Churchill, Terrorism of Any Stripe, and Bombing Auschwitz
Years ago in Commentary, Hillel Halkin penned “The Jewish State & Its Arabs.” This resulted in a flurry of reader comment. The question of bombing Auschwitz was prominently debated. Fifteen years later amid similar controversies, the subject is still pertinent. (Updated from 2009.)
Churchill’s “overreaction”
One reader wrote that Churchill “overreacted” to the 1944 assassination of Lord Moyne by members of the Jewish Lehi (Stern Gang). This is to misjudge Churchill, who deplored terrorism regardless of its source.
From Churchill by Himself, 442, WSC, House of Commons, 17 November 1944. (Source: Sir Martin Gilbert, Winston S. Churchill, VII: 1052):
If our dreams for Zionism are to end in the smoke of assassins’ pistols, and our labours for its future to produce only a new set of gangsters worthy of Nazi Germany, many like myself will have to reconsider the position we have maintained so consistently and so long in the past. If there is to be any hope of a peaceful and successful future for Zionism, these wicked activities must cease. And those responsible for them must be destroyed root and branch.
Bombing Auschwitz
Another reader wrote: “Had Churchill given an order to bomb Auschwitz, rather than simply recommend that it be bombed, it would have been bombed. He did not do so, presumably, because he was loath to quarrel with his General Staff. He did not wish to stand accused of risking air crews to save Jewish lives that had no military value.”
It was more an order than a recommendation, but let that go. The more compelling idea was bombing the railway lines to Auschwitz, rather than the camp itself. The latter, as the Jewish Agency pointed out at the time, would have killed inmates who, it was hoped, would be liberated. (Remember, this was in 1944.) However, early requests by the Jewish Agency did not make this distinction (read on).
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As to bombing railway lines, Churchill did not have plenary authority over the U.S. Army Air Force—the responsible agency for the Auschwitz sector. Martin Gilbert, in a 1993 lecture at the United States Holocaust Museum, Washington, noted that in mid-1944…
…five prisoners escaped from Auschwitz in order to bring news to the West of what was happening to the Jews there. Four were Jews. One was a Polish Catholic medical student.
The moment their information reached the West, and the truth of the gas chambers made clear, there was a tremendous and understandable outcry. (The first thing that has always struck me: What would have happened if these escapees had made their way West in 1943? Or even at the end of 1942?) The impact of their report on the Jewish and non-Jewish world was dramatic and traumatic….
On 6 July 1944, in a meeting with Anthony Eden, Chaim Weizmann and Moshe Shertok made five urgent and desperate suggestions. The fifth was that “the railway line leading from Budapest to Birkenau, and the death camp at Birkenau and other places, should be bombed.”
When Churchill saw this request by Eden, he did something I’ve not seen on any other document submitted to Churchill for his approval: He wrote on it what he wanted done.
Normally, he would have said, “Bring this up to War Cabinet on Wednesday,” or, “Let us discuss this with the Air Ministry.”
Instead, he wrote to Eden on the morning of 7 July: “Is there any reason to raise this matter with the Cabinet? Get anything out of the Air Force you can, and invoke me if necessary.”
The singularity of Churchill’s order
Martin Gilbert continued:
I have never seen a minute of Churchill’s giving that sort of immediate authority to carry out a request…. I suppose it is a great tragedy that all this had not taken place in July 1943 or October 1942. For when all is said and done, July 1944 was too late to save all but a final 100,000.
There is a vast subtext, in my book, Auschwitz and the Allies. British officials did not know on 7 July that the deportations had ceased. They had to deal with the Prime Minister’s request on the assumption that it still had some validity. Some revealed considerable distaste for carrying out any such instruction.
It is interesting, however, to note that when the request was put to the American Air Force Commander, General Ira C. Eaker, when he visited the Air Ministry a few days later, he gave it his full support. He regarded it as something that the American daylight bombers could and should do.
But as you know, the request died in Washington. On the second occasion it reached the Assistant Secretary of War, John J. McCloy. He told his assistant to kill it.. The debate about bombing the Auschwitz lines continued for more than a month after the lines were no longer in use.
From the bomber crews
Dr. Gilbert interviewed several of those who would have bombed the Auschwitz lines as Churchill had wished. Every one, without exception, was emphatic that he would have done it. Some expressed anger that they were not asked to do it. Sir Martin continues:
I even found the young man who had taken that aerial photograph of Auschwitz displayed in the Museum. He was South African photo reconnaissance pilot. He was in extreme distress that he had no idea what it was he was flying over.
If only he had known, the pilot continued, he could at least have tipped his wings, to signal those on the ground that someone knew they were there.
Winston Churchill instantly recognized the terrible crime. Sir Martin quotes his letter Anthony Eden on the day that the escapees’ account of Auschwitz reached them:
There is no doubt that this is probably the greatest and most horrible crime ever committed in the whole history of the world, and it has been done by scientific machinery by nominally civilised men in the name of a great State and one of the leading races of Europe.
It is quite clear that all concerned in this crime who may fall into our hands, including the people who only obeyed orders by carrying out the butcheries, should be put to death after their association with the murders has been proved. Declarations should be made in public, so that everyone connected with it will be hunted down and put to death.”
Further Reading
“Sir Martin Gilbert on Churchill and the Holocaust,” 2024.
“The Polish and the Holocaust: What Churchill Knew,” 2021.
“Witold Polecki: A Brave Pole Who Did His Best for Liberty,” 2020.
“Bombing Auschwitz, from my book, Winston Churchill, Myth and Reality,” 2020