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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums'You don't brag about wiping out 60‑70,000 people': the men who dropped the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Stephen Walker
It was a beautiful morning. The sun was shining on the buildings. Everything down there was bright very, very bright. You could see the city from 50 miles away, the rivers bisecting it, the aiming point. It was clear as a bell. It was perfect. The perfect mission.
Im sitting in a Chinese restaurant in San Francisco opposite the navigator of the Enola Gay, the B-29 bomber that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima on 6 August 1945. The year is 2004, and Theodore Dutch Van Kirk, aged 83, has agreed to be interviewed for a book Im writing for the 60th anniversary of that fateful mission. Van Kirk informs me, with the trace of a smile, that this will probably be the last interview in his life.
We have spent the afternoon looking through wartime logbooks from his 58 overseas combat missions. Now, between servings of dim sum, he is telling me about the 59th, the one that wiped out a city, along with well over 100,000 people.
The instant the bomb left the bomb bay, we screamed into a steep diving turn to escape the shockwave. There were two the first, like a very, very, very close burst of flak. Then we turned back to see Hiroshima. But you couldnt see it. It was covered in smoke, dust, debris. And coming out of it was that mushroom cloud.
He stops a moment, awe visibly registering on his face. The city was gone. It was only three minutes since wed dropped the bomb.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/don-t-brag-wiping-60-110037331.html

Blue Owl
(56,561 posts)TnDem
(913 posts)If you had seen many of your friends die in B-17's in Germany, it might change your perspective on the enemy in WW2.
Van Kirk was a B-17 navigator in the European Theater flying many combat missions over Germany before transferring to the Pacific in a B-29.
spanone
(139,403 posts)'Like the world has never seen before'