From Wiki:
Dresden:
Seeking to establish a definitive casualty figure, in part to address propagandisation of the bombing by far-right groups, the Dresden city council in 2005 authorized an independent Historian's Commission (Historikerkommission) to conduct a new, thorough investigation, collecting and evaluating available sources. The results were published in 2010 and stated that a
minimum of 22,700[3] and a maximum of 25,000 people[4] were killed.
Tokyo:
The
US Strategic Bombing Survey later estimated that nearly 88,000 people died in this one raid, 41,000 were injured, and over a million residents lost their homes. The Tokyo Fire Department estimated a higher toll: 97,000 killed and 125,000 wounded. The
Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department established a figure of 83,793 dead and 40,918 wounded and 286,358 buildings and homes destroyed.
[21] Historian
Richard Rhodes put deaths at over 100,000, injuries at a million and homeless residents at a million.
[22] These casualty and damage figures could be low;
Mark Selden wrote in
Japan Focus:
The figure of roughly 100,000 deaths, provided by Japanese and American authorities, both of whom may have had reasons of their own for minimizing the death toll, seems to be arguably low in light of population density, wind conditions, and survivors' accounts. With an average of 103,000 inhabitants per square mile (396 people per hectare) and peak levels as high as 135,000 per square mile (521 people per hectare), the highest density of any industrial city in the world, and with firefighting measures ludicrously inadequate to the task, 15.8 square miles (41 km2) of Tokyo were destroyed on a night when fierce winds whipped the flames and walls of fire blocked tens of thousands fleeing for their lives. An estimated 1.5 million people lived in the burned out areas.
[21]
In his 1968 book, reprinted in 1990, historian
Gabriel Kolko cited a figure of 125,000 deaths.
[23] Elise K. Tipton, professor of Japan studies, arrived at a rough range of 75,000 to 200,000 deaths.
[24] Donald L. Miller, citing
Knox Burger, stated that there were "at least 100,000" Japanese deaths and "about one million" injured.
[25]
The Operation Meetinghouse firebombing of Tokyo on the night of 9 March 1945 was the single deadliest air raid of World War II,
[26]greater than
Dresden,
[27] Hamburg,
Hiroshima, or Nagasaki as single events.