Poll
shows Americans, for first time, divided on use of A-Bombs in 1945
By GREG MITCHELL*
NEW
YORK (24 July 2005) -- As the 60th anniversary of the atomic bombings
of Japan approach in two weeks, one major poll shows that Americans,
in a historical switch, now appear about equally divided on the decision
to use the bomb.
Polling
by the Associated Press, announced today, found that 24 per cent of
Americans "strongly approve" dropping the first atomic bombs
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and another 24 per cent "somewhat approve."
But 23 per cent "somewhat disapprove" and 24 per cent "strongly
disapprove." Another 6 per cent are not sure.
Polls
in past years have generally shown strong majority support for the use
of the bomb, although the "pro" count has slowly subsided
over the years.
The
poll of 1,000 adults in the United States was conducted for the AP by
Ipsos, an international polling company, from July 5-10. The poll has
a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
The
polling, and a separate survey in Japan carried out by Kyodo, also found
that more Americans than Japanese expect another world war in their
lifetime. Most people in both countries believe the first use of a nuclear
weapon is never justified, although nearly half of the Americans obviously
make an exception for the 1945 examples, which killed at least 200,000,
the vast majority of them civilians.
Japan
surrendered within days of the use of the atomic weapons, but historians
differ on whether that country would have given up, in the same time
frame, even if the bombs had not been used, due to the Russians' entry
into the war against them and other factors.
*Greg
Mitchell (letters@editorandpublisher.com) is editor of E&P and co-author,
with Robert Jay Lifton, of "Hiroshima in America."
www.editorandpublisher.com
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