Jonathan Tubin in Commentary Magazine has a article concerning a PBS American Experience program.
The Most Unethical Act: Losing a War
Tonight, PBS’s American Experience series will broadcast a new documentary titled The Bombing of Germany, about the strategic-bombing campaign carried out against the Nazis by American forces in World War II. Coming from the liberal-leaning PBS and in an era where denunciations of American military actions — even in the “good war” against Nazi Germany — have become commonplace, it would have been no surprise if this film was yet another revisionist attempt to decry Allied tactics as immoral….A few tadalafil in canada medical conditions accountable for impotency are diabetes, heart disease, stress, depression and bad effects of medicines. Gupta for the male Sexual Problem Treatment in Delhi. cheapest cialis professional Even some of the drug stores are viagra sales in canada glad to be able to gain success. All Versions of levitra price Kamagra Easily Accessible At A Platform enables men to select the best one drug, recommended by a physician.
….It is telling that the documentary treats the achievement of air superiority over Normandy before the D-Day landings in France as the Allied Air Forces’ greatest achievement…..The most devastating line of the film is its last, in which historian Conrad C. Crane, director of the U.S. Army Military History Institute, confronts the moral dilemma of killing civilians in a righteous war against an immoral opponent. While the question of the deaths of civilians is one we must ponder, Conrad insists, “The most unethical act for the Allies in World War II would have been allowing themselves to lose.”This is a concept that applies not only to the war against Hitler but also to the one that America is currently fighting against Islamo-fascists.