Chronology of the Decision to Use the Bomb - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Chronology of the Decision to Use the Bomb

Description:

July 21 President Truman approves order for atomic bombs to be used July 23 ... If we consider international agreement on total prevention of nuclear warfare ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:93
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: YiRen6
Learn more at: http://web.stanford.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chronology of the Decision to Use the Bomb


1
Chronology of the Decision to Use the Bomb
  • The official order states
  • "The 509 Composite Group, 20th Air Force will
    deliver its first special bomb as soon as the
    weather will permit visual bombing after about 3
    August 1945 on one of the targets Hiroshima,
    Kokura, Niigata, and Nagasaki."

Yi-Ren Chen Hist 5N April 11th 2004
2
  • March 25
  • At the urging of Leo Szilard, Albert Einstein
    signs a letter of introduction of Szilard to
    President Roosevelt. Szilard wishes to warn
    Roosevelt of the post-war dangers of a nuclear
    arms race if the atomic bomb is used against
    Japan. The letter states The terms of secrecy
    under which Dr. Szilard is working at present do
    not permit him to give me information about his
    work however, I understand that he now is
    greatly concerned about the lack of adequate
    contact between scientists who are doing this
    work and those members of your Cabinet who are
    responsible for formulating policy. In the
    memorandum accompanying the letter, Szilard
    wrote our demonstration of atomic bombs will
    precipitate a race in the production of these
    devices between the United States and Russia and
    that if we continue to pursue the present course,
    our initial advantage may be lost very quickly in
    such a race.

3
  • April 12
  • Franklin Roosevelt dies, and Harry Truman becomes
    the 33rd President of the United States.
  • April 25
  • Secretary of War Stimson and General Groves brief
    President Truman on the bomb. In this briefing,
    Groves insists that Japan had always been the
    target of the bombs use.
  • April 25
  • Joint Chief Planners advise Joint Chiefs of Staff
    that unless a definition of unconditional
    surrender can be given which is acceptable to the
    Japanese, there is no alternative to annihilation
    and no prospect that the threat of absolute
    defeat will bring about capitulation.

4
  • April 27
  • The Target Committee meets for the first time to
    decide which Japanese cities to target with the
    atomic bomb. By the end of May the following
    cities are selected Kyoto, Hiroshima, Kokura and
    Niigata. See minutes of the second meeting of
    the Target Committee in Related Sites.
    Eventually Kyoto is replaced by Nagasaki and the
    listed cities are spared further conventional
    bombing by the American Army Air Force.
  • April 29
  • In a report entitled Unconditional Surrender, the
    Joint Intelligence Committee informs the Joint
    Chiefs of Staff that numbers of informed
    Japanese, both military and civilian, already
    realize the inevitability of absolute defeat.
  • May 8
  • War in Europe ends.

5
  • May 9
  • The Interim Committee meets for the first time.
    Its purpose is to study and report on the whole
    problem of temporary war controls and later
    publicity, and to survey and make recommendations
    on post war research, development and controls,
    as well as legislation necessary to effectuate
    them. The Interim Committee appoints a
    Scientific Panel, which included Oppenheimer,
    Lawrence, Fermi and Compton.
  • May 25
  • Leo Szilard visits White House with letter of
    introduction from Albert Einstein to warn
    President Truman of the dangers atomic weapons
    pose for the post-War world and to urge him not
    to authorize use of atomic weapons against Japan.
    Szilard is referred Matthew J. Connelly,
    Trumans appointments secretary, to James Byrnes
    in Spartanburg, South Carolina.

6
  • May 28
  • Assistant Secretary of War John J. McCloy argues
    to Secretary of War Stimson that the term
    unconditional surrender should be dropped
    Unconditional surrender is a phrase which means
    loss of face and I wonder whether we cannot
    accomplish everything we want to accomplish in
    regard to Japan without the use of that term.
  • May 28
  • In a State Department Memorandum of Conversation,
    Acting Secretary of State Joseph Grew describes a
    meeting with President Truman that day. Grew
    writes The greatest obstacle to unconditional
    surrender by the Japanese is their belief that
    this would entail the destruction or permanent
    removal of the Emperor and the institution of the
    Throne. If some indication can now be given the
    Japanese that they themselves, when once
    thoroughly defeated and rendered impotent to wage
    war in the future will be permitted to determine
    their own future political structure, they will
    be afforded a method of saving face without which
    surrender will be highly unlikely.

7
  • May 31
  • The Interim Committee agrees that the most
    desirable target would be a vital war plant
    employing a large number of workers and closely
    surrounded by workers houses. Among those
    agreeing is James Conant, the president of
    Harvard University.
  • May 31
  • The Office of Strategic Services (OSS) reports on
    receiving a Japanese peace feeler through a
    Japanese diplomat stationed in Portugal. The
    Japanese diplomat says that the actual terms are
    unimportant so long as the term unconditional
    surrender is not used.
  • June 1
  • Interim Committee makes formal decision decides
    not to warn the civilian populations of the
    targeted cities.

8
  • June 11
  • The Franck Committee on the social and political
    implications of the atomic bomb, headed by Nobel
    Laureate James Franck, issues a report advising
    against a surprise atomic bombing of Japan. The
    report states, If we consider international
    agreement on total prevention of nuclear warfare
    as the paramount objectivethis kind of
    introduction of atomic weapons to the world may
    easily destroy all our chances of success. The
    report correctly predicts that dropping an atomic
    bomb will mean a flying start toward an
    unlimited armaments race.
  • June 14
  • The Franck Committee Report with its
    recommendation that bomb be demonstrated to Japan
    before being used on civilians is taken by
    Compton to Los Alamos, and copies were given to
    Fermi, Lawrence and Oppenheimer. June 16
  • Compton, Fermi, Lawrence and Oppenheimer
    conclude We can propose no technical
    demonstration likely to bring an end to the war
    we see no acceptable alternative to direct
    military use.

9
  • June 17
  • McCloy tells Stimson that there were no more
    cities to bomb, no more carriers to sink or
    battleships to shell we had difficulty finding
    targets.
  • June 18
  • Admiral Leahy makes diary entry noting, It is my
    opinion at the present time that a surrender of
    Japan can be arranged with terms that can be
    accepted by Japan and that will make fully
    satisfactory provision for Americas defense
    against future trans-Pacific aggression. He
    also notes that General Marshall believes that an
    invasion of Kyushu, the southern-most Japanese
    island, will not cost us in casualties more than
    63,000 of the 190,000 combatant troops estimated
    as necessary for the operation. This may be
    compared to later estimates, after the atomic
    bombings, of 500,000 to 1,000,000 American lives
    saved.

10
  • June 20
  • A meeting of the Supreme War Direction Council
    before Emperor Hirohito is held on the subject of
    ending the war. According to the U.S. Strategic
    Bombing Survey, the Emperor, supported by the
    premier, foreign minister and Navy minister,
    declared for peace the army minister and the two
    chiefs of staff did not concur.
  • June 26
  • Stimson, Forrestal and Grew agree that a
    clarification of surrender terms should be issued
    well before an invasion and with ample time to
    permit a national reaction to set in. The three
    agreed that Japan is susceptible to reason.
  • July 10
  • At a meeting of the Supreme War Direction
    Council, Emperor Hirohito urges haste in moves to
    mediate the peace through Russia.

11
  • July 13
  • Washington intercepts and decodes a cable from
    Japanese Foreign Minister Shigenori Togo to his
    Ambassador in Moscow that states, Unconditional
    surrender is the only obstacle to peace.
  • July 15
  • President Truman lands at Antwerp on his way to
    Potsdam meeting. Byrnes has convinced him to
    drop Article 12 of the Potsdam Declaration, which
    had provided assurance that the Emperor would be
    allowed to retain his throne as a constitutional
    monarch.
  • July 16
  • Trinity test, a plutonium implosion device, takes
    place at 52945 a.m. mountain war time at
    Alamogordo, New Mexico. It is the worlds first
    atomic detonation.

12
  • July 17
  • President Truman at Potsdam writes in his diary,
    Just spend sic a couple of hours with Stalin.
    Hell be in the Jap War on August 15th. Fini
    Japs when that comes about.
  • July 21
  • President Truman approves order for atomic bombs
    to be used
  • July 23
  • UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill remarks,
    It is quite clear that the United States do
    not at the present time desire Russian
    participation in the war against Japan.
  • July 24
  • Walter Brown, special assistant to Secretary of
    State Byrnes, writes in his journal that Byrnes
    was now hoping for time, believing after atomic
    bomb Japan will surrender and Russia will not get
    in so much on the kill, thereby being in a
    position to press claims against China.

13
  • July 24
  • Secretary of War Henry Stimson passes on orders
    for atomic attack.
  • July 25
  • General Carl Spatz, commander of the United
    States Army Strategic Air Forces, receives the
    only written order on the use of atomic weapons
    from acting Chief of Staff, General Thomas Handy.
  • July 26
  • Potsdam Declaration calls upon Japanese
    government to proclaim now the unconditional
    surrender of all Japanese armed forces. The
    alternative, the Declaration states, is prompt
    and utter destruction.
  • July 26
  • Forrestal secret diary states, In the past days
    Sato in Moscow has been sending the strongest
    language to the Foreign Office at Tokyo his
    urgent advice for Japan to surrender
    unconditionally. Each time the Foreign Minister,
    Togo, responds by saying that they want Sato to
    arrange for the Russians to receive Prince Konoye
    as a special representative of the Emperor to
    Moscow. Satos persistent reply to these
    messages was that this is a futile hope, that
    there is no possibility of splitting the concert
    of action now existing between Great Britain, the
    United States and Russia.

14
  • July 28
  • Japan rejects Potsdam Declaration.
  • August 6
  • The world's second atomic bomb, Little Boy, a
    gun-type uranium bomb, is detonated 1,900 feet
    above Hiroshima, Japan. It has a yield of
    approximately 15 kilotons TNT. Some 90,000 to
    100,000 persons are killed immediately about
    145,000 persons will perish from the bombing by
    the end of 1945.
  • August 8
  • Soviet Union informs Japan that it is entering
    the war.

15
  • August 9
  • At 944 a.m. Bockscar, a B-29 carrying Fat Man,
    the world's third atomic bomb, arrives at its
    primary target, Kokura. The city is covered in
    haze and smoke from an American bombing raid on a
    nearby city. Bockscar turns to its secondary
    target Nagasaki. At 1102 a.m. the world's third
    atomic bomb explosion devastates Nagasaki, the
    intense heat and blast indiscriminately
    slaughters its inhabitants

16
  • August 9
  • President Truman speaks to the American people
    via radio broadcast He states, The world will
    note that the first atomic bomb was dropped on
    Hiroshima, a military base. That was because we
    wished in the first instance to avoid, in so far
    as possible, the killing of civilians. The
    official Bombing Survey Report stated Hiroshima
    and Nagasaki were chosen as targets because of
    their concentration of activities and
    population. More than 95 percent of those
    killed at Hiroshima and Nagasaki were civilians.
  • August 9
  • Atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki.
  • August 9
  • Soviet Union begins its offensive against Japan
    in Manchuria.
  • August 14
  • Japan surrenders.

17
  • Bibliography
  • http//www.trumanlibrary.org/teacher/abomb.htm
  • www.willamette.edu/cla/wviews/hiroshima.html
  • www.socialstudieshelp.com/Lesson_95_Notes.htm
  • www.colorado.edu/AmStudies/lewis/2010/atomic.htm
  • History 5N readings, April 12 McGeorge,
    Berstein, Walzer.

18
End.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com