Gullible Jones wrote:@Fisher: I overreacted the first time around, and I'm sorry for that. Seriously. Please see my more recent post, wherein I try to be a bit more civil.
Really? You honestly beleive that by critizing someone for commiting treason in the name of the greater good for humanity that it makes me a hypocrite or a jingoist? When have you ever heard me justify a war crime or a crime of any type simply because of patriotism?
As for the greater good of humanity.... there is no way I will EVER beleive that giving the soviets or the chinese the secrets to atomic weapons was an act that was for the greater good of humanity. And at the end of the day it does not matter what the rationalization was. Commiting a crime for any reason is not Ok.
Patriotism no. Necessity (or perceived necessity), yes. Hiroshima for instance was a war crime by any reasonable definition. It was also (probably) necessary, it (probably) did the world a favor, it (probably) saved more lives in the long run than were lost... But it was still a war crime. And I have seen you (and others) try to justify it.
You know what? Maybe it was justified. No other recourse, etc. The long term results are still somewhat ambiguous, though it looks like things may have turned out much worse otherwise. Point is, how can you be sure that the "bleeding heart scientists" didn't see things the same way?
For that matter, how can you be sure that they didn't draw the right conclusion? We may have the benefit of hindsight, but we can't examine alternate histories outside of pure theory.
Ok, now I am going to lawyer up on you. Hiroshima was NOT a WAR CRIME. I am not justifying it. I am telling you a cold hard fact. The act of making war on a civilian population as part of "total war" was not a war crime in WWII. The Dresden fire bombings, The V2 rockets and the Luftwaf bombings of London, and etc, were all part of a concept called "total war". They were considered legitimate targets of war.
You can argue that it should have been a war crime. And in the aftermath of WWII international laws were passed that made it a war crime to commit "total war" on civilian populations. But, when they dropped the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki it was not a criminal act. It was a legitimate act of war. Japan had been called upon to surrender repeatedly and had refused. They were still actively at war. Hiroshima and Nagasaki, based on the laws of war at that time, were legitimate military targets.
Telling you that does not make me a hypocrite. Nor does it mean that I think the means justifies the end.
the following is a justification and quite a good one The bombing of Hiroshima has been credited with a total death toll of 200,000. Nagasaki approximately 245,000. The total death toll may be approximately 500,000 depending on whose numbers you beleive.
According to conservative estimates an invasion of Japan would have cost 1.7 million US lives and 5 million Japanese lives. The high estimates werre 4 million and 10 million respectively.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_bom ... d_Nagasaki 500,000 lives vs upwards of 14 million. OK, lets assume it really wouldn't have been that bad. Lets say it would ONLY have been 500,000 US lives and 2 million Japanese lives. the math still adds up. at a bare minimum dropping the bombs potentially saved 5 lives for every one that was taken.
And the one thing we can be certain of is that Truman had this information when he made the decision to drop the bombs. He knew that he was potentially saving millions of lives in exchange for 500,000 or less.
Now lets look at your hypothesis that the scientists who through espionage committed a crime of treason. No wiggle room here. Treason and Espionage are crimes punishable by death and imprisonment at the time the crimes were committed. I will refrain from using the term "bleeding heart liberal" as it seems to be a hot button for you.
They claim that thier ideology and desire to serve humanity and a higher cause justify thier actions. That because they were trying to prevent a "horrible crime against humanity" thier crimes were neccessary.
They made this decision based on ideology and "principles". They had no facts to support thier supposition that communisim was a better steward of humanity. Quite the opposite was true in fact if they had bothered to study the methods used by the Chinese communists or the Soviet communists during WWII.
As for those who betrayed thier country for idealism and the belief that war would be eliminated and a "crime against humanity" would be averted. Well, they had no assurance of any kind that what they beleived would be true. They didn't even have the kind of data that Truman had to base his decision on. They justifed the means and the ends purely on a theory and a strong hope that the future would be brighter because everyone would see the horror that atomic war would bring and world peace would ensure for the next thousand years. Well, I guess we know how that turned out don't we.
So, the short answer to your question "how can you be sure that the "bleeding heart scientists" didn't see things the same way?" is this. I am sure that they may have thought they saw things the same way. But, they were wrong because as scientists they should have known better. They had lots of hard data that did not support their beliefs and they ignored the data. And they had scanty or no data to support thier belief.
What they did was rationalize a bad decision. They committed crimes and then tried to convince themselves and others that they did it for noble purposes.
That is the difference between Truman's decision to drop the bomb and Fuchs or Halls decision to commit treason.
"To create more positive results in your life, replace 'if only' with 'next time'." — Author Unknown
"Experience is a hard teacher because she gives the test first, the lesson afterward." — Vernon Law