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1. How Auschwitz could have been bombed in 1944:

A Mosquito fighter swoops down at high speed to dive-bomb a building and quickly retreat with anti-aircraft guns firing. (from 1964 movie "633 Squadron")

In 1943 and '44 high-flying Mosquitos flew over all of Europe to dive-bomb thousands of buildings, rail-lines, dams, and other targets. From April 1944 Mosquitoes flew from North Italy to photograph potential bombing targets in Poland including the Auschwitz and Birkenau camps.

The air photos together with spy reports contradicted the mass-murder rumors, and therefore Birkenau structures such as the 2 large cremation buildings were not bombed.


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2. Theresienstadt camp, Austria (now in the Czech Republic) - 1943:

Healthy, happy, well-fed inmates, who had daily hot showers in the communal bath-house. Germans moved out the townsfolk and set-up all-Jewish Theresienstadt in Nov, 1941. Inmates operated the camp with heated barracks, many shops, and a bank with 53 Million Reichmarks.

Over 2 years conductor Viktor Ullmann wrote and conducted hundreds of musical scores in the large theatre, including the chamber opera "Emperor of Atlantis", with it's thinly-veiled criticism of Germany, which was allowed. In late 1944 the Germans evacuated the family with all others ahead of the Red Army.


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3. Birkenau camp over-flight - February, 1945:

Soviet film. Looking east across the wood sleeping barracks before Soviets removed some and burned the rest to prevent the spread of typhus. By January '45 most inmates had been moved to camps in Germany. In January almost all the remaining inmates chose to move west with the guards rather than wait for the Soviet Army, which entered the camp January 27th. Soviets alleged brutal attrocities, but did not invite international doctors, forensic experts, and journalists to view evidence the way the Germans had at Katyn.


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4. Auschwitz healthy children and newborns - February, 1945:

Soviet film. Hundreds of healthy, well-fed, robust children walking west between the 2 fence-rows at Auschwitz I with camp buildings on the left and the music theatre on the right.

Women and nurses are carrying the newborns and babies. About 6 of the children, and some women, eagerly expose their forearms to show their tattooed identification numbers.

German camp authorities and mothers must have decided in January, '45, that mothers who wished their children to remain in the camp could stay behind with these children and wait for Soviet troops. The remainder of the inmates were taken in groups to Germany as German authorities had assurred the Americans and the British that camp inmates would be evacuated before the Soviet army advance.


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5. Birkenau mass-graves on air photos - February, 1945:

Soviet film. Looking north across one of 5 mass-graves located outside Birkenau 100 meters west of the fence around the cremation buildings and 60 meters north of the entrance road. The "Kanada" storage area buildings are in the distance.

The five 50-meter-long graves are seen on February 19th, but not on January 21st, air photos. So the Soviets excavated them in February to bury the hundreds of inmates who had died of disease or natural causes in Birkenau and Auschwitz I either just before or after the Soviets entered on January 27th.

These are the only graves on Birkenau 1944 or '45 air photos, which is understandable because almost all bodies were cremated until the end of 1944. The graves' locations were unknown until 1998 when they were identified by the author on the February 19th, 1945 air photos.

(For location on map see: Crema - number 23) and map february 19th, 1945.


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6. Monowitz industrial plant, taken by Soviets - February, 1945:

Large buildings in the synthetic-rubber production area including the high air-cooling-towers and the Power Plant with 5 high smoke stacks that produced electricity from coal. On the far left is the aluminum smelter. Inmates and outside workers were all paid and housed in 7 surrounding camps.


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7. Schindler's List movie - Hollywood, U.S.A. - 1994:

Camp commander Amon Goeth on horseback in camp. Hundreds of steps leading to Goeth's hill-top house. Air-photos show house was beside a road with no steps. Goeth on balcony with an unobstructed view of the inmate's camp and rock bluff around camp in distance. Air-photos show inmate's camp was behind hill and not visible from Goeth's small balcony, and wire fences on 3 sides of camp allowed un-obstructive views. Goeth shoots' sitting woman in inmate's camp, which would have been impossible.


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8. Katyn Forest, Soviet Union - May, 1943:

Raising a head to examine a large bullet exit wound. Removing wallets with papers which were all dated before March, 1940. Bodies were stacked 12 high and end to end. Polish Red Cross and European journalists observed examinations. Captain Butz was in charge of hundreds of international observers.


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9. Katyn Forest, Soviet Union - May, 1943:

Villagers exposing bodies piled 2.5 m (8 ft) high in one of 7 graves. Separating and removing corpses. American, British, and Canadian air-force prisoners viewing graves. International forensic doctors examining corpses. Using probe to determine bullet entry angle in back of necks.


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10. Air-photo plane filming - Germany, 1941:

A view of the ground from hole in plane was used to determine what areas needed filming. More farmland. In the 1920's and 30's the Germans invented large air-photo cameras with 24 cm (9 inch) wide film-rolls and developed interpretation equipment at the Zeiss factory in Yena (north of Dresden), which were copied by air forces throughout the world.


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11. Air-photo preparing and viewing - German film, 1941:

Twin-engine air-photo plane landing. Removing photo camera. After developing, negative rolls were dried on spinning wheels. Interpreters viewing negatives on light-table. Interpreters with hand-held single-lens magnifying lenses studying prints on large table with sunlight. Even today, to obtain the best quality images with the highest resolution, interpreters use single-lens magnifying lenses in sunlight, instead of multi-lens large magnifiers with artificial light. So today's interpreters can see no more than war-time interpreters.


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