Not opinions, but lies, proven as lies, and for which he has served time in prison.
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Irvings books are no more full of unsubstantiated facts, opinions and assertions than most other Historians. In fact on most things he is on the shelf due to use of first hand materials and knowlege of the language rather than mere 'surverys of the liternature'. Ambrose and Bevoir are full of unsubstantiated assertions, Abrose's likely fraudulent.
Irving has a different, higher standard, applied to him for political reasons and so his flaws are amplified. His mistakes with the casualties of Dresden for instance. Overall the point of 25,000 dead or 140,000 dead in a book written long ago is not so big. I suspect many of the same folks are happy to exaggerate Guernica i.e. to accept the higher casualty numbers and count injured as dead etc.
Put it this way: history is full of bunk and historians often like to put it there. Irving is no more an offender than most others who haven't been under the microscope. He has written amazing books; unlike MOST Historians he speaks the language, interviewed the actual people and sourced the original ducuments. Irvings books are footnoted well enough for one to check the sources of his assertions.
Irving got in trouble only twice: his liable suite with Lipstat and over the levels of the Dresden raid. It was a close to pointless raid anyway, whether 25,000 or 14,000 died.
Irvings books on the death of the Luftwaffe, the V weapons, the Milch biography, the German atomic program "Virus House" are indispensible and quite appolitical. His technique of
putting himself in the context of his subject is what gets him in to trouble.
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