History's deadliest air raid happened in Tokyo during World
War II
Everywhere
she turned, 8-year-old Haruyo Nihei saw flames.
Bombs dropped by the Americans had created tornadoes of fire
so intense that they were sucking mattresses from homes and hurling them down
the street along with furniture -- and people.
"The flames consumed them, turning them into balls of
fire," says Nihei, now 83.
Nihei had been asleep when the bombs began raining down on
Tokyo, then a city comprised of mostly wooden houses, prompting her to flee the
home she shared with her parents, her older brother and her younger sister.
As she raced down her street, the superheated winds set her fireproof
wrap ablaze. She briefly let go of her father's hand to toss it off. At
that moment, he was swept away into the crush of people trying to escape.
As the flames closed in, Nihei found herself at a Tokyo
crossroad, screaming for her father. A stranger wrapped himself around her to
protect her from the flames. As more people piled into the intersection, she
was pushed to the ground.
As she drifted in and out of consciousness beneath the
crush, she remembers hearing muffled voices above: "We are Japanese. We
must live. We must live." Eventually, the voices became weaker. Until
silence.
When Nihei was finally pulled out from the pile of people,
she saw their bodies charred black. The stranger who had protected her was her
father. After falling to the ground, they'd both been shielded from the
fire by the charred corpses were now at their ankles.
It was the early morning of March 10, 1945, and Nihei had
just survived the deadliest bombing raid in human history.
Japanese government photo shows buildings aflame after World
War II firebomb raid.
As many as 100,000
Japanese people were killed and another million injured, most of them civilians, when
more than 300 American B-29 bombers dropped 1,500 tons of firebombs on the
Japanese capital that night.
The inferno the bombs created reduced an area of
15.8 square miles to ash. And, by some estimates, a million people were left
homeless.
The human toll
that night exceeded that of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki later
that year, where the initial blasts killed about 70,000 people and 46,000
people respectively, according to the US Department of Energy.
But despite the sheer destruction of the Tokyo air raids,
unlike for Hiroshima or Nagasaki, there is no publicly funded museum in Japan's
capital today to officially commemorate March 10. And while the Allied bombing of Dresden in
Germany in February 1945 roused a strong public debate on the tactic
of unleashing fire on civilian populations, on its 75th anniversary the impact
and legacy of the Japan air raids remain largely unknown.
An aerial view of Tokyo after it was razed by American fire
bombing carried out on March 10, 1945.
The introduction of B-29s
The horrors Nihei saw that night were the result of
Operation Meetinghouse, the deadliest of a series of firebombing air raids on Tokyo
by the United States Army Air Forces, between February and May 1945.
They were designed largely by Gen. Curtis LeMay, commander
of the US bombers in the Pacific. LeMay later launched airstrikes on North Korea and Vietnam and supported
the idea of a preemptive nuclear attackagainst Russia during the Cuban
Missile Crisis in October 1962.
Though US
President Franklin Roosevelt had sent messages to all warring governments urging
them to refrain from the "inhuman barbarism" of bombing civilian
populations at the outbreak of war in Europe in 1939, by 1945 that policy had
changed.
After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7,
1941, the US was determined to retaliate. By 1942, Japan's empire in the
Pacific was at its most powerful. US war planners come up with a target list
designed to obliterate anything that might help Tokyo, from aircraft bases to
ball bearing factories.
But to execute its plan, the US needed air bases in range of
Japan's main islands.
With the invasion of the South Pacific island of Guadalcanal
in August 1942, it began to acquire land for that purpose, continuing that
mission by picking up the islands of Saipan, Tinian and Guam in 1944.
With that hattrick in hand, the US had territories on which
to build airfields for its new, state-of-the-art heavy bomber, the B-29.
Originally conceived to strike Nazi Germany from continental
US in the event Britain fell to Hitler's forces, the B-29 -- with its ability
to fly fast and high and with large bomb loads -- was ideal for taking war to
the Japanese homeland, according to Jeremy Kinney, curator at the Smithsonian
National Air and Space Museum in Virginia.
US B-29 bombers in flight.
The bombers were the culmination of 20 years of aviation
advances leading up to World War II and were the first to have pressurized,
heated fuselages, enabling them to operate above 18,000 feet without crews
having to don special gear or use oxygen masks.
That put them out of range of most anti-aircraft guns and
gave them plenty of time before fighters could rise up to engage them, Kinney
said.
"The B-29 Superfortress was the most advanced
technology of its time," he said.
And US war planners were ready to unleash it on Japan.
But the B-29s' early attacks on Japan were considered
failures.
The planes dropped their explosive loads from the high
altitudes -- around 30,000 feet -- they were designed to operate at, but as few
as 20% hit their targets. US crews blamed poor visibilty in bad weather and
said the strong winds of the jet stream often pushed bombs off target as they
fell.
LeMay was tasked with finding a way to get results.
His answer was so drastic it even shocked the crews who
would carry out the raids.
The B-29s would go in low -- at 5,000 to 8,000 feet. They'd
go in at night. And they would go in single file, rather than in the large
multi-layered formations the US had used in the daylight bombing of German
forces in Europe;
Perhaps
most significantly, they'd carry fire bombs, designed to set Tokyo's
largely wooden landscape ablaze. Fire bombs, or incendiary bombs,
let loose flammable substances as they strike, as opposed to high-explosive
bombs, which destroy with concussion and shrapnel.
When US air crews were briefed on the mission, many of the
more than 3,000 Army aviators reacted with disbelief.
Going in single file, they'd be unable to protect each other
from Japanese fighters. And LeMay had ordered the large bombers to be stripped
of almost all of their defensive armaments so they could carry more of the fire
bombs.
"Most
men left the briefing rooms that day convinced of two things: one, LeMay was
indeed a maniac; and two, many of them would not live to see the next
day," wrote James Bowman, son of a B-29 fire raid crewman, in a
journal compiled from records of the units involved.
On the
evening of March 9, 1945, on Saipan and Tinian and Guam, the B-29s began
leaving their island bases for the seven-hour, 1,500-mile trip to Japan.
Early in
the morning of March 10, as the Japanese slept in their low-rise, wooden homes,
the first bombers over Tokyo started five sets of marking fires, smaller
strikes for the rest of the bomber force to aim it, according to B-29 pilot
Robert Bigelow, who recounted the raid for the
Virginia Aviation History Project.
Between
1:30 a.m. and 3:00 a.m. the main force of American B-29s unleashed 500,000 M-69
bombs, each one clustered in groups of 38 and weighing six pounds.
The
clusters would separate during their descent and small parachutes would carry
each bomblet to the ground.
The jellied
gasoline -- napalm -- inside the metal casings would ignite seconds after
hitting something solid and shoot the flaming gel onto the surrounding
surfaces.
Haruyo
Nihei had endured US bombing raids on Tokyo before, but when her father woke
her up in the early morning darkness of March 10, he shouted that this one
was different.
They needed
to get out of the house and to an underground shelter without any delay.
Nihei
remembers throwing on the clothes, shoes and emergency rucksack she kept
by her pillow and rushing out the house with her mom, younger sister and elder
brother. The family, who owned a spice shop, lived in the downtown Tokyo
district of Kameido. They rushed passed the local fishmonger's and small
grocery stores that lined the streets.
In those
early moments, she remembers not so much the fire, as the air being sucked into
the inferno to fuel it. The fire hadn't reached their district yet.
Her family
made it to an underground shelter, but their refuge didn't last long.
"We
were huddled inside -- we could hear footsteps overhead fleeing, voices rising,
kids screaming 'mom, mom.' Parents were screaming their kids' names," she
said.
Soon, her
father told them to get out.
"You'll
be burned alive (in here)," her father said. He thought the flames and
smoke would easily overwhelm the bunker door.
But once
outside, the horrors were unimaginable. Everything was burning.
The roadway
was a river of fire, with homes and their contents, tatami mats, futons,
rucksacks, all in flames.
And people.
"Babies were burning on the backs of parents. They were running with
babies burning on their backs," Nihei said.
Animals
were on fire, too. Nihei recalled a horse pulling a wooden cart loaded with
luggage. "It suddenly spread its four legs and froze -- then the luggage
caught fire -- then it caught onto the horse's tail and consumed the
horse," she said.
The rider
refused to leave his mount. "He clung to the horse, and was burned along
with the horse," she said.
Flames
still raged in Tokyo the morning after the fire bombs fell.
In the sky
above, the B-29 fliers were feeling the effects of wind and flames.
Bowman, the
son of the raid crewman, in his history quotes Jim Wilde, a flight engineer on
a B-29.
"Everything
below us was fiery red and smoke immediately filled every corner of our
plane," Wilde said.
The hot air
rising from the inferno below pushed the 37-ton airplane up 5,000 feet, then
dropped it just as quickly seconds later, according to the journal.
B-29 pilot
Bigelow recalls the Japanese putting up a defense. "The streams of tracer
antiaircraft fire crisscrossed the sky as if sprayed from garden hoses,"
Bigelow wrote.
Explosions
buffeted his bomber, but the crew focused on their drop.
"We
hardly noticed the shrapnel which rattled and tinkled as it rained down on the
wings," he wrote.
Bombs
released, Bigelow banked his B-29 sharply and headed out to sea.
"We
had created an inferno beyond the wildest imaginings of Dante," he wrote.
As the B-29
flew more than 150 miles away from Tokyo over the Pacific, Bigelow's tail
gunner radioed the pilot that the glow of the fires was still visible.
'Killing
Japanese didn't bother me much'
The
destruction wrought upon Tokyo on March 10 only emboldened the Americans.
Further
fire raids on the Japanese capital on April 14 and 18, and May 24 and 26
reduced a further 38.7 square miles to cinders -- an area one-and-a-half times
the size of Manhattan.
99% of a city destroyed in one night
While the
March 9-10, 1945, bombing of Tokyo was the deadliest raid of the war, for sheer
totality of destruction it was eclipsed by the August 1, 1945, firebomb raid on
Toyama.
More than
99% of the city, an industrial center of 100,000 people on the western side of
the main island of Honshu, burned to the ground that night after a raid by 179
US B-29 bombers dropping napalm.
More than
2,700 people were killed and 8,000 injured. But the atomic bombing of Hiroshima
occurred just five days later, and Toyama's tragic story was all but lost in
the closing days of World War II.
Tens of thousands more people were killed, and fire bombs
followed on the major cities of Nagoya, Osaka and Kobe. The US bombers then
targeted "medium-sized towns," hitting 58 of them, according to the
official history.
At one point, the B-29s' base at North Field, on the tiny
island of Tinian, was the busiest airport in the world.
The official
US Army Air Force post-war history puts the scope of the fire bomb
campaign matter of factly, saying by June Japan's industrial centers "were
finished off as profitable targets."
But the
raids seemed to do little to bring Japan's capitulation. Some of the damage
only enraged its leaders.
"We,
the subjects, are enraged at the American acts. I hereby firmly determine with
the rest of the 100,000,000 people of this nation to smash the arrogant enemy,
whose acts are unpardonable in the eyes of Heaven and men, and thereby to set
the Imperial Mind at ease," then-Prime Minister Suzuki Kantaro said,
according to am account by Richard Sams in the Asia Pacific Journal.
Still, the harm
inflicted on Japan was massive.
By the end
of the campaign, hundreds of thousands of refugees were created across Japan.
LeMay would
later acknowledge the sheer brutality of it.
By Brad
Lendon and Emiko Jozuka, CNN
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/03/07/asia/japan-tokyo-fire-raids-operation-meetinghouse-intl-hnk/index.html



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