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Posts Tagged ‘Adolf Hitler’

Revisionist thinking at its worst – “Neville Chamberlain was right”

by Mojambo ( 140 Comments › )
Filed under Germany, History, UK, World War II at October 3rd, 2013 - 7:00 am

As the guys from Powerline said “Why the left can never be trusted with power“. Britain and France would not be going to war over to protect Czechoslovakia but to protect themselves. The attempt to rehabilitate the reputation of Neville Chamberlain, one of the most pusillanimous and weak kneed prime minsters of Britain ever, is almost laughable. Hitler  taking the measure of Neville Chamberlain quite accurately, actually said “I saw my enemies in Munich, and they are worms.” The attempt to rehabilitate Chamberlain’s reputation I feel is part and parcel to rehabilitating the Jimmy Carter wing of the Democratic Party of which Barack Obama is the ultimate result and to denigrate the Ronald Reagan wing of the Republican Party or the Margaret Thatcher wing of the Tories  who believed in the concept of “peace thorough strength”. Churchill  said about Munich  – “England has been offered a choice between war and shame. She has chosen shame and will get war”. We know now that had Britain and France showed any sort of fight, a coup was planned to oust Hitler in Germany, not that the Wehrmacht generals had any sort of humanity but they themselves did not think that they were ready for war. As for Britain’s lack of preparedness you can thank the governments of Stanley Baldwin, Ramsey MacDonald and Neville Chamberlain.

hat tip – Powerline

by Nick Baumann

Seventy-five years ago, on Sept. 30, 1938, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain signed the Munich Pact, handing portions of Czechoslovakia to Adolf Hitler’s Germany. Chamberlain returned to Britain to popular acclaim, declaring that he had secured “peace for our time.” Today the prime minister is generally portrayed as a foolish man who was wrong to try to “appease” Hitler—a cautionary tale for any leader silly enough to prefer negotiation to confrontation.

But among historians, that view changed in the late 1950s, when the British government began making Chamberlain-era records available to researchers. “The result of this was the discovery of all sorts of factors that narrowed the options of the British government in general and narrowed the options of Neville Chamberlain in particular,” explains David Dutton, a British historian who wrote a recent biography of the prime minister. “The evidence was so overwhelming,” he says, that many historians came to believe that Chamberlain “couldn’t do anything other than what he did” at Munich. Over time, Dutton says, “the weight of the historiography began to shift to a much more sympathetic appreciation” of Chamberlain.

First, a look at the military situation. Most historians agree that the British army was not ready for war with Germany in September 1938. If war had broken out over the Czechoslovak crisis, Britain would only have been able to send two divisions to the continent—and ill-equipped divisions, at that. Between 1919 and March 1932, Britain had based its military planning on a “10-year rule,” which assumed Britain would face no major war in the next decade. Rearmament only began in 1934—and only on a limited basis. The British army, as it existed in September 1938, was simply not intended for continental warfare. Nor was the rearmament of the Navy or the Royal Air Force complete. […………]

All of this factored into what Chamberlain was hearing from his top military advisers. In March 1938 the British military chiefs of staff produced a report that concluded that Britain could not possibly stop Germany from taking Czechoslovakia. In general, British generals believed the military and the nation were not ready for war. On Sept. 20, 1938, then-Col.Hastings Ismay, secretary to the Committee of Imperial Defense, sent a note to Thomas Inskip, the minister for the coordination of defense, and Sir Horace Wilson, a civil servant.  [………]

Historians disagree whether the British military’s position relative to Germany was objectively better in 1939 than it was in 1938. The British military systematically overestimated German strength and underestimated its own in the lead-up to the Czechoslovak crisis, then shifted to a more optimistic tone in the months between Munich and the outbreak of war. Whatever the situation on the ground, it’s clear that the British military’s confidence in its abilities was far higher in 1939 than it was during the Munich crisis, especially because of the development of radar and the deployment of new fighter planes. In 1939, the military believed it was ready. In 1938, it didn’t.

Chamberlain’s diplomatic options were narrow as well. In World War I, Britain’s declaration of war had automatically brought Canada, Australia, and New Zealand into the fight. But the constitutional status of those Commonwealth countries had changed in the interwar period. According to the British archives, it was far from clear that Chamberlain could count on the backing of these countries if war broke out with Germany over Czechoslovakia. [………..] There is also plenty of evidence in the archives that the British government had near-total disdain for the stability and fighting abilities of France, its only likely major-power ally. The average duration of a Third Republic government in the 1930s was nine months. When war did break out, Chamberlain’s doubts about France’s staying power proved prescient.

Nor was the British public ready for war in September 1938. “It’s easy to forget that this is only 20 years after the end of the last war,” Dutton notes. British politicians knew that the electorate would never again willingly make sacrifices like the ones it had made in World War I. The Somme and Passchendaele had left scars that still stung, and few, if any, British leaders were prepared to ask their people to fight those battles again. Many people saw the work of the Luftwaffe in the Spanish Civil War and feared that aerial bombardment would ensure that a second war would be more devastating that the first.  […………]

If Britain were to go to war with Hitler’s Germany, most people didn’t want to do so over Czechoslovakia. “People spoke of Czechoslovakia as an artificial creation,” Dutton says. “The perception by the ’30s was there was a problem, it was soluble by negotiation, and we ought to try. It was not the sort of thing that would unite the country [as] an issue to go to war over.”

Nor is the modern view of Hitler reflective of how the Nazi dictator was seen in the late 1930s. Blitzkrieg and concentration camps were not yet part of the public imagination. The British had already been dealing with one fascist, Benito Mussolini, for years before Hitler took power, and top British diplomats and military thinkers saw Hitler the way they saw Mussolini—more bravado than substance. Moreover, many Europeans thought German complaints about the settlement of World War I were legitimate. We now see Hitler’s actions during the early and mid-1930s as part of an implacable march toward war. That was not the case at the time. German rearmament and the reoccupation of the Rhineland seemed inevitable, because keeping a big country like Germany disarmed for decades was unrealistic. Hitler’s merging of Austria and Germany seemed to be what many Austrians wanted. Even the demands for chunks of Czechoslovakia were seen, at the time, as not necessarily unreasonable—after all, many Germans lived in those areas.

[………]

To Chamberlain’s credit, his views changed as Hitler’s intentions became clearer. When Hitler took Prague and the Czech heartland in March 1939—his first invasion of an area that was obviously without deep German roots—Chamberlain said he feared it might represent an “attempt to dominate the world by force.” [………….]Then, on Sept. 3, some 11 months after Munich, he took his country to war.

Historians often find themselves moving against popular opinion. In the case of Chamberlain, though, the gap between public perception and the historical record serves a political purpose. The story we’re told about Munich is one about the futility and foolishness of searching for peace. In American political debates, the words “appeasement” and “Munich” are used to bludgeon those who argue against war. But every war is not World War II, and every dictator is not Hitler. Should we really fault Chamberlain for postponing a potentially disastrous fight that his military advisers cautioned against, his allies weren’t ready for, and his people didn’t support? [………..] Chamberlain’s story is of a man who fought for peace as long as possible, and went to war only when it was the last available option. It’s not such a bad epitaph.

Read the rest – Neville Chamberlain was right

Iranian President Rouhani’s Trophy Jew

by Mojambo ( 64 Comments › )
Filed under Ahmadinejad, Anti-semitism, History, Holocaust, Iran, Israel, World War II at October 1st, 2013 - 8:00 am

Throughout history there have always been “court Jews” whom  anti-Semites have used to “prove” that they were not really anti-Semitic. The most notorious in modern days were the vile Neturei Karta Jews who visit Iran and the have their photos taken with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and when he was alive, Yasser Arafat.  Iran’s current president  has brought over his very own Iranian Jew to show the world that he is not really a genocidal anti-Semite.

by Rafael Medoff

Iranian president Hassan Rouhani has announced that when he attends the United Nations General Assembly this week, he will be accompanied by the only Jewish member of Iran’s parliament. Jewish arm candy can be very useful in certain sticky political situations.

Rouhani’s immediate predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, was known for his claims that the Holocaust was a hoax. Hence NBC-TV’s Ann Curry recently asked the newly-elected Rouhani if he shares that view. He replied: “I’m not a historian, I’m a politician.” Rouhani is mistaken if he thinks that bringing MP Siamak Moreh Sedgh along to the UN will take the sting out of that reprehensible answer.

Adolf Hitler was perhaps the first dictator in modern times to utilize a Trophy Jew–ostensibly in pursuit of a trophy. In the months leading up to the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, numerous Americans called for a boycott of the games. One of their main arguments was that the Nazi regime had broken the rules of the International Olympics Committee by refusing to let Jewish athletes compete for places on the German team.

Hitler responded by inviting a German Jewish high jumper, Margaret Lambert, to try out. American opponents of the boycott made good use of the Lambert invitation to undercut the anti-Nazi boycott campaign. Lambert’s try-out jump of 1.60 metres tied the German high-jump record, but just days before the games opened –after the Nazis had fully exploited the p.r. benefits of her presence– she was informed by the authorities that she did not make the team because of her “mediocre performance.”

The Germans did not even have three women high jumpers to field, as did other Olympic teams. And one of their two jumpers later turned out to be a man who disguised himself as a woman on orders from Nazi officials. Ironically, the Hungarian athlete who won the high-jump in the 1936 games reached the same height Lambert did in the try-outs, 1.60.  [……….]

The leaders of the Soviet Union employed some Jewish arm candy of their own. In response to criticism of the persecution of Soviet Jews, the Kremlin sent Moscow’s chief rabbi, Yehuda Leib Levin, to the United States in June 1968 to announce that “all the restrictions on [Jewish] culture, work and similar matters were eliminated and the Jews have the same rights as other nationalities.” Accusations of Soviet antisemitism were all the creation of “bad tongues, evil tongues,” Rabbi Levin insisted.

Interestingly, Rabbi Levin’s visit was organized by the U.S. wing of Neturei Karta, a tiny extremist sect in Jerusalem that believes the State of Israel should not have been created. Evidently that was the only Jewish organization the Soviets could find that would sponsor Levin’s disinformation tour.

Some years later, one of Neturei Karta’s leaders, Rabbi Moshe Hirsch, filled the role of Jewish Prop for the Palestinian leadership. In 1994, Yasir Arafat appointed Hirsch as his “Minister for Jewish Affairs.” His main tasks included posing for photos holding hands with Arafat and giving interviews to Arab publications as the-Jew-who-denounces-Israel.  [………]

Hirsch was a bizarre figure who voluntarily chose to give aid and comfort to those who had devoted their lives to trying to destroy Israel. No doubt psychiatrists could have a field day deciphering his motives.

The other Trophy Jews, by contrast, were essentially prisoners. Margaret Lambert had to reckon with the likelihood that the Nazis would retaliate against her family if she refused to compete for the German Olympic team. [……….]Rabbi Levin, of course, went much further than Ms. Lambert, by becoming a public apologist for the Soviet regime, but most American Jews likely recognized that he was a captive mouthpiece for Soviet propaganda.

The Jewish MP whom Iranian president Rouhani is bringing to New York, Siamak Moreh Sedgh, seems to be cut from the same cloth as the late Moscow rabbi. In interviews with the international news media, Moreh Sedgh has accused Israel of “anti-human behavior” and denied that there is, or ever has been, antisemitism in Iran. He has not explained why it is that 90% of Iran’s Jews have chosen to flee the country since 1979.

If President Rouhani wants to persuade Americans that his recent election represents a genuine change of attitude in Tehran, he should respect our intelligence and stop trying to “prove” Iran is tolerant by trotting out a captive Jewish apologist for his regime. The American public will not be so easily fooled.

Read the rest – Rouhani’s Jewish arm candy

Teapot Looks Like Hitler? I Don’t Think So.

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 128 Comments › )
Filed under Art, Humor, Nazism, OOT, Satire at May 31st, 2013 - 7:00 pm

You’ve probably seen/heard the story by now. There’s a JC Penney billboard advertisement on the 405 freeway near Culver City California that’s created some controversy. Apparently some southbound commuters in bumper-to-bumper traffic are getting way too many fumes in their noggins, and decided that an image of a teapot looks EXACTLY like Adolf Hitler.

I happened to be in the Culver City area last week, saw the billboard in question. I thought little of it, but after all the hoopla I shot this pic today:

JC Perney Billboard 405 S

Doesn’t look much like Hitler to me (maybe a bit like Charles Johnson circa 2004) but apparently the good folks at Breitbart.com bought into it as well.

Hitler Tea Kettle Sells Out

Hitler, Chaplin, Johnson – I dunno, Babs, but I do know this.
It’s time for a Friday Edition of The Overnight Open Thread.

American ambassadors have gone from untouchable to dead

by Mojambo ( 148 Comments › )
Filed under History, Libya, World War II at May 14th, 2013 - 4:00 pm

An attack on an American Ambassador ought to be considered an attack on an American president and treated as an act of war.

by Shmuley Boteach

I just finished one of the best books I’ve read in a long time: In the Garden of Beasts by Erik Larson. The book tells the story of William Dodd, President Roosevelt’s first ambassador to Hitler, and chronicles the slow descent of Germany into Nazi tyranny. One of the most striking features of the narrative is the fear that slowly descends on the German populace as they become terrified of expressing an opinion about Hitler and his police state, even in the company of close family and friends.

Yet Dodd and his family were utterly immune to such fear. Though they lived in a home that was owned by a Jewish banker; regularly hosted journalists who wrote critically of Hitler; drove by the home of Franz von Papen – the deputy chancellor – to show their support even after he had been placed under house arrest by Hitler for his Marburg speech of June, 1934; though Dodd openly snubbed Hitler every year by refusing to attend the Nazi Nuremberg rally where Hitler was celebrated as a god, Dodd never had anything to fear.

He did not have to worry that the SA would ransack his Berlin home in the middle of the night. He did not have to fear that his daughter Martha, who even had an affair with Gestapo head Rudolf Diels, would be summarily shot for her increasing disillusionment with Hitler’s regime. […….] And he did not have fear that roaming bands of Nazi thugs would attack him for his protests to the German foreign minister against unprovoked attacks that threatened the lives of Americans.

And why didn’t he fear? Because even a monster as evil as Hitler, arguably the most dangerous man that ever lived, wasn’t going to mess with the American ambassador.

In fact, one of the stories told in the book is of the day Dodd took a walk with French ambassador André François-Poncet in the Tiergarten, when the latter told him he would not be surprised if he were shot in the street by the SS. Dodd was astonished. It had never occurred to him to worry; he was the American ambassador.

Indeed, Hitler and the Nazis never harassed Western ambassadors.

It therefore matters that just 80 years later a bunch of terrorist thugs think they can murder an American ambassador, in full sight of the world, without consequence.

American diplomatic staff were once the safest people in the world, representatives of a superpower that would rain hell from the skies should you touch one.  [……]

The revelations coming out of the Congressional hearings on Benghazi, Libya – such as that the Obama State Department watered down public statements on the attack, cleansing them of any mention of al-Qaida and terrorism – are a travesty and demonstrate a lack of moral will to call evil by its proper name.

ABC News and Fox News reported this past Friday that the department’s talking points were revised fully 12 times to purge them of any mention of terrorism. State Department spokesman Victoria Nuland asked the CIA to remove mention of their own security warnings about Benghazi. According to ABC News the original paragraph read, “The Agency has produced numerous pieces on the threat of extremists linked to al-Qaida in Benghazi and eastern Libya. [……]

We cannot rule out [that] individuals [have] previously surveilled… US facilities, also contributing to the efficacy of the attacks.”

But Nuland was concerned that the line “could be abused by members [of Congress] to beat up the State Department for not paying attention to warnings, so why would we want to feed that, either?” I have earlier written about how ambassador Susan Rice was an utterly inappropriate choice as secretary of state based on her efforts to disassociate the word “genocide” from the Rwandan mass slaughters of 1994 so as not to commit the Clinton administration to intervention. In a 2001 article published in The Atlantic, Samantha Power, author of the Pulitzer-Prize winning A Problem of Hell and arguably the world’s foremost voice against genocide, who currently serves on the National Security Council as an aide to President Obama, referred to Ambassador Susan Rice and her colleagues in the Clinton administration as “Bystanders to Genocide.”

[……..]

Worse, the attempt to whitewash the Benghazi attacks and describe them merely as “a protest that turned violent” trivializes the death of ambassador Chris Stevens and the three Americans murdered with him, and threatens to cheapen the life of every American diplomat currently serving in a dangerous post.

We need to accept that the fear the United States once instilled in those with evil intent against our diplomatic staff has worn thin and the only way to reintroduce that fear is to understand fully what happened in Benghazi, and to rain fire on the culprits so that this never happens again

Read he rest – American ambassadors: from untouchable to dead