No. 4

Vol. 13, No. 4 · www.InconvenientHistory.org · 2021

Inconvenient History seeks to revive the true spirit of the historical revisionist movement; a movement that was established primarily to foster peace through an objective understanding of the causes of modern warfare.

To browse the contents of this issue, click on the individual papers listed below.

Two Faces of Heroism: Wolfgang Fröhlich and Admiral Sir Tom Phillips

Ending a sad month for H&D, following the loss of our comrades John Bean and Ian Carser, we learned that the great Austrian revisionist – 70-year-old chemical engineer Wolfgang Fröhlich, who earlier this year was awarded the Robert Faurisson International Prize – has died. His longstanding comrade Franz Radl informs us: “As I was told he…

Dr. Sigmund Rascher’s Medical Experiments

Human medical experiments performed by German doctors during World War II are considered the worst atrocities in history, and they are said to have served no useful purpose. This article documents the medical experiments performed by one of Germany’s most infamous doctors: Dr. Sigmund Rascher, and shows that these experiments did produce useful medical information, and were no more criminal than many human medical experiments performed by U.S. doctors during and after World War II.

Whitewashing the Dachau Show Trials

The book Unsung Heroes of the Dachau Trials deals with the young Americans who were responsible for gathering evidence, interviewing witnesses, apprehending suspects and securing convictions in trials held at Dachau conducted by the U.S. Army after WWII. This article discusses some of the mistakes and misunderstandings made by the author and the members of the 7708 War Crimes Group interviewed in this book.

Jasenovac Unmasked

An obscure WW2 concentration camp in present-day Croatia by the name of Jasenovac, accounting for some 0.33% of the presumed Jewish death toll of 6 million, is by any reasonable accounting all but irrelevant to the Holocaust story. A three-year-old Croatian TV interview with historian and Croatian Jew Ivo Goldstein expounds on the “increasingly problematic” camp at Jasenovac, decrying "the lack of forensic evidence from this particular camp", meaning the lack of any corpses, ash, or other human remains. This paper discusses the basis and implications of this admission.

Sir Arthur Harris: Dutiful Soldier—or War Criminal?

Marshal of the Royal Air Force Sir Arthur Travers Harris (1892-1984) led British Bomber Command for the greater part of World War II. He is widely regarded as one of the most controversial figures of the war. This article discusses the career path that enabled Harris to become commander-in-chief of Bomber Command, as well as the morality of area bombings practiced by Harris during World War II.

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