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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
Delve into the controversial decisions surrounding the atomic bomb drop on Japan during World War II. Discover how Truman's understanding of the bomb's implications and the true scope of his decisions were far more limited than popular belief. Explore the moral quandaries faced by key figures like Secretary of War Stimson, who fought to spare Kyoto. Learn about Truman's post-war revulsion towards nuclear weapons and his hopes for their outlawing, highlighting the complexities of his reluctant Cold Warrior stance.
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INSIGHT

Truman's Misunderstanding Of The Bomb

  • Truman likely misunderstood the nature and planned use of the atomic bombs before Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
  • Alex Wellerstein argues this misapprehension reshapes who truly “decided” to drop the bombs.
ANECDOTE

How Kyoto Was Spared

  • Henry Stimson vehemently vetoed Kyoto as a target and protected it from bombing.
  • Stimson's personal opposition forced planners to reserve alternative targets like Kokura and later Nagasaki.
INSIGHT

The Key Decision Was To Spare Kyoto

  • Truman's single concrete pre-use decision was to spare Kyoto, not to authorize citywide atomic bombing.
  • This narrow intervention had major downstream effects on target selection and moral framing.
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