How Effective is Strategic Bombing? Lessons Learned from World War II to Kosovo

2001 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 852 ◽  
Author(s):  
David R. Mets ◽  
Gian P. Gentile
2002 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 409
Author(s):  
Paul B. Hatley ◽  
Gian P. Gentile

Author(s):  
Michele K. Troy

This chapter examines how the Allied bombings of Germany affected the lives of people in the Albatross-Tauchnitz fold, particularly Max Christian Wegner and Walter Gey. To celebrate the tenth anniversary of Adolf Hitler's reign, the Nazi elite gathered with thousands of party loyalists on January 30, 1943 for an evening of rousing speeches at the Berlin Sportpalast. The Allies commemorated Hitler's tenth anniversary by sending Royal Air Force Mosquito light bombers on a daylight air raid on the German capital. For Prime Minister Winston Churchill, President Franklin Roosevelt, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, this attack marked the beginning of the “strategic bombing” campaign they had agreed upon at the Casablanca Conference days earlier. This chapter considers Wegner's arrest and imprisonment at the height of World War II as well as Gey's efforts to make the best of the Albatross Press's ever-shrinking terrain.


2012 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 669-696
Author(s):  
Andrew Oppenheimer

A manWho sets a house ablaze is anArsonist who is prosecuted and punishedUnder the law.A manWho turns entire cities toDebris and ash is aConquerorWho is hailed as a hero.This poem, published in an early postwar edition of the German-language pacifist journalDer Friedensbote, encapsulates a vision of modern war that circulated among German peace activists during the late 1940s and early 1950s. It is an image of war as arson on a massive scale, of strategic bombing campaigns that burned cities and civilians to ashes. Of course, the less than subtle allusion here is to the aerial assaults carried out on select German cities by British and American forces during World War II, which inflicted tremendous damage, population displacement, and loss of life in and around cities including Berlin, Cologne, Dresden, Hamburg, and throughout the Ruhr industrial basin. Some 131 locales were subject to and an estimated 500,000 to 600,000 deaths resulted from air assaults that used the tactics and weaponry of area and firebombing. Read with this recent history in mind, the stanza evokes images of the wartime Allies as criminals and Germans as their civilian victims.


Author(s):  
Rachel Galvin

This chapter charts how Auden’s strategies for writing about war as a civilian changed during World War II, extending the previous chapter’s inquiry regarding the journalistic aspirations of his 1930s writing and his vision of the transformation of bodily experience into text. It contends that the poems of Another Time offer parables of wartime interrelation: models for imagining the relation between contemplation and action, civilian and soldier. Further, whereas The Double Man has been read as superannuated and excessively rhetorical, this chapter argues that it shrewdly showcases the resources of poetic language available to the noncombatant. A concluding section examines a surprising episode in 1945 when Auden donned a military uniform for the United States Strategic Bombing Survey and finally got the bird’s eye view of war he had imagined.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S768-S768
Author(s):  
Hanna K Ulatowska ◽  
Tricia Santos ◽  
Diane Walsh ◽  
Jilliane Lagus ◽  
Mitchell Pruett ◽  
...  

Abstract The present qualitative study examined the reconciliation of trauma experienced by 55 World War II veterans (22 aeronautical crew members, 27 non-pilot combatants, and 6 veterans with dementia) demonstrated via testimonial language within a semi-structured interview. The research team considered themes of language coherence as they relate to veteran experiences of trauma and reconciliation. Trauma literature documents the importance of personal narratives in both identifying and reconciling traumatic experiences. This study examined morals and values of participants, traumatic experiences either lived or witnessed, and reconciliation of trauma as demonstrated by the coherence of participants’ linguistic and paralinguistic communication. Linguistic analysis included the use of evaluative and emotional language; linguistic devices such as crowding, topic maintenance, and humor; and lessons learned from trauma and the reconciliation process. Prosody was analyzed as a paralinguistic indicator of trauma and reconciliation using audio recordings of semi-structured interviews. The primary findings revealed that highly coherent language is present among participants with distinct content when comparing episodes from youth and reflections of experience in old age. The unique differences demonstrated overall strength of veterans’ narrative identity throughout their lives. Strength of identity and coherence of language indicated adequate reconciliation of traumatic events. Reconciliation of trauma was also evident in veterans’ participation in the study and generative behavior described in testimonial language.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 (1) ◽  
pp. 804-813 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rune Bergstrøm

ABSTRACT Norway has more than 2100 ship wrecks within its territorial waters. They have been classified according to their pollution potential, both from cargo and bunker oils. Most concern has been paid to World War II wrecks with large amounts of bunker oil or oil tankers. 30 high risk wrecks have been monitored since 1993, with concern about corrosion and oil leakage. New knowledge on corrosion status and toxicity of different oil types has radically changed the priority list for which ships will be handled first. The Norwegian Coastal Administration, has conducted oil recovery from eight of these ships (30 – 150 meters depth). The amount of oil had been estimated on all ships based mainly on ships' papers, eyewitnesses to the incident and known damage to ships (hits by bombs, torpedoes, etc). We have tested different oils for their environmental effects to marine organisms. We have also tested for operational purposes in case we have to handle large amounts of oil after a sudden collapse of one or more tanks. The very high toxicity effects on marine environments from some German oils (coal based) compared to British oils (mineral oils) is important new information that will alter the priority list for oil recovery from World War II ships. The methods for hot tapping have also been developed and refined during the different operations. This brings the time and cost of each operation down significantly. The use of highly experienced personnel and standardized equipment from the off-shore oil industry contributes to the same.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nguyen Tuan Anh

Japan is the world's 3rd largest economy with a nominal GDP of USD 5380 billion. Japan's economy has a rapid industrial development process after its defeat in World War II. Vietnam's economy in 2020 will achieve GDP growth of 2.9%, nominal GDP of 300 billion dollars, per capita income reached $2786, if calculated according to purchasing power parity (PPP), the average income of Vietnamese people is about $ 8,500. In 2020, Vietnam has a trade surplus of 19.1 billion USD (an important contribution to this result is the total two-way turnover of 39.6 billion USD, a trade deficit of 1.1 billion USD from Japan. No small contribution to the economic success of Vietnam as a strategic partner of Japan - the third largest economy in the world. Japan is the first country in the G7 group to recognize Vietnam as a market economy and partner, the largest ODA sponsor for Vietnam, the number 1 investor in Vietnam and the 3rd largest trading partner of Vietnam. This paper also refers the lessons learned for Vietnam.


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