Taking Back Our Stolen History
After the Japanese had Already Agreed to Surrender, the USA Drops an Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima and the Famously Christian City of Nagasaki Three Days Later.
After the Japanese had Already Agreed to Surrender, the USA Drops an Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima and the Famously Christian City of Nagasaki Three Days Later.

After the Japanese had Already Agreed to Surrender, the USA Drops an Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima and the Famously Christian City of Nagasaki Three Days Later.

Author and Lecturer Eustice Mullins also deeply researched the Atomic Bomb and its reasoning and adds many additional details:

The story begins in Germany. In the 1930s, Germany and Japan had a number  of scientists icing on the development of nuclear fission. In both of these  countries, their leaders sternly forbade them to continue their research.  Adolf Hitler said he would never allow anyone in Germany to work to work on  such an inhumane weapon.

The Emperor of Japan let his scientists know that he would never approve  such a weapon. At that time the United States had no one working on  nuclear fission. The disgruntled German scientists contacted friends in the  United States, and were told that there was a possibility of government  support for their work here. As Don Beyer tells these immigrants to the  United States pushed their program.

“Leo Szilard, together with his long time friends and fellow Hungarian  physicists, Eugene Wigner and Edward Teller, agreed that the President must  be warned; fission bomb tehnology was not so farfetched. The Jewish emigres,  now living in America, had personal experience of fascism in Europe. In  1939, the three physicists enlisted the support of Albert Einstein, letter  dated August 2 signed by Einstein was delivered by Alexander Sachs to  Franklin D. Roosevelt at the White House on October 11, 39.”

CRIMINALS ON DISPLAY

At the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum, photographs of two men are prominently  displayed; Albert Einstein, and J. Robert Oppenheimer, who developed the  atomic bomb at Los Alamos laboratories, New Mexico. Also on display is a  statement from General Eisenhower, who was then supreme Military Commander,  which is found in number of books about Eisenhower, and which can be found  on p.426, Eisenhower by Stephen E. Ambrose, Simon & Shuster, NY, 1983.

“Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson first told Eisenhower of the bomb’s existence. Eisenhower was engulfed by “a feeling of depression’. When  Stimson said the United States proposed to use the bomb against Japan,  Eisenhower voiced ‘my grave misgivings, first on the basis of my belief that Japan was already defeated and that dropping the bomb was completely unnecessary, and secondly because I thought that our country should avoid shocking world opinion by the use (of atomic weapons).’ Stimson was upset by Eisenhower’s attitude ‘almost angrily refuting the reasons I gave for my quick conclusion’. Three days later, Eisenhower flew to Berlin, where he met  with Truman and his principal advisors. Again Eisenhower recommended against using the bomb, and again was ignored.

Other books on Eisenhower state that he endangered his career by his protests against the bomb, which the conspirators in the highest level of  the United States government had already sworn to use against Japan, regardless of any military developments. Eisenhower could not have known  that Stimson was a prominent member of Skull and Bones at Yale, the Brotherhood of Death, founded by the Russell Trust in 1848 as a bunch of the  German Illuminati, or that they had played prominent roles in organizing  wars and revolutions since that time. Nor could he have known that President Truman had only had one job in his career, as a Masonic organizer for the State of Missouri, and that the lodges he built up later sent him to the  United States Senate and then to the presidency.

ATOMIC TERRORISM

The man who set all this in motion was Albert Einstein, who left Europe and  came to the United States in October 1933. His wife said that he “regarded  human beings with detestation”…

When Einstien arrived in the United States, he was feted as a famous scientist, and was invited to the White House by President and Mrs.  Roosevelt. He was soon deeply involved with Eleanor Roosevelt in her many leftwing causes, in which Einstein heartily concurred. Some of Einstein’s biographers hail the modern era as “the Einstein Revolution” and “the Age of  Einstein”, possibly because he set in motion the program of nuclear fission in the United States. His letter to Roosevelt requesting that the government  inaugurate an atomic bomb program was obviously stirred by his lifelong commitment to “peace and disarmament”. His actual commitment was to Zionism;  Ronald W. Clark mentions in Einstein; His Life And Times, Avon, 1971, p.377,  with “He would campaign the Zionists for a Jewish homeland in Palestine.” On  p.460, Clark quotes Einstein, “As a Jew I am from today a supporter of the Jewish Zionist efforts.” (1919)

Einstein’s letter to Roosevelt, dated August 2, 1939, was delivered personally to President Roosevelt by Alexander Sachs on October 11. Why did Einstein enlist an intermediary to bring this letter to Roosevelt, with whom he was on friendly terms? The atomic bomb program could not be launched without the necessary Wall Street sponsorship. Sachs, a Russian Jew, listed his profession as “economist” but was actually a  bagman for the Rothschilds, who regularly delivered large sums of cash to Roosevelt in the White House. Sachs was an advisor to Eugene Meyer of the  Lazard Freres International Banking House, and also with Lehman Brothers,  another well known banker. Sachs’ delivery of the Einstein letter to the White House let Roosevelt know that the Rothschilds approved of the project and wished him to go full speed ahead.

A UNITED NATIONS PROJECT

In May of 1945, the architects of postwar strategy, or, as they liked to call themselves, the “Masters of the Universe”, gathered in San Francisco at the plush Palace Hotel to write the Charter for the United Nations. Several of the principals retired for a private meeting in the exclusive Garden Room. The head of the United States delegation had called this secret meeting with his top aide, Alger Hiss, representing the president of the United States and the Soviet KGB; John Foster Dulles, of the Wall Street law firm of Sullivan and Cromwell, whose mentor, William Nelson Cromwell, had  been called a “professional revolutionary” on the floor of Congress; and W. Averill Harriman, plenipotentiary extraordinary, who had spent the last two  years in Moscow directing Stalin’s war for survival. These four men  represented the awesome power of the American Republic in world affairs, yet of the four, only Secretary of State Edward Stettinius Jr., had a position  authorized by the Constitution. Stettinius called the meeting to order to  discuss an urgent matter; the Japanese were already privately suing for peace, which presented a grave crisis. The atomic bomb would not be ready  for several more months.We have already lost Germany,” Stettinius said. “If Japan bows out, we will not have a live population on which to test the  bomb.”

But, Mr. Secretary,” said Alger Hiss, “no one can ignore the terrible power of this weapon.” “Nevertheless,” said Stettinius, “our entire postwar program depends on terrifying the world with the atomic bomb.” “To accomplish that goal,” said John Foster Dulles, “you will need a very good  tally. I should say a million.” “Yes,” replied Stettinius, “we are hoping  for a million tally in Japan. But if they surrender, we won’t have anything.” “Then you have to keep them in the war until the bomb is ready,”  said John Foster Dulles. “That is no problem. Unconditional surrender.”  “They won’t agree to that,” said Stettinius. “They are sworn to protect the Emperor.” “Exactly,” said John Foster Dulles. “Keep Japan in the war another three months, and we can use the bomb on their cities; we will end this war with the naked fear of all the peoples of the world, who will then bow to our will.”

Edward Stettinius Jr. was the son of a J.P. Morgan partner who had been the world’s largest munitions dealer in the First World War. He had been named by J.P. Morgan to oversee all purchases of munitions by both France and England in the United States throughout the war. John Foster Dulles was also  an accomplished warmonger. In 1933, he and his brother Allen had rushed to Cologne to meet with Adolf Hitler and guaranteed him the funds to maintain the Nazi regime. The Dulles brothers were representing their clients, Kuhn  Loeb Co., and the Rothschilds. Alger Hiss was the golden prince of the communist elite in the united States. When he was chosen as head of the prestigious Carnegie Endowment for International Peace after World War II, his nomination was seconded by John Foster Dulles. Hiss was later sent to prison for perjury for lying about his exploits as a Soviet espionage agent.

This secret meeting in the Garden Room was actually the first military strategy session of the United Nations, because it was dedicated to its mission of exploding the world’s first atomic weapon on a living population.  It also forecast the entire strategy of the Cold War, which lasted  forty-three years, cost American taxpayers five trillion dollars, and accomplished exactly nothing, as it was intended to do. Thus we see that the  New World Order has based its entire strategy on the agony of the hundreds of thousands of civilians burned alive at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, including many thousands of children sitting in their schoolrooms. These leaders had learned from their master, Josef Stalin, that no one can rule without mass terrorism, which in turn required mass murder. As Senator Vandenberg, leader of the Republican loyal opposition, was to say (as quoted in American Heritage magazine, August 1977), “We have got to scare the hell out of “em.” …

THE BUCK PASSES TO TRUMAN

Although Truman liked to take full credit for the decision to drop the  atomic bomb on Japan, in fact, he was advised by a prestigious group, The National Defense Research Committee, consisting of George L. Harrison, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; Dr. James B. Conant, president of Harvard, who had spent the First World War developing more  effective poison gases, and who in 1942 had been commissioned by Winston Churchill to develop an Anthrax bomb to be used on Germany, which would have killed every living thing in Germany. Conant was unable to perfect the bomb  before Germany surrendered, otherwise he would have had another line to add to his resume.  His service on Truman’s Committee which advised him to drop the atomic bomb on Japan, added to his previous record as a chemical warfare professional, allowed me to describe him in papers filed before the United States Court of Claims in 1957, as “the most notorious war criminal of the Second World War”. As Gauleiter of Germany after the war, he had ordered the burning of my book, The Federal Reserve Conspiracy, ten thousand copies having been published in Oberammergau, the site of the world-famed Passion Play.

Also on the committee were Dr. Karl Compton, and James F. Byrnes, acting  Secretary of State. For thirty years, Byrnes had been known as Bernard  Baruch’s man in Washington. With his Wall Street profits, Baruch had built the most lavish estate in South Carolina, which he named Hobcaw Barony. As the wealthiest man in South Carolina, this epitome of the carpet-bagger also controlled the political purse strings. Now Baruch was in a position to dictate to Truman, through his man Byrnes, that he should drop the atomic bomb on Japan.

LIPMAN SIEW (aka William Laurence)

Despite the fact that the Manhattan Project was the most closely guarded secret of World War II, one man, and one man only, was allowed to observe everything and to know everything about the project. He was Lipman Siew, a Lithuanian Jew who had come to the United States as a political refugee at the age of seventeen. He lived in Boston on Lawrence St., and decided to  take the name of William L. Laurence. At Harvard, he became a close friend  of James B. Conant and was tutored by him. When Laurence went to New York,  he was hired by Herbert Bayard Swope, editor of the New York World, who was  known as Bernard Baruch’s personal publicity agent. Baruch owned the World. In 1930, Laurence accepted an offer from the New York Times to become its  science editor. He states in Who’s Who that he “was selected by the heads of the atomic bomb project as sole writer and public relations.” How one could be a public relations writer for a top secret project was not explained. Laurence was the only civilian present at the historic explosion of the test bomb on July 16, 1945. Less than a month later, he sat in the copilots seat of the B-29 on the fateful Nagasaki bombing run.

WILL JAPAN SURRENDER BEFORE THE BOMB IS DROPPED?

There were still many anxious moments for the conspirators, who planned to  launch a new reign of terror throughout the world. Japan had been suing for  peace. Each day it seemed less likely that she could stay in the war. On March 9 and 10, 1945, 325 B-29s had burned thirty-five square miles of  Tokyo, leaving more than one hundred thousand Japanese dead in the ensuing  firestorm. Of Japan’s 66 biggest cities, 59 had been mostly destroyed. 178  square miles of urban dwellings had been burned, 500,000 died in the fires, and now twenty million Japanese were homeless. Only four cities had not been  destroyed; Hiroshima, Kokura, Niigata, and Nagasaki. Their inhabitants had no inkling that they had been saved as target cities for the experimental atomic bomb. Maj. Gen. Leslie Groves, at Bernard Baruch’s insistence, had demanded that Kyoto be the initial target of the bomb. Secretary of War  Stimson objected, saying that as the ancient capital of Japan, the city of  Kyoto had hundreds of historic wooden temples, and no military targets. The Jews wanted to destroy it precisely because of its great cultural importance to the Japanese people.

THE HORROR OF HIROSHIMA

While the residents of Hiroshima continued to watch the B-29s fly overhead without dropping bombs on them, they had no inkling of the terrible fate which the scientists had reserved for them. William Manchester quotes General Douglas MacArthur in American Caesar, Little Brown, 1978, p.437:

‘There was another Japan, and MacArthur was one of the few Americans who suspected its existence. He kept urging the Pentagon and the  State Department to be alert for conciliatory gestures. The General predicted that the break would come from Tokyo, not the Japanese army. The General was right. A dovish coalition was forming in the Japanese capital, and it was headed by Hirohito himself, who had concluded in the spring of 1945 that a negotiated peace was the only way to end his nation’s agony. Beginning in early May, a six-man council of Japanese diplomats explored ways to accommodate the Allies. The delegates informed top military officials that “our resistance is finished.

On p.359, Gar Alperowitz quotes Brig. Gen. Carter W. Clarke, in charge of  preparing the MAGIC summary in 1945, who stated in a 1959 historical  interview, “We brought them down to an abject surrender through the  accelerated sinking of their merchant marine and hunger alone, and when we  didn’t need to do it, and knew we didn’t need to do it, we used them as an  experiment for two atomic bombs.”

Although President Truman referred to himself as the sole authority in the decision to drop the bomb, in fact he was totally influenced by Bernard Baruch’s man in Washington, James F. Byrnes. Gar Alperowitz states, p. 196, “Byrnes spoke with the authority of-personally represented-the president of  the United States on all bomb-related matters in the Interim Committee’s  deliberations.” David McCullough, in his laudatory biography of Truman, which was described as “a valentine”, admitted that “Truman didn’t know his own Secretary of State, Stettinius. He had no background in foreign policy, no expert advisors of his own.”

The tragedy of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was that a weak, inexperienced president, completely under the influence of Byrnes and Baruch, allowed himself to be manipulated into perpetrating a terrible massacre. In the introduction to Hiroshima’s Shadows, we find that “Truman was moving in  quite the opposite direction, largely under the influence of Byrnes. The atom bomb for Byrnes was an instrument of diplomacy-atomic diplomacy.”  (p.ix)

MASS MURDER

On August 6, 1945, a uranium bomb 3-235, 20 kilotons yield, was exploded  1850 feet in the air above Hiroshima, for maximum explosive effect. It  devastated four square miles, and killed 140,000 of the 255,000 inhabitants.  In Hiroshima’s Shadows, we find a statement by a doctor who treated some of  the victims; p.415, Dr. Shuntaro Hida: “It was strange to us that Hiroshima  had never been bombed, despite the fact that B-29 bombers flew over the city  every day. Only after the war did I come to know that Hiroshima, according  to American archives, had been kept untouched in order to preserve it as a  target for the use of nuclear weapons. Perhaps, if the American  administration and its military authorities had paid sufficient regard to  the terrible nature of the fiery demon which mankind had discovered and yet  knew so little about its consequences, the American authorities might never  have used such a weapon against the 750,000 Japanese who ultimately became  its victims.”

Dr. Hida says that while treating the terribly mangled and burned victims,  “My eyes were ready to overflow with tears. I spoke to myself and bit my lip  so that I would not cry. If I had cried, I would have lost my courage to  keep standing and working, treating dying victims of Hiroshima.”

On p.433, Hiroshima’s Shadows, Kensaburo Oe declares, “From the instant the  atomic bomb exploded, it became the symbol of all human evil; it was a  savagely primitive demon and most modern curse…. My nightmare stems from a  suspicion that a ‘certain trust in human strength’ or ‘humanism’ flashed  across the minds of American intellectuals who decided upon the project that  concluded with the dropping of the bomb on Hiroshima.”

In the introduction to Hiroshima’s Shadows, we find that “One of the myths  of Hiroshima is that the inhabitants were warned by leaflets that an atomic  bomb would be dropped. The leaflets Leonard Nadler and William P. Jones  recall seeing in the Hiroshima Museum in 1960 and 1970 were dropped after  the bombing. This happened because the President’s Interim Committee on the  Atomic Bomb decided on May 31 ‘that we could not give the Japanese any  warning’. Furthermore, the decision to drop ‘atomic’ leaflets on Japanese  cities was not made until August 7, the day after the Hiroshima bombing.  They were not dropped until August 10, after Nagasaki had been bombed. We  can say that the residents of Hiroshima received no advance warning about  the use of the atomic bomb. On June 1, 1945, a formal and official decision was taken during a meeting of the so-called Interim Committee not to warn the populations of the specific target cities. James Byrnes and Oppenheimer insisted that the bombs must be used without prior warning.”

“Closely linked to the question of whether a warning of an atomic bomb  attack was given to the civilian populations of the target cities is the  third ‘article of fifth’ that underpins the American legend of Hiroshima;  the belief that Hiroshima and Nagasaki were military targets. The  Headquarters of the Japanese Second army were located in Hiroshima and  approximately 20,000 men-of which about half, or 10,000 died in the attack.  In Nagasaki, there were about 150 deaths among military personnel in the  city. Thus, between the two cities, 4.4% of the total death toll was made up  of military personnel. In short, more than 95% of the casualties were  civilians.”

On p.39 of Hiroshima’s Shadows we find that (at Hiroshima) “strictly  military damage was insignificant.” How are we to reconcile this statement  with Harry Truman’s vainglorious boast in Off The Record; the Private Papers  of Harry S. Truman Harper, 1980, p.304, “In 1945 I had ordered the Atomic  Bomb dropped on Japan at two places devoted almost exclusively to war  production.” In fact, many thousands of the Hiroshima casualties were  children sitting in their classrooms.

The bomb was dropped because (p.35) “The Manhattan Project’s managers were  lobbying to use the atomic bomb. Byrnes sat in on these meetings. Maj. Gen.  Groves seems to have been the author of the claim that the use of the bomb  would save a million American lives–a figure in the realm of fantasy.”

Truman himself variously stated that the use of the use of the atomic bomb  saved “a quarter of a million American lives”, a “half-million American  lives”, and finally settled on the Gen. Groves figure of “a million American  lives saved.”

Meanwhile (p.64) William L. Laurence, who was writing for the New York Times  at full salary while also receiving a full salary from the War Department as  the “public relations agent for the atomic bomb” published several stories  in the New York Times denying that there had been any radiation effects on  the victims of the Hiroshima bombing (Sept. 5, 1945 et seq.) in which he  quotes General Groves’ indignant comment, “The Japanese are still continuing  their propaganda aimed at creating the impression we won the war unfairly  and thus attempting to create sympathy for themselves.” (p.66)

“The Legation of Switzerland on August 11, 1945 forwarded from Tokyo  the following memorandum to the State Department (which sat on it for  twenty-five years before finally releasing it): ‘The Legation of Switzerland  has received a communication from the Japanese Government.’ On August 6,  1945, American airplanes released on the residential district of the town of  Hiroshima, bombs of a new type, killing and injuring in one second a large  number of civilians and destroying a great part of the town. Not only is the  city of Hiroshima a provincial town without any protection or special  military installations of any kind, but also none of the neighboring regions  or towns constitutes a military objective.”

The introduction to Hiroshima’s Shadows concludes that (p.lxvii) “The claim  that an invasion of the Japanese home islands was necessary without the use  of the atomic bombs is untrue. The claim that an ‘atomic warning’ was given  to the populace of Hiroshima is untrue. And the claim that both cities were  key military targets is untrue.”

A PILOT’S STORY

Corroboration of these statements is found in the remarkable record of  Ellsworth Torrey Carrington, “Reflections of a Hiroshima Pilot”, (p.9) “As  part of the Hiroshima atomic battle plan my B-29 (named Jabbitt III, Captain  John Abbott Wilson’s third war plane) flew the weather observation mission  over the secondary target of Kokura on August 6, 1945.” (p. 10) “After the  first bomb was dropped, the atom bomb command was very fearful that Japan  might surrender before we could drop the second bomb, so our people worked  around the clock, 24-hours-a-day to avoid such a misfortune.” This is, of  course, satire on Carrington’s part. (p. 13) “in city after city all over  the face of Japan (except for our cities spared because reserved for atomic  holocaust) they ignited the most terrible firestorms in history with very  light losses (of B-29s). Sometimes the heat from these firestorms was so  intense that later waves of B-29s were caught by updrafts strong enough to  loft them upwards from 4 or 5,000 feet all the way up to 8 or 10,000 feet.  The major told us that the fire-bombing of Japan had proven successful far  beyond anything they had imagined possible and that the 20th Air Force was  running out of cities to burn. Already there were no longer (as of the first  week in June 1945) any target cities left that were worth the attention of  more than 50 B-29s, and on a big day, we could send up as many as 450  planes!” “The totality of the devastation in Japan was extraordinary, and  this was matched by the near-totality of Japan’s defenselessness.” (as of  June 1, 1945, before the atomic bombs were dropped.) (p. 14) “The Truman  government censored and controlled all the war information that was allowed  to reach the public, and of course, Truman had a vested interest in  obscuring the truth so as to surreptitiously prolong the war and be  politically able to use the atom bomb. Regarding the second element of the  Roosevelt-Truman atomic Cold War strategy of deceiving the public into  believing that Japan was still militarily viable in the spring and summer of  1945, the centerpiece was the terribly expensive and criminally unnecessary  campaign against Okinawa.

Carrington quotes Admiral William D. Leahy, p. 245, I Was There, McGraw  Hill: “A large part of the Japanese Navy was already on the bottom of the  sea. The combined Navy surface and air force action even by this time had  forced Japan into a position that made her early surrender inevitable. None  of us then knew the potentialities of the atomic bomb, but it was my  opinion, and I urged it strongly on the Joint Chiefs, that no major land  invasion of the Japanese mainland was necessary to win the war. The JCS did  order the preparation of plans for an invasion, but the invasion itself was  never authorized.”

Thus Truman, urged on by General Groves, claims that “a million American  lives were saved” by the use of the atomic bomb, when no invasion had ever  been authorized, and was not in the cards. Carrington continues, p. 16, “The  monstrous truth is that the timing of the Okinawa campaign was exclusively  related to the early August timetable of the atomic bomb. J’accuse!  I  accuse Presidents Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman of deliberately  committing war crimes against the American people for the sole purpose of  helping set the stage for the criminally unnecessary use of atomic weapons  on Japan.”

Carrington further quotes Admiral Leahy, from I Was There, “It is my opinion  that the use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagaski was of no  material assistance in our war against Japan. The Japanese were already  defeated and ready to surrender because of the effective sea blockade and  the successful bombing with conventional weapons.”

Carrington concludes, p.22, “Truman’s wanton use of atomic weapons left the  American people feeling dramatically less secure after winning World War II  than they had ever felt before, and these feelings of insecurity have been  exploited by unscrupulous Cold War Machine Politicians ever since.” As  Senator Vandenberg said, “We have to scare the hell out of ’em” in order to  browbeat the American people into paying heavy taxes to support the Cold  War.

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