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Very nice post Sammi and I too salute your Granddad.:salute:
My Uncle was a navigator in bomber commend he also didn't say much to me about the war, until I asked him how ha got the burns on his arms. He then told me that his plane was hit by tracer from a ****e-Wulf 190 fighter on the return trip from a raid on Berlin in 1943 and he said he burned his hands dying the fire out which stared near the radio compartment he said that was trying to save the radio operator who was badly injured in the attack. My Dad then later told me that was awarded the DFC for his act of bravery in saving the radio operator. He was then put on light duties right up to the Nuremberg war crime trials where he was a chauffeur for one of Generals who was in charge (I can not recall the generals name) Sadly my Uncle died in 2001 |
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You get my point. Your sarcasm is unneeded, I think. Most Nazis inEurope were Germans. But not all Germans were Nazis. That may ruin your completely demonised image of how evil Germans are, but I cannot help it. If you want to accuse a majority of Germans of anything, than that many remained silent instead of engaging themselves in an underground resistence. But before you complain about that, be certain that you would have the courage yourself to do that in case of living under a brutal dictatorship that kills and tortures and where police and justice do not deserve that name and where your family is at risk. It's easy to be a hero by mouth only, you know. That's why I said in another thread some weeks ago that I do not say that I know what I would do in such extreme situations, only that I know what I hope I would have the courage to do if facing such extreme situations. |
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I am so tired of this dribble, how many more years is this going to continual? What's done is done, stop complaining and move on. If Germany wants a memorial to their war dead I have no objections what so ever so please let us have ours.
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Manned aerial bombing is an unusal form of warfare in that the scale of devastaion is rarely seen first hand by the persons doing the bombing. They fly high over their targets, drop their munitions and, with any luck, they fly away safely. I remember an episode of the TV series M*A*S*H involving a bomber pilot who was shot down over the area near the hospital. He managed to make his way to the 4077th and was telling the doctors about how being a bomber pilot was a rather comfortable way to spend the war. It was, to him, a matter of wake up in the morning, get your orders, fly to the target, drop your bombs, and then head back to the base for lunch or dinner. Hawkeye was quite miffed at the pilot's callousness and indifference to the lives he affected with his flights. Claiming they were short of people to help in the hospital, Hawkeye enlisted the pilot to assist in tending to injured civilians in the wards. The pilot came upon a small child who was severly injured and difigured and he was appalled by the sight. He asked how it happened and Hawkeye told him she was one of the civilians from the area where the pilot had flown his most recent mission; she was a part of the "collateral damage". The pilot's initial reaction was one of anger towards Hawkeye for "setting him up"...
War is, as often quoted, "Hell", and, as such, breeds many demons and sufferings. We have gone from large flights of bombers flying into flak, to a single plane with a single bomb flying over a city on a pleasant morning, to a pilotless craft controlled from thousands of miles away by a "pilot" with a "joystick" who probably recieved his initial training on an X-Box as a child. We are gowing inured to the physical effects of today's "video game" warfare. It only seems right to try to remember and commemorate those who fought a very human war and paid a very high human price as both soldier and civilian. The German goverment may protest; it is only the pro forma act of any government to placate those who have very loud voices (who, in many cases, also have never fought in a war) and make bothersome gnats of themselves; that is for the politicians and diplomats to deal with; for the survivors, descendants and others touched by such acts of war, the memorials are a way of humanizing the grossly inhuman... ... |
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The hysteria was overwhelming even in the military. Later on when bombs started to fall things might had changed. As far as resistance look at other couturiers....in particular to the east which had been terrorised the most. Maybe they open McDonald's next to memorial..... |
I just wish that Germans had dropped a few bombs on the Thatcher household :yep:
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My Great-Uncle flew as a navigator for the RAF during the war. He was Canadian, but many served in the British forces. His bomber was shot down over Burma and the crew spent weeks walking back to allied lines. Of course, I only found out all this after he died from his daughter. He never talked about the war.
Its about time they have a memorial. |
Arthur Harris got his memorial 20 years ago. If he, the one who commanded it, got a memorial, why not the grunts who worked for him.
Thanks, Sammy, for sharing your memories. :salute: As a German I can say, I talked with many vets from the German side who ha similar memories, recognizing in hindsight how inhuman the whole thing was. I knew people who just did what they were told, I knew people whose choice was death or Strafeinheit, I know people who had their ****ing childhood in a bunker any night and I got to know people who were convinced of an ideology back then. Good that we know better today. One of the reasons why put an extra eye on the protection of civilians today. Some stuff which wasn't mentioned so far: - Germany had their production peak of their military industry in 1944 - despite all the bombings, - The bombings did bind military personal - half a million of regular troops were in the flak units - not even speaking of all the Flakhelfer and civilian personal. - Let's not forget the people who were civilians, behind the front. The ones who had not the luxury to walk into a bunker, the only luxury was to survive one more day in a camp. So many Germans who were civilians during that time told me how bad the war is, but most told me how terrible the war was when all the **** came back. The seed was planted before. "Coventry, Rotterdam, Leningrad, never heard of it - but the war was terrible when it came back here...." During all this time, even when the war came back to Germany, civilians were killed behind the front, the extermination machine still went on. |
My main objection to many people's understanding of the war is that most people tend to think that it was a one sided affair.. The Germans were killing and torturing civilians and we came in to save the day.. What no one tends to mention is the fact that we burned Dresden to the bone. We dropped fire bombs on wooden Japanese cities because we knew they would burn really well. We had every intention on burning civilians alive.
So my question is. Nazis or not who the hell is so self righteous to call themselves the good guys in a war like that? How much better were we than these Nazis? We burned children alive for crying out loud and did not think twice. The only difference I see between the allied powers and the Nazi's heinous acts during the war was that they did it a lot more personally. And suddenly that gives us the high horse to say they were evil. |
Well, German submariners have their memorial at Kiel (see: http://www.uboat- memorial.org) They sunk civilian ships, killed civilians and so on.
Why not a memorial to honour bomber crews? The important thing is to remember the young men who fought, and more than often lost their lives for their country. The strategy, or the political gains of their actions, sometimes is better to be forgotten. But that is not the point of any memorial. |
Okay, for the last 10 years or so I have only been lurking, rarely posting except for some photos of a type XXI, but this topic actually draws a reply from me:
I am german and I am not upset about this memorial. Ancient history and I quite frankly could not care less, as long as the brave pilots are the focus, and not the terror bombing campaign. Go ahead, build all the memorials you want, for all I care. One thing that DOES come to mind however, is how upset many Brits reacted, when there where plans to build a memorial for the rocketeers in Peenemünde. If you want to google it: I think it was in 92 and 94. (And bevore some Sherlock here mentiones it: Yes, the "Join date" says "jun 2009". This is not my first account. If you only log in every few years, literally, it becomse kinda hard to memorize passwords...) |
The memorial is a long overdue act of recognising and honouring the sacrifice of over 55,000 airmen.
The same has been done for other sections/arms of the military in other countries as well so I don't see the big deal here. |
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