Erik Heter

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During the half century following the advent of the new bomb, it took on much symbolic weight that wasn't felt at the time, when it was perceived essentially as merely a much more powerful weapon. Knowing what was then known under the then-enormous pressures to end the awful war — as opposed to enjoying the luxury of retrospective judgment — only some higher order of human being would have made different decisions, or agonized about them much more than Truman did.
The Battle of Okinawa: The Blood and the Bomb
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