Tag Archives: WWII

WWII Anniversary: The Lessons We Haven’t Learned

“Now I believe for the first time there will not be war”. This was an English diarist in September 28, 1938, slightly less than a year before the Second World War broke out, writing on the eve of the Munich agreement.

Of course, we all know with hindsight that you would have had to be an imbecile to have imagined such a thing by that stage in the advance of Nazi Germany. Had Hitler not already made his hostile intentions perfectly clear in Mein Kampf, in his aggressive rearmament in breach of the Versailles treaty terms, his Austrian Anschluss, his increasing persecution of the Jews and his noises about the Sudetenland?

But actually this diary entry was from the extremely well-connected and well-informed Duff Cooper who at the time was serving in the Cabinet as First Lord of the Admiralty. He later changed his mind about treating with Hitler and resigned his position. The point though is this: if even a man like that could, however briefly, gull himself into the immensely fashionable narrative that another global conflict with the Germans was unthinkable is it any wonder that the outbreak of the Second World War 75 years ago today caught so many by surprise?

Duff Cooper’s naivety (as it seems now, though I think “wishful thinking” is a fairer term) was shared by many writers and politicians and ordinary folk of the period. Read the diaries of almost anyone in the emigre community of artists, boulevardiers and journalists in Paris in that era: few of them entertained the idea until the very last minute (June 1940) that such a glorious city could possibly fall to the Germans.

Or read the autobiography of Raphael Lemkin, the Jewish lawyer who coined the term genocide, where he describes his narrow escape – from Poland via Lithuania to Stockholm – from the Germans in 1940. Time and again in cities which have yet to fall to the Nazis he meets fellow Jews who try to reassure him (or more likely themselves) that the German advance has gone as far as it will go and that the worst cannot possibly happen to them. Next thing you hear they’re all dead or on the way to being dead in concentration camps.

So what lessons can we learn from history on the anniversary of the world’s greatest ever conflict?

Many, I’m sure, but mine are this: that no one ever knows anything about anything; that those who do predict events correctly are not so much prescient as lucky (though I think we can probably agree that some men – such as Churchill – are both); and that history is contingent (which is to say that nothing is guaranteed: not the endurance of the Roman Empire, nor the everlasting “peace dividend” of World War II).

Some see in Putin’s behavior – the massive arms building programme, the adventurism from Chechnya and Georgia to Ukraine – the birth of a new Hitler. Others reckon the Middle East will prove the tinderbox that sets the world on fire. Still others see in China’s Pacific ambitions the same instincts that led Japan to bomb Pearl Harbor.

Personally I don’t, but perhaps that’s partly because I’m as prone to wishful thinking as the next man who just wants a quiet life for himself and his family. All I do know, is this: the times we are living in are definitely not the kind of times you’d want a weak, vacillating, ill-advised, culturally insecure, strategically illiterate, tactically incompetent President in the White House; nor when you’d want Britain in the hands of a government so blind to history that it is prepared to take the gamble of shredding its already shoestring armed forces by 20 per cent.

[H/T Breitbart]

New York Officials Move to Seize WWII Vet’s Property – and With Taxpayer Dollars

(TheBlaze) — World War II veteran Frank Whitney is fighting taxpayer-funded attempts by a New York village to seize his private property.

Officials in the village of Saltaire on Fire Island, N.Y., are trying to take Whitney’s Saltaire Market grocery using eminent domain so they can build a municipality-owned market, the New York Post reported.

And in an attempt to get their hands on the 88-year-old’s property, which was damaged in 2012 by Superstorm Sandy, village officials may try to raise the $2.5 million needed to buy and refurbish his grocery store by increasing the area’s property taxes.

Whitney said he has means and the money to fix the damaged store, which he has owned and operated for 25 years, but he said Saltaire officials are preventing him from repairing his property.

“Our choice was to rebuild,” Whitney said in a video his family put together in an attempt to draw attention to his situation. “It’s not fair. What they did is not fair.”

The village’s board of trustees voted Aug. 31 to pursue an eminent domain proceeding against Whitney’s property, leaving some scratching their heads over the ordeal.

“There is almost nobody I have spoken to in the town that supports this eminent-domain action,” David Fisher told the Post.

It’s “disgraceful, absolutely disgraceful,” Kathleen Butle added.

In a statement, the village said it has “been trying, without success, to engage the Whitneys in substantive discussions” about renovating for the past year.

“[A]t various times they have clearly stated their inability or unwillingness to undertake the renovation requirement and despite statements to the contrary, no building plans or architectural drawings of any kind have ever been presented to the village for review,” it said.

But here’s where the story becomes particularly frustrating for Whitney: Four engineers, including two commissioned by the village, reviewed the storm damage on the market and ruled that it was not “substantial,” the store owner’s son, Scott, said.

“The repairs that are required due to the flooding . . . do not appear to me to be substantial improvements as defined in the building code,” one of the village-commissioned reports reads.

Nevertheless, despite the findings in the reports, village officials continue to argue that the damage is too much for Whitney to handle. Officials also said the veteran’s submitted plans for repairs are insufficient or incomplete.

New York Officials Move to Seize WWII Vet’s Property – and With Taxpayer Dollars

The village applied Aug. 12 for a $1.5 million New York state waterfront-improvement grant to acquire Whitney’s property, the Post reported. The New York State Department of State denied the village’s request this month.

Perhaps in anticipation of this ruling, village trustees voted three weeks after submitting the application to pursue eminent domain against Whitney.

Here’s a video of Frank Whitney recalling his years in the United States Air Force during WWII:

Saltaire Mayor Robert Cox III said that if the village’s condemnation moves forward, “it would be paid for by raising village taxes, floating a bond or selling off village property,” the Post reported.

The fight between Whitney and village officials continues to this day in the Appellate Division in Brooklyn.

“We continue to be hopeful that the matter can be resolved by the Whitney family agreeing to undertake the required repairs,” Cox told TheBlaze in an email, directing all inquiries to a more thorough explanation of the situation.

The Whitney family did not respond immediately to TheBlaze’s request for comment.

You can read more about Whitney’s fight to keep his property here.

[H/T TheBlaze]

Normandy France Remembered: 69 Years Ago Today, the Allies Launched Massive Normandy Invasion on D-Day

Normandy 69 Years Ago69 years ago today, the Allies invaded the beaches of Normandy opening the long-awaited “Second Front” against Adolf Hitler’s Germany.  At the time it was the largest amphibious invasion to ever take place.

Today, we give thanks to the many veterans that sacrificed their lives in order for democracy to prevail.

USNews reports: “A few moments after 1 a.m. on June 6, the boots of American and British paratroopers thudded upon the soil of France.”

So begins U.S. News’s detailed description of one of the largest invasions by land, sea and air in the history of the world.

In this day and age, detailed information flies around the world within minutes of news breaking. But 69 years ago, things were a little different. It took several weeks for U.S. News & World Report (known at the time as The United States News) to get a detailed description of what happened on five beaches in Northwest France on Tuesday, June 6, 1944.

In an article that ran 24 days after the invasion, U.S. News paints a picture reminiscent of the opening scenes of Steven Spielberg’s 1998 film “Saving Private Ryan,” with troops descending “in misty darkness on the narrowest part of Normandy, where the shore swings north” and a “death trap” of machine guns and cannons encountered by the American invaders.

“On this beach, losses were high. Even men who got through that fire were able to advance only 100 yards inland in several hours of fighting.”

The events of that day have been retold in countless books and movies over the past seven decades, but one item touched upon in U.S. News’s story is not often found in historical accounts of that time period: robots. In 1944, U.S. News reported that there was fear of a “dangerous robot plane attack” by the Germans. Unmanned “warbots” do date back as far as World War I, but they rarely make their way into the movies.

U.S. News’s account ends on an optimistic note, stating that Germany’s defeat would possibly come within months. Sure enough, less than a year later (May of 1945), the Germans unconditionally surrendered, ending the war in Europe. War did rage on in the Pacific, however, for several more months.

http://c.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f9?isVid=1

Read entire article including Close-Up of Invasion: How the Job Was Done: http://www.usnews.com/news/blogs/press-past/2013/06/06/69-years-ago-today-the-allies-launched-massive-normandy-invasion-on-d-day

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