By Owei Lakemfa
SUNDAY, August 15, 2010 will be the 65th commemoration of the day the terrible Second World War ended. But no country wants to mark this; in fact, it is difficult to find any member of the human race marking the day.
The Japanese whose Emperor Hirohito on  August 15, 1945 announced the Japanese surrender and effectively ended the war, do not mark it because it reminds them of the humiliation of Japan.
Most European countries like Britain and France prefer to mark ancillary dates like the D-Day. The Germans who had been the pivot of the war do not mark it as it would remind them of their military defeat and humiliation.
The defunct Soviet Union and its successor states would prefer to mark ‘The Great Patriotic War’ in which they highlight their undisputable heroism against Hitlerite Germany.
The Americans were the main people who forced imperial Japan to surrender, but they do not commemorate the day because in ensuring the Japanese capitulation, the Harry S. Truman administration committed heinous crimes against humanity and let the human race know that it can commit suicide.
The war had began to wind down after the May 7, 1945 surrender of Germany. But Japan was still holding out when on July 16, 1945 the US first tested the atomic bomb at the Trinity site. The Americans knew it was a bomb capable of erasing cities from the earth.
A committee headed by the scientist, Robert Oppenheimer who had been director of the research, listed four Japanese cities; Kyoto, Yokohama, Hiroshima and Kokura as possible targets that will elicit maximum damage and terrible psychological effects. Kyoto was picked because it was a military and intellectual centre.
But US Secretary of War, Henry L Stimson got Kyoto dropped because he had fallen in love with the city when he had his honeymoon there.
Without any warning, the US aircraft, Enola Gay named after the mother of its pilot, Colonel Paul Tibbets, on August 6, 1945 dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. It took 43 seconds for the bomb called “Little Boy†to fall from the aircraft and detonate.
On the first day, it wiped out 83,000 people, including almost all the doctors and nurses in the city with tens of thousands injured. Within four months, an additional 80,000 died, bringing the total figure to 166,000.
The injured and those affected by radiation continued to die as a result of the bomb for another five decades. The shocked Japanese reported that the bomb destroyed practically all living things in the city which was picked for its heavy civilian population to instil fear in the ordinary Japanese.
Unfortunately, most Americans not realising the gravity of the crime their government had committed, were ecstatic, prompting Truman to declare that unless the dazed Japanese surrender immediately, they should “expect a rain of ruin from the air, the like of which has never been seen on this earthâ€.
True to his words, on May 9, another American aircraft, the Bockscar commanded by Major Charles W. Sweeny was on the way to drop the second atomic bomb called the “Fat Man†.
The initial target was Kokura but visibility over it was poor, so the plane headed for Nagasaki, again this was cloudy, but as the aircraft made for a third target, there was a last minute break in the clouds over Nagasaki and the bomb was dropped. Luckily it was dropped in the Urakami Valley and the hills protected a major part of the city.
Despite this, about 75,000 persons were killed on that first day with thousands more dying within the next four months. In a twist of fate, some survivors of the Hiroshima bombing three days earlier who had found their way to Nagasaki were again bombed.
On August 15, 1945 while lamenting the use of such unimaginable weapon of terror on the Japanese civil populace and announcing surrender, Emperor Hirohito, said if the US were given the excuse to continue using the atomic bomb, it would not only lead to the “obliteration of the Japanese nation, but also it would lead to the total extinction of human civilizationâ€.
Unfortunately, the American populace did not immediately realise the danger in terrorising civilian populations by dropping or threatening to drop atomic bombs on them. They saw only power in their ability to exterminate, annihilate and obliterate other peoples. But gradually, they came to realise the crime against humanity perpetrated by the Truman administration in the name of saving lives in the closing period of the war.
Humanity vowed that never again will it allow such senseless wars. But it seemed that very few lessons were learnt, and rather than wind down such bombs that can lead to the mutual destruction of the world, the Americans redoubled their efforts and began to produce deadlier bombs.  By 1985, they had 9,600 nuclear weapons.
The Soviet Union raced to produce its own atomic bomb to counter- balance the US terror. In 1949, it tested its first bomb and soon overtook the Americans in the nuclear bomb race so much that by 1985, it had 12,000 nuclear bombs.
The British with its fading super power status raced to test its bomb in 1952 and by 1985 had 225 nuclear weapons. The French followed with its own test in 1960 and eventually produced 300 nuclear weapons while China tested its bomb in 1964 and went on to stockpile 240 nuclear bombs. India did its test in 1974 and produced some 70 bombs while its neighbour and political rival, Pakistan tested its bomb in 1998.
Israel which refuses to acknowledge that it has the bomb did its own test in 1979, and has a stockpile of 80 nuclear bombs.
South Africa is the only country in the world to have disassembled its nuclear weapons, while America in proliferating nuclear weapons has shared its arsenal with Germany, Belgium, Turkey, Netherlands, Greece, Italy and Canada. North Korea and Iran are also on the march. Apparently, humanity has simply made the world a place for Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD).
Disclaimer
Comments expressed here do not reflect the opinions of Vanguard newspapers or any employee thereof.