Originally posted by Michael Miller
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Goering was NOT listed as an attendee at the Wansee Conference.
Goering was also overheard quietly remarking to another defendent at Nurmburg when the Holocaust evidence was being presented: "What was Himmler thinking?" Hardly an indication that he had indepth knowledge of the Holocaust.
I question whether Goering was any more involved in the Holocaust than Joseph Speer. and I think it's evident he had no involvement in the extermination planning. IMO: He should have received a life sentence just like Hess and we would have a much better understanding ot the inner workings of the 3rd Reich today.
I am NOT defending Goering's actions but I do believe we lost more than we gained by forcing him to commit suicide.
Jim
Quote:
"The Wannsee Conference was a meeting of senior officials of the Nazi German regime, held in the Berlin suburb of Wannsee on 20 January 1942. The purpose of the conference was to inform administrative leaders of Departments responsible for various policies relating to Jews that Reinhard Heydrich had been appointed as the chief executor of the "Final solution to the Jewish question". In the course of the meeting, Heydrich presented a plan, presumably approved by Adolf Hitler, for the deportation of the Jewish population of Europe and French North Africa (Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia) to German-occupied areas in eastern Europe, and the use of the Jews fit for labour on road-building projects, in the course of which they would eventually die according to the text of the Wannsee Protocol, the surviving remnant to be annihilated after completion of the projects.[1] Instead, as Soviet and Allied forces gradually pushed back the German lines, most of the Jews of German-occupied Europe were sent to extermination or concentration camps, or killed where they lived. As a result of the efforts of historian Joseph Wulf, the Wannsee House, where the conference was held, is now a Holocaust Memorial."
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