Sasaferrato
Super Refuser!
Pathetic.
No Frank, it isn't. Of course, you have never been in a war, have you?
Pathetic.
The bombings of Dresden, Hiroshima, Nagasaki and Tokyo should be regarded as war crimes.
So, y’know, just make sure you exterminate everyone capable of working in a factory. Seems sensible.
The purpose of going to war is to win. Pointless otherwise. The victory inevitably means that non-combatants are killed, it is unavoidable.
Go to the Imperial war museum and see these:
The little one is a V1, the big one is a V2. They were unguided rocket weapons aimed absolutely indiscriminately at London. Consider the use of those weapons, then try and justify criticism of British bombing of Germany.
Two wrongs famously making a right of course.
Quite. As to Japan, when I was a boy I lived next to a Burma railway survivor. Japan treated POWs like animals, indeed, worse that animals. The people on the railway worked until starvation and exhaustion killed them.
I don't think you quite grasp the concept of total war.
So, y’know, just make sure you exterminate everyone capable of working in a factory. Seems sensible.
when I was a boy
My mother was manageress of the British Restaurant at Tate & Lyle in Clydebank, and was on duty the night it was bombed. The screams of those engulfed in molten sugar stayed with her for the rest of her life.
Workers are a legitimate, indeed necessary target. Destroying the enemy capacity for manufacture is a necessity.
Hang on a minute - are you saying those who find themselves disturbed by the bombings of enemy civilians in Germany and Japan are apologists for the wartime regimes in those countries? Because that's not on, as far as I'm concerned.Quite. As to Japan, when I was a boy I lived next to a Burma railway survivor. Japan treated POWs like animals, indeed, worse that animals. The people on the railway worked until starvation and exhaustion killed them.
The bleeding heart liberal view of Britain's actions in Germany and Japan fall on deaf eras here I'm afraid.
What do the apologists have to say about London, Coventry and Glasgow civilians being bombed? My mother was manageress of the British Restaurant at Tate & Lyle in Clydebank, and was on duty the night it was bombed. The screams of those engulfed in molten sugar stayed with her for the rest of her life.
would you advocate more war than there is or are you happy with the status quo... in otherwords ... is what we need another war?
Hang on a minute - are you saying those who find themselves disturbed by the bombings of enemy civilians in Germany and Japan are apologists for the wartime regimes in those countries? Because that's not on, as far as I'm concerned.
Pretty surprised to hear that argument coming from you Idris. It's a pretty dangerous path.The Nazis - and in a different way, the Japanese imperialists - represented an evil so extreme that normal ethics and morality might well be said to not apply in the case of the war against them.
Seriously like. . . . the Second World War was probably the worst thing that ever happened. Really. That's why I think it's something apart. Maybe you could argue that if morality and ethics are universal, they're universal even in the most extreme and extraordinary cases (like WW2).Pretty surprised to hear that argument coming from you Idris. It's a pretty dangerous path.
Probably something more useful to do with the bombers than burn Dresden.The problem with that is that every 88mm gun not firing at a Lancaster or B-17 is an 88mm gun firing at a T-38 or Sherman, and every FW-190 or ME-110 not chasing bombers is a pair of 500lb bombs falling on an allied troop column crossing the Rhine or Oder, every lunatic jet fighter program cancelled is resources poured into the V2 or tank production, thus prolonging the ground war.
I'm not going to sit here and say that burning a city full of civs is great, but when you say 'we shouldn't do this', you have to ask what the consequences of not doing it are going to be.
Nahh the Japanese wanted things to go back to the way things were. Keep Korea and China and carry on as before.When you say 'Japan' did that, were the civillian population of Nagasaki directly involved? Where the as yet unborn children who suffered and died as a result of these weapons also culpable?
Japan was prepared to surrender before the bombs were dropped, this is a matter of record. Even assuming those attacks were necessary to secure unconditional surrender, the 'unconditional' part was purely a matter of pride for the Americans, and had nothing to do with securing long term peace.
Me too, and will be back this year. The art gallery at the Zwinger is tremendous. We'll be visiting from Berlin.I've been to Dresden, by the way.
It feels. . . different.
all's fair in love and warShould it have been done?
I disagree.
The whole idea of war crimes is bizarre to me. It makes it seem like there's some morally sound way, within a physical war, to inhibit state-sized enemies.