Other Losses

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Other Losses P r a i s e for OTHER LOSSES 'A brave book which ferrets out one of the war's least welcome secrets... [It] provokes bewilderment, anger and dismay' J U L I A N B A R N E S 'I was wrong to dismiss this book unseen as a pack of revisionist lies. In fact, the author has conducted painstaking and valuable research, and revealed much about the conduct of senior American and French leaders which is unflattering' Daily Mail 'There seems ample evidence that there was large-scale neglect of the huge mass of German troops who gave themselves up to the Americans because they feared the Russians more' G u a r d i a n This is a great and grim masterpiece of investigative journalism, unmasking one of the most successful cover-ups in modern history' I n d e p t n d t n t on S u n d a y ISBN 0-П16-64070-0 jacket photograph: tlldiicli I r t > i ■ 1* c I • i littirkitlli uui Muut d 11 o nt I r a n i liant However, while this titanic revenge was taking place, Western leaders strongly opposed to the betrayal of Christian ideals were desperately seeking to bring help to the Germans, as part of a policy to aid starving people around the world, Herbert Hoover, US Secretary of War Robert Patterson, Canadian Prime Minister Mackenzie King and his assistant Norman Robertson together created the largest chanty in history, a food-aid program that saved hundreds of millions of lives around the world during three years of struggle against famine. Never before had such revenge been known. Never before had such c o m p a s s i o n been shown. Crimes and Mercies is the extraordinary story of what happened to these people and why: a book that rips the mask from a suppressed atrocity and exposes our breathtaking capacity for kindness and cruelty. JAMES BACQUE is a former 9 book editor and reporter. He is now a successful novelist and lives in Toronto. It was in 1986, while researching a book on Raoul Laporierie, a French Resistance hero, that he stumbled on evidence of Allied death camps. Other Losses, bis highly acclaimed investigation into the deaths of German prisoners of war after 1945, was the product of that discovery. Crimes and Mercies, which expands upon this earlier book, is his third work of non- fiction. More than nine million Germans died as a result of Allied starvation and expulsion policies in the first five years after the Second World War - a total far in excess of the figures actually reported. That these deaths occurred at all is stii! being concealed and denied, especially by Western governments. Following the world-wide success of his earlier book, Other Losses, which documented the deaths of about one million Axis prisoners in Allied camps after the war, James Bacque flew to Moscow to work in the newly opened KGB archives. The first English-speaking writer to gain access to these files, he found new proof of the mass deaths of prisoners. He is also the first writer to publish recently declassified information from the renowned Hoover Institution in California. Some other important American papers were specially declassified for this book. Under the Morgenthau Plan and its successors, Germans were prevented from growing sufficient food to feed themselves, goods were stolen from them at levels far beyond the war reparations agreed between the Allies, and private charity was forbidden. And in May 1945, US General Eisenhower -who had publicly promised to abide by the Geneva Convention - illegally forbade German civilians to take food to prisoners starving to death in American camps. He threatened the death penalty for anyone found feeding prisoners. One quarter of the country was annexed, and about fifteen million people expelled in the largest act of ethnic cleansing the world has ever known. Over two million of these people died either on the road or in concentration camps in Poland and elsewhere, Children were enslaved for years in these camps, and the majority of them also died. (ciillinl ■■ ticl HЬ) UK Ј18.99 CAN S29.95 RECOMMENDED RETAIL PRICE Also by James Bacque FICTION The Lonely Ones Creation (with Kroetsch and Gravel) A Man of Talent The Queen Comes to Minnicog BIOGRAPHY Just Raoul HISTORY Other Losses DRAMA Judgement Day CRIMES AND MERCIES The Fate of German Civilians Under Allied Occupation 1944-1950 JAMES BACQUE LITTLE, BROWN AND COMPANY (CANADA) LIMITED Boston • New York • Toronto • London First published in Great Britain in 1997 by Little, Brown and Company This Canadian edition published by Little, Brown and Company (Canada) Limited in 1997 148 Yorkville Avenue Toronto, ON MSRK Copyright © 1997 hy James Bacque The moral right of the author has been asserted. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. Canadian Cataloguing in Publication Data Bacque, James, 1929— Crimes and mercies ISBN 0 316 64070 0 1. Germany - History - 1945-1955. 2. Food supply - Germany. 3. Deportation - Germany. 4. Economic assistance - Germany. DD2257.B32 1997 943.087'4 C97-931419-4 Typeset in Goudy by M Rules Printed and bound in Great Britain by Creative Print and Design (Wales), Ebbw Vale 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 To Herbert Hoover and Reverend John F. Davidson CD SSL \ CONTENTS LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS ix FOREWORD BY DR ALFRED DE ZAYAS xiv INTRODUCTION xxi I A PIRATICAL STATE 1 II THE BEGINNING OF WISDOM? 16 III 'FROM THERE No PRISONER RETURNED' 41 IV A HOLIDAY IN HELL 64 V AND THE CHURCHES FLEW BLACK FLAGS 89 VI DEATH AND TRANSFIGURATION 112 VII THE VICTORY OF THE MERCIFUL 142 VIII HISTORY AND FORGETTING 183 APPENDICES 199 NOTES 225 SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 270 INDEX 278 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS p. xxviii Map showing the division and control of Germany immediately after the Second World War. Source: The Oder-Neisse Problem by Friedrich von Wilpert (Bonn, Atlantic-Forum, 1962). p. xxix Map showing the expulsion of Germans from their eastern homelands. Source: The Oder-Neisse Problem by Friedrich von Wilpert (Bonn, Atlantic-Forum, 1962). p. 42-3 German local governments were ordered by the US Army to warn citizens that feeding prisoners was a crime punishable by death. This order was found in the 1980s in the archives of the village of Langenlonsheim by Jakob Zacher. p. 98-9 Printed notice for Germans to be expelled from Kraslice, in the Sudetenland, Czechoslovakia. Source: Sudetendeutsches Bild- archiv, Munich. CRIMES AND MERCIES p. 127 This memorandum by Robert Murphy, Chief Political adviser to US Military Governor of Germany from 1945, was kept secret until the 1990s. Murphy predicts an excess of deaths over births of at least 2,000,000. Source: Hoover Institution, Stanford. Plate section 1. Henry Morgenthau, US Secretary of the Treasury. His Morgenthau Plan for the destruction of German industry led to the deaths of millions of Germans years after the war's end. (US Army) 2. The Potsdam Conference in the summer of 1945, where the transfers of millions of Germans from Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary were approved. Truman is in the foreground, with his back to camera; Stalin is seated further to the right and Churchill is across the table on the left. (US Army) 3. US President Harry Truman (left) greets Herbert Hoover on 28 May 1945, before a 45-minute meeting during which they discussed world food relief. (Acme Inter- national/Bettman Archive) 4. In September 1945, US Secretary of War Robert Patterson and President Harry Truman controlled the most powerful military machine in human history. They soon used it for a huge food-relief campaign. (US Library of Congress) 5. Norman Robertson, Under-Secretary of External Affairs for Canada, led the Canadian food aid programme from 1945. Later he became Ambassador to the United States. (Herb Nott/Ontario Archive) 6. William Lyon Mackenzie King, Prime Minister of Canada. X LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS He worked with Norman Robertson and Herbert Hoover to bring Canadian wheat to starving people around the world. (Gilbert Milne/Ontario Archive) 7. Painting by prisoner Kurt Spillman of the French camp at Thorйe-les-Pins, near La Flиche, in early spring 1945. 'We arrived about 6 A.M. in a snowstorm. The dead lying on the right are comrades who suffocated during the journey. US soldiers look on as we are beaten by the French support troops.' (Kurt Spillman) 8. US Army camp at Sinzig, on the Rhine near Remagen, spring 1945. Millions of Axis prisoners were herded into open fields and kept for months without sufficient food, water or shelter. (US Army) 9. Aerial view of the infamous Russian camp at Vorkuta, two thousand miles north-east of Moscow, between the Barents Sea and the northern peaks of the Urals. (Hoover Institution) 10. On these tiny pages (shown actual size) the names of dead Austrian prisoners were written. Rudolf Haberfellner (now of Toronto) risked his life to smuggle this notebook out of his camp at Novo Troitsk, USSR. (Rudolf Haberfellner) 11. The Allies deprived Germany of chemical fertilizers, so this farmer near Bamburg uses liquid manure. The cows drawing the wooden tanks also provided milk and, when too old to work, meat for the hungry.
Recommended publications
  • ~Ongrcssionai-1Rrcord
    ~ongrcssionai - 1Rrcord United States of America PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE 79th CONGRESS,. SECOND SESSION S. 1363. An act to reimburse certain Navy PETITIONS AND MEMORIAL SENATE and Marine Corps personnel and former Navy Petitions, etc., were laid before the and Marine Corps personnel for personal Senate, or presented, and referred as FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1946 property lost or destroyed as the result of water damage occurring at certain naval flnd indicated: <Legislative day of Tuesday, March 5, Marine Corps shore activities; and By the PRESIDENT pro tempore: .1946) S. 1601. An act to revive and reenact the A memorial of the Senate of t he Legisla­ act entitled "An act granting the consent ture of the Territory of Alaska; to the Com­ The Senate met at 12 o'clock meridian, of Congress to the counties of Valley and Mc­ mittee on Territories and Insular Affairs: on the expiration of the recess. Cone, Mont., to construct, maintain, and op­ "Senate Memorial 1 erate a free highway bridge across the Mis­ The Chaplain, Rev. Frederick Brown "To the Honorable Harry S. Truman, Presi­ souri River at or near Frazer, Mont," approved dent of the United States; to the Con­ Harris, D. D., offered the following August 5, 1939. prayer: gr ess of the United States; to the .Hon­ On April 24, 1946: orable Juli us Krug, Secretary of the Our Father God, we beseech Thee that S. 718. An act to authorize the Secretary Interior: Thou wilt make this moment of devotion of t he Interior to contract wit h the Middle "Your memorialist, the Senate of the Leg­ a pavilion of Thy peace as, trusting only Rio Grande Conservancy· District of·New Mex­ islature of the Territory of Alaska, in the ico for the payment of operation and main­ extraordinary session of the seventeenth ses­ in Thy mercy, we bring our soiled souls tenance charge::; on certain Pueblo Indian sion assembled, does most respectfullf rep­ to Thy cleansing grace.
    [Show full text]
  • Remedies for Victims of Violations of International Humanitarian Law
    RICR Septembre IRRC September 2003 Vol. 85 No 851 497 Remedies for victims of violations of international humanitarian law LIESBETH ZEGVELD* International humanitarian law (“IHL”) has never been confined to the level of relations between States.1 On the contrary, the initiators of the nineteenth century conventions already believed that human persons had inviolable rights even during armed conflicts.2 However, recognition of rights is one thing, the right to claim those rights is another. So far, States have been reluctant to entitle, explicitly and in general, victims of violations of international humanitarian law to claim reparation. As humanitarian law treaties do not expressly envisage causes of action for victims in national or international law, they are hardly able to exercise their rights. On this point international humanitarian law sharply contrasts with tendencies in international law. In spite of the gap in the International Law Commission’s Articles on State Responsibility, which were finally adopted in 20013 but fail to mention rights of individuals in the regime of secondary rights,4 it is generally known that human rights treaties provide a remedy, both substantive and procedural, for individuals suffering injury from unlaw- ful conduct by State authorities. For example, Article 13 of the European Convention on Human Rights stipulates that individuals whose rights as set forth in that Convention are violated shall have “an effective remedy before a national authority”. And Article 50 of the same Convention mandates the European Court of Human Rights to afford just satisfaction to victims. Human rights treaties also provide for specific provisions on compensation, for example to victims of unlawful arrest or detention.5 Most recently, the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court6 authorizes the Court to determine any damage, loss or injury to victims and order reparations to them.
    [Show full text]
  • German Prisoners of War in Canada, 1940–1946: an Autobiography-Based Essay
    Canadian Military History Volume 27 Issue 2 Article 19 2018 German Prisoners of War in Canada, 1940–1946: An Autobiography-Based Essay Franz-Karl Stanzel Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.wlu.ca/cmh Part of the Military History Commons Recommended Citation Stanzel, Franz-Karl "German Prisoners of War in Canada, 1940–1946: An Autobiography-Based Essay." Canadian Military History 27, 2 (2018) This Feature is brought to you for free and open access by Scholars Commons @ Laurier. It has been accepted for inclusion in Canadian Military History by an authorized editor of Scholars Commons @ Laurier. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Stanzel: German Prisoners of War in Canada German Prisoners of War in Canada, 1940–1946 An Autobiography-Based Essay FRANZ-KARL STANZEL “What is a prisoner of war? He is a man who has tried to kill you and, having failed to kill you, asks you not to kill him.” —Winston Churchill Abstract : The four years I spent in British and Canadian POW Camps offered ample time to study English Literature. This experience in particular had a decisive effect on my later career as university teacher of English literature. It also helped me to become one of the first Anglicists at German and Austrian universities, who included Canadian literature in his syllabus and a founder member of the German Association for Canadian Studies. In this essay based on my war-autobiography, I describe the experience of German POWs in Canada. I was captured in 1942 when serving as third officer of the watch on board U-331 after my vessel was sunk in the Mediterranean by a torpedo fired from a RAF Albacore.
    [Show full text]
  • A Study of Prisoners of War in the Twentieth Century
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works Student Theses Baruch College 1-1-1997 A study of prisoners of war in the twentieth century Victor Montejo Baruch College How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/bb_etds/45 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] A STUDY OF PRISONERS OF WAR IN THE TWENTHIETH CENTURY by Victor Montejo © April 28, 1997 Submitted to the Committee on Undergraduate Honors of Baruch College of The City University of New York in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in History with Honors ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS INTRODUCTION Status of prisoners of war in the Middle Ages Philosophical and Humanitarian opinions Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Emmerich de Vattel Red Cross and Francis Lieber Geneva Convention, Hague Convention and the Red Cross First World War Industrialization and modern warfare The European Front Russian treatment of prisoners of war German treatment of prisoners of war British treatment of prisoners of war The Pacific Front Japanese treatment of prisoners of war The Middle East British treatment of prisoners of war The Interwar years League of Nations Geneva Convention of 1929 The Spanish Civil War Conflict of Idealism; Fascism, Communism, and Democracy Second World War The Pacific Front Japanese treatment of prisoners of war Allied treatment of prisoners
    [Show full text]
  • The Ridgefield Encyclopedia ===
    === THE RIDGEFIELD ENCYCLOPEDIA === A compendium of nearly 4,500 people, places and things relating to Ridgefield, Connecticut. by Jack Sanders [Note: Abbreviations and sources are explained at the end of the document. This work is being constantly expanded and revised; this version was updated on 4-27-2021.] A A&P: The Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company opened a small grocery store at 378 Main Street in 1948 (long after liquor store — q.v.); moved to 378 Main Street in the Bissell Building in the early 1940s. It became a supermarket at 46 Danbury Road in 1962 (now Walgreens site); closed November 1981. [JFS] [DD100] A&P Liquor Store: Opened at ONS133½ Main Street Sept. 12, 1935; [P9/12/1935] later was located at ONS86 Main Street. [1940 telephone directory] Aaron’s Court: A short, dead-end road serving 9 of 10 lots at 45 acre subdivision on the east side of Ridgebury Road by Lewis and Barry Finch, father-son, who had in 1980 proposed a corporate park here; named for Aaron Turner (q.v.), circus owner, who was born nearby. [RN] A Better Chance (ABC) is Ridgefield chapter of a national organization that sponsors talented, motivated children from inner-cities to attend RHS; students live at 32 Fairview Avenue; program began 1987 with six students. A Birdseye View: Column in Ridgefield Press for many years, written by Duncan Smith (q.v.) Abbe family: Lived on West Lane and West Mountain, 1935-36: James E. Abbe, noted photographer of celebrities, his wife, Polly Shorrock Abbe, and their three children Patience, Richard and John; the children became national celebrities when their 1936 book, Around the World in Eleven Years.
    [Show full text]
  • German Prisoners of War in Britain, 1940-1948: Policy and Performance
    _________________________________________________________________________Swansea University E-Theses German prisoners of war in Britain, 1940-1948: Policy and performance. Clarke, Gillian S How to cite: _________________________________________________________________________ Clarke, Gillian S (2006) German prisoners of war in Britain, 1940-1948: Policy and performance.. thesis, Swansea University. http://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa42278 Use policy: _________________________________________________________________________ This item is brought to you by Swansea University. Any person downloading material is agreeing to abide by the terms of the repository licence: copies of full text items may be used or reproduced in any format or medium, without prior permission for personal research or study, educational or non-commercial purposes only. The copyright for any work remains with the original author unless otherwise specified. The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holder. Permission for multiple reproductions should be obtained from the original author. Authors are personally responsible for adhering to copyright and publisher restrictions when uploading content to the repository. Please link to the metadata record in the Swansea University repository, Cronfa (link given in the citation reference above.) http://www.swansea.ac.uk/library/researchsupport/ris-support/ German Prisoners of War in Britain, 1940-1948: Policy and Performance Gillian S. Clarke Submitted to the University of Wales in fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Swansea University, 2006 ProQuest Number: 10797986 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a com plete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted.
    [Show full text]
  • HOLOCAUST DENIAL Kenneth S
    HOLOCAUST DENIAL Kenneth S. Stern The American Jewish Committee New York Kenneth S. Stern is program specialist on anti-Semitism and extremism for the American Jewish Committee. The American Jewish Committeeprotects the rights andfreedoms ofJews the world over; combats bigotry and anti-Semitism andpromotes hwnan rights for all; works for the security of Israel and deepened understanding between Americans and Israe- lis; advocates public policy positions rooted in American democratic vulues and the perspectives ofthe Jewish heritagr: and enhances the creative virality of the Jewish people. Founded in 1906, it is the pioneer human-relations agency in the United States. Copyright 0 1993 The American Jewish Committeen All rights reserved Library of Congress catalog number 93-070665 ISBN 0-87495-102-X First printing April 1993 Second printing June 1993 Third printing July 1994 This publication is dedicated to the memory of Zachariah Shuster, who gave 40 years of extraordinary service to the cause of world Jewry, human rights, and Jewish-Christian understanding. He opened AJC's European office in 1948, helping thousands of Holo- caust survivors, and, later, North African Jews fleeing anti-Semi- tism, rebuild their lives. On behalf of the AJC, he had a hand in establishing the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, the passage of Nostra Aetaze-which marked a turning point in Catholic attitudes toward Jews-and the publication of German textbooks containing accurate information about Jews, Judaism, anti-Semitism, and the Holocaust. In the early 1950s, Zachariah Shuster was one of the first to speak out about the plight of Soviet Jewry.
    [Show full text]
  • Arbeitskommandos...21 Bridge on The
    DETAILED TABLE OF CONTENTS E NCYCLOPEDIA OF P RISONERS OF W AR AND I NTERNMENT SECOND EDITION SECTION ONE: ENTRIES A Abu Ghraib Prison........................................................ 1 Accommodation ........................................................... 2 Afghan Wars ................................................................ 5 Agincourt Massacre...................................................... 7 Allen, Ethan ................................................................. 8 Altmark Incident .......................................................... 9 American Revolution.................................................... 9 Andersonville............................................................... 13 Angolan Civil War (1975-2002) ..................................... 14 Apache Wars ................................................................ 16 Arab-Israeli Wars ......................................................... 17 Arbeitskommandos....................................................... 21 Ardeatine Caves Massacre ............................................ 22 Ashanti Wars................................................................ 23 Assurance..................................................................... 24 Attila The Hun ............................................................. 25 Auschwitz .................................................................... 25 Avitaminosis ................................................................ 26 Aztecs .........................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Civil Reintegration of Demobilized Soldiers of the German
    FROM SOLDIERS TO CITIZENS: THE CIVIL REINTEGRATION OF DEMOBILIZED SOLDIERS OF THE GERMAN WEHRMACHT AND THE IMPERIAL JAPANESE ARMY AFTER UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER IN 1945 By BIRGIT SCHNEIDER A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY Department of History MAY 2010 © Copyright by BIRGIT SCHNEIDER, 2010 All Rights Reserved © Copyright by BIRGIT SCHNEIDER, 2010 All Rights Reserved To the Faculty of Washington State University: The members of the Committee appointed to examine the dissertation of BIRGIT SCHNEIDER find it satisfactory and recommend that it be accepted. ___________________________________ Raymond C. Sun, Ph.D., Chair ___________________________________ Noriko Kawamura, Ph.D. ___________________________________ Brigit Farley, Ph.D. ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank everyone who has helped me be successful in the Ph.D. program at the History Department at Washington State University and beyond. First and foremost, I would like to thank my committee chair, Raymond Sun, for his constant trust and support, and for many enlightening discussions. I could not have finished this project without him. I would also like to thank my committee members, Noriko Kawamura and Brigit Farley, for their help, insights, and thoughts on my work. I would like to thank Alex D’Erizans, Victor Cheng, Sun Yi, Elise Foxworth, Susanne Klien, Midori Keech, and Vincent Pollard for their critical and supportive questions and comments at the conferences where I presented parts of this dissertation, at GSA, NYCAS, AHA-PCB, JSA-ASEAN, and JSA. Further, I would like to thank Professor Hiroshi Fujino for his tremendous help in getting in contact with Kimura Takuji, and Kimura-san for sharing his thesis with me.
    [Show full text]
  • The United States and the Denial of Prisoner of War (POW) Status at the End of the Second World War1
    Aufsatz Richard D. Wiggers The United States and the Denial of Prisoner of War (POW) Status at the End of the Second World War1 In his study entitled Nazi Prisoners of War in America, historian Arnold Krammer relates how the U. S. Government followed the 1929 Geneva Convention to the letter during World War Π in its treatment of nearly 400,000 captured German military personnel imprisoned in POW camps across the United States. According to Krammer the U. S. government »was almost obsessed with adherence to a liberal interpretation of the Geneva Convention, often far in excess of any agreed-upon requirements«.2 Even during the closing months of the war, the United States government gave every indication that it intended to continue to abide fully by the 1929 Geneva Convention in its treatment of captured enemy military personnel. As of January 1945,100 million leaflets to that effect had been dropped behind the shrinking German front lines, and by April 1945 large numbers of »safe conduct« passes making similar promises and signed by Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) commander Dwight D. Eisenhower had also been dropped behind German lines by the US Army to induce surrenders of enemy military personnel.3 The same apparently unequivocal stance in support of compliance with the 1929 Geneva Convention was taken domestically by US government officials. During hearings which were held in Washington in April 1945 before a Special Committee of the US House of Representatives, officials from both the State and the War Departments
    [Show full text]
  • Epw/Ci Policy and Procedures
    SUBCOURSE EDITION MP2011 D EPW/CI POLICY AND PROCEDURES EPW/CI POLICY AND PROCEDURES Subcourse Number MP2011 EDITION D United States Army Military Police School 5 CREDIT HOURS Edition Date: October 1996 SUBCOURSE OVERVIEW Enemy prisoner of war (EPW) and civilian internee (CI) operations is one of four missions that the military police (MP) are responsible for. History tells us that EPW and CI are as much a part of armed conflict as weapons and tactics. The next battlefield will be characterized by nonlinear operations (rear, close, and deep) and decentralized command and control. Mobility of tactical units is critical because of the increasing lethality of weapons systems. Prompt evacuation of EPW from tactical units will give our combat forces greater freedom to maneuver. This subcourse provides an overview of MP doctrine for collecting, evacuating, and interning enemy prisoners of war and civilian internees. The doctrine in this subcourse may be applied to all levels of conflict including mature theaters with forward deployed units, contingency operations, and in operations in war other than war. No prerequisites are required for this subcourse. This subcourse reflects the doctrine that was current at the time of preparation. In your work situation, always refer to the latest publications and use the most current doctrine. Unless otherwise stated, the use of masculine pronouns includes both men and women. TERMINAL LEARNING OBJECTIVE ACTION: Plan EPW and CI operations in a theater of operations. CONDITION: You have this subcourse, paper and pencil. STANDARD: To demonstrate competency of this task, you must achieve a minimum score of 70 percent on the subcourse examination.
    [Show full text]
  • The Execution of German Deserters by Surrendered German Troops Under Canadian Control in Amsterdam, May 1945
    Canadian Military History Volume 2 Issue 1 Article 8 1993 Victims of Circumstance: the Execution of German Deserters by Surrendered German Troops Under Canadian Control in Amsterdam, May 1945 Chris Madsen University of Victoria Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.wlu.ca/cmh Part of the Military History Commons Recommended Citation Madsen, Chris "Victims of Circumstance: the Execution of German Deserters by Surrendered German Troops Under Canadian Control in Amsterdam, May 1945." Canadian Military History 2, 1 (1993) This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Scholars Commons @ Laurier. It has been accepted for inclusion in Canadian Military History by an authorized editor of Scholars Commons @ Laurier. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Madsen: Victims of Circumstance: the Execution of German Deserters by Sur Victims of Circumstance: The Execution of German Deserters by Surrendered German Troops Under Canadian Control in Amsterdam, May 1945 Chris Madsen Introduction German commanders and military judges continued to apply an irregular military law n the morning of 13 May 1945, five days against deserters; and Canadian restrictions Oafter the formal capitulation of Hitler's on these actions remained limited and hesitant. Wehrmacht, a German military court delivered In this situation, larger political and strategic death sentences on two German naval considerations worked against deserters like deserters, Bruno Dorfer and Rainer Beck. The Dorfer and Beck. Canadian reactions, during trial occurred in an abandoned Ford assembly and twenty-one years after the execution, plant on the outskirts of Amsterdam, a site reflected a sad record of indifference and used by the Canadian army for the callousness for these unfortunate victims of concentration of German naval personneL Later latent Nazism.
    [Show full text]