Bombsaway;
https://codohforum.com/viewtopic.php?p=20531#p20531
Maybe you can talk about the difference between wanting to kill civilians en masse on purpose (which the brits for sure wanted to do) and genocide. The common way to interpret that is not genocide because of the military justification, but i dont agree with that
Churchill said, in 1918;
https://winstonchurchill.org/publicatio ... ng-policy/
“This is the moment to attack the enemy, to carry the war into his own country, to make him feel in his own towns and in his own person something of the havoc he has wrought in France and Belgium. This is the moment, just before the winter begins, to affect his morale, and to harry his hungry and dispirited cities without pause or stay. While the new heavy French machines.. .will strike by night at all the nearer objectives, the British, who alone at the moment have the experience, apparatus and plans already made to bomb not only by night but in broad daylight far into Germany, must be assured of the means to carry out their role.”
He was not discussing the extermination of Germany then. He was looking for a way to end the stalemate of trench warfare and he saw the newly invented aeroplane as a means to do that. To be a genocide, the aim is to destroy, eliminate, exterminate an entire people. Churchill is not wanting to do that to Germans and Germany, he wants to win the war, WWI.
"Some of the bombers that Churchill bought, built and armed were already in action in October 1918, attacking German railway junctions, steel works, chemical factories and aerodromes. Among the cities reached were Metz, Frankfurt, Coblenz, Bonn, Mainz and Karslruhe."
By November 1918, Germany had surrendered. The newly invented bombers hit military targets and bombed cities, just as the Germans had bombed military and civilian targets in the UK. Come WWII, and Churchill wants to retaliate and fight fire with fire;
"On 12 May 1940, two days after Churchill became Prime Minister—and as German bombers struck at the Dutch port of Rotterdam—the War Cabinet discussed whether it was right “on moral grounds” to bomb targets in Germany. Summing up the general tenor of the discussion, Churchill told his colleagues: “… we were no longer bound by our previously held scruples as to initiating ‘unrestricted’ air warfare. The enemy had already given us ample justification for retaliation on his country.”
WWII was unrestricted warfare. The Nazis set the bar and Churchill matched it. Now, the full "exterminating" quote;
"To Lord Beaverbrook, the Minister of Aircraft Production, Churchill wrote on 8 July 1940—in urging him to increase the resources being put into bomber as opposed to fighter production: “When I look round to see how we can win the war, I see that there is only one sure path. We have no continental ally which can defeat the German military power…. Should [Hitler] be repulsed here or not try invasion, he will recoil eastward, and we have nothing to stop him. But there is one thing that will bring him back and bring him down, and that is an absolutely devastating, exterminating attack by very heavy bombers from this country upon the Nazi homeland.”
Churchill has written to the head of aircraft production, wanting an increased number of bombers, for attacks on Germany, as the only country left in Europe, that was able to fight the Nazis. It is a year before the Nazis attacked the Soviets, as the North Africa campaign had just started, with British and Italian forces engaging in the first tank battle in Libya. Aerial bombing was the only way to hit back at the Nazis, who had been bombing towns and cities all over Europe, from the first raid over Frampol in Poland.
Churchill was anticipating the Nazis would start air raids on the UK, and he was correct, with the first raid in August 1940. His words, were in the context of an anticipated aerial battle between the British and the Nazis, involving long range, heavy bombing. At no point, unlike Hitler discussing the Jews, does Churchill discuss the extermination, liquidation, elimination of all Germans and the ending of Germany.