Your thought here is this is a concession to the native population?
Revisionists will justify such a statement as they weren't planning on starving people just to starve them, rather it was about winning the war. I think this is actually true, it doesn't exactly morally justify such a war, but excepting that we can view the mass starvation as being contingent.A meeting on 2 May 1941 between the permanent secretaries responsible for logistical planning for the invasion of the Soviet Union, as well as other high-ranking Nazi Party functionaries, state officials and military officers, included in its conclusions:
1.) The war can only be continued if the entire Wehrmacht is fed from Russia in the third year of the war.
2.) If we take what we need out of the country, there can be no doubt that tens of millions of people will die of starvation.[8]
This much is clear in German documents, which talk about the deportation of tens of millions.TlsMS93 wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2025 11:25 pm
The plan in my conception was to push the 6 million Jews to the Urals at the end of the war, along with a large part of the Russian population, to Germanize those who were Germanizable, and to colonize the rest. It is a gloomy prediction, without a doubt, since a large part of Russia is comfortable living in the western part of the country.
So it's clear they were at least considering outright killing people at this time (orthodoxy would say non-Jews, since the fate of Jews had been decided on already)The relations between the German people and foreign peoples within its jurisdiction are therefore a problem of national and racial politics and only secondarily of constitutional law or power politics. There are four possible ways of dealing with the problem:
1. coexistence with racially and ethnically equal groups;
2. assimilation of foreign ethnic groups into the German nation;
3. spatial displacement of foreign ethnic groups; and
4. physical destruction of foreign peoples that are undesirable in the sphere of power of the German Reich. All 4 paths can be followed, they can also be followed side by side. The decisive factor, however, is that once a path has been taken, it must be marched through to the end without compromise and that one is not forced to turn back halfway due to insufficient prior preparation and consideration. It is clear that such a deviation from the foreign nation must always be interpreted as weakness."
No there's overlap but you can ethnically cleanse without seeking the destruction of a group. You could also enslave all of them and this wouldn't be genocidal necessarily. I would view these worse actually than genocide in some cases. I think what the Allies did to the Germans and Japanese meets my criteria of genocide, bad, but not as bad as an ethnic cleansing campaign that would lead to 15 million dying. Ethically, by my standards, what the Nazis planned to do in their colonization of Russia would have been a greater crime than the Holocaust, in my understanding of it.
I see #3 as covering the ethnic cleansing optionAs for physical destruction, what do you understand? It can be interpreted as complete ethnic cleansing, unlike the second option, which is basically to keep these groups away from the territory.
It's not something I'm compelled to argue much further, we can let both our points stand.The word "physische" relates to the physical/material existence or body, similar to English "physical." When combined with "Vernichtung" (destruction/annihilation), it specifically points to the destruction of the physical body/existence, as opposed to other forms of "destruction" that could be:
Cultural destruction (destroying language, customs)
Social destruction (breaking up communities)
Economic destruction (removing property rights, livelihoods)
Political destruction (removing political rights)
The use of "physische" therefore narrows down the type of destruction being discussed to one that acts upon the physical body itself. This is further reinforced by how it's positioned as distinct from option #3 (spatial displacement) - if "physische Vernichtung" meant anything other than killing, it would be redundant with the other categories.
I would defer to Himmler on this over your interpretationAs for the millions of deaths of Soviet prisoners in 1941, it was clearly due to the German logistical collapse and the lack of winter clothing that the Germans did not prepare for themselves or for the prisoners of war, so much so that the following year the mortality rate was lower and Stalin at no time accepted the German appeals for a mutual agreement on food for the prisoners, failing to send a list of captured German prisoners.
Stubble wrote: ↑Mon Feb 17, 2025 12:53 am Let's let bombs present in this thread and we can splinter new threads off that do not pertain to chronology. For example, dispute about particular documents and their intent.
I for one am curious to see the orthodox narrative presented in a coherent way.
I will personally attempt to refrain from derailment on particulars and can assure you all I am already firmly biting my tongue.
Perhaps when bombs has finished we can take some time for rebuttal given that bombs is not opposed.
I'm not eager to see this thread cluttered with argumentation before it has run course.
Of course, that's just my perspective.
There really is no "general" at this point. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... n_1941.pngStubble wrote: ↑Mon Feb 17, 2025 1:49 am Well, in an effort to keep the chronology straight, we should likely start with the opening of operation barbarossa. So far as a locality, if you like, for this portion, let's be general and any points of contention can be brought into a tighter focus. I think this will be streamlined enough to provide usefulness for future observers of the thread.
So far as points of contention thus far, I am trying to be generous here and letting you present your side of the coin. I don't see a reason to bust your balls or anything and what you have presented does in fact exist. There may be some bones to pick about interpretation, but, that can be subjective, so, being eager to move the thread forward, let's move the thread forward.