Dukasaur wrote:It's unclear
- How much the nuking decision was influenced by the racism, and
- whether Truman was making a decision, or just following through on what was accepted doctrine.
First of all, let's remember that there was always an asymmetric hatred relationship against the enemy from Japan as opposed to the enemy from Germany. This level was so great that after the war, long before political correctness set in to the media, most of the anti-Japan propaganda cartoons were quickly suppressed. Everyone remembers the lady with the rolled sleeve ... do you know about these ones ...
10 Most Xenophobic Pieces of Anti-Japanese Wartime Propaganda. Even
Dr. Seuss joined in the hatred.
Here is an interesting article that deserves a number of quotes.
A Critical Comparison Between Japanese and American Propaganda during World War II.A commonly held view was that the Japanese were subhuman or evolutionarily inferior. It was an all too common idea among not only the Americans but among the other Allies as well. British Under-Secretary of the Foreign Office Sir Alexander Cadogan referred to the Japanese as “little yellow dwarf slaves” referring to the average height difference between Anglos and Japanese (Aldrich 64). Chiefs of Staff felt “no reason to believe that Japanese standards are even comparable with those of the Italians.” In one of the most famous, and perhaps most fantastic and blatant misconceptions of the Japanese, historian Arthur Marder thought the Japanese to be inherently inferior, especially in the art of war, for several reasons, one being “because of their eye slits… the Japanese fighter pilots could not shoot straight, and Japanese naval officers could not see in the dark” (65). Captain Vivian from Tokyo said that Japanese were incapable of springing surprise in battle because they have “peculiarly slow brains” (64). One needs only to obviously site the bombing of Pearl Harbor to disclaim that notion. Despite this, the West was still convinced during the early part of the war that Japan was of Japan’s inherently inferior.
Thus it is incredibly hard to argue that Truman wasn't racist in this regard because EVERYONE in the war effort was to one degree or another.