Apocalypse 1945: The Destruction of Dresden was first published on April 30, 1963. Using official papers, private records, and the accounts of eye-witnesses on both sides. David Irving gives a harrowing account of the two saturation bombing raids executed by RAF Bomber Command on Germany's most beautiful city at the end of the war, a horrific firestorm raid which left over 100,000 innocent civilians dead or missing-jacketed
Apocalypse 1945: The Destruction of Dresden is first published on April 30, 1963. At 10 p.m. on February 13-14, 1945, the Master Bomber broadcast the cryptic order: ‘Controller to Plate-Rack Force: Come in and bomb glow of red T.I.s as planned.’ The ill-famed R.A.F. attack on Dresden had begun. The target city was among Germany’s largest but had little military or industrial value. It was a centre for evacuating wounded servicemen, and schools, restaurants, and public buildings had been converted into hospitals.
The authorities expected that this, a city often compared with Florence for its graceful Baroque style, would be spared. By 1945, the legend was deeply entrenched that Dresden would never be bombed. It was not to be.
In February 1945, with the war’s political and military directors meeting at Yalta in Crimea, Mr Winston Churchill urgently needed some display of his offensive strength and willingness to assist the Russians in their drive westwards. Just seven miles behind the eastern Front, Dresden became the victim of Mr. Churchill’s desire for a spectacular ‘shattering blow’. As things turned out, this, the most crushing air raid of the war, was not delivered until the Yalta conference ended.
Apocalypse 1945: the destruction of dresden
The city was undefended - even the Luftwaffe’s local night fighter force was grounded. There were no proper air raid shelters. Dresden was housing hundreds of thousands of refugees from Silesia, East Prussia, and western Germany, in addition to its population of 630,000. Up to a hundred thousand people, perhaps more, were killed in two or three hours, burned alive that night. Yet until the first edition of this book appeared in 1963, the raid scarcely figured in the Allied war histories. A veil had been drawn across this tragedy.
Stung by foreign revulsion at this new St Valentine’s Day massacre, the British prime minister - who had ordered it - penned an angry minute to his Chief of Staff, even before the war ended, rasping that ‘the destruction of Dresden remains a serious query against the conduct of allied bombing’. It is from this remarkably forgetful minute that the sub-title is taken. For this edition, the full story, omitting nothing, of the historical background to this cruel blow and of its unexpected political consequences, is told.
320 pages - Hardback
About the Author
David Irving
David Irving is a renowned British historian and author of over 30 books. Known for his meticulous primary source research, he has spent decades in archives across the globe, unearthing diaries, documents, and first-hand accounts that have reshaped our understanding of the Second World War and its key figures.
History doesn’t wait for the comfortable version. Dresden. Nuremberg. Two defining moments of WWII — documented from the inside, with sources few published accounts had access to. This bundle collects two archive-led accounts in one offer.
David Irving's facsimile record and commentary on the infamous American policy for postwar Germany. If adopted, the Morgenthau Plan would have led to the death by starvation and pestilence of ten million Germans in the first two years after the war ended, in addition to the one million who had perished in the saturation bombing and the three million killed in the enforced expulsion from Germany's eastern territories. Both Roosevelt and Churchill unthinkingly initiated the Plan, as these documents show. Now, for this edition in English. Laminated hardback.
Dive into the enigmatic world of Rudolf Hess's wartime odyssey with David Irving's Hess: The Missing Years 1941-1945. This compelling volume sheds light on one of World War II's most mysterious episodes: the daring solo flight by Hitler's deputy to Scotland in a bid to broker peace. This mission led to his lifelong incarceration. Irving's painstaking research uncovers the hidden layers of this historical puzzle, drawing from secret British Intelligence files, medical records, and firsthand accounts to narrate a story that veers between tragedy and espionage thriller.
True Himmler. David Irving's dissenting work on Heinrich Himmler is based on actual letters, diaries, and documents exclusively available to him and on twenty years of research and interviews with Himmler's generals and private staff, including an analysis of his murder on May 23, 1945, by a special British killing unit. Hardback, with over 700 pages and hundreds of original black-and-white and color photographs from Himmler's albums.