There's some fairly damning (on the face, anyway) evidence that we knew about the camps, etc before we entered the war and certainly before we made reaching them any priority. News was leaked by Austrian and Czech Jews and related to the world by the World Jewish Congress and the Polish Government-In-Exile informed the Allies about it as well. Reconnissance photos of Auschwitz/Birkenau exist pre-dating any attempt at liberation or even disruption of the camp activities. But it's easy to use hindsight and say what should have been and harder to prove that people knew of the scope of what had happened and was happening. Likewise, liberating camps in Poland was easier said than done in 1942-1944 and, although Jewish authorities pleaded with Allied officals to bomb the railways leading to the camps in '44, what the actual result would have been is anyone's guess.
I have a hard time condemning the Allied forces entirely for not stopping the Holocaust sooner but I do take issue with people who would have you believe that we entered WW II for any reason concerning the plight of the Jews. As Deathwysh points out, anti-Semitism was hardly unknown to the United States or western Europe/Britian. In 1938, spurred on by the continuing reports of hostility against the Jews in Germany, several of the world's nations came to the Evian Conference to discuss allowing Jews immigrate into their borders. The results were Canada chosing to allow only farmers, Britian allowing very limited immigration and closing off the Palastinian colony. Belgium, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Ireland, and Switzerland all claimed unemployeement numbers prevented them from allowing even more refugees into their borders. The Central and South American nations almost all said their governments were unwilling to allow any more Jews into the country. And Australia said bluntly "it will no doubt be appreciated that as we have no real racial problem, we are not desirous of importing one by encouraging any scheme of large scale foreign migration". The rather tiny Dominican Republic, to its credit, decided to allow 100,000 Jews to immigrate. While the US adopted to let some Jews enter, we were mainly after the scientists, etc and turned away many, many others on the basis of already filled immigration quotas. Had Hitler stopped at invading Poland and eliminating the Jewish population in Germany/Poland, I doubt we'd have ever done anything to try and stop it.
As for Hitler's "plan", it was common knowledge to anyone who was looking. Hell, in January '39, Hitler said that in the event of war, the end result would "not be [...] the victory of the Jewry, but the annihilation of the Jewish race in Europe". Later quotes were obviously no more promising. As the Evian Conference showed, the world was well aware of the open hostility to the Jews in Germany. Again though, I don't think that from Hitler's hate rhetoric most people understood the scope of what was happening or would happen. At least I'd like to think that was the case.
I started re-reading for the -nth time Maus (and Maus II) by Art Spiegelman the other night. If you've never read them, I highly recommend it. Not so full of any historic details that you're asking about but a couple of very powerful books (I assume they're available as one book these days).
Edited, Sat Jan 29 22:34:21 2005 by Jophiel
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Belkira wrote:
Wow. Regular ol' Joph fan club in here.