At the German concentration camp at Wobbelin, many inmates were found by the U.S. Ninth Army in pitiful condition. Here one of them breaks out in tears when he finds he is not leaving with the first group to the hospital. Germany, 05/04/1945
photo: US Army file/Pvt. Ralph Forney
WorldNews.com 2012-07-22: Article by WN.com Correspondent Dallas Darling

The liberation of the Nazi death camps near the end of World War II was unfortunately not a priority objective for Allied forces. Neither was it a coordinated and planned operation to prevent more deadly massacres from occurring and to try and save those suffering and being killed by Nazi genocide. In truth, Allied strategists and war planners organized their campaigns towards "total war" without specific regards to the Nazi death camps. There were no rescue attempts, no daring raids, no military assistance.

Thus, when Allied troops by chance stumbled upon the first death camps and massacre sites, they were horrified and aghast. They were also totally unprepared to witness the many living hells. They were forced to think the unthinkable, to imagine the unimaginable, as crematoriums and furnaces had silenced the screams of tens of thousands of innocent civilians. Massive killing sites revealed bleached bones protruding from the ground. The truth was so horrible that it was easily denied, even discounted.

"Inside the Vicious Heart," by Robert Divine, came to mind when U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced there was "indisputable evidence that the Syrian regime had deliberately massacred and murdered innocent civilians." In urging the U.N. Security Council to take action, she said that "History will judge this Council," and that "Its members must ask themselves whether continuing to allow the Assad regime to commit unspeakable violence against its own people is the legacy they want to leave."

While purported massacres by both Syrian forces and Syrian rebels have turned into a propaganda war and a battleground between the Syrian government and Syrian rebel militias, the Nazi massacres of the disabled, Socialists, Communists, Jews, Gypsies, and others viewed as "undesirables," have been well documented. So too has the 1995 Srebrenica genocidal massacre where Serbian military forces, under the command of General Ratko Mladic, killed and murdered thousands of Muslims.

But while the Western press wades through reports of massacres in Syria and somberly remembers and recognizes the 17th anniversary of the Srebrenica genocide by Bosnian Serb forces, including its infamous March of Death, Clinton and Americans might also want to recall how General Dwight Eisenhower, commander of Allied forces during World War II, ordered every available armed forces unit to visit the death camps and massacre sites already mentioned.

He also issued this statement: "We are told that the American soldier does not know what he is fighting for. Now at least he will know what he is fighting against." Along with urging journalists to visit these massive killing sites and tell the world of such atrocities so they might never occur again, for him and others these death camps and massacre sites changed the meaning and purpose of war. It was initially discussed that the "main objective" of armies and military campaigns should be to prevent future killing fields.

But sadly, this new sense of mission and purpose, to prevent death camps and massacres of innocent civilians, was replaced by a postwar fear of Russia and communism. It would also be adversely impacted by Indigenous peoples around the world seeking freedom and independence. Military, political and economical priorities to prevent massacres would also be ignored as colonies rebelled and fought for self-determination against their Western masters, including the United States.

No one knows how the world would be different if the U.S. and its military had actually changed the meaning and purpose of war, that is, in prioritizing and preventing killing fields and massacres. What is known, though, are the massacre sites and mass graves found in Guatemala, Iran, Vietnam, Indonesia, Haiti, El Salvador, Honduras, Bolivia, Chile, Panama, Iraq, Afghanistan, and many other regions and countries of the world. There are even some present-day mass graves and killing sites here in America.

The term "massacre" is derived from the Latin term "mass sacrifice." Whether it be in the name of nationalism, an economic system like capitalism or communism, an ideology or belief system, or a misguided utopian vision like U.S. Exceptionalism, to kill humans brutally and indiscriminately is always an abomination. It is an atrocity against humankind and the sanctity of life. Few nations are innocent of such crimes against peace and humanity. Most nations are either complicit or clearly guilty of killing fields.

Regarding the World War II death camps and massacre sites, Abzurg also studied the phenomenon known as "double vision." Faced with a revelation so terrible, witnesses could not fully comprehend the evidence of systematic murder of more than six million innocent men, women and children. Once allied troops returned to their homes, these death camps and killing fields produced no common moral response.

At the same time, no particular pattern emerged in their occupational, political, and religious behavior beyond a fear of the rise of postwar totalitarian systems. Few spoke publicly of liberating the death camps, let alone the horrendous atrocities. Their friends and families preferred not to listen to their stories choosing rather to deny and forget. Some did have nightmares, but most witnesses repressed such awful memories. A new sense of purpose and mission, or "never again," quickly disappeared.

Collectively, a nation can also repress and deny its own historical atrocities, its own perpetrated massacre sites, killing fields and death camps. It too can suffer from "double vision," or the inability to face and comprehend and cope with its own crimes against peace and humanity. It appears the smell of death, or the systematic killing of innocent men, women and children, is still overwhelming the world. Emaciated bodies are still being flung into shallow and unmarked graves.

And what of the many faces of massacres, both victims and perpetrators, sufferers and collaborators, the wounded and neglectful, the murdered and forgetful? Perhaps History will judge not only Councils but Nations and their armies, including their priorities, too.

Dallas Darling (darling@wn.com)

(Dallas Darling is the author of Politics 501: An A-Z Reading on Conscientious Political Thought and Action, Some Nations Above God: 52 Weekly Reflections On Modern-Day Imperialism, Militarism, And Consumerism in the Context of John's Apocalyptic Vision, and The Other Side Of Christianity: Reflections on Faith, Politics, Spirituality, History, and Peace. He is a correspondent for www.worldnews.com. You can read more of Dallas' writings at www.beverlydarling.com and wn.com//dallasdarling.)






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