The story presented for the closing days of the Second World War was always a little too pat.  This plausibly puts a different perspective on the situation and the concerns determining policy in the last days of the war.
It certainly served US interests to demonstrate the actual power of the atomic bomb.  I can not believe that anyone had a proper appreciation of the actual future role of the bomb itself but they certainly needed to convince the soviets not to exploit their strategic advantage.  Recall that communist doctrine called for a global communist polity that certainly included all of Europe .  The swift repositioning of surrendering German armies alongside western forces and Patten’s comments at the time shows us just how dicey it all was.
The atomic bomb made further Soviet gains impossible and put Stalin emotionally on the defensive.  As this article makes clear, Japan 
The A bomb was a game changer and the Soviet Union  failed to win the Atomic peace.  This was not an obvious conclusion to make in 1945 when prior to the Second War the soviet economy had outstripped everyone else’s.
Why World War II ended with Mushroom Clouds
65 years ago, August 6 and 9, 1945: Hiroshima  and Nagasaki 
By Jacques R. Pauwels
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=20478
“On Monday, August 6, 1945, at 8:15 AM, the nuclear bomb ‘Little Boy” was dropped on Hiroshima 
“On August 9, 1945, Nagasaki was the target of the world's second atomic bomb attack at 11:02 a.m., when the north of the city was destroyed and an estimated 40,000 people were killed by the bomb nicknamed ‘Fat Man.’ The death toll from the atomic bombing totalled 73,884, as well as another 74,909 injured, and another several hundred thousand diseased and dying due to fallout and other illness caused by radiation.”[2]
In the European Theatre, World War II ended in early May 1945 with the capitulation of Nazi Germany Great  Britain , the United  States , and the Soviet Union – now faced the complex problem of the postwar reorganization of Europe . The United States  had entered the war rather late, in December 1941, and had only started to make a truly significant military contribution to the Allied victory over Germany  with the landings in Normandy Germany  ended, however, Washington 
As the country that had made the biggest contribution and suffered by far the greatest losses in the conflict against the common Nazi enemy, the Soviet Union wanted major reparation payments from Germany and security against potential future aggression, in the form of the installation in Germany, Poland and other Eastern European countries of governments that would not be hostile to the Soviets, as had been the case before the war. Moscow also expected compensation for territorial losses suffered by the Soviet Union at the time of the Revolution and the Civil War, and finally, the Soviets expected that, with the terrible ordeal of the war behind them, they would be able to resume work on the project of constructing a socialist society. The American and British leaders knew these Soviet aims and had explicitly or implicitly recognized their legitimacy, for example at the conferences of the Big Three in Tehran  and Yalta Germany , because such a bloodletting would eliminate Germany 
Negotiations among the Big Three would obviously never result in the withdrawal of the Red Army from Germany  and Eastern Europe  before the Soviet objectives of reparations and security would be at least partly achieved. However, on April 25, 1945, Truman learned that the US 
At the time of the German surrender in May 1945, the bomb was almost, but not quite, ready. Truman therefore stalled as long as possible before finally agreeing to attend a conference of the Big Three in Potsdam in the summer of 1945, where the fate of postwar Europe would be decided. The president had been informed that the bomb would likely be ready by then - ready, that is, to be used as “a hammer,” as he himself stated on one occasion, that he would wave “over the heads of those boys in the Kremlin.”[5]  At the Potsdam  Conference, which lasted from July 17 toAugust 2, 1945, Truman did indeed receive the long-awaited message that the atom bomb had been tested successfully on July 16 in New   Mexico America Potsdam 
In the meantime the Japanese battled on in the Far  East , even though their situation was totally hopeless. They were in fact prepared to surrender, but they insisted on a condition, namely, that Emperor Hirohito would be guaranteed immunity. This contravened the American demand for an unconditional capitulation. In spite of this it should have been possible to end the war on the basis of the Japanese proposal. In fact, the German surrender at Reims  three months earlier had not been entirely unconditional.
 (The Americans had agreed to a German condition, namely, that the armistice would only go into effect after a delay of 45 hours, a delay that would allow as many German army units as possible to slip away from the eastern front in order to surrender to the Americans or the British; many of these units would actually be kept ready - in uniform, armed, and under the command of their own officers – for possible use against the Red Army, as Churchill was to admit after the war.)[7] 
In any event,Tokyo Washington 
The Japanese believed that they could still afford the luxury of attaching a condition to their offer to surrender because the main force of their land army remained intact, in China Tokyo Japan  dragged on, then, because the Soviet Union  was not yet involved in it. Already at the Conference of the Big Three in Tehran  in 1943, Stalin had promised to declare war on Japan  within three months after the capitulation of Germany , and he had reiterated this commitment as recently as July 17, 1945, in Potsdam 
 Consequently, Washington  counted on a Soviet attack on Japan Far East .)[9] In addition, the American navy assured Washington  that it was able to prevent the Japanese from transferring their army from China US  navy was undoubtedly able to force Japan Japan 
In order to finish the war against Japan Japan USA  would then enjoy a total hegemony over that part of the world, something which may be said to have been the true (though unspoken) war aim of Washington  in the conflict with Japan Japan  into surrender was rejected, since the surrender might not have been forthcoming until after – and possibly well after - the Soviet  Union ’s entry into the war. (After the war, the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey stated that “certainly prior to 31 December 1945, Japan would have surrendered, even if the atomic bombs had not been dropped.”)[10]
As far as the American leaders were concerned, a Soviet intervention in the war in the Far East threatened to achieve for the Soviets the same advantage which the Yankees’ relatively late intervention in the war in Europe had produced for the United States, namely, a place at the round table of the victors who would force their will on the defeated enemy, carve occupation zones out of his territory, change borders, determine postwar social-economic and political structures, and thereby derive for themselves enormous benefits and prestige. Washington  absolutely did not want the Soviet Union  to enjoy this kind of input. The Americans were on the brink of victory over Japan Washington Potsdam Germany , Poland , and the rest of Central andEastern Europe .
The atomic bomb was ready just before the Soviets became involved in the Far East . Even so, the nuclear pulverization of Hiroshima  on August 6, 1945, came too late to prevent the Soviets from entering the war against Japan Berlin  - the Soviets declared war on Japan China USSR  did get involved in the war against Japan Washington  extremely impatient: the day after the Soviet declaration of war, on August 9, 1945, a second bomb was dropped, this time on the city of Nagasaki 
And so the Americans were stuck with a Soviet partner in the Far East  after all. Or were they? Truman made sure that they were not, ignoring the precedents set earlier with respect to cooperation among the Big Three in Europe . Already on August 15, 1945, Washington Germany , Japan America ’s defeated rival was to be occupied by the Americans only, and as American “viceroy” in Tokyo , General MacArthur would ensure that, regardless of contributions made to the common victory, no other power had a say in the affairs of postwar Japan 
Sixty-five years ago, Truman did not have to use the atomic bomb in order to force Japan 
With the passing of time, many historians have concluded that the bomb was used as much for political reasons...Vannevar Bush [the head of the American center for scientific research] stated that the bomb “was also delivered on time, so that there was no necessity for any concessions toRussia at the end of the war”. Secretary of State James F. Byrnes [Truman’s Secretary of State] never denied a statement attributed to him that the bomb had been used to demonstrate American power to the Soviet  Union  in order to make it more manageable in Europe.[13]
Truman himself, however, hypocritically declared at the time that the purpose of the two nuclear bombardments had been “to bring the boys home,” that is, to quickly finish the war without any further major loss of life on the American side. This explanation was uncritically broadcast in the American media and it developed into a myth eagerly propagated by the majority of historians and media in the USA Iran  and North Korea 
Jacques R. Pauwels, author of The Myth of the Good War: America in the Second World War, James Lorimer, Toronto, 2002
Notes
 
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiroshima.
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagasaki.
[3] Jacques R. Pauwels, The Myth of the Good War: America  in the Second World War, Toronto 
[4] William Appleman Williams, The Tragedy of American Diplomacy, revised edition, New York 
[5] Quoted in Michael Parenti, The Anti-Communist Impulse, New York 
[6] Gar Alperovitz Atomic Diplomacy: Hiroshima  and Potsdam 
[7] Pauwels, op. cit., p. 143.
[8] Alperovitz, op. cit., pp. 28, 156.
[9] Quoted in Alperovitz, op. cit., p. 24.
[10] Cited in David Horowitz, From Yalta  to Vietnam : American Foreign Policy in the Cold War, Harmondsworth, Middlesex , England 
[11] Studs Terkel, "The Good War": An Oral History of World War Two, New York 
[12] Gary G. Kohls, “Whitewashing Hiroshima: The Uncritical Glorification of American Militarism,” http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig5/kohls1.html.
[13] Sean Dennis Cashman, , Roosevelt, and World War II,New  York  and London 
[13] Sean Dennis Cashman, , Roosevelt, and World War II,

 
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