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In Reply to: Re: Chivalrious muderers and petty pucky sentimentalism posted by Victor Khomenko on August 05, 2000 at 14:35:36:
*Your number I suspect is an extrapolation of the Paulus army story - if I remember correctly some 5000 to 10000 made it out of about 300,000. That was very early in the war and things changed later, so it was not even close to 2000 overall.*Perhaps I was wrong in the numerical sense, no denying that, however, 5000 out of 300,000 sounds quite reasonable(if it can be).
Battle of Stalingrad was fought from Summer of 1942 till Feb. 2, 1943 exactly, so I wouldn't call that early in the war, perhaps on the bulge. As far as the numbers go, 91,000 troops turned themselves over to the Soviets. The Soviets recovered 250,000 German and Romanian corpses in and around Stalingrad and total Axis losses (Germans, Romanians, Italians, and Hungarians) are estimated to have been 800,000 dead. Official Russian military historians esitmate that 1,100,000 Soviet soldiers lost their lives in the campaign to defend the city.
What do you mean by "things changed later"?
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*According to many accounts the alternatives would mean many more Japanese killed. Estimate for the blocade were close to 30 million Japanese civilians dead from starvation, so 100000 or so from a-bomb can be considered a humane thing for both sides.*Interesting utilitarian take, but "yesli-by da kaby":)) Are you calling Truman a humanist? I think he couldn't careless how many Japanese soldiers and civilians would perish in the siege. It was a political bomb, that's what I think of it. How about bombing of Tokyo and the subsequent fires that killed thousands? Couldn't the Americans drop their atomic bombs on a deserted island or naval base or imperial escadra; the effect would be just as devastating. A show-and-tell like this would perhaps install the same fear in Japanese high command.
Remember the Damansky island that was whiped off the map by the Russians when Chinese occupied it. Nobody bombed Shanghai. Chinese promptly removed their forces around Amur river and Russian border after that.
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****War is hell.I don't like that phrase - it is used too often as an excuse. This is like saying "crime is bad". There are cases and there are cases. Killing the bomber's crew while shooting it down is one thing, shooting 10,000 Polish officers in Katin woods is another. Letting 1 million civilians die in a besieged city is different from shooting Soviet tanks at Prokhorovka.*
I didn't use that sentence as an excuse for the said war, but simply expressed my opinion. Viktor, could you please elaborate on your comparison of bombers, Katyn' and Prokhorovka?
Regards
Follow Ups:
Usual estimates for prisoners taken at Stalingrad are in the 90,000 to 100,000 range. Also, out of these, about 60,000 were dead already by the spring of 43. Out of 90+K about 5000 survived.What I meant by "things changed" was that this case was in the middle of the most critical period, when the treatment was perhaps the worst. Prisoners captured towards the war's end had much better odds of surviving. Will look for more stats.
Just quick for now, will try to comeback again.1. Will try to dig out some numbers.
2. Not ready yet to start a war over the A-bomb, but one never knows
3. Will try. Did you see the story on Khatyn vs. Katyn?
http://www.go.com/?win=_search&sv=M6&qt=katyn&oq=&url=http://www.ihr.org/jhr/v01/v01p230_FitzGibbon.html&ti=Khatyn+vs+Katyn&top=
I was thinking about the "therapeutic" usage of an A-bomb and the slaughther of 10,000 to 15,000 Polish officers in Katyn by the Soviets that you'd mentioned. Perhaps it was as "therapeutic" as the A-bomb you mentioned. An army without command is a dead army. So, 15,000 dead Poles against 100,000 dead Japanese. What's more humain then?
I really don't want to start a discussion over an atomic bomb either. I have a point of view on that, which is probably pretty solid, but another aspect is always interesting to read. As you might've guessed I am something of a pacifist, but I take interest in reading war stories and always go into the Medeival arms and armour wing of the Met.
I read the article about Kh vs. K and to my eyes it's nothing more than yet another revisionist paper. Appearance and disappearance of both places on the Soviet-era maps(of 1950s-70s to boot) doesn't prove or disprove anything. Soviet cartography was as politicised and incorrect as anything. Actually, Soviet maps were notoriously inaccurate. I read several accounts of geologists and geographers doing field research with these maps, noting their tremendous shift, compression and inaccuracy(purposeful, I suppose). One geologist wrote that all the major reserch was done using western maps which, after the field research was over, were to be returned to you know who. Add the freaky secrecy of the Soviet era and you get this article, based on nothing more than speculative and overimaginative thinking.
I am not sure about your negative reaction to that article. While it is not that everyone should just take it at face value, using the word "revisionist" is in my view uncalled for. Surely you are not saying that there is something sacred or God given about the Soviet history. Nothing in the story strikes me as implausible. If anything, many new things about it are what I would call 'discoveries'.
Victor, I'm not sure if the article was a genuine piece of historical reporting. I know that the Soviets killed those people in Katyn', no dispute here; Now, as far as the Khatyn' fires are concerned I really need more than a few lines on the internet to prove the hoax, if there were any.
Peace.
No argument here. I myself am curious too and will try to find out more. So far I spoke to several people, usually well informed, and got nowhere.What do YOU know about Kh?
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