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WAS KATYŃ GENOCIDE? Polish officers were killed


Seanus 15 | 19,672
28 Sep 2009 #121
Genocide has a certain nature to it. I should know, I did so many cases on it in International Criminal Law. It doesn't strictly depend on the number but the character of the crime.
MareGaea 29 | 2,751
28 Sep 2009 #122
lesser

Would not even be such a bad idea - they can rezone Bautzen and Cottbus to recreational parks. (Absorbtion park?)

Did the Soviets attempt to kill the entire Polish nation in Katyn? Don't think so, therefore it's not genocide. Did they do this based on racial issues? No, both are Slavic ppl and the Soviets wanted to weaken any future Polish state, should it re-emerge. This last bit means that they were kinda anticipating the Polish nation to live on (even the Nazis anticipated on that, only they saw a future role for the Poles as slaves, following the Lebensraum-principle), hence not to wipe them off the face of the earth like the Nazis tried with the Jews and the Ottomans tried with the Armenians. That, my friend, makes the events in Katyn mass-murder and not genocide. And in order to wipe out an entire nation, one usually has to kill 100.000's or millions. That's what the numbers stand for.

M-G (impropria impropriae est)
lesser 4 | 1,311
28 Sep 2009 #123
It doesn't strictly depend on the number but the character of the crime.

Yes, exactly! Many people tend to change the meaning of words to make it compatible with their wishes.
Torq
28 Sep 2009 #124
Did the Soviets attempt to kill the entire Polish nation in Katyn? Don't think so, therefore it's not genocide.

The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, adopted in 1948, declared that genocide was any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group (...)

For the less perceptive readers - I higlighted the words "or in part" :-)
lesser 4 | 1,311
28 Sep 2009 #125
Did the Soviets attempt to kill the entire Polish nation in Katyn?

It is neither only about nations. They targeted particular group of people on territory that they planned to absorb, according to their nationality and social status.
MareGaea 29 | 2,751
28 Sep 2009 #126
Seanus

Fact remains that the Soviets at Katyn did not aim to wipe out the Poles as a whole, which in my opinion makes it mass-murder, not genocide.

a national, ethnic, racial or religious grou

Where exactly does militairy personnel fit in?

M-G (doesn't want to diminish the fact that it was terrible, but I am sure all understand that)
Torq
28 Sep 2009 #127
Fact remains that the Soviets at Katyn did not aim to wipe out the Poles as a whole

Read post no. 166 again, please :-)

Where exactly does militairy personnel fit in?

Do you mean Polish military personnel? Besides, it wasn't only military personnel
but also lawyers, priests or land owners for example.
Seanus 15 | 19,672
28 Sep 2009 #128
M-G, I didn't say otherwise. I've already classed it as a war crime and it didn't have the character of genocide. I was making the point that it isn't numbers that decide the matter. Numbers are relative in this case anyway.
Torq
28 Sep 2009 #129
I've already classed it as a war crime

Seanus - you're a smart fella, so maybe you can explain to me how can
there be a war crime without a factual state of war?

I still think that...

In case of Katyń genocide there was neither an officially declared war between
Poland and USSR nor even a factual state of war as all military clashes between
Polish and Soviet armies ceased in September (or October) 1939.

So, in April 1940, at the time of Katyń genocide, there was no war between
Poland and USSR (declared or not) that would justify calling it a "war crime".

So, why do you class it as a "war crime"?
MareGaea 29 | 2,751
28 Sep 2009 #130
Ok, suppose I have a truck full of machine guns. I park it in the middle of a market square somewhere. The market square is packed with ppl. I then get out the machine guns and shoot everybody there. Suppose also that nobody runs away and nobody is able to stop me. I shoot, say, 1200 ppl there. They are all part of the same nationality. I know this, because I have done research and I know that at that day at that time there are only members of that particular race/etnicity/religion. I succeed in my plan. 1200 ppl of the same group have been killed. What have I committed? Genocide or mass-murder?

M-G (curious)
Torq
28 Sep 2009 #131
They are all part of the same nationality.

I know this, because I have done research and I know that at that day at that time there are only members of that particular race/etnicity/religion.

I shoot, say, 1200 ppl there (...) 1200 ppl of the same group have been killed.

For me the answer is obvious - you targeted the specific ethnic/racial/religious group
based only on their ethnicity/race/religion with the intent to destroy them (a part of
that nation/race/religious group)...

...which fits the definition of genocide under the international law.

The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, adopted in 1948, declared that genocide was any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group (...)

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genocide#Under_international_law

What have I committed? Genocide or mass-murder?

You have commited genocide.
Seanus 15 | 19,672
28 Sep 2009 #132
Torq, the Soviets had already crossed the border and the war was already under way. It fitted the billing of a war crime because it served the ends of a wartime objective. It was wilful killing designed to further their ultimate post-war objective of imposing communism with the bare minimum of resistance.

Also, another important aspect of war crime is the inextricable link with the orders passed down from the leader. Stalin endorsed it and it funnelled down to the soldiers, NOT hitmen, to kill Polish inteligentsia.
MareGaea 29 | 2,751
28 Sep 2009 #133
I go with the war-crime. However, I am still not convinced that it's genocide. But I guess we will never find a definitive answer to that.

M-G (going to watch a movie)
Torq
28 Sep 2009 #134
Torq, the Soviets had already crossed the border and the war was already under way.

In April 1940? The war between Poland and USSR?

It fitted the billing of a war crime because it served the ends of a wartime
objective. It was wilful killing designed to further their ultimate post-war objective of imposing communism with the bare minimum of resistance.

I see what you're getting at, Seanus, but the decisive factor for me is the fact that
there wasn't a war between Poland and USSR at the time.

Stalin endorsed it and it funnelled down to the soldiers, NOT hitmen, to kill Polish inteligentsia.

Such a huge task could only be passed down to the army. Nazis also used their military
personnel, NOT hitmen, to destroy Jewish population of Europe.
lesser 4 | 1,311
28 Sep 2009 #135
MareGaea

You remind me those Poles who claim that Bereza Kartuska was not a concentration camp. Neither you or them respect widely recognized definitions.
MareGaea 29 | 2,751
28 Sep 2009 #136
Nazis also used their military
personnel, NOT hitmen

No they didn't. They used the Sonderkommandos, which you could compare to hitmen. In fact they had to proceed secretly in order to avoid the German army seeing what was happening as Hitler feared that they would revolt.

M-G (wonder why that was as he was so convinced of his own correctness)
Seanus 15 | 19,672
28 Sep 2009 #137
Nope, there was a war going on from Sep 3 1939. Also, they were classed as POW's. Furthermore, civilians were affected, a major part of a war crime.

The leader knew that there would be a war and it was a war crime in nature. Besides, the invasion had already happened.
sadieann 2 | 205
28 Sep 2009 #138
Interrogation, political agitation and then declaration of "hardened and uncompromising enemies" of Soviet authority. Deemed Polish "Nationalists and Counterrevolutionaries." It was a SELECTIVE deprivation of Poland's Military and Intellectual elite which ultimately would weaken Poland as a whole. Massacre carried out by military. Fits declared description of Genocide. In my opinion, Genocide. Isolated group which ultimately would weaken Poland as a whole. Others, consider it mass murder due to the Russian military carrying out the execution. Genocide typically is carried out by military.
Torq
28 Sep 2009 #139
No they didn't. They used the Sonderkommandos. In fact they had to proceed secretly in order to avoid the German army seeing what was happening as Hitler feared that they would revolt.

Military SS formations were also used in the holocaust and the entire camp system.
Also SS and Wehrmacht units were often supervising the departure and loading of
transport trains to death camps.

Also, they were classed as POW's.

Which is strange as many of them were captured after the military operations
were over and many of them weren't even military personnel but lawyers, land-owners,
settlers and priests. Some POW's!

*off to catch some z's*
MareGaea 29 | 2,751
28 Sep 2009 #140
Military SS formations

But they were not part of the Wehrmacht. Where as the perpetrators of Katyn were members of the Red Army. There is a difference.

Wehrmacht units were often supervising the transport trains to death camps.

Besides that I have serious doubts about this; how do you explain that the Sonderkommandos had to operate in a secretive way to keep their actions hidden from the Wehrmacht's eye?

M-G (SS looked and acted like an army, but were not, in general)
Torq
28 Sep 2009 #141
Besides that I have serious doubts about this; how do you explain that the Sonderkommandos had to operate in a secretive way to keep their actions hidden from the Wehrmacht's eye?

I don't know, but Wehrmacht units were most definitely used in the realization of Holocaust.

I did a quick google and got:

"during the invasion of the Soviet Union the Wehrmacht was systematically
involved in the realization of the Holocaust"

hgs.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/11/1/79

or

ess.uwe.ac.uk/genocide/wehrmacht.htm

...there's probably more info on that in the Internet.

T (now really off to catch some z's)
Seanus 15 | 19,672
28 Sep 2009 #142
Torq, the important thing was that the Soviets invaded and took Polish POW's. It doesn't need an official declaration in this case.
Torq
29 Sep 2009 #143
Seanus, it's not about the official declaration of war. I stated plainly in one of my previous
posts that whether the war was declared or not is irrelevant as long as there is a factual
state of war. There was NO factual state of war between Poland and USSR in April 1940
when the genocide was commited.
Seanus 15 | 19,672
29 Sep 2009 #144
It doesn't matter. It was a crime conducted during a war. The label is just different.
sjam 2 | 541
29 Sep 2009 #145
Besides, it wasn't only military personnel
but also lawyers, priests or land owners for example.

many of them weren't even military personnel but lawyers, land-owners,
settlers and priests. Some POW's!

Just 500 lawyers, priests and landowners out of how many priests, lawyers and landowners that were in Eastern Poland at the time of their arrest?

A group of 500 out of your total of 22,000 Katyn victims not that many by any stretch of credibility. And I doubt if they represented 0.5% of all the Polish priests, landowners and lawyers of Eastern Poland so not a significant number at all. It doesn't diminish the fact a crime was committed but no one can serioulsy claim it was a genocidal crime.

There were 10 times as many deserters on the execution list than your 'many of them weren't even military personnel but lawyers, land-owners, settlers and priests.

There was NO factual state of war between Poland and USSR in April 1940
when the genocide was commited.

Only if you ignore the restistance organisations that were set up in Soviet occupied Poland (as were they of course in German occupied Polish lands). Thus by ignoring the fact that resistance organistations were set-up and that the NKVD memorandum specifically mentions POWs involved in insurgent organisations were to be executed, you arrive at the absurd statement that war did not exist in 1940. The NKVD were fighting against Polish resistance organisations at every twist and turn, and they were much more successful in infiltrating and breaking-up such organisations than the Germans ever were, the NKVD having had many more decades ruthless experience in using executions, torture and deporatations to break resistance to Stalinist control.

Also SS and Wehrmacht units were often supervising the departure and loading of transport trains to death camps.

So did the Jewish Order Police, so I guess they were guilty of Holocaust crimes as well!

I guess Polish locomotive drivers such as Stefan Kirsz* who in his own words was a locomotive co-driver and led the Jewish transports from Rava_Russkaya to Belzec were also guilty of Holocaust crimes.

*Source: Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka: The Operation Reinhard Death Camps —page 69.

It was a crime conducted during a war. The label is just different.

Without doubt!

They targeted particular group of people on territory that they planned to absorb, according to their nationality and social status.

How would you compare the social status of the 6,000 deserters on the NKVD memorandum to the group of Polish generals?

In the document there is no particular single group targetted but a number of groups of which the largest majority were Polish military commisioned officers, who came to be held seperately from the tens of thousands of other ranks who were freed shortly after capture. I believe this was also the case in German occupied Poland ie. after the siege of Warsaw ended all Polish military forces were ordered out of Warsaw and after processing in holding camps the other ranks were released and the officers deported to German POW camps.

On the Katyń memorandum they were not even all Polish, 3% were not. So nationality doesn't seem to be a factor, other than most prisoners taken in Poland by the Soviets were naturally Polish.
Harry
29 Sep 2009 #146
Genocide under international law:
The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, adopted in 1948, declared that genocide was any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group (...)

For the less perceptive readers - I higlighted the words "or in part" :-)

Well, if you want to use that particular definition, the Polish nation committed genocide against the Jews. At Jedwabne and Kielce parts of a religious group were destroyed. And of course we'll need to add the genocide which Poland committed against Ukraine (the Lvov pogrom et al).

Alternatively we could agree that none of the above was genocide (I certainly wouldn't describe it as genocide).

So, in April 1940, at the time of Katyń genocide, there was no war between
Poland and USSR (declared or not) that would justify calling it a "war crime".

You may wish to debate that point with by General Michał Tokarzewski-Karaszewicz. He was the leader of Związek Walki Zbrojnej (later to become the Armia Krajowa) forces in the areas under Soviet occupation and was arrested and imprisoned by the NKVD in March 1940.
sjam 2 | 541
29 Sep 2009 #147
General Michał Tokarzewski-Karaszewicz.

Who was released in August 1941 and obviously not considered 'elite' enough to be murdered by NKVD in Torq's genocide!
Torq
29 Sep 2009 #148
It was a crime conducted during a war.

What war, Seanus? It was April 1940, so it certainly wasn't between Poland and USSR.

I know that there was a war at that time between Denmark, Norway, France,
and Germany (also Great Britain was at war with the Germans) but it would be
VERY odd if Soviets tried to use the war between these countries to justify
calling their genocide a "war crime".

Just 500 lawyers, priests and landowners

You really have some kind of an obsession with numbers, Sjam. I told you that, in my
opinion, it's the nature of the crime itself and not the numbers that matter.

the restistance organisations that were set up in Soviet occupied Poland

You may wish to debate that point with by General Michał Tokarzewski-Karaszewicz. He was the leader of Związek Walki Zbrojne

I don't think that Soviets can use the existence of partisan groups as an excuse
to call the murdering of regular army officers, settlers, lawyers, landowners and
priests a "war crime".
Seanus 15 | 19,672
29 Sep 2009 #149
Well, that isn't the key point. I have to review the legislation, though. A war crime is one typical of war and not necessarily conducted during wartime. I'll get back to you on this, Torq.
Harry
29 Sep 2009 #150
What war, Seanus? It was April 1940, so it certainly wasn't between Poland and USSR.

Can you perhaps explain why the Sikorski-Mayski Polish-Soviet Union Agreement of 30 July 1941 says "The Soviet Government grants amnesty to all Polish citizens now detained on Soviet territory either as prisoners of war or on other sufficient grounds, as from the resumption of diplomatic relations." If there really was no war, why were there prisoners of war?

I don't think that Soviets can use the existence of partisan groups as an excuse to call the murdering of regular army officers, settlers, lawyers, landowners and
priests a "war crime".

I note that you completely ignore the fact that by your definition of genocide Poland committed genocide on the Jews and the Ukrainians.

I also note that you have still not explained why the people sjam and I have listed were charged with war crimes (in addition to crimes against humanity) but not with genocide. Could it perhaps be that people who have more than a passing knowledge of international law know the difference between war crimes and genocide while you clearly do not?


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