The Bombing of Auschwitz Should the Allies Have Attempted It? Edited by Michael J. Neufeld and Michael Berenbaum
October 2003 376 pages, 11 illustrations, 6 x9-1/8 Paper ISBN 0-7006-1280-7, $17.95 (t)
Did we "know" the gas chambers were there? Could we have destroyed them? Why didn't we bomb?
For decades, debate has raged over whether the Allies should have bombed the gas chambers at Auschwitz and the railroads leading to the camp, thereby saving thousands of lives and disrupting Nazi efforts to exterminate European Jews. Was it truly feasible to do so? Did failure to do so simply reflect a callous indifference to the plight of the Jews or was it a realistic assessment of a plan that could not succeed? In this volume, a number of eminent historians address and debate those very questions.
Published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, this is the first paperback edition of a book that has been widely hailed by critics and cited by Kirkus Reviews as "the definitive resource for understanding this deeply troubling episode in the twentieth century's greatest horror." Prominent scholars such as Sir Martin Gilbert, Walter Laqueur, Michael Berenbaum, Gerhard Weinberg, and Williamson Murray offer a diverse array of mutually supporting and competing perspectives on the subject. In the process, they shed important light on how much knowledge of Auschwitz Allied intelligence actually had and on what measures the Allies might have taken to halt the killing.
The book is also rich in documentary evidence—including the correspondence of Churchill, Roosevelt, Cordell Hull, Anthony Eden, and John McCloy—that reveals just how much these men knew about the situation and what they thought about its potential resolution. It also includes a selection of the most important documents and aerial reconnaissance photos from 1944 exploring the feasibility of an air strike.
Ultimately, these contributions show that the dilemma over Auschwitz was far more complex than criticisms of inaction would suggest. The Bombing of Auschwitz is an unusual volume that confronts life-and-death questions and addresses a matter of enduring interest for all readers of World War II and Holocaust history.
"An excellent study, objectively edited, with all points of view represented eloquently and substantively by major scholars of the subject."--William J. vanden Heuvel, Forward (Father of Katrina, editor of The Nation.)
"An intense book and one that deserves a wide readership. . . . It cuts to
the core of Allied policy on Jewish affairs during the war and on the changes that have transpired in attitudes toward the Holocaust since the war ended."--Jewish Book World
"The authors have assembled not only the best and most technical assessments but thoughtful reflections on how to judge the hard-pressed political leaders and generals of the time. The broader questions may be unanswerable, but they merit pondering nonetheless—particularly in an age that has seen its share of massacres uninterrupted by external intervention."--Foreign Affairs
MICHAEL J. NEUFELD, author of The Rocket and the Reich, is a curator and historian at the National Air and Space Museum. MICHAEL BERENBAUM, author of The World Must Know: The History of the Holocaust, is director of the Sigi Ziering Institute: Exploring the Ethical and Religious Implications of the Holocaust and adjunct professor of theology at the University of Judaism in Los Angeles. He served as director of the Research Institute of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.