Menu
Excerpts
Exhibits
Collections
Originals
Categories
Map
Search
Person
Curtis LeMay
Book
Mission with LeMay
: My Story
Curtis LeMay, MacKinlay Kantor
1965
View on Map
Related Excerpts
Viewing 1–18 of 18
"I Have Sought to Slaughter as Few Civilians as Possible."
The rabid, apocalyptic Beat poetry that is "Mission with LeMay."
by
Alex Wellerstein
via
Doomsday Machines
on
October 16, 2025
Narrative Napalm
Malcolm Gladwell’s apologia for American butchery.
by
Noah Kulwin
via
The Baffler
on
May 17, 2021
Mythologizing the Bomb
The beauty of the atomic scientists' calculations hid from them the truly Faustian contract they scratched their names to.
by
E. L. Doctorow
via
The Nation
on
August 14, 1995
M-16: A Bureaucratic Horror Story
Why the rifles jammed.
by
James Fallows
via
The Atlantic
on
June 1, 1981
Inside the Days, Hours and Minutes Leading Up to the Hiroshima Bombing
On the preparation and aftershocks of the attack that marked the beginning of the Nuclear Age.
by
Iain MacGregor
via
Literary Hub
on
July 24, 2025
For Decades, a Treaty Contained the Threat of Nuclear Weapons. Now That’s All at Risk.
Trump did not create this situation, but he has accelerated its centrifugal forces.
by
Fred Kaplan
via
Slate
on
July 17, 2025
Hate Burst Out: Chicago, 1968
It is hard not to figure the 1968 election as inaugurating the cultural and political polarisation of the American electorate so evident today.
by
Kim Phillips-Fein
via
London Review of Books
on
August 7, 2024
Big Six v. Little Boy: The Unnecessary Bomb
A new book's insistence that the bomb was necessary to bring about Japan’s surrender is largely contradicted by its own evidence.
by
Andrew Cockburn
via
London Review of Books
on
November 15, 2023
Did We Really Need to Drop the Bomb?
American leaders called the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki our 'least abhorrent choice,' but there were alternatives to the nuclear attacks.
by
Paul Ham
via
American Heritage
on
August 6, 2023
The Forgotten Crime of War Itself
A new book argues that efforts to humanize war with smarter weaponry have obscured the task of making peace the first goal of foreign policy.
by
Jackson Lears
via
New York Review of Books
on
March 31, 2022
Invisible General: How Colin Powell Conned America
From My Lai to Desert Storm to WMDs.
by
Noah Kulwin
via
The American Prospect
on
October 22, 2021
partner
The Japanese Surrender in 1945 is Still Poorly Understood
Did the United States have no other option but to drop atomic bombs on Japan in order to get them to surrender?
by
Jeremy Kuzmarov
,
Roger Peace
via
HNN
on
September 26, 2021
Did Making the Rules of War Better Make the World Worse?
Why efforts to curb the cruelty of military force may have backfired.
by
Dexter Filkins
via
The New Yorker
on
September 2, 2021
The Korean War Atrocities No One Wants to Talk About
For decades they covered up the U.S. massacre of civilians at No Gun Ri and elsewhere. This is why we never learn our lessons.
by
Jim Bovard
via
The American Conservative
on
June 26, 2020
The Lethal Crescent
The 45 years of peace between the Cold War superpowers were 45 years of killing for much of the rest of the world.
by
Daniel Immerwahr
via
The Nation
on
December 20, 2018
Lessons from the Election of 1968
Protests, populism, and progressivism all clashed in a battle royal. But what really drives election results?
by
Louis Menand
via
The New Yorker
on
January 8, 2018
Recoil Operation
The U.S. has long supplied the world with AR-15 rifles. But only when we see its grim effects at home do politicians call for restricting its sale.
by
Patrick Blanchfield
via
The New Inquiry
on
July 11, 2016
Almost Everything in “Dr. Strangelove” Was True
How Stanley Kubrick’s film “Dr. Strangelove” exposed dangers inherent in nuclear command-and-control systems.
by
Eric Schlosser
via
The New Yorker
on
January 17, 2014