Bombing
of Dresden
in World War II - Impact of the attack
Out of 28,410
houses in the inner city of
Dresden,
24,866 were destroyed. An area of 15 square kilometres was
totally destroyed, among that: 14,000 homes, 72 schools, 22 hospitals,
18 churches, 5 theatres, 50 bank and insurance companies, 31
department stores, 31 large hotels, 62 administration buildings as
well as factories such as the Ihagee camera works. In
total
there were 222,000 apartments in the city. 75,000 of them were totally
destroyed, 11,000 severely damaged, 7,000 damaged, 81,000 slightly
damaged. The city was around 300 square kilometres in area in those
days. Although the main railway station was destroyed completely, the
railway was working again within a few days.
The precise
number of dead is difficult to ascertain and is not known. Estimates
are made difficult by the fact that the city and surrounding suburbs
which had a population of 642,000 in 1939[20]
was crowded at that time with up to 200,000 refugees[21],
and some thousands of wounded soldiers. The fate of some of the
refugees is not known as they may have been
killed
and incinerated beyond recognition in the fire-storm,
There have
been higher estimates for the
number of dead, ranging as high as 300,000. They are from
disputed and unreliable sources, such as the Reich Ministry of Public
Enlightenment and Propaganda headed by Joseph Goebbels, Soviet
historians, and
David
Irving,
the once popular, but now discredited self-taught historian who
retracted his higher estimates[29].
The Nazis made use of
Dresden
in their propaganda efforts and promised swift retaliation. The
Soviets also made propaganda use of the
Dresden
bombing
in the early years of the Cold War to alienate the East Germans from
the Americans and British.
The destruction
of
Dresden
was comparable to that of many other German cities, with the tonnage
of bombs dropped lower than in many other areas[30].
However, ideal weather conditions at the target site, the
wooden-framed buildings, and "breakthroughs" linking the cellars of
contiguous buildings and the lack of preparation for the effects of
air-raids by Gauleiter Martin Mutschmann[31],
conspired to make the attack particularly devastating. For these
reasons the loss of life in
Dresden
was higher than many other
bombing
raids during World War II. For example Coventry, the English
city which is now twinned with
Dresden,
and is often compared and contrasted with it, lost 1,236 in two
separate raids in 1940. In late 2004, an RAF man involved in the raid
said in an interview on the BBC's Radio 4 that another factor was the
lower-than-expected level of anti-aircraft fire, which allowed a high
degree of accuracy on the part of the bombers.
Overall,
Anglo-American
bombing
of German cities claimed around 400,000 civilian lives. Whether these
attacks hastened the end of the war is a controversial question. As
acts of retaliation, they were at best vicarious (even if entire
nations are seen as morally competent agents).