few small insignificant islands are one thing.
      Mainland no way.
      China and Korea. OH yeah. They where pushing.

  • @GuineaPigEveryday
    @GuineaPigEveryday Рік тому +10

    Hey and a reminder for the ppl claiming that the nukes were ‘too far’ and unjustified, there were reports of a ‘Kill All POW’s’ order sent out to local commanders outside of Japan (considering they still held significant territory across South-East Asia) that said they should kill all Prisoners of War from August 20th or so. Now thats based on surviving evidence. But if that’s not good enough, Hirohito when deciding on surrender days after the nuclear strikes, actually stopped a fucking COUP attempt by military officials who wanted to continue the war. If you think the nukes weren’t necessary, think again, because thousands upon thousands of people were stuck in those concentration camps or on the railroads or in Japan itself who were days away from dying. I know I owe my existence to those bombs, my grandfather was just a teenager stuck in the camps without his mom or dad and every day given less and less to survive on.

    • @josephshields2922
      @josephshields2922 Рік тому +1

      The "People claiming...nukes were unjustified" include Adm Halsey, Adm Leahy, Eisenhower and MacArthur, Herbert Hoover, and the Secretary of war. All were more knowledgeable of the situation than any of us, BTW How many pows did the bombs kill both in the cities and in retribution by the Japanese?

    • @hagamapama
      @hagamapama Рік тому +2

      Let's turn that question around: How many JAPANESE did the dropping of the bombs save do you think? Millions? Tens of millions? If the US had to march up the islands by foot and blow the hell out of any resistance that showed its faces, how much of a Japan do you think would have been left at the end? Not to mention blockades, starvation, epidemics, bad food and water, and all the horrors that go with this.
      Germany was pretty badly devastated, Germany's devastation would have had nothing on what happened in Japan.@@josephshields2922

    • @paulputz7698
      @paulputz7698 Рік тому +1

      Who cares? They were wrong then and now. I notice that you don’t mention Nimitz, who was the real architect behind the pacific war and the mastermind of the American naval strategy that placed Rickover in a position to dominate the seas. The same people whining over the use of atomic weapons sure do gloss over a lot of contemporaneous crimes like the mass rape of women by the Soviets, the Three Alls of Japan, the British actions in South Asia and pretty much any action the Germans took during WW2. WW2 was brutal and a knife fight to the finish. Using nuclear weapons in a limited fashion wound up making it political suicide to use them against a peer power and has made major land wars obsolete.

  • @JoaoMariaNunes
    @JoaoMariaNunes 2 роки тому +9

    if it had happened , Americans estimated they would have 5 million casualties alone...

    • @The_Custos
      @The_Custos 2 роки тому

      At least 400,000 dead, even if it went well.

  • @scottfirman
    @scottfirman 2 роки тому +10

    My father was part of the D- day invasion and was told after Germany fell, he would be transfered to the Pacific Theater. Because he had size feet that couldn't fit any available combat boots, he was relegated to clerical work but was told he would be expected to go to Japan reguardless. He was relieved when Japan surrendered.

    • @Blox117
      @Blox117 2 роки тому +1

      that doesnt make any sense

  • @mikavirtanen7029
    @mikavirtanen7029 2 роки тому +7

    In August 1945 Japanese still occupied Indochina (Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia), Dutch East Indies (Indonesia), Malaya, Korea, parts of Burma, China, Philippines and South Sea Mandate and if fighting would have continued hell of a lot of people would have died outside of Japanese Home Islands...300.000 Allied POWs and Internees in Japanese hands wouldn't also have very good prospects of surviving if the war had raged on. It really doesn't matter if Japanese surrendered because of atom bombs or Soviet declaration of war, main thing is that millions of people all over Asia survived because Pacific War ended when it did.

  • @dr.threatening8622
    @dr.threatening8622 Рік тому +10

    I most likely would not be alive, as my Grandpa was in the Philipines training for Downfall when the bombs dropped. I literally owe my life to Oppenheimer.

    • @frankmcgowan9457
      @frankmcgowan9457 Рік тому +3

      My father had embarked from Italy bound for either the US east coast to be mustered out or the Philippines for beach landing training. My oldest sister was born in August of 1945 and the rest of us may, also, owe our lives to Oppenheimer and the Manhattan Project.

    • @josephshields2922
      @josephshields2922 Рік тому

      Know you don't. According to Sec of war Stinson a naval blockade would have brought about a surrender and the bombing was unnecessary'
      Admiral Leahy, Truman’s chief military advisor, wrote in his memoirs: “It is my opinion that the use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki 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.- asia Pacific Journal
      Eisennhower agreed with Leahy
      "General Dwight Eisenhower, in his memoirs, recalled a visit from Secretary of War Henry Stimson in late July 1945: “I voiced to him 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 a weapon whose employment was, I thought, no longer mandatory as a measure to save American lives. It was my belief that Japan was, at that very moment, seeking some way to surrender with a minimum loss of ‘face.’” Eisenhower reiterated the point years later in a Newsweek interview in 1963, saying that “the Japanese were ready to surrender and it wasn’t necessary to hit them with that awful thing.” "-Asia Pacific Journal

  • @prdude1234
    @prdude1234 2 роки тому +16

    Oh boy, I sure can't wait to read the respectful, insightful, good-faith and level-headed discussions in the comments section that this subject will spring up!

    • @nonyabisness6306
      @nonyabisness6306 2 роки тому

      That's what you get when discussing the moral justification for WMD's.
      Personally it sound like a cope. There's really no argument saying it wasn't a crime to drop nuke's on cities. Saying "it worked" isn't really making it any better. Did the german strategy of executing civilians for partisan attacks work? Did it prevent a larger number of deaths?
      If we had incontrovertible evidence of super-hitler having been gassed in a german KZ and knew super-hitler would've killed 12 billion people, would that makie the camps morally just? Yeah probably not.

  • @navret1707
    @navret1707 2 роки тому +11

    My father’s destroyer was heading for the Panama Canal when we nuked Japan. I’m quite glad that it went the way it did.

  • @blakesutherland519
    @blakesutherland519 2 роки тому +9

    I don't really see any difference in the use of the atomic bombs as opposed to the massive fire bombings that were already taking place against Japan in 1945. The raid on Tokyo in March cooked more Japanese alive than the 2 atomic bombings put together.
    The people of Japan didn't mind slaughtering and raping millions of Chinese and Asians across the Pacific for over a decade prior to the the bombs being dropped.
    Also. Dropping those bomb probably insured that a 3rd, more destructive World War didn't happen during the very dangerous Cold War period. It was a horrible thing to do but was justified due to Japan choosing to start a war of extermination in the Pacific.
    Also. That little incident at Pearl Harbor kinda took the gloves off any restraint the United States was willing to show to defeat the evil Axis powers.
    Plus. The starvation blockade had left Japan facing a massive famine that would've killed upwards of 30 million Japanese within another 6 months had Japan not done the smart thing and agreed to surrender.

    • @mikegleason3754
      @mikegleason3754 2 роки тому +2

      Your entire statement is exactly what I have thought for over 30 years. A very hard shock to the Japanese psyche was needed. Piecemeal Japanese deaths meant nothing to the Japanese Imperial Army

    • @blakesutherland519
      @blakesutherland519 2 роки тому +3

      @@mikegleason3754
      It's very easy for very comfortable people in the relatively safe time we live in to nitpick over how we fought and won WW2 because we've never had to live through it or suffer the consequences of what would've happened had we not been victorious.
      The Axis powers would've extermated about 90% of the planets population either through direct genocide or labor and starvation had they been able to carry through with their plans of liquidation of the undesirable people's in Asia and Europe. Japan actually killed more innocent Chinese and others than Nazi's killed in the European Holocaust.
      We live in a time when people are traumatized by Will Smith slapping Chris Rock while people are dying by the thousands in Ukraine so I really don't put much stock in all those Monday morning quarterbacks who have never ventured outside of their safe spaces and so the real trauma of the world.
      Around 100 million people or more were killed in War, Genocides, the Spanish flu Pandemic and the affects of the Greatest Depression just in the 31 year period between 1914 and 1945 at a time when the global population was barely 2 billion. That's like 10% of the people who lived in that era!
      Turning a few 100 thousand Japanese civilians into ashes and shadows was a tiny... Near insignificant event in comparison.

    • @ShifuCareaga
      @ShifuCareaga 2 роки тому +1

      The difference is setting the bar on that next level.
      But yes... Someone fucks with you you go all out. At least honest people do. Empires play war games and elites the game of thrones. All disgusting... Even more disgusting than Hiroshima.

    • @blakesutherland519
      @blakesutherland519 2 роки тому +2

      @@ShifuCareaga
      War is a crime in of itself. There's actually no rules to War, just the guy who wins gets to write those rules in retrospect.

    • @ShifuCareaga
      @ShifuCareaga 2 роки тому

      @@blakesutherland519 eh... 1776? America entering both world wars? Stopping Bosnian genocide?
      Let's not be pacifist hippies.
      "Animals have their claws and men have their weapons."
      Mankind learned war from the cosmos/Lord itself. All the original war weapons were thunderbolt inspired.
      I will agree War is destructive and the new War Economy or "sustainable war" is evil. I hate imperialism persobally... Even Disney's hegemony.
      But it is reality.

  • @artcarney-fq8pg
    @artcarney-fq8pg Рік тому +12

    Clearly use of the atomic bomb saved millions of lives,

    • @gregb6469
      @gregb6469 Рік тому

      The best decision Truman ever made.

    • @jerrygoldman4484
      @jerrygoldman4484 Рік тому

      Using the bombs was unavoidable out of sheer momentum, but they were unnecessary. The cities bombed would merely have been destroyed by B-29s. Same result.

    • @gregb6469
      @gregb6469 Рік тому

      @@jerrygoldman4484 -- How many hundreds, if not thousands, of American airmen would you have been willing to sacrifice, when you had the means to end the long war immediately?

  • @treydunn8497
    @treydunn8497 2 роки тому +10

    This would be an absolute logistical nightmare

  • @jacob4920
    @jacob4920 2 роки тому +20

    Everybody hates to admit this, but the two Atomic Bombs of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were actually the better of two options. Less Japanese died, than would have died in an Allied Invasion.

    • @JohnJ469
      @JohnJ469 2 роки тому

      Three options. Blockade and starve them into submission, Invade with the horrific toll that would be or drop the bombs.

    • @takebacktheholyland9306
      @takebacktheholyland9306 2 роки тому

      It's not about which option is better, but rather which one was less cruel. And the nukes were just that

    • @JohnJ469
      @JohnJ469 2 роки тому

      @@takebacktheholyland9306 I call it "The Mathematics of Human Misery", where the "best" choice is just the one that kills the least number of people.

  • @zeronzemesh7718
    @zeronzemesh7718 2 роки тому +10

    It would have gone even worse for Japan. The US would have fire bombed cities into nothing, and blockaded the entire area. Millions of Japanese civilians would have been burned to death, and millions more starved to death slowly over months. We contemplate the dead from the atomic bombs, but ignore the massive dead from conventional bombing, and most of those people suffered slow and agonizing deaths. Neither choice is a good one, but it's clear the choice Truman made was the correct one.

    • @ilyapopov2818
      @ilyapopov2818 2 роки тому

      By August 9, 1945 66 out of 100 Japanese cities were bombed by US. Another 2 cities? What difference does it make?

  • @Lord_Merterus
    @Lord_Merterus Рік тому +19

    Whenever someone says the atomic bombs were unecessary remember that the US is still giving out purple hearts made for Downfall

    • @orionstokesweiss2344
      @orionstokesweiss2344 Рік тому +2

      Thank you for that fact, terribly interesting and I've never come across it

  • @ChadSimplicio
    @ChadSimplicio 2 роки тому +9

    It would've been a bloodbath far worse than the Eastern European Front, and Northern Japan would've been part of the Soviet Union, then Russia.

    • @Noxcho-li8pn
      @Noxcho-li8pn 2 роки тому +2

      Not worse than East Europe wtf are you comparing😂 but yes they would take more Land and forced the Locals out and Would also have established Military Based like in Eastern Europe

    • @weirdofromhalo
      @weirdofromhalo 2 роки тому

      @@Noxcho-li8pn The Second Sino-Japanese War was far worse than the Eastern Front, and an invasion of the home islands would have been just as horrific as the Japanese in China/Southeast Asia.

    • @Noxcho-li8pn
      @Noxcho-li8pn 2 роки тому

      @@weirdofromhalo not True at All give me some Numbers to back it up the Battle betwen Germany and Soviet Union was the deadliest fought between two States yet

    • @weirdofromhalo
      @weirdofromhalo 2 роки тому

      @@Noxcho-li8pn Casualty estimates for the Second-Sino Japanese War:
      Chinese totals: 3.8 mil-10+ mil military casualties
      1+ mil captured
      1 mil dead POWs
      10+ mil civilian deaths
      95 million refugees
      Japanese casualties:
      3.5 mil military casualties
      Civilian deaths probably 100,000+
      Ho-ping Ting gives 15,000,000 military casualties, while Micheal Clodfelter gives 22,000,000.
      The PRC gives civilian casualties at 20 million, but there aren't any good estimates for the number of civilian deaths.
      And none of these take the ravages of Manchuria into account, which Chinese sources do, and say they're part of the "War of Resistance Against Japan."

  • @jamesberwick2210
    @jamesberwick2210 2 роки тому +7

    There was a book written, Operation Coronet. It used actual plans from the Pentagon for the planning of the invasion of Japan. It also used documents captured after the surrender of Japan, on their preparations for the invasion. It was a massive operation, and nearly one million casualties with in the first few days with the way they found Japan had prepared. Everyone from grandparents fighting with bamboo spears, to Children with explosives running up to the invaders and blowing themselves up. The conclusion of the writer was that if we had to take the entire Japanese islands, the war would have gone on until the 1950s, and would have guaranteed the extinction of the Japanese people on the island. They would have fought to the last person.

    • @frankjocle7697
      @frankjocle7697 Рік тому

      Again Bullshit. There was already dialog with Japan LONG before the bombs were dropped. The Soviets deliberately botched negotiations for THEIR benefit. The Western allies already knew there were strong anti-war forces still in Japan and it was simply a matter of trying to override the sadists in the Japanese Army. Actually, many of those sadists were the ones most afraid of losing their lives. The Japanese had been contemplating surrender FOR A VERY LONG TIME before the bombs were dropped. There was even the possibility of using the Japanese against the Chinese Communists in order to help them save face. That is part of the reason most surviving Japanese units at the end of the war that were capable were used by the allies in policing roles AGAINST the Communists in places like Malaya. The need to drop the atom bombs is an academic LIE. It is meant to protect the US Communist supremo leader Truman, who , like Roosevelt, was essentially a Democrat MARXIST. They sought to hand as much of the world over to the Communists as possibly. The atom bombs were a part of that effort. It was actually supposed to signal the Communist invasion of Northern Japan.

  • @sander0209
    @sander0209 2 роки тому +8

    My first thought at seeing this was the fact that in preparation for Operation Downfall the US made 500.000 Purple Heart Medals, to be given out to heavily wounded and dead soldiers. And they thought they might need to make up to 1.000.000 more of them to be able to give them all to the affected soldiers.
    As it stands that batch of 500.000 Purple Hearts made back then is still being used to give out medals today

    • @captain61games49
      @captain61games49 2 роки тому

      Someone else mentioned that it ran out in 2006

    • @sander0209
      @sander0209 2 роки тому +1

      @@captain61games49 As I'm reading it the US Military ordered several thousand medals since WW2, but it is unclear if this is because they have actually ran out.
      Most experts think that it is just because they want to have more then enough medals to never run out.
      But they might have actually ran out. I guess only high ranking US Military know for sure.

  • @eddisonfoncette9103
    @eddisonfoncette9103 Рік тому +11

    The fighting in the Pacific became even more vicious and brutal the closer the US forces got to Japan and it was horrific to begin with. The Japanese strategy from the beginning was to force the US to negotiate on terms favourable to Japan through a war of attrition as they knew they couldn't invade the US or come close to matching her industrial capacity. To this end the Japanese would have mobilised their entire population to fight to the death for every inch of land and take as many invaders with them. Dropping the Bomb was horrific but an invasion of Japan would have been an even greater , more devastating ,unimaginable bloodbath as every road, village, town and city would have been a bloodier replica of Iwo Jima and Okinawa.

    • @janus3555
      @janus3555 Рік тому

      Would have been interesting to watch the entire population of Japan exterminated. Similar to watching 1.2 billion Chinese exterminated today. As a USAF 2W1, we often go over the models (not regarding Japan or WW2), and it does make for a better outcome on the world stage. Once the manufacturing is readjusted into other countries in a more diversified setting.
      I say that because that is what would become of Japan in such an eventuality. It would have been a war that would be untenable to the political sphere. It would become a fight of constant revenge until the near desolation of the Japanese people. Eliminated largely from afar and indiscriminately

  • @Redfour5
    @Redfour5 2 роки тому +9

    "How would have WW2 gone if the US had not used nuclear bombs on Japan?" My father would have likely died. He was in the Navy and an electrician's mate second class but had already been issued his boots and uniforms for the physical invasion. He had already been used by the Marines in a comm role stringing lines on the beaches so that was what he thought he would be used for. Then the bombs dropped and it was over and they took it all back. So, I wouldn't be here very likely if they hadn't bombed.

  • @calwere
    @calwere 2 роки тому +13

    So dropping the atom bombs actually saved millions and millions of lives on both sides.

  • @blakegoulds8313
    @blakegoulds8313 2 роки тому +11

    This is what I tell people when they complain about dropping the bomb. It was, in a weird way, merciful. Far less Japanese died than this alternative.

    • @lepeau8327
      @lepeau8327 2 роки тому +2

      100% this.

    • @Vincent89297
      @Vincent89297 2 роки тому +1

      Watch the video Shaun made on the topic. This narrative is a post-hoc justification that is completely made up. The Japanese were already on their way to surrender, and the bombs did not affect their decision because a militaristic totalitarian government does not care about its citizens. The only thing causing the militarists to resist surrender was America refusing to give any guarantees about what would happen to the emperor. As soon as those guarantees were implicitly given, Japan surrendered. They did not surrender as soon as the first bomb dropped because again, they did not care about destroyed cities.

  • @BostonIan17-zx8rk
    @BostonIan17-zx8rk Рік тому +6

    An amphibious attack on Japan would've costed the US military dearly. They had to resort to a bomb as a cheap way to end the war rather than actual armies directly engaging to see who's boss.

  • @knpark2025
    @knpark2025 2 роки тому +12

    At the end days of WW2 in the pacific, Japan would circle propaganda slogans urging 100 million "Japanese" to do gyokusai, or "shatter like jade" (aka fight to the bitter end). The plot twist: the number included in the 100 million were not only people from the mainland Japan, but it also included people from occupied Taiwan and Korea. As if throwing in ethnically different Okinawans as fodders, Japan was willing to throw tens of millions more from their occupied territory to stall the war they had started. Numbers in the archipeligo is scary enough, but it is also chilling to imagine Japan forcing millions from Manchuria and Korea as fodders against the Red Army (and possibly face the worse fate than Mainland Japanese against Downfall) if the conventional war in the Japanese archipelago were to flair up in full swing.

    • @eliasziad7864
      @eliasziad7864 2 роки тому

      Bro Japanes army would inflict ht ht ht ht ht ht ht ht ht ht ht ht ht ht ht ht ht heavirceavirceavirceavirceavircsualtieeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeees army

    • @1mol831
      @1mol831 2 роки тому

      Those people will probably resist and refuse to follow orders

    • @knpark2025
      @knpark2025 2 роки тому

      @@1mol831 Henderson Field as US Marines first found at Guadalcanal was partially built by Korean forced labor, and more Okinawans lost their lives than Japanese soldiers shipped from outside in the Battle of Okinawa. Sure people can resist and there will be civil disobedience but that doesn't mean Japan would have given up trying to make their overseas territories as Okinawa on steroids.

  • @letsgowinnietheflu5439
    @letsgowinnietheflu5439 Рік тому +17

    Simply the USSR did not have the numbers or the types of ships necessary to invade the Japanese home Island

    • @Arinisonfire
      @Arinisonfire Рік тому +2

      They didn't need to, really. Prior to 1945, the majority of the Japanese military was in China and southeast Asia. The USSR had already completely crushed the Kwantung Army, it would have only been a matter of time before they and the Chinese kicked the Japanese completely out of the country while the British Commonwealth kicked them out of the rest of southeast Asia. By the end of 1945, Japan would have been completely isolated. That said, the USSR would have certainly took the rest of Sakhalin and might have managed an invasion of Hokkaido as it was a lot more sparsely populated and hadn't been as reinforced by the military as Kyushu and Honshu had been

    • @Stormyy6310
      @Stormyy6310 Рік тому

      But the Japanese didn't either, sure they had more ships than the USSR's pacific fleet but those ships can't be everywhere at once to stop an invasion especially since the US is present on the other side of Japan and even then there's a lot of space to cover and the USSR could invade from a lot of places, the Japanese didn't have enough fuel to keep patrolling as well so you have to keep in mind that it is not impossible to have a temporary naval superiority on Japan for the USSR, furthermore the soviet navy in the east was not as weak as people think it is and the soviets had some experience doing amphibious assaults and when you couple that with a total air superiority then yeah it's quite possible that this could happen, and in fact it would be even more likely that such an invasion (to be successful and quick) would be jointed between the USSR and the US to really crush Japan and to avoid extreme losses for the Allies

    • @letsgowinnietheflu5439
      @letsgowinnietheflu5439 Рік тому

      @@Stormyy6310 Must not have research very well. 1st the Japanese basically had no capital ships left at this point of the war the US had sent them to the bottom. Now the Soviet navy had a very limited number of ships in either in the Western or Eastern fleets. The largest guns on any of them were 10 inch. (The distance between Sakhalin and Hokkaido is aprox 40km. This means the Russians couldn't just hop in their amphibious troop carriers and tanks and cross like a European river.) The Russians would have to move their fleet within the long range of Japanese big guns. The USSR didn't have any actual landing craft of LST's to carrier troops or heavy equipment ashore. This means that the Soviets would have to seize an intact port in very short order. Other factors. the Soviet doctrine required large preparatory artillery bombardment they would not have had that available. They were are centered around large armor movement. the mountainous terrain prohibited that. The Japanese had 345000 troops on the island (not counting civilian reserves) over 2000 kamikaze a number of small explosive ladened boats for kamikaze attacks and some subs set up for suicide attaches The Soviets had about a 1 in 1000 chance and thats being generous.

    • @letsgowinnietheflu5439
      @letsgowinnietheflu5439 Рік тому

      @@Arinisonfire The Soviets did take the rest of Sakhalin but this was because they had brought reinforcements onto their controlled area and like Manchuria launches an overwhelming assault on the Japanese garrison there. Their largest assault by sea was after the Japanese's had moved the majority of their troops north to meet the onslaught. These 5000 troops were landed fishing boats. They had 0 landing craft to send troops ashore or lsts to unload heavy equipment or supplies. They would have needed a port and fast.
      It's 40km between Sakhalin and Hokkaido so the Soviets could not have crossed like a European river. Soviet capital ships did not have big enough gun (10in) to outrange the guns the Japanese had in the area.

    • @Arinisonfire
      @Arinisonfire Рік тому +1

      @letsgowinnietheflu5439 While that's true, you also have to remember that the US already supplied the Soviets with lend-lease and in the event they wanted to attempt an invasion of Hokkaido, the US could have lent them plenty of landing ships, considering most of them were just converted civilian commerce ships and the actual landing craft were very cheap to produce. As for fire support, I imagine there would be more than enough US and Royal Navy warships left over to support the comparatively small Soviet fleet. I don't imagine they'd have needed much help with air support either considering the anemic state of Japanese air defenses and the large quantity of short medium range bombers they had left over from the war with Germany. 40km may be a long way by see, but not by air. Obviously there is a degree of wishful thinking to this considering the mutual distrust between the Soviets and allied powers but I don't think it's out of the realm of possibility to imagine that they may have worked together, after all the US leadership was very nervous about the projected casualty figures and would probably jump at any chance of help they could get.
      Either way, the simple *pressure* of having the Soviets right there on their border, a stone's throw from the home islands, would have put immense pressure on the Japanese leadership. Remember that they had planned on using the USSR as a mediator to negotiate a conditional surrender to the allies, that's why the very act of the Soviets declaring war on Japan was such a big idea. Of course the total obliteration of the Kwantung Army was a factor there too. All I'm saying is that there's variables, a lot of variables, too many to justify using the bombs. They should have been the last option, instead of the first one

  • @stevecampin5361
    @stevecampin5361 2 роки тому +16

    In the last weeks of WW2 in Asia, a New Zealander (my country of residence) was the second-highest ranked Allied POW in one of the Japanese POW camps. He and the #1 ranked Allied Officer were bought before the Camp Commandant, who shared with them that he had been copied with orders that in the moment when the first 'U.S' (Allied) soldier set foot on the Japanese mainland, all Allied POWs held by the Japanese military were to be immediately executed. This would have involved the deaths of more than one million soldiers. If not for the Atom bombs that were subsequently dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki this would have come to pass. While I doubt that the senior Allied leadership would have been aware of these orders, it can safely be said that these two bombs in fact were a fortunate conclusion to the war.

    • @frankjocle7697
      @frankjocle7697 Рік тому

      Again why do people lie on here so profusely? Whether the Japanese had such orders or not the dropping of the bombs would have nothing to do with it. In many places in SE Asia the Allies were aware of such orders and were able to contact the Japanese in charge and warn them they will be held accountable. Again, this applies to the BS about the Japanese committing suicide. Japanese commanders WERE scared of being hung. There were also Asian versions of SAARF ready to be dropped to known Japanese concentration camps. Still, those in the know understood that such orders would likely not be followed. As I said, by June-July 1945 there was a dialog with many of the Japanese forces. That is because by that time those forces knew their days were numbered.

  • @MrPhotoman75
    @MrPhotoman75 Рік тому +6

    I lived and worked in Japan for a while in the 1980s. The ground is relatively flat along the coast. As you go inland, the terrain becomes mountainous, steep, and covered in dense jungle. An Invasion of this country was going to be bloody and costly.

  • @nairbvel
    @nairbvel 2 роки тому +29

    Every time I hear someone say that the US killed "too many people" with the nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I start going over some of the figures you mentioned. It's amazing how many folks have no comprehension of just how much of a meat grinder this invasion would have easily become on a literally overnight timeline. As far as Japan planning to capitulate before the two atomic bombs were dropped, there are roughly equal bodies of evidence for *and* against that theory -- and the events that transpired when it became obvious to some of the military that the Emperor *had* decided to capitulate show that even if that plan was real, it may have been overcome by an angered military if there had been less first-person evidence of the Allies' ability to lay wasted to the home islands.

    • @filanfyretracker
      @filanfyretracker 2 роки тому

      I think a lot of people forget how terrible the incendiary bombing campaigns were in WW2, The nukes have flash and the horrible after effects but the fire bombing in Japan especially was way worse. And if we had no nukes we would have burned every city with B-29s packed with fire bombs.

    • @DonVigaDeFierro
      @DonVigaDeFierro 2 роки тому +3

      The fact is that the Tokyo fire bombings killed far, far more people than both atomic bombs combined, and that was still not enough to get the Japanese empire from fighting and making them surrender.

    • @EricTheActor805
      @EricTheActor805 2 роки тому

      @@DonVigaDeFierro
      You present a false dichotomy
      Like those are our only 2 options

    • @Excalibur01
      @Excalibur01 2 роки тому

      People also need to remember that despite an unconditional surrender they were never charged with war crimes.

    • @herrhaber9076
      @herrhaber9076 2 роки тому

      You've summarized in 5 lines what I've been arguing about with so many people... Thank you Sir ! I've been told I couldnt comment because I'm not in the military... Well, the thing about the military around the world is that they are also superb historians and the data is available for everyone to read.
      People also forget that even after surrendering to the US, Japan still wanted to take on the Soviets ! Fortunately the US made them see light and the world was finally at peace again.

  • @kurtumscheid6567
    @kurtumscheid6567 Рік тому +8

    My dad was in the 98th Division stationed in Hawaii. He was slated to be part of the invasion or occupying force. If no atom bomb, I wouldn't be here.

  • @mikestergios994
    @mikestergios994 2 роки тому +6

    My dad was a 2nd Lieutenant with the 3rd Marines, scheduled to be the tip of the spear for Operation Olympic. They had all filled out their wills.
    There were storehouses crammed full of bamboo spears which were to be handed out to civilians to attack any marines who made it off the beaches.

  • @thatwasinteresting3319
    @thatwasinteresting3319 Рік тому +6

    My father was in the 11th airborne in China waiting to attack Japan in 1945. He said that they were told that based on what happened in Europe they expected 90% casualties for the airborne forces when they jumped into Japan

    • @The_Corporal
      @The_Corporal Рік тому

      You are lucky, you have a WW2 veteran dad

    • @xetor2000
      @xetor2000 Рік тому

      My dad was on Okinawa getting ready for the invasion of Japan,he told me exactly the same thing,the invasion saved his life.

  • @AnthonyJ504
    @AnthonyJ504 Рік тому +20

    As horrific as the bombs were, they save MILLIONS of lives in the end. A lesser of two evils.

    • @clydeosterhout1221
      @clydeosterhout1221 Рік тому +2

      Japan could have been defeated without an invasion through the use of a naval blockade. In fact it already had been. Japan was no longer capable of taking any offensive operations at all. They couldn’t even fuel their ships. Their industrial capacity simply could not function without imports. In 1945 Japan was heading back to the Stone Age! But the US did not think that time was in their favor, for a whole list of political and strategic reasons. Was that belief accurate? In hindsight, probably not.
      Did the bomb save lives? Probably, although far more Japanese lives than American. Did that make it the use of atomic weapons (or the indiscriminate bombing of civilian targets at all) therefore morally justifiable? I’ll let others argue that. At the time it was an atrocity when Germans bombed civilians, but it was heroic when Americans did the same on a far more vast scale. The logic of that eludes me.

    • @AnthonyJ504
      @AnthonyJ504 Рік тому +1

      @@clydeosterhout1221 Sure they could have blockaded Japan and starved them to death, therefore costing millions of lives due to slow agonizing starvation.
      Japan still had vast numbers of troops rampaging through other areas of the world including China, Burma, and countless islands costing yet more lives. They would have continued to take lives while Japan was blockaded. The goal was to bring the entire war to a swift end with the least amount of lives lost (on both sides). As for considering bombing civilians heroic? I personally don't think that's heroic at all. By any side. However it was how war was conducted then. Every major side did it. Britain, US, Germany, Japan, Italy, Soviets etc.

    • @nickcharles1284
      @nickcharles1284 Рік тому

      Not really.

    • @janus3555
      @janus3555 Рік тому +1

      @@clydeosterhout1221 When a murderer who tortures, rapes and kills people, that's an issue. When we kill the murderer and his family who support him in such a way that they're immediately vaporized, no suffering, that's less of an issue.
      To argue that Fat Man and Little Boy killed civilians is judging it from a modern sense. Civilians die during invasions in conventional combat. This isn't a point of contention seeing as this was normal of the era.

    • @clydeosterhout1221
      @clydeosterhout1221 Рік тому

      @@janus3555 a guy kills someone I care for, so I firebomb his entire family? That’s the way drug lords operate, not nations. Especially free nations. We need to be better than that!

  • @roberthayden5103
    @roberthayden5103 2 роки тому +8

    I don’t think the Japanese would have surrendered with the capture of Tokyo, rather they would have continued in the mountains “Red Dawn” style.

    • @joefox9875
      @joefox9875 2 роки тому

      It could be. It depends a lot on what the leadership, especially the Prime Minister and Emperor, decided to do. Maybe once their homes in Tokyo were taken, they would have realized they couldn't win.

    • @brianlong2334
      @brianlong2334 2 роки тому

      @@joefox9875 Some Japanese would have surrendered but look how many did in ww2 something like 20,000 did and 2 to 3million died fighting....
      The numbers would have still been massive, then look at the last Japanese to surrender in 1974, now imagine you on there home land I highly doubt they wouldn't keep fighting, even if the government wanted peace only the emperor had the power he would have been hidden or died, both would have caused the Japanese to fight on.

  • @jonsanborn6849
    @jonsanborn6849 2 роки тому +9

    My father was part of the Naval invasion force of mainland Japan, serving as comm/radar on the USS Niagara attack transport specifically designed for this. His was one of the first ships into Tokyo Bay after the surrender landing the first marines. Part of the condition of surrender was a white flag in each gun emplacement. He said there were thousands upon thousands of flags in every conceivable place. He was convinced he and most of that force would have died and that the bomb spared his and millions of lives. He passed away this year at 95 to Naval Honors.

  • @centurion7993
    @centurion7993 Рік тому +6

    The crazy part about how many Purple Hearts they made for operation downfall (in anticipation of casualties), they stopped issuing them in ~2006, with over half left if I recall…

  • @fredlandry6170
    @fredlandry6170 Рік тому +7

    It would have been a horrific bloodbath.

  • @anguswaterhouse9255
    @anguswaterhouse9255 2 роки тому +26

    In other words, thank fuck we used the bombs

    • @vizsla8579
      @vizsla8579 2 роки тому

      In other words the Anglos are cowards and one day this cowardice will come back to bite them.

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Рік тому +7

    Japan would have fought on the home islands savagely. Okinawa, the single bloodiest battle in all of World War II, had been a staging area. Harry Truman faced a cataclysmic decision, but he is on record; he was not going to be put in the position of having to tell the families of American servicemen that the nation had a weapon which would have ended the bloodshed, but had refused to use it.

  • @nev707
    @nev707 Рік тому +8

    I’m glad you mentioned the UK and it’s commonwealth countries being a part of this attack on Japan.

  • @dirtcop11
    @dirtcop11 2 роки тому +11

    My Dad had served on Okinawa and would have been part of the invasion force. The two atomic bombs killed fewer Japanese than an invasion would have killed. Had my Dad died in the invasion I would not have been born. I think dropping the atomic bombs lowered the potential bloodshed.

    • @davidlewis2668
      @davidlewis2668 2 роки тому +1

      My father told me the same thing. He made he Philippines and okiniwa and was scheduled for either the first or second wave in the invasion of kyushu and told to expect 75 to 80% casualties in these waves. I wouldn't have existed if it weren't for the two bombs and the Russian invasion of manchuria.

    • @willymac5036
      @willymac5036 2 роки тому +1

      It’s insane to think about the fact that dropping the two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki actually SAVED lives, most of all Japanese lives, but it’s true.
      US estimates were at least 1 million deaths, 3-5 million injured, and at least TEN MILLION Japanese deaths.
      Utter insanity.

    • @jeffreyerwin3665
      @jeffreyerwin3665 2 роки тому

      @@willymac5036 All Truman had to do in in order to persuade Japan to surrender was to offer Hirohito amnesty. That was the sticking point in the secret negotiations. But that was not politically feasible for Truman who had promised the US people that Japan would have submit to unconditional surrender. The fact is that Japan did not surrender after the A-bomb attacks. It came only after a desperate Truman finally agreed to a secret amnesty for Hirohito, but covered up that betrayal through the propaganda that it was the A-bombs. Of course Hirohito mentioned these. it suited his purpose. Was that war criminal going to say that he ordered Japan to surrender because of his own amnesty?

    • @willymac5036
      @willymac5036 2 роки тому +3

      @@jeffreyerwin3665 all of that is simply incidental. The simple truth is, before the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the OVERWHELMING majority of the Japanese senior political leaders, military leadership, and Imperial War council were ALL steadfast in their opposition to surrender. It wasn’t even the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki that swayed their minds. It was the confirmation by Japanese scientists that the weapons were truly nuclear in nature that swayed them. Once they realized that the U.S. had the technological capability to literally exterminate the Japanese as a race and as a society, without ever stepping foot on Japanese soil, THAT was what changed their minds. Still, many opposed surrender however. There was a coup attempt on the night of August 14th, 1945, in an attempt to intercept the recorded message of Emperor Hirohito ordering the Japanese population to surrender, thereby preventing it from being broadcast nationwide at noon on August 15th. Many senior leaders of the military had already been informed of the true destructive nature of the atomic bombs, and therefore acted quickly to put down the coup. The idea that if “Truman had only accepted amnesty for Emperor Hirohito, the war could have ended sooner” is completely false. It took several DAYS for senior Japanese scientists to verify the atomic nature of the bombing of Hiroshima, which is in effect, the reason why the second bombing of Nagasaki took place. Not one of them cared that the cities had been destroyed, because they still believed that final defeat of their empire required millions of American soldiers to land on Japanese soil. Once they HAD verified the true nature of the bombing of Hiroshima (by that time Nagasaki had also been bombed), most of the holdouts against surrender finally capitulated.
      Of course there were still many extremists who thought that it would be better to see Japan completely destroyed than to suffer the indignity of surrender, a fate worse than death for a great number of Japanese, both military and civilian. The Japanese in the 1940’s were fanatical, and had mobilized their entire nation to fight against the pending American invasion. My god they were training children with sticks and preparing them to throw themselves at the “enemy invaders”. It was only after hearing the voice of the Emperor himself, which the vast majority of the Japanese population had never heard before, and considered it the voice of god, ordering them to surrender, that broke this fanaticism.
      The relationship between the Japanese people and their emperor was a complicated and powerful one. The Allied occupation worked in many ways to break down this deeply spiritual and fanatical relationship, one of which was convincing Emperor Hirohito to renounce his divinity to the nation on Jan 1st, 1946. The US was not trying to humiliate Japan. They did not want to do the same thing in Japan that the Allies had done to Germany after World War 1, which lead directly to the rise of Fascism and the Nazis. The US occupation of Japan took special care to treat the Japanese society as a whole as equals to the United States, allowing the Japanese to retain their dignity, culture, and pride in their society. The Allied occupation of Japan essentially dragged the Japanese population kicking and screaming into the 20th century however, getting them to give up the very cultural aspects that led to fanatical expansion of the empire. Once Japanese society did truly reform itself however, they were able to become a role model to the world of self governance and peaceful achievement of prosperity.

  • @LSuschena
    @LSuschena 2 роки тому +14

    The thing most of you are missing, yes allied casualties would have been high, but that pales in what would have happened to the Japanese people themselves.
    Historically, Japanese soldiers fought to the death, or commit suicide rather than be captured. Okinawa, mothers threw their children from cliffs then jumped themselves.
    Japan was indoctrinating everyone of their citizens to fight, including young boys and girls.
    Upwards of 80% percent of the Japanese population could have been annihilated, depending on how fervent they were to die for their emperor.

    • @coogrfan
      @coogrfan 2 роки тому

      Truth. There are literally millions of people living in Japan and the USA today who would never have been born if Operation Downfall had been carried out.

    • @takebacktheholyland9306
      @takebacktheholyland9306 2 роки тому

      Worse yet, given their modern day birthrate, they're practically going extinct at that point

    • @jameswright2974
      @jameswright2974 2 роки тому

      Russia sacrificed 20 million plus you keep your mouth shut eye as closed tell you children usa saved Europe another USA puppet on internet

  • @johnroscoe2406
    @johnroscoe2406 2 роки тому +23

    Though horrific, and having let the proverbial genie out of the bottle, the bombs were the best choice. An invasion of the Japanese home islands would have been apocalyptic for the Japanese and the Allies both. The Japanese civilian from children to the elderly were indoctrinated to defend to the last. Could you imagine being an American, British or Aussie soldier having to shoot 12 year old girls and 70 year old women running at you with bamboo spears? Japanese casualties would have been in the order of a million, with a sizeable number of them being civilians. Allied casualties would have been disturbingly high as well. And then imagine, when it was eventually over, having to occupy and administrate a defeated nation where so many were killed by you?
    Parallel to this, the Soviets most assuredly would have gotten involved, and no doubt you'd have had another Korea or Vietnam. As terrible as the bombs were, in the long run it was the best choice for all involved.
    Which only serves to show how horrific war in general is and why we should as a species work towards eradicating it, despite how basic it is to our nature.

    • @jaybeebee9288
      @jaybeebee9288 2 роки тому

      "12 year old girls, 70yr old women"...and now if you're a Ukranian man in his 50's, who thought he'd never get called up, think again. What the fuck happened to Gender "equality"? All we men do is fucking work, bleed and die while women chug prosecco and go to Reiki classes.

    • @icecold9511
      @icecold9511 2 роки тому

      The only way Russia could get involved is if we decided to sacrifice their men to save ours, and used our ships to bring them in.
      And relations were already cooling faster than Hitler's body.

    • @johnroscoe2406
      @johnroscoe2406 2 роки тому +1

      @@icecold9511 Matters not. Stalin would have wanted a piece. He wouldn't have done it to help, he'd have done it for himself. The bombs both ended things before he could, and sent a message to him.

    • @icecold9511
      @icecold9511 2 роки тому

      @@johnroscoe2406
      The problem with that is his only way of getting troops it was other allied ships, and their only source of support. They didn'thave even close to enough ships. We he have trusted us with that, with relations falling?

    • @johnroscoe2406
      @johnroscoe2406 2 роки тому

      @@icecold9511 Ok then remove Stalin completely from the equation. It was still the least awful choice to drop the bombs for the reasons I stated. But if you've taken the position that it should not have been done no matter what, then we're not going to find common ground here so neither of us should be wasting our time. You're not going to convince me I'm wrong nor I you. So if it's then just a matter of Last Word well then you're welcome to it since Last Word means nothing.