Don Harkins
22nd April, 2003
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Posted by seumasach on February 14, 2010
Don Harkins
22nd April, 2003
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Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: dresden massacre | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on February 10, 2010
Many put the death toll at well above 40,000 including eyewitnress and longstanding student of this massacre Kurt Vonnegut
Jacques R. Pauwels
9th February, 2010
In the night of February 13-14, 1945, the ancient and beautiful capital of Saxony, Dresden, was attacked three times, twice by the RAF and once by the USAAF, the United States Army Air Force, in an operation involving well over 1,000 bombers. The consequences were catastrophic, as the historical city centre was incinerated and between 25,000 and 40,000 people lost their lives.[1] Dresden was not an important industrial or military centre and therefore not a target worthy of the considerable and unusual common American and British effort involved in the raid. The city was not attacked as retribution for earlier German bombing raids on cities such as Rotterdam and Coventry, either. In revenge for the destruction of these cities, bombed ruthlessly by the Luftwaffe in 1940, Berlin, Hamburg, Cologne and countless other German towns big and small had already paid dearly in 1942, 1943, and 1944. Furthermore, by the beginning of 1945, the Allied commanders knew perfectly well that even the most ferocious bombing raid would not succeed in “terrorizing [the Germans] into submission,”[2] so that it is not realistic to ascribe this motive to the planners of the operation. The bombing of Dresden, then, seems to have been a senseless slaughter, and looms as an even more terrible undertaking than the atomic obliteration of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which is at least supposed to have led to the capitulation of Japan.
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Posted by seumasach on February 14, 2009
“Many mainstream Germans say that the huge loss of life must be remembered as a warning against war’
More specifically, it could have served as a warning against the destructive proclivities of the Anglo-american alliance as shown subsequently at Hiroshima, Nagasaki and in Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Serbia and Afghanistan. And if we are wise, it should remind us that as long as anglo-american power projection is unchecked, we still face the prospect of nuclear war and, perhaps, ultimate destruction. The anglo-american empire viewed as a single project dating from Elizabethan times has carried out a four hundred year programme of genocide: at all times the cultural and near physical destruction of entire peoples has been the norm. Until recently, Indian children in Canada were being tortured and murdered in Christian institutions. The characteristic propensity to the infliction of random and widespread death on civilians has been confirmed by the use of such weapons as depleted uranium. Only as this empire dies, as it is dying at the moment, will the truth about its history be fully revealed, but for the moment one thing is clear: in the practice of genocide it was, and is, second to none.
Organizers of the alliance that formed as a counterweight to the neo-Nazi march through the eastern German city said around 11,000 people participated at several demonstrations. Police put that number at just under 10,000.
The far-right uses Dresden as a rallying cry
They were protesting a “mourning march” held by members of the extreme-right in the capital of the state of Saxony. For a decade, anti-immigrant and skinhead groups have marked the anniversary of the bombing of Dresden by Allied air raids, which took place Feb. 13-15, 1945, at the end of World War Two.
Many of the groups marching were affiliated with the National Democratic Party (NPD), a far-right political party which entered the Saxony state assembly in 2004.
This year’s event was organized by a group known as theJunge Landsmannschaft Ostdeutschland, supported by the NPD. The far-right marchers totaled around 6,000, according to police, about a thousand more than gathered in 2005, on the 60th anniversary of the bombing.
Many in the far-right scene call the widespread destruction in Dresden a “Holocaust,” and attempt to paint Germany as a victim of the war. The firebombing killed an estimated 25,000 people, mostly civilians, and wiped out the city center.
Police officers force back left-wing demonstrators
Eyewitnesses on Saturday said several hundred leftists who objected to the far-right procession tried to attack neo-Nazi participants, hurling bottles at the police cordon and damaging parked cars. Witnesses said several people were injured, although police have not confirmed this.
Clashes between left-wing and far-right groups are common on the anniversary. This year, police forces numbered around 4,000, some brought in from neighboring states.
Commemoration
Separately, thousands of pacifists took part in processions to both denounce the neo-Nazi threat and remember the city’s dead.
On Saturday morning, peace services were held in churches and a synagogue. Afterwards, thousands of Dresden residents went to a central square, the site where numerous victims of the bombing were burned to death.
Dresden after the firebombing and today
Also participating in the commemorations were politicians from Dresden and Saxony as well as representatives from the United States and Great Britain.
Many mainstream Germans say that the huge loss of life must be remembered as a warning against war.
On Friday, the bell of the Frauenkirche, or Church of Our Lady, rang out in their memory. The church, one of the symbols of Dresden, collapsed two days after the raids. It remained a pile of rubble for decades until US and British donors helped pay to rebuild it in a gesture of reconciliation. It reopened in 2006.
Posted in Drive to Global War | Tagged: dresden massacre, End of empire | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on February 14, 2009
1 st June, 2008
The author Kurt Vonnegut was a prisoner of war in Dresden during the allied bombing raids and was later forced to dig out bodies from the ruined city. In papers discovered by his son after his death last year, he provides a searing eyewitness account of the ‘obscene brutality’ that inspired his novel Slaughterhouse-Five
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