Theodore Van Kirk was the navigator aboard the Enola Gay, the plane that dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima 65 years ago. Now the sole survivor of the crew, how does he live with the deaths of 200,000 people?
Fumanchewd wrote:How do they figure that he was responsible for the deaths of 200,000 people? I've NEVER heard that number before.
JeffSFO wrote:Can't say I blame him. We were at war and there's a good argument that it saved American lives.
JeffSFO wrote:Can't say I blame him. We were at war and there's a good argument that it saved American lives.
MD11Engineer wrote:JeffSFO wrote:Can't say I blame him. We were at war and there's a good argument that it saved American lives.
Not just American, but British and Canadian lives as well. After the defeat of Germany, the British and Canadians were busy preparing for a combat landing operation in both Japan and Singapore.
Jan
JeffSFO wrote:Fumanchewd wrote:How do they figure that he was responsible for the deaths of 200,000 people? I've NEVER heard that number before.
That's probably the count including the long term effects from radiation: cancer, leukemia, disease, etc. Acute deaths from and immediately after the bombing in 1945 may have been as high as 166,000:
http://www.rerf.or.jp/general/qa_e/qa1.html
Regardless, I'd like like to see the sources for the newspapers article.