"An intense book and one that deserves a wide readership. . . . It
cuts to the core of Allied policy on Jewish affairs during the war
and on the changes that have transpired in attitudes toward the
Holocaust since the war ended."--Jewish Book World"The authors have
assembled not only the best and most technical assessments but
thoughtful reflections on how to judge the hard-pressed political
leaders and generals of the time. The broader questions may be
unanswerable, but they merit pondering nonetheless--particularly in
an age that has seen its share of massacres uninterrupted by
external intervention."--Foreign Affairs"An essential work not only
for students of the Holocaust, but also for anyone interested in
the war in Europe."--NYMAS Review, The New York Military Affairs
Symposium
"An excellent study, objectively edited, with all points of view
represented eloquently and substantively by major scholars of the
subject."--William J. vanden Heuvel, Forward
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