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		Speedy11(at)aol.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Fri Sep 10, 2010 10:14 pm    Post subject: Dresden | 
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				Pat,
  You were quite right to butt in.  Your first hand experience adds  insight.
  It's terrible that we upset the "cultured people" all over Europe.   Those Europeans should have raises their concerns about "wartime  culture" with the Nazis.
  I love Germany, but personally, I'm glad we have to option to speak, or not  speak, German.
  We owe the allies who fought and won that war an enormous debt.
  Stan Sutterfield
   
    	  | Quote: | 	 		  The    destruction of the city provoked unease in intellectual circles in    
 Britain. According to Max Hastings (a renowned British historian), by    
 February 1945, attacks upon German cities had become largely irrelevant to    
 the outcome of the war and the name of Dresden possessed a resonance for    
 cultured people all over Europe ?" "the home of so much charm and beauty,    a 
 refuge for Trollope's heroines, a landmark of the Grand Tour." He argues    
 that the bombing of Dresden was the first time Allied populations    questioned 
 the military actions used to defeat the    Nazis...
 
 Hi,
 
 as a lurker on the Rocket list ( just interest as I    fly a microlight) I am 
 loth to post this but I just cannot let a    discussion of Dresden pass by 
 without comment.
 
 Being 81 I lived    through the war  ( and got bombed out) and perhaps have a 
 different    viewpoint than those `second guessers` born later who have had the 
 luxury    of hindsight when evaluating what should and should not have been    
 done.
 
 Max Hastings is of course right when he says that there was    `unease` in 
 intellectual circles. There was unease after we bombed    Hiroshima and 
 Nagasaki but this was a problem which had to be solved    IMMEDIATELY.  The 
 decision would not wait for the luxury of    intellectual discussion. There was 
 a war on, decisions had to be made NOW.    The Germans and the Japs were still 
 fighting, they were not giving up. We    had them on the back foot certainly 
 but that is the time to attack, not    ease off. There was no `unease` among 
 the men who had to go in and die on    the ground in Germany or storming the 
 beaches of the Japanese homeland.    They all said `Serve the bastards right, 
 they started it`
 
 There    seems to be the idea that Dresden was sitting there making Dresden    
 porcelain figures. Were they hell. Any more than Bath or Coventry    were.Bath 
 was stuffed to the gills with Admiralty Planning     Departments and you 
 couldn`t throw a stone in Coventry without hitting an    engineering works. 
 They were all `legitimate` targets.
 Remember too    that this was the end of the war and we had brought bombing to 
 a pretty    fine art. We had a lot of practice and lost a lot of Bomber Command 
 and    the American Airforce refining the problem. If Germany had been as 
 expert    in bombing in the early part of the war as we were then do you think 
 that    she would have worried about Bath, Bristol, Coventry, Plymouth, London    
 having `cultural resonance`. Of course not. They did their best to wipe    out 
 those cities, it is just that ,like us at that time, they were not    very good 
 at it.
 
 Poor old `Bomber` Harris got a lot of stick just    for carrying out his 
 orders. He was denied the rewards which were handed    out to the commanders of 
 every other arm of the Services. His men ,who    died in their thousands, were 
 denied a Campaign Medal even. Suddenly, when    the need for them had passed 
 everyone became holier than thou` and began    to voice doubts about the 
 bombing campaign, and decrying the efficacy of    the results.
 
 Sorry to but  in
 
 Pat
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		pj.ladd(at)btinternet.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sat Sep 11, 2010 12:27 am    Post subject: Dresden | 
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				You were quite right to butt in.>>
   
  Thanks Stan. Nice to have someone agree with me . I  seem to find myself more and more in disagreement with  those around me  (not my contemporaries) these days.
   
  Just to up my flying credentials a bit.  Although I do fly a microlight, I have a Jabi. 2200 in the power  department.
  Cheers
   
  Good flying
   
  Pat
    [quote][b]
 
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		nico(at)cybersuperstore.c Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sat Sep 11, 2010 6:53 am    Post subject: Dresden | 
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				Thank you for that reality-check, Pat, perhaps more relevant with the anniversary of 9/11 than at any other time.   
 As it goes with generations, the pain and immediate horror of war fade over time and the intellectual discourse starts glossing over the realities of the time, which spawned those horrible, not-always-appreciated decisions. Only when another war looms on the horizon and some folks are brought before choices that spawn tough decision all over again, do we get to reflect with some semblance of realization on what folks got done back then.   
 If we look at new military technology, it is very clear that the U.S. has become the leader in developing warring systems that minimize collateral losses -- both human and property -- in a conflict, which is what we will have in the future as opposed to full blown wars. You already saw that happen in the span of those six terrible years ending in 1945.  
 The Iraq war has shown to what extent military targets can be selected and destroyed with the precision only dreamt of in '45. But even back then the U.S. has already demonstrated that just going out to break more things and kill more people than one's enemy is not the way to go. It is much more productive to break only the enemy's war machines and kill its combatants. Razing museums and killing civilians hoping that the enemy will feel the pain and stop fighting only works if the enemy fears losing its civilians and its cities. The A-bombs on Japan were, hopefully, the last demonstration of that military strategy, necessary as it was to end the war.   
 With today's technology such a scenario is unlikely to occur again since arm-chair pilots sitting in lounge-like settings flying pilotless drones can go in and stop any scenario that might develop into a kill-civilians initiative.   
 Without the hindsight of history, as you pointed out, Pat, some might fuzzy-over the reasons for spending the money to develop smart weapons preventing a world conflict rather than winning one.   
 That is, provided the enemy's psyche remains in the four corners of what we understand enemies to be. With the resurrection of 6th century thinking, cultures and warfare, our neighbor and fellow American has become our enemy and our neighborhoods have become our battlefields.   
 These are people who swore allegiance to a mythical figure represented by remotely located clerics who have indoctrinated their people to consider the pain of civilian-killings and museum-razing as passports to pie-in-the-sky rewards for being killed.   
 So, the more bombs thrown on civilians the greater their victory becomes. The more of their buildings razed the greater are our losses. The paradigm of killing and destroying military targets on enemy territory still holds true, but the location of those enemy-assets has shifted from their turf to ours. If we hit an enemy combatant, we have killed a fellow American. If we destroy a military target, we have hit a place of worship that is under the protection of the U.S. Constitution.   
 Just as age brings new ailments to the fore for you and me, so it has done to our country. We contract diseases as we get older that were latent in our DNA and dormant during our youth just as America now suffers from diseases to which the Constitution offers no cure. Mostly because the Founding Fathers could never have imagined the challenges that we face today, such as snake-oil salesmen who can dematerialize and transmit themselves in real time into millions of people's homes at the same instant, assemble themselves again and speak to the nation eye-to-eye in their living rooms. Television, for example.   
 We allowed the enemy into our country when their only distinction was that they were foreigners. And now those powers that keep us safe also prevent us from solving the problem. It won't be resolved with drones hitting military targets elsewhere. If we don't find a solution soon, it will be our blood that will flow on our beaches because we will be forced to shoot at our people to protect our liberties.   
 How's that for bad options on the horizon of choices that will require a decision sooner rather than later.   
 Our very own Hiroshima moment.   
          
   
 From: owner-rocket-list-server(at)matronics.com [mailto:owner-rocket-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Speedy11(at)aol.com
  Sent: Friday, September 10, 2010 11:11 PM
  To: rocket-list(at)matronics.com
  Subject: Re: Dresden  
   
      
    
     
 Pat,  
     
 You were quite right to butt in.  Your first hand experience adds insight.  
     
 It's terrible that we upset the "cultured people" all over Europe.  Those Europeans should have raises their concerns about "wartime culture" with the Nazis.  
     
 I love Germany, but personally, I'm glad we have to option to speak, or not speak, German.  
     
 We owe the allies who fought and won that war an enormous debt.  
     
 Stan Sutterfield  
     
    
      	  | Quote: | 	 		    
 The destruction of the city provoked unease in intellectual circles in 
  Britain. According to Max Hastings (a renowned British historian), by 
  February 1945, attacks upon German cities had become largely irrelevant to 
  the outcome of the war and the name of Dresden possessed a resonance for 
  cultured people all over Europe ?" "the home of so much charm and beauty, a 
  refuge for Trollope's heroines, a landmark of the Grand Tour." He argues 
  that the bombing of Dresden was the first time Allied populations questioned 
  the military actions used to defeat the Nazis...
  
  Hi,
  
  as a lurker on the Rocket list ( just interest as I fly a microlight) I am 
  loth to post this but I just cannot let a discussion of Dresden pass by 
  without comment.
  
  Being 81 I lived through the war  ( and got bombed out) and perhaps have a 
  different viewpoint than those `second guessers` born later who have had the 
  luxury of hindsight when evaluating what should and should not have been 
  done.
  
  Max Hastings is of course right when he says that there was `unease` in 
  intellectual circles. There was unease after we bombed Hiroshima and 
  Nagasaki but this was a problem which had to be solved IMMEDIATELY.  The 
  decision would not wait for the luxury of intellectual discussion. There was 
  a war on, decisions had to be made NOW. The Germans and the Japs were still 
  fighting, they were not giving up. We had them on the back foot certainly 
  but that is the time to attack, not ease off. There was no `unease` among 
  the men who had to go in and die on the ground in Germany or storming the 
  beaches of the Japanese homeland. They all said `Serve the bastards right, 
  they started it`
  
  There seems to be the idea that Dresden was sitting there making Dresden 
  porcelain figures. Were they hell. Any more than Bath or Coventry were.Bath 
  was stuffed to the gills with Admiralty Planning  Departments and you 
  couldn`t throw a stone in Coventry without hitting an engineering works. 
  They were all `legitimate` targets.
  Remember too that this was the end of the war and we had brought bombing to 
  a pretty fine art. We had a lot of practice and lost a lot of Bomber Command 
  and the American Airforce refining the problem. If Germany had been as 
  expert in bombing in the early part of the war as we were then do you think 
  that she would have worried about Bath, Bristol, Coventry, Plymouth, London 
  having `cultural resonance`. Of course not. They did their best to wipe out 
  those cities, it is just that ,like us at that time, they were not very good 
  at it.
  
  Poor old `Bomber` Harris got a lot of stick just for carrying out his 
  orders. He was denied the rewards which were handed out to the commanders of 
  every other arm of the Services. His men ,who died in their thousands, were 
  denied a Campaign Medal even. Suddenly, when the need for them had passed 
  everyone became holier than thou` and began to voice doubts about the 
  bombing campaign, and decrying the efficacy of the results.
  
  Sorry to but in
  
  Pat    http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Rocket-List  | 	  0123456789
         [quote][b]
 
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		pj.ladd(at)btinternet.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
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				 Posted: Sun Sep 12, 2010 3:56 am    Post subject: Dresden | 
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				<<Thank  you for that reality-check, Pat, perhaps more relevant with the anniversary of  9/11 than at any other time. >><?xml:namespace prefix = o ns =  "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /> 
 Thanks for  the replies that my intervention has provoked.  I would rather have kept  this off list but there was no private return address. 
 Delighted  to continue anydiscussion  that  you like off list 
 Cheers 
 Pat 
 <<Razing  museums and killing civilians hoping that the enemy will feel the pain and stop  fighting only works if the enemy fears losing its civilians and its  cities.>> 
 I don`t  think that anyone, even in 1940, wanted to waste bombs on `museums and  civilians`. They got hit because the average bomb aimer couldn`t put a bomb  within 5 miles of his target. 
 <<With  today's technology such a scenario is unlikely to occur again since arm-chair  pilots sitting in lounge-like settings flying pilotless drones can go  in.>>  
 Thats  what they said in 1940. " the B-17 box formation was impregnable". Until the Me  109`s  drove head on straight through the formation, broke it up and then  picked off the individuals. 
 "The  Norden bombsight will enable us to put a bomb in a barrel from 20,000 ft"   This was a bit later on when the Norden sight was introduced but it couldn`t do  anything like that in combat conditions. In any case the lead bomb aimer ran the  sight and everyone else, spread over 10 miles of sky pickled their bombs when  they saw his drop and spread their bombs over ten miles of  territory.. 
 <<These  are people who swore allegiance to a mythical figure represented by remotely  located clerics who have indoctrinated their people to consider the pain of  civilian-killings and museum-razing as passports to pie-in-the-sky rewards for  being killed.>> 
  You  mean like being taught that there is a God by your local pastor and hoping to go  to Heaven when you die?  Maybe your local cleric wasn`t so specific about  the availability of virgins but the message is pretty much the same. All armies  fight in the belief that God is on their side. You have `In God we Trust` The  Germans have `Gott mit Uns` on their belt buckles. The  `Christian` Crusaders from Britain, France, Germany who, after the  seige  stood the entire population of Acre, men women and children, in line  and killed them all by mace or sword or axe or dagger. It took two days. They  all had The Holy Cross emblazoned on their surcoats and banners to `legalise`  their actions. 
 << such  as snake-oil salesmen who can dematerialize and transmit themselves in real time  into millions of people's homes at the same instant, assemble themselves again  and speak to the nation eye-to-eye in their living rooms. Television, for  example>> 
 Like  that Koran burning pastor down in Gainesville for instance.   
 <<We  allowed the enemy into our country when their only distinction was that they  were foreigners. And now those powers that keep us safe also prevent us from  solving the problem. >> 
 Dont  forget the very extensive pro nazi faction alread in  many countries  (including the UK) in the 1930.`s.  There were many solid citizens, not of  foreign antecedents, in both our countries who thought Hitler was the best  thing since sliced bread. Many of them changed their minds when the bombs began  to fall and yours changed  after Ed Murrow. We still interned, in terrible  conditions,  many loyal people with blameless records just because  they  had German names or Austrian grandparents. Once that paranoia gets  loose where does it stop? Remember the Macarthy witch hunts. Lives ruined for  the slimmest, or no reason. 
 <<It  won't be resolved with drones hitting military targets elsewhere. .  How's  that for bad options on the horizon of choices that will require a decision  sooner rather than later. >> 
 Pretty  miserable outlook isn`t it?  In the meantime, the sun is shining, there is  a blue sky with  scattered Cu. at 4000ft. I think I will get the plane  out. 
 Cheers 
 Pat    
  
 From:  owner-rocket-list-server(at)matronics.com  [mailto:owner-rocket-list-server(at)matronics.com] On Behalf Of Speedy11(at)aol.com
 Sent: Friday, September 10, 2010 11:11  PM
    [quote][b]
 
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