Gas Normal Part Of Warfare

Firebombing was carried out on Coventry and London late in 1940, so it's not a case or irony, but of 'reaping the whirlwind'. Of course, the British had wanted to do something similar themselves, but decided it was best to wait until Germany threw the first punch.
...

I did not know that.

(Did some reading just now, http://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/mar/04/secondworldwar.theatre http://www.winstonchurchill.org/learn/myths/myths/he-bombed-dresden-as-payback-for-coventry )
 
If Hitler had intelligence info to belie this and/or his dementia accelerated earlier, he might have gone ahead with a far more nightmare-inducing Blitz of London.

Which would have been far worse for the Germans in the long run after the British retaliated with Anthrax.
 
I did not know that.

Arthur Harris said the Germans missed their prime chance to make firestorms that wipe out entire cities.

In the early days of bombing our notion, like that of the Germans, was to spread an attack out over the whole night, thereby wearing down the morale of the civilian population. The result was, of course, that an efficient fire brigade could tackle a single load of incendiaries, put them out, and wait in comfort for the next to come along; they might also be able to take shelter when a few high explosives bombs were dropping. ... But it was observed that when the Germans did get an effective concentration, ... then our fire brigades had a hard time; if a rain of incendiaries is mixed with high explosives bombs there is a temptation for the fireman to keep his head down.

The Germans again and again missed their chance, as they did during the London blitz that I watched from the roof of the Air Ministry, of setting our cities ablaze by a concentrated attack. Coventry was adequately concentrated in point of space, but all the same there was little concentration in point of time, and nothing like the fire tornadoes of Hamburg or Dresden ever occurred in this country. But they did do us enough damage to teach us the principle of concentration, the principle of starting so many fires at the same time that no fire fighting services, however efficiently and quickly they were reinforced by the fire brigades of other towns could get them under control.
Arthur Harris

That said chemical and biological weapons would kill far more then firestorms.

Which would have been far worse for the Germans in the long run after the British retaliated with Anthrax.

The British didn't have a real Anthrax stockpile in 1940, later on sure, but in 1940 Germany had the largest and worst set of WMDs. Goering and Himmler actually did argue for the use of chemical and biological weapons against the British by the way.
 
Top