SteveR
Pre-takeoff checklist
I have to agree with you. And I suspect there are a number of us on the board who might not otherwise be here if he had not.
I am one of those people. My Grandfather was a POW of the Japanese for 3.5 years, he was in a POW camp in Japan when the bombs were dropped. The plan was to kill all POWs when the mainland was invaded. Dropping the bombs prevented that from happening. The quote below is from a biography of my Grandfather that my younger brother just finished (my Grandfather was Carl Ruse):
A paper was in circulation in the offices of the Army and Navy General staffs. Called “Ketsu-Go”, this was the Japanese last effort for the final battle that would decide the
outcome of the war.
The plan would call for the final employment of every available weapon and resource the Japanese had. Thousands of aircraft had been prepared for use as suicide planes; hidden under trees or camouflage, with only enough fuel in the tanks for one trip to a beach being invaded. Return was not part of the strategy. Runways were narrow swaths cut through grassy meadows. They could only afford a single battle, and it must not pass the beach, so every resource would be spent there. The plan was to kill as many Americans as possible and crush morale. Civilians would fight along soldiers with bamboo spears, and were encouraged to commit suicide before being captured.
As a POW, Ruse had heard of Ketsu-Go: “We found out that their plan was to try to have all of the POWs in Japan, and as the Americans got too close to their homeland, and made landing on Japanese soil, we would all be done away with. In fact, they had already issued orders to that effect. I’ll never, ever forget old Harry Truman for sending those bombs over and putting a stop to it because that’s what got us back home. I think a heck of a lot of Harry Truman and his atomic bomb. If it hadn't been for that, well,
we would have never got out of there.”
After all that the POWs had survived thus far, the plan was to kill them all in the event of an invasion. This was the hopeless world into which the surviving POWs entered in 1944. The war could not be sustained much longer. Some sort of a violent end was inevitably coming, and it would be coming soon. Sure enough, plans for extermination of POWs materialized when Japanese soldiers massacred close to 150 inmates at the Palawan POW Camp. As allied troops advanced on the islands, the men were ordered into bomb shelters underground which they had built themselves for their own protection. After the men were safely inside, gasoline was poured on the death trap and ignited with torches. As the men attempted to escape, many were shot, bayoneted, or met hand grenades. In the end, only eleven men managed to escape. The Ketsu-Go plan was more than just a plan;
at Palawan in December of 1944, it was a reality.
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