By Rich Lowry
Wednesday, September 11, 2024
You might have heard that Tucker Carlson had a
Nazi-sympathizing podcaster on his show the other day.
The friendly — indeed, admiring — interview has
engendered a lot of commentary, but I’d like to delve into one thing in
particular: the podcaster Darryl Cooper’s harsh condemnation of the Allied
bombing campaign in World War II.
Although Cooper is very understanding of how it is
(through unfortunate happenstance, apparently) that the Nazis came to wage a
war of annihilation in the East, he’s full of moral indignation about the
bombing of German cities.
Cooper calls it “rank terrorism,” and “the greatest scale
of terrorist attacks you’ve ever seen in world history.” In addition, Winston
Churchill’s launching a bombing campaign while waiting for help either via the
Soviet Union or the United States was “a craven, ugly way to fight a war.”
Throughout this part of the discussion, Carlson
repeatedly asked very earnestly what Churchill was trying to accomplish, as if
this were some mystery to be unlocked by a random podcaster.
Cooper’s view is that Churchill sought to deny Hitler his
rightful victory after the Nazi conquest of France, and because “all he had
were bombers,” he did it via the bombing campaign that Cooper finds so
objectionable.
Well, yeah. What else was Churchill supposed to do?
If Cooper has stupefyingly clownish views, it’s still
worth dwelling on this matter because the critique of the Allied bombing
campaign isn’t just an obsession of right-wing revisionists (David Irving wrote
a book on Dresden); mainstream critics focus on it, as well.
(I rely on a number of historians in what follows but
particularly the brilliant Andrew Roberts and his book The Storm of War: A
New History of the Second World War.)
First of all, it should be noted — although it doesn’t
justify anything they did — that the Allies weren’t the first or only ones to
bomb cities.
The Nazis bombed Warsaw and Rotterdam, with great effect,
as part of their blitzkrieg campaigns.
After the Nazis hit and burned the British city of
Coventry in November 1940, flattening or damaging half of the homes, they came
up with the neologism coventrieren to denote the destruction of a city.
In April 1941, they launched Operation Punishment to
avenge an anti-Nazi coup in Yugoslavia. They hit central Belgrade, which “had
no apparent military objective,” as this account from RFE/RL notes. “The air raid,” it
continues, “destroyed much of the center of the capital, killed thousands of
people, and wiped out much of the published cultural heritage of Serbia when
the National Library burned to the ground.”
The Battle of Britain, needless to say, was a campaign to
subdue England from the air. If the Nazis had succeeded in destroying the Royal
Air Force, they would have launched an invasion to conquer England. It didn’t
work, but not for lack of trying. After the British launched small-scale raids
on Berlin, Hitler switched tactics from targeting British air facilities
and planes to directly hitting London in the Blitz.
We have no word from Cooper about whether he considers
the Blitz to have been honorable, but it diverted the Nazis from what should
have been the main effort — continuing to target the Royal Air Force — and was
ineffectual because the Nazis lacked the quantity and quality of bombers
necessary to pull it off.
This gets to Cooper’s point of Churchill’s having only
bombers. It’s not true because Churchill also had fighters — the gloriously
effective Spitfires foremost among them — and a huge navy. This constellation
of forces wasn’t a cowardly tack but a sensible strategic choice for a
relatively small island nation.
As it happens, Hitler couldn’t bring Britain to heel
because he didn’t have the air or naval forces for the job. Thus, he lost both
the Battle of Britain and the Battle of the Atlantic — and ultimately the war.
Cooper’s suggestion that ground battle is less craven and
more manly than other forms of conflict is absurd. Atrocities aside, was the
war in the East edifying? Were Stalingrad and Kursk anything other than
complete horrors?
Given the choice, any rational person would rather fight
World War II on the British and U.S. model that emphasizes air and sea power
and out-produces our enemies to dust rather than the German or Soviet model of
largely grinding it out on the ground in tremendously destructive and costly
campaigns of attrition. (The German Blitzkrieg victories at the outset and
initial, although illusory, successes in Barbarossa were exceptions.)
All that said, it’s difficult to exaggerate the scale of
the Allied air campaign. Bomber Command dropped nearly a million tons of bombs.
We devastated dozens and dozens of German cities.
What was the alternative?
Early on, the British could have told their own people
and the Americans, Sorry, we are just going to sit tight for now. We have no
means to hit Nazi Germany that meet our exacting moral standards, so we will
wait until something comes up.
This would have been intolerable as long as Britain
didn’t opt for Cooper’s preference of capitulating to Hitler. (Also, of course,
the Soviets wouldn’t have been appreciative if, unable and unwilling to launch
a premature invasion of France, we refused even to bomb Nazi Germany.)
When it was discovered through hard experience that
daylight raids were too costly, the British switched to nighttime raids in
short order. These weren’t particularly accurate and turned into efforts to
take out industrial centers and their environs in “area bombing.” The idea was
to collapse German morale and to disrupt and deny housing to the workforce that
the Nazis depended on for their war production.
When the U.S. joined the war, we focused on daylight
raids to try to target specific war-related industries. As Andrew Roberts
points out, though, since such facilities were located in heavily populated
areas and bombing lacked accuracy, the distinction between precision and area
bombing was blurry. He quotes a U.S. Air Force officer who observed after the
war, “The RAF carried out precision attacks on area targets, while the USAAF
carried out area attacks on precision targets.”
Throughout the war, we engaged in operations both to take
out specific German industries — for instance, fighter production in the run-up
to D-Day — and to target population centers to try to collapse German morale,
or, as the head of the RAF, Bomber Harris, put it, disrupt “civilized community
life throughout Germany.”
As noted above, Dresden has long been particularly
controversial. In February 1945, hundreds of Allied bombers hit the city in
waves. They created a massive, hurricane-like firestorm that incinerated all in
its path. It suffocated people by consuming all the oxygen, reached into
underground tunnels, and boiled alive people who sought safety in an enormous
water tank. In all, 13 square miles of the city were leveled, and roughly
20,000 died, disproportionately women, children, and the elderly.
It was all the worse because Nazi authorities neglected
basic safety measures such as shelters and functioning sirens.
There is no minimizing the horror. Yet, in the judgment
of Frederick Taylor, the top authority on the raid, the city constituted “by
the standards of the time a legitimate military target.”
The Russians wanted us to disrupt German troop movements
and pushed at Yalta for us to hit Dresden.
Roberts writes, “As a nodal point for communications,
with its railway marshaling yards, and conglomeration of war industries — its
pre-war industry based on porcelain, typewriters and cameras had been converted
into an extensive network of armaments workshops, particularly in the vital
optics, electronics and communications fields — the city was always going to be
in danger once long-range penetration by bombers with good fighter escort was
possible.”
Bomber Harris put it with his usual lack of delicacy:
“Dresden was a mass of munition works, an intact government center and a key
transportation center. It is now none of those things.”
The upshot is that, overall, the campaign from the air
worked. As Williamson Murray writes, “Military historians have attempted to
minimize the contribution the air war made to the defeat of Nazi Germany. In
actuality, it played one of the most important roles in the eventual defeat of
the Germans and the Japanese.”
Cathal Nolan, in his compelling book The Allure of
Battle, similarly concludes: “By 1945 the bombers would destroy Germany’s
transportation systems and demolish most vital war industries, especially oil
supply and refining, and effectively end fighter production. Then Allied and
Soviet tactical airpower pinned the last German armies to the ground,
forbidding movement and paralyzing local and operation reactions. Neither
Germany nor Japan could by the end of their respective wars move military
supplies, complete production or deploy weapons and divisions as they wanted,
even inside their homelands.”
The Nazis were forced to divert fighters to the home
front rather than deploy them in support of their operations on the Eastern
front. Roberts points out that 70 percent of all German fighter aircraft were
deployed in the West as of the spring of 1943. The same was true of
antiaircraft guns, including the fearsome 88 mm. Manpower was diverted, too, to
aerial defense.
We never stopped German arms production, but its upward
trajectory was checked in the spring of 1943.
The British assault on the Ruhr in the spring of that
year made itself felt. As Williamson Murray notes, coal and steel production
dropped significantly in the aftermath. In the second half of 1943, American
targeting of German aircraft-production facilities had a similar effect.
According to Murray, the number of new and reconditioned Fw 190s and Bf 109s
hit 1,263 in July and dropped to 687 in December.
Murray notes, too, how German arms production became
tilted toward producing the aircraft and antiaircraft systems necessary to try
to counter the bombing campaign, as well as V1 and V2 rockets to hit back at
Britain; collectively, these efforts constituted about 60 percent of the war
economy.
To return to Cooper’s point that this was all “craven”:
Prior to establishing air superiority, the Allies took enormous losses in the
air and could only prosecute the campaign thanks to the sacrificial bravery of
countless airmen. Roughly 44 percent of Bomber Command’s aircrew was killed
during the course of the war.
The logic of total war meant that every piece of Nazi
matériel that we didn’t destroy from the air, or stop from being produced in
the first place, would have to be taken out by some other bloody means of
combat. And every day that the conflict was extended meant more unspeakable
cruelty and suffering for all involved, from Allied servicemen to German
civilians and obviously, not least, the Jews who hadn’t yet been murdered in
the Nazi genocide.
The impulse to bring the war to as hasty a conclusion as
possible, with B-17s and Lancasters making their contribution, was obviously
the correct one.
There are certainly fair criticisms of the bombing
campaign, and reasonable people can differ on whether and how it should have
been calibrated. But the root-and-branch rejection of it that Darryl Cooper
represents probably implicates a much more fundamental question — whose side
are you on?
No comments:
Post a Comment