New survey shows changing perspectives among Japanese teenagers on nuclear weapons, with implications for global disarmament efforts

"While many are committed to the abolition of nuclear weapons, they are also conflicted about issues of possession and use."
"We may be the last generation to hear directly from survivors."
Time is the ultimate enemy of memory, and in Japan, the clock is ticking louder than ever. Eighty years after the devastation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the nation confronts a grim demographic milestone: the number of hibakusha—atomic bomb survivors—has plummeted below 100,000 for the first time in history. With an average age now surpassing 86, the window for direct, living testimony is rapidly closing.
This isn't just a statistic; it is the erosion of living history. Today, a staggering 90% of Japan's population was born after the war. The visceral reality of nuclear horror, once carried in the scarred skin and voices of survivors, is fading into textbook abstraction. As the hibakusha pass away, Japan faces an unprecedented crisis of continuity. The visceral, first-person warnings that have underpinned the country’s pacifist identity for eight decades are being silenced by time, leaving a vacuum that new, more hawkish narratives are beginning to fill.
The chain of memory is breaking. A critical 2025 survey by the Japanese Red Cross Society exposes a widening chasm between the past and the present. While one in two Japanese citizens overall has heard firsthand accounts of the war, that figure collapses among the youth. Fewer than half of teenagers today have ever heard a survivor speak directly.
This disconnect is systemic. Unlike previous generations who absorbed the horrors of war at the knees of grandparents and relatives, today's youth are isolated from these personal histories. They are the first generation to rely almost exclusively on digital archives and second-hand retelling. The survey, covering 1,200 people, highlights a disturbing trend: without the emotional weight of direct contact, the urgency of nuclear abolition is losing its grip on the teenage mind. We are witnessing the transition of Hiroshima from a lived trauma to a distant historical footnote.
In a dramatic departure from Japan’s post-war pacifism, the youth are embracing a harder, more pragmatic stance on nuclear weapons. The Red Cross survey reveals a startling statistic: 32% of teenagers believe that possessing nuclear weapons for self-defense is unavoidable. This is the highest percentage of any age group surveyed, signaling a profound ideological shift.
"While many are committed to the abolition of nuclear weapons, they are also conflicted about issues of possession and use," explains Hiroto Oyama of the Japanese Red Cross Society. This conflict is driving a wedge between generations. While older Japanese remain staunchly anti-nuclear, the youth—growing up in an increasingly volatile geopolitical neighborhood—are looking at the nuclear option not just with fear, but with calculation. They are more likely to worry that Japan will be dragged into a future war, and their answers suggest they want the country to be armed for it.
Perhaps the most alarming data point comes from a separate 2022 study by the Institute of Statistical Mathematics. It uncovers a trend that would have been unthinkable decades ago: the younger the respondent, the more likely they are to view the US atomic bombings as justified. Among teenagers, one in four holds this view—the highest proportion of any demographic.
This is a radical revision of the national psyche. Teenagers are also less likely to believe that nuclear disarmament contributes to global security. This skepticism suggests that the traditional narrative of victimhood and the moral crusade for a nuclear-free world are failing to resonate with a generation concerned with immediate security threats. The consensus is fracturing, and the implications for Japan's identity as the world's moral compass on nuclear disarmament are profound.
The ripples of this shift will be felt far beyond Tokyo—they will crash against the walls of the United Nations in Geneva. Switzerland, a hub for global disarmament efforts, must pay close attention. If the youth of the only nation to suffer atomic bombardment are losing faith in disarmament, what hope is there for the rest of the world?
Despite the hawkish turn in defense views, 80% of respondents still agree on the necessity of passing on war memories. But the message is changing. As Japanese high school students in Geneva warned, "We may be the last generation to hear directly from survivors." The world is at a crossroads. If the moral authority of the hibakusha fades with them, the global movement for nuclear non-proliferation loses its most powerful voice. The challenge now is not just remembering the past, but convincing the future that peace is still a viable option.