By the way, barely 200,000 people died as a direct or indirect result of the nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
There is a lot of politics behind a number like that, while I believe nuking Hiroshima was wrong
but it was something that needed to be done and probably saved many lives. Maybe it saved 600,000 or a million or two million?the war would have dragged and it was used to save American lives and Japanese lives.
What happened after WW2 is these cities were left with many 'Hibakusha'. Atomic people who were messed up after the war but the Japan government acted like cheap skate scrooges. They refused to certify many or give them medical benefit. It's not too unlike how in the West we sent soliders off to the Nevada sands to watch the mushroom clouds and the US government refuses to call them atomic veterans because its going to get a huge medicare bill if they do.
Post a link to where I said any of those things.
Dayton3 at your best
ColGrn, AustralisBesides, between 1991 and 2003, the U.S. lost from 400-600 servicemen during the "containment" of Iraq.
http://www.trekbbs.com/showthread.php?t=78413
"I'd HATE to think that you'd just pulled that out of your ass"
" If there's a question that will force D3 to answer in a way that doesn't conform to his worldview, it'll be ignored."
BTW your opinions are often incoherent
but one thing you frequently claim Bush Jnr was better than his Father HW Bushand better than JFK
NO NUCLEAR HOLOCAUST.
Birmingham has a population 1 million, the greater urban area 3 million that's already more than half the number of Jews exterminated during WW2. How is Nuking Birmingham and cities like Minsk, Norfolk, Virginia not a nuclear holocaust?![]()
I figured the number of Americans who died per year during the containment of Iraq to be around ONE TENTH of the total number of Americans who died in that time period due to accidents.
That seems a reasonable calculation given the U.S. forces deployed to an area.
A few cities lost to nuclear weapons is hardly a nuclear holocaust. Tragic but it in no way compares to a general nuclear exchange.
IIRC, in "The Third World War: August 1985" the estimated death toll in the Birmingham area was around 370,000 people.
Remember, only one warhead was used.
people forget, unless an urban area is flat out blanketed with nuclear weapons strikes or an incredibly large warhead is used (20 megatons for example) then the majority of the population of a major city will survive the attack.