24 August, 2016

The Germans Weren’t Brutal Enough

Posted by Socrates in Socrates, William Pierce, William Pierce Wednesday at 2:27 pm | Permanent Link

by Dr. William Pierce.

[…]

“With the exception of the Pacific theater, the two primary forces in opposition in World War II were Europe and Jewry. The Germans fought for Europe, and the Americans, the British, the Russians, and the various communist partisan groups fought for Jewry. Europe — and the West — lost the war, and one of the reasons we lost (though certainly not the only reason) was that the Germans just weren’t brutal enough. They were mentally and morally unprepared to wage war Jewish-style.

When the Germans encountered guerrilla opposition in France and in the occupied eastern and southeastern territories, they just couldn’t cope with it — much as Americans found themselves unable to cope with guerrillas in the Indochina more recently. The Germans took hostages, and they even shot a few, but that was just what the guerrillas wanted them to do. The Germans never were able to solve the guerrilla problem, and they were obliged to devote a major portion of their military effort to it throughout the war.”

[Article].


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