Channel 4 Learning


Learning Programme Notes - History

THE WAR OF THE WORLD

PROGRAMME 4: 'A TAINTED VICTORY'

PROGRAMME AIMS

The programme should enable students to:

BACKGROUND

By 1942, it was difficult to imagine the Axis powers not winning the war. With Germany controlling virtually all of continental Europe, and Japan occupying vast areas of the Far East and the Pacific, they seemed invincible. In this programme, Niall Ferguson shows us how the eventual Allied victory was morally questionable and, in fact, 'a tainted victory'.

Germany had gained ground in Soviet territory and in this programme we learn about the huge-scale Battle of Kursk in 1943. With 400,000 land mines, thousands of tanks, 1.3 million Russian soldiers, 900,000 Germans and a battlefield the size of Wales, this was conflict on an unprecedented scale. Tanks collided in a waterlogged mud bath, leaving a sea of charred bodies and burnt-out tanks. Equipped by the Americans, the Soviets proved the stronger and pushed the Germans further and further back. This came at a heavy price, with the number of Red Army soldiers killed in this battle almost equal to the total death toll of both the British Empire and America during the whole war.

We learn of the extreme violence of the Japanese as they took control throughout the Pacific. Trained to be totally loyal to the Emperor and to uphold values of honour and self-sacrifice, Japanese soldiers had no concept of surrender, determined to fight to the death or kill themselves rather than be captured. Likewise, American troops had no respect for the rights of prisoners. Captured Japanese soldiers were killed rather than imprisoned, an attitude that was openly encouraged by military leaders. The Australian General Sir Thomas Blanney, for example, described the Japanese as a 'cross between the human being and an ape'.

Another example of the level of Allied violence against the enemy and civilians was the policy of bombing enemy cities in the last few months of the war. The official reason for the bombing of Dresden was to hit troop trains heading eastwards, but it was really to kill German civilians and break German morale. Victor Klemperer, one of the last surviving Jews in Dresden, recorded the bombing in his diary. Ironically, he escaped in the ensuing chaos, thus being saved from almost certain death in the camps. Some 35,000 to 50,000 people died in the bombing of Hamburg, and in the raid on Tokyo, 80,000 to 200,000 people were killed and the city was totally destroyed. Niall questions to what extent the bombing of German and Japanese cities – including the atom bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki – was justified.

In the aftermath of the war, the atrocities of Germany and Japan were examined for the world to see at the Nuremberg war crimes trials, and yet the acts of extreme violence committed by the Allies were ignored. Finally, Niall asks who really won the war in Asia since the main beneficiary was certainly Russia.

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