Remember lest we forget, both of these events. Pegleg I would disagree about the worst naval disaster in history, but I definitely will not belittle it, it was as tragic as it was awful... Read " Ordeal by sea " I have a copy autographed by an ensign survivor from Iowa Park Texas, Plenty of drama of the highest type and all true. I believe the worst Naval disaster was Pearl Harbor, now we were not at war, but the ships were afloat and attacked, My favorite uncle " now deceased " was there at 14 years old in the navy, ( mom signed that he was 16 ) and lost an eye, he went back on duty very quickly and fulfilled his enlistment. He talked very little about it until he was in his seventies and I was in my forties.
Now every country has learned how to bend the rules, You can't really go to war with a country, it is divided into uniformed troops that you deal with quickly and the non uniformed combatants, who now get US protection. If any of our guys go non uniformed combatant, or uniformed combatant, the enemy will still cut off his or her head and the " world court, won't do a thing " of course they don't have any power anyway, and we don't want them to.
What we did at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I think kept the world at peace for a long time, Vietnam not withstanding, the rest of the world still remembered,, the USSR, tried to keep up with us, for the same reason, " don't start nothin, there won't be nothin " We won that one, but who knows what the next leader is going to do. Disarmament is a bad deal, I hate to think it, but sometimes hope we do have a " Star chamber type of setup, that will never allow that to happen".
Happy 63rd, may we never have to do it again, but if we do, go to work.
A little trivia given to me by my advanced emission control teacher, the Enola Gay had a catalytic converter, not for emissions, but for the air intake into the aircraft that people will breathe, all the air coming in went through it, as it will neutralize radiation.