The Leuchter Report Vindicated:
A Response to J.-C. Pressac's Critique
In early 1988, American execution hardware expert
Fred A. Leuchter, Jr., carried
out the first-ever forensic investigation of the alleged extermination gas
chambers at Auschwitz, Birkenau and Majdanek. His sensational conclusion
-- that these structures were never used as gas chambers to kill people
-- set off an international controversy that is still continuing. In a detailed
report, commonly referred to simply as
The Leuchter Report, the gas chamber specialist summed up the result
of his investigation: (note 1)
After a study of the available literature, examination and evaluation
of the existing facilities at Auschwitz, Birkenau and Majdanek, with expert
knowledge of the design criteria for gas chamber operation, an investigation
of crematory technology and an inspection of modern crematories, the author
finds no evidence that any of the facilities normally alleged to be execution
gas chambers were ever used as such, and finds, further, that because of
the design and fabrication of these facilities, they could not have been
utilized for execution gas chambers.
Not surprisingly, indignant defenders of the orthodox Holocaust extermination
story have tried frantically to discredit Leuchter and refute his findings.
Undoubtedly the most ambitious effort to impeach The Leuchter Report on
scientific and technical grounds consists of two articles by French pharmacist
Jean-Claude Pressac in a book sponsored by "Nazi-hunter" Beate Klarsfeld,
and grandiloquently titled Truth Prevails: Demolishing Holocaust Denial:
The End of the Leuchter Report. (note 2) [A
review of Truth Prevails, which deals with more generally
with the book's non-scientific criticisms of Leuchter, is published elsewhere
in this issue of the Journal. -- Editor.]
In Truth Prevails, Pressac is described as "one of the world's
rare research specialists in gas chamber extermination technique. He is
not a Jew and very nearly became a 'revisionist'." (p. 29) At the conclusion
of his essay "The Deficiencies and Inconsistencies of 'The Leuchter Report',"
Pressac pronounces stern judgment on The Leuchter Report:
. . . Leuchter is the victim of his own errors: layout errors, location
errors, measurement errors, drawing errors, methodology errors and historical
errors. Based on fake knowledge, inducing fake reasoning and leading
to false interpretations, "The Leuchter Report" is inadmissible because
it was produced in illegal conditions; because it overlooks the most
basic historical data; because it is scuttled by gross errors of calculation,
drawing and location; and because it is suspect of falsification. "The
Leuchter Report" lands in the cesspool of pretentious human folly. (p.
55)
As this article will show, Pressac, by dismissing The Leuchter Report's
scientific and technical method so intemperately, has cast a verbal boomerang
that returns to strike its author.
I
When Leuchter took forensic samples of brick, mortar and sediment from
the alleged extermination "gas chambers" in Auschwitz-Birkenau, as well
as a control sample from a camp delousing facility, he wore protective gear.
Pressac ridicules him for this:
To prevent his "precious" samples from being polluted during their removal,
Leuchter and his assistant . . . had agreed to wear protective surgical
gloves and masks. Since the analyses to be done on the samples were
chemical and not bacteriological in nature, this was a perfectly ludicrous
and totally useless precaution. (p. 62)
Pressac is ignorant of the real reason why Leuchter and company wore
protective masks and gloves. Potassium cyanide, a highly poisonous solid,
(note 3) is found in the walls of some of the facilities under study. (note
4) As Du Pont chemists have pointed out: "Wear an approved dust respirator
when there is danger of inhaling cyanide dust . . . Wear protective gloves
when handling solid cyanide." (note 5) Thus, Leuchter and his team showed
good sense by wearing protective gear when extracting the samples.
Leuchter stored his samples in cool, damp, and sunlight free locations.
But Pressac writes: "Since Leuchter placed the samples in transparent plastic
bags, it is difficult to accept his 'sunlight free locations' claim." (p.
62) In fact, although Leuchter first placed the samples in transparent bags,
he then transported them to America in closed, sunlight-free suitcases.
(note 6) The gas chamber expert wrote: "We boarded the Polish airline plane
after clearing customs -- my suitcase containing twenty pounds of forbidden
samples, fortunately none of which was found." (note 7)
Leuchter is faulted for allegedly making misleading descriptions of the
specimens. In Pressac's words:
Thirty-one samples . . . were identified by laboratory analysis . .
. as coming from "brick" -- an inexact generalization. If two-thirds
really are brick fragments, either pure or mixed with a bit of mortar,
the rest are composed of lime mortar or sometimes of pure cement (as
in the case of two or three samples). This abusive generalization leads
one to have a major reservation about the very nature of the samples
Leuchter took. Either Leuchter was mistaken in his assessment of the
substratum, or the laboratory made an error. (p. 61)
In one part of his report, Leuchter wrote: ". . . forensic samples of
brick, mortar, concrete and sediment were selectively taken from sites in
Poland." (note 8) In a letter to Alpha Analytical Laboratories (Ashland,
Massachusetts), the laboratory which analyzed the samples, Leuchter wrote:
"Samples No. 1 through No. 11; Samples No. 13 through No. 32. Brick, mortar
and sediment. Cyanate content." (note 9) Clearly, he did not use the "inexact
generalization" of "brick" to characterize the samples. (note 10)
II
Pressac realizes the importance of the samples taken from the "gas chambers"
and the delousing facility. Thus, discrediting Leuchter's method of taking
samples and his conclusions regarding their chemical content is really the
major purpose of Pressac's two essays in Truth Prevails. He writes:
Since Leuchter's samples were obtained illegally, I will only concur with
their cyanide concentration on the express condition that they be verified
by official expert chemical evaluation. Admitting their validity with reservations,
certain results which may have been surprising at first glance can be logically
explained. (p. 40)
A subsequent "expert official chemical evaluation" has in fact strongly
corroborated Leuchter's findings. In response to Revisionist claims that
Zyklon B was not used at AuschwitzBirkenau to commit mass murder, the Auschwitz
State Museum asked Poland's Institute of Forensic Research (in Krakow) to
carry out a scientific investigation of the matter. Its expert report results
buttress those of Leuchter: The institute's team found significant potassium
cyanide residue in delousing facility samples, while next to none in alleged
"gas chamber" samples. (note 11) (As will be discussed below, the Polish
institute's conclusion regarding the significance of this finding differs
from Leuchter's.)
Throughout both his essays, Pressac strongly implies that Leuchter consciously
falsified his findings in order to disprove the existence of the gas chambers.
As a case in point -- concerning sample 2 from Crematorium II -- Pressac
insinuates that Leuchter planted a brick with no cyanide residue in the
"gas chamber" area in order to "prove" his case. (p.65)
At the 1989 conference of the Institute of Historical Review, Leuchter
publicly challenged the international scientific community to investigate
his findings -- hardly the behavior of a man who is guilty of falsifying
his results. (note 12) A team of scientists could easily expose deliberate
deceptions, as well as methodological errors, by Leuchter. All they would
have to do is retrace his path, take more samples from the same facilities,
and subject them to chemical analysis.
Leuchter's 1988 investigation of the concentration camps, including his
inspection and sample taking, was recorded on videotape. A videotape cassette
of his visit, which shows Leuchter taking some of his specimens, is available
to the public. (note 13) Pressac claims throughout his second essay that
this video is a "witness to a fraud." (pp. 61-73) He writes, for example:
"Manipulation, substitution and trick photography are certainly confirmed
in the case of sample No. 6." (p. 68) With reference to the extraction of
this sample, he writes at another point: "The deception seems clearly obvious."
(p. 67)
Pressac writes further:
Out of seven samples obtained from the Crematorium II gas chamber ruins,
not a single one was shown upon analysis to contain cyanide. This amazing
result is contrary to everything known about the building's history.
Faurisson wanted this gas chamber to yield a perfect (for him) result
across the board -- that is to say, uniformly negative. Playing his
cards close to his vest, he succeeded all too well. The results are
too consistent, too perfect. (p. 68)
Whatever defects there may be in the videotape record of Leuchter's investigation,
it seems unlikely that they are the result of conscious fraud (let alone
a plot orchestrated by his arch-enemy Robert Faurisson). Any possible defects
there may be are more likely to have been occasioned by inexperience and
the circumstances in which the gathering of evidence and the videotaping
was conducted. As British historian David Irving has written:
I myself would, admittedly, have preferred to see more rigorous methods
used in identifying and certifying the samples taken for analysis, but
I accept without reservation the difficulties that the examining team
faced on location in what is now Poland: chiselling out the samples
from the hallowed site under the very noses of the new camp guards.
The video tapes made simultaneously by the team -- which I have studied
-- provide compelling visual evidence of the scrupulous methods that
they used. (note 14)
Furthermore, as already mentioned, Poland's Institute of Forensic Research
(Krakow) has provided independent corroboration of Leuchter's findings.
The Institute's investigation team found no cyanide residue in the "gas
chamber" samples they took, except for one taken from the Crematorium II
ruins. It measures 6 micrograms per 100 grams of material. This is equal
to .06 milligrams of cyanide per kilogram of material (mg/kg). (note 15)
This is less than the minimum amount that could be detected by the measuring
instrument of the Alpha laboratory. The minimum trace level of cyanide that
could be detected by Alpha was one mg/kg. (note 16) Anything below this
amount was rightly considered inconsequential. Thus, Leuchter's findings
are consistent with those of Poland's Institute of Forensic Research: there
was no significant cyanide residue in material taken from Crematorium II's
"gas chamber."
III
Pressac asks:
What decisive point of the [Leuchter] report leads the deniers [Holocaust
Revisionists] to think they have "won" [the debate about the existence
of extermination "gas chambers"]? They compared the quantity of cyanide
residue in the Birkenau BW 5a delousing building gas chamber (sample
No. 32) yielding 1,050 mg/kg . . . and those varying from 0 to 7.9 mg/kg
in samples from the Auschwitz-Birkenau homicidal gas chambers. The result
triggers the following line of questioning. How can it be believed that
the areas supposedly used to asphyxiate thousands daily by means of
hydrocyanic acid over the course of a year or two retain only minute
traces of cyanide while other places, used for delousing with the same
gas over the same time period, yield traces one hundred and fifty to
a thousand times greater? (p. 35)
As Pressac indicates, Leuchter did indeed conclude:
One would have expected higher cyanide detection in the samples taken
from the alleged gas chambers (because of the greater amount of gas
allegedly utilized there) than that found in the control sample. Since
the contrary is true, one must conclude that these facilities were not
execution gas chambers, when coupled with all the other evidence gained
on inspection. (note 17)
In an effort to discredit this conclusion, three explanations have been
offered in response:
Explanation 1. After 45 years, virtually all of the cyanide residue
in the alleged extermination gas chambers has "weathered away." Poland's
Institute of Forensic Research, for example, expressed the view that
. . . one can hardly assume that traces of cyanic compounds could still
be detected in construction materials (plaster, brick) after 45 years,
after being subjected to the weather and the elements (rain, acid oxides,
especially sulfuric oxides). More reliable would be the analysis of
wall plaster [samples] from closed rooms which were not subject to weather
and the elements (including acid rain). (note 18)
Writing in Truth Prevails, Pressac expresses a similar opinion: "As a
general rule, the more a sample's locale was exposed to the elements, the
lower -- indeed, nil -- the cyanide content." He also wrote: "The ruins
of Crematorium II and III and the restored walls of IV and V have been exposed
to the elements for over forty years. It's practically a miracle that any
measurable hydrocyanic compound traces still remain." (pp. 71, 44)
However, in his 1989 book, Auschwitz: Technique and Operation of the
Gas Chambers, Pressac says something rather different. In this detailed
work, he published a picture of the outside wall of a delousing chamber.
Referring to this structure, he wrote: ". . . from ground level to just
below the chimney, bluish stains can be seen on the bricks of the wall,
showing that hydrocyanic acid was used there (in 1942-1944), for delousing
purposes." (note 19) He thus confirms that even though this wall has been
exposed to the elements since the Second World War, a significant amount
of Prussian blue is nevertheless still visible. Pressac himself thus discredits
the claim that all or even most of the Prussian blue (ferric ferrocyanide)
would have "weathered away."
If Pressac's view on this is correct, the outside wall of this delousing
facility obviously would have a lower Prussian blue content than the inside
walls of the "gas chamber" of Krema I. In fact, though, visible Prussian
blue stains can be seen on the outside wall of the delousing facility, which
has been exposed to the elements since the Second World War. By contrast,
there are only invisible and barely detectable amounts of Prussian blue
in samples taken from the inside wall of the supposed homicidal "gas chamber"
of Krema I, which is inside an intact structure and has thus been protected
from the elements since the Second World War. (note 20) As Pressac himself
notes: "Its [Krema I] morgue/ gas chamber inside walls have never been exposed
to sun, rain, or snow (factors which contribute to cyanide content diminishing)
as the other crematoriums were and are." (p. 44)
Referring to the absence of cyanide/Prussian blue traces in the samples
taken from Birkenau's Krema II, Pressac writes in Truth Prevails: "Cyanide's
solubility in rain water and the water layer accumulated underground from
infiltrating rain accounts for its absence from the samples." (p. 41)
This view is simply not correct. Dr. James Roth, the chemistry expert
who analyzed Leuchter's samples, pointed out that Prussian blue cannot be
washed out of brick, mortar or cement by water. The ferric ferrocyanide
compounds produced by the interaction of hydrogen cyanide with the iron
elements in brick (and such) are very stable, and remain in such substances
for a very long time. As Roth testified under oath, the compounds can be
removed only by sandblasting or the application of strong acid. (note 21)
Nobel Prize-winning chemist Linus Pauling similarly confirms that Prussian
blue is insoluble in water. (note 22) Finally, the authoritative Handbook
of Chemistry and Physics notes that ferric ferrocyanide -- or iron (III)
ferrocyanide -- is insoluble in hot or cold water. (note 23)
It should be stressed here that whereas the Institute of Forensic Research
(Krakow) measured the amount of potassium cyanide, (note 24) Leuchter was
mainly concerned with Prussian blue (or ferric ferrocyanide). (note 25)
As previously noted, while Potassium cyanide is indeed water soluble, (note
26) ferric ferrocyanide is not. Prussian blue is a very stable compound
that simply could not have been washed away by rain.
Explanation 2. Pressac suggests that when camp officials dynamited
crematory buildings (Kremas) II, III and V, this contributed to the removal
of cyanide residue. (pp. 40, 42, 43) This explanation will also not hold
up. While it is true that dynamiting breaks up the bricks of a structure,
it does not remove chemical stains on or within such bricks. Nor, for the
most part, would it abrade Prussian blue on their surfaces. Pressac himself
points out that a support pillar in Krema II's "gas chamber" withstood the
effects of explosion. (p. 65) Any Prussian blue on the surface of or within
the pillar's pores would have remained.
Explanation 3. This is Pressac's principal explanation. Even though
the delousing facility was exposed to a lesser amount of HCN than the "gas
chambers," the walls of the delousing facility were impregnated with warm
HCN for at least twelve hours a day. He writes:
This cyanide saturation of 12 to 18 hours a day was strengthened by
the heat the stoves in the room emitted, providing a temperature of
30 degrees Celsius [86 degrees Fahrenheit]. The walls were impregnated
with hot HCN for at least 12 hours a day, which would induce the formation
of a stain: Prussian blue, or potassioferric ferrocyanide [sic] . .
. (p. 37). (note 27)
As for the "gas chambers," Pressac alleges the HCN was in physical contact
with their walls "for no more than ten minutes a day," at a temperature
of about 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit). Without additional
heat, the brief contact of high concentrations of HCN with the walls of
the homicidal installations was not able to induce the reaction which led
to the formation of significant amounts of cyanide residue. Hence, the amount
of ferric ferrocyanide in the "gas chamber" samples is nil or nonexistent.
(pp. 36-38)
If Pressac had made an objective study of the chemistry of hydrogen cyanide
and Prussian blue, he would have learned how inaccurate this theory is.
The walls of the alleged gas chambers contain a large amount of iron.
(note 28) And, as Dr. James Roth pointed out: "If iron is present with hydrogen
cyanide around, then you are going to get a reaction between the hydrogen
cyanide and iron." (note 29) Hydrogen cyanide dissolves very readily in
water, becoming hydrocyanic acid. (note 30) As Pressac and Leuchter have
both noted, the alleged gas chambers were very damp. (note 31) Enough moisture
would have been on the walls, floors and ceilings to dissolve at least some
of the HCN supposed to have been used during an alleged gassing.
In the presence of water, iron in the walls and cyanide from the hydrogen
cyanide would readily combine to form an iron cyanide complex. Aqueous solutions
of hydrogen cyanide are weak acids.32 As Dr. Pauling notes: "Iron is an
active metal, which displaces hydrogen easily from dilute acids."33 Consequently,
the iron from the walls would easily have displaced the hydrogen (H+) in
the hydrocyanic acid, bonded with the cyanide (CN-], and formed an iron-cyanide
complex, ferrocyanide ion [Fe(CN6)]4-. (note 34) This is what Dr. Pauling
meant when he wrote that cyanide ion [CN-] added to a solution of ferrous
ion [iron (II) ion] forms precipitates which dissolve in excess cyanide
to produce complex ions. (note 35)
Finally, according to Dr. Pauling, the pigment Prussian blue is made
by the addition of ferric [iron (III)] ion to a ferrocyanide solution.36
According to chemist James Brady: "The deep color Prussian blue is formed
when a drop of dilute solution containing Fe3+ [iron (III) ion] is added
to a dilute solution containing ferrocyanide ion, Fe(CN)64-. After a few
moments, the blue precipitate, Fe4[Fe(CN)6]3 . 16H20, settles to the bottom
of the test tube." (note 37) In plain language, the iron-cyanide complex,
ferrocyanide, combines with more iron to form ferric ferrocyanide (or Prussian
blue).
What this whole reaction mechanism shows is that even if the HCN were
in contact with the "gas chamber" walls for less than ten minutes every
day or two for two years, significant quantities of Prussian blue still
would have formed. (By a "significant amount" is meant an amount slightly
less or equal to that found in the delousing facility samples.) At least
some of the HCN, upon contact with the diffuse wetness, would have dissolved
immediately. (note 38) This dissolved HCN, upon contact with the iron, would
have formed some ferrocyanide immediately. (note 39) The ferrocyanide, upon
contact with more iron, would have formed some Prussian blue almost immediately.
(note 40)
But just as important, the application of heat to the walls and gas is
not at all necessary to form significant amounts of Prussian blue. Relevant
to this issue is the informative verbal exchange between attorney Douglas
Christie and Dr. James Roth during the 1988 trial in Toronto of Ernst Zuendel.
Referring to the reaction between hydrogen cyanide and the iron in the walls
of the alleged gas chambers, Christie asked Roth: "And could you explain
any way by which this would not happen or no such reaction would occur?"
The chemist replied:
ROTH: Well, one is the lack of water. These reactions to -- in a lot
of cases have to take place in water or with some vapor around. Now,
chances are great [that with] normal temperatures and rooms of normal
humidity, there would be plenty of moisture present for this type of
reaction to take place.
CHRISTIE: So in a normal room with normal humidity these quantities
of iron in the wall, hydrogen cyanide in quantities of 300 parts per
million [.36 g/m3] or more, on a daily basis for two years or even two
weeks, you would expect to see the formation of Prussian blue. Is that
correct?
ROTH: I would expect to see detectable amounts of Prussian
blue. [If not visibly detectable, at least chemically detectable.] That
type of reaction is an accumulative reaction. In other words, as it
reacts it doesn't go away. It stays . . . (note 41)
Pressac's theory that without additional heat the brief contact of high
concentrations of HCN with the walls of the gas chambers was not sufficient
to form significant amounts of Prussian blue is therefore false. (note 42)
The whole ensemble of physical and chemical conditions would have ensured
that significant amounts of Prussian blue residue would have been detectable
in Leuchter's samples if they had been exposed to the amount of gas Pressac
claims.
IV
The boiling point of hydrogen cyanide (HCN) is 26 degrees Celsius (or
78 degrees Fahrenheit). (note 43) That is, HCN vaporizes, or changes from
liquid to gas, at this temperature. If the temperature is below 78 degrees
F, there will thus be condensation: Much of HCN will change from gas to
liquid. In addition to being cool year round, the Auschwitz I and II (Birkenau)
"gas chambers" were supposedly operated during the cold weather months of
fall, winter and spring. (note 44) They were allegedly ventilated "naturally"
or "mechanically." (p. 72) (note 45) In either case, air from the outside
environment would have been used to expel poison gas from the chamber. During
the fall, winter and spring months, this outside ventilation air would have
been considerably cooler than 78 degrees F. In addition, as Pressac admits
and Leuchter confirms, the "gas chambers" had no internal heating devices
to prevent condensation. (note 46) The temperature of the walls, floors
and ceilings for much of the year would have been well below 78 degrees
F.
During an alleged gassing operation, much of the poisonous HCN gas therefore
would have promptly condensed to liquid upon contact with the frigid walls,
floors and ceilings, or upon contact with cold air during ventilation. Because
HCN gas naturally adheres to surfaces, it can be ventilated only with difficulty
and after considerable time. (note 47) Thus, even if an alleged "gassing"
lasted no more than twenty minutes, a considerable amount of condensed,
liquid HCN would have remained on the walls, floors and ceilings after ventilation.
The cold air allegedly used to ventilate the poison gas would simply have
ensured that much of the HCN would have changed to liquid and remained on
the inside surfaces of the "gas chambers."
In this vein, Leuchter has noted:
. . . if the temperature [of the gas chamber] is not above 78 to 79
degrees, we get condensation of the gas on the walls, the floor and
the ceiling. When the hydrogen cyanide condenses into a liquid it will
be absorbed by the brick and by the mortar . . . (note 48)
As Dr. Pauling has noted, "Hydrogen cyanide . . . is a gas which dissolves
in water and acts as a very weak acid." (note 49) In this regard, it is
worth pointing out that the Auschwitz-Birkenau "gas chambers" were always
damp. (note 50) Therefore, even during the warm weather months, when the
ambient temperature in the "gas chambers" may have been above 78 degrees
F, some gaseous HCN would have readily dissolved the moment it came in contact
with the natural moisture on the floor, walls and ceiling. In this way,
the constant dampness or moisture in the "gas chambers" would ensure that
HCN would be held in solution even during the warm weather months. (note
51) This HCN -- dissolved in the moisture or condensed back to liquid --
thus would have remained in the "gas chambers" even after ventilation, and
would have reacted with the iron in the bricks to form Prussian blue.
According to chemists of the German Degesch company (which manufactured
Zyklon), exposed porous surfaces of an authentic (delousing) gas chamber
must be coated with a sealant to make the facility impervious to HCN impregnation.
(note 52) Leuchter found that none of the alleged extermination "gas chambers"
in Auschwitz was coated with any sealant. (note 53) If these facilities
had actually been used as extermination gas chambers, their walls, floors
and ceilings would have absorbed significant quantities of HCN.
Critical to Pressac's thesis is this claim:
In a homicidal gas chamber, the action of highly concentrated HCN was
rapid and intense (never more than 15 to 20 minutes), at a temperature
below 27 degrees C. [80.6 degrees F], then the room was aired or artificially
ventilated to get rid of the gas as quickly as possible . . . The acid
had time to attack the metallic parts superficially, forming cyanide,
but did not have enough time to impregnate and stain the brick. Conversely,
the operation of a delousing gas chamber used much lower concentrations
of HCN, but as a general rule and according to witnesses, the gas remained
for a very much longer time, from 16 to 18 hours, and a higher temperature
was maintained by heating the chamber by stoves . . . (note 54)
This is not accurate. As we have already established, if the structures
in question had actually been used as homicidal "gas chambers," the walls,
floors and ceilings would have absorbed significant quantities of HCN. The
physical and chemical conditions in the alleged "gas chambers" were such
that a significant amount of HCN would have remained after a "gassing,"
impregnating the brick and forming significant quantities of Prussian blue.
Let us summarize Pressac's thesis with two quotations. In the 1990 work,
Truth Prevails, he wrote:
Without heat induction of long continuance, the cyanide doses [in the
"gas chambers"], as high as they were, were not in contact with the
walls of the homicidal installations long enough to provoke the reaction
[forming Prussian blue] to an appreciable -- that is to say visible
-- degree. (p. 38)
And in his 1989 work, Auschwitz, Pressac wrote:
To sum up here: as a consequence of all these factors, HCN would have
been in contact with the walls of the "gas chambers" for much more than
just ten or twenty minutes a day, and significant amounts of HCN would have
remained after gassing and subsequent ventilation. Therefore -- and contrary
to what Pressac claims -- significant amounts of Prussian blue would have
been produced.
Leuchter's comparison of samples taken from the "gas chamber" with samples
taken from the control/delousing facility samples is entirely valid. If
the alleged extermination "gas chambers" had actually been used to kill
people as alleged, ferric ferrocyanide would have been found in them in
amounts comparable to those found in the delousing facility. As the American
gas chamber expert has noted, the point is not that the cyanide traces at
the alleged gassing sites are "somewhat less" but that they are negligible
or nil. The samples from the alleged gas chamber areas, most of them had
totally no traces at all. The few that did have traces were barely above
detection level. So, we're not talking about a situation that there was
more or less. We're talking about nothing and something, and in the area
where there was something [the delousing facility], we had a very high content.
We had a thousand and fifty milligrams per kilogram, and the highest that
we detected in any of the other areas [the alleged gas chambers] was seven
milligrams per kilogram. (note 56)
V
Pressac claims that only a select few of Leuchter's specimens were taken
correctly. The rest are "worthless," allegedly because Leuchter "switched
samples" by planting rocks with no cyanide residues in the "gas chamber"
area in order to "prove" his case. Pressac also charges that Leuchter confused
sample location. (That is, samples designated by Leuchter as coming from
one area actually came for another.) And, according to Pressac, the American
specialist used "trick photography." (pp. 42-43, 46-48, 61-73)
Let us give Mr. Pressac the benefit of the doubt, and assume that his
designation of most of Leuchter's samples as either "worthless" or "valid"
is correct. This would mean that remaining "acceptable" specimens include:
Krema III: Sample 9. (p. 69)
Krema V: Sample 24. (p. 71)
Krema I: Samples 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, and 30. (pp. 40, 46, 62)
Fortunately, using just these samples, we can disprove Pressac's theories
and show that Leuchter's results are valid.
Consider crematory building (Krema) I in the Auschwitz main camp. The
supposed gas chamber there was adjacent to a washroom. (note 57) The washroom
was never part of the "gas chamber." (note 58) They were separated by a
gas-tight door. (note 59) Both rooms were apparently disinfestated with
hydrocyanic acid. (note 60) Pressac maintains that people were killed in
the alleged "gas chamber" there from the end of 1941 until 1942. (note 61)
Prior to this, he believes, it was used as a morgue, and afterwards it was
used as an air raid shelter. (note 62) Hence, it would have been exposed
to significant amounts of HCN not only during the period when it allegedly
functioned as a homicidal gas chamber, but also as a result of periodic
disinfestation treatment during the time it functioned as a morgue and air
raid shelter.
According to Pressac, "probably" no more than ten thousand persons were
put to death in the alleged "gas chamber" of Krema I. (note 63) Consequently,
this room would have been exposed to significant concentrations of HCN for
extended periods of time. (note 64)
Leuchter found no evidence of any exhaust system, or any other way to
expel the gas in a short period. (note 65) For this reason, it would have
taken many hours after each alleged "gassing" operation to ventilate HCN
from the chamber. For reasons already given, much HCN would have remained
after the ventilation phase of a "gassing" to permeate the walls, floor
and ceiling. By contrast, the washroom would have been exposed to the gas
only during periodic disinfestations. Clearly, then, the alleged "gas chamber"
was exposed to HCN for much longer periods of time than then the washroom.
Pressac's theory predicts that the amount of cyanide residue in a structure
would be proportional to the amount of time it was exposed to HCN. He writes:
The considerable difference in hydrocyanic residue between the delousing
stations and the homicidal gas chambers is the result of the respective
difference in time spent administering Zyklon (at least 12 hours per
day in the delousing versus 5 to 10 minutes every day or two in killing
humans). (p. 63)
In the view of Revisionist researcher Enrique Aynat, though:
. . . Leuchter took one of his samples in an area that had been a washroom,
which had never been part of the supposed gas chamber, and was separated
from it by a gas-tight door. The partition wall that separated the washroom
from the supposed gas chamber was eliminated by the Poles after the
war. The analysis of this sample reveals a presence of cyanide comparable
to that of most of the other samples. In short, the amount of cyanide
found in a sample taken from a place that had never served as a gas
chamber was similar to that detected in the samples taken from the supposed
gas chamber. If the mortuary had really been a gas chamber, cyanide
ought to have been detected in the samples taken from there, and by
the same token nothing should have been detected in the sample obtained
from the former washroom; or rather a minute amount of cyanide should
have been found in the former washroom (from contingent disinfestation
with hydrocyanic acid) and a much larger quantity in the gas chamber.
What proves to be inexplicable from the Exterminationist point of view
is the findings of similar amounts of cyanide in both places. (note
66)
This finding strongly suggests that Pressac's theory is false.
Pressac notes that ". . . sample 9 (Crematorium III, Leichenkeller 1),
taken from the base of a fifth central support pillar, exposed to every
imaginable meteorological turpitude for 45 years, still gives a reading
of 6.9 mg/kg." (p. 71) Sample 24 was taken from the ruins of an alleged
gas chamber of Krema V. Because the building which housed it was razed to
the ground in the 1940s, the foundation and floor were exposed to the elements
for decades. (p. 44) Therefore, Pressac cannot contend that any difference
between the cyanide levels of samples 9 and 24 is due to the "weathering
process."
The time periods during which the extermination "gas chambers" of crematory
buildings (Kremas) III and V were in operation are similar. The "gas chamber"
in Krema III (Birkenau) allegedly operated during much of 1943 and 1944
-- almost two full years. (note 67) The "gas chamber" in Krema V (also in
Birkenau) supposedly operated from April 1943 until the summer of 1944.
(p. 43)
According to Pressac, because there was a mechanical ventilation system
in Krema III, sample 9 would have been in contact with the HCN for only
five to ten minutes during an alleged gassing operation: "Considering the
poisoning time required to asphyxiate the victims in conjunction with the
ventilation, the time period during which the walls were exposed to the
hydrocyanic acid gas did not exceed 5 to 10 minutes every one or two days."
(p. 72) By contrast, in the case of the supposed "gas chambers" of Krema
V, he writes:
Crematorium V's 3 (then 4) gas chamber bloc [sic] was aired out naturally,
with all the doors open. It clearly took more time than the mechanical
ventilation did. The period during which the walls were exposed to the
hydrocyanic acid, with the concentration progressively diminishing during
the airing out time, had to be one or two hours. (p. 72)
According to Pressac's theory, then, sample 24 should have a significantly
higher cyanide content than sample 9, because of the former's longer exposure
time to HCN. Yet just the opposite is the case. Sample 9 has a measured
residue of 6.7 mg/kg, while sample 24 has no measurable residue. (note 68)
In an attempt to explain away this serious discrepancy, Pressac claims
that sample 9 stood one meter from one of the four wire mesh columns through
which Zyklon B was supposedly introduced into the chamber. This "privileged
position," he speculates, could be the cause of the "unusual" cyanide content.
(pp. 71-72)
This explanation will not withstand close scrutiny. As noted above, Pressac
alleges that HCN was in contact with sample 9 of Krema III for only five
to ten minutes during a gassing, while sample 24 of Krema V was in contact
with the gas one or two hours during a gassing operation. Pressac himself
wrote: "The substantial difference between the two exposure periods (that
of V being 10 to 30 times longer than that of II/III) shows that V's bricks
were saturated with hydrocyanic gas much longer than those of II and III."
(p. 72) According to his own theory, the HCN would have had more time to
form significant amounts of Prussian blue in sample 24 than in sample 9.
The reader may understandably ask: "If the alleged 'gas chambers' were
never used for homicidal purposes, why was any cyanide at all found in the
samples taken by Leuchter?" Dr. Robert Faurisson provides an answer: "The
extremely low levels of cyanide found in some crematoria was likely, in
my opinion, to have resulted from disinfection of the premises during the
war." (note 69)
Pressac rejects this explanation as an "often-used lie":
Hydrocyanic acid is used first and foremost to exterminate such vermin
as insect pests [lice] and rodents. Classified as an insecticide and
vermin killer, it has no bactericide or germicide properties for use
as an antiseptic. Places and things are disinfected with various kinds
of antiseptics: solid (lime, lime chloride), liquid (bleach, cresol),
gas (formaldehyde, sulfur anhydride). To remove lice from clothing required
either an insecticide, or dry steam disinfecting in an autoclave. But
a morgue is not disinfected with an insecticide or vermin killer like
hydrocyanic acid, as Faurisson foolishly claims . . . Leuchter, who
claims to be scientifically trained, whereas Faurisson is not, similarly
used this stupidity in his report. (pp. 38-39)
Here Pressac is straining to represent Dr. Faurisson and Leuchter as
having ignorantly confused "disinfection" with "disinfestation," although
he knows full well that the word "disinfection," in line with the German
usage (Desinfektion), is used for "delousing."
A standard reference work makes this point about the disease typhus:
"The spread of typhus in communities results largely from the fact that
infected lice tend to leave persons with high fever, and they evacuate the
corpses of those who have died from the disease." (note 70) As both Revisionists
and Exterminationists agree, many thousands died in Auschwitz as a consequence
of recurrent typhus epidemics, and the supposed homicidal gas chambers were
used as morgues. Because deceased victims of the disease are a direct source
of the infected lice, any place where the corpses of typhus victims were
kept would therefore be a logical place for disinfestation treatment with
Zyklon B. Contrary to what Pressac maintains, it would make perfect sense
to periodically delouse the morgues (or supposed "gas chambers"). Indeed,
a wartime German document on the use of hydrogen cyanide and Zyklon B (Nuremberg
document NI-9098) specifically states that Zyklon B should be used for large-scale
fumigations of storerooms. (note 71)
VI
Finally, a few miscellaneous comments are in order.
Pressac misrepresents what Leuchter writes about the danger of locating
HCN gas chambers adjacent to crematoria:
Leuchter's last claim about the homicidal gas chambers in connection
with the cremation furnaces is that they are incompatible under the
same roof. As soon as the door was opened to the area saturated with
hydrocyanic acid, the same being without ventilation according to Leuchter,
the gas would be spread throughout the crematorium, reaching the lit
ovens, and, combined with the air, would have exploded, destroying the
entire building. HCN's flammability limits in air are from 5.6% (minimum)
to 40% (maximum) in volume (6%-41% according to Du Pont). This signifies
that upon contact with a flame there is an explosion if the concentration
of hydrocyanic acid in air comprises between 67.2g/m3, and 480g/m3.
Below 67.2g/m3 there is no risk, nor is there any at greater than 480g/m3
because there is not enough remaining oxygen for burning to begin. The
SS used doses of 5g/m3 in delousing and 12-20g/m3 in killing, well under
the 67.2g/m3 threshold. Their gas chambers and crematoria were not about
to explode. Leuchter's "impartial" opinion is based upon an incorrect
calculation. (p. 45)
Leuchter was well aware of the very real explosiveness of HCN. As he
has pointed out, no execution gas chamber system in the United States has
ever been designed for use with Zyklon B because
. . . a danger of explosion always exists. The overall gas mixture [in
a gas chamber] is generally below the lower explosion limit (LEL) of
the gas air mixture. . .but the concentration of the gas at the generator
(or as in the case of Zyklon B, at the inert carrier) is much greater
and may well be 90% to 99% by volume. This is almost pure HCN and this
condition may exist at points of time in pockets in the chamber. (note
72)
Du Pont company chemists confirm this point: "Hydrogen cyanide is extremely
flammable and can be ignited by an open flame, hot surface, or spark . .
. Outside closed containers, the gas is likely to form flammable mixtures
because of its high volatility." (note 73) Even if the gas does not explode,
it can still burn. Another authoritative source similarly notes: "Small
quantities of hydrogen cyanide can be burned in a hood in an open metal
vessel. Large-scale burning in outdoor pans can be performed, but special
safety precautions must be employed." (note 74)
Leuchter has also pointed out the alleged extermination gas chambers
were not properly sealed. (note 75) Gas would have leaked out, and some
of the escaping HCN gas would have reached the ovens, ignited, and burned
in the air -- all the way to the source of the leaks in the "gas chamber."
If the burning HCN reached a pocket of the gas within the explosive limits,
an explosion would have occurred. Because this scenario is quite plausible,
Leuchter stated: ". . . I wouldn't even want to be present within the vicinity
of the building [which housed the alleged gas chambers] if someone were
using Zyklon B and the crematory was functioning." (note 76) Simply put,
it would have been extremely dangerous to carry out a homicidal gassing
operation near a functioning crematory. A disaster would be likely.
With regard to another issue of contention, Pressac writes:
The nature of the substrata is not sufficiently taken into account,
to the extent of evading the issue, and is grouped under the heading
of "brick" by the Analysis laboratory. In the case of L-Keller 1 of
crematoriums II and III, the German construction documents attest that
the "cellar" walls were built with 400 bricks per cubic meter, with
mortar mixed at the ratio of 1/1/5, which measures one part cement and
one part lime for every five parts of sand. The pillars were poured
of 1/5 reinforced concrete, meaning one part cement to every five parts
of sand. The interior partitions, pillars and ceiling all received a
coat of roughcast (about 1 to 1.5 cm thick), comprising 17 liters of
mortar. Its composition was 1/0.5/5, meaning one part cement and one
half part lime for every 5 parts sand. The L-Keller 1 wall bricks which
are visible today were covered throughout the war with a roughcast which
has since fallen off. These bricks were never directly exposed to the
gas. Leuchter's samples of the exposed bricks in the "cellar" are not
worth very much in view of the feeble impression the hydrocyanic acid
made on their surfaces. (p. 73)
An official wartime information sheet on the use of hydrogen cyanide
and Zyklon B confirms that HCN has "extraordinarily great penetrative powers."
This sheet (Nuremberg document NI-9912) was issued by the public health
agency of Bohemia-Moravia. (note 77) Even if the roughcast had been present
during the alleged homicidal gassings, HCN would have penetrated through
to the iron in the bricks beneath it, ultimately producing a significant
quantity of Prussian blue.
Also noteworthy in this regard is the observation of Poland's Institute
of Forensic Research concerning the Auschwitz delousing facilities: "According
to our information, these rooms were whitewashed during the war years. In
some spots, a blue or dark blue stain shows through." (note 78) As Dr. Roth
pointed out, the reaction between HCN and iron will go fairly deep in porous
substances (like roughcast) unless perhaps the surface formation of Prussian
blue inhibited its further penetration. (note 79) Indeed, the outside wall
of a Birkenau delousing facility had Prussian blue stains. (note 80) Apparently,
the gas penetrated from the inside of the chamber to the outside surface
of the bricks. Any paint or roughcast on the inside surface did not prohibit
HCN penetration.
Another criticism of the Leuchter Report has been made by Mr. Charles
Provan, an American lay theologian and contributor to the weekly Christian
News. He has alleged that certain "eyewitnesses" have claimed that the chambers
were washed down with water after the homicidal gassings. This water supposedly
would have washed away the HCN, preventing it from reacting with the iron.
(note 81)
Because HCN has great penetrating powers and the "gas chamber" surfaces
were porous, at least some hydrogen cyanide would have penetrated far enough
into the roughcast and brick to escape being washed away. Furthermore, HCN
is water soluble. After the hosing down, numerous water droplets, containing
dissolved HCN, would have remained on the walls, floors and ceilings to
react with the iron, ultimately forming significant amounts of Prussian
blue.
Conclusion
Based on spurious knowledge, inducing specious logic which leads to false
conclusions, Pressac's attacks on The Leuchter Report stem from faulty scientific
and technical understanding, and thus utterly fail to demolish it. As already
noted, since the publication of Truth Prevails, a study by Poland's leading
forensic institute has given strong corroboration to Leuchter's findings,
and thus to his methodology.
Pressac's ad hominem attacks on Leuchter and Faurisson, who by daring
to subject the gas chamber myth to scientific and technical investigation,
have risked their livelihoods, their personal freedom, and even their lives,
will, one hopes, strike future generations of readers as no less obscurantist
than the attacks directed at Galileo, at Darwin, or at the geneticists who
dared to defy Lysenko during the Stalin years. May The Leuchter Report help
to free, not only the Western world, but the entire literate world from
the chains of an oppressive illusion -- the lie of the Hitler gas chambers.
Notes
The author would like to express special thanks to a retired Standard
Oil research chemist who wishes to remain anonymous, and to Dr. William
Lindsey. Their knowledge and expertise were very helpful. Any mistakes or
errors in this article are, of course, the sole responsibility of the author.
1. The Leuchter Report: The First Forensic Examination of Auschwitz
(London: Focal Point, 1989). With foreword by David Irving, and introduction
by Robert Faurisson. Page 10. Hereafter, this work will be cited as
The Leuchter Report.
2. Shelly Shapiro, editor, Truth Prevails: Demolishing Holocaust
Denial: The End of "The Leuchter Report" (New York: Beate Klarsfeld
Foundation and Holocaust Survivors & Friends, 1990). Distributed by: Holocaust
Survivors & Friends in Pursuit of Justice, 800 New Loudon Rd., #400, Latham,
NY 12110. Pressac's two articles are "The Deficiencies and Inconsistencies
of 'The Leuchter Report'," (pp. 31-60), and "Additional Notes: Leuchter's
Videotape: Witness to a Fraud" (pp. 61-73). Hereafter, all page numbers
cited in the main text of this article refer to Truth Prevails. For a good
review of Pressac's contribution to this book, see the May-June 1991 issue
of Remarks, available for $3 postpaid from Jack Wikoff, P.O. Box
234, Aurora, N.Y., 13026.
3. Robert C. Weast, ed., Handbook of Chemistry and Physics: A Ready-Reference
Book of Chemical and Physical Data, 57th edition. (Cleveland: CRC Press,
1976), p. B-144. Hereafter, this book will be cited as Handbook of Chemistry
and Physics.
4. Institute of Forensic Research (Krakow, Poland), "An Official Polish
Report on the Auschwitz 'Gas Chambers,' " The Journal of Historical
Review, Summer 1991 (Vol. 11, No. 2), pp. 207-216.
5. "Sodium Cyanide: Properties, Uses, Storage and Handling," p. 7. This
Du Pont company information sheet is reprinted in facsimile in The Leuchter
Report (London: 1989), pp. 33-38. See p. 37.
6. Leuchter letter to Alpha Analytical of March 9, 1988. Reprinted in
facsimile as an appendix in The Leuchter Report (London), p. 31.
7. Fred Leuchter, "The Leuchter Report: The How and Why," The Journal
of Historical Review, Summer 1989 (Vol. 9, No. 2), p. 137.
8. The Leuchter Report (London), p. 15.
9. Leuchter letter of March 9, 1988 to Alpha Analytical. Reprinted as
an appendix in The Leuchter Report, p. 31.
10. The term "cyanate content" is a mistake. Leuchter wanted to know
the cyanide content, not cyanate content. The two are different.
11. Institute of Forensic Research (Krakow, Poland), "An Official Polish
Report on the Auschwitz 'Gas Chambers,' " The Journal of Historical
Review, Summer 1991 (Vol. 11, No. 2), pp. 212-213.
12. See the videotape of Leuchter's lecture in the videotape recording,
"Highlights of the 9th IHR conference" (Feb. 1989). Available from the Institute
for Historical Review, Videotape V-048.
13. Videotape "Fred Leuchter in Poland" (VT-003). Available from David
Clark, P.O. Box 726, Decatur, Ala., 35602. This videotape, produced under
the name of Samisdat (Toronto), does not show the entire visit.
14. See David Irving's foreword to the London (Focal Point) edition (1989)
of The Leuchter Report, p. 6.
15. See footnote 11.
16. F. Leuchter, The Leuchter Report, p. 21. See also: Robert
Lenski, The Holocaust on Trial: The Case of Ernst Zundel (Decatur,
Ala.: Reporter Press, 1990), p. 394. Hereafter, this book is cited as
The Holocaust on Trial.
17. The Leuchter Report, p. 15.
18. Institute of Forensic Research (Krakow, Poland), "An Official Polish
Report on the Auschwitz 'Gas Chambers'," The Journal of Historical Review,
Summer 1991, pp. 213-214.
19. Jean-Claude Pressac, Auschwitz: Technique and Operation of the
Gas Chambers (New York: Beate Klarsfeld Foundation, 1989), p. 59. Hereafter
cited as: Pressac, Auschwitz (1989).
20. The Leuchter Report, pp. 21-22.
21. Robert Lenski, The Holocaust on Trial: The Case of Ernst Zundel
(1990), pp. 395-396.
22. Linus Pauling, General Chemistry (New York: Dover Publications,
1988), p. 706.
23. Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 57th ed., p. B-120.
24. See footnote 11.
25. Fred Leuchter, "The Leuchter Report: The How and Why," The Journal
of Historical Review, Summer 1989 (Vol. 9, No. 2), pp. 138-139.
26. Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 57th ed., p. B-144.
27. The scientific name of Prussian blue is ferric ferrocyanide. The
elemental potassium which Pressac says is part of the compound is actually
an impurity. See: Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, 3rd ed.,
Vol. 13, p. 769.
28. See the compiled data from Alpha Analytical Laboratories given as
an appendix to The Leuchter Report, p. 21. See also Dr. Roth's
statements in: R. Lenski, The Holocaust on Trial, p. 394.
29. R. Lenski, The Holocaust on Trial, p. 395.
30. "Zyklon B for Pest Control," Degesch company booklet, p. 5. This
entire booklet is reprinted in facsimile as an appendix in The Leuchter
Report (London, 1989), pp. 49-62. See p. 51.
31. J.-C. Claude Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), pp. 208, 215, 284-285.
Leuchter also observed that the "gas chambers" were cool and damp. See
The Leuchter Report, pp. 13, 16, 17. See also R. Lenski, The
Holocaust on Trial, p. 375. Filip Mueller, an alleged "operator of
the gas chamber," claimed: "Normally the concrete floors in the gas chamber
as well as in the changing room were damp." See: F. Mueller, Eyewitness
Auschwitz: Three Years in the Gas Chambers (New York: Stein and Day,
1979), pp. 82-83.
32. "Hydrogen Cyanide: Storage and Handling," Du Pont company information
sheet (1983), p. 2. This sheet is reprinted as an appendix in The Leuchter
Report (London), pp. 39-44. See p. 41.
33. Linus Pauling, General Chemistry (1988), p. 690.
34. P.W. Atkins, General Chemistry (New York: Scientific American,
1989), p. 780.
35. Linus Pauling, General Chemistry (1988), p. 691.
36. L. Pauling, General Chemistry (1988), p. 692.
37. James Brady, General Chemistry: Principles and Structure,
5th ed. (New York: John Wily, 1990), p. 704. Dr. Brady also notes: "It is
interesting that exactly the same compound is formed if a solution containing
Fe2+ [iron (II) ion] is added to a solution containing Fe(CN)63- ion [ferricyanide
ion]." The Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, 3rd ed., Vol. 13,
p. 769, provides clarification. It lists the following reactions: excess
Fe3+ + K2[Fe(CN)6] -- -> insoluble Prussian blue: excess Fe2+ + K3[Fe(CN)6]
-- -> insoluble Turnbull's blue
38. They point out that insoluble Prussian blue and insoluble Turnbull's
blue are the same substances. See also James E. Huheey, 3rd ed., Inorganic
Chemistry: Principles of Structure and Reactivity (New York: Harper
and Row, 1983), p. 522. The following are the chemical equations used to
describe the formation of ferric ferrocyanide, or Prussian blue. 1) Fe2+
+ 6CN- -- -> [Fe(CN)6]4-: Ferrous ion, cyanide ion ferrocyanide ion : iron
(II) ion: 2) 3 [Fe(CN)6]4- + 4Fe3+ -- -> Fe4[Fe(CN)6]3: ferrocyanide ferric
ion Prussian blue
39. Sources: Linus Pauling, General Chemistry (1988), pp. 673,
691-692; P.W. Atkins, General Chemistry (1989), p. 780; James E.
Brady, General Chemistry (1990), p. 704; James E. Huheey, 3rd ed., Inorganic
Chemistry: Principles of Structure and Reactivity (New York: Harper and
Row, 1983), pp. 521-522; William Nebergall, Frederic Schmidt, Henry Holtzclaw,
College Chemistry with Qualitative Analysis, 5th ed., (Lexington, Mass:
D.C. Heath, 1976), p. 909; William Brown, Elizabeth Rogers, General, Organic,
and Biochemistry, 3rd ed., (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 1987), pp. 561A-561B.
40. See footnote 30.
41. See footnotes 33, 34 and 35.
42. See footnote 36 and 37.
43. R. Lenski, The Holocaust on Trial, p. 396.
44. Pressac's theory is further undermined by the observation of Degesch
company chemists: "Hydrocyanic acid dissolves very readily in water. Compared
with liquid hydrocyanic acid, the gas is chemically very indifferent, and
even in highly concentrated form under prolonged exposure it does not show
a tendency to react with other substances." From: "Zyklon for pest control"
Degesch company booklet, p. 5. Published in facsimile as appendix to The
Leuchter Report (London), p. 51. This statement suggests prolonged exposure
of the gas with the walls is not what would cause the formation of large
amounts of Prussian blue. The gas becomes reactive when it dissolves in
water or condenses to liquid.
45. Information provided by the Dupont and Degesch companies, published
as appendices in The Leuchter Report (London, 1989), pp. 41, 51.; Handbook
of Chemistry and Physics, pp. B-117, F-135.
46. J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), pp. 131-132, 183, 223, 224, 264,
284-285, 289, 375, 379, 392; Fred Leuchter, The Leuchter Report, pp. 13,
16, 17; Robert Lenski, The Holocaust on Trial, pp. 367, 375, 377.
47. Note also: J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), pp. 16, 183, 223, 224,
284-285, 289, 355-376, 384-386, 489.
48. F. Leuchter, The Leuchter Report, pp. 13, 16, 17. Nowhere in Auschwitz
(1989) does Pressac show the "gas chambers" had any internal heating devices
to prevent condensation.
49. Nuremberg document NI-9912. Published in English translation as an
appendix to The Leuchter Report, (London), pp. 23-25, and in J.-C. Pressac,
Auschwitz (1989), pp. 18-20. Original German-language text is published
in: Udo Walendy , ed., Auschwitz im IG-Farben Prozess (Vlotho: Germany,
1981), pp. 66-72.
50. Dr. Robert Faurisson was the first person to publish document NI-9912,
and to stress the importance of both NI-9912 and NI-9098. Writing in the
Paris daily, Le Monde (Jan. 16, 1979, p. 13), he stated: "The industrial
documents [NI-9098 and NI-9912] establish that Zyklon B was not among those
gasses which were described as 'ventilatable'; on the contrary, its manufacturers
were obliged to admit that it was 'difficult to ventilate since it adheres
to surfaces'." These two documents are referred to by Dr. Faurisson in his
interview/ essay, published in The Journal of Historical Review,
Winter 1981, pp. 324, 356-357. See also Faurisson's essay in The Journal
of Historical Review, Spring 1991, p. 39.
41. Lenski, The Holocaust on Trial, p. 377.
52. L. Pauling, General Chemistry, p. 288. HCN is soluble in water in
all proportions. See Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 57th ed., p. B-117.
53. See footnote 31.
54. That the humidity in the air would "collect" the HCN and make it
react with the iron in the walls is suggested by this statement of Degesch
chemists: "In case of high relative humidity of air, it may happen that
blank-polished surfaces of metal get tarnished, particularly in case of
somewhat higher concentration of gas." See The Leuchter Report (London),
p. 51.
55. "Zyklon For Pest Control," Degesch company booklet, p. 25. Reprinted
as appendix in The Leuchter Report (London), p. 61.
56. The Leuchter Report, p. 13.
57. J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), p. 59.
58. J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), p. 53.
59. R. Lenski, The Holocaust on Trial, p. 366.
60. J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), pp. 131, 159.
61. J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), p. 131; R. Lenski, The Holocaust
on Trial, p. 375. Sample 28 was taken from the washroom. It was never a
part of the presumed gas chamber. To confirm this, compare Leuchter's diagram
of Krema I (p. 28 of The Leuchter Report) with Pressac's diagram of the
same in Auschwitz, p. 159.
62. J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), p. 131.
63. Pressac evidently does not think the washroom or morgue/"gas chamber"
was ever deloused with Zyklon B. However, sample 28 (from the washroom)
contains a minuscule amount of cyanide residue. What accounts for this?
Since Pressac admits the washroom was never used as a "gas chamber," the
presence of cyanide in this specimen can only be due to the fact that it
was treated at least once with Zyklon B during delousing/disinfestation.
See footnote 58. Pressac himself suggests that virtually every building
in Auschwitz-Birkenau was deloused with Zyklon B at one time or another.
See: J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), pp. 188, 201.
64. J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), p. 132.
65. J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), pp. 131-132.
66. J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), p. 132.
67. 12 g/m3 (grams per cubic meter) is the concentration of the HCN allegedly
used in a homicidal gassing. 5g/m3 was the concentration used in a disinfestation.
See J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), p. 16.
68. R. Lenski, The Holocaust on Trial, p. 375. Pressac claims
that one or two extractor fans may have been installed in the ceiling. Even
if this were true, much HCN would have still remained behind after the ventilation
phase of an alleged gassing. See J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz, (1989), p. 132.
69. Enrique Aynat, "Neither Trace Nor Proof," The Journal of Historical
Review, Summer 1991 (Vol. 11, No. 2), pp. 182-183.
70. J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz, pp. 183, 264.
71. The Leuchter Report, pp. 21-22.
72. Introduction by R. Faurisson to The Leuchter Report (London), p.
7.
73. "Typhus," by Herbert Kondo, in: Grolier Universal Encyclopedia, 1966
edition.
74. See endnote 47.
75. The Leuchter Report, p. 12.
76. "Hydrogen Cyanide: Storage and Handling," Du Pont company information
sheet, pp. 1, 8. This sheet is reprinted as an appendix in The Leuchter
Report (London), pp. 39-44. See pp. 40, 44.
77. Kirk, R.E. and Othmer, D.F., Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology,
Third Edition, 7, p. 316.
78. The Leuchter Report, pp. 16, 17.
79. R. Lenski, The Holocaust on Trial, p. 367.
80. See footnote 47. Specifically, see The Leuchter Report (London),
p. 23.
81. "An Official Polish Report on the Auschwitz 'Gas Chambers',"
The Journal of Historical Review, Summer 1991 (Vol. 11, No. 2), p.
211.
82. R. Lenski, The Holocaust on Trial, pp. 395-397.
83. J.-C. Pressac, Auschwitz (1989), p. 59.
84. Audiotape, "Hoffman Interviews Provan," Summer 1991. Available from
Wiswell Ruffin House, P. O. Box 236, Dresden, NY 14441.
Reprinted by permission from The Journal of Historical Review
Vol. 12, No. 4, Winter, 1992-93.
Institute for Historical Review
Post Office Box 2739
Newport Beach, California 92659
|