While on a quiet Winter Camino in Spain I met up with a German man of about my own age. We walked and talked and he eventually told me that his father had been in the SS during the war.
He told me that his father had admitted to have done some terrible, murderous, things. They were under a strict discipline which meant if you didn't obey an order from the officer
who gave it you could be shot .
That memory came to mind this morning when I heard that the man who is accused of making the bomb which blew up the plane over Lockerbie has been arrested and taken to the USA.
Can a functionary be blamed for following orders?
He actually claims that the orders came from Libyan intelligence, but that Gadhafi "thanked him and other members of the team for their successful attack on the United States" it is claimed.
I've lost track of this a bit. As far as I can tell the Libyan government accepted responsibility for the actions of those in their employ but denied giving the order. Groups supporting Palestine have also been mentioned. Do we actually know who planned it?
In your example those that joined the SS knew exactly what they were getting into. Maybe not the poor saps on the front line but then by and large they were not the perpetrators of heinous acts.
The question that this raises is did the SS man simply follow orders or did he personally embrace the 'cause'. Likewise the bombers. I would guess that is a 'yes' to both. Therefore, neither can be deemed innocents just following orders - whatever the source of those orders.
Imagine a patriot joining the SS in the 1930s. He would obey orders,
He was under an iron discipline.
My post asks when are you guilty when you obey orders?
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