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![]() Stephen Harding wrote: MLenoch wrote: Just a factual question: was there ever a statistic of the number of deaths via fire bombing vs. the nuclear bombs? Just wondering. Thx, Yes there have been some such stats, but they vary a bit. There is the issue of how many people died during the explosion versus days/weeks/months after. Firebombing (or any sort of bombing) can produce lingering, or drawn out deaths, but the nuclear bombing this was more pronounced. I've read that some "counters" in Japan continue to add to the death toll of Hiroshima/Nagasaki as people who were there and survived that day finally start to die off. Basically *everyone* in those towns becomes part of the death toll eventually for these types of counters. The numbers I've come across, with some [maybe] small percent variation due to faulty memory, are something like this: Hiroshima: 85,000 (I've read stats going up over 100,000) Nagasaki : 65,000 (max I've seen is around 80,000) One night firebombing of Tokyo by LeMay and company: 120,000-150,000. SMH I used similar stats in my MA thesis on the Invasion v. bombs: more died in the Tokyo fire raid that died in the two nuclear strikes put together. Although I felt the U.S. casualty figure for Kyushu was too high-USSBS used 75-100,000, MacArthur's HQ (which I used) said 55,000 to 70,000, not including Navy casualties. No figures available for CORONET: the plan was published on Aug. 15th-the day of the surrender announcement-still incomplete. Posted via www.My-Newsgroups.com - web to news gateway for usenet access! |
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