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Hiroshima and Nagasaki: 80 years after the bombing | The Hindu Interactive












    Hiroshima and Nagasaki: 80 years after the bombing | The Hindu Interactive














































    80 YEARS AGO

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    The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki cleaved history into “before” and “after” —
    for Japan, the U.S., and the entire world.

    A remembrance of the first, and thankfully last, time humans used atomic weapons in war

    Published: August 5, 2025


    Video credits: Museum of Modern Art, New York City, New York


    NEAR-TOTAL RUIN



    At 8:15 am on August 6, 1945, the U.S. B-29 bomber Enola Gay released “Little Boy”, a
    uranium-powered atomic bomb, over Hiroshima. The explosion unleashed a firestorm.


    An estimated 70,000 people were killed instantly, with total deaths by the end of 1945
    reaching around 140,000. The majority were civilians, including a significant number of
    children.


    Three days later, a plutonium implosion bomb dubbed “Fat Man” was detonated over Nagasaki,
    causing approximately 74,000 deaths by year’s end.


    In Hiroshima, about 70% of all buildings were razed or burnt, with damages extending up to 2
    km from the bomb”s hypocentre. Steel frame buildings suffered severe structural damage up to
    1.7 km while multistorey brick buildings were completely demolished as far as 1.3 km.


    Roof tiles were melted by the flash heat and virtually all wooden or timber-framed buildings
    within 3 km were either destroyed or heavily damaged.

    Strong reinforced concrete buildings were blown down 700 m away in Nagasaki.


    Fires after the blast consumed almost all combustible materials, compounding the destruction
    by burning wooden structures, tearing away windows and doors, and damaging ceilings and
    equipment.


    In Nagasaki, the bomb levelled 6.7 sq. km and destroyed buildings up to 2.5 km away. Some
    earthquake-resistant structures such as reinforced concrete smoke stacks were overturned
    within 1.2 km of ground zero.


    The bombs also flattened nearly all masonry buildings and caused mass structural failures in
    residential, religious, and industrial buildings.


    All together, the blast’s concussive force, intense heat, and ensuing fires reshaped the
    urban landscapes of Hiroshima and Nagasaki into scenes of near-total ruin.


    The survivors, known as hibakusha, endured horrific injuries and long-term health
    consequences including radiation sickness, increased cancer rates, chronic diseases, and
    permanent psychological trauma.



    Move the line to see images of Nagasaki before and after


    IN THE BALANCE

    The scale and nature of devastation were unprecedented in human warfare.


    A Red Cross delegate sent this telegram on August 30, 1945, from Hiroshima to his
    colleague in Tokyo. The first four lines read:


    VISITED HIROSHIMA THIRTIETH CONDITIONS APPALLING STOP



    EIGHT PERCENT ALL HOSPITALS DESTROYED OR SERIOUSLY DAMAGED INSPECTED TWO EMERGENCY
    HOSPITALS CONDITIONS BEYOND DESCRIPTION FULL STOP

    EFFECT OF BOMB MYSTERIOUSLY SERIOUS STOP



    MANY VICTIMS APPARENTLY RECOVERING SUDDENLY SUFFER FATAL RELAPSE DUE TO DECOMPOSITION
    OF WHITE BLOOD CELLS AND OTHER INTERNAL INJURIES NOW DYING IN GREAT NUMBERS STOP


    The U.S. justified the bombings on several grounds. Foremost was Japan’s refusal to
    accept unconditional surrender, as outlined in the Potsdam Declaration.


    The bombings were also part of a broader geopolitical contest with the Soviet Union.
    While it was a U.S. ally during World War II, rising tensions and distrust had fuelled a
    desire in Washington to assert technological and military supremacy before Soviet
    influence in Asia expanded.






    Leaders of the Allied powers of the Second World War meet at the Potsdam Conference in July
    1945 to discuss post-war Europe and the terms for Japan’s surrender



    The atomic bombings marked a profound shift in American foreign policy. The U.S. shaped the
    postwar order using its nuclear umbrella to guarantee the security of Western European
    allies and Japan, thus cementing alliances and shaping political economies that aligned with
    American strategic interests.

    Winston Churchill, Harry Truman, and Joseph Stalin in July 1945


    The psychological impact of nuclear weapons redefined warfare and diplomacy. Nuclear
    deterrence became foundational, setting up doctrines like “mutually assured destruction”
    that underscored superpower relations for decades.


    The bombings also marked the beginning of a struggle to balance the strategic benefits of
    nuclear arms with their horrifying humanitarian consequences.


    The bombings accelerated the onset of the Cold War. The Soviet Union perceived the atomic
    strikes as a direct threat and a demonstration of American geopolitical and technological
    dominance.

    Protest against nuclear weapons

    Anti-nuclear protests intensified in the 1980s


    In response, the USSR rapidly pursued its own nuclear weapons programme, testing its first
    atomic bomb in 1949, just four years after Hiroshima.


    This initiated the nuclear arms race, embedding nuclear weapons at the core of superpower
    rivalry and global tensions.


    The Cold War era was defined by the Cuban Missile Crisis and arms control negotiations,
    including anti-ballistic-missile treaties and successive arms limitation talks.


    The baleful legacy of Hiroshima and Nagasaki also catalysed international attempts to
    control nuclear weapons and prevent their spread.


    Early initiatives such as the Baruch Plan (1946) sought to place atomic energy under
    international control but couldn’t succeed.

    More comprehensive frameworks emerged only decades later.


    The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) of 1968 became the cornerstone of
    non-proliferation policy.


    It established a threefold objective: prevent the spread of nuclear weapons, achieve nuclear
    disarmament, and foster peaceful uses of nuclear energy.


    The treaty recognised five nuclear-weapon states (U.S., USSR/Russia, UK, France, China) and
    barred other signatories from developing or acquiring nuclear weapons.


    The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) was tasked with inspection and verification
    roles to ensure compliance.


    The IAEA inspection team that on September 1, 2022, began IAEA’s first inspection of a
    nuclear plant in a war zone: the Zaporizhzhia facility in Ukraine. Credits: IAEA Imagebank


    The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT), opened for signature in 1996, represented
    an effort to ban all nuclear explosions worldwide.


    Though it has not entered into force due to key states’ non-ratification, it embodies
    near-global consensus on eliminating nuclear testing.


    These treaties shaped international norms and institutions around non-proliferation.
    However, implementation remained complex.


    States like India, Pakistan, and North Korea never joined or withdrew while covert
    proliferation raised new challenges. Non-proliferation efforts also intersected with
    regional conflicts, nuclear latency, and the politics of deterrence.


    This said, by the late 20th century, the anticipated flood of nuclear states hadn’t come
    about, partly due to the NPT and diplomatic pressure.


    Key success stories include South Africa’s voluntary dismantling of its nuclear arsenal and
    post-Soviet denuclearisation agreements that removed weapons from Belarus, Kazakhstan and
    Ukraine.


    Still, the international community wrestled with mistrust, technical verification issues,
    and geopolitical rivalries that complicated the ultimate goal of complete disarmament.

    Castle Romeo GIF
    Castle Bravo GIF


    Aerial footage of thermonuclear tests during the Cold War era: Castle Romeo (left/top on
    mobile) and Castle Bravo, both in 1954. The fallout from Castle Bravo hit the 23-member crew
    of the Japanese fishing vessel Daigo Fukuryū Maru, drawing international condemnation of
    atmospheric nuclear testing and later contributing to the genesis of Nihon Hidankyo.


    Eighty years on, the spectre of nuclear war is as real and complex as ever.

    Modern missile launch


    The U.S. Peacekeeper missile test on June 17, 1983, at Kwajalein Atoll. The missile can hold
    multiple nuclear warheads aimed at separate targets, each able to deliver the explosive
    power of 25 Hiroshima-sized bombs. As such, it’s an important kind of destabilising factor.


    The Cold War’s end did not eliminate nuclear weapons. Instead, it shifted the focus to
    non-proliferation and disarmament, with treaties like the NPT and CTBT becoming central to
    global security.


    However, the post-Cold War era has seen new challenges, including North Korea’s nuclear
    programme, Iran’s contested nuclear ambitions, and the erosion of arms control agreements.


    The 21st century has also witnessed a resurgence of great power competition, with nuclear
    deterrence remaining a key element in U.S.-China and U.S.-Russia relations.


    While large-scale use has thankfully been avoided since 1945, the global stockpile is still
    around 12,000 warheads worldwide.


    Contemporary conflicts from Ukraine to Korea and tensions around Israel and Iran in West
    Asia and between India and Pakistan in South Asia continue to bear nuclear overtones.


    The risks of accidental launch, escalation from conventional conflicts or the introduction
    of novel technologies like hypersonic delivery systems and cyber warfare are new
    destabilising factors.


    Efforts continue through the United Nations, the 2017 Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear
    Weapons, and new calls for arms control diplomacy, among others.


    One particularly bright light is Nihon Hidankyo, an organisation representing the hibakusha
    that took shape in Japan in 1956.


    Nihon Hidankyo


    ⁠Nihon Hidankyo secretary general Terumi Tanaka speaks to youth about surviving the Nagasaki
    bombing at a UN event in Vienna in 2007.


    The organisation was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace in 2024 for “its efforts to achieve a
    world free of nuclear weapons and for demonstrating through witness testimony that nuclear
    weapons must never be used again.”





    Credits:


    Editing and writing: Vasudevan Mukunth | Interactive and code: Areena Arora | Photos from
    Wikimedia Commons, unless otherwise specified













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