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Obama to visit site of first atomic attack

President won’t revisit decision to bomb Hiroshima, aides say
Former President Jimmy Carter was the first U.S. president to visit a memorial for the victims of Hiroshima, the Japanese city that was decimated by an atomic bomb at the end of World War II. Carter, with then-Hiroshima Mayor Takeshi Araki, placed a wreath at the memorial in 1984, three years after his presidency ended.

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama will become the first sitting U.S. president to visit Hiroshima, Japan, the White House announced Tuesday, making a fraught stop this month at the site where the United States dropped an atomic bomb at the end of World War II.

The visit, hotly debated in the White House for months as the president planned a trip to Vietnam and Japan, carries weighty symbolism for Obama, who is loath to be seen as apologizing for that chapter in U.S. history.

“He will not revisit the decision to use the atomic bomb at the end of World War II,” Benjamin J. Rhodes, his deputy national security adviser for strategic communication, said in a blog post on Medium. “Instead, he will offer a forward-looking vision focused on our shared future.”

“In making this visit, the president will shine a spotlight on the tremendous and devastating human toll of war,” Rhodes added in the blog post.

Obama’s critics have often accused him of making an “apology ... tour” during the first year of his presidency, pointing to his travels to the Middle East and Europe during that period, when he gave a series of speeches acknowledging past misdeeds by the United States and seeking to rebuild ties frayed at the end of the Bush administration.

But the president’s advisers say a trip to Hiroshima is in keeping with his emphasis on reducing the spread of nuclear weapons.

Japanese officials avoided any suggestion that they viewed the visit as tantamount to a U.S. apology. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe framed it as a chance to honor the dead and support the cause of nuclear disarmament.

“Japan is the only country to be hit by a nuclear weapon, and we have a responsibility to make sure that terrible experience is never repeated anywhere,” Abe said.

Sunao Tsuboi, 91, a leading anti-nuclear activist in Hiroshima, who was burned by the bomb blast on Aug. 6, 1945, welcomed Obama’s visit, which he said he hoped would “project a broad anti-nuclear message.”

“I was one of the first people who said Obama should visit Hiroshima,” he told NHK, Japan’s national public broadcaster. “Good for him for coming.”



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