English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

How did the West get to a point where the experiences of what was going on during the Holocaust became a reality? I'm wondering what was the point where they decided to help out? Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.

2007-05-30 19:19:59 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities History

5 answers

i guess leaving Germany in a pile of rubble and winning the war wasn't good enough?

I think maybe you're asking, why didn't we jump into the war sooner???

Attacking continental Europe and winning earlier than June 1944 was not possible. Attacking sooner would've meant tactical defeats and prolonged the war at least another year. The US strategy of building up an overwhelming force was the strategy in WWII.

In 1943, the US & western allies were landing in Sicily and making their way up the boot of Italy. Building up the force that attacked the Atlantic Wall required a June 1944 attack date.

Several setbacks in 1944 also prolonged the war, inluding the little gamble known as the Battle of the Bulge.

I guess winning the war and defeating the Germans wasn't good enough? I think you may be asking is why didn't we conquer the German's sooner? But even that question is a little out of context, as the Allies went about the invasion of the Atlantic Wall and the Eastern Front as fast as they could...although i see that the Red Army stopped just short of Warsaw during the Polish uprising, causing more Poles to die than there should have.

Some people wonder why the railways leading into Auswitz weren't bombed. I have to believe that the extent of the state-sponsored genocide was not known and that the few reports that did get out were too fantastic to believe.

2007-05-31 07:00:36 · answer #1 · answered by Its not me Its u 7 · 0 0

The West did not get to the point of deciding anything regarding the Holocaust until the war was almost over, because the West had little knowledge that such genocide was going on until Allied forces began liberating the concentration camps.

2007-05-30 19:28:44 · answer #2 · answered by oldironclub 4 · 0 0

Its viable. Human minds can consistently be swayed. Many common humans grew to become very islamophobic over the beyond few days in England. These are common humans. They don't seem to be usually in opposition to Muslims. But their evaluations can sway everyday headquartered at the temper of others. These are the humans that the click play to. A well chief can have an impact on those humans to a annoying degree. A chief like Adolf Hilter did this to the Jews whilst the German country used to be so much, so much worse than the UK used to be after the assault at the soldier. It can consistently occur. But it is going to by no means occur on that scale once more. There's too many pacts such because the EU, NATO and many others which are prepared as much as hinder such matters from gaining momentum and spreading. Universal condemnation might arise.

2016-09-05 17:31:28 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

West being the USA I'm assuming?

2007-05-30 19:23:48 · answer #4 · answered by Quieres_bailar_conmigo 2 · 0 1

Please check out the worldwide group Yahoo! group:Remember_The_Holocaust@yahoogroups.com

2007-05-31 03:02:59 · answer #5 · answered by Lejeune42 5 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers