Why Wasn't Auschwitz
Bombed?
Did Missing 1944 Military Studies Conclude
Auschwitz-Birkenau Not Death Camp?
By THE COMMITTEE FOR
HISTORICAL TRUTH (2004)
From 1944 to 1993 the
Holocaust lobby's story was Auschwitz-Birkenau wasn't bombed because
the 3,000 to 10,000 daily mass murders were kept secret through a
circle of fences one kilometer
(0.6 mi) from Birkenau so noone outside the camp knew about the mass
executions until
an April, 1944 prison escape, and the camp was out of range for bombers
until late 1944.
In 1993 Air Photo Evidence
published air photos proving the Germans made no attempt to hide the
Birkenau Cremation buildings which had no outer fence and only one wire fence close to the buildings so mass
executions would have been visible, and Birkenau was not out of range
as American planes bombed the Monowitz
industrial complex 6 km (4 mi) east starting in August, '44.
The photos sent shockwaves
through the Holocaust lobby which hastily organized a 1993 Auschwitz
Bombing convention in Washington, DC, to change their story and agree
to new reasons why Birkenau was not bombed. The new story was the
British and American governments knew about the Birkenau mass
executions from early '43 to November, '44, but didn't order that
Birkenau or rail-lines leading to the camp be bombed for a number of
reasons. The Holocaust Lobby's 4 main reasons are in black text, and
the truth according to Air Photo Evidence is in red:
- Requests for bombing in 1944 by U.S. President Roosevelt
and British Prime Minister Churchill were over-ruled by the military
who knew about the mass murders, but were
indifferent to the plight of the camp inmates. The truth is that in 1944 the American and
British military completed independent studies using air photos and
spy reports about whether
it was neccessary to bomb Birkenau, and although both studies
disappeared after 1944, they must have concluded that no mass murders
were occurring at Birkenau because bombing was not ordered by
Roosevelt, Churchill, or the military.
- Jewish groups in America, Britain, and Jersualem asked the
U.S. and British
governments to bomb Birkenau during 1944 but they were rebuffed by
military and political leaders. The
truth is that although a few individual members of Jewish groups who
had heard the mass-murder rumors, sent letters to other members of
their groups to consider bombing, not one official Jewish organization
anywhere in the world asked that Birkenau be bombed, because they knew
from escaped inmates and spies, and from contacts with the highest
levels of the U.S. and British governments, that mass murders were not
occurring.
- The War Refugee Board knew about the daily murders but did
not have enough political clout to command the attention of President
Roosevelt. The truth is that
Board member Henry Morgenthau knew of the unsubstantiated stories of
Birkenau mass murders, but he acted like he did not believe them
because he did not even discuss the possible bombing of Birkenau or any
other camp during his many meetings with President Roosevelt.
- Bombing would have killed inmates and there was no
guarantee bombing would have
stopped the slaughter. The truth
is rail-lines and bridges together with the Birkenau
Cremation buildings
could have been bombed with a minimum loss of life the same way two
other areas were bombed. From June, 1942 to August, 1944, 12 groups of B-25
long-range bombers and P-38 Lightning fighter-bombers
, flew long distances from airfields in Egypt to pin-point bomb at low
elevations the Ploesti oil refinery 55 kilomters (35 miles) north of
Bucharest, Rumania, and on August 24th, '44, the Gustloff-Werke armaments
factory 150 m (500 ft) from Buchenwald detention camp in Germany, was
destroyed by B-25 bombers without a single bomb hitting the Buchenwald camp.
In 1944 the Americans and British had the ability to pin-point bomb the Birkenau
cremation buildings or rail-lines leading to camp, but after military studies of air
photos and spy reports concluded that inmates were not being executed, no American or
British leader ordered bombing of Birkenau because they believed executions were not
occurring.
THE COMMITTEE FOR
HISTORICAL TRUTH (2004) |