Chief Stinkwort wrote::CLAP:
Spot on.
Britain could have bombed the railway lines that led to the Nazi death camps and saved millions of lives.
It chose to unleash a wave of bombing terror on civilians instead.
I can understand Moore's bitterness, but this is not an excuse for his Little England bigotry, which ATEOTD is merely a mirror image of some of the worst nationalistic ravings of the Nazis themselves. Moore's comments are also an insult to hundreds of thousands of Germans who opposed Hitler and paid for that with their lives.
If his fiancee had been killed by a greengrocer in 1940 would he now be waging war on employees of Tesco and Asda?
Britain could not have 'bombed the railway lines'. Accurate bombing was all but impossible, hence the use of huge scale carpet bombing. Even with a direct hit the largest bomb would only remove a few metres of a section of track and an amount of soil. That could be replaced and fixed in a day. Bombing the railway infrastructure as part of a wider campaign was effective, but as a standalone tactic? Pointless.
Britain only chose to attack Germany cities as a retaliatory tactic following the (accidental) bombing of London in 1940. However, things soon deteriorated into a tit-for-tat campaign and cities became fair game, even though figures in both governments questioned the tactic throughout. In the wider scale of things, you cannot ignore the fact Germany was inflicting massive death and suffering in Europe and threatened the same of Britain. Britain was compelled to go on the offensive and show aggression in the name of destroying Germany, and if that meant playing dirty then so be it.
21st Century sensitivities have no real place in judging WW2 issues of morality.
billypop wrote:Just to be pedantic, I am sure that Germany didn't declare war on the British Empire. I am pretty sure we claimed we declared war on Germany to pprotect the independence of Poland.
Didn't achieve that, did we?
Major fail.
A completely moot point. Poland was nothing more than the centre of an attempt to get tough with Hitler, who admired and even feared the British, envied the British Empire and knew they would be a formidable enemy. Even Chamberlain knew Hitler wouldn't stop unless opposed. Given the events on the continent, war was inevitable.
Seriously, was there any other option?
As for Patrick Moore, if someone can't understand why the death of his clearly much-loved fiancee at the hands of an unwanted enemy he was already fighting and losing friends to, they're an idiot. I knew old fellas who despised Germans and Japanese for the same reasons MF gave. Many of the older generations felt this way, and quite understandably.
Allow him his views. While they have little place in today's society, they are entirely relevant to his personal experiences.