If the newspapers would just cut out the shit: “You’ve killed so many civilians.” That’s their tough luck for being there. You’re gonna kill innocent people at the same time, but we’ve never fought a damn war anywhere in the world where they didn’t kill innocent people. Paul Tibbets: Oh, I wouldn’t hesitate if I had the choice. Studs Terkel: One last thing, when you hear people say, “Let’s nuke ’em,” “Let’s nuke these people,” what do you think? None of this business of taking them to court, the hell with that. Paul Tibbets: We’ve got to get into a position where we can kill the bastards. His emphatic reply displayed the simplistic topography of his moral beliefs: Terkel then asked him about his thoughts on the September 11 bombings, and how the US should respond to the threat of terrorism. Ultimately Tibbets justified his action with the age-old reason that he was just following orders: ‘I did what I was told’. That’s what I believe in and that’s what I work for. Number one, I got into the air corps to defend the United States to the best of my ability. Studs Terkel: Do you ever have any second thoughts about the bomb?
Terkel gave his interviewee the opportunity to explore the ethics of his actions, but received little response: The tension builds, everyone’s on alert, the timing is crucial – and the execution is perfect. Tibbets tells the tale as if it were an exciting action movie. When I level out, the nose is a little bit high and as I look up there the whole sky is lit up in the prettiest blues and pinks I’ve ever seen in my life. I’m in this turn now, tight as I can get it, that helps me hold my altitude and helps me hold my airspeed and everything else all the way round. We get to that point where I say “one second” and by the time I’d got that second out of my mouth the airplane had lurched, because 10,000lbs had come out of the front. We’d been fiddling round with the most peculiar-shaped things we’d ever seen. I said, “OK, this is an atom bomb we’re dropping.” They listened intently but I didn’t see any change in their faces or anything else. He said, “Colonel, we wouldn’t be playing with atoms today, would we?” I said, “Bob, you’ve got it just exactly right.” So I went back up in the front end and I told the navigator, bombardier, flight engineer, in turn. After we got the airplanes in formation I crawled into the tunnel and went back to tell the men, I said, “You know what we’re doing today?” They said, “Well, yeah, we’re going on a bombing mission.” I said, “Yeah, we’re going on a bombing mission, but it’s a little bit special.” My tailgunner, Bob Caron, was pretty alert. In a revealing interview with the oral historian Studs Terkel in 2002, when aged 87, Tibbets described exactly what happened on the historic mission in the Enola Gay. In actual fact, the US Air Force pilot, Paul Tibbets, experienced no profound moral quandaries about his actions, either before or after dropping the bomb that killed an estimated 140,000 people. ‘Imagine how it felt to be the pilot who dropped the bomb on Hiroshima – how do we feel about that kind of moral responsibility?’ The implication of this rhetorical question was that the pilot must have been desperately wrestling with the ethical consequences and dilemmas of releasing the world’s first atomic weapon on the unsuspecting city. Midway through he made a throwaway comment about the bombing of Hiroshima in August 1945.
In May 2010 I went to an entertaining talk by the writer Malcolm Gladwell, author of The Tipping Point, Blink and other bestsellers. Paul Tibbets, the man who dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945.