You are very right Pongo... to talk about it is to remember it.
I also read "Hitlers Willing executioners" and gave me at least some understanding about what happened. The known 'wier haben es nicht gewüst'(we didn't know) reply gets a total different meaning. What gets me tho is the fact that it indeed takes a very strong will to open your eyes. I just read a good book "Het Verzet" (The underground) that deals with the underground movement in the low countries. Those movements were very very small until 1943. After all Germany had won the war (that was what the believe was) and it takes a very strong mind to react instead of going with the flow and living your life. So I'm of the believe that most knew what was going on, civilians and soldiers.
I believe what stands out is why the war was fought. If you take WW1 it's not so clear who were the 'good' and who the 'bad'. Nationalism and imperialism reigned and both sides were out for a 'quick fight'. In WW2 it's a bit more clear, at least between the western Allies and the axis forces (if you consider the goelag and the athrocities that Stalin's regime commited it's maybe a different matter). Both sides commited crimes to a certain extend but that's war, the Western Allies didn't start a war of conquest and neither did they massacre millions of people in a clinical way.
I admire the german aces, but when I read a book about them the above thought is always in my mind. I don't believe the 'I fought for the Fatherland' comment... specialy not when we are talking about highly decorated and reveared aces. They became public figures and served the propaganda campaign probably more then the fighters they shot down. Ok ok not hanz rudel... nobody can beat sinking a battleship

Bee
PS: reading "Citizen Soldiers" by Stephen Ambrose, if you see it pick it up, you won't regret it. (Western Campaign from 7th June 1944-7th may 1945 from a pov of the GI's and german soldiers).
[This message has been edited by JENG (edited 05-29-2000).]