Living Death: The Eternal Now of Hiroshima
by Chris Floyd
I once shared an office for a time with a Japanese scientist from Hiroshima. It was a strange setting for such an association: we were working at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), where the atomic bomb that obliterated my colleague's city -- 63 years ago today -- was fashioned.
Picture from The Hiroshima Panels by Maruki Iri and Maruki Toshi
He never mentioned the bombing; he was too young to have experienced it himself, although some of his family certainly would have. I sometimes felt a bit awkward in his presence, as if I should say something about it, make some kind of apology. But what could you say?
- "Oh, sorry we destroyed your city and killed all those people in such a gruesome way when we really didn't have to. Hey, could you pass me that stapler?"
Ridiculous. Pointless.
In any case, we had a good time, a lot of laughs, during the
months he was there, along with our other officemate, an American
scientist who had been a conscientious objector during the Vietnam War,
and had been sentenced to do public service for refusing to fight. He
spent most of the war working in a juvenile detention center for
troubled Native American adolescents somewhere in the Dakotas. Politics
was a constant theme of our conversations, especially during that
period: it was the time of the first war against Iraq, which, like the
current one, had been the product of cynical manipulations, rank
propaganda and outright deceit by national leaders named Bush and
Cheney.
ORNL itself was a sprawling, labyrinthine complex,
something like an college campus -- albeit one surrounded by walls
topped with barbed wire and patrolled by armed guards -- which was in
turn part of a much larger complex of laboratories and huge technical
facilities scattered throughout that rural area of East Tennessee, all
of which had contributed to the creation of the bomb. During World War
II, the federal government had constructed not only the secret
laboratories but an entire secret city, Oak Ridge, to house the tens of
thousands of scientists, technicians and laborers. My grandfather had
helped build the housing there. He was a carpenter in Middle Tennessee,
one of thousands of workers requisitioned into service by the
government. He spent months building the secret city, returning home
only on weekends, and was strictly forbidden to tell his family where
he was working or what he was doing.
By my day, all weapons
production long ceased, and the complexes had been turned into research
facilities in a variety of areas. When I was there, as a technical
editor, I worked on projects dealing with global warming, energy
conservation, transportation and artificial intelligence. I also worked
with a remarkable scientist who wanted to set up a new "Court of the
Generations," a kind of Supreme Court that would consider the effects
of current policies -- particularly technological and scientific
developments -- on future generations, and act as an advocate for them.
I helped prepare his presentation to Congress on the matter. Obviously,
the idea went nowhere: Future generations? Are you kidding? Who cares?
Or as George W. Bush once put it so eloquently: "History? We don't
know. We'll all be dead." Still, it was an intriguing idea: one that
might have come in handy during the early days of the laboratory, in
the feverish rush to build -- and use -- atomic weapons.
Here
too, amidst all the secrecy and feverish activity, there was deceit and
manipulation at work. As John Pilger notes in a blistering article in
the Guardian on the anniversary of Hiroshima's destruction, the stated
justifications for using this horrific weapon on a civilian population
have all been exposed as deliberate falsehoods. Pilger writes:
- "The
atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was a criminal act on an epic
scale. It was premeditated mass murder that unleashed a weapon of
intrinsic criminality. For this reason its apologists have sought
refuge in the mythology of the ultimate "good war", whose "ethical
bath", as Richard Drayton called it, has allowed the west not only to
expiate its bloody imperial past but to promote 60 years of rapacious
war, always beneath the shadow of The Bomb.
- "The most enduring
lie is that the atomic bomb was dropped to end the war in the Pacific
and save lives. "Even without the atomic bombing attacks," concluded
the United States Strategic Bombing Survey of 1946, "air supremacy over
Japan could have exerted sufficient pressure to bring about
unconditional surrender and obviate the need for invasion. Based on a
detailed investigation of all the facts, and supported by the testimony
of the surviving Japanese leaders involved, it is the Survey's opinion
that ... Japan would have surrendered even if the atomic bombs had not
been dropped, even if Russia had not entered the war and even if no
invasion had been planned or contemplated."
- "The National
Archives in Washington contain US government documents that chart
Japanese peace overtures as early as 1943. None was pursued. A cable
sent on May 5, 1945 by the German ambassador in Tokyo and intercepted
by the US dispels any doubt that the Japanese were desperate to sue for
peace, including "capitulation even if the terms were hard". Instead,
the US secretary of war, Henry Stimson, told President Truman he was
"fearful" that the US air force would have Japan so "bombed out" that
the new weapon would not be able "to show its strength". He later
admitted that "no effort was made, and none was seriously considered,
to achieve surrender merely in order not to have to use the bomb". His
foreign policy colleagues were eager "to browbeat the Russians with the
bomb held rather ostentatiously on our hip". General Leslie Groves,
director of the Manhattan Project that made the bomb, testified: "There
was never any illusion on my part that Russia was our enemy, and that
the project was conducted on that basis." The day after Hiroshima was
obliterated, President Truman voiced his satisfaction with the
"overwhelming success" of "the experiment".
Pilger then concludes:
- ...In
waging their bogus "war on terror", the present governments in
Washington and London have declared they are prepared to make
"pre-emptive" nuclear strikes against non-nuclear states. With each
stroke toward the midnight of a nuclear Armageddon, the lies of
justification grow more outrageous. Iran is the current "threat". But
Iran has no nuclear weapons and the disinformation that it is planning
a nuclear arsenal comes largely from a discredited CIA-sponsored
Iranian opposition group, the MEK - just as the lies about Saddam
Hussein's weapons of mass destruction originated with the Iraqi
National Congress, set up by Washington...
- This progression of
lies has brought us to one of the most dangerous nuclear crises since
1945, because the real threat remains almost unmentionable in western
establishment circles and therefore in the media. There is only one
rampant nuclear power in the Middle East and that is Israel. The heroic
Mordechai Vanunu tried to warn the world in 1986 when he smuggled out
evidence that Israel was building as many as 200 nuclear warheads. In
defiance of UN resolutions, Israel is today clearly itching to attack
Iran, fearful that a new American administration might, just might,
conduct genuine negotiations with a nation the west has defiled since
Britain and America overthrew Iranian democracy in 1953.
- "In the
New York Times on July 18, the Israeli historian Benny Morris, once
considered a liberal and now a consultant to his country's political
and military establishment, threatened "an Iran turned into a nuclear
wasteland". This would be mass murder. For a Jew, the irony cries out.
- "The
question begs: are the rest of us to be mere bystanders, claiming, as
good Germans did, that "we did not know"? Do we hide ever more behind
what Richard Falk has called "a self-righteous, one-way, legal/moral
screen [with] positive images of western values and innocence portrayed
as threatened, validating a campaign of unrestricted violence"?
Catching war criminals is fashionable again. Radovan Karadzic stands in
the dock, but Sharon and Olmert, Bush and Blair do not. Why not? The
memory of Hiroshima requires an answer."
The fate of
Hiroshima is still with us, like those shadows of the victims
permanently burned into the stones of the city by the flash of the
bomb, as Pilger describes at the beginning of his article.
It affects
not only the survivors of that first blast, and their descendants, like
my Oak Ridge colleague, but all of us. Several generations, including
mine, were brought up with the threat of imminent nuclear destruction
constantly pressed upon us, as Gregory McNamee describes in his book,
Blue Mountains Far Away. ( The relevant chapter can be found here). The
manufactured crisis with Iran has brought a little something of that
anxiety-riddled atmosphere back to public consciousness -- and, as
Pilger notes, the Terror War has made the possibility of another
American use of nuclear weapons on defenseless citizens in a
non-nuclear country far more likely.
The Atomic Age ushered in
by the attack on Hiroshima has produced a kind of quantum-state
apocalypse, one that is both here and not-here, but which can be
actuated at any moment. McNamee quotes a passage from Susan Sontag that
aptly sums up our strange and warping state of being:
- ...a
permanent modern scenario: apocalypse looms, and it doesn't occur....
Apocalypse has become an event that is happening, and not happening. It
may be that some of the most feared events, like those involving the
irreparable ruin of the environment, have already happened. But we
don't know it yet, because the standards have changed. Or because we do
not have the right indexes for measuring the catastrophe. Or simply
because this is a catastrophe in slow motion.
The nuclear
age is indeed a catastrophe in slow motion. Given all that we know of
human nature, it is almost inconceivable that these monstrous weapons
will not be used again, either individually, as against Japan, or en
masse, as in the fearsome Cold War scenarios. It all began in Hiroshima
63 years ago, but that horrible moment -- the searing flash and the
poison wind -- has not yet ended; the slow-motion catastrophe is still
unfolding, inside us and all around us.
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