
Author : Mattogno Carlo
Title : The Neuengamme and Sachsenhausen gas chambers With a focus on british investigations for the tesch trial
Year : 2022
Link download : Mattogno_Carlo_-_The_Neuengamme_and_Sachsenhausen_gas_chambers.zip
Part One : The “Gassing” of Soviet Prisoners of War at the Neuengamme Camp. 1. The First Testimonies (1945). Right from the start, Auschwitz-Birkenau was the main focus of Jewish- Polish black propaganda about homicidal gassings and gas chambers. This propaganda started in late 1941 and intensified during the successive years (see Mattogno 2021). At the same time, Auschwitz-Birkenau was also the camp which so the largest number of transferred inmates. In 1944 and 1945, an enormous number of inmates originating from this camp was sent to camps inside the Reich (see Mattogno 2004, 2005), taking with them phantasmagorical stories. Some of the inmates in the other camps did not want to stay behind with their tales in comparison to their colleagues from Auschwitz, hence they themselves conjured up improbable gassing tales presumably perpetrated at their own camps. There, by the spring of 1945, almost every camp in the central and western parts of Germany had their own attested-to “gas chamber,” which, when U.S. and British troops reached these camps, were instantly transmogrified into an indisputable “truth,” because the victorious powers attributed to any incriminating testimony the ontological quality of veracity. In this climate of collective insanity, which I have described in another study – where I demonstrated how a testimonial “truth” (black propaganda) was first promoted to a judicial “truth” and then to a historical “truth” (see Mattogno/Kues/Graf, pp. 74-83) – the only defense strategy left to the indicted SS officials during the British and U.S. trials were “confessions,” with the inevitable recourse of claiming inescapable orders from higher up. ...
De Chambrun René - Pierre Laval
Author : De Chambrun René Title : Pierre Laval Traitor or patriot ? Year : 1983 Link download :...

