Hiroshima Bombing Positive Effects

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One of the biggest military actions the United States has taken on another country is dropping the atomic bomb. It is a highly controversial topic rather or not we should have done this. Many people do not look at every aspect before they form an opinion about this bold action. To form your own opinion you must look at the effects it had on the U.S. both positive and negative. The United States decision to drop the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki had an overall positive affect. The bombing on Hiroshima devastated the country and hit them at home. It was estimated by the U.S. that 60,000 to 70,000 people were killed or missing. This fact tends to make people wonder why the U.S. would ever do such a horrendous thing. The city of Hiroshima …show more content…
There are 90,000 buildings in Hiroshima and of those 60,000 of them were demolished instantly. This helped the U.S. because they city of Hiroshima was a heavy military city. One of the biggest military bases for Japan was located there and wiping it out helped weaken the government of Japan. This was the main goal of the U.S. from the beginning. After the explosion the main telegraph stopped working and the radio stations went off the air. This caused Japan to go completely blind from what had happened. This helped the U.S. because Japan was down and close to giving up. The whole city had been destroyed and the government was in the dark about the …show more content…
and Japan both had very delayed responses and ways of getting the news of what had taken place. In Japan it started at railway stops with rumors near the city of Hiroshima and they contacted the Headquarters of the Japanese General Staff. The rumors that were going around were horrifying and this caused a panic in the citizens in nearby cities. If not for this it would have taken the government of Japan a lot longer to get the news of what happened. The U.S. had delayed news of what happened because they were not notified until a formal radio address was given by President Harry S. Truman in the afternoon of the 6th of August 1945. The U.S. nation besides the government had no idea what had happened until almost ten hours later. At this point it was relieving for U.S. citizens to hear this news because until this point they had not known of a plan of action against Japan. Both the U.S. and Japan were late in receiving the news and knowing that the world had just changed