warspite1
You've already posted this previously. When clicking on the link sometimes it comes up with the paper previously posted and sometimes a Russian(?) script asking for a password??
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warspite1
ORIGINAL: warspite1
warspite1
You've already posted this previously. When clicking on the link sometimes it comes up with the paper previously posted and sometimes a Russian(?) script asking for a password??
Oh dear…… Once again you operate with the same MO as you’ve used before. If someone disagrees with your position during a debate this does not necessarily mean they are confused or they haven’t followed or haven’t read the necessary evidence. It could actually mean they simply don’t agree with your interpretation of events - or that what you've provided doesn't actually answer the point.I also reposted the paper because it was obvious that you hadn't followed the timeline of events. That paper makes it quite clear.
warspite1ORIGINAL: BBfanboy
It might also have led him to re-think deployment of Force Z
Oh dear…… Once again you operate with the same MO as you’ve used before. If someone disagrees with your position during a debate this does not necessarily mean they are confused or they haven’t followed or haven’t read the necessary evidence. It could actually mean they simply don’t agree with your interpretation of events - or that what you've provided doesn't actually answer the point.
You have made clear that you believe the British Government purposely withheld food supplies to Bengal in 1943.
Given the accusation you’ve made and the points I’ve raised that need to be answered, I can only assume you are being deliberately obtuse in suggesting the paper attached above gives the necessary timeline – much less in anyway shape or form answers the questions raised.
What this paper shows is that far from brutal indifference, the Government of India and the Bengal Government did try and take steps to help. That those steps were ineffective in stopping what became a monumental tragedy is crystal clear – but there was no policy (based on the evidence seen) of any deliberate act of starvation.
You desperately want to believe Mukerjee and want to hold Churchill and the British Government guilty of a war crime, but can’t produce any evidence that that was true.
As said, if you want to put Churchill and co into the war crimes dock and convince most people of their guilt then you are going to actually have to come up with some evidence. Absent of that I suspect we are all debated out.
I put it in the kitchen, in the cabinet under the sink. [;)]ORIGINAL: mind_messing
Let me ask you then, where do you put the blame?
Sorry, I seemed to miss the part where you provided sources or research into the topic.
It's not my belief, it's fact. The shipping was needed elsewhere.
Let me be less obtuse then. Pages 55-64 are the relevant section of the above paper.
"The Government of India's reasons for holding the 'no shortage' line despite Herbert's frequent reports and the obvious urgency of the Rescue plan are debatable, but the line justified Linlithgow's refusal to intervene constitutionally. An admission of unmanageable shortage carried some responsibility to act. If assistance measures proved unsuccessful, the Central Government would be implicated in the failure. Chattopadhyay argues, on the other hand, that the Government of India reduced famine to scarcity 'by executive order1 to disguise the endemic famine which had occurred in rural Bengal every year since the mid-1930s, which he sees as a consequence of the amount of resource transfers from rural Bengal during the depression years."
I find your stubborn defence of the famine difficult to understand given that:
I'd like you to respond the following points.
Specifically:
1. India overall was a net exporter of food for the duration of the famine.
2. PM King of Canada's promise of food shipments (that King promised would not induce a shortfall in war shipments) was not acted upon. See the telegram of 04 Nov 1943
3. The resultant inquiry was a white-wash for the colonial regime. If the famine had genuinely resulted from the combination of natural and wartime factors, what was the need for a cover-up?
I'm particularly interested in point #3
I'm not a lawyer, but looking in to it, I don't think it would be a war crime.
I'm well aware that the Japanese were just as bad, if not worse at treating subject peoples as the other colonial powers.
The justifcation for denying aid from outside sources given by the highest levels of the British government just doesn't add up.
Aid was withheld by the British government for political purposes.
However, there's certainly a solid case to be made of serious responsibility, falling firmly on that of the British colonial government.
The ability to provide serious famine relief was there from the onset, there was just no political will at any level to mount an effective response.
Let me ask you then, where do you put the blame?
No, you didn’t miss it. As said I don’t believe that HMG and Winston Churchill committed a war crime, I don’t believe that they deliberately caused a famine in Bengal or stopped aid getting to the area. On the basis that someone is innocent until proven guilty, on the basis that no one has brought any proper evidence to show this, and on the basis that it is very hard to prove something that didn’t happen, the onus is not on me.
You do believe this. That is a very big accusation. If you want people to believe you (and they are interested in the truth), you need to provide the evidence for that.
Er this is new. So you do now believe that shipping was not withheld because of a deliberate policy of starvation – but because it was needed elsewhere? That is a breakthrough, although given the wartime situation I highlighted above this is only logical.
You believe HMG and WSC were deliberately guilty of withholding food supplies to India. I ask for a proper timeline and you give this? For the second time there is no mention of HMG in this report. If one is to prove that foodstuffs were requested of HMG, when? What the response was? etc. etc. it would really help to have some mention of HMG and those requests in the evidence you are providing. I say once again; there is no mention of HMG in this report. My turn to accuse you – are you confusing the Government of India with HMG? It appears so?……
This is the basis of this paper. That the Government of Bengal couldn’t deal with the issue and it needed the Government of India to take a stronger line and use the powers it had. Please read this report and then try and answer the question I’ve raised for the third time – if Linlithgow had the ability to act under powers invested in him (but didn’t) then why would he be asking HMG for foodstuffs?
MM really? What does that mean? ‘My defence’. Pardon my French but FFS. 3m people died of starvation. I am not going to sit here defending something like that if there is proof it was deliberate. And if it was not deliberate but incompetence then the guilty should have been named. As I said in my very first post on the subject (post 69)
“Could more have been done? That appears to be unarguable? Was there any truth that Churchill was looking to punish the Indians for the quit India movement? I like to believe not, but there are questions that need answering. But what needed to done? Whose fault was it that more was not done? That is less clear”.
3m people died. That needs a proper answer as to why and why I have said that questions need to be answered. Not the whitewash that was the official enquiry. I suspect that if this was ever looked at properly the Government of India (and Linlithgow in particular) would come out of it looking none too clever. But (depending on the answers) that does not make him a mass murderer – and until we know why he acted as he did then he can’t be accused of incompetence.
1. Again – and I’m really shocked you can’t see this – where is the detail? The last report you posted stated Bengal stopped exporting rice in July 1942 (I may be wrong but iirc Mukerjee was saying Bengal continued exporting much later). Were the Government of India allowing this when they knew of the famine and knew the policies they and the Bengal Government had put in place had failed? If this is true why (at the sake of sounding like a stuck record) was Linlithgow asking for more food from HMG? But this is the reason these sorts of things can’t be proven here. Where is the detailed timeline showing who did what and when? Without it this is just a bunch of ‘facts’ with no context. Another point is where was this food going to? There is some mention of Ceylon (Mukerjee again I think). Well what was Ceylon’s position at the time?
2. Again context and detail including timeline. I understand that Churchill said no to Mackenzie-King on the basis that Australia would provide the assistance as it was quicker. It was pointed out that any help sent in Nov/Dec 1943 from Canada would not get to India before Jan/Feb 1944 and all food relief work was finished in January 1944. I believe that the famine deaths had peaked by the time of the offer from Canada. So the question is. Did Churchill say no because he wanted more Bengali deaths or because by that time the food was not needed in the timescale Canada could get it to India?
3. Yes I think that appears to be the case. To blame the local Bengal Government for something that clearly (although not sure when) needed the Government of India to sort out seems to be wrong. Why a whitewashed version of events? I don’t know but can only suggest (and I’m not defending this if it was the case) that with partition on the horizon, a population on the edge with trouble brewing, what was needed was a quick and dirty answer to try and not fan the flames.
That kind of puts them in the war crimes camp but this is getting somewhere at least. So you are not in the Mukerjee camp?
But then you say:
Well I don’t know what you’d call that but I’d call it mass murder…. If it were true.
EDIT for brevity
Despite MM’s protestations, there is nothing like the evidence needed to say this was deliberate.
Last I checked the thread, all the published papers on the subject have been posted by myself. You've critiqued it but offered no evidence to the contrary.
At the very best, the famine was a result of a massive mismanagement of wartime priorities. At worst, it was imperialist antipathy coloured with racism and vengance against the Bengalis
At worst? Yes, this is case you want to make and one that you appear constantly in two minds about - it's like you are arguing with yourself. The point is, and has been since the start of the debate, and continues to be. Writing that is easy - proving it is another thing.
Despite MM’s protestations, there is nothing like the evidence needed to say this was deliberate.
warspite1ORIGINAL: mind_messing
The only way I seeing it being a more deliberate act would have been to go out and salt the fields.
ORIGINAL: warspite1
warspite1ORIGINAL: mind_messing
The only way I seeing it being a more deliberate act would have been to go out and salt the fields.
If you believe what you state to be true then I don’t understand, particularly given the above sentence, why you don’t believe it was a war crime. You appear to be at war with yourself.

warspite1ORIGINAL: mind_messing
ORIGINAL: warspite1
warspite1ORIGINAL: mind_messing
The only way I seeing it being a more deliberate act would have been to go out and salt the fields.
If you believe what you state to be true then I don’t understand, particularly given the above sentence, why you don’t believe it was a war crime. You appear to be at war with yourself.
Not a lawyer, but my understanding is that it would be classed as a crime against humanity.
warspite1ORIGINAL: RangerJoe
Even today it is difficult to move food from one Indian state to another. It is actually easier and cheaper to import it from another country. As far as the railroads go, there are many accidents on them today with much loss of life. Don't tell me that it was better then, especially during a war.
ORIGINAL: warspite1
warspite1ORIGINAL: RangerJoe
Even today it is difficult to move food from one Indian state to another. It is actually easier and cheaper to import it from another country. As far as the railroads go, there are many accidents on them today with much loss of life. Don't tell me that it was better then, especially during a war.
Very true - despite the false comments to the contrary - India was not Holland and the problems caused by a lack of road and rail communication and distance was a very real problem thanks to numerous factors. In addition the military necessity (some people love to forget there was actually a war on) of getting supplies to the front line compounded the issues of geography and climate.
However, if one believes the argument being made, the food wasn't delivered to India in the first place (although evidence also suggests there was surplus food in India as a whole??) - and what surplus there was was not distributed to the rural dwellers of Bengal - not through poor roads - but by policy. But if this was true why was the Viceroy, who could order the surplus moved, not doing so and at the same time apparently clamouring HMG for more food??.
Like so much I've read, there is so much that is unclear or contradictory. The last report presented as evidence says that denial policy stopped the full planting of crops in 1942 and 1943. Other reports suggest the famine ended when the 'bumper' 1943 crop was harvested. How was the latter possible if the denial policy seriously hindered the planting in the first place?
If all the evidence is available and indisputable, I wonder why (assuming they haven't) the Indian Government has not sought reparations from the UK for this 'crime' (however one wishes to define it)?
The denial of rice is of little value as the Japanese would be living off their own rations.
