The first concentration camps were intended mainly for political opponents of the Nazis. One of the very first accounts by Hans Beimler, who escaped from Dachau in May 1933, appeared in the Soviet Union in August 1933 and was translated into several languages, including English. It is a deeply shocking account, which was later supported by the testimony of others. The first news of the extermination camps used largely for mass murder (that is, for the Holocaust) first reached Britain in November 1941 from the Polish Underground. The report related to mass shootings and to Chelmno camp. It met with skepticism in the British Foreign Office. By the spring of 1942 much more information of a similar kind reached Britain and the U.S. However, in both countries the governments were reluctant to publish full details. The motives for this are unclear. Jan Karski, a member of the Polish Underground, who was very well informed about the Holocaust, wrote a book on the subject. It appeared during the war in the U.S. and by the end of the war it had sold about 400,000 copies. Joncey
The US did NOT "rescue Jews from the concentration camps." When the US and England had a chance to destroy Nazi concentration camps with bombing, they refused, preferring instead to bomb other military targets. Years later, at the end of the war, after six million Jews had already been murdered, some US troops participated in "liberating" a few Nazi camps. However, by then it was too late. There were very few Jews left alive.
they pretended not to know
As the Allied powers (the US, Great Britain, Soviet Union and France) began to close in on Germany towards the end of the war, they began to stumble upon the concentration camps in Germany, Poland, and other nations bordering Germany. Typically, the German garrisons guarding these camps would flee before Allied forces reached them. Thus, as the Allied lines advanced, they discovered these camps, liberating those prisoners left in the camp.
Five concentration camps were liberated by US troops, on 11 April 1945 Dora Mittlebau and Buchenwald were reached. On 23 April Flossenburg was liberated, Dachau on the 29th and finally Mauthausen on 4 May. Slaughtered SS members Fierce resistance
the US camps supplied food and did not require hard labour or other hard conditions.
The US did NOT "rescue Jews from the concentration camps." When the US and England had a chance to destroy Nazi concentration camps with bombing, they refused, preferring instead to bomb other military targets. Years later, at the end of the war, after six million Jews had already been murdered, some US troops participated in "liberating" a few Nazi camps. However, by then it was too late. There were very few Jews left alive.
During World War II, after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, and the US declared war with Japan, the US sent Japanese-Americans to internment camps. The US did thisin order to prevent any Japanese-Americans from being able to support the Japanese during the war.Theese internment camps, unlike Nazi concentration camps, did not mass murder their inhabitants, and they had much better conditions than the Nazi camps, but they were similar to the Nazi concentration camps in other ways:The people sent there were sent there based on their race, not on any crimes they had committedThe people's homes and belongings were confiscated and they were forced to go to the camps without warningThe people's belongings were not returned to them when they were freed from the camps (although the US did later pay these Japanese-Americans some compensation).
because they did not want do get involved in a war.eighther that or because they didnt think that involved them because it was in Europe
No I don't think so. Probably not. Many Americans admired Hitler and his plans for rebuilding Germany. Their support began fading when he invaded Poland and pretty much ended when we began to hear about the concentration camps.
None.
they pretended not to know
no, they are independent states.
As the Allied powers (the US, Great Britain, Soviet Union and France) began to close in on Germany towards the end of the war, they began to stumble upon the concentration camps in Germany, Poland, and other nations bordering Germany. Typically, the German garrisons guarding these camps would flee before Allied forces reached them. Thus, as the Allied lines advanced, they discovered these camps, liberating those prisoners left in the camp.
prisoners the free and camps consentration the enter us the did year what 1945
The Nazis who killed the inmates and not much documents about the camps
Five concentration camps were liberated by US troops, on 11 April 1945 Dora Mittlebau and Buchenwald were reached. On 23 April Flossenburg was liberated, Dachau on the 29th and finally Mauthausen on 4 May. Slaughtered SS members Fierce resistance
the US camps supplied food and did not require hard labour or other hard conditions.