In the East
In the judeo communist realms, the
conditions that German POWs, many just kids, endured on the Eastern Front were
beyond grim and did not follow any accepted protocol for treatment of captured
soldiers. Under the provisions of the Yalta Agreement, the U.S. and U.K. had
agreed to the use of German POWs in the Soviet Gulag as “reparations-in-kind,”
but comparatively few Germans were taken alive before Stalingrad. Most were
shot and many were mutilated alive. Out of the 90,000 Germans who marched into
Soviet captivity at Stalingrad, only 5,000 ever returned: 40,000 did not
survive the march to the Beketovka camp, where another 42,000 perished of
hunger and disease. Those POWs that made it alive to separate camps in Siberia
and elsewhere in the western Soviet Union were forced into slave labor and
endured frequent beatings, brutal torture, poisoning and execution. Thousands
more captured soldiers were executed on the spot and thrown into mass graves.
Food and water were always scarce, living barely primitive. The result was an
unacceptable rate of death.
The jewish gulag’s daily food ration
was padded with 400 to 800 grams of bread, more than half of the prisoner’s
daily 1200-1300 calories. The most productive workers received a modest food
bonus (ironically, the Morgenthau Plan for occupied Germany suggested the same
allotment of 1300 calories a day per German, while the suggested minimum
requirements for heavy labor are from 3,100-4,000 calories per day). In the
gulags, the prisoner’s food ration was linked to his production. Realizing that
the most productive work done by prisoners is in the first three months of
captivity, after which they were too debilitated to perform well, the exhausted
prisoners were simply killed off and replaced with fresh blood, ensuring a
constant flow of new labor.
Because the German POWs had been
conveniently redefined as “disarmed enemy forces,” jewish led Allied captors
did whatever they wanted with their German captives and even bartered them away
to others for use as slaves. In fact, in a “Re-education” bulletin distributed
by the “Special Service Division, Army Service Forces” of the U.S.Army in 1945,
tacit approval is given for the intentional transfer of German POWs from Allied
hands to the genocidal jewish Red Army ala Morgenthau’s genocidal plan:
“Many German prisoners will remain
in Russia after the end of war, not voluntarily, but because the Russians need
them as workers. That is not only perfectly legal, but also prevents the danger
of the returning prisoners of war becoming the core of a new national movement.
If we ourselves do not want to keep the German prisoners after the war, we
should send them nonetheless to Russia.”
Long columns of German prisoners
were marched on foot hundreds of tortuous miles toward their doom in
Stalingrad, Kiev, Kharkov, Moscow and Minsk where most were starved and worked
to death. Very few ever saw home again. Although it was always strongly denied,
the jew Morgenthau himself said his plan was implemented. In the New York Post
for Nov. 24, 1947, he wrote, “The Morgenthau Plan for Germany… became part of
the Potsdam Agreement, a solemn declaration of policy and undertaking for
action…. signed by the United States of America, Great Britain and the Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics.”
The fates of thousands upon
thousands of German soldiers, many just kids, surrendered to both the Allies
and especially the Soviets have never been accounted for and any attempts to
uncover the truth of their disappearance have been halted. Between 1941 and
1952, millions of German POWs died in the Gulag. The last surviving 10,000 of
them were not released from the Soviet Union until 1955, after a decade of
forced labor. About 1.5 million German soldiers are still listed as missing in
action and join the ranks of those who vanished while under Soviet captivity.
The jewish Red Terror was let loose
on surrendered German POWs in eastern Europe from Czechoslovakia to Poland and
beyond. Many were simply shot and thrown into mass graves, others were tortured
and mutilated first, and these retributions extended even to young boys. German
POWs who fell into the hands of the Yugoslav hordes suffered horrible fates.
After 1986, a report appeared showing that out of about 194,000 prisoners, up
to 100,000 died from gruesome torture, murder, horrible conditions, disease and
intentional starvation.
Around 93,000 ethnic Germans who
lived in the Danube basin from 1939 to 1941 served in Hungarian, Croatian and
Romanian armies, and they remained citizens of those countries during the war
(many of these ethnic Germans served in the “Prinz Eugen” Waffen SS division of
about 10,000, which automatically gave them German citizenship). 26,000 of
these soldiers died, over half after the end of the war in Yugoslav camps. When
most of the “Prinz Eugen” division surrendered after May 8, 1945, over 1,700 of
them were murdered in a village near the Croat-Slovenian border and the other
half was worked to death in Yugoslav zinc mines near the town of Bor, in
Serbia.
Aside from these Danube German
soldiers, over 70,000 Germans who had served in regular Wehrmacht died in
Yugoslav captivity from revenge murders or as slave laborers in dangerous work.
These were mostly troops of “Army Group E” who surrendered to British in
southern Austria on May 8, 1945 only to have the British turn about 150,000 of
them over to vengeance fueled judeo Communist Yugoslav partisans who dealt with
them brutally.
The fates of the remaining captured
German troops in Yugoslavia was murder, both fast and slow. First, up to 10,000
died in jewish Communist-organized “atonement marches” (Suhnemärsche) which
stretched 800 miles from the southern border of Austria to the northern border
of Greece. In most instances, the prisoners were all tied together and forced
to walk barefoot with no food or water. As some dropped off one by one on these
death marches, others were executed or tied together in smaller groups and
thrown into rivers where they were all shot for sport and drowned.
On November 1, 1944, the Council for
the Liberation of Yugoslavia declared all Germans “open prey” and less than
half of the German POWs and ethnic German civilians survived the partisans’
genocide during this time. Then, later in the summer of 1945, many more German
POWs were murdered in mass executions or thrown alive into large karst pits
along the Dalmatian coast of Croatia. For the next 10 years, from 1945 to 1955,
as was the case in the Soviet Union and other judeo communist countries, 50,000
more German prisoners died from being worked to death as slaves and from the
results of disease, starvation or exhaustion.
Thousands of German and Croat
soldiers captured in the final days of the War were coldly executed and buried
in mass graves found in western Croatia. As of October 2007, 540 secret mass
graves had been registered across Slovenia, believed to be holding up to
100,000 bodies. Since that time, many more have been unearthed.
A site recently uncovered at
Harmica, 50 kilometres north-west of Zagreb, holds the bodies of 4,500
soldiers, including 450 German officers, executed by the communist partisans.
The bones were found in six separate caves and laid in trenches upon discovery.
The victims were troops of the 392 Infantry Division, set up by the German
command in Croatia in August 1943 led by Lt. General Hans Mickl. In other
caves, POWs were herded in and were gassed to death after the entrances were
sealed. In previous discoveries of mass graves of both civilians and military,
the remains wore no clothing and had been mutilated, burned, beaten,
dismembered or suffered other atrocities. In 2009, “hundreds” of mummified
corpses shot by Tito’s Partisans were found near Lasko in Slovenia. Croatia’s
Interior Minister said there could be as many as 840 mass graves in Croatia
alone and estimated another 600 in neighbouring Slovenia and around 90 in
Bosnia-Herzegovina.
“Special” Camps
When approximately 6,000 German Army
officers were released by the judeo Western Allies in the first half of 1945,
they were then re-arrested by the judeo Soviets and held in Zone II at
Sachsenhausen Prison Camp which had formerly held the Communist political
prisoners of the NS. Later, Special Camp No. 7 was filled with German prisoners
who had been sentenced by a Soviet military tribunal to 15 years of hard labor.
By the end of 1945, it held 12,000 to 16,000 prisoners, among them 2,000 female
prisoners, but the population grew by epic proportions.
There was inadequate food and
deplorable sanitary conditions. Prisoners could have no clothing other than
what they were wearing when arrested. Disease and epidemics ran through the
barracks where the prisoners had to sleep on the bare wood frames with only a
block of wood for a pillow for two years until blankets and bags of straw were
finally distributed in 1947. They were not allowed any activities, and even
singing was prohibited. The windows of the overcrowded barracks were blacked
out and the prisoners were kept in almost total darkness. A total of
approximately 60,000 German prisoners were held in Special Camp No. 7 after
World War II ended, and 12,000 were buried in unmarked mass graves. None were
released by the Soviets until 1948, and most prisoners remained there until
1950, and some were sent on to the Soviet “jewlags” or handed over to the East
German Communist government for even more punishment.
In eleven Soviet camps set up within
the GDR such as Muehlberg, Saxonia or Oranienburg, many thousands also lost
their lives. Between 1945 and 1950 there were 122,671 interned, from which
42,889 died of diseases and 756 were executed. However in Muehlberg at 7,000 to
9,000 out of 22,000 perished painfully from hunger, malnutrition and epidemics
and were then thrown into mass graves. Prisoners here as young as fifteen were
completely isolated and not allowed to write or receive any letters. Most were
kept for years without ever knowing why they were arrested, since in those
camps there were no prominent national socialists. There were eleven silent or
secret camps as well “Five Oaks” at New Brandenburg where about 6500 prisoners
died.
Established in April, 1945, near the
village of Ketschendorf in Furstenwalde south-east of Berlin, the judeo Soviet
occupation forces ran a camp named ‘Special Camp Number 5.’ which housed
internees. At first the prisoners were primarily members NS and members of the
SS. But then the Soviets began including many German teenagers who were
arrested without reason or kidnapped, taken away by the Russian military forces
and simply “disappeared.” Months later, in November, 1945, there were still
9,395 persons interned in Camp Ketschendorf. During this time it is believed
that over 5,000 internees died due to the catastrophic conditions under which
they were forced to live. During 1952 and 1953 many mass graves were discovered.
Around 4,500 bodies were exhumed and reburied in a mass grave at Halbe. Another
camp ‘Special Camp Number 2’ was set up in the former concentration camp at
Buchenwald which held 28,000 internees, 7,000 of whom died from neglect and
hunger. These camps were unknown to the outside world until years after the
war.
The Hermann Helfta POW camp near
Eisleben
Eisleben, Saxony (Lutherstadt
Eisleben) is one of the oldest towns between the Harz mountains and the river
Elbe. Here, Martin Luther was born and died. Eisleben was first officially
recorded in 994 AD and was granted a town charter in the 12th century. The town
grew in importance in the 15th and 16th centuries, mainly due to the copper
mining and smelting industry in the territories of the once powerful Counts of
Mansfeld. The district of Neustadt, a settlement for miners where St. Anne’s
Church and the adjacent Augustinian Friars’ monastery are located, was
established in the town’s heyday. As the local curate, Martin Luther often used
to stay there.
The Cistercian convent of St Mary of
Helfta is located outside Eisleben. It was founded in 1229 below Mansfeld
Castle and in 1258 the nuns moved to Helfta. It went on to become a major
European religious and cultural center. Three women represent the influence of
the convent on German mysticism and literature in the 13th century: Getrud the
Great, Mechthild of Magdeburg and Mechthild of Hackeborn.
Eisleben, a city with about 24,000
inhabitants in 1945, was attacked with artillery fire and low-flying attacks,
and while no major physical damage was caused to the city itself, surrounding
mining and industrial enterprises were greatly impacted. Three firefighters and
fourteen people were killed in the shelling of the town. By the end, in April
1945, every major school, several restaurants and the city hospital was being
used as a hospital for casualties from the surrounding area.
The jewish led Americans took
control of the city, which surrendered without a fight after futile resistance
from some young boys and old men. All privately owned weapons, binoculars,
cameras, radios had to be delivered and all citizens had to undergo a
registration. In addition, a curfew was imposed. A large wave of arrests by
American military police against office-holders of the Third Reich followed.
The Americans set up a “refugee
camp” to keep their many prisoners of war as well as to detain certain
civilians on the north and east side of the mine shaft at the Hermann Helfta,
but it was not a “real” camp. It was rather a field hastily fenced with barbed
wire without any barracks or housing. The prisoners had to sleep on the bare
ground and there was hardly any food. Water was provided only once a day from a
toxic former agricultural water truck which had carried pesticides. Numerous
ex-inmates testified that while bread was being sent to them, the US guards let
it mold outside of the fences in view of the starving inmates. They describe
having to sleep in the open under pouring rain and in storms, with their mouths
open trying to get drops of fluid, of some people having barely any clothing to
cover themselves and of the rampant physical abuse and torment they endured.
Below: former site of the “camp.”
The hygienic conditions were as
miserable as the water supply. Prisoners began dropping like flies, but anyone
attempting an attempt to escape was immediately shot. The number of prisoners
was increasing and conditions became more unbearable. There was almost no space
left available for a prisoner to lie down. When a couple of prisoners
complained at last, a group of them was herded onto a truck by the Americans
and taken to the liberated Buchenwald concentration camp near Weimar to see the
“atrocity exhibits” which had been recently been polished up by the Americans
for use as learning tools for their German “re-education” policy. On their
return, the prisoners had to describe the scene and recite alleged German
atrocities to their fellow prisoners in the Helfta camp who were gathered
together for the “show.” Thus, each protest was suppressed at once.
By the end of May, it became
increasingly difficult to manage Helfta and it was disbanded, with some of the
prisoners were moved by trucks to Naumburg on the Saale. By then, 80,000 to
90,000 prisoners had been interned in Helfta (a number now being “downsized” by
“modern historians” to a mere 22,000). The death toll in any case is considered
to be somewhere between 2,000 and 3,000.
After the Americans handed over the
entire area to the judeo communists as previously agreed, the subject was
officially taboo to speak of, and this was the policy of the former German
Democratic Republic. Since reunification, a monumental stone has finally been
erected to the immense suffering of the inmates of the POW camp Helfta, donated
by former German prisoners of war and the Folk Society Helfta. Much of the
former camp was divided into small land parcels with homes built over another
part. Not a single reference exists to this wretched piece of German history
exists today.
Some German POWs returned home after
eight or more years in captivity as penniless, homeless old men and receiving
charity to live, as Henry Morganthau desired, “as a dog is dependent on its
master” for survival.
Two Wrongs Make Right
Thanks to the jewish Allied
insistence that surrendered, disarmed German soldiers were not POW’s but
“disarmed forces who had surrendered unconditionally,” treaties guarding
against abuse could be ignored and were. One of the worst examples of this
policy was the use of captives for slave labor performing deadly tasks, in the
case here, clearing land of mines.
In Norway, German protests that
forcing POWs to clear mines was against international law, article 32 of the
Geneva conventions, were rejected with the assertion that the Germans were not
POW’s but “disarmed forces who had surrendered unconditionally.”
After the German capitulation in
Norway on May 8, 1945, over 5,000 German prisoners of war were forced by the
British, under the command of General Sir Andrew Thorn, to undertake clearance
of land mines in clear violation of the Geneva Convention of 1928. The POWs had
to walk arm-in-arm through mine fields already cleared of mines in hopes of
triggering off land mines that were not found previously. Mine clearance
reports received by the Allied Forces Head Quarter state: June 21, 1945 lists
199 dead and 163 wounded Germans. The registration from August 29, 1945 lists
275 dead and 392 Germans. Neither Thorn nor anyone else was ever held
accountable for war crimes.
It happened in Denmark as well, and
a Danish historian documented the killing of German POWs during such clearance
of land mines. It is assumed that about 250 German POWs met their deaths in
this way in Denmark when forced to perform this diabolical task. On the morning
of July 22, 1945, seven Germans were blown into the air as 450 land mines
detonated. The other German POWs had to then collect the body parts of their
friends without using gloves or other protection.
At the end of the war, mines had
been laid on more than 500,000 hectares of land in France. The French had asked
the Americans and the British to hand German POWs over to them for use in
mine-clearing operations. London and Washington agreed, and the French forced
tens of thousands of German prisoners of war to clear minefields between
mid-1945 and the end of 1947, regardless of whether the mines had been laid by
German army engineers or by the French army against German forces. Possibly as
many as 50,000 German POWs may have been used for this high-risk form of forced
labor. An estimated 1,800 of them died. Some of the survivors are asking for
compensation.
German prisoners of war being used
as mine clearers although they should have been protected under the Geneva
Convention of July 27, 1929. Article 32 unequivocally states that: “It is
forbidden to use prisoners of war at unhealthful or dangerous work.”
There seemed to be a grim jewish
satisfaction in having German prisoners “clean up” the mess of war and the
thought of exacting retribution from those unable to defend themselves made
titillating news. Many were forced to perform “clean up” operations such as
those illustrated above in a 1946 British magazine where the German prisoners
were vindictively fanned out and made to sweep clean Dunkirk beach of
“hazardous materials.”
It was not only male POWs who
suffered the grim consequences of revenge. As shown on another page of this
site, female German military personnel also paid the price.
On April 15, 1945, the Belsen prison
camp was occupied by British troops who found thousands of decaying corpses
scattered about the grounds. In the final, chaotic months of the war, trains
had brought to Belsen thousands of new inmates from other camps in the east
which had experienced catastrophic conditions during the final months of the
war when food and medical transports were being destroyed on the roads and
railways by Allied bombers. This made the conditions at Belsen even worse, and
the ensuing shortage of food, water and medicines together with overcrowding
and an uncontrollable outbreak of typhus had caused the deaths of thousands of
inmates.
A few weeks after the British
takeover, another 13,000 died, some 2,000 of them after eating the rich food
given to them by the British. On May 2, some 95 medical students from London’s
teaching hospitals were flown to Belsen to help treat the sick prisoners. It
was acknowledged that there was no deliberate intention by the Germans to
starve the prisoners to death at Belsen. There were no gas chambers and the
“crematorium” consisted of only one furnace in which to dispose of the dead.
All the same, the jewish led British
executed the camp’s commandant and his chief physician at the ‘Belsen War
Crimes Trial’ in spite of valiant efforts they had made to remedy the horrible
situation. They had quarantined the camp and done everything in their power to
prevent the catastrophe, even begging the surrounding population to donate
vegetables and food. Of a total of 86 staff members captured at Belsen, 28 were
women. By June 17, twenty had died, most from digging graves to bury the dead
inmates which the British forced them to do. By the end of the month the whole camp
had to be burned down (also covered elsewhere).
After the End: Who Put the Bad in
Bad Kreuznach?
There was no “peace treaty” in place
at the end of the jewish instigated War. German POWs were labelled “disarmed
enemy forces” (DEF) rather than “prisoners of war” in order to skirt provisions
of the Hague Land Warfare Convention which mandated humane treatment, including
that which stated: “After the peace treaty, prisoners of war should be
dismissed into their homeland within shortest period.” By this manipulation of
justice, German POWS could be taken to the lands of their former enemies and
used as slave labor for extended periods, often at the cost of their lives due
to grim hardships encountered before, during and after transit. Furthermore, a
German soldier designated as DEF had no right to any food, water or shelter,
and could, as many thousands did, die within days.
There were no impartial observers to
witness the treatment of POWs held by the U.S. Army. From the date Germany
unconditionally surrendered, May 8, 1945, Switzerland was dismissed as the
official Protecting Power for German prisoners and the International Red Cross
was informed that with no Protecting Power to report to, there was no need for
them to send delegates to the camps.
Half of the German POWs in the West
were imprisoned by the US forces, half by the British. The number of prisoners
reached such a huge proportion that the British could not accept any more, and
the US consequently established the Rheinwiesenlager from April to September of
1945 where they quickly built a series of “cages” in open meadows and enclosed
them with razor wire. One such notorious field was located at Bad Kreuznach
where the German prisoners were herded into the open spaces with no toilets,
tents or shelters. They had to burrow sleeping spaces into the ground with
their bare hands and in some, there was barely enough room to lay down.
In the Bad Kreuznach cage, up to
560,000 men were interned in a congested area and denied adequate food, water,
shelter or sanitary facilities and they died like flies of disease, exposure
and illness after surviving on less than 700 calories a day. There are 1,000
official graves in Bad Kreuznach, but it is claimed there are mass graves which
have remained off limits to investigation.
Only by the autumn of 1945, after
most camps had closed or were in the process of closing, was the Red Cross
granted permission to send delegations to visit camps in the French and UK
occupation zones and to finally provide minuscule amounts of relief, and it was
not until February 4, 1946, that the Red Cross was allowed to send even token
relief to others in the U.S. occupation zone. The death rate for prisoners in
these U.S. camps was at that point 30% per year, according to a U.S. medical
survey, but nearly all the surviving records of the Rhineland death camps were
destroyed.
There were also numerous accidents
in transport. A few weeks after the war officially ended, on July 16, 1945, a
US military freight train carrying tanks near Munich was signalled to proceed
by an American signalman despite the track ahead being blocked by a train
carrying German POWs which had stopped due to an engine breakdown. It slammed
into it and killed 96 German soldiers.
At the end of June, 1945 the first
camps in Remagen, Böhl-Ingelheim and Büderich were dissolved. SHAEF offered the
camps to the French, who wanted 1.75 million prisoners of war for use as jewish
slave labor. In July, Sinzig, Andernach, Siershahn, Bretzenheim, Dietersheim,
Koblenz, Hechtzheim and Dietz, all containing thousands of prisoners, were
given to France. In the British Zone, prisoners of war who were able to work
were transferred to France and the rest were released. At the end of September,
1945 all the initial camps were dissolved.
At one point, 80,000 prisoners of
war a month were supposed to have to been returned from USA captivity and
discharged into the Allied zones of Germany as part of the 1.3 million allotted
to France for “rehabilitation work” (slave labor), but after the Red Cross
reported that 200,000 of the prisoners already in French hands were so
undernourished they were unfit for labor and likely to die over the winter, the
USA stopped all transfers of prisoners to French custody until the French would
maintain them in accordance with the Geneva Convention.
By winter 1947, it was estimated by
the International Red Cross that 4,160,000 German POWs were still held in ‘work
camps’ outside Germany: 750,000 in France, 30,000 in Italy, 460,000 in Britain,
48,000 in Belgium, 4,000 in Luxembourg and 1,300 in Holland (as discussed
later, the Soviet Union started with between four and five million, Yugoslavia
had 80,000 and Czechoslovakia 45,000) as well as the USA’s 140,000 in the US
Occupation Zone with 100,000 more later also held in France.
It is estimated that 700,000 to a
million men may have died within the period they spent incarcerated in American
and French camps alone from 1945 to 1948. There are much higher estimates,
however, and attempts to uncover the truth regarding these camps in modern
times, as well as excavation of reported mass grave sites, have been vigilantly
thwarted by, among others, the German government. It is unknown how many
perished under British captors but recently declassified documents indicate
widespread torture and abuse. Under all of them, many of the prisoners were
used to do dangerous work such as working with hazardous materials and mine
sweeping in complete disregard of the law.
In total, 5,025 German men and women
were convicted of war crimes between 1945 and 1949 in the American, British and
French zones by Allied War Crimes Trials. Over 500 were sentenced to death and
the majority were executed, among them 21 women.
In Cold Blood
Many German soldiers at the end of
the fighting desperately tried to get to a place where they could be taken
captive by the Americans rather than the Russians. Some swam, ran or crawled to
safety. Others resorted to stealing US jeeps or donning US uniforms to
accomplish this and when caught were usually treated as spies and executed.
If captured in small groups, the
jewish led US Army unofficial policy was to slaughter the prisoners where they
stood if they were SS. The largest (currently acknowledged) massacres at the
hands of the Americans were the murder of 700 troops of the surrendered 8th SS
Mountain Division, atrocities carried out against the surrendered SS Westphalia
Brigade where most of the German captives were shot through the back of the
head, and the machine gunning of 300 surrendered camp guards at Dachau. There
was also an alleged mass murder of as many as 48 surrendered German prisoners
who were captured on April 15, 1945 at Jungholzhausen. An eye-witness stated:
“The Americans forced the Germans to walk in front of them with raised hands in
groups of four. Then they shot the prisoners in their heads from behind.” The
bodies were loaded onto a truck and taken away. The matter is still “under
investigation”! There were other incidents of lawlessness and outright murder.
A mass grave outside of Nürnberg
discovered after the war contained the bodies of some 200 SS soldiers.
Autopsies revealed that most had been shot at close range or beaten to death by
US Seventh Army rifle butts. In the village of Eberstetten, 17 German soldiers
of the ‘Gotz von Berlichingen’ Division were shot after they surrendered to US
troops. 14 members of the 116th Panzer Division were marched through the
streets of Budberg on April 8, 1945 to the US 95th Infantry Division command
post where they were lined up and shot. Three were wounded and managed to
escape.
On April 13, 1945, the US Infantry
entered the village of Spitze near Cologne and made the village inhabitants
gather in front of the church. 20 German soldiers among them, members of an
anti-aircraft unit stationed in the village, were separated and marched several
hundred yards to a field just outside the village where they were lined up and
mowed down by machine-gun fire. The US Army ordered the civilians to dig graves
and bury the dead. A memorial for the victims was built in 1995.
Several dozen unarmed German
prisoners of war were murdered in cold blood by American forces near the
village of Chenogne, Belgium on January 1, 1945. Accounts of the massacre
indicate it was a revenge killing for the incident called the “Malmedy massacre”
which had taken place a couple weeks before elsewhere. One American unit is
said to have issued orders that, “No SS troops or paratroopers will be taken
prisoners but will be shot on sight.”
Author Martin Sorge writes: “It was
in the wake of the Malmedy incident at Chegnogne that on New Year’s Day 1945
some 60 German POWs were shot in cold blood by their American guards. The
guilty went unpunished. It was felt that the basis for their action was orders
that no prisoners were to be taken.” An official history published by the
United States government denies this.
An eyewitness account by John Fague
of B Company, 21st Armored Infantry Battalion (of the 11th Armored Division),
near Chenogne describes the murder of German prisoners by American soldiers:
“After a rest of an hour we received orders to go back through the town and
join our vehicles on the other side of the town. We formed into the semblance
of columns and trudged back. As we were going up the hill out of town, I know
some of our boys were lining up German prisoners in the fields on both sides of
the road. They must have been 25 or 30 German boys in each group. Machine guns
were being set up. These boys were to be machine gunned and murdered. We were
committing the same crimes we were now accusing the Japs and Germans of doing.
The terrible significance of what was going on did not occur to me at the time.
After the killing and confusion of that morning the idea of killing some more
Krauts didn’t particularly bother me. I didn’t want any share in the killing.
My chief worry was that Germans hiding in the woods would see this massacre and
we would receive similar treatment if we were captured. I turned my back on the
scene and walked on up the hill.”
In another case, poisoned bread was
fed to German prisoners in one camp. There are differing accounts of the story,
but the official American version was that a bakery worker who supplied bread
to American prison camps claimed he received arsenic in bottles from Paris and
poisoned 3,000 loaves of bread. It sickened over two thousand men and the death
toll was anywhere from 200 to 700 German veterans. This criminal act was never
prosecuted.
In 1945, thousands of German POWs
were jammed into US Army vehicles going through towns such as Nürnberg and
Emskirchen (below). They often traveled for hundreds of miles without being
able to sit and with no food, rest or relief stops. Hundreds of German
prisoners were confined in makeshift US camps. Some were sent to fields,
mudholes, quarries and other hell-holes. The photos below show the magnitude of
the situation.
Below top to bottom: 1945 German
POWs at their new home in Verdun, France; POWs captured in France; About
250,000 Germans (including most of the Afrika Korps) and Italians who
surrendered in Tunis in May 1943 taken as prisoners of war where they sweltered
in large pens in the desert heat (many survivors were later sent to Egypt and
campsin the US and elsewhere). Captured POWs being abused by mob. Lastly,
“poison bread incident” wire photo. The New York Times reported: “NUREMBERG,
Germany, April 22 (AP) U S Army authorities said tonight that additional German
prisoners of war have been stricken with arsenic poisoning, bringing to 2,283
the number taken ill in a mysterious plot against 15,000 former Nazi Elite
Guard men confined in a camp near Nuremberg.”And on April 23, 1946, it stated:
“POISON PLOT TOLL OF NAZIS AT 2,283; Arsenic Bottles Found by U.S. Agents in
Nuremberg Bakery That Served Prison Camp.”
Many of the German POWs were mere
boys when they were captured and were therefore better able to survive the
brutal conditions of slave labor under the communists. When they finally came
“home,” many had no living family, no homeland and no thanks for their
sacrifice since it is politically incorrect to honor Germany’s soldiers. In
1955, in West Germany at Friedland camp, the last (official) surviving German
prisoners of war were finally released from the Soviet Union after 10 long,
hard years of slavery.
Other Odds and Ends; Internment;
Brain Washing; Camps on Home Soil
As for German POWs kept on American
soil from 1942-1945, most were shipped to and detained in about 500 camps in
rural areas across the USA, mainly in the South and Southwest but also in the
Great Plains and Midwest (12,000 POWs were held in camps in Nebraska alone). In
spite of the Geneva Convention, specially trained prison officials set about
molding the minds of the 380,000 German prisoners who filled numerous US camps
from 1943 onward. Prisoners were expected to turn them into “US-style democrats”
using coercion, brainwashing and threats.
Behavioral scientists at the
Pentagon directed a “re-education” program using liberal arts professors who
entered over 500 camps nationwide imposed a program that stressed only positive
aspects of American society. German POW collaborators and American educators
censored popular books and films as they feverishly promoted democratic
humanism and condemned German “wartime heroics.”
Those who didn’t comply were sent
mainly to Camp Alva in Oklahoma, a maximum-security camp for those the military
deemed “hardcore Nazis and Nazi sympathizers.” At least forty-six captives died
while in custody there.
More than 7,000 German prisoners of
war were brought to twelve different camps in Utah where hundreds of German
prisoners had also been held during World War One, in fact, more than 500
German seamen captured on board the German cruiser SMS Cormoran at Guam and the
SMS Geier at Hawaii when America declared war on Germany were interned at Fort
Douglas between June 1917 and March 1918. Fort Douglas was also the prison for
“enemy aliens,” conscientious objectors, and others arrested for violations of
wartime legislation.
On May 7, 1945, there were 250
German prisoners of war still housed at a camp that had been set up at the end
of Main Street in Salina, Utah awaiting repatriation back to their homeland.
They were housed in 43 tents scattered across the camp grounds with guards
towers looming above. On July 8, 1945, Private Clarence Bertucci began his
midnight shift and soon took his .30-caliber machine gun and aimed at the tents
where the prisoners were sleeping, methodically firing 250 rounds. He hit
thirty tents in a fifteen-second rampage. He killed six prisoners and wounded
twenty-two (of which three later died) before a corporal managed to disarm him.
Bertucci had bragged in advance of
what he intended and was completely unrepentant after the massacre. He was
briefly placed in a hospital for a psychiatric assessment, and despite the
absence of any evidence of mental impairment, Bertucci was declared insane by a
military panel and sent to a New York mental hospital. There is little
information available about how long he spent there, but he lived until 1969.
His victims were buried at Fort Douglas Cemetery clad in U.S. military
uniforms.
In 1988, the German Air Force funded
the refurbishment of the memorial statue at Fort Douglas Cemetery created by
German-born stone carver and immigrant to Utah, Arlo Steineke in honor of 21
German prisoners from World War One who died there. Representatives from
Germany rededicated the statue in honor of all the deceased prisoners, and
included the phrase: “and all victims of despotic governments around the
world.” Of the tens of thousands of Germans POWs in the United States during
World War II, only 2,222, less than 1 percent, tried to escape, By 1946, all
prisoners had been returned to their homes… if they had one left.
Civilian Internees
The story of America’s civilian
German Alien Internees during the war remains overshadowed by that of the
Japanese. However, 11,000 persons, including many American-born children, were
interned by the end of war by simple virtue of their German ancestry, leaving
behind a legacy of ruined lives, lost fortunes, shattered families and even
suicide. At least 53 military and INS facilities were used to house these
mostly innocent civilian internees. Many were completely stunned by a home
invasion by three to seven gun-slinging FBI agents, sometimes taking place in
the middle of the night. The personal property left behind by some individuals
was lost or stolen.
Dragged off to various camps and a
hasty hearing at a special Hearing Board, aliens deemed “potentially dangerous
to the public peace and safety of the United States” were typically sent in a
sealed off train with all windows shuttered to various camps. These civilians
were viewed as Prisoners of War and forced to wear government issue uniforms.
They were initially housed in tents
or crude cabins with inadequate washing and toilet facilities and surrounded by
barbed wire, warning signs and machine guns. Some were later sent on to family
camps like Crystal City or Seagoville in Texas. Beginning in early 1942 and
ending in May of 1945, there was also wholesale internment in the U.S. of
thousands of Latin American Germans who were kidnapped from their homes and
shipped in dark holds of ships to the USA, all under the guise of hemispherical
security, and these unfortunate aliens were subsequently charged with illegal
entry once the war was concluded! There was continued internment of a large
group of internees until 1948 for no valid reason.
In Merry Old…
At least most were not spat upon in
England. A small number of German prisoners were sent to British POW camps from
1939 to mid 1943, but it was not until their defeat in North Africa that the
camps in Britain took in large numbers. Italian as well as German prisoners
were interned in camps across England, Scotland and Wales. After 1942, most
were shipped directly to New York and approximately 25,000 were sent on to two
large camps in Canada. The British did not want large numbers of German POWs on
their soil, and sent most elsewhere, some to distant parts of the British
Empire. They did run camps in Great Britain, however, over 600 in all.
In general the treatment of the
average POW was decent. It was not good for those prisoners who were considered
“hard core Nazis” and they were treated roughly, segregated from others and
kept longer, often in the wilds of Scotland and other remote areas. There have
also been cases of torture brought to light in recent years as well. German
airmen were brutally interrogated in some cases to extract information. All were
subjected to “re-education” before release.
An organization called the Combined
Services Detailed Interrogation Centre (CSDIC), a division of the British War
Office, ran a secret prison at Bad Nenndorf following the British occupation of
north-west Germany in 1945. One of their most notorious centers elsewhere was
known as the London Cage, located in an exclusive neighbourhood of London.
Official documents recently revealed that the London Cage was a secret torture
centre where German prisoners who had been concealed from the Red Cross were
beaten, deprived of sleep, and threatened with execution or with “unnecessary
surgery.” However, conditions at Bad Nenndorf, a small, once-elegant resort
near Hanover, was far worse. Secret records recently opened and disclosed
horrific torture and suffering of many of the 372 men and 44 women who passed
through the center during the 22 months it operated before its closure in July
1947, not only former NS party members, but private German citizens. Several
local citizens claimed that one could hear the prisoners’ screams at night.
Although it makes for uncomfortable
reading, the concept of concentration camps was not a German invention and was
a well-established system throughout the world long before wars with Germany.
Just a scant few of British-run camps elsewhere are mentioned below.
German, Italian and Japanese
civilians were interned in camps Motuihe and Somes Islands in World War II, the
same camps where German civilians living in New Zealand were interned in World
War I.
In British-India, British interned
enemy nationals (mostly Germans) during both wars, including Germans who had
acquired British citizenship in India. There were at least 11 interment
facilities here in World War II. Most internees were then deported in late
1946. Germans shipped to Hamburg were sent to the former Neuengamme
concentration camp for “de-Nazification.”
In 1940, German combatant prisoners
were sent to Canada at the request of Britain. Between 1940 and 1944, over
40,000 German POW were kept on Canadian soil behind Canadian barbed wire in
places like Kananaskis-Seebe, Lethbridge & Medicine Hat, Alberta and
Kitchener, Bowmanville, Kingston & Gravenhurst, Ontario.
850 German Canadian civilians were
accused of being spies for the Nazis, as well as subversives and saboteurs
during WW Two. Many German Canadians interned in Camp Petawawa were from a
nineteenth-century migration in 1876 who founded a farm village called
Germanicus in Ontario. Their original farm homesteads were expropriated by the
federal government with no compensation and they were imprisoned behind barbed
wire in the camp. The Foymount Air Force Base near Cormac and Eganville was
built on this expropriated land. Notable was that not one of these homesteaders
from 1876 or their grandchildren had ever visited Germany again after 1876, yet
they were accused of being “German Nazi agents.” 756 German sailors, mostly
captured in East Asia, were also sent from Indian camps to Canada in June,
1941.
Isle of Man: During World War II,
about 8,000 people were interned in Britain, many being held in camps at
Knockaloe and Douglas on the Isle of Man where the British had also interred
Germans during WW One. The internees included enemy aliens from the Axis
Powers, principally Germany and Italy. The British government rounded up 74,000
German, Austrian and Italian aliens. Within 6 months the 112 alien tribunals
had individually summoned and examined 64,000 aliens, and the majority were
released, having been found to be “friendly aliens” (mostly non-Germans).
Eventually only 2,000 of the remainder were interned. Initially they were
shipped overseas. The last internees were released late in 1945, though many
were released in 1942. In Britain, internees were housed in camps and prisons.
Some camps had tents rather than buildings with internees sleeping directly on
the ground. Men and women were separated and most contact with the outside world
was denied, conditions which drew criticism from a variety of sources.
France certainly had its share of
camps, most with horrible conditions as previously mentioned. Even the
Netherlands did! Under Operation Black Tulip in the Netherlands, a plan to evict
all Germans from the Netherlands, on September 10, 1946 Germans and their
families in Amsterdam were pulled from their homes in the middle of the night
and given one hour to collect fifty kilogrammes of luggage. They were allowed
to take only one hundred Guilders. The rest of their possessions were
confiscated by the state. They were taken to concentration camps near the
German border, the biggest of which was Mariënbosch near Nijmegen. The
operation ended in 1948 after 3,691 Germans (15% of German residents) were
deported.
In post-war Belgium, a tribunal
until October, 1946 dealt with “war criminals” which included Belgian
collaborators; They were sent to places such as Breendonk Concentration Camp.
4.357 were sentenced to death, with 111 executed. Collaborators were deprived
of their right to vote and over 322,000 Belgians were affected.
Belgium also took in Baltic soldiers
who had understandably fought on the side of the Germans to protect their
homeland from the communists. Nearly 25,000 Latvians, for example, were
interned in Allied POW camps, initially those run by the British in Germany. In
the fall of 1945 most of them, about 12,000, were transferred to POW Camp 2227
at the Zedelgem camp in Belgium (Camp 2226 was used for Germans). However, the Allies
also transported the Baltic refugees to Swedish ports where they were shoved
aboard freighters and deported together along with several hundred former
German soldiers to the USSR, where they spend their lives in slave labor in
Communist hellholes. In both situations, they often received beatings, and
occasionally were even used for live target practice by the guards. They were
released from Allied camps during 1946 when the Western Allies concurred that
the Latvians were not Nazis despite their SS uniforms.
When released, the Latvians had no
home to return to, and they left Displaced Persons camps and forged new homes
in Australia, Europe, Canada, South America, and the US. Their self-help
organization (which was and still is denounced by the Soviets as a Nazi front),
Daugavas Vanagi, went with them.
A similar situation played out in
Sweden. In June 1945 the Swedish government, at the insistence of the US and
Britain, signed an agreement with the Soviet Union to give them the
approximately 3,000 German soldiers who were interned in Sweden at the time of
German capitulation. The agreement was implemented (after a delay) on January
23, 1946, even though most of the Swedish press and public protested the
inhumane decision of the Swedish government.
Included with the German POWs were a
number of Balts who had joined the German forces out of fear and hatred of the
Soviets. The Lithuanians and other Baltic refugees present in Sweden reacted to
this decision with despair, knowing the POWs would in many cases meet sudden
death and most would not be seen or heard from again. But the US pressed the
case, and in early 1946, an US military official published the following
statement in German newspapers: “most of the refugees from the Baltic States
have fled to Germany only because of their sympathy for National Socialism. In
addition, the refugees from the Baltic lands are most responsible for the
crimes committed, which create hardships for the refugees of other
nationalities as well, and cause disturbances among the inhabitants.” The New
York Times echoed this sentiment and presented Baltic refugees to the American
public as “pro-Nazi collaborators” who had fled their lands willingly. In
January 1946, Sweden handed over 146 Baltic and 2,364 German soldiers who had
been interned in Swedish prison camps to the Soviet Union.
Many preferred death to the horrible fate which awaited them at the
hands of the vengeful communists and there was an attempted mass suicide. At
least seven of the internees died during the process, but the number was
possibly much higher and blocked by censorship.
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