How the Iran Deal Undermines America’s Strategic Interests in the Middle East
It’s not just about nuclear weapons.
August 11, 2015
Could hundreds of thousands have been saved?
On August 8, 1942, Gerhart Riegner, who then worked in Geneva as the secretary of the World Jewish Congress, sent a telegram to contacts in the U.S. State Department and the British Foreign Office informing them in some detail about the systematic murder of European Jewry. Walter Laqueur explains how Riegner came to this information, why those in positions of power ignored it, and what the Western Allies might have done had they chosen to act on the information:
It’s not just about nuclear weapons.
But the PA and the UN don’t care.
Could hundreds of thousands have been saved?
They don’t expect Muslims to be civilized, just angry.
From embracing Jewish subjects to avoiding them.
On August 8, 1942, Gerhart Riegner, who then worked in Geneva as the secretary of the World Jewish Congress, sent a telegram to contacts in the U.S. State Department and the British Foreign Office informing them in some detail about the systematic murder of European Jewry. Walter Laqueur explains how Riegner came to this information, why those in positions of power ignored it, and what the Western Allies might have done had they chosen to act on the information:
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