Posted on 01/29/2002 12:06:26 PM PST by Intolerant in NJ
The History Channel carried an interesting program over the weekend on WWII German POW's who had been held in this country. Apparently the Geneva Conventions require that POW's must be detained under conditions equivalent to those provided the troops of their captors. In Texas, Alabama, and Mississippi, where the Germans were sent in the US, this meant barracks, PX availability, and even their own theatres and bands. POW's received fresh vegetables and meat daily, when US citizens were still under wartime rationing and often couldn't get these items themselves. In one location, prisoners had a daily beer ration, although the camp was actually located in the middle of a "dry" county. When POW's arrived at one camp where their barracks were not yet completed they had to live in tents temporarily; US troops assigned to guard them were required to live in tents themselves until the construction of the POW barracks was finished and the prisoners could move in. One official who had been involved in the program admitted that pehaps it was "naive" in some instances, but the American government had hoped that by treating the German POW's well we would help obtain better treatment for our own troops held by the Germans.
The Al-Qaeda fighters, in their mission to kill civilians, are not protected by Geneva Convention rules. An interesting example of this situation is discussed in the story of Luftwaffe interrogator Hans Scharff. Some captured American P38 pilots were going to be charged with war crimes for machine-gunning civilians. This action would have exempted them from Geneva Convention protection and subjected them to a likely execution. Scharff got them to relate every detail of their last missions from take-off to capture in an effort to collect enough corroborating evidence to exonerate them. Fortunately for the accused pilots, another wrecked P38 was found with the (dead) pilot still in the cockpit. The Germans developed the gun-camera film and found their war criminal. The accused pilots were then sent to regular POW camp for the remainder of the war.
Scharff was one of the most successful interrogators of the war as far as the amount and quality of information he was able to get from prisoners. He did it by talking with prisoners in a way that was friendly and disarming. They would let down their guard and often reveal useful information without actually realizing it. He was subpoenaed to the US in 1948 to testify in a trial and some of his former interrogatees actually sponsored him to immigrate. He became a mosaic artist and among other things, created the beautiful mosaics on the wall of the main hall in Cinderella's castle in Disney's Magic Kingdom in Orlando FL.
The camp commandants were required to interrogate the prisoners, but the soldiers on both sides looked at it as more of a game that had to be done for those above than as a serious undertaking, and thus the man I knew would tell of the cabbage patches that members of the Home Guard were obliged to tend. Honestly, the man was almost wistful, and certainly not competely traumatised by his time there, even though he managed 2 escapes.
The only part of world war 2 that was run according to virtually all the rules of law was the fighting in North Africa; Allied POWs would stand to attention and salute Rommel when he walked passed, in that theater both sides understood themselves as professionals involved in a professional disagreement, and, unlike what you saw in Eastern Europe, in a race to the bottom to dispense with as many conventions of human society as possible.
I think our government is to be praised for doing everything to help the POWs, and, I hope that this lesson of world war 2 has not been forgotten in our newest war. This war is as much a war for hearts and minds as it is to rid us of malefactors,
I guess the most telling statement of their treatment was the number that emigrated to the US after the war.
I know one who didn't. Vladimir was a Soviet soldier from the Crimea, was captured at Kiev and became a German POW in Austria. Happily, I might add -- he claims he had no respect for the Soviet regime.
Further, he noted he was treated very well by the Austrians who manned his camp. An ethnic Ukrainian, he liked them better than Russians.
But, as the war wound down, with the Germans obviously being defeated on all fronts, he knew he would be repatriated to the Soviet Union when the time came. He volunteered for the Russian army that was being raised from the camps to go fight for the Germans against the Soviets on the Eastern Front. All of them knew what awaited them as POWs once they were turned over to the Red Army: Siberia. Or worse. They might as well fight for themselves, they thought.
Then, he deserted. And ran like hell, across Germany to the West -- eventually managing to get himself "captured" by the Americans. He passed himself off as a Serbian partisan and managed to gain passage to the US.
He became a citizen in 1952 and, when I left the area eight years ago, Vladimir was still the best machinist in Montgomery, Alabama. Could make any part for any piece of farm equipment...
Now, instead of a farmer, I'm a writer...more or less. And I didn't think to interview him and develop one of the best human interest adventure stories that I've ever encountered.
Probably would have cost them $40-50 if they had purchased it in a civilian store.
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