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Niall Ferguson Says Allied Win `Tarnished' In World War II: TV

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  • Niall Ferguson Says Allied Win `Tarnished' In World War II: TV

    Dave Shiflett
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    NIALL FERGUSON SAYS ALLIED WIN `TARNISHED' IN WORLD WAR II: TV

    Bloomberg
    June 30 2008

    Historian Niall Ferguson compares the 20th century's unrivaled
    bloodletting to the mayhem in H.G. Wells's "The War of the Worlds,"
    with humans playing the part of the marauding Martians.

    Ferguson, a history professor at Harvard University, challenges the
    entire notion of advanced civilization in "The War of the World,"
    a three-part PBS series that begins tonight at 10 p.m. New York time.

    Why was the century so bloody?

    Ferguson argues that three factors converged to create a "hundred-year
    global war": economic volatility, the breakdown of multiethnic
    societies in places like Yugoslavia, and the unraveling of old empires,
    which unleashed a wave of revolutions and similar power gropes.

    Racial animosity also reached new levels of virulence, Ferguson
    says. The Russian press denounced the Japanese as "jaundiced monkeys"
    in the run-up to the Russo-Japanese War; the Japanese retaliated by
    sending most of the Russian's Baltic fleet to the bottom of the sea
    in 1905.

    The Japanese held the Chinese in similar regard, starting a war in
    1937 that Ferguson says was the real outbreak of World War II. Then
    there was Hitler and his henchmen: Ferguson argues that the Holocaust,
    while not the first of the century's genocides, was unique because
    it was carried out by one of the most sophisticated, highly educated
    societies in history.

    Hitler, he adds, considered Americans a "decadent" and "racially
    mongrel people." Still, the U.S. was very good at building weapons,
    which it gladly lent to Josef Stalin, another ferocious race-baiter.

    Gulag Prisoners

    Ferguson says many of Stalin's policies were "racial persecution
    disguised as class warfare." The Soviet dictator was "deeply
    suspicious" of all non-Russians and didn't hesitate to eliminate them.

    In one disturbing segment, Ferguson peruses the archives of the Soviet
    Gulag -- row upon row of brown-covered books containing victims'
    pictures and records of their fate. He reads the dossier of a woman
    sentenced to 10 years for simply criticizing the government and finds
    it "rather haunting to look at these faces."

    Ferguson's views on the Allied victory in World War II, featured in
    Part 2 on July 7, will undoubtedly cause controversy. He argues that
    the victory was "tarnished" because the Allies killed hundreds of
    thousands of civilians during bombings of German and Japanese cities,
    including the nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

    While Ferguson makes a distinction between gassing innocent civilians
    and attacking cities in an effort to shorten the war, he says the
    effects were frightfully similar.

    `Age of Genocide'

    Although the two world wars featured massive killing grounds -- the
    pivotal 1943 battle of Kursk between Germany and the Soviets took
    place in an area the size of Wales -- many deaths occurred in more
    remote places and circumstances. He says the "age of genocide" began in
    1915 with the Turkish slaughter of Armenians, many of whom were driven
    into the desert to perish. (Turkey denies that it was genocide.) Under
    Stalin, millions in Russia died from execution or starvation.

    The series concludes July 14 with a look at the last half of the 20th
    century, which wasn't so great an improvement over the first. Some
    20 million people died in Cold War conflicts, evidence that the Age
    of Aquarius was mostly a theatrical phenomenon.

    Today, China's rise as a global power is frightening many of its Asian
    neighbors and tensions in the Middle East could, in Ferguson's words,
    produce a war as staggering as "anything we saw in the 20th century."

    Maybe those backyard bomb shelters weren't a bad idea, after all.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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