New Trend Magazine Forum
(These two letters from Shoaib Qureshi, London, England, somehow got 
published in the Times Literary Supplement, over an extended period of 
time. 
The first one is about the bombing of Dresden and the other about David 
Irving's case last year that he was was being defamed by a Jewish 
American 
professor, Lipstadt, to stop the publication of his work in mainstream 
media.)
{The first was a response to a recent book review about bombings in the 
second world war.
The second about David Irving losing the court case.}
More than half a century after the end of the second world war, there 
is still 
an inability to deal maturely with the moral issues raised by the 
bombing of 
Dresden (Books, THES, May 25).
In particular, the trite way Sir Patrick Moore quotes Robin Neillands, 
author 
of 
The Bomber War: The simple defence against the charges levelled against 
the 
air crew who destroyed Dresden is that there was a war on.  It was the 
war 
that 
killed... And who should be blamed for that? This is precisely the 
argument 
used by the Germans tried at Nuremburg.
And it is similar to the one used for the continued allied bombing of 
Iraq and 
the genocidal sanctions. Those who use it speak as though they are 
bombing and 
starving Saddam, not the unwitting population of Iraq. If this logic is 
correct, 
it is OK for terrorists to bomb United States embassies because they 
are 
attacking George W. Bush.  It appears that the weight given to 
arguments 
depends 
on whether you are a winner or a loser.
Admit it, might is right
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Should ruling about the 
holocaust 
be taught as part of history studies?
Yes.
Judicial processes themselves are subject to bias of period they are 
in.
Irving and others have pointed this out witt Nuremburg war trials.  
(Which to 
me begs the question why, he should have approached a court in the 
first 
place.)
Interestingly your journal chose to print Lipstadt's response to the 
verdict 
but not Irving's, reflecting your own bias in favour of whatever the 
current 
norms (prejudices) are.
My prejudice:  I don't like Irving at all.
However, it appeared that the trial focussed on exposing his personal 
prejudices rather than the case he was presenting as a historian.  
(i.e. we 
don't have a law against holocaust denial, but we do have one against 
anti-semitism. If we can prove he's 
anti-semitic and link that to the concept of holocaust denial, we don't 
need 
to seriously examine the case for criticising the account given of the 
holocaust.)
You don't reject the work of Alan Turing as a Computer Scientist 
because he's 
a homosexual.
Similarly, we don't reject Plato because of his views on women and slavery.
I read in a previous issue of your journal that its the job of  
academics to 
be a bit "transgressive" - well lets see you do it.  Put the arguments 
for 
and against the historiographic evidence.  Dont be scared someone will 
call 
you anti-semitic.  Let 
readers judge.
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2001-08-23 Thu 17:31ct