
THE ATOMIC BOMBING OF NAGASAKI
Nagasaki (August 9, 1945)
Events: Dawn of the Atomic Era, 1945
The next break in the weather over Japan was due to appear just three days after
the attack on Hiroshima, to be followed by at
least five more days of prohibitive weather.� The plutonium
bomb, nicknamed "Fat Man," was rushed into readiness to
take advantage of this window.� No further orders were
required for the attack.� Truman's
order of July 25th had authorized the dropping of additional bombs as
soon as they were ready.� At 3:47 a.m. on August 9, 1945, a B-29 named Bock's Car lifted off from Tinian and headed
toward the primary target: Kokura Arsenal, a massive collection of war
industries adjacent to the city of Kokura.��
From this point on, few things went according to
plan.��The aircraft commander, Major Charles W. Sweeney, ordered the arming of the
bomb only ten minutes after take-off so that the aircraft could be
pressurized and climb above the lightning and squalls that
menaced the flight all the way to Japan.� (A journalist,
William L.
Laurence of the New York Times,
on an escorting aircraft saw some "St. Elmo's
fire" glowing on the edges of the aircraft and worried that the static
electricity might detonate the bomb.)� Sweeney then
discovered that due to a minor malfunction he would not be able to access his
reserve fuel.� The aircraft next had to orbit the city of Yokohama for
almost an hour in order to rendezvous with its two escort B-29s, one of which
never did arrive.� The weather had been reported satisfactory earlier in
the day over Kokura Arsenal, but by the time the B-29 finally arrived there, the
target was obscured by smoke and haze.� Two more passes over the target still produced no sightings of the aiming
point.� As an aircraft crewman, Jacob Beser, later recalled, Japanese
fighters and bursts of antiaircraft fire were by this time starting to make
things "a little hairy."� Kokura no longer appeared to be an
option, and there was only enough fuel on board to return to the secondary
airfield on Okinawa, making one hurried pass as they went over their secondary
target, the city
of Nagasaki.� As Beser later put it, "there was
no sense dragging the bomb home or dropping it in the ocean."��
As it
turned out, cloud cover obscured Nagasaki as well.� Sweeney reluctantly approved a
much less accurate radar approach on the target.� At the last moment the
bombardier, Captain Kermit K. Beahan, caught a brief glimpse of the city's stadium through the clouds and
dropped the bomb.� At 11:02 a.m., at an altitude of 1,650 feet, Fat Man
(right) exploded
over Nagasaki.� The yield of the explosion was later estimated at 21
kilotons, 40 percent greater than that of
the Hiroshima bomb.��
Nagasaki was an industrial center and major port on the western coast of
Kyushu.� As had happened at Hiroshima, the "all-clear" from an
early morning air raid alert had long been given by the time the
B-29 had begun
its bombing run.� A small conventional raid on Nagasaki on August 1st had resulted in a partial evacuation of the city, especially of school
children.� There were still almost 200,000 people in the city below the
bomb when it exploded.� The
hurriedly-targeted weapon ended up detonating almost exactly between two of the principal
targets in the city, the Mitsubishi Steel and Arms Works to the south, and the
Mitsubishi-Urakami Torpedo Works (right) to the north.� Had the bomb exploded
farther south the residential and commercial heart of the city would have
suffered much greater damage.��
In general, though Fat Man exploded with greater force than Little Boy, the
damage at Nagasaki was not as great as it had been at Hiroshima.�
The hills of Nagasaki, its geographic layout, and the bomb's detonation over an
industrial area all helped shield portions of the city from the weapon's blast,
heat, and radiation
effects.�
The explosion affected a total area of approximately 43 square miles.�
About 8.5 of those square miles were water, and 33 more square miles
were only partially settled.� Many roads and rail lines escaped major
damage.� In some areas electricity was not knocked out, and fire breaks created over
the last several months helped to prevent the spread of fires to the south.��
Although the destruction at Nagasaki has generally received less worldwide
attention than that at Hiroshima, it was extensive nonetheless.� Almost everything up to
half a mile from ground zero was completely destroyed, including even the
earthquake-hardened concrete structures that had sometimes survived at
comparable distances at Hiroshima.� According to a Nagasaki Prefectural report
"men and animals died almost instantly" within 1 kilometer (0.62
miles) of the point of detonation.� Almost all homes within a mile and a
half were destroyed, and dry, combustible materials such as paper instantly
burst into flames as far away as 10,000 feet from ground zero.� Of the
52,000 homes in Nagasaki, 14,000 were destroyed and 5,400 more seriously
damaged.� Only 12 percent of the homes escaped unscathed.� The official
Manhattan
Engineer District report on the attack termed the damage to the two
Mitsubishi plants "spectacular."� Despite the absence of a firestorm,
numerous secondary fires erupted throughout the city.� Fire-fighting
efforts were hampered by water line breaks, and six weeks later the
city was still suffering from
a shortage of water.� A U.S. Navy officer who
visited the city in mid-September reported that, even over a month after the
attack, "a smell of death and corruption pervades the
place."��As at Hiroshima, the psychological effects
of the attack were undoubtedly considerable.��
As with the estimates of deaths at Hiroshima, it will never be known for
certain how many people died as a result of the atomic attack on Nagasaki.�
The best estimate is 40,000 people died initially, with 60,000 more injured.� By January
1946, the number of deaths probably approached 70,000, with perhaps ultimately
twice that number dead total within five years.� For those areas of
Nagasaki affected by the explosion, the death rate was comparable to that at
Hiroshima.��
The day after the attack on Nagasaki, the emperor of Japan (right) overruled the
military leaders of Japan and forced them to offer to surrender
(almost) unconditionally.
�
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