March 9, 1945: Operation Meetinghouse begins.
The first bombings conducted by the United States over Japan came in the form of the Doolittle Raid, a 1942 air raid that succeeded in boosting American morale but caused very little long-lasting damage to targeted Japanese cities. The bombing campaign dubbed Operation Meetinghouse, which targeted Tokyo with incendiary bombs and firestorms, was of an entirely different breed and more closely resembled the 1945 bombing of Dresden.
On March 9, 1945, around 330 B-29s (the plane that carried out the majority of bombings in Japan, including Hiroshima and Nagasaki) launched an attack on the Japanese Home Islands from U.S. outposts in the Mariana archipelago. The bombers carried out low-altitude raids over Tokyo using incendiary bombs, which were deathly effective against the tightly-packed and highly-flammable buildings that were common in Japan. They also made it impossible to avoid devastating civilian populations - there was no way to accurately target, with these napalm bombs, factories and industrial buildings. Fiery infernos burned on the ground, reaching 1,000 ° C, and wind swept burning debris and “clots of flame” into the air, setting everything surrounding alight. Civilians threw themselves into canals and any nearby water in attempts to escape the burning, but still stacks of incinerated bodies piled up in the streets - Curtis LeMay, who executed the strategic bombing campaign in the Pacific Theater, described the victims as having been “scorched and boiled and baked to death”. An estimated 80,000 - 100,000 (according to the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey and the Tokyo Metropolitan Police) died in that overnight air raid, during which some 4,500,000 pounds of incendiaries were dropped in three hours. Reportedly, the stench of burning human flesh was so strong that the Americans piloting the bombers, flying thousands of feet overhead, could smell it.
The firebombing of Tokyo, which was followed by similar bombings in Nagoya, Osaka, and Kobe, was the deadliest air raid of World War II, and it was only the beginning of a campaign that began in late 1944 and targeted and destroyed more Japanese industrial cities throughout the spring and summer until the capitulation of the Japanese Empire in August of 1945. In a memorandum dated June 17, 1945, Bonner Fellers describes the American firebombing campaign of Japan as “one of the most ruthless and barbaric killings of non-combatants in all history.”