So you're saying, the US just bombed Japan?
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A total of 2,348 bombs weighing 41 tons were disposed of during fiscal year 2023, the Reuters news agency reported, citing the Self-Defense Force.
Holy shit. Other than the obvious, I never learned much in school about the Allied bombing campaign in Japan during WWII... which, now that I think about it, was probably on purpose.
If you're interested in the worst of it you should look up firebombing and why it was so effective against Japan.
The Doolittle raids are fairly well know but the fire bombings carried out after that were not. The E-46 cluster bomb was pretty terrible 3 - 5 seconds after hitting the ground a small explosion would ignite and spread flaming napalm. The updraft from the fires was so bad some bombers lost control and crashed.
Not just in Japan, in Europe as well.
We're still finding random shit from all sides, IIRC there is a fully loaded German heavy bomber on the bottom of the lake near where I grew up
I used to live in an area that was one of the biggest targets for bombers in Germany during WW2. I remember every few months there was a bomb alarm. We had to leave the house for a few hours while it was being defused. No bomb ever blew up luckily and it just became routine.
But why did they leave it there?
Foreshadowing.
Someone was paid to push dirt over a small hole to build a runway not dig for bombs.
It's likely they didn't know it was there
It likely buried itself deep into the ground after it dropped from the bomber and failed to detonate.
bombs are single use, there's no need to pick it up now
why it was there in the first place? they probably had no idea, or if there was post-war cleanup it went undetected for some reason
So like if these kill ya, are you a WW2 fatality?
Not sure how it's handled in Japan but I know this is how it works in Germany and France, for both WW1 and WW2.
I impressed that it have not exploded earlier.
any explosive weapon will sometimes leave duds, there are GMLRS, javelin and excalibur duds documented. ww1 era shells could be the worst because by some estimates up to some 20% failed, then fuzes were often brass so they didn't corrode, but shell or bomb body were steel or cast iron so they did. when fuze gets almost set off then loses mechanical support it sometimes becomes more likely it'll be initiated on its own
Meanwhile, in a nursing home in Iowa, a man sits bolt upright in bed and says, "I told you I hit the target!"