Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction and summary: The Truman era in retrospect
- 1 The mind and character of Harry S. Truman
- Part I Domestic politics and issues
- Part II Foreign policy and national defense
- 7 The national security state reconsidered: Truman and economic containment, 1945–1950
- 8 The insecurities of victory: the United States and the perception of the Soviet threat after World War II
- 9 Alliance and autonomy: European identity and U.S. foreign policy objectives in the Truman years
- 10 U.S. policy in the Near East: the triumphs and tribulations of the Truman administration
- 11 Toward a post-colonial order: Truman administration policies toward South and Southeast Asia
- 12 Occupied Japan and the cold war in Asia
- 13 The Truman administration and the Korean War
- About the authors
- Index
12 - Occupied Japan and the cold war in Asia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction and summary: The Truman era in retrospect
- 1 The mind and character of Harry S. Truman
- Part I Domestic politics and issues
- Part II Foreign policy and national defense
- 7 The national security state reconsidered: Truman and economic containment, 1945–1950
- 8 The insecurities of victory: the United States and the perception of the Soviet threat after World War II
- 9 Alliance and autonomy: European identity and U.S. foreign policy objectives in the Truman years
- 10 U.S. policy in the Near East: the triumphs and tribulations of the Truman administration
- 11 Toward a post-colonial order: Truman administration policies toward South and Southeast Asia
- 12 Occupied Japan and the cold war in Asia
- 13 The Truman administration and the Korean War
- About the authors
- Index
Summary
When Harry Truman succeeded Franklin Roosevelt as president in April 1945, the United States had just begun the systematic, low-level saturation bombing of Japanese cities. In the third month of his administration, the new president received word of the nuclear test at Alamogordo, thought immediately of biblical prophesies of the apocalypse, and immediately approved the use of the atomic bombs against Japan. As he phrased it in his belatedly discovered “Potsdam diary,” written at the time he learned about the successful test, the Japanese were “savages, ruthless, merciless and fanatic.” In a personal letter written a few days after Hiroshima and Nagasaki had been destroyed, the president explained that “when you have to deal with a beast you have to treat him as a beast.” Following Japan's capitulation in mid-August 1945, the United States occupied the country as the overwhelmingly dominant force in a nominally “Allied” occupation and proceeded to initiate a rigorous policy of “demilitarization and democratization.”
Less than five years later, the Truman administration had identified Japan as the key to the balance of power in Asia—and Asia as capable of tipping the global balance in the direction of the Soviet Union.
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- The Truman Presidency , pp. 366 - 409Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989
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