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To: mightylakers who wrote (9872)9/19/2001 12:28:17 PM
From: Ilaine  Respond to of 74559
 
The US did participate in the attacks. The policy of area bombing was developed by the Brits, who flew at night to reduce their own casualties. The bombing of Dresden was under the command of British Air Marshall Harris. We were allies, and participated willingly.

After the war, Harris wrote this about the attack:

>> With the German army on the frontiers of Germany we quickly set up GH and Oboe ground
stations close behind the front line and this ensured the success of attacks on many distant
objectives when the weather would otherwise have prevented us from finding the target. At
the same time the bombers could fly with comparative safety even to targets as distant as
Dresden or Chemnitz, which I had not ventured to attack before, because the enemy had lost
his early warning system and the whole fighter defence of Germany could therefore generally
be out-manoeuvred.

In February of 1945, with the Russian army threatening the heart of Saxony, I was called upon
to attack Dresden; this was considered a target of the first importance for the offensive on the
Eastern front. Dresden had by this time become the main centre of communications for the
defence of Germany on the southern half of the Eastern front and it was considered that a
heavy air attack would disorganise these communications and also make Dresden useless
as a controlling centre for the defence. It was also by far the largest city in Germany-the
pre-war population was 630,000-which had been left intact; it had never before been bombed.
As a large centre of war industry it was also of the highest importance.

An attack on the night of February 13th-14th by just over 800 aircraft, bombing in two sections
in order to get the night fighters dispersed and grounded before the second attack, was
almost as overwhelming in its effect as the Battle of Hamburg, though the area of devastation
-1600 acres - was considerably less; there was, it appears, a fire-typhoon, and the effect on
German morale, not only in Dresden but in far distant parts of the country, was extremely
serious. The Americans carried out two light attacks in daylight on the next two days.

I know that the destruction of so large and splendid a city at this late stage of the war was
considered unnecessary even by a good many people who admit that our earlier attacks were
as fully justified as any other operation of war. Here I will only say that the attack on Dresden
was at the time considered a military necessity by much more important people than myself,
and that if their judgment was right the same arguments must apply that I have set out in an
earlier chapter in which I said what I think about the ethics of bombing as a whole.<<

War is hell. Germany attacked Great Britain, not the other way 'round.



To: mightylakers who wrote (9872)9/19/2001 12:30:11 PM
From: Moominoid  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
Estonian dude today blamed the US for Dresden. He said he was near there when it happened.