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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. To understand the nature of terrorism in contemporary global society is to realize how the United States – fending complete innocence where the perpetuation of terrorism is concerned – has long played an integral role in its existence, whether American officials ever come to admitting such historical involvement or not. With so many examples from which to choose throughout the two hundred and thirty years America has been a global player, it is difficult to find just one that illustrates the most important role the nation has played in spreading terrorism; however, the dubious dropping of nuclear bombs upon Hiroshima and Nagasaki brings forth one of the best standards by which to compare. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCTerrChng.rtf
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role in its existence, whether American officials ever come to admitting such historical involvement or not. With so many examples from which to choose throughout the two hundred and
thirty years America has been a global player, it is difficult to find just one that illustrates the most important role this nation has played in spreading terrorism; however, the
dubious dropping of nuclear bombs upon Hiroshima and Nagasaki brings forth one of the best standards by which to compare. As such, the student will want to travel back
to these two locations and prevent both bombs from being dropped. It is a tragic reality how the Japanese population suffered for the
two nations as a whole based upon the unfounded belief that dropping the bombs ultimately saved more people than it killed. In reality, it did nothing more than make
war criminals out of the United States, a nation that placed itself far below its own expectations of moral responsibility by carrying out such acts of blatant terrorism, a point
writer Steven Benson illustrates with definitive accuracy: "In the name of God and country whom they, too, had sworn to serve, these men carried out acts of wanton destruction against
a people who were targeted for a special brand of hellfire because of Japans hideous inhumanities against our fighting forces" (Benson, 2002, pp. V1-V2).
The bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were wholly unjustified because of the number of innocent lives taken, the impact upon people who survived the bombings, as well as the
economic hardship Japan experienced in the aftermath. Those who endured the ravages of war wrongly assumed Japan was not going to succumb quickly or easily without the help of
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