*** From [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Miroslaw J. Wiechowski)

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From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sat, 23 Nov 2002 22:42:38 EST
Subject: (no subject)
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Szanowny Panie.
Przesylam artykul z Washington Post gdzie znowu uzyto slow 'Polish 
concentration camps". Prosimy o protesty.
Marie Glowacki. 

Endgame 
'The Conquerors: Roosevelt, Truman and the Destruction of Hitler's Germany, 
1941-1945' by Michael Beschloss 

Sunday's Book World, as well as daily reviews, news and features, can be 
found on our Books page. 
The Washington Post Book Club gives you access to discounts, discussions, 
special events and more. 

Reviewed by Carlo D'Este
Sunday, November 17, 2002; Page BW04 

THE CONQUERORS 
Roosevelt, Truman and the Destruction Of Hitler's Germany, 1941-1945 
By Michael Beschloss
Simon &Schuster. 362 pp. $26.95

In the closing days of World War II, the Soviet Union began systematically to 
ravage what Adolf Hitler had once called his Thousand Year Reich. Berlin was 
destroyed, and in the Soviet zone of occupation many thousands were murdered. 
Uncounted numbers of POWs simply disappeared into the gulags, never to be 
heard from again. Entire factories were dismantled and shipped East.

The Western nations took a far different approach. Instead of repeating the 
harsh peace of Versailles, the United States, as the dominant allied partner, 
opted for an occupation that had as its eventual aim the restoration of 
Germany so as to prevent future militarism and install a democratic political 
system to replace the Nazi regime.

How that came about is the subject of historian Michael Beschloss's The 
Conquerors, a fresh look at how Franklin Roosevelt proved instrumental in 
determining the shape of postwar Germany. Beschloss draws on exhaustive 
primary sources, including newly opened Russian archives and the private 
papers of the wartime secretary of the treasury, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., whose 
tempestuous relationship with Roosevelt supplies the book's major subplot. 
Although the U.S. government learned of the existence of Nazi death camps as 
early as 1942, Morgenthau became increasingly distraught over what an 
official report he commissioned called "the Acquiescence of This government 
in the Murder of the Jews." Haunted by what he viewed as Roosevelt's 
indifference to the plight of Europe's Jews, but unable to sway the 
president, Morgenthau put forth his own plan in 1944 for an exceptionally 
harsh peace, which would turn Germany into a harmless agrarian state by 
completely dismembering its industrial base in the Ruhr. Although Roosevelt 
grudgingly accepted the Morgenthau plan and presented it to Churchill at 
Quebec in 1943 as American policy, it was strongly opposed by Secretary of 
War Henry L. Stimson, who viewed Morgenthau as meddlesome and misguided, and 
thwarted him at every turn, as did Assistant Secretary of War John J. McCoy 
and Secretary of State Cordell Hull. The current political struggle within 
Washington over Iraq almost pales by comparison to the fierce infighting that 
took place within the Roosevelt administration during World War II. FDR 
played his advisers off each other. Sometimes he would make promises he had 
no intention of keeping; other times he would skilfully manipulate 
Morgenthau, who was hoping to gain more influence over Germany's future by 
becoming secretary of state, an ambition that FDR privately rejected.

Ultimately, however, Roosevelt's reluctance to repeat the mistakes of history 
-- i.e., his refusal to pursue a Versailles-style harsh peace -- led to a 
more benign American course of action toward Germany. Despite all the 
Roosevelt administration's intrigues and power struggles, the U.S. government 
eventually adopted a more moderate strategy for dealing with postwar Germany. 
After FDR's death, Harry Truman followed the same set of policies.

The Conquerors focuses mainly on the Allied demand for unconditional 
surrender from Germany, together with American occupation policy after the 
war ended. But the most explosive issue that Beschloss explores is why, in 
the face of mounting evidence of the terrible atrocities being committed in 
Hitler's death camps, the Allies failed to bomb Auschwitz, the infamous 
Polish concentration camp. As the senior partner in the Angloi-American 
alliance, the United States had the ultimate authority to make such a 
decision. Therein lies the most controversial aspect of Beschloss's book. 
Many critics laid the blame for the U.S. government's failure to act with 
McCoy, who later publicly denied that he ever discussed the matter with 
Roosevelt. But Morgenthau's son revealed to Beschloss that McCoy admitted to 
him in 1986 that he indeed had discussed it with the president -- who 
forcefully rejected bombing Auschwitz on the grounds that it "wouldn't do any 
good" to kill innocent people. "I won't have anything to do with it," FDR is 
alleged to have said.

Although McCoy's private revelation after years of denying Roosevelt's 
involvement is unsubstantiated, it nevertheless suggests the first direct 
link to Roosevelt as the arbiter of one of the most important and 
controversial decisions of World War II. Beschloss fairly presents both sides 
of the debate, but also doesn't conceal his own belief that the Allies 
gravely failed to deliver "a moral statement for all time that the British 
and Americans understood the historical gravity of the Holoucast." FDR 
rejected repeated exhortations by Morgenthau to initiate the bombing of 
Auschwitz. Not only did FDR fail to address the Holocaust, Beschloss argues; 
he also remained "shockingly disengaged from the struggle to rescue Jewish 
refugees from Hitler." Nor did he attempt "to explore whether death camps 
bombings and transportation lines might have saved lives." 

Before relinquishing his post as U.S. occupation commander in October 1945, 
Dwight Eisenhower said, "The success of this occupation can only be judged 
fifty years from now. If the Germans at that time have a stable, prosperous 
democracy, then we shall have succeeded." More than 50 years later, we can 
see the Eisenhower's visionary aspiration is a reality. Modern-day Germany, 
writes Beschloss, "resembles the Germany that Franklin Roosevelt and Harry 
Truman once imagined far more than either man could probably have ever 
dreamt." 

Even as Beschloss wades fearlessly into the debates over U.S. culpability in 
prolonging the Holocaust, he shows here a keen understanding of a larger 
historical truth: While Roosevelt's legacy will remain controversial over the 
question of Auschwitz, his flaws, Beschloss concludes, "are overshadowed by 
the greatness in Roosevelt's leadership." This was especially so in the 
critical years of 1939 and 1940, when FDR dared to send aid to a beleaguered 
Britain. "Had Roosevelt been more meek or shortsighted," Beschloss writes, 
"Hitler might have won World War II." .

Carlo D'Este is the author of "Patton: A Genius for War" and "Eisenhower: A 
Soldier's Life." 


.(C) 2002 The Washington Post Company



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