War on Civilians
The New Stürmer
- Volume 5If you have views regarding this article please feel free to contact me at:
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Dear kindred and fellow Aryans
Quoting Winston Churchill: "Some are curable, others killable"
Prior to September 1, 1939 wars were fought between nations according to rules. There is at least one exception to this assertion, England’s, City of London’s, war on the Boers in South Africa. In this war Winston Churchill, Jewish through his mother, was a journalist --- NOT a fighter. He reported about the bravery of English soldiers fighting the Boers, but never wrote about the English using Boer children and women as shields when firing on Boer soldiers. The Boer war was also the first war where civilians were sent to concentration camps --- and England used such camps.
By October 18, 1907, most countries in the world signed the "Regulations respecting the laws and customs of war on land". These regulations laid out rules for wars between rival countries. The intentions for the regulation were to secure civilians from being exposed to acts from their belligerents, . For years countries tried to agree on regulations covering war at sea, but England, surrounded by water, did not want to make the necessary concessions for any regulations that could be agreed upon.
After WI the League of Nations tried to get it’s member countries to make an agreement covering a future war using aeroplanes. After many negotiations it was approved that Industrial factories and Military fields could be attacked from the air, but not civilians. These facts had been agreed to.
The first air attack of WWII
As WWII started civilians would be secured against attacks from aeroplanes. But the member countries never had any real intentions in keeping such an agreement. The first air attacks of WWII were carried out by UK on September 4, 1939. Ten Bristol Blendheim aeroplanes dropped bombs over Wilhelmshaven, a German naval base. (Ludwig Peters "Volkslexikon Drittes Reiches", Grabert Verlag 1998, page 94)
Germany retaliated with an aero attack on September 13, 1939 on Warsaw. Bombs were dropped to force the defenders of Warsaw to capitulate. In both these attacks only military targets were hit. (Ludwig Peters "Volkslexikon Drittes Reiches", Grabert Verlag 1998, page 94)
First attack targeting Civilians
The first air attack on civilians happened as RAF bombed Moenchengladbach in Germany on May 11, 1940 . This was one day after Churchill had been installed as British Prime Minister. Then, on May 14, 1940 Germany attacked Rotterdam, Holland. On May 17, 1940 Churchill declared total war on Germany. (Ludwig Peters "Volkslexikon Drittes Reiches", Grabert Verlag 1998, page 94)
On August 1, 1940 Hitler, Weisung Nr 17, declared Germany an air war on England. The English army Expedition Corps, had been sent home with their tails between their legs. After that, the war changed dramatic. (Ludwig Peters "Volkslexikon Drittes Reiches", Grabert Verlag 1998, page 94)
Civilians as targets
During the night of the 16th of May 1943, nearly 300,000 bombs, most of them firebombs, were dropped over Barmen, a part of the town of Wuppertal. Although the people had heard air planes flying above, they felt safe since this part of the town had no military bases or industry, and prior to May 15, 1943, had not experienced any bombing. (Joerg Fredrich, Der Brand (The Fire), Propylaeen Verlag, 2003).
A young couple had been celebrating their wedding with friends in a small house near the outskirts of the forest. They were dancing as the sirens signaled an air attack. The visitors began to hurry home. Some had just reached their homes as phosphorous bombs struck. Try to picture yourself in the cellar of your house as it is burning, with five children, you elderly sick mother-in-law; the smell of stench reaching you is a mixture of burning phosphor, cattle on fire, and earth. You can hear the terrible sounds of walls tumbling down and people trapped in burning ruins as you look out from the small cellar windows and see a mass of red and yellow flames of fire blazing all around you. The next day people were found, in their gala dressing, laying in the street partly burned to ashes. It is impossible to give a full description of the terror that the air attacks had given the civilians. For this account, I refer the book by the German historian Joerg Fredrich, Der Brand (The Fire). After the air raid was over, the Wupppertal Times wrote: "Never before has a German industrial town been wiped from the face of the earth."
The Firebombs
Before the war technicians in the British Air Ministry worked on producing firebombs. The bombs were too heavy and the explosion did not do as much damage as much as the ministry wanted. Fire engineers were brought in to work on a new bomb. With the experience of these engineers, knowing how fire starts and spreads, the production of a more powerful fire bomb got on a new track with the use of phosphorous. These bombs killed millions of Hausfraus, elderly men and children, besides wounding soldiers in hospitals.
British bombing strategy
This strategy was through a bombing to scare the living daylights out of every German, including children. The first city to be bombed with firebombs was Mannheim, which was hit in 1940. There was no protection from the firebombs. In Dresden alone 600.000 were killed. This attack was a slaughter, for Germany had declared Dresden a hospital city, with no defense. Children were killed by the tens of thousands even in the shelters, while the phosphorous bomb burned the city to the ground. From the city of Dresden had come the world's most beautiful china and porcelain.
As badly as Germany was hit, it was the first European country to clean up and rebuild after the war. Because of the strong and determined minds if the German people, and because they lived in harmonious communities they survived and began rebuilding their homes and all the rubble cleared away.
To bring war on to civilians before WWII was unthinkable in civilized countries. To understand why war was brought on, one must remember who started it---Winston Churchill, the Prime Minister of England approved the most savage bombing of beautiful ancient German towns and cities which took place. We must also remember that it was the President in USA---Franklin D Roosevelt, who joined with Churchill when he involved his own country into an unthinkable war. One of Churchill’s advisor was Lord Beaverbrook, a Jew who owned the newspaper that announced on March 24, 1933, the declaration of war on Germany.
German firebombs
Germany also had firebombs, but they were not particularly developed for war. Why? I do not know. I think Hitler was hoping for a kind of chivalrous war. Do I have proof of Hitler’s views? I can only refer to Otto Skorzeny's book regarding the building of a nuclear bomb: "Meine Kommandounternehmen" (My Commando Adventures).
Bombs dropped over Germany through out the war
A total of 2,767,000 bombs were dropped over Germany during WWII, and more then 4 million German civilians, including children and women, died as a consequence. How many burned to death can not be said.
The last aero attacks during WWII
US air force dropped two nuclear bombs over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, respectively, on August 6th and 8th in 1945, killing nearly 200,000 civilians.
After WWII the bombing of civilians became ordinary
There are many examples after WWII of USA and England attacking civilians when fighting wars. A young Vietnamese girl had her back severely damaged by napalm after air attacks by the defenders of supposedly democracy. I recall pictures of children being born even today with defects in Vietnam, caused by their mother or father exposed to agent orange during the Vietnam war. As late as the present time, I recall children being killed by nonexplosive cluster bombers, left, while looking for food parcels in Afghanistan. And, lastly, children playing in Iraq were not told that what they played with were parts of dirty bombs.
Why is there not a loud scream of inhuman treatment after foot soldiers used dirty bombs in Iraq? I wonder what the world Jewish media would say if Palestinians had dropped dirty bombs in a Jewish village. Of course, they would require a retaliation more deadly than what they are doing to the Palestinians after a suicide bomber, or children throwing sticks and stones at their tanks. I can not recall having seen any Jewish children being bombed with nuclear bombs, napalm, agent orange or dying from playing with cluster bombs or parts of Palestinian dirty bombs. When will it all end?
In the face of Chutzpah, Jewish audacity and outright lies, resistance must be a national duty.
Heil og sael
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