The thing though is that most of these people were not "Nazis" in the sense of being Jew-hating socoiopaths, many of them were members of the Nazi party (as the Waffen SS was a Nazi paramilitary organisation I'm assuming you had to be one to join) but that doesn't make them evil by default.
Loius points up the difference between the way RAF pilots wer seen and are now seen, but neglects to distinguish between Fighter Command and Bomber Command, one defended Britain from German bombers, the other conducted a systematic campaign designed to destroy not only the German infastructure but the will to fight - Dresden being the classic example, only fully repaired and rebuilt quite recently.
The point is, the men of Bomber Command were doubtless brave, but in the course of "doing their duty" they slaughter thousands of civilians and destroyed masses of civilian goods and property - I'm sure on some level they knew they were doing this, but they kept on "doing their duty". Of course, the Germans did this as well, and they also slaughter six million defenceless people in gas chambers, so what ther Germans did was more but the individuals involved have, perhaps, a similar level of culpability for their personnal sins.
The important thing to remember is that the Third Reich set out to impose it's political will over at least all of Europe by force, and they subscribed to an ideaology which effectively removed large numbers of people from the human race. THAT is what Nazism had to be stopped, and it was.
Persecuting old men for sins they committed in their Youth is pointless, and if you had all the evidence you'd probably end up prosecuting everyone in the German army up to 1945 for something they had done.
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