Thursday, August 7, 2025

The darkest of days over Japan 80 years ago

The people of Japan remember the moments 80 years ago when US B-29s dropped  atomic bombs in the skies over  Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Below is a link to  the views expressed by Charles Oppenheimer, the grandson of Robert Oppenheimer. Like his grandfather, he calls for the banishment of nuclear warheads from our planet.

In an interview on BBC Radio 4 yesterday morning he was critical of the nuclear policies of the three superpowers, China, US and Russia. He also expressed strong disapproval of Israel on  its ‘hidden’ nuclear arsenal and its current war in Gaza.

Below the link is yesterday’s editorial in The Irish Times ‘When the world changed forever'

https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/backstories/3376/

At 8.15am local time on the morning of August 6th, 1945, a US B-29 bomber named Enola Gay dropped the world’s first atomic bomb used in warfare over the Japanese city of Hiroshima. The weapon, nicknamed “Little Boy”, exploded roughly 600 metres above the city centre. What followed was an act of man-made devastation without precedent in human history.

A blinding flash, an immense shockwave and a blast of intense heat levelled much of the city within seconds. It is estimated that between 70,000 and 80,000 people died instantly. Tens of thousands more were burned, crushed, or irradiated. Buildings within a two-kilometre radius were either incinerated or flattened. In the days, weeks and months that followed, the death toll continued to climb as radiation sickness set in. By the end of 1945, more than 140,000 were dead.

Hiroshima was a moment that changed the trajectory of the modern world. It revealed, in the most brutal way possible, the terrifying power of nuclear weapons. Three days later, a second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki. Less than a week after that, Japan surrendered, bringing the second World War to an end.

The shadow cast by those bombings has never lifted. In the eight decades since, the spectre of nuclear annihilation has remained with us, sometimes pushed to the background, other times terrifyingly near. The Cold War saw the United States and the Soviet Union build vast nuclear arsenals, capable of destroying the planet many times over. The Cuban missile crisis of 1962 brought the world to the brink.

The end of the Cold War offered some hope. Tensions eased and warheads were gradually dismantled. But the danger never truly receded. Nine nations now possess nuclear weapons, and others appear determined to join them. Iran’s ambitions have drawn global attention and military strikes by Israel and the US. North Korea continues to test its capabilities. And in the early stages of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Vladimir Putin made direct threats of nuclear escalation.

Flashpoints persist, from the Persian Gulf to the India-Pakistan border. Recent suggestions by Polish politicians that their country should seek its own nuclear arsenal are just one more reminder that the old consensus on deterrence is fraying, with American security guarantees now in serious doubt.

Eighty years on from Hiroshima, the world finds itself on the threshold of a new nuclear era: multi-polar, less predictable and almost certainly more dangerous. The lessons of 1945 may not have been forgotten, but they have certainly not been fully heeded. What happened to Hiroshima must remain more than a historical event. It is a warning, one that still demands urgent attention and constant vigilance.

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The darkest of days over Japan 80 years ago

The people of Japan remember the moments 80 years ago when US B-29s dropped  atomic bombs in the skies over   Hiroshima and  Nagasaki. Below...