
On August 6, 1945, the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, killing 1.5 million people. Two days later, an American fighter pilot was captured by the Japanese. He was Marcus E. McDilda, pilot of a P-Fifty-One Mustang bomber. McDilda was one of the fighter pilots who dropped thousands of bombs on Japan over several months. He was then captured and paraded through the streets of Osaka, where he was brutally beaten and abused by the Japanese. The guards kept him alive and tried to extract confidential information from him. After the demonstration, the pilot was taken to prison and severely beaten. What is an atomic bomb? What is an atomic bomb? How many other nuclear weapons does the USA possess? Pilot McDilda had studied chemistry in high school and university and knew what an atom was. However, he didn't know what an atomic bomb was. At the time, he wasn't even a member of the US Air Force's Combined Brigade, made up of nine or fifteen men trained to drop atomic bombs on Japan. He wasn't even part of the Army's engineering department, so he knew nothing about weapons. In other words, to him, the atomic bomb and signs of life from above on Earth were the same thing. But ultimately, it was to save his own life. After all, if the Japanese had known he wasn't one of them, they wouldn't have wasted their time killing him. There could be no pity, for millions were dying. There could be no pity, because millions of Japanese had already been killed by the American army. So McDilda started making up stories. It was then that he was tortured again and the sword began to cut into the skin of his face.
"Wait, I'll tell you all about it," he said.

He then gathered all the scientific knowledge he'd learned at school and told them that when an atom splits in two, most of its beauties and defects also split in two. Let's put all these beauties and defects in a big pot and cover it with a tin lid. That way, they won't meet. If a bomb falls somewhere, the tin lid will melt. When the wall moves, good and evil will collide with a great crash and the city's atmosphere will explode. A huge bolt of lightning. The city's atmosphere is then completely restored. The return causes a violent earthquake that destroys everything". The Japanese generals are delighted that Marcus E. McDilda fictional account has provided them with important scientific information. But they have other questions:
which Japanese cities have been targeted by the Americans, and how many atomic bombs does the American army still possess?
During the three-day experiment, the pilot wrote down the names of two cities, Tokyo and Kyoto. He wrote down the names of the two cities and said that the U.S. still had at least 100 nuclear bombs ready to go. They could launch them at any time. This was a lie. The pilots didn't know it, and the U.S. had only three atomic bombs at the time. The first was tested, the second was to be dropped on Hiroshima and the third on Nagasaki. This was one of the events that led to Japan's surrender shortly after the dropping of the two bombs. The Emperor had misinformed Japanese General Umezu about the 100 atomic bombs.
Did you know that when Hollywood, Japan and France make films and documentaries, they leave out three very important points?
QNo:1 They leave out three very important aspects of history.
For example
- They don't show that Hitler built the atomic bomb in Germany before the United States did.
- Japan and the Soviet Union also tried to build atomic bombs, but without success.
QNo2: is why the USA chose the Communist scientist Oppenheimer for this important project, when it had not yet declared war and was cracking down on Communists in its own country.
QNo3: Most important question is this: Would Japan have surrendered if the atomic bombs hadn't been dropped?
These are important questions that the Western media often avoid.
Even Oppenheimer, the father of the atomic bomb, lamented the success of the bomb's development in numerous films, but in his final days, he defended the dropping of the atomic bomb on Japan.

At the time, it was said that the bomb was necessary to end the war: at the beginning of the 20th century, a branch of physics called "quantum physics" was gaining in popularity. This story begins here.
About the Creator
James Haider
Greetings! I'm James Haider, a seasoned content writer with a passion for turning ideas into captivating stories. With over 7 years in the industry.I specialize in creating content that not only engages but also resonates with audience.




Comments (1)
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