At the heart of this book about the wartime Allied triumvirate of Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin and their knowledge of and public statements on what after the war was recognized as the genocide of Europe's Jews, is historical context, not moral judgements made with hindsight.Hitler's murderous intention vis-à-vis the Jews, according to Richard Breitman, was known, although its details were obscured.Certainly, information seeped out of fortress Europe sporadically and was not always reliable or believed.At the earliest by late 1942, at the latest by the spring of 1944, the evidence was accumulating that Jews were being singled out for destruction by virtue of being Jews.The Allied response to this information was frequently framed by factors that intervened to restrain outright condemnation; not least to avoid being cast as marionettes of an alleged hidden world Jewish conspiracy on whose behalf the Allies were fighting Nazi Germany.The question of why not more was done is, in Breitman's view, an ahistorical one and decontextualizes their room for manoeuvre.This is something that frequently comes up in student discussions regarding to bomb or not to bomb Auschwitz, which only assumed its killing site status from 1942.The broad outline of the story as presented by Breitman in eight chapters is largely well-known to historians and their students.From Hitler's well-known notorious 'prophecy' speech of 30 January 1939 to the Reichstag, when he briefly referred to the destruction of Europe's Jews, to Churchill's radio broadcast of 24 August 1941, to Stalin's reluctance to acknowledge the singularity of the Nazis' campaign against Jews (with the example among many, of Babi Yar), to Roosevelt's cautious and belated support for a humanitarian intervention in the spring of 1944, triggered by events in Hungary that laid bare Hitler's exterminatory war against the Jews.Breitman's discussion of each leader and the contexts within which they acted make up the core of the book.In chapter eight, the focus turns to Hungary where we find Joel Brand's ill-fated mission to buy Hungarian Jews freedom in exchange for war materiel (trucks for Jews), an almost apologetic discussion of fellow Hungarian Reszö Kasztner's role in buying the freedom
Anthony McElligott (Thu,) studied this question.