by Tom Goodrich
As we’ve come to appreciate with each passing year, World War Two was the most evil manifestation in human history. No other conflict even comes close in matching that war for its vast and unspeakable crimes. Mass murder of surrendering soldiers, mass starvation of helpless civilians, mass rape of women and children, assembly-line style torture in the tens of thousands, uprooting and expulsion of millions to certain death, the deliberate destruction of ancient cultures—these atrocities and many more add annually to World War Two’s menu of beastly war crimes.
Also, with each passing year, it becomes clearer and clearer that virtually all the major crimes of the Second World War were committed by the Allied powers. Additionally, almost all these crimes took place toward the end of the war. Why is this? Why were these terrible atrocities not only committed by the victors but why did almost all occur at the end of the war? Simple. Late in the war the Allies knew they would win and they thus knew that there was little risk of war crimes trials. The victors—with the Americans in the lead—knew that they could unleash their sadism against a hated, helpless enemy with utter impunity, and they did.
The following is a description of just one such major war crime as listed above. The account comes from my recent book, Summer, 1945: Germany, Japan and the Harvest of Hate. To this day, relatively little is actually known of this great atrocity. And this, of course, is because war criminals not only plan their crimes expertly, but they cover them up expertly, as well.
______ 卐 ______
Note of the Editor: The sample chapter can already be read on Counter-Currents Publishing, here.
2 replies on “Summer, 1945”
The war crimes and their trials are the most disgusting concepts in the history of humanity. You cannot commit crimes against your enemy during the war.
The same way as it’s impossible to rape your wife. Physically, logically, illogically impossible.
The most you can do in war is repay your enemy in kind, and it isn’t insane to overcompensate said kindness.
What most people will say to your comment, however, is “You can’t be saying that, are you insane? It’s 2018, man!!”