“Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.”
- J. Robert Oppenheimer (Father of the Atomic Bomb)
(Quoted from the Bhagavad Gita, spoken by Oppenheimer after witnessing the Trinity test.)What happened at Hiroshima - BBC World Service Documentaries
Hiroshima: The Day Humanity Crossed the Line We Can Never Uncross
By [adaptationguide.com]
On August 6, 1945, the world split into before and after.
At 8:15 in the morning, an American B-29 bomber named Enola Gay dropped a bomb called Little Boy over the Japanese city of Hiroshima from nearly ten thousand meters above. It detonated 600 meters over the city center with the force of about 15 kilotons of TNT.
The temperature on the ground spiked to several thousand degrees Celsius in seconds. People were vaporized where they stood.
Shadows of human beings were seared into stone steps and walls — the only trace they left behind.
Tens of thousands died instantly. By the end of 1945, an estimated 140,000 people had succumbed to the blast, burns, and radiation sickness.
Many more would die in the following years, their bodies betraying them cell by cell, poisoned from the inside.
The city’s core was erased in seconds.
Modern nuclear weapons have many times that destructive power.
This was not just a military strike. It was humanity’s first deliberate use of a nuclear weapon — a weapon designed to annihilate not armies, but the very concept of life in its blast radius.
Under U.S. President Harry S. Truman, it was framed as a move to end World War II swiftly and avoid a bloody invasion of Japan’s home islands.
Hiroshima was targeted because it housed the headquarters of Japan’s 2nd Army and stored war materials.
Three days later, Nagasaki met the same fate.
The military logic was — and remains — contested.
Japan’s forces were already crippled; some historians argue the nuclear strikes were unnecessary for surrender.
But on August 15, 1945, Emperor Hirohito announced Japan’s unconditional capitulation. The atomic age had begun.
From the Mushroom Cloud to the Arms Race
Hiroshima and Nagasaki didn’t end nuclear weapons — they unleashed them.
The immediate postwar years saw an uncontrolled arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union.
By the 1970s, fragile bilateral arms control treaties were born, aiming to slow the march toward global suicide.
The New START treaty of 2010 limited both sides to 1,550 deployed nuclear warheads. But in 2023, Russia suspended its participation, citing — conveniently — France and Britain’s modernization of their arsenals.
The treaty expires in 2026, and a successor deal looks unlikely. The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) warns: without it, both Moscow and Washington are poised to expand their nuclear stockpiles again.
As SIPRI’s Hans Kristensen put it:
“The era of reducing the number of nuclear weapons in the world, ongoing since the end of the Cold War, is coming to an end.”
The Numbers They Don’t Want You to See
Today, nine nations hold nuclear weapons. The “official” nuclear states under the Non-Proliferation Treaty are the U.S., Russia, France, Britain, and China.
Then come Israel, Pakistan, and India — all outside the treaty — plus North Korea, which walked away in 2003.
In 2024, every single one of these nine states modernized their nuclear forces. Some rolled out entirely new weapons systems.
SIPRI estimates the global stockpile at about 12,200 nuclear warheads.
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90% belong to the U.S. and Russia.
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Around 9,600 are ready for potential use.
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2,100 sit in “high alert” status, mounted on ballistic missiles, primed to launch within minutes.
The U.S. and Russia maintain a “nuclear triad” — the ability to strike from land, sea, and air — ensuring that even after a first strike, they could obliterate their attacker in a second strike.
This is the grotesque logic of Mutually Assured Destruction.
The Ghost of Hiroshima in Today’s Wars
Since 1945, nuclear weapons have never been used in combat again — but they have been used politically.
In the war against Ukraine, Russia brandishes nuclear threats to deter direct NATO involvement. Israel and the United States have justified military strikes on Iran partly by citing Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.
The recent flare-up between India and Pakistan reignited fears of a nuclear exchange.
Europe now debates its own nuclear deterrent. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has floated supplementing the U.S. nuclear umbrella with a European one. French President Emmanuel Macron has offered France’s arsenal to European partners “as the Americans do.” Paris and London recently agreed to coordinate their deterrents more closely.
Meanwhile, Donald Trump promises a “Golden Dome” missile defense shield over the U.S., modeled on Ronald Reagan’s failed “Star Wars” program of orbital lasers to shoot down Soviet missiles.
Moscow and Beijing accuse Washington of trying to undermine the strategic balance.
The 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty once aimed to preserve that balance by limiting missile defenses — ensuring that both sides remained vulnerable, and thus cautious.
The U.S. abandoned it in 2001.
Eighty Years Later: What Have We Learned?
The co-pilot of Enola Gay, Robert Lewis, watched the birth of the nuclear age from 10 kilometers above Hiroshima. In his logbook, he wrote:
“My God, what have we done.”
Eighty years on, the question is still hanging in the air like radioactive dust:
What have we done — and will we do it again?
We now live in a world where nine men with launch authority could erase most human life in less than an hour.
Where the destruction of a city is not just possible, but planned for.
Where Hiroshima’s suffering is recited as history but ignored as warning.
The mushroom cloud over Hiroshima was not just the end of a war — it was the beginning of humanity’s most efficient method of self-extinction.
And yet the arsenals grow, the treaties die, and the political rhetoric once again flirts with nuclear “solutions.”
The truth is simple, and it is ugly: Every single nuclear weapon ever built is a Hiroshima waiting for coordinates.
History will not forgive us if we make the same choice again.
The dead of August 6, 1945, cannot speak.
But they are watching.
yours truly,
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