For whatever reason, they didn’t even think it was worth bombing the rail systems that fed the camps.
Roosevelt didn’t care. Churchill in particular publicly endorsed Aryan race theory before the war so “not caring” is the most charitable interpretation.
Allied leadership was very wary of running into the issue they did in WW1 - where the exaggeration of German war crimes discredited the propaganda apparatus of Britain. As they became more aware of the nature and extent of the death camps, Allied leadership opted to document evidence for the postwar tribunals rather than engage in a war of accusation and denial against Nazi Germany which could have seriously damaged the short-term credibility of their propaganda efforts.
Whether this was the right choice is another question entirely.
I don’t think it was confirmed until they were starting to get liberated, was it? Like it was probably predicted they were there, but that’s a pretty tough allegation to put out there and then be wrong on, victors or not.
Polish partisans had been telling Allied Command about them for years.
Iirc there was even an absolute madlad of a Jewish Polish war hero who let himself get sent to a death camp so he could gather evidence and escape to get better evidence.
It wasn’t an actual secret. All the Wehrmacht officers knew, all the people in the towns nearby knew, all the cops knew, all the Ally leadership knew.
If the Ally leadership knew, why didn’t they use that information as propoganda for their war efforts?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auschwitz_bombing_debate
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Abandonment_of_the_Jews
For whatever reason, they didn’t even think it was worth bombing the rail systems that fed the camps.
Roosevelt didn’t care. Churchill in particular publicly endorsed Aryan race theory before the war so “not caring” is the most charitable interpretation.
Allied leadership was very wary of running into the issue they did in WW1 - where the exaggeration of German war crimes discredited the propaganda apparatus of Britain. As they became more aware of the nature and extent of the death camps, Allied leadership opted to document evidence for the postwar tribunals rather than engage in a war of accusation and denial against Nazi Germany which could have seriously damaged the short-term credibility of their propaganda efforts.
Whether this was the right choice is another question entirely.
I don’t think it was confirmed until they were starting to get liberated, was it? Like it was probably predicted they were there, but that’s a pretty tough allegation to put out there and then be wrong on, victors or not.
Polish partisans had been telling Allied Command about them for years.
Iirc there was even an absolute madlad of a Jewish Polish war hero who let himself get sent to a death camp so he could gather evidence and escape to get better evidence.