Inconvenient Facts About World War II
by
David Gordon
by David Gordon
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The
neoconservatives are already in hot pursuit of Human
Smoke. In the March 2008 issue of Commentary,
David Pryce-Jones called it a "mendacious book." From this review,
one might have thought that Nicholson Baker had written a defense
of the Third Reich and its Führer. Quite the contrary: no one
who reads the book can suspect Baker of the slightest sympathy for
Hitler, whose evil deeds receive copious coverage in the book.
Where, then,
lies Baker's offense? Rather than write a standard historical narrative,
he presents on each page a separate fact, often taken from contemporary
newspaper accounts. A number of these facts show Winston Churchill
and Franklin Roosevelt in less than a favorable light, and this
has proved too much not only for Pryce-Jones but for John Lukacs
as well. For Lukacs and his ilk, Churchill is the Schwannritter
of the 20th century, and inconvenient truths must not be permitted
to jar unwary readers from the veneration properly his due.
However reasonable
one may think the Allied cause in World War II, even a just war
must be fought in accord with the demands of morality. Direct attacks
on noncombatants are strictly forbidden.
The policies
pursued by Churchill could not be further from this clear demand
of jus in bello. As First Lord of the Admiralty in World
War I, he supervised the British hunger blockade of Germany. By
endeavoring to starve the German population, Churchill hoped to
undermine the German war machine from within.
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Copyright ©
2008 Ludwig von Mises Institute
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