The Allies of World War 2 were aware that The Nazis were...

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    The Allies of World War 2 were aware that The Nazis were carrying out a Holocaust as early as 1942 and refused to provide safe havens for the targeted Jews in Germany.
    Allied forces knew about Holocaust two years before discovery of concentration camps, secret documents reveal
    The Allied Powers were aware of the scale of the Jewish Holocaust two-and-a-half years earlier than is generally assumed, and had even prepared war crimes indictments against Adolf Hitler and his top Nazi commanders.

    Newly accessed material from the United Nations – not seen for around 70 years – shows that as early as December 1942, the US, UK and Soviet governments were aware that at least two million Jews had been murdered and a further five million were at risk of being killed, and were preparing charges. Despite this, the Allied Powers did very little to try and rescue or provide sanctuary to those in mortal danger.

    Indeed, in March 1943, Viscount Cranborne, a minister in the war cabinet of Winston Churchill, said the Jews should not be considered a special case and that the British Empire was already too full of refugees to offer a safe haven to any more.

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    Of course, Winston Churchhil claim was fasle as the 10 pound pomp sceme demonstrates. The British wanted to populate Australia and Canada with White English spaekers.
    Netanyahu was right in that the allies never helped persecuted Jews in terretory under Nazi control by oftering them safe haven.
    The notion that the Allied forces invaded and defeated Germany under Nazi rule to liberate the Jews is a making of your own imagination @rcman
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    The attitude of European nations leading to WW2
    How Europe Went To War In 1939

    The Second World War was the most destructive conflict in human history. Years of international tension and aggressive expansion by Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany culminated in the German invasion of Poland on 1 September 1939. Britain and France declared war on Germany two days later.

    The decisions that led to war reflected the ambitions, rivalries, fears and anxieties that developed in the two decades that followed the end of the First World War. The European powers were willing to go to war to extend or protect what each nation saw - in dramatically different ways - as matters of vital interest, great power status, international prestige, and national survival.

    The Retreat from Democracy in Europe
    The instability and insecurity of the 1920s and 1930s gave rise to political extremism in many European countries. People looked to authoritarian leadership as a political alternative. Fascist leader Benito Mussolini came to power in Italy in 1922 and almost all aspects of Italian life came under state control.

    In Germany, Adolf Hitler became Chancellor in 1933 and established a totalitarian one-party state under the Nazis. Political opposition was violently repressed. Hitler exploited the popular belief that Germany had been humiliated after the First World War. He promised economic recovery, national revival and that Germany would return to international prominence through a revision of the Treaty of Versailles.

    Germany withdrew from the League of Nations in October 1933. In 1935, Hitler announced German rearmament and re-introduced conscription, which was prohibited under Versailles. The ultra-nationalist governments of both Italy and Germany
    each pursued aggressive foreign policies of territorial expansion that threatened to destroy the world order established by the post-war peace settlement.
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    Your obsession with Jews and biased views including historical ones are as irrational a those of Hitler when it comes to Jews.
 
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