by Dr. Rafael Medoff
Arutz Sheva
September 4, 2003
The Israeli planes that flew over Auschwitz this week are a tragic reminder
that Allied planes also flew over the notorious Nazi death camp - but failed to
bomb the gas chambers and crematoria where an estimated 1.5-million Jews were
murdered.
The Israeli planes were over Poland this past Thursday, September 4, to take
part in an international celebration of the 85th anniversary of the creation
of the Polish Air Force. Recognizing the symbolic significance of their
presence, the Israeli Air Force arranged to have three of its fighter jets stage a
special fly-over above the site of the Auschwitz death camp.
The event has evoked comments about how the Holocaust might have been averted
if Arab and British opposition had not prevented the creation of a Jewish
State in the 1930s. True enough.
But the sight of Israeli planes flying over Auschwitz should also cause us to
ask why the Allied planes that flew over Auschwitz in 1944 and could have
bombed the infamous gas chambers, instead bombed only the adjacent oil factories.
The answer is that the Roosevelt administration knew about the mass murder of
Jews in Auschwitz, but did not order U.S. planes to bomb the gas chambers,
because saving Jews would have resulted in more pressure to let the refugees
come to the United States.
This, despite the fact that many more Jewish refugees could have been
admitted to the U.S. even within the strict limits of the existing immigration
quotas. Those quotas were way under-filled, because U.S. immigration officials
created extra bureaucratic obstacles to keep out all but a handful of refugees.
By 1944, the Roosevelt administration even had detailed aerial reconnaissance
photographs of Auschwitz, showing the mass-murder machinery - photos that
were taken because the War Department was interested in bombing the German oil
factories in the region.
On August 20, 1944, 127 American ‘Flying Fortress’ bombers dropped more than
1300 bombs on German factories less than five miles from the gas chambers; on
September 13, 96 American ‘Liberator’ bombers hit the factories again - and
stray bombs accidentally struck an SS barracks and the railway line leading
into the death camp. There were many other such bombing raids on German
industrial sites in that region during the autumn of 1944 and the winter of 1944-1945,
but the gas chambers and crematoria remained untouched.
In the new film They Looked Away (directed by Stuart Erdheim; narrated by
Mike Wallace), Allied pilots who took part in those raids describe, in chilling
detail, how they could have easily struck the murder facilities, but were never
instructed to do so.
In his famous memoir, Night, Elie Wiesel recalled how he and other Auschwitz
prisoners reacted when the bombers struck: “We were not afraid. And yet, if a
bomb had fallen on the blocks [the prisoners’ barracks], it alone would have
claimed hundreds of victims on the spot. But we were no longer afraid of death;
at any rate, not of that death. Every bomb that exploded filled us with joy
and gave us new confidence in life. The raid lasted over an hour. If it could
only have lasted ten times ten hours!”
In Washington, a number of Jewish organizations privately urged the Roosevelt
administration to bomb the gas chambers. Assistant Secretary of War John
McCloy rebuffed the requests on the grounds that they would divert resources that
were “essential” to Allied military operations in Europe. But the fact is
that during World War II, American military resources were repeatedly diverted
for reasons far less important than the saving of human lives. The same John
McCloy who refused to divert a few bombs to hit the gas chambers later personally
intervened to divert American bombers from striking the German city of
Rothenburg, because he feared for the safety of the city’s famous medieval
architecture. Similarly, the State Department, which opposed any U.S. government action
to rescue Jews from Hitler, in 1943 established a special government
commission “for the protection and salvage of artistic and historic monuments in
Europe.” And General George Patton even diverted U.S. troops to rescue 150 prized
Lipizzaner horses in Austria in April 1945.
Perhaps the Zionist leader Rabbi Meyer Berlin was not so far off the mark
when he told U.S. Senator Robert Wagner in early 1943: “If horses were being
slaughtered as are the Jews of Poland, there would by now be a loud demand for
organized action against such cruelty to animals. Somehow, when it concerns Jews,
everybody remains silent.”
This entry was posted
on Monday, September 8th, 2003 and is filed under opinion.