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air raid |
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air raid![]() Bombed houses in Britain in 1915, the year Germany started its World War I air raids on British cities. By the end of the war, 250 tons of bombs had been dropped, causing thousands of civilian casualties. ![]() A World War II air-raid protection (ARP) warden in Chelsea, London, in 1939. In 1938, when war with Germany was imminent, the British government set up defence procedures to protect the civilian population against air attacks. At the height of the Blitz, London suffered 57 consecutive nights of bombing from German planes.
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| ? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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On bombing civilian targets (from an interview in the New York
Times, 4/8/03) We started the first air raids of this kind, killing a
city, with Guernica in the Spanish Civil War.
"I know that you intend to describe in detail to your boys the
horrors of war, the gas attacks, the mutilations, the air raids on
defenseless civilians, plague, famine--all the Four Horsemen. Although
he refers to the air raids as "punishment" (in German the word
he uses is Gericht, which comes from juridical language and means
"tribunal" or "judgment"), he is also quick to
insist, "I have not heard a single person curse the enemies or
blame them for the destruction. |
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