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Alex Wellerstein, "The Most Awful Responsibility: Truman and the Secret Struggle for Control of the Atomic Age" (Harper, 2025)

Jan 21, 2026
Alex Wellerstein, a historian of science and the creator of the NukeMap simulator, dives into the complexities of Truman's decision regarding the atomic bomb. He reveals that Truman didn't participate in the initial decision-making and believed he was preventing massive civilian casualties. Wellerstein uncovers the limitations of Truman's briefings and civilian-military tensions that influenced targeting decisions. Through this lens, he discusses Truman's moral revulsion after Hiroshima and his legacy of nuclear restraint.
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INSIGHT

Truman's Limited Understanding Of The Bomb

  • Truman likely misunderstood the scope and schedule of the atomic-bomb plan before Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
  • Alex Wellerstein shows Truman had limited briefings and thought the bomb would be a single, military-target strike rather than successive city attacks.
ANECDOTE

Stimson Blocks Kyoto From Target List

  • Henry Stimson personally vetoed Kyoto as a target and insisted it be spared.
  • Stimson's refusal surprised and angered General Groves, who repeatedly tried to put Kyoto back on the list.
INSIGHT

Truman Thought He Approved Non-City Targets

  • Truman believed he and Stimson had decided to avoid bombing cities, targeting military installations instead.
  • Wellerstein argues Truman misinterpreted that agreement and did not realize Hiroshima was a civilian city target.
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