Sfedg
By: Steve • Essay • 346 Words • January 30, 2010 • 644 Views
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A flash of light; heat; an explosion; a firestorm; a mushroom cloud of dust and radioactive fall out coming to the ground miles from the point of impact; an electromagnetic pulse; extreme amounts of radiation; complete and utter destruction; death. There is a long list of a lot of not-so-nice things that come with the dropping of an atomic bomb. The atomic bomb is perhaps the most destructive and deadly weapons known to man, only being used in the most extreme of situations. One can wonder how any country can justify the dropping of this type of weapon, especially when you know the magnitude of destruction it will cause, and not to mention the death it can cause to innocent civilians. There are a multitude of things to consider when you face a decision as big as dropping a bomb that will kill hundreds of thousands of people and cause millions of dollars in damage. Eventually, especially in a time of war, there will come a point where keeping such a weapon in storage is no longer an option. On August 6th, 1945, the Truman administration found it necessary to use the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan. The culminating result was death, destruction, and ultimately,