Pilot who attacked Hiroshima by nuclear bomb dies

  • 12/15/2022
  • 19:11
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CHICAGO, Nov 2,SPA -- The pilot of the plane that ushered in the age of atomic warfare with the first nuclear attack on the Japanese city of Hiroshima, died Thursday at the age of 92. Paul Warfield Tibbets, Jr., whose B-29 bomber dubbed the Enola Gay dropped the 9,000-pound "Little Boy" bomb on August 6, 1945, died at his home in the midwest city of Columbus, Ohio. He had been suffering from heart problems, manager and publisher Gerry Newhouse told AFP. Tibbets was more than just the pilot. He was instrumental in redesigning and testing the plane used to carry the massive bomb and organizing and training the men needed to deliver it. Tibbets never regretted the bombing that led to the end of World War II but at a horrific price: 140,000 dead immediately and 80,000 other Japanese succumbing in the aftermath, according to Hiroshima officials. "That's what it took to end the war," he told the Columbus Dispatch in 2003. "I went out to stop the killing all over."Aware that not everyone agrees with his view of history, Tibbets asked his family to cremate him so his grave site would not be desecrated by detractors, Newhouse said. In Japan Friday survivors of the attack on Hiroshima voiced regret that Tibbets died without saying sorry. "He did not apologise, arguing, like the American government, that the bombing saved millions of American and Japanese lives by ending the war," said Nori Tohei, 79, who survived the bombing of the western Japanese city."But I wanted him to visit Hiroshima and take a direct look at what he did as a human being," said Tohei, who co-chairs the Japan Confederation of A- and H-Bomb Suffers Organisations and now lives in Tokyo. "He was following orders as a military man but I wanted him to recognise it (the bombing) was a mistake and apologise to those who were killed or were long suffering side effects," Tohei told AFP. Tibbets was just a 30-year-old lieutenant colonel when he piloted the plane named after his mother. Decades later, the memory of the first atomic bomb fired in war stayed vivid in his mind. "If Dante had been with us on the plane, he would have been terrified," Tibbets once said.--SPA www.spa.gov.sa/495843

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