Tjebbe van Tijen on Mon, 22 Feb 1999 19:16:46 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Unbombing the World Project |
The idea is to make an installation that, starting in 2001, can travel worldwide and can be exhibited both in towns that have been bombed in the last century and in towns of countries that have bombed others but did not come under attack themselves (United States). The collection of the content for this installation will be done by a group of researchers which will develop a network of local researchers all over the world. A system will be devised which allows for participation in the research from people living in or connected to each of the towns bombed (a list can be found at the end of this document). The use of the Internet will be essential for this part. Through a system of structured information gathering local researchers can share their knowledge with others on a global level. The first stage of the project will be to bring the database of bombed cities on line, with the possibility for people to comment and add. People ineterested to participate can contact me through my email address. Please putting the following line in the subject header <unbombing consultant>. ----------------------------- UNBOMBING THE WORLD 1911-2001 ----------------------------- 90 years aerial bombing of the human habitat a proposal for an installation on the history and future of planned destruction and reconstruction Tjebbe van Tijen - Imaginary Museum Projects -over a million of death -more than a thousand square kilometres of vanished townscapes <illustrated webversion on http://people.a2000.nl/ttijen/ubw/ubw01a.html > The planned destruction of human beings and their habitat by aerial bombing, including the inevitable attacks by 'mistake'. Showing all aerial bombings in an impartial and indiscriminate way, making them comparable, thus putting the debate beyond the justifications of contemporary 'real-politik'. Clarifying the underlying structures of the military-industrial complex and the political bureaucracy that formed, and still form, the basis for this kind of mass destruction. De-constructing the process: mapping, targeting, choosing, planning, testing, threatening, bombing, mediating, evaluating, commemorating. Make it understood that there is a close link between the violence of weapons of the military and the violence of euphemistic language of the politicians. Give voice to those in the past who dared to question or criticise the aerial bombings of 'their enemies' and had to face the consequences of such 'anti-patriotic' behaviour. Re-evaluating the official and unofficial protests of the bombed ones, with their accusations of 'crimes against humanity', raising the ethical question of means and ends, why not all atrocities are considered 'war crimes'. Putting the emphasis not so much on the spectacular sight of destruction with its heroism and even aesthetic attraction, as can be found in many eyewitness accounts of major blasts and fires by people that were lucky enough to escape and tell their story, but on the much more invisible phenomena of the 'bureaucratisation of genocide'; the daily routine of mapping and targeting the supposed enemy. A practice that has not been stopped at the end of the Second World War, Cold War, or Vietnam War, but has continued to exist till this very moment. Condensing these complex issues by juxtaposing fragments of historical documents relating to the different actors in this theatre of war, both perpetrators and victims: politicians, civil servants, scientists, industrialists, military personnel, civilians. Choosing a significant number and a representative variety of bombed cities from the complete list of approximate 400 towns in the world that have been bombed in the last 90 years. Dramatising the historical documents that belong to the chosen examples, by using interactive audio-visual media. With each chosen dramatised example, showing comparable examples (just in text form, diagrams or maps) from the complete list, to make the magnitude of destruction always understood. Letting the voices of the victims of bombing be heard by quoting from the vast arsenal of personal accounts that have been published the last nine decades in different countries that have suffered bombing attacks. Making a choice of such writings and translating them in the languages needed in the country or countries where the installation will be shown. Setting up an international network of concerned people: archivists, artists, people who have witnessed a bombing, local journalists, peace activists, translators, photographers, etc., who will share their knowledge by adding it to a public accessible database which will be made available over the Internet. Placing the destruction by aerial bombing in a wider historical context by finding ways to show how, through the whole of history, towns and their inhabitants have been made a target, put on a list to be destroyed or annihilated, from the legend like biblical story of the destruction by divine fire of Sodom and Gomorra, to the bombing raid of the combined American and British air forces with the code name 'Operation Gomorra' on Hamburg in 1943, where 40.000 civilians were killed in a human made fire storm. Studying the language used by those attacking and those being attacked, showing the links with events way back in history, with words like 'Huns' and names like Genghis Kahn, surfacing again. Showing how deeply rooted the collective memories of these violent periods in human history are. Relating this to man made apocalyps of the middle of the twentieth century: Berlin, Dresden, Tokyo, Hiroshima, Nagasaki. Posing, also, the question about a possible link between urban growth and urban disaster, between destruction and reconstruction, noting the vitality of all those cities that, in one way or another, did rise from their ashes, maybe even more vital as before. Comparing the different reconstruction processes of bombed cities: those that have referred back to the past by building replicas of what have been destroyed, and those that were using the opportunity to build a new town, following a whole new concept, almost welcoming the 'tabula rasa' created by war, the unique opportunity, a town as an empty piece of paper on a drawing board. Contrasting the magnitude of destruction by bombing in war with that of destruction by regular urban renewal Finding ways to show clearly what has disappeared forever, what have been reconstructed and what have been newly added. Ask people to imagine what would have happened if their town would not have been bombed. Showing all this in an installation, an art work, an educational facility if you want,that has three different layers, using three main symbols: Stones ------ Bureaucratic procedures for choosing targets can lead to the actual destruction of human habitat. High technology is used to bomb people back into the stone age. Images of this destruction, frozen in engraved tombstones, can be personally captured. Rubbings made on paper with charcoal can be taken home. Before proceeding to the other parts of the installation you can wash your hands in 'innocence'. A graveyard of tombstones with aerial photographs of bombed cities engraved. The stones can be contemplated and visitors can make charcoal rubbings of stones to take home, either single stones of particular cities, or combining different cities in one rubbing. When they are finished with this they can wash their dirty hands and proceed to the rest of the installation. Desks ----- There is an inescapable relation between the targeting and destruction of the human habitat and the reconstruction afterwards. However devastating and cruel the attack, none of the towns bombed by modern technology have been wiped of the face of the earth definitely. The office-desk and the drawing-table are the two symbols that stand at the beginning and end of this process of destruction and recreation. Sitting at an office desk with drawers full of files with the names of target cities and target areas. Going through these files, taking out one, opening it and study the details. Opening the other drawer of the desk and going through the arsenal of possible weapons. Choosing the right weapon that belongs to how the chosen target fits in space and time. Bombing the target and turn around on your office chair, looking to what was there before and what after. Having the opportunity to turn away from the desk, asking yourself: "what have I done?" Sitting at the drawing table of the urban planner, making an inventory of the war damage, thinking up new plans, deciding what to keep, what to knock down after all. Turning your chair, looking at what was before, at what came after, maybe turning around and ask yourself: "what have I done?". By pointing a hand size symbolic model of an aeroplane up and down, the visitor can listen to narrated fragments from those who were bombing and those who have been bombed. In a similar way, at the drawing table, the visitor can listen to stories of both the planners and the ones that have been planned, by moving a special drawing pencil up and down over the table. Joysticks --------- The difference between playing war with an arcade or home game and real war has diminished greatly by the miniaturisation and computerisation of both military and consumer electronics. Desktop war as entertainment, or for real, has become a reality. Human victims seem to have no importance neither in simulation games nor in real life. Around the installation with the stones and the desks are several flight simulators and wargames placed for the visitors to use. These are both recreational and military games. Before being able to play a game, to exercise war, the visitor will have to look at a short interview on the screens of the computers and the military and arcade game, with both makers and players of these simulations and games. Questions will be asked: "why is it that victims are so invisible", "can it be that these games will have a kind of kartharsis function?", "would you really push the button, do the attack when ordered?". -------------------- This is the second draft of the unbombing project as formulated by Tjebbe van Tijen/Imaginary Museum Projects. The aim is to find other people, other orgaisations, institutions that are interested, willing to collaborate on this project. There is a lot that still needs detailing, there are many things that can be adapted or changed, in one way or another, though the basic structure has now been laid down and should remain. A first list of possible cities and rural areas that might be part of this installation is included in this document. There is a seperate introduction for that section. Amsterdam February 1999 All contacts via: Imaginary Museum Projects Nieuwe Amstelstraat 70, 1011 PM, Amsterdam, Netherlands Telephone +31-(0)20-6261897, Fax 6271897 Email t.tijen@cable.a2000.nl: Tjebbe van Tijen ----------------------- UNBOMBING 90 YEARS LIST ----------------------- The following list is only the first attempt to make an overview of aerial bombings in this century. The aim is to list all bombings that have hurt or killed humans, damaged or destroyed human habitat. The official aim of an aerial raid, 'just hitting economic targets', 'precision bombing' of terrorist, dictators, criminals, name it, has not been my main concern. I have listed any attack that has hit humans and their habitat and also have included cases which need to be checked if such casualties might have occurred. My point of view is not military history, neither a viewpoint from a particular nation or group of nations. My attempt will be to make a list of towns and rural areas that have been hit, a list as complete as possible. The sources I have used for this first sketch are listed below, and of course most of them tend to be rather biased. Only in one book (by Janusz Pikalkiewicz) there is an attempt to systematically give contemporary war dispatches from both sides, but also here the voice of civilians is not yet heard. There is an inherent streak of colonialism in the lack of geographic detailing of bombardments on non-European targets. One just reads 'China, North Korea or North Vietnam, have been heavily bombed', but how heavy, and which towns or areas, is not detailed, while the same book will give much more details on bombing attacks on Great Britain or Germany. No doubt there will be sources enough to fill in the white areas and spots in the map of the bombed areas of the world, but this will need research of local sources in many different languages. The aim is to bring, at a further stage, this database 'on-line' on the Internet so many people from all over the world can help to do the documentary work, share their knowledge. This list, as said, is just the very first beginning and several definition and descriptive problems need to be solved. Topographical names tend to change over time, as border lines are pushed in wars towns are shifting from one nation to another and often change name in the process. The same process happens with countries that appear and disappear. The list below is still full of names that can be debated, or need better detailing. The same goes about the dating of aerial attacks. Many towns or areas have been attacked repeatedly during a war, and some even in several different wars. One example is London that has been bombed by zeppelins and airplanes from the German emperor in the First World War and has also been attacked by airplanes and rockets send in by Adolf Hitler during the Second World War. Does each singular attack to be listed, or is it better to summarise them as series of attacks. As I see it now, the last possibility is the best, because too much academic completeness will generate such an amount of information that the impact might be lost. Too rough figures have the opposite effect, so a balance must be found. The idea is to use in a later stage icons to generate visual statistics that give the needed insight, make quantities understandable and comparable. Who has been bombed and , of course also, who have been bombing. Definition problems here also, and a need for a lot more detailing. The number of people who died in aerial attacks, were wounded, became homeless, areas that have been destroyed, all this needs to be quantified. And than, of course, also how many airplanes, rockets, tonnage of bombs, explosive power, was used and what was the price of human lives, all the pilots and other personnel, the ground assistance, the ammunition workers... Of course this side will not be forgotten. Last the unfortunate mistakes that are part of the game, airplanes lost in the fog, bombing their own towns, attacks on the wrong target, holding an aerial photograph up side down, a typing mistake in a computer, and other human mistakes. There are several clear examples and also not so clear ones, because nobody likes to admit a mistake. With all this in mind you are ready to read the first version of 90 years of aerial bombing of humans and their habitat. Sources for Unbombing database: A guide to the reports of the United States Strategic Bombing survey/Gordan Daniels (199-) Blankest of fire/Kenneth P. Werrell (1996) Crimes of war/Richard A. Falk... (1973) Dictionary of wars/George C. Kohn (1986) Encyclopedia of the Second World War/Bryan Perrett .. (1989) Luftkrieg 1939-1945/Janusz Pikalkiewicz (1978) The Bomber Command war diaries/Martin Middlebrook ... (1985) The century of warfare *1900...)/Charles Messenger (1995) The people's chronology/James trager (1992) Timelines of war/David Brownstone ... (1994) Traume in Trummern/Werner Durth ... (1993) 02:Nicaragua: guerrilla stronholds of Sandino (1928) USA Air Force 04:Austria: Pola (Adriatic coast) (1915-1916) Italian Air Force 04:Belgium: Antwerp (1943-1945) USA Air Force/Luftwaffe (V2) 04:Belgium: Brussels (194?) Luftwaffe (V2) 04:Belgium: Liege (1944-1945) Luftwaffe (V2) 04:Belgium: Ostend (194?) 04:Belgium: Tournai (1944) Luftwaffe (V2) 04:Czechoslovakia: Pilsen (1942-) RAF 04:Finland: Helsinki (1939) Soviet Union 04:France: Angers (194?) 04:France: Arras (1944) Luftwaffe 04:France: Billancourt (194?) 04:France: Boulogne (194?) 04:France: Brest (1943) Allied Forces 04:France: Caen (1944) RAF 04:France: Calais (194?) 04:France: Cannes (194?) 04:France: Cherbourg (194?) 04:France: Clermont-Ferrand (194?) 04:France: Dunkirk (194?) 04:France: Gennevilliers (194?) 04:France: Juvisy (194?) 04:France: La Pallice (194?) 04:France: Le Creusot (194?) 04:France: Le Havre (1944) RAF 04:France: Le Mans (194?) 04:France: Lille (1942, 1944) USA Air Force/Luftwaffe 04:France: Lorient (1943) RAF 04:France: Meulan (194?) 04:France: Modane (194?) 04:France: Montbeliard (194?) 04:France: Orleans (194?) 04:France: Paris (1914, 1944) German Army airplanes/Luftwaffe 04:France: Paris (Boulogne Bilancourt) (1942) RAF 04:France: Poitiers (194?) 04:France: Rouen (1944) USA Air Force 04:France: Royan (1945) RAF 04:France: Saumur (194?) 04:France: St. Medartd en Jalles (194?) 04:France: St. Nazaire (1943) Allied Forces 04:France: Tourcoing (1944) Luftwaffe (V2) 04:France: Tours (194?) 04:France: Trappes (194?) 04:France: Vaires (194?) 04:Germany: Aachen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Augsburg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Bad Kreuznach (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Bamberg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Bautzen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Bayreuth (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Berchtegaden (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Berlin (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Bielefeld (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Bingen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Bocholt (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Bochum (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Bohlen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Bonn (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Bremen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Bremerhaven (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Brunswick (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Castrop Rauxel (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Chemnitz (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Cottbus (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Cuxhaven (1943) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Darmstadt (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Desau (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Dresden (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Duisburg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Duren (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Dusseldorf (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Eilenburg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Eisenach (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Emden (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Emmerich (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Erfurt (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Essen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Flensburg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Flensburg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Frankfurt am Oder (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Frankfurt an Main (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Freiburg (1939-1945) Luftwaffe/Allied Forces 04:Germany: Friederichshafen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Fulda (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Gelsenkirchen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Gelsenkirchen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Gera (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Goppingen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Gotha (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Gutersloh (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Hagen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Halberstadt (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Halle (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Hamburg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Hamm (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Hanau (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Hannover (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Hannover (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Heide (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Hildesheim (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: industrial targets (?) (1917) British aircrafts 04:Germany: Ingolstadt (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Jena (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Kaiserlautern (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Karlsruhe (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: KasselFulda (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Kiel (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Kleve (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Koblenz (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Koln (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Krefeld (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Leipzig (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Leverkusen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Lubeck (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Ludwigshafen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Magdeburg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Mannheim (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Meiningen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Merseburg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Monchen Gladbach (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Munich (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Munster (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Neubrandenburg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Neuss (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Neusterlitz (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Neuwied (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Nordhausen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Nuremberg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Oberhausen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Offenbach (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Offenburg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Oranienburg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Osnabruck (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Paderborn (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Pforzheim (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Pirmasens (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Plauen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Potsdam (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Prenzlau (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Rathenow (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Regensburg (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Remscheid (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Rennes (1943) RAF 04:Germany: Rheine (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Rositz (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Rostock (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Saarlouis (1942) RAF 04:Germany: Sarbrucken (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Schweinfurt (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Soest (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Solingen (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: south-western Germany (1918) French Air Force/British Air Force 04:Germany: Stralsund (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Straubing (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Stuttgart (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Trier (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Ulm (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Ulm (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Wesel (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Wiesbaden (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Wilhelmshaven (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Wismar (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Witten (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Worms (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Wuppertal (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Zeitz (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Germany: Zwickau (1939-1945) Allied Forces 04:Gibraltar: Gibraltar (1940) French Air Force 04:Great Brittian: Birmingham (1940-1941) Luftwaffe 04:Great Brittian: Bristol-Avonmouth (1940-1941) Luftwaffe 04:Great Brittian: Coventry (1940-1941) Luftwaffe 04:Great Brittian: Glasgow (1940-1941) Luftwaffe 04:Great Brittian: Gloucester (1944) Luftwaffe 04:Great Brittian: Hull (1940-1941) Luftwaffe 04:Great Brittian: Liverpool (1940-1941) Luftwaffe 04:Great Brittian: London (1915, 1916, 1940-1945) German Zeppelin attacks/German airplanes/Luftwaffe 04:Great Brittian: Manchester (1940-1941, 1944) Luftwaffe 04:Great Brittian: Norwich (1944) Luftwaffe 04:Great Brittian: Plymouth Devonport (1940-1941) Luftwaffe 04:Great Brittian: Portsmouth (1940-1941) Luftwaffe 04:Great Brittian: Southampton (1940-1941, 1944) Luftwaffe 04:Greece: Elbasan (1941) RAF 04:Greece: Kattavia (Rhodos) (1941) RAF 04:Hungary: Budapest (1944) USA Air Force 04:Hungary: Debrecen (1944) USA Air Force 04:Hungary: Diosgyor (1944) RAF 04:Italy: Bari (1943) Luftwaffe 04:Italy: Genua (1942) RAF 04:Italy: La Spezia (1943) RAF 04:Italy: Milano (1942, 1943) RAF 04:Italy: Naples (1942) USA Air Force 04:Italy: Rome (1943) Allied Forces 04:Italy: Taranto (1940) RAF 04:Italy: Torino (1943) RAF 04:Lituania: Konigsberg (Kalingrad) (1943) Soviet Union Air Force/RAF 04:Lituania: Tilsit (Sovetsk) (1943) Soviet Union Air Force 04:Luxembourg: Luxembourg (194?) Luftwaffe 04:Malta: La Valetta (1941-1945) Luftwaffe/Italian Air Force 04:Netherlands: Den Haag (194?) RAF 04:Netherlands: Den Helder (194?) RAF 04:Netherlands: Eindhoven (1942) RAF 04:Netherlands: Enschede (194?) RAF 04:Netherlands: Hengelo (194?) RAF 04:Netherlands: IJmuiden (1945) RAF 04:Netherlands: Maastricht (1944) Luftwaffe 04:Netherlands: Rotterdam (1940, 194?) Luftwaffe/RAF 04:Netherlands: Vlissingen (194?) RAF 04:Norway: Oslo (1942) RAF 04:Norway: Trontheim (1943) USA Air Force 04:Poland: Danzig (1943) Soviet Union Air Force/USA Air Force 04:Poland: Drohobycz (1944) USA Air Force 04:Poland: Gotenhafen (Gdingen) (1943) USA Air Force 04:Poland: Insterburg (1943) Soviet Union Air Force 04:Poland: Polish front (1915) German Zeppelin attacks 04:Poland: Warsaw (1939) Luftwaffe 04:Rumania: Ploesti (1943-1944) USA Air Force 04:Russia: (German front ?) (1914-1917) Czar's Squadron of Flying Ships 04:Soviet Union: Leningrad (1941-1944) Luftwaffe 04:Soviet Union: Moscow (1941) Luftwaffe 04:Soviet Union: Sebastopol (1942) Luftwaffe 04:Spain: Bilbao (1937) Luftwaffe? 04:Spain: Guernica (1937) Luftwaffe 04:Spain: Madrid (1937) Luftwaffe 04:Yugoslavia: Belgrade (1941) Luftwaffe 04:Yugoslavia: Rijeka (Fiume) (1919) Force led by Gabriele d'Annanunzio 05:Egypt: Cairo (subburbs) (1970) Israelian Air Force 05:Egypt: Port Said (1956) RAF/French Air Force 05:Eritrea: Asmera (1941) RAF 05:Ethiopia: (1935) Italian Air Force 05:Ethiopia: Debra Tabor (1941) RAF 05:Lybia: Tobruk (1941) 05:Lybia: Tripoli (1911) Italian Air Force 05:Lybia: Tripoli Quadaffi's headquarters (1986) USA Air Force 05:Marocco: Casablanca (1942) Luftwaffe 05:Marocco: (Spaanse Marokko) (1923) Spanish Army/French troops/German Chemicals 06:Irak: Amara (1941) RAF 06:Irak: Bagadad (1990) USA Air Force 06:Irak: Osirak nuclear reactor (1981) Israelian Air Force 06:Iran: airfields (1980) Iraq Air Force 06:Iran: Kharg Island oil terminal (1985) Iraq Air Force 06:Libanon: Beirut (1980) Israelian Air Force 06:Libanon: guerrilla bases .... (1970) Israelian Air Force 06:Middle East: (tribal people) (1920-) RAF 06:North Yemen: border war with South Yemen (1979) 06:Palestine: (1918) British aircrafts 06:Syria: Damascus (1925) French Air Force 07:Afghanistan: Kabul (1979) Soviet Union Air Force 07:Bangladesh: Dakka (1972) Indian Air Force 07:Burma: Mandalay Fort Dufferin (1945) RAF 07:Cambodia: communist bases ... (1969) USA Air Force 07:China: Hanchow (1937) Japanese Air Force 07:China: Hankow (?) (1938) Japanese Air Force 07:China: Nanking (1937) Japanese Air Force 07:China: Shanghai (?) (1937) Japanese Air Force 07:China: Tientsin (1937) Japanese Air Force 07:Hong Kong: Hong Kong (1941) Japanese Air Force 07:India: North-West Frontiier (1920) RAF 07:Indonesia: Nonokromo (1944) Allied Forces 07:Indonesia: Surabaja (1944) Allied Forces 07:Japan: Akashi (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Amagasakmi (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Aomori (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Chiba (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Choshi (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Fukui (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Fukuoka (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Fukuyama (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Gifu (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Hachioji (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Hamamatsu (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Himeji (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Hiratsuka (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Hiroshima (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Hitachi (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Ichinomiya (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Imabari (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Isezaki (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Kagoshima (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Kawasaki (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Kobe (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Kochi (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Kofu (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Kumagaya (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Kumamoto (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Kure (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Kuwana (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Maebashi (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Matsuyama (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Mito (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Miyakonojo (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Miyazaki (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Moji (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Nagaoka (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Nagasaki (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Nagoya (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Nishinomiya (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Nobeoka (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Numazu (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Ogaki (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Oita (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Okayama (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Okazaki (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Omura (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Omuta (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Osaka (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Saga (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Sakai (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Sasebo (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Sendai (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Shimizu (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Shimonoseki (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Shizuoka (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: T oyohashi (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Takamatsu (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Tokushima (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Tokyo (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Touyama (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Toyama (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Tsu (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Tsuruga (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Ube (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Ujiyamada (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Utsonomiya (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Uwajima (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Wakayama (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Yawata (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Yokkaichi (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Japan: Yokohama (1942-1945) USA Air Force 07:Laos: North Vietnamese supply depots ... (1971) USA Air Force 07:Manchuria: Mukden (Anschan) (1944) USA Air Force 07:Manchuria: needs further detailing (1951) USA Air Force 07:North Korea: May dams bombed (1953) USA Air Force 07:North Vietnam: Ben Tre (1968) USA Air Force 07:North Vietnam: Chaudoc (1968) USA Air Force 07:North Vietnam: Haiphong (1972) USA Air Force 07:North Vietnam: Hanoi (1967, 1968, 1972) USA Air Force 07:North Vietnam: Hue (1968) USA Air Force 07:North Vietnam: Mytho (1968) USA Air Force 07:North Vietnam: Ninh Binh (1967-1968) USA Air Force 07:North Vietnam: North Vietnam *needs further detailing) (1965, 1968, 1972) USA Air Force 07:North Vietnam: Phuly (1967) USA Air Force 07:North Vietnam: Thanh Hoa (1967-1968) USA Air Force 07:South Korea: Seoul (1950, 1951) North Korean Forces ? 07:South Vietnam: Da Nang area *chemical bombardments) (1965) USA Air Force 07:South Vietnam: Duchai (1965) USA Air Force 07:Taiwan: (Formoasa) (1944) USA Air Force 07:Thailand: Bangkok (1944) USA Air Force 08:Marian Islands: Saipan (1944) Japanese Air Force 08:New Guinea: Hollandia (1944) USA Air Force 08:New Guinea: Port Moresby (1942) Japanese Air Force 08:Solomon Islands: Sizo (1942) USA Air Force Tjebbe van Tijen Imaginary Museum Projects (IMP), Amsterdam Background information on: http://www.iisg.nl/~tvt/index.html Do check the upcoming Next 5 Minutes conference on: http://www.n5m.org/index.html --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl