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Orthodox Vs Orthodox Analysis

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World War II was a terrible war and its end was just as gruesome. For 72 years, the decision to drop two atomic bombs on Japan in 1945 has been a controversial debate. Many of the debates ask the same kinds of questions: was the atomic bombs necessary to end the war? Did the decision save lives? Did the U.S. President Harry S. Truman and his advisors understand that this would lead to the Cold War with the U.S.S.R.? The various views historians in this debate can be categorized into three groups: orthodox, revisionist, and consensus. (Thesis) The historiography of the bombings and its aftereffects were extremely influenced by the crusade for true history and the current wars that were raging on at the time these academic works were published.
Orthodox historians, also known as the traditionalist, generally accepted the U.S. President Harry S. Truman’s and Henry Stimson’s reason that they only wanted to end the war quickly and with the least amount of lives lost. Overall, orthodox historians believe that the use of the atomic bombs against Japan was justifiable to prevent a costly invasion of the island itself. Because of this thinking, orthodox historians also believed that this was a moral decision. Although orthodox arguments emphasize on various facts or aspects, they all come to the same conclusion, making …show more content…

However, they all agree to disagree on Truman’s and Stimson’s projected casualty number for a Japanese invasion. Most revisionists also accept some of Gar Alperovitz’s Atomic Diplomacy, but not all of it. In some arguments, revisionist believe Truman’s administration who were involved with the atomic bomb research and planning ignored other alternatives to end the war and the decision Truman made concerning the bombs were influenced by rising diplomatic tension with the Soviet Union, who at the time was a United States’

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