Australasia still decided to bomb Tokyo in accordance with the original plan.
This also meant that just for Tokyo alone, it would take a total of five atomic bombs.
However, because these were nuclear warheads, using five atomic bombs could also add an extra layer of assurance.
As long as more than half of the five nuclear warheads exploded successfully, Australasia could be certain that most of Tokyo would be destroyed.
If all five nuclear warheads exploded, the scene would probably require digging three feet into the ground even in the outskirts of Tokyo.
As for the more than 3 million inhabitants of Tokyo, it was likely that less than one percent would survive.
Although keeping them alive could have had some economic value, the key issue was that most of the radicals and proponents of war from the Island Nation were in Tokyo, and their elimination was a top priority.
An Island Nation without the radicals was, to Australasia, truly worth conquering.