Fred Bock, has been on display at the museum since 1961. The B-29 bomber, named for one of its pilots, Capt. Sweeney, 75, of Milton, Mass., said he loves the Bockscar ``like you love your oldest pair of slippers.″ Parts of the Enola Gay are to be displayed this summer at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum in Washington. Three days before the bombing, Sweeney flew the instrument plane that accompanied the Enola Gay when it dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima. ``Don’t they have the ultimate responsibility for all the deaths of their countrymen?″ ``They who started the war and then stubbornly refused to stop it must be called to account,″ he said. ``Today, millions of people in America and Southeast Asia are alive because the war ended when it did,″ Sweeney told a crowd of about 400 at the museum Wednesday night. Sweeney visited the plane, the Bockscar, for the first time in more than 30 years last week at the U.S. Eatherly is standing in the center of the. ``There’s no question in my mind that President Truman made the right decision,″ Sweeney said. The B-29 Superfortress crew that flew over Japan and radioed that the weather appeared clear before the Enola Gay dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. What Did The Pilot Say After Dropping The Atomic Bomb Robert Lewis, co-pilot of the Enola Gay that dropped the weapon wrote My God, what have we done when the city fell out of the sky at night under mushroom clouds.