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Re: Downed allied pilot in Iszkaszentgyörgy Hungary in 1944
Gabor is right (except for the last sentence, Larry is a well respected aviation historian and author).
One should not condone war crimes, regardless who did it and what excuse he might have had, if any. |
Re: Downed allied pilot in Iszkaszentgyörgy Hungary in 1944
Thanks, D.B. My sarcastic response to Gabor was for his gratuitous injection of the “American War Criminals” theme in a thread that, up to his unsolicited and unwarranted comment, had been civil, scholarly, balanced and even polite. He is not the first to do this is a thread dealing with the air war over Hungary. His reply to my response raises even more eyebrows in that he appears to excuse Hungarian war crimes by act of omission leaving one with the impression that he either does not recognize them or he exonerates them. Yes, war crimes are unpardonable, but we should strive to keep this topic off TOCH! where it almost always develops into a flame war full of nationalistic insults. If Mr. G. wants to pursue his theme, I might suggest he do so on the War Crimes sub-forum on http://forum.axishistory.com/index.php. They have a number of threads there on this subject.
Larry |
Re: Downed allied pilot in Iszkaszentgyörgy Hungary in 1944
Watch it guys. No personal attacks.
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Re: Downed allied pilot in Iszkaszentgyörgy Hungary in 1944
Larry,
Do not get me wrong: war crimes are not the centre of my interest at all. Neither time, nor intention to dig into them. But I do not understand why you say I ignore Hungarian war crimes. I think I was clear enough: “A crime is a crime regardless of the side”. I never said that it was correct what those civilians tried to do. BUT: if we ignore the other side of the coin, what some A.A.F. pilots did to civilians and some of their defenseless opponents in the air and/or on the ground, we will never be able to understand the civilians’ reaction to those captured pilots! What do you think the farmers in Texas would have done eg. to captured Japanese pilots if they reached the American mainland and started to burn down cities, strafing fellow farmers and their cattle? The answer is obvious. Only the whole picture can be understood with equal measures and standards. Bringing up the Holocaust in this topic was dangerous as well as very misleading. I have pointed out the language problem in Lt. Crawford’s story. That word in his memories is not even close in the two languages! So why should I let other people come to wrong conclusions? This is why history gets manipulated and changed over and over again. And finally: do not forget that the guy saving Lt. Crawford’s life (I mean IF this was that Iszkaszentgyorgy case in the original question) was also Hungarian. That’s all. Thanks, Gabor |
Re: Downed allied pilot in Iszkaszentgyörgy Hungary in 1944
Quote:
Larry |
Re: Downed allied pilot in Iszkaszentgyörgy Hungary in 1944
Larry,
OK, I aggree. Have a nice weekend! Gabor |
Re: Downed allied pilot in Iszkaszentgyörgy Hungary in 1944
And you have a nice weekend, too, i.e., with no tornadoes (U.S.) and no flooding (Europe)!
Larry |
Re: Downed allied pilot in Iszkaszentgyörgy Hungary in 1944
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Intentionally Killing unarmed civilians on the ground is a war crime of course, but the unarmed civilians killed by strafing are small number comparing to unarmed civilians killed by mass bombing, and sadly I have to admit that such mass bombing such as Luftwaffe bombing Warsaw, London and Coventry or RAF bombing Hamburg and Dresden or American nuking Hiroshima and Nagasaki were legitimate war actions. |
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