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The Presidents Connect today's election issues with the past

 

Chapter:

Hiroshima and Nagasaki (7:32)
The U.S. drops atomic bombs on two Japanese cities. The Japanese surrender and World War II ends.
FDR

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Truman
LBJ
Nixon
Carter
Reagan
G H W Bush

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TRUMAN, Chapter 28

Crossing the 38th Parallel (9:35)
MacArthur convinces Truman to fight the Chinese in Korea. Truman denies MacArthur's demand to use atomic weapons.
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REAGAN, Chapter 16

The Nuclear Freeze Movement (7:07)
Demonstrators, including Reagan's daughter, protest his plan to increase nuclear weapons.
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NIXON, Chapter 16

The Fall (9:36)
Nixon is re-elected in a landslide while the investigation into Watergate burglaries begins. After Nixon orders intensive bombing in Vietnam, peace talks lead to a cease-fire.
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Chapter 1

Introduction (2:58)
Part one of a biography of Harry Truman, the 33rd president.
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Chapter 2

Early Years (14:11)
Harry Truman grows up in Independence, Missouri. He gets his first taste of politics at the 1900 Democratic National Convention.
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Chapter 3

The Family Farm (10:22)
After working office jobs in Kansas City, Truman returns to the family farm to help his father. He woos Elizabeth Wallace.
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Chapter 4

Love and Death (10:23)
Bess Wallace rejects Truman. After his father dies, Truman leaves the farm to make his fortune, but fails in business.
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Chapter 5

World War I (9:52)
Truman shows leadership as the captain of Battery D, fighting in World War I's bloodiest battles.
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Chapter 6

Marriage and Politics (13:12)
After the war, Truman marries Bess Wallace and runs for public office.
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Chapter 7

Senator Truman, (6:45)
With the help of Kansas City political boss Tom Pendergast, Truman wins a seat in the U.S. Senate.
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Chapter 8

Truman Proves Himself (9:07)
Truman works hard to understand the workings of the Senate and finds sucess.
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Chapter 9

The 1944 Election (11:21)
Truman becomes the Democrats' compromise choice for vice president.
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Chapter 10

Vice President for 82 Days (5:25)
Roosevelt keeps Truman out of his inner circle. When the president dies, Truman is nervous and unprepared.
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Chapter 11

A Man of the People (10:27)
As president, Truman makes a show of energy and confidence. Americans warm to his straightforward manner.
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Chapter 12

Endgame in Japan (10:04)
After the war in Europe ends, Truman focuses on the bitter battle with Japan. Bess Truman is uncomfortable as first lady.
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Chapter 13

On the World Stage (10:27)
Truman meets with Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin to decide the fate of Europe. In New Mexico the atomic bomb is successfully tested.
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Chapter 14

Nuclear Diplomacy (7:06)
Truman takes a tougher stance at Potsdam after receiving news of a successful atomic bomb test in New Mexico.
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Chapter 15

Hiroshima and Nagasaki (7:32)
The U.S. drops atomic bombs on two Japanese cities. The Japanese surrender and World War II ends.
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Chapter 16

CreditsProduction credits for part one of the television program.
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Chapter 17

CreditsHead credits for part two of the television program.
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Chapter 18

Introduction (2:16)
Part two of a biography of Harry Truman, the 33rd president.
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Chapter 19

The Post War Economy (10:59)
Truman faces domestic challenges. He takes a tough stance against striking railroad workers.
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Chapter 20

The Mid-Term Elections of 1946 (4:47)
The Republicans gain majorities in both houses of Congress.
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Chapter 21

The Truman Doctrine (9:04)
As the Soviets control Eastern Europe, Truman acts to stop Communism in Greece and Turkey.
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Chapter 22

American Power (6:50)
Truman establishes the Marshall Plan and prepares the country for a new kind of war -- the Cold War.
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Chapter 23

A Stand for Human Rights (11:21)
Before the election of 1948, Truman boldly calls for civil rights for African Americans and for Israel to be recognized.
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Chapter 24

The Conventions (6:41)
Despite Democrats' misgivings, President Truman is nominated at a dispirited Democratic Convention.
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Chapter 25

Truman Defeats Dewey (9:47)
Taking his "New Deal" message on a whistlestop campaign across the country, Truman defeats New York governor Thomas Dewey.
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Chapter 26

Fighting Communism (10:10)
Facing the Communist threat, Truman shows U.S. strength with an airlift to blockaded Berlin and air strikes and infantry in Korea.
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Chapter 27

The Korean War (5:29)
U.S. troops in Korea retreat until Douglas MacArthur's surprise attack on Inchon forces the North Koreans to pull back to the 38th Parallel.
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Chapter 28

Crossing the 38th Parallel (9:35)
MacArthur convinces Truman to fight the Chinese in Korea. Truman denies MacArthur's demand to use atomic weapons.
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Chapter 29

Under Pressure (6:22)
Truman persists with a "limited war." Pressure on him grows intense as casualties mount and U.S. troops are repelled by Chinese forces.
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Chapter 30

Dismissing MacArthur (6:58)
In a controversial move, Truman removes General Douglas MacArthur from his command for insubordination.
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Chapter 31

The Last Years (9:06)
With the lowest popularity rating in history, Truman decides not to seek re-election. He retires to Independence, Missouri.
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Chapter 32

CreditsProduction credits for part two of the television program.
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Related Links


TRUMAN
Learn more about Harry S. Truman.

The Japanese Invasion Plan
Read about the U.S. plan for a land invasion.

American Reactions
A historian describes public views on atomic weapons.

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Transcript: Chapter 15

NARRATOR: August 6, 2:45 A.M. -- the Enola Gay, carrying a four-ton atomic bomb, was heading out over the Pacific Ocean toward Japan.

Some would later argue that Japan might have been forced to surrender without the bomb. The president might have warned the Japanese with a demonstration bomb, might have blockaded their islands until they surrendered, might have assured the Japanese that they could keep their Emperor. Truman would later say that to end the war quickly without invading Japan, the bomb had to be used -- and he used it.

8:15 A.M. -- The atomic bomb dropped clear of the Enola Gay. Forty-three seconds later, it exploded over Hiroshima.

Harry Truman was eating lunch when he was handed a decoded message, "Results clear-cut; successful in all respects." Truman reacted immediately: "This," he said, "is the greatest thing in history."

GEORGE ELSEY: The crew burst into applause and cheering when he announced this will end the war. Since most of the crewmen were anticipating that they'd have to go out and engage with the Japanese, you can see why there was great glee on the part of the crew, the officers, everyone, everyone present.

NARRATOR: That afternoon, Truman issued a warning to the Japanese government.

ARCHIVAL FILM OF TRUMAN ON CAMERA: "If they do not now accept our terms, they may expect a reign of ruin from the air the like of which has never been seen on this earth."

NARRATOR: Two days later, Secretary of War Stimson showed the president aerial photographs of Hiroshima. Truman did not yet know that the atomic bomb had killed more than 80,000 men, women, and children and that tens of thousands more would die from radiation sickness in the days and years to come.

ALONZO HAMBY: You see these pictures of Hiroshima just leveled for almost as far as the eye can see. Clearly he's distressed by that.

NARRATOR: He told Stimson, "This places a terrible responsibility upon myself and upon War Department." Three days after the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, the Soviet Union declared war on Japan, but still, there was no word of surrender.

August 9, 11:00 A.M. -- a second atomic bomb was dropped on the Japanese seaport of Nagasaki. In 1/10 of one-millionth of a second, the city was destroyed. Another 40,000 people were killed.

ALONZO HAMBY: Truman had not been any limitation on the use of the second bomb. Essentially after he signs the order at Potsdam, it's all on automatic pilot and, unless he changes his mind, up to the military.

NARRATOR: The day after Nagasaki was destroyed, Truman took the authority to use the atomic bomb back from the military and placed it once again in his own hands.

August 14 -- The simple reason Truman always gave for using the atomic bomb was to end the war and save lives. Now after nearly four years, Japan surrendered. The war was over.

Years later, Truman would often say that he never brooded over his decision to drop the bomb.

"Once a decision was made," he wrote later, "I didn't worry about it afterward."

ALONZO HAMBY: Time and again, Truman claimed, "I never lost a minute's sleep. Ah, I never felt any regret. I did what had to be done."

But clearly, this was a somewhat more upsetting event than he let on.

NARRATOR: The day after the bomb fell on Nagasaki, Truman had told his cabinet that "the thought of wiping out another 100,000 people was too horrible." He hated the idea of killing "all those kids."

BARTON BERNSTEIN: You can never feel comfortable about killing 100,000 or more people. And I'm sure that was true for Harry S. Truman, who fought vigorously always to deny it.

ROBERT LIFTON: He wasn't a man who could allow self-questioning. He wasn't a man who could allow reflection. He could never take in fully what he had done and what that meant for the world. Here was a good man, a loving man, who made a decision to use the cruelest weapon in human history on a densely populated city and spent the rest of his life justifying that decision.

NARRATOR: "I made the only decision I ever knew how to make," Truman wrote. "I did what I thought was right."

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