An aerial reconnaissance photograph of the Auschwitz concentration camp (4th April 1944)
The main arguments Butz presents in the book to back up his claims are:[8]
the overwhelming majority of deaths in Nazi administered concentration camps were caused by a typhus outbreak rather than any deliberate extermination policy
defendants at the Nuremberg trials, such as Rudolf Höss, were beaten into making incriminating confessions that a program of killing Jews was enacted by the Nazis
extermination camps didn't exist as concentration camp inmates, who were primarily incarcerated for punitive or security reasons, were actually a valuable source of penal labour to the German government for military production
the Red Cross inspected several concentration camps scattered around German-occupied Europe during the war, including Auschwitz and Theresienstadt, and could find no evidence of deliberate mistreatment of Jewish inmates at any of them
aerial reconnaissance photographs of Auschwitz taken by the Allies in early 1944 show no evidence of the claimed mass outdoor burning of bodies and the crematory chimneys in fact appear inactive
captured German documents reference a program of expulsion and resettlement of Jews, and do not contain any references to gas chambers or extermination camps
Reception
Canadian academic Alan T. Davies has described it as an "antisemitic classic".[9] A 1978 German Studies Review article criticized Butz's writings and conclusions, describing the book as a "dull" work which systematically ignored or attempted to discredit any evidence of the Holocaust's existence, even evidence produced by Nazi officials.[10]
The book has been banned in Canada and is X-rated in Germany where it cannot be displayed or advertised.[11] In 2017, the online book seller Amazon.com removed the book, along with other Holocaust-denying titles, from its US and UK sites.[12][13]