Bombing of Dresden in World War II
The Bombing of Dresden by the British Royal Air Force (RAF) and United States Army Air Force (USAAF) between 13 February and 15 February 1945 were war crimes committed by the Allies of World War II. In four raids, 1,300 heavy bombers dropped more than 3,900 tons of high-explosive bombs and incendiary devices on the city, the Baroque capital of the German state of Saxony. The resulting firestorm destroyed 39 square kilometres (15 sq mi) of the city centre. [1]
Between 7 October 1944 and 17 April 1945 Dresden was bombed by an estimated 2,500 bombers. During the evening of February 13 an 14, 1945, Dresden was attacked by 772 English and 311 American bombers. According to calculations by the British historian David Irving the total amount of bombs dropped on Dresden was 650,000 tons (fire bombs). The Allies used the first generation of incendiary petroleum bombs which caused massive fire storms. The fires were so intense people standing in the street was sucked into the burning buildings.
With accounts of up to 350,000 victims, the bombing of Dresden would be the single most devastating war crime[2] atrocity of World War II.
History
War crime
2,640 tons of bombs were dropped on Dresden during the first wave, two thirds of which were incendiary bombs. A firestorm erupted in an area eight miles square reaching temperatures of 1,500 degrees centigrade engulfing the narrow, medieval streets. Ninety per cent of buildings within the city centre were destroyed, including over twenty hospitals. Smoke rose up to 15,000 feet.
With only minimal anti-aircraft guns, few German troops, and limited war-related industry, Dresden was still deemed a legitimate target – for Arthur ‘Bomber’ Harris’s intention was not so much military but ‘moral bombing’, to demoralise the civilian population and thereby shorten the war (despite evidence during the Blitz that instead of demoralising civilians, bombing only hardened resolve).
The strategic objective of bombing Dresden and other cities in eastern Germany was, as agreed at the Anglo-American Yalta Conference, to help alleviate the pressures on Soviet forces advancing into Germany on the Eastern Front.
The Allied commanders studied aerial photographs of German cities and specifically targeted areas of heavy residential populations. His aim, said Harris, was to make the ‘rubble bounce’ not just in Dresden but in every German city.
The Allies knew that a bomb shelter or a cellar would only provide protection for about three hours before becoming unbearably hot and so forcing the civilians back outside. Thus a second wave of bombs was dropped precisely three hours after the first batch – again to maximise the number of casualties. Many bombs were adapted so that they would explode hours after falling – the idea to cause maximum casualties against civilians who were trying to remove the devices. Air bombs were dropped with the intention of blowing off roof tiles, allowing incendiary bombs to fall unimpeded into the interior of buildings, and to blow out windows to allow greater ventilation to stoke the flames.
People died from the lack of oxygen as the firestorm () sucked the air out of the atmosphere. One witness described seeing people suddenly falling dead as if shot but, as she found later, they were dropping dead from the lack of oxygen. Many unfortunates jumped into a huge water tank hoping to escape the suffocating heat, only to find the water inside was boiling.
Although initially enthusiastic about the bombing raids, Churchill tried to distance himself and, following Dresden, questioned Harris’s methods of
- ‘bombing German cities simply for the sake of increasing the terror … The destruction of Dresden remains a serious query against the conduct of Allied bombing … I feel the need for more precise concentration upon military objectives.’
Bomber Harris (also known as "Butcher" Harris within the RAF) responded angrily that the attacks had been necessary in order to hasten the German surrender and diminish further allied casualties.
Fatalities and Destruction
Today German fascists estimate the number of victims between 250,000 and 350,000.[3] Eberhard Matthes a lieutenant colonel and General Staff Officer in Dresden at the time of the bombing was one of those responsible for determining the number of victims. According to his data 35,000 corpses were "totally identified", 50,000 were "partially identified" and 168,000 corpses "could no longer be identified." In total Matthes counted 253,000 dead. The present "German" government and apologists for Allied war crimes present a much lower death toll. The most widely held estimate of the number of fatalities comes from British historian Frederick Taylor. He estimated the death toll to be between 25,000 and 35,000.
During the war Dresden was a communications hub in the middle Germany. At the time of the bombing around one million inhabitants--largely refugees--were gathered in the city. It is more than likely the figure of 35,000 is too low. In February 1945, the city’s population had temporarily been inflated by a huge influx of German refugees, perhaps up to 350,000, fleeing the Soviet advance sixty miles away to the east.
According to a police report prepared shortly after the bombing: 12 000 homes, 24 banks, 26 insurance buildings, 31 department stores, 647 shops, 2 market halls, 31 large hotels, 26 public buildings, 63 administrative buildings, 3 theaters, 18 cinemas, 11 churches, 6 Chapels, 5 cultural-historical buildings, 19 hospitals, 39 schools, 5 consulates, 1 zoo, 1 water facility , 1 railway station, 19 postal buildings, 4 tram buildings, 19 ships and barges were destroyed.
The report also said that the Wehrmacht's command post in Tauschenbergska palace and 19 military hospitals and a number of military buildings of lesser importance have been destroyed. Almost 200 small factories were damaged including Zeiss optics factories. Surprisingly, the Luftwaffe base in Klotzsche eight kilometers from the city was not hit by a single bomb.
Rebirth
After the war they city began to recover and in 1946 a reconstruction plan of the city was implemented. Many of the historic buildings have since been rebuilt, notably since 1991. Today Dresden has a population of 490,000 inhabitants.
References in literature
Kurt Vonnegut placed a scene from his novel Slaughterhouse-Five in Dresden during the bombings. Vonnegut was an American prisoner of war in Dresden and witnessed the city's destruction. Alfred-Maurice de Zayas writes in his book Nemesis at Potsdam - The Anglo-Americans and the Expulsion of the Germans - Background, Execution and Consequences[4]: "The Report of the Joint Relief Commission of the International Red Cross 1941-1946 of the "Joint Relief Commission of the International Red Cross Committee and the League of Red Cross Societies" (462 pages) estimated up to about 275,000 victims."
Aftermath
No responsibility for the attack and the destruction of Dresden has ever been formally apologised for, and no war crimes commissions were ever organized. In 1998 the first fascist demonstration on the anniversary of the bombing was organized in memory of the victims.
Gallery
- A view taken from Dresden's town hall of the destroyed Old Town after the allied bombings between February 13 and 15, 1945..png
View from the city hall over the destroyed city
- Dresden Mother and baby.png
Mother and baby incinerated
- Dresden carnage.png
Dresden mother and child
- Dresden child.png
Grandfather and child
- Dresden 14 Feb 1945.png
Dresden 14 February 1945
- Dresden more.png
Dresden 14 February 1945
- Dresden murder.png
Dresden 14 February 1945
- Dresden deaths.png
Dresden children
- Dresden Funeral Pyre.png
Piles of dead bodies awaiting a mass cremation
- Dresden bodies.png
Dresden, one of the funeral pyres of murdered civilians
- Germany Dresden bombed streets.png
Dresden, ruined street
- Germany Dresden post-war (2).png
Dresden. The aged help to clear the rubble.
- Germany Dresden post-war.png
Post-war salvaging and cleaning stone
- Dresden Nov 1946.png
Dresden, November 1946: Placing flowers on a home in a destroyed residential street.
- Germany Dresden Zwinger Palace pavilion 1945.png
Ruins of Dresden's famous Zwinger palace.
See also
- Flakhelfer
- Operation Gomorrah
- Bombing of Germany during World War II
- Claimed mass killings of Germans by the WWII Allies
Further reading
- The Destruction of Dresden by David Irving, first published 1963; revised 1971 and again 1985 , Macmillan, London, 1985, ISBN 0-333-40483-1.
- Dresden 1945 by Alexander McKee, Granada Publishing, London, 1983, ISBN: 0-583-13686-9.
- Dresden - Tuesday 13 February 1945, by Frederick Taylor, Bloomsbury, London, 2004, ISBN 0-7475-7078-7.
- The Fire - The Bombings of Germany 1940-1945, by Jorg Friedrich, Columbia University Press, English-language edition, 2006, ISBN 0-231-13380-4
External links
- David Irving: Index to air raid on Dresden, February 13-14, 1945
- Kevin Alfred Strom: Dresden: A Real Holocaust, 2015
- Holocaust at Dresden
- Victor Gregg: I survived the bombing of Dresden and continue to believe it was a war crime
- Terror Bombing: The Crime of the Twentieth Century
- Bombing of Hamburg, Dresden, and Other Cities
- The Dresden Firestorm: Was the Bombing of Dresden Militarily Justified? Part 1
- The Dresden Firestorm: Was the Bombing of Dresden Militarily Justified? Part 2
- After The Firestorm – Debating the Dresden Death Toll
- How Many Germans Died under RAF Bombs at Dresden in 1945?
- Dresden 1945: The Devil's Tinderbox
- Tearful veteran who witnessed Dresden bombing recalls children MELTING in the fire-storm
- Into the inferno: 75 years on, the most horrifically vivid account of the Allied bombing of Dresden
References
- ↑
- Angell (1953) The number of bombers and tonnage bombs in the lead are taken from a USAF document written in 1953 and classified secret until 1978. Also see Taylor (2005), front flap, which gives the figures 1,100 heavy bombers and 4,500 tons.
- Burleigh, Michael. "Mission accomplished", The Guardian, 7 February 2004.
- Addison (2006), Chapter "City under Attack" by Sonke Neitzel, p. 74.
- Bomber Command Arthur Harris's report, "Extract from the official account of Bomber Command by Arthur Harris, 1945", National Archives, Catalogue ref: AIR 16/487, which says that 1600 acre were destroyed.
- ↑ A war crime is a serious violation of the laws applicable in armed conflict (also known as international humanitarian law) giving rise to individual criminal responsibility. Examples of war crimes include "murder, the ill-treatment or deportation of civilian residents of an occupied territory to slave labor camps," "the murder or ill-treatment of prisoners of war," the killing of prisoners, "the wanton destruction of cities, towns and villages, and any devastation not justified by military, or civilian necessity."
- ↑ http://forum.panzer-archiv.de/viewtopic.php?p=158625&sid=b8dd90a246c3f02c4a6759c873938a28
- ↑ Routledge and Kegan Paul (1979), ISBN 978-0897253604