Monday, April 23, 2007

Maybe you had to be there

While looking into our own War Museum's approach to the role of Bomber Command during WWII, I came across a site in Britain, detailing a recent exhibit in Manchester, England. The Imperial War Museum's air war display closed recently. It was called AGAINST ALL ODDS. When I read the piece I marvelled at their disparate ways in which this period in our common history have been portrayed.

The exhibit at the Imperial War Museum didn't omit facts -- it presented Germany's estimated death toll and examined German losses, but its focus was on the accomplishments of Bomber Command despite the risks, hardship, privations and fear faced by the airmen. It treated the fliers with respect and honour.

"Against The Odds is the first major exhibition to look at the role of Bomber Command. From the first day of the Second World War until the Allied invasion of Germany in 1944, the bombing of Germany and allied countries in the Second World War by British and American forces made a vital contribution to the defeat of the Nazis. Bomber Command was the only British force to strike directly at the enemy's homeland.

"They came from across the Commonwealth, and alongside the United States Air Force, their role was the destruction of Germany's industrial, economic and military strength.

"But the cost was great: 55, 888 Bomber Command personnel were killed in action or on active service. 51 out of every 100 flyers did not return."
Michael Simpson, Head of Exhibitions at Imperial War Museum North

Whether it's the length of time that's elapsed since WWII, or Canada's physical distance from the action in WWII, or simply that we have scarcely seen hostilities on our soil in nearly 200 years, the Canadian War Museum's plaque, AN ENDURING CONTROVERSY -- is a painful example of historical contrition without benefit of sufficiently balanced background information. The cries of neutrality are strained when presented against the entirety of the display. This sermonizing and genuflecting at the altar of anti-war zealotry seems an effort to distance ourselves from our true military past. It's like an act of penance to purge a national sin.

Canada's Veterans are a humble lot. They aren't inclined to glorify war or their own contributions. Most of them are anti-war because they've been there and they know war firsthand. The War Museum has been entrusted with the preservation of their stories inside the framework of the war itself. The Museum's unyielding attachment to this paragraph, and its unbalanced display, despite the offense and injury to our Veterans, is unfathomable. Our Veterans don't deserve to be treated as though their service is an asterisk in the war effort. They don't deserve to feel as though they are trying to keep skeletons in the closet.

Contrast this paragraph with the above text from the Imperial War Museum:

"The value and morality of the strategic bomber offensive against Germany remains bitterly contested. Bomber Command's aim was to crush civilian morale and force Germany to surrender by destroying its cities and industrial installations. Although Bomber Command and American attacks left 600,000 Germans dead, and more than five million homeless, the raids resulted in only small reductions in German war production until late in the war."
The author of this paragraph is unable to think outside post-1960s assumptions about war -- all war. He has failed as an historian, because he has been unable to see the world from the perspective of his subject. At the outset, he has told us of a debate, and we expect balance because he has indicated that there are two sides to the role and the outcome of Bomber Command's mission -- but then he presents only one. If this were fictional, I might call it author intrusion. The writer wants so badly for the reader to take a particular point of view, that despite claiming objectivity, he provides limited scope and gives speculation and conjecture in the form of 'fact'. It is irresponsible at best and it is unethical at worst.

In defense of the paragraph, Dean F. Oliver says:

The text panel, "An Enduring Controversy," has attracted more public attention than any other, but it reflects the museum's overall approach. (...) Nowhere in this approach -- and certainly not in any of our dialogues with veterans -- does the Canadian War Museum see fundamental contradictions between presenting history as accurately as possible and remembering respectfully those whose actions in peace and war have done so much to shape this country.
It has been suggested that the Museum can't ignore 'difficult subjects' and that it's 'dangerous' to 'rewrite history' which implies the Veterans want the facts expunged from the display. What the Veterans really want, is for 'facts' to be presented at all. This plaque stands as a summary of the exhibit. It is general idea that visitors will take from the display. The people who run the War Museum have taken an intractable stance against the Royal Canadian Legion about this paragraph and the photographs chosen to reveal the story.

Let's look at the 'facts'.

First, most historians put the German civilian losses in a range from 350,000 to 600,000. Both are huge numbers, but the War Museum has taken the high-end estimate and used it as a factual total, and yet there is no accepted 'factual' total -- only estimates. The decision to use the high estimate without explaining that totals are impossible to ascertain, renders the credibility of the whole display suspect. It suggests the authors intended to lead visitors in a particular direction.


Second, by belittling the mission, it implies there was no reasoning behind the bombing, when in fact the strategy was used only after others had failed. Daylight raids had resulted in huge losses for the Allies early on in the war, so Britain used the Lancaster and Halifax Bombers, which were heavy and meant to be flown at night -- night bombing means area bombing. Little chance of pinpoint accuracy, but a better chance of getting the load off at all, without being shot down. Bomber Command put the safety of their fliers above the civilians of an enemy population bent on total war against all non-Germanic peoples. It was the only rational way to fight the war. Any other decision would have meant the deaths of more crews. As it was, even using night-bombing 51 out of every 100 fliers were killed in action. The Americans tried daylight, pinpoint bombing. It lasted less than a year -- not much longer than Bomber Command's initial attempts early in the war. The losses were simply too great. Later in the war, there were finally Allied troops on the ground in Europe and technology was moving ahead. Precision bombing became doable without being suicide. Strategy changed.

Third, it is misleading to say that "the raids resulted in only small reductions in German war production until late in the war."

Germany's production continued throughout the war because Germany had invaded all its neighbours and used their factories and workers to build munitions.
How many more guns, planes, bullets, mines, tanks, and V-bombs could they have built without the continuous disruptions of manufacturing and shipping lines by Bomber Command?
How much longer might the war have lasted?
How many more Allied soldiers and civilians might have been killed had bombing raids never happened?
How many more innocent people could have been sent to the ovens?

The War Museum plaque doesn't even ask these questions, let alone attempt to answer them. This is the synopsis, yet it has ignored issues which are imperative to understanding the role of Bomber Command.

AN ENDURING CONTROVERSY, the paragraph, is more "bitterly contested" than the rest of the Bomber Command display in its totality. Despite Director Oliver's assurance to the contrary, it is at the very least incomplete and because of that, it is indeed, disrespectful. The Museum's unwavering attachment to it, despite the anguish it has caused many Veterans, is shameful and unreasonable.

This is not about free speech. This is about presenting history realistically. No one wants to purge the historical record of evidence and facts, but our Veterans don't deserve to be equated with their wartime enemy. This display might be the only information a visitor will ever see or hear on the air war. Questioning their morality and belittling the value of their mission gives the impression of parity between the actions of the Nazis and those of Bomber Command.

It doesn't serve history well to ignore the painful parts, but neither does it serve our understanding of the past to take a sliver of time and interpret it, without conveying a sense of the historic reality. At least a century's distance from acts of war on Canadian soil has allowed us the illusion of being 'peacemaker' and 'peacekeeper' of the world. In order to reconcile its vision of our nice country with reality, the War Museum has chosen to pull a chapter from a bloody, protracted war and unjustly use it as a Scarlet 'A'.

And yet the Museum still doesn't understand the fuss. The Brits and the Veterans lived it. Maybe some people would have had to be there to get it.

canadianna

6 comments:

Matt said...

Great post, Canadianna! That couldn't have been better said.

Anonymous said...

the wording at the museum is terrible.

Bomber Command and later the USAAF forced Germany to deploy millions of soldiers to FLAK, Balloon, Searchlight and deception activities. BY 1943 10,000 heavy Flak cannon, 15,000 light Flak guns and 15,000 heavy searchlights were deployed. The Luftwaffe deployed hundreds of thousands more in Night fighter, radar and airfield security.

All those troops and guns and the billions of rounds of ammunition they used would have made a valuable contribution on the Russian Front.

German war industry was greatly impacted. Factories needed to be moved to the interior or underground. The raids on Peenemunde set the V weapon program back months - a critical factor in the war. Isolating the Normandy battlefields before D-Day was also critical in allowing the Allies to build the beach head strength faster than the Germans could build their defenses by road and rail. Also critical.

The civilian losses were tragic but it was how war was waged. Germany had to be slowed down to help the Russians, who came so close to being defeated.


Bomber command's campaign against Germany was a major factor in winning the war. Have pity on the civilian casualties, but don't say the effort wasn't worthy it.

Anonymous said...

If the new Liberal Elite thinkers want to use hindsight to write history, then lets go back to 1933 and ask why little was said
about Japan and Hitler's Germany .
Plus , lets show how Trudeau mocked the War and was more than willing to let others die for his Freedom so he could one day Dictate what RIGHT's Canadians will have in the Charter .
Maybe even ask why Canada was in the 1936 Olympics in Munich knowing the Nazi Party's stance on expunging religion from the Public space , and where were the Liberals and Trudeau when the enternment Camps existed.

Hindsight is so great for picking what moral values you have just to protest for a Political reason, Politicians reveal much more from what they Don't say about moral issues , and not what they claim to support as a more balance view.

Anonymous said...

It's not surprising that the CWM has taken such a disturbing view of history. Over many years of Liberal intelligentsia's diligent altering of our history to favor many and any minority or enemy it has now become the norm to demean any of our military efforts past and present. Just as the gallant men of Bomber Command are being equated to wholesale murderers our troops in Afghanistan are being likened to war criminals. What this country has become is being shown to Canadians over and over. Our Veterans did not sacrifice so much to be treated so in the name of political correctness. Shame on the Canadian War Museum.

Anonymous said...

It seems to me that the war museum must strike an appropriate balance between fostering a national ethos and avoiding jingoism. Personally, I would prefer them to err on the side of the national ethos.

But Canadians should know about the reality of war: yes, all of our grandparents made sacrifices and endured much. From a pragmatic and realistic view however many of these sacrifices were simply tragic wastes or miscalculations, ie. World War One in its entirety. But the fact that justifications are lacking for the outbreak and continuance of the Great War only elevates the respect and admiration with which we should hold the veterans. They did their part regardless of the surreal hell that they were plunged into for very obscure reasons.

Huxley (not a super political source, but...) said true conservatism died in WWI: it was a total war, one of national fervour, and not a comparatively genteel war like those of the 19th century, when sudden peaces and truces were common when in the interest of a state.

So, to be fair, I think museums should reflect the folly of the times they depict or at least present differing views of events, including controversial events like WWI. As to the bombings: its all very well for a Canadian museum to muse about the Allied bombings as Canada hasn't know real war since 1812. It does not surprise me that the Imperial War Museum reflects English realities. My English grandmother who was, like all in London, bombed in the Blitz was philosophical about it: "they did it to us, we did it to them, but I suppose we would have done it first if we could have" (actually I think England did launch the first bombing run). But she sure wouldn't swallow any revisionist sob stories either.

Kristin Beaumont-Politics and Other Things said...

Nice post Canadianna....well put. You do seem to be attracting "anonymous" posters...lol....twas ever thus.