THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Dresden devastated – 1945

Via History.com

On the evening of February 13, 1945, the most controversial episode in the Allied air war against Germany begins as hundreds of British bombers loaded with incendiaries and high-explosive bombs descend on Dresden, a historic city located in eastern Germany. Dresden was neither a war production city nor a major industrial center, and before the massive air raid of February 1945 it had not suffered a major Allied attack. By February 15, the city was a smoldering ruin and an unknown number of civilians–somewhere between 35,000 and 135,000–were dead.

By February 1945, the jaws of the Allied vise were closing shut on Nazi Germany. In the west, Nazi leader Adolf Hitler’s desperate counteroffensive against the Allies in Belgium’s Ardennes forest had ended in total failure. In the east, the Red Army had captured East Prussia and reached the Oder River–less than 50 miles from Berlin. The once-proud Luftwaffe was a skeleton of an air fleet, and the Allies ruled the skies over Europe, dropping thousands of tons of bombs on Germany every day.

From February 4 to February 11, the “Big Three” Allied leaders–U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin–met at Yalta in the USSR and compromised on their visions of the postwar world. Other than deciding on what German territory would be conquered by which power, little time was given to military considerations in the war against the Third Reich. Churchill and Roosevelt, however, did promise Stalin to continue their bombing campaign against eastern Germany in preparation for the advancing Soviet forces.

An important aspect of the Allied air war against Germany involved what is known as “area” or “saturation” bombing. In area bombing, all enemy industry–not just war munitions–is targeted, and civilian portions of cities are obliterated along with troop areas. Before the advent of the atomic bomb, cities were most effectively destroyed through the use of incendiary bombs that caused unnaturally fierce fires in the enemy cities. Such attacks, Allied command reasoned, would ravage the German economy, break the morale of the German people, and force an early surrender.

Germany was the first to employ area bombing tactics during its assault on Poland in September 1939. In 1940, during the Battle of Britain, the Luftwaffe failed to bring Britain to it knees by targeting London and other heavily populated areas with area bombing attacks. Stung but unbowed, the RAF avenged the bombings of London and Coventry in 1942 when it launched the first of many saturation bombing attacks against Germany. In 1944, Adolf Hitler named the world’s first long-range offensive missile V-1, after Vergeltung, the German word for “vengeance” and an expression of his desire to repay Britain for its devastating bombardment of Germany.

The Allies never overtly admitted that they were engaged in saturation bombing; specific military targets were announced in relation to every attack. It was but a veneer, however, and few mourned the destruction of German cities that built the weapons and bred the soldiers that by 1945 had killed more than 10 million Allied soldiers and even more civilians. The firebombing of Dresden would prove the exception to this rule.

Before World War II, Dresden was called “the Florence of the Elbe” and was regarded as one the world’s most beautiful cities for its architecture and museums. Although no German city remained isolated from Hitler’s war machine, Dresden’s contribution to the war effort was minimal compared with other German cities. In February 1945, refugees fleeing the Russian advance in the east took refuge there. As Hitler had thrown much of his surviving forces into a defense of Berlin in the north, city defenses were minimal, and the Russians would have had little trouble capturing Dresden. It seemed an unlikely target for a major Allied air attack.

On the night of February 13, hundreds of RAF bombers descended on Dresden in two waves, dropping their lethal cargo indiscriminately over the city. The city’s air defenses were so weak that only six Lancaster bombers were shot down. By the morning, some 800 British bombers had dropped 1,478 tons of high-explosive bombs and 1,182 tons of incendiaries on Dresden, creating a great firestorm that destroyed most of the city and killed numerous civilians. Later that day, as survivors made their way out of the smoldering city, over 300 U.S. bombers began bombing Dresden’s railways, bridges, and transportation facilities, killing thousands more. On February 15, another 200 U.S. bombers continued their assault on the city’s infrastructure. All told, the bombers of the U.S. Eighth Air Force dropped 954 tons of high-explosive bombs and 294 tons of incendiaries on Dresden. Later, the Eighth Air Force would drop 2,800 more tons of bombs on Dresden in three other attacks before the war’s end.

The Allies claimed that by bombing Dresden, they were disrupting important lines of communication that would have hindered the Soviet offensive. This may be true, but there is no disputing that the British incendiary attack on the night of February 13-14 was conducted also, if not primarily, for the purpose of terrorizing the German population and forcing an early surrender. It should be noted that Germany, unlike Japan later in the year, did not surrender until nearly the last possible moment–when its capital had fallen and its Fuhrer was dead.

Because there were an unknown number of refugees in Dresden at the time of the Allied attack, it is impossible to know exactly how many civilians perished. After the war, investigators from various countries, and with varying political motives, calculated the number of civilians killed to be as little as 8,000 to more than 200,000. Estimates today range from 35,000 to 135,000. Looking at photographs of Dresden after the attack, in which the few buildings still standing are completely gutted, it seems improbable that only 35,000 of the million or so people in Dresden that night were killed. Cellars and other shelters would have been meager protection against a firestorm that blew poisonous air heated to hundreds of degrees Fahrenheit across the city at hurricane-like speeds.

At the end of the war, Dresden was so badly damaged that the city was basically leveled. A handful of historic buildings–the Zwinger Palace, the Dresden State Opera House, and several fine churches–were carefully reconstructed out of the rubble, but the rest of the city was rebuilt with plain modern buildings. American author Kurt Vonnegut, who was a prisoner of war in Dresden during the Allied attack and tackled the controversial event in his book Slaughterhouse-Five, said of postwar Dresden, “It looked a lot like Dayton, Ohio, more open spaces than Dayton has. There must be tons of human bone meal in the ground.”

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20 Comments
CCRider
CCRider
February 13, 2019 7:45 am

If you’re disgusted by war and slaughter there are 2 historical figures you need to come to terms with. No, not hitler and stalin. Churchill and lincoln.

Old Shoe
Old Shoe
  CCRider
February 13, 2019 8:11 am

It needs to be remembered that the 100s of thousands of German women and children that died in these incendiary bomb attacks were not collateral damage. They WERE the DESIGNATED targets.

CCRider
CCRider
  Old Shoe
February 13, 2019 9:44 am

Many years ago I talked to a sweet old German lady who lost a 5 year old daughter in Dresden. She told me that the fire was so intense she was 15 miles outside of town and you couldn’t face towards the city or it would burn your skin. They took turns dousing each other with water to stay alive as they fled. Fucking barbaric. Hopefully churchill is feeling that heat this very day.

Enrique Covarrubias EC
Enrique Covarrubias EC
  CCRider
February 13, 2019 2:37 pm

Our dear Mrs. Rollins (her hubs was a Mercedes dealer) was a lovely teacher. It was not out of the ordinary for her former students to drop by to say hello to her. One time, she let some seniors do a skit for us – from the Big Bamboo album – I believe it was the driving scene. Anyways, she took a trip to Germany one time and came back in a snit, quite unlike her, complaining about the things she saw and heard.

22winmag - Q is a Psyop and Trump is lead actor
22winmag - Q is a Psyop and Trump is lead actor
  CCRider
February 13, 2019 9:04 am

Mr. Truman drops atomic bombs on women and children and it my father who is posthumously adjudged a war criminal.

At Yalta with a sweep of a pen, a senile president condemns a third of the world to communism.

Europe with the zeal of a missionary gone mad, hands over the wealth and resources of Africa to savages who have barely learned to beat a drum.

Then you give them tanks and arms to replace their bows and arrows.

And when your freezers arrive, they use them to store their enemies until their Sunday dinner.

I have the grace not to mention Vietnam.

All over your brave new democratic world, inflation spirals as literacy drops.

And in America? They vote for law and order whilst shooting down Presidents, schoolchildren, and rock stars in the streets.

Johann von Tiebolt
The Holcroft Covenant (1985)

Fornigator
Fornigator
  CCRider
February 13, 2019 2:54 pm

Slippery slope here. Kind of reminds me of the vice principal trying to find out which of 2 boys started the fight out on the playground. Facts vs. emotions: some times it is best to keep ’em separate.

Enrique Covarrubias EC
Enrique Covarrubias EC
  Fornigator
February 13, 2019 3:00 pm
TC
TC
February 13, 2019 10:15 am

35,000-135,000? History.com can go fuck itself.

BB
BB
  TC
February 13, 2019 1:40 pm

Air Force General Lemay ( I think that’s the right spelling ) told a newspaper that if he would have lost the Air War over Japan he would have been charged for war Crimes. He killed more people then the two atom bombs combined . Burned most of them to death . Think about that .

Oldlett
Oldlett
  TC
February 13, 2019 4:52 pm

330,000 according to the International Red Cross.
Dresden was overwhelmed with refugees trying to escape the Red Army.
I lived in a house with 14 people. School was running 2 shifts and a 3rd
of the class could not even speak German.
The massacre was beyond belief. The whole city was one giant fire.
The wind sucked by the flames made it almost impossible for an 8 year old
to stand at the western rim of the city, the end of the carpet bomb run.
No one survived in the mid city. No oxygen. Black top streets were on fire.
The next morning was a “clean up” operation. Any buildings left were leveled
and any survivors near the Elbe river were machine gunned by fire planes.

But 35,000 sounds so politically correct that it’s not to be questioned !

Das Arschloch
Das Arschloch
February 13, 2019 1:48 pm

The real tragedy was not so much the destruction of German cities but the post-war reconstruction. The architectural atrocities that disfigure German cities today make one hope for a return of the 8th air force. Since there are still operational B17s, maybe an arrangement can be found. I know quite a few Germans who would be happy to chip in to cover the cost of gasoline. Weather permitting, I would recommend 51.839464 N, 12.227239 E as a start.

Enrique Covarrubias EC
Enrique Covarrubias EC
  Das Arschloch
February 13, 2019 2:30 pm

That looks like a holocaust museum.

Das Arschloch
Das Arschloch
  Enrique Covarrubias EC
February 13, 2019 2:49 pm

Das Bauhaus. The birthplace of architectural evil.

Enrique Covarrubias EC
Enrique Covarrubias EC
  Das Arschloch
February 13, 2019 3:07 pm

Form follows function, bro.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
February 13, 2019 2:17 pm

When in war always fight to win. Losers get charged with war crimes. Winners only get charged with war crimes for domestic political reasons.

Fornigator
Fornigator
February 13, 2019 4:52 pm

If you are a history buff and need your fix for the day, take a look at the contrasts between Dresden and Leipzig (the firestorm hit Leipzig 2 years earlier than Dresden). The rebuild of each city likewise is in contrast. Interesting to learn why.

Llpoh
Llpoh
February 13, 2019 6:20 pm

Incredibly varying accounts of the numbers killed: No one will ever know the exact numbers.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/oct/03/secondworldwar.germany

Unlikely hundreds of thousands died at Dresden, but surely that number were killed in fire bombings throughout Germany. It is lamentable. Parallels to modern terrorist action can certainly be drawn. I have visited some sights that were fire bombed. The devastation was beyond understanding. The rebuilding of Germany was a monumental achievement.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
February 13, 2019 6:27 pm

A blatant war crime that was never prosecuted.

Drud
Drud
February 13, 2019 8:37 pm

My name is Yon Yonson
I work in Wisconsin
I work in the lumber mill there
The people I meet
When I walk down the street
They ask me my name and I say…
My name is Yon Yonson
I work in Wisconsin
I work in the lumber mill there
….

Arlo Dillon
Arlo Dillon
February 14, 2019 6:07 am

War really is hell and this was nothing new. At the end of the Civil War the Union Army burned and destroyed everything that wasn’t nailed down in the south. And, even some stuff that was nailed down…aka “Sherman’s Neckties”.