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Gunner Asch[_6_] Gunner Asch[_6_] is offline
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Default First Into Nagasaki - was REALLY Heavy Metal Work

On Sun, 26 Feb 2012 22:58:17 -0500, GeoLane at PTD dot NET GeoLane at
PTD dot NET wrote:

A few years back I read a book titled "First Into Nagasaki". It was
written by the son of an American reporter who managed to get into
Nagasaki before the US army did. The reporter's columns were
suppressed by MacArthur, but the reporter had saved carbon copies.
After his death, the son published the columns as the book, along with
a description of the Japanese death ships that took the survivers of
the Bataan Death March back to Japan. The reporter's assessment was
that Nagasaki was mostly destroyed by fires rather than the blast from
the bomb. He recounted how there were American POW's working at the
Mitsubishi factory. At the air raid alarm they went to slit trenches
outside the plant. Those who kept their heads down in the trenches
lived despite being nearly under the blast. My recollection of the
story was that the bomb was dropped about noon, when Japanese women
were cooking lunch on charcoal hibachis. The blast knocked over the
hibachis, setting fire to most of the homes. Because of obstructions
in the streets due to downed power lines etc. from the blast, the fire
trucks couldn't make it to where they needed to go, and the whole city
burned. I forget what he said about the radiation sickness, but I
recall he described it. The gist of the articles was that it was a
very powerful bomb, but more survivable than the military made it out
to be. I'm not a student of the nuclear bombing's so take it for what
it's worth. What we thought we all knew from "common knowledge"
sounds a little different from what this reporter described. It was
an interesting description by an eye witness. The descriptions of the
death ships was very dull by comparison.

RWL


If you can find the articles on the net, please post a link here. It
would be very interesting to read, along with interviews of the American
POWs at the scene

Gunner

--
One could not be a successful Leftwinger without realizing that,
in contrast to the popular conception supported by newspapers
and mothers of Leftwingers, a goodly number of Leftwingers are
not only narrow-minded and dull, but also just stupid.
Gunner Asch