Bombing of Dresden

The Bombing of Dresden occurred on February 13, 1945 in World War II and has since become sort of a myth among neo-Nazis, the anti-American crowd,[note 1] and just general cranks. It is furthermore often used as a red herring in Holocaust denial.

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German cities… will be subjected to an ordeal the like of which has never been experienced by a country in continuity, severity and magnitude…. To achieve this end there are no lengths of violence to which we will not go.
Winston Churchill, after the British had been bombed horrifically in the Blitz.[1]

What actually happened

By February 1945, Dresden, Germany was one of the last mostly undamaged cities still under Nazi control. It was furthermore an important industrial center and transportation hub with several major railways going into and out of the city. Both war-relevant transports as well as deportations into the death camps went through Dresden, even on the day of the bombings. Furthermore, by official Nazi decree, only "war-relevant" industries were still allowed to function. As such, all industry had become a legitimate target of military action by the Nazis' own admission. In the case of Dresden, this was a recipe for disaster as many small businesses were integrated into densely-populated neighborhoods. Thus separating civilian from military targets was next to impossible, especially given the high inaccuracy of target mechanisms of this time. According to the latest census data from 1939, Dresden had almost 630,000 inhabitants.[note 2] As the Soviets were already close to the Oder River (some 150-200 km from Dresden), the attack was also intended to aid the Soviet attack on Germany proper by taking out the substantial military forces still headquartered in Dresden.

The attacks

In the night of February 13-14 at roughly 22:00 CET, the attack began by marking the targets through light-marking devices.[note 3] Half an hour later most of the old town was in flames, as this was the area with the most military industry and hence the main target area. Due to the architecture of that time the fire quickly spread and was hard to extinguish, something that was known of and intended by the Royal Air Force.[note 4] At 1:23 AM, a second wave hit most of the parts of Dresden that had been spared by the first wave. As the fire from the first wave was still burning it functioned in essence as a target aid for the bomber pilots. In the next two days a couple of day attacks were flown, all focused on destroying the military industry and railway infrastructure of Dresden in order to take out all military capacity of the city. Furthermore, the famous "Church of Our Lady" (Frauenkirche), then as now a major landmark of the city, burned out and collapsed due to the major damage sustained during the bombing. All in all some 20,000 to 25,000 people died.[note 5][2]

PRATTs about the attack

Just to get this out of the way:

  • No, there was no white phosphorusFile:Wikipedia's W.svg – the Royal Air Force did not possess any significant quantity of said substance during the time of the attacks;
  • No, there were no low flying planes shooting at fleeing civilians with machine guns;
  • No, the attack was in no way substantially different from the bombing of other German cities during the war;
  • No, Dresden was in no way "innocent" – there were a ton of legitimate military targets and deportations through Dresden happened a day before the attacks;
  • No, the attack was not the one with the most victims – neither in absolute numbers nor as a percentage of the population.
  • No the number of victims did not exceed 25,000[note 6]. Numbers of several hundred thousand that Nazis (both old and new) like to cite are complete and utter BS.

Origin of the myth

As Dresden had deceived itself into believing that it had nothing to do with politics and as the city was internationally known for buildings like Semper's Opera house or the Frauenkirche, there was considerable shock among the populace of having been the target of an air raid. The Nazis were quick to seize an opportunity for propaganda and quickly released widely-exaggerated figures of 40,000 or even 200,000 dead, which at that time was demonstrably absurd to anybody living in Dresden, but hard to prove wrong for people elsewhere.[note 7] When in May 1945 the Nazis finally surrendered, the Soviets took over Dresden and it became one of the more important cities of the GDR. The general disdain for "bourgeois" old stuff notwithstanding, the GDR regime kept some buildings in their ruined state while seizing the opportunity in other cases to make tabula rasa for a complete rebuilding of entire neighborhoods in a "socialist" style, even if many of the buildings torn down could have easily been saved[note 8]. Furthermore, official Soviet propaganda reinforced an old Nazi trope, as they said that the "terror-air-raids" were "militarily unnecessary" while at the same time claiming that the Soviet soldiers were heroic liberators. This of course was a moderately clever way of tearing down the Western allies and letting the Soviet Union look not as bad as the US and Britain. Unfortunately a significant part of the inhabitants of Dresden swallowed the propaganda hook-line-and-sinker, which should prove fertile ground for the neo-Nazis to plant their seeds in later.

Dishonorable mentions

Kurt Vonnegut, who is considered something of a left-wing icon, was in Dresden as a POW during the attack. He wrote a (highly fictionalized) account of the events in his most well-known book Slaughterhouse Five, or The Children's Crusade: A Duty-Dance with Death[note 9] and goes as far as quoting David Irving - On the number of victims that Irving blatantly exaggerated by a factor of ten. Though to be fair, at the time that Vonnegut wrote the book, Irving was not yet a Holocaust denier and Irving's sympathy for Hitler was not yet publicly known.

Nazi hypocrisy

Biggest neo-Nazi march in Europe

After the wall came down, many economic and political problems arose: unemployment, young people leaving, a sense of lack of purpose after having followed a "wrong" ideology for 40 years. Various types of political cranks took advantage of these problems. While the Frauenkirche was rebuilt between 1994 and 2004,[note 10] the tradition of "commemoration"[note 11] of the events of February 13 as well as the Soviet and Nazi propaganda (exaggerated victim figures included) proved fertile ground for neo-Nazis to agitate. Soon the "remembrance march" on February 13 (and sometimes the following Saturday as well) was the largest neo-Nazi demonstration of Europe, with neo-Nazis coming from Hungary, France and the Netherlands to perpetrate the "myth of Dresden." Thankfully while large parts of the (rather conservative) populace of Dresden remained silent and just wanted to have "their commemoration" (i.e. the Nazi myth without the Nazis), German antifascist groups[note 12] soon staged counter-manifestations to demystify the bombardment and raise awareness for the wider context of the war. As this attacked old sensibilities (namely Dresden being the "innocent victim"), they were at first not at all welcomed by a large part of the conservative populaces of Saxony and Dresden. Police violence also occurred[note 13] and some rather outrageous cases of supposed crimes by left-wing activists related to the demonstration have found their way into court. Still, February 13 is now largely over as a huge focus for German or European far-right groups.

Does the stupid ever end?

While Dresden is mostly out of the headlines when it comes to February 13, sadly another right-wing movement has originated and seems to have taken root mostly in Dresden. Namely PEGIDA, the "Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the Occident" (Patriotische Europäer gegen die Islamisierung des Abendlandes). While this movement of cranks and woo meisters has spread to other cities, it originated in Dresden and it was only there that it could take root. Basically the message of PEGIDA is that there are "two menni Mooslimz" (even though Muslims make up less than 3% of Dresden's population) and that the media all tell lies. When confronted with this absurdity, PEGIDA sympathizers reply that the media say that other cities where more Muslims live are horrible. Which is rather strange, considering PEGIDA sympathizers consider the media to tell only lies. In 2015 PEGIDA even ran a candidate for mayor in Dresden (who ironically enough is a carpetbagger from Hamburg) who obtained 10% in the first round and promptly withdrew in favor of the center-right candidate[note 14] in the second round to avoid the horror of a social democrat with ties to the Green Party and a leftist party becoming mayor. Needless to say, the center-right candidate won.

Bomber Harris

Sir Arthur "Bomber" Harris,File:Wikipedia's W.svg the man responsible for the bombing of Dresden, remained unapologetic and even claimed that he would have destroyed the city again.[3] Because of this, he is considered a hero among hardcore leftists and anti-Nazis, and in 2016 the "Bomber Harris, do it again!" meme was created to troll "wehraboos" (Wehrmacht apologists) and neo-Nazis in general[4] in the same way William T. Sherman memes were created to trigger neo-Confederates.[5]

Sir Arthur Harris is also the namesake of the Monty Python character wrestler Colin Bomber Harris.[6]

gollark: One year has already been sent home due to a confirmed case, thus apiobees.
gollark: Specifically, on our year being at school significantly less than usual within 10 days.
gollark: Inaccurate. I am not that color.
gollark: [EXPUNGE]
gollark: Your soul is being bridged to APIONET. Do not resist.

Notes

  1. Sadly on both left and right and even within the US itself.
  2. Though given the number of people fleeing the bombardment of the cities as well as the number of refugees passing through transportation hubs like Dresden an exact figure for the day of the attack is impossible to come by.
  3. Referred to as "Christmas trees" by the Germans due to the way they looked.
  4. A similar thing had happened two years prior during the bombing of Hamburg, which actually had a higher death toll.
  5. An internal Nazi document of March 1945 estimates 18,375 dead. A commission of historians that was put in place in 2004 by the mayor of Dresden reached the conclusion that no less than 18,000 and no more than 25,000 people died in the bombing.
  6. It was most likely lower, maybe some 20,000
  7. There being no Twitter and all.
  8. Interestingly enough, similar things happened at the same time in other European cities, the justification being to make them "ready for the automobile" - The same thing even happened in the US - where no bombing had taken place whatsoever
  9. Named for the place where he was interned.
  10. With money mostly raised through donations, some of them from Coventry, a city fervently bombed by the Nazis this is often seen as an important symbol of reconciliation.
  11. In almost all other cities the day of the heaviest bombardment is just that another day.
  12. While the movement is rather heterogeneous (being left-wing and all) and unable to agree on much besides being against Nazis, the collective noun "antifa(scist)" is often used to refer to them.
  13. And for some reason more often against the antifa than against the neo-Nazis.
  14. Dirk Hilbert, a member of the center-right classical liberal/libertarian FDP (Free Democratic Party) running as an independent due to the ongoing lack of popularity of his party.

References

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