Ww Ll The Air War Essay, Research Paper
World War ll is one of the biggest and most remembered wars in American history. The Bombing of Germany was a big part of the war. General Arnold wanted his service to use a selective bombing technique against Germany because he considered it the most efficient way for winning the war. He also described it as a morally superior way of conducting war. In the spring of 1943, he sent his combat commanders a memorandum offering ethical and practical reasons for precision bombing. He urged them to make sure that Army forces planes bombed as accurately as possible so the American flyers would not have to risk their lives repeatedly to destroy targets that could be eliminated with one bomb. He also warned his generals to avoid needless harm to enemy civilians. Careless, inaccurate bombing would spread and intensify feelings of hatred toward other countries after the war was over.(Schaffer 60-61). With the successful allied landing in Western Europe and the advance of Soviet armies in the East, it was clear that Germany had lost the war. But this was very different from bringing the German government to the point of surrender. Those who controlled the American and British air forces continued to search for ways of using air power to make Germany capitulate. Their proposals continued to include attacks on civilians- to disrupt their morale and break their ties with Nazi leaders, to teach their lessons about the fate of those who begin wars. Before the war American planers had imagined that bombing civilians at the right moment precipitate Germany’s collapse.(Schaffer80). One of the obstacles to direct attack on the German populace -a shortage of planes- had stopped being a problem. Nevertheless, among AAF officers and their advisors controversy persisted about proposals to destroy Germany’s will to fight by attacking and terrorizing the German people.(Schaffer80). In July of 1944, responding to a decision by the British Chiefs of Staff, the Air Ministry produced an analysis of proposals for ending the war through airial terror raids. It examined suggestions for bombing small towns; for raids on several large cities; for wide spread strafing of civilian objectives, such as road and railroad traffic; and for a single devastation attack on Berlin. A copy of this paper went to Washington, where General Laurence Kuter, the assistant chief of air staff for plans, analyzed the proposals and forced all of there deficient.(Schaffer80). The most important factor moving the AAF toward Douhetian war was the attitude of the countries best civilian and military leaders. The chief movers, some of them moved at times by other leaders and by circumstances, were Arnold, who, despite his preference for selective bombing, sometimes promoted less discriminate forms of attack; Eisenhower, who would do anything to bring a fast end to the problem; Marshall, who wanted to put on CLARION and THUNDERCLAP and to show the Germans going to Munich that their situation was hopeless; and Lovett, who felt the war should be painful and unforgettable to German civilians.(Schaffer106) The detonation of nuclear weapons over Hiroshima and Nagasaki were an effort by American strategic air forces to destroy almost every important city in Japan. The first was the great Tokyo raid of March 9-10, 1945. The men who directed it hoped that incendiary air attack, together with precession bombing of industrial and military together and the explosion of nuclear bombing would stop the will of the Japanese people and destroy their nations ability to fight. Optimistic that a Douhetian kind of warfare, which had not achieved the result the others had that were anticipated in Europe, would succeed in Asia, but never knew what it would take to make the Japanese surrender. American planes devoted intellectual and physical resources to determine how to take out Japans cities. Some of the men who were privy to these deliberations wondered at the same time about the morality of what was being planned, but for the most part controversy about the moral issue in the American bombing of Japan awaited the end of the war.(Schaffer107). When the Atomic bomb explosion stopped the Pacific air offensive, planned so carefully by so many military and civilian specialists over so many years, American civilians and service men and other people throughout the world were happy, for a terrible war was ending. But debates had already started over the way the United States used air power to punish and defeat the empire of Japan.(Schaffer148). When people cause events to happen that are as important as the destruction of the Japanese cities, it is natural to wonder how they thought about the moral issues involved. Were the Americans responsible for the way Japan was bombed. Finding the answers to the questions is very hard for the historians to decide.(Schaffer149). Some AAF commanders might lead to the conclusion that they felt no concern about the morality of the nuclear and fire bomb attack on Japan. General Eaken’s remark that he never thought there was any moral sentiment among leaders of the AAF applied to those who directed the attacks against Japanese urban centers, officers he knew well. General LeMay’s comments seem to verify Eaker’s view. When an Air Force cadet asked him how much moral consideration affected his decisions about bombing Japan, Le May said, “Killing Japanese didn’t bother me at this time. It was getting the war over with that bothered me, so I wasn’t worried particularly about how many people we killed in getting the job done……….. All war is immoral, and if you let it bother you, you’re not a good soldier(Schaffer150.)” Dropping the atomic bomb caused him he said, “no difficulty”.(Schaffer150).
Long before the United States was forced into the war, all the pilots knew what would be expected of them. They knew that themselves and all others in active training or about to enter training knew that air power could dominate any military situation on land or sea. They knew once at war, Americ
1. Jblonski, Edward. America In The Air War. Alexandria: Time Life Books, 1982. 2. Mingos, Howard. American Heros Of The War In The Air. New York: Lancian Publishers INC., 1943. 3.Schaffer, Ronald. Wings of Judgement. Oxford: New York, 1985.