Why the "Diesel Issue" is Relevant

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fireofice
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Why the "Diesel Issue" is Relevant

Post by fireofice »

One of the methods claimed for mass extermination is from engine exhaust. The kind of engine exhaust claimed by historians for a long time has been diesel. However, the main problem with this is that diesel is not very efficient for mass killings. Information on that here:

https://codoh.com/library/document/the- ... -chambers/

https://codoh.com/library/document/the- ... in-a-myth/

https://holocaustencyclopedia.com/instr ... haust/266/

Because of these problems, some have backed away from the diesel claim and say it was from gasoline. The most vocal proponents of this are the HC bloggers, although some mainstream historians have also taken that position as well.

https://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot ... evant.html

https://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot ... _9432.html

https://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot ... s-why.html

https://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot ... ns-at.html

I will mainly be focusing on the Reinhard camps here, not so much on the gas vans and Chelmno, which for this I'll concede the gasoline claim for those. I just want to note here that there are some contradicting claims for the gas vans. In The People's Verdict book, diesel is claimed. Sergey also found a reference to diesel in some documents he dug up. However, there are also references to gasoline as one of the articles I linked demonstrates.

For a full treatment, I suggest reading section 8.1 point 95 of Carlo Mattogno's response, I'll just be summarizing the most important points here. If you look through the gasoline witnesses for the Reinhard camps, you'll see most of them are for Sobibor. Mattogno however concedes the gasoline issue for Sobibor calling it "old news" established by the 1966 Hagen Court. So this leaves Belzec and Treblinka.

The only 2 claimed gasoline witnesses for Belzec are Rudolf Reder and Kasimierz Czerniak.

For Reder, his earliest testimony says:
The [exhaust] gas was evacuated from the engine directly into the open air, and not into the chambers.
So this doesn't even describe a mass killing with the gasoline gas. So much for that testimony.

For Czernaik, the HC bloggers claim that he said gasoline was used in the margins of a document. However, Mattogno comments:
It is unknown who the author is, but since the translation was prepared in West Germany 14 years after Czerniak made his deposition in communist Poland, it certainly was not added as a result of a remark made by Czerniak. Hence the remark was most probably added by a prosecuting judge.
Two of the other witnesses, Kurt Gerstein and Wilhelm Pfannenstiel, claimed Diesel. The HC bloggers tried to make it seem like Gerstein wasn't a direct witness, but this isn't true at all. Gerstein's testimony:
Heckenholt is the driver of the Diesel […]. With the exhaust gases of his Diesel the people are supposed to be brought to death. […] But the Diesel did not function. This would happen relatively rarely, I was told – Captain Wirth arrives. One sees that it is embarrassing to him, that today of all days it has to happen when I am here. Yes, I see everything! and I wait. My stopwatch registered everything properly. 50 minutes, 70 minutes – the Diesel does not start up! […] Captain Wirth lashes the whip into the face of the Ukrainian who is supposed to help Heckenholt with the Diesel. – After 2 hours 49 minutes – the stopwatch registered everything well – the Diesel starts up!
As can be seen, Gerstein spent almost 3 hours with it, and he literally says he saw everything. So no, you can't get this to be hearsay. On top of that, Gerstein was an engineer. The HC bloggers make a big fuss about the experts and the ones close to it saying it was gasoline. Well Gerstein as an engineer was the biggest expert of all of the witnesses at Belzec. Going by that standard, he should be listened to above everybody. And since Pfannenstiel also claimed Diesel, he would be a "corroborating witness".

For Treblinka, the only witness claiming gasoline is Nikolay Shalayev. Here is what he said:
It was an ordinary, four-cylinder engine which used gasoline and, according to the story, of the German machine operator, was of Russian make. The engine was installed on a wooden frame and started as soon as people were herded into the gas chamber rooms, whereupon the exhaust pipe was covered up and the valve of the pipe was opened, through which the exhaust entered the "bath".
Since he couldn't tell what make it was on his own, it seems to me that this testimony would not override all the other testimonies for diesel. Here are Soviet and German tank engines, it seems rather amazing to me that he wouldn't be able to tell the difference.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kharkiv_model_V-2

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_W ... ch_engines

On top of that, the skin coloration claimed (not red/pink) is more consistent with diesel than gasoline. Although the skin color issue is a whole other problem for them, so I won't dwell on that.

This means that the diesel issue is still relevant, for Belzec and Treblinka at least. Although Sobibor was the camp that killed the least of all the Reinhard camps. Why would they have the most efficient killing method for the Reinhard camp which killed the least amount, and less efficient methods for the camps that killed way more? That doesn't make any sense at all.
Last edited by fireofice on Mon Nov 24, 2025 10:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Nessie
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Re: Why the "Diesel Issue" is Relevant

Post by Nessie »

fireofice wrote: Mon Nov 24, 2025 8:45 am ...

Because of these problems, some have backed away from the diesel claim and say it was from gasoline. The most vocal proponents of this are the HC bloggers, although some mainstream historians have also taken that position as well.

...
Open-minded historians, after reading the diesel issue put forward initially by FP Berg (IIRC) checked the witness evidence. They found that those who worked with the engines used to gas people, the eyewitnesses, such as Erich Fuchs, either said they were petrol, or they did not say what fuel was used. Most of the people who worked at the gas chambers, such as Yankel Wiernik, or saw a gassing, such as Kurt Gerstein, but may not have seen the engine, vary. Some say it was petrol, some diesel and some do not say what fuel was used, and since many likely did not see the engine, their evidence is hearsay. There were also engines used as generators for the camps, and if they were diesel, then there is an explanation for some confusion and mistakes.

The main reason why diesel is relevant, is that it is a good way for so-called revisionists to learn how to better identify eyewitness from hearsay evidence and to understand that mistakes can be made, when people are remembering something, often decades later.
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Re: Why the "Diesel Issue" is Relevant

Post by Archie »

An overarching point I would make is to remind ourselves that under the revisionist thesis there was no gassing engine. The engines described in these testimonies, if they had any basis in reality, were probably being used as generators (as accidentally admitted in the Nov 1942 Treblinka report). Debating whether the gassing engine was gasoline or diesel is like debating over what materials they made the Death Star out of in Star Wars or some other fictional universe. The Holocaust fabulists happened to pick the wrong one and ran with it for decades and HC is now hoping for a redo.

Was it gasoline or diesel? Neither, because it didn't exist.

Revisionists like Fritz Berg debunked the standard story back in the 1980s on technical grounds. In 2011(!), unable to defend the story technically, the Holocaust Controversies bloggers attempted to change the story to gasoline engines and proceeded to hunt around for primary sources that would fit their desired conclusion. Now they are attempting to use the fact that the primary sources are highly contradictory to their advantage, even though objectively speaking the inconsistency in the testimonies and obvious interdependence are simply additional reasons not to believe any of this.

Their claim is that if you screen the testimonies for "direct" testimony and for technical competence that the gasoline testimonies emerge as the clear winner. But the testimonies do not split as cleanly as they say and in fact their elevation of the gasoline testimonies is arbitrary.
fireofice wrote: Mon Nov 24, 2025 8:45 am
Two of the other witnesses, Kurt Gerstein and Wilhelm Pfannenstiel, claimed Diesel. The HC bloggers tried to make it seem like Gerstein wasn't a direct witness, but this isn't true at all. Gerstein's testimony:
Agreed, and this is really where their argument breaks down because Gerstein was both technically competent and a direct observer. Their interpretation of Gerstein is quite desperate. The engine was supposedly right next to the gas chamber building (16 and 17 below) and he was there for several hours as a technical observer to a gassing, during which the engine broke down.
Image

If we are to take Gerstein seriously (they pretend to), there needs to be some explanation for how he got the erroneous idea that it was a diesel if it wasn't. I will add here as a minor point that diesel engines also sound and smell different.

From an old post of mine, focusing on Belzec.
Diesel
1) Gerstein: Technical background, closely monitored a gassing, describes the engine breaking down for a long time, mentions diesel repeatedly. Says Globocnik described a diesel engine for gassing."
2) Pfannensteil: "The engine itself was not in a separate room but stood in the open, raised on a platform. It was a diesel engine."
3) Schluch: "For the gassings an engine was started up. I cannot give a more detailed description of the engine because I never saw it. I am certainly not a specialist, but I would say that based on the sound, it was a medium-sized diesel engine."
4) Oberhauser: “at first the Jews were killed with a gas, but after the camp was enlarged, they were killed by diesel exhaust”.

"Uncertain" (although one of these actually leans toward diesel)
5) Gley: "After the doors of the gas chambers had been closed, a large engine-I don’t know whether it was a diesel or an Otto (gasoline) engine-was started up by a mechanic from the Hiwi section. The exhaust fumes of this engine were fed into the chambers and caused the death of the Jews."
6) Semigodov: "The people doomed to death were driven into these gas chambers or “dushegubki”, as they were also known, where they were killed with exhaust gas from a diesel motor (found in the same building) or some other motor."

Gasoline (only two)
7) Reder: "I myself saw that in that small room there was an engine with petrol fuel that looked very complicated. I remember that the engine had a flywheel, but I could not make out any other specific construction or technical features. This engine was always operated by two technicians, Russians from the armed camp staff. I know only that the engine used 4 cans of petrol each day, because that is how much petrol was brought to the camp every day. It was when the petrol was delivered to the engine room that I briefly had the opportunity to look inside the room."
8) Czerniak: “The 200 H.V. motor was powered by gasoline, as were the three other mentioned cars."
https://archive.codohforum.com/20230609 ... &start=450

They then draw the following conclusion.
From the testimonies of Shalayev (Treblinka), Hödl (Sobibor), Fuchs (Sobibor), Bauer (Sobibor), Reder (Belzec) and Czerniak (Belzec) it is clear that the engines in the Reinhard camps were petrol.
It is "clear" based on 2/8 witnesses?! What???

The Czerniak testimony is obscure and not impressive at all (see MGK reply, pg 826). Really what this comes down to is they are trying to say Reder should be favored over Gerstein, but Reder is anything but reliable on technical matters (see his ludicrous testimony about the mass graves).

Lastly, I would just say that if it were really true that the testimonies favored gasoline we still have the puzzle of how diesel is what made it into the history books. Imo, it clearly comes from Gerstein. The Belzec trial testimonies (like Oberhauser) favor diesel because they are derivative. And the history books say diesel because that's what the earliest histories like Hilberg said.
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Archie
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Re: Why the "Diesel Issue" is Relevant

Post by Archie »

Nessie wrote: Mon Nov 24, 2025 11:42 am Open-minded historians, after reading the diesel issue put forward initially by FP Berg (IIRC) checked the witness evidence.
No, if you believe it was gasoline that means "the historians" you are always glazing got it wrong for 66 years (and counting) and had to be corrected by Sergey, an independent blogger, in 2011. If you believe this, it contradicts all of your usual nonsense that "everything has been carefully checked and vetted by professional historians."
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Re: Why the "Diesel Issue" is Relevant

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Archie wrote: Mon Nov 24, 2025 3:05 pm
Nessie wrote: Mon Nov 24, 2025 11:42 am Open-minded historians, after reading the diesel issue put forward initially by FP Berg (IIRC) checked the witness evidence.
No, if you believe it was gasoline that means "the historians" you are always glazing got it wrong for 66 years (and counting) and had to be corrected by Sergey, an independent blogger, in 2011. If you believe this, it contradicts all of your usual nonsense that "everything has been carefully checked and vetted by professional historians."
You just made that quote up. Strawman fallacy yet again. I am well aware mistakes can be made and then repeated. Someone wrote about diesel engines and other historians and journalists followed, without picking up on the error. However, the so-called revisionists then made a mistake, by not separating hearsay and eyewitness descriptions of the engine and noting there was also a camp generator.
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