4 hours ago, Odanan said:Well, it worked with the WWII Japan...
Are you referring to nuking Japan? If so that kinda misrepresents the reason those bombs were dropped. It was less about ending the war to bring our boys home faster, and more about forcing Japan to surrender before Russia joined that front, and also scaring the pants off every other nation that wasn't Japan, particularly our allies, to make sure they didn't try to oppose the US down the line.
The war in Europe had more or less ended, and Russia was getting ready to invade as they had a long standing beef with Japan plus all these soldiers that didn't have to fight Nazi's anymore. If that happened, Russia would've had a lot more power at the allied negotiating table once all the fighting was over because it would have made them instrumental in ending the conflict in both of the major theaters. The US knew that Japan was basically beaten already, and would likely surrender the same day the Russians joined the fight against them, but wasn't about to let Russia swoop in and claim any amount of glory on the western front. The Nukes were dropped to force Japan's surrender early under terms laid out specifically by the US. That's why two bombs had to be dropped, Japan really wasn't feeling those terms so a second attack was ordered just weeks ahead of Russia's planned invasion to force Japan's hand. This also served the purpose of demonstrating how dangerous the Nuke was to the rest of the world, something that was made pretty clear during post war negotiations as there was a general attitude of "don't mess with the US or we will do to you what we did to Japan. Lookin at you Commies." That animosity the US and several other allied nations had towards Russia is one of the many many factors that led to the Cold War, which our country likes to leave out of the history books, since it kinda shows how we had more of a part in creating that situation than most would care to admit.
Sorry for the random totally off-topic long post. I just really really like history.
Edited by Hippie Moosen