Backbreaker, your numbers are incorrect and misleading. 80,000 Germans in total were convicted in allied courts of war crimes, and in just Poland alone 40,000 Germans were convicted of war crimes. Thousands of these men were summarily hanged or otherwise beaten to death by angry locals. And at the Nuremberg trials, 200 Germans were convicted. In addition, hundreds of thousands of German soldiers were incarcerated and starved to death in the frozen gulags of Russia without the benefit of a trial at all.
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/36qs.html
And this is according to a Jewish website, the Wiesenthal Center, and you know if anything they're going to downplay the level of punishment suffered by the Germans in the aftermath of WW2.
Only a tiny percentage of leading Japanese officers were ever tried and convicted, especially when compared to the overwhelming numbers of Germans that were tried and convicted before courts, or simply summarily executed during the invasion of Germany or in the frozen tundras of the Soviet Union.
Compare these numbers to the 920 Japanese who were executed for their war crimes, 320 of whom were not Japanese at all - they were Korean or Taiwanese. Where you got this bs number that 7500% more Japanese were executed than Germans is totally beyond me.
Germany itself was completely overrun, and tens of thousands more German officials and soldiers were killed without the benefit of a trial due to the nature of the four pronged allied invasion into Germany - a devastatingly destructive invasion that Japan itself was saved from experiencing thanks to the atomic bombs being dropped.
The dropping of the atomic bombs were necessary in order to win the war and prevent even more people from being killed. And the atomic bombs didn't kill as many civilians as other conventional bombings of other cities. They also prevented an invasion of the Japanese home islands, which would have killed many many more people.
The dropping of the atom bombs shortened the war and actually saved many more lives than they took.