I just found and re-watched this... had it on VHS for some 15 years.
Don't know, if this is true, but the claims made are more than shocking and they are presented in a way that does sound plausible.
US respecting the trade agreements, IBM having experts in Nazi Germany doing the statistics of the death camps... it's all very shady, but it's not impossible. WW2 is the event that has shaped much of our recent history (drawing new borders, setting new alliances, shifting power...), so I am convinced there's much more that meets the eye, but some of the claims made in this documentary are really shocking.
So, if you get a chance to watch it (I don't understand Hungarian, but have a Croatian translation of the documentary), you should probably not take it at face value... but be prepared to start thinking about some things in a different way than before, because this documentary does open some very important questions - especially on the US position leading right up to the war... and also during the war.
Let's just say that until somebody does a fully unbiased research of all available data about WW2 and synthesize it into a one complete story (and that seems rather impossible), we would probably never find out the truth.
Don't know, if this is true, but the claims made are more than shocking and they are presented in a way that does sound plausible.
US respecting the trade agreements, IBM having experts in Nazi Germany doing the statistics of the death camps... it's all very shady, but it's not impossible. WW2 is the event that has shaped much of our recent history (drawing new borders, setting new alliances, shifting power...), so I am convinced there's much more that meets the eye, but some of the claims made in this documentary are really shocking.
So, if you get a chance to watch it (I don't understand Hungarian, but have a Croatian translation of the documentary), you should probably not take it at face value... but be prepared to start thinking about some things in a different way than before, because this documentary does open some very important questions - especially on the US position leading right up to the war... and also during the war.
Let's just say that until somebody does a fully unbiased research of all available data about WW2 and synthesize it into a one complete story (and that seems rather impossible), we would probably never find out the truth.