World War II--"the good war"--is here viewed from a new angle of
vision, one that sheds fresh light on how major decisions were
reached. More than just a book on the strategy and outcome of American
bombing in World War II, _Wings of Judgment_ tells about choices in
war, decisions that determined whether hundreds of thousands of people
lived or died and whether famous cities and great monuments of
civilization survived or were destroyed. It is about the bombing of
Dresden and Berlin and of dozens of cities and towns all over Germany
and about the preservation of Rome and Florence. It is about the
incineration of Tokyo, the bombing of Hiroshima, and the sparing of
one of Japan's most beautiful and holy places, the city of Kyoto.
Describing U.S. air raids that terrified inhabitants of enemy nations
and citizens of enemy-occupied countries, it raises serious questions
about the military and moral effects of American bombing. It also
tells of American efforts to avoid killing civilians needlessly.
Taking us behind the scenes at military headquarters, Schaffer shows
that even the toughest warriors occasionally found themselves offering
moral arguments for their actions, arguing that they were made right
by enemy atrocities, by the justness of the Allied cause, and by the
numbers of lives of American servicemen that Allied bombing might
save.
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American Bombing in World War II
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780199878970
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter