Calls for Resignation After White House Press Secretary’s Gaffe About Hilter
White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer at the April 11 daily briefing. (Photo: Steve Herman/VOA News)

Calls for Resignation After White House Press Secretary’s Gaffe About Hilter

WHITE HOUSE _ There were audible gasps in the White House press room Tuesday when spokesman Sean Spicer appeared to forget about the details of the Holocaust when he tried to assert that Syria’s military dropping sarin gas on civilians exceeded the atrocities of Nazi Germany.

With Spicer’s credibility already strained, opposition Democrats and others began calling for the White House press secretary to be removed from his position. 

Spicer, known for previous incidents of clumsy wording on the White House podium, said: “You had someone as despicable as Hitler who didn’t even sink to using chemical weapons,” making a comparison to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s military using chemical weapons on its own civilians last week.

When a reporter subsequently asked “What about the Holocaust?” Spicer responded he understood the point, but that Hitler used chemical weapons in what the White House presidential spokesman termed “Holocaust centers,” but that “he was not using the gas on his own people the same way that Ashad (sic) is doing.”

That explanation “made things much worse,” CNN’s senior media correspondent Brian Stelter said after the briefing’s conclusion, adding “he’s got some more clarifying to do.”

Hitler oversaw the most lethal use of chemical weapons in history. Nazis killed perhaps 1 million people, most of them Jews, using the poison gas Zyklon B.

Indeed, shortly after similar comments on other cable television news channels, Spicer issued a further written clarification saying he was “in no way…trying to lessen the horrendous nature of the Holocaust,” but rather “trying to draw a distinction of the tactic of using airplanes to drop chemical weapons on population centers.”

But that explanation did not mollify some.

“Sean Spicer must be fired and the president must immediately disavow his spokesman’s statement,” said the Democratic Party’s leader in the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi. “Either he is speaking for the president, or the president should have known better than to hire him.”

Pelosi noted Spicer’s statements came on the first day of Passover, the story from the biblical Exodus celebrating the ancient Israelites' liberation from Egyptian slavery.

Late in the day, the chastened White House press secretary began making separate appearances on national news programs to apologize for his latest verbal gaffe.

“I just want to set the record straight on what was intended,” Spicer told VOA as he shuttled outside the West Wing between live and taped appearances on several television networks.

Minutes earlier, on CNN, Spicer said "I mistakenly used an inappropriate and insensitive reference to the Holocaust...I apologize."

Spicer said he was apologizing not only to Holocaust survivors but also to “anyone who was offended by those comments. It was a mistake, I shouldn’t have done it,” he added.

Spicer was accused of “Holocaust denial” by Steven Goldstein, executive director of New York’s Anne Frank Center for Mutual Respect.

“Spicer's statement is the most evil slur upon a group of people we have ever heard from a White House press secretary,” added Goldstein, saying Spicer now “lacks the integrity to serve as White House press secretary, and President Trump must fire him at once."

The Holocaust was the systematic state sponsored persecution and murder of 6 million Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators.

Historians see Spicer’s stumbling as a learning moment to call for better education about one of the most horrific events in world history and a cornerstone of modern Jewish identity.   

 “It’s embarrassing,” said Professor Wolf Gruner, a specialist on the Holocaust who heads the University of Southern California's Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research.

Gruner, originally from Germany, said a public figure of Spicer’s stature “should be informed of the basic facts of the Holocaust and other genocides.”  

Historians conservatively estimate that about 300,000 German citizens (including those of Austria) were killed by the Nazis using poison gas, whether as Jews or during euthanasia programs, according to Gruner. 

Spicer had other rhetorical difficulties during both of his briefings held so far this week.

He suggested on Monday that President Trump could take military action if Assad drops more barrel bombs, something Syrian government forces have done with regularity.

The White House subsequently walked back that comment.

And in Tuesday’s briefing, the press secretary also declared Iran a failed state in discussing Russian allies.

Henry Kelly

librarian at DeWitt Clinton H.S.

6y

These reactions are politically motivated. Interested parties are ready to jump on anything that can be thrown at Trump's admin.

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Reply
Honza Prchal

attorney at Heninger, Garrison & Davis

6y

That's not at all what he said. There's a case for demanding his resignation for his malaproprist-laden reference to Hitler's refusal to use his chemical weapons stockpile for (amazingly) moral reasons, but framing the article this way weakens that case considerably.

Barbara McDougle

Charis Typing Services--Living On Purpose

6y

This is how wars, hatred, prejudice, etc., begins...when things said are taken out of context. Much like reading the Holy Bible, read the scripture before and after a particular verse to get the full meaning. Then truly study it to get the most our of what was read or said.

Karunpol 2 EdD

Deputy Director of Secondary Educational Service Area Office 13 at The secondary educational service area office 13

6y

Hitler is not good I think no one best way may be somerthink is better alway

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Kanada Gorla

Founder, SHINE - facilitator, mentor, coach & guide: leadership, culture, resilience

6y

I don't know where you got your figure of 1 million people Steven Herman this is from The Telegraph newspaper: The Holocaust death toll, A memorial to Jewish deaths 2:18PM GMT 26 Jan 2005 Millions of Jews, gipsies, Russians and prisoners of war died in Hitler's death camps as part of his Final Solution plans. Below is a list of the death toll. Between five and six million Jews More than three million Soviet prisoners of war More than two million Soviet civilians More than one million Polish civilians More than one million Yugoslav civilians About 70,000 men, women and children with mental and physical handicaps More than 200,000 gipsies Unknown numbers of political prisoners, resistance fighters, homosexuals and deportees

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