James Gibney, Columnist

Did Bombing Hiroshima Save Japanese Lives?

Wartime diaries of civilians suggest an invasion would have been even worse.

An invasion would have been worse.

Photograph: Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

"Yoshikado-sensei said, 'They're still there. Spear them! Spear them!' and it was really fun. I was tired, but I realized that even one person can kill a lot of the enemy."

So wrote Mihoko Nakane, a 10-year-old Japanese girl, in her diary in July 1945. She was describing the hand-to-hand combat training she and her classmates were getting for the "decisive battle" to be fought if and when the U.S. and its allies invaded mainland Japan.