Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Special pages
Niidae Wiki
Search
Search
Appearance
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Create account
Log in
Pages for logged out editors
learn more
Contributions
Talk
Editing
Other Losses
(section)
Page
Discussion
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Page information
Appearance
move to sidebar
hide
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
== Content == === The "other losses" statistic === The title of ''Other Losses'' derives from a column of figures in weekly U.S. Army reports that Bacque states actually reflects a body count of German prisoners that died of slow starvation or diseases. The book states that Colonel Philip Lauben, chief of German Affairs Branch at [[SHAEF]] (Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force), confirmed that "other losses" meant deaths and escapes, with escapes being a minor part. This is supported by a US Army document lodged in the US National Archives which "plainly states" that the "other losses" category of prisoners was for deaths and escapes.<ref name="bacque2"/> Bacque dismisses claims from his opponents that "other losses" meant transfers or discharges, as these are accounted for in other columns in the same tables. Furthermore, there is no separate column in which deaths were recorded. The book refers to the Army Chief Historians report that was published in 1947; in the 20 pages dealing with the capture, transfer and discharge of prisoners, the report makes no mention of releasing prisoners without formal discharge. Furthermore, Bacque cites Army orders from [[Dwight D. Eisenhower|General Eisenhower]] himself (Disbandment Directive No. 1) stating that every prisoner leaving captivity had to have discharge papers.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p230</ref> === Disarmed Enemy Forces designation === ''Other Losses'' states that Eisenhower sought to sidestep the requirements of the Geneva Convention through the designation of these prisoners as [[Disarmed Enemy Forces]] (DEF), specifically stating that "in March, as Germany was being cracked ... a message was being signed and initialed by Eisenhower proposed a startling departure from the Geneva Convention (GC)βthe creation of a new class of prisoners who would not be fed by the Army after the surrender of Germany."<ref name="Bacque 1989 p=25-26,29-30">{{Harvnb|Bacque|1989|pp=25β26,29β30}}</ref> The book states that, against the orders of his superiors, Eisenhower took 2 million additional prisoners after Germany's surrender that fell under the DEF designation.<ref>{{Harvnb|Bacque|1989|p=58}}</ref> According to the book, a million of those who died had fled the Eastern front and most likely ended up in [[Rheinwiesenlager]] prisoner transit camps run by the United States and French forces where many such prisoners died of disease or starvation under the cover of the DEF designation. The book cites orders from Eisenhower which stipulated that the Germans would be solely responsible for feeding and maintaining the DEFs, however, he then prevented any aid from reaching them.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p27</ref> === Body count of German prisoners === ''Other Losses'' contends that nearly one million German prisoners died while being held by the United States and French forces at the end of World War II. Specifically, it states: "The victims undoubtedly number over 800,000, almost certainly over 900,000 and quite likely over a million. Their deaths were knowingly caused by army officers who had sufficient resources to keep the prisoners alive."<ref name="bacque2">{{Harvnb|Bacque|1989|p=2}}</ref> ''Other Losses'' contains an analysis of a medical record that it states supports the conclusion of a prisoner death rate of 30%.<ref>{{Harvnb|Bacque|1989|p=187}}</ref> Bacque also referred to a 1950 report from the [[German Red Cross]] which stated that 1.5 million former German POWs were still officially listed as missing, fate unknown. The book comments that approximately 15% of the deaths in the U.S. camps were from [[starvation]] or [[dehydration]] and that most deaths were caused by [[dysentery]], [[pneumonia]], or [[septicaemia]], as a result of the unsanitary conditions and lack of medicine.<ref>Bacque, ''Other Losses'', p164</ref> Further, it states that officers from the [[U.S. Army Medical Corps]] reported death rates far higher than they had ever seen before.<ref>Bacque, ''Other Losses'', p64</ref> The book states that Eisenhower's staff were complicit in the scheme,<ref name="Bacque 1989 62">{{Harvnb|Bacque|1989|p=62}}</ref> and that in order to carry out such a scheme, Eisenhower kept these prisoners in camps far longer than was necessary<ref>{{Harvnb|Bacque|1989|p=145}}</ref> It states that, by the end of 1945, only 40% of prisoners had been released.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p165</ref> ''Other Losses'' further characterizes the 22-volume German ''[[Erich Maschke|Maschke]]'' Commission report investigating the deaths of German prisoners as written by "client-academics" as part of a "cover-up" of the supposed deaths.<ref>{{Harvnb|Bacque|1989|pp=150, 155β6}}</ref> === Treatment of prisoners === ''Other Losses'' states that the U.S. dismantled the German welfare agencies, including the German Red Cross, then dismissed the Swiss Government from its role as Protecting Power. No agencies were allowed to visit the camps or provide any assistance to the prisoners,<ref>Bacque, ''Other Losses'', p. 69.</ref> including delegates from ICRC (International Committee of the Red Cross), which was a violation of the Geneva Convention.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p30</ref> It further states that the only notable protest against this was from William Lyon Mackenzie King, Prime Minister of Canada.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p71</ref> Bacque comments that the press was also prevented from visiting the camps, and therefore was unable to report on the state of the camps and the condition of the prisoners. The book states that many of the U.S. camps consisted of open fields surrounded by barbed wire, with no shelter or toilet facilities. In these camps prisoners were forced to sleep on the ground in the open, though it claims the U.S. Army had plenty of surplus shelter supplies which could have been issued.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p162</ref> No supplies such as blankets were supplied to the prisoners, even though these were in good supply at various locations such as the depot at Naples. In a letter, General Everett Hughes stated that there were "more stocks than we can ever use; stretch as far as eye can see."<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p32</ref> The book quotes [[Konrad Adenauer|Dr. Konrad Adenauer]] (later Chancellor of Germany) stating that "The German prisoners have been penned up for weeks without any protection from the weather, without drinking water, without medical care. They are being held in a manner contrary to all humanitarian principles and flagrantly contrary to the [[Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907|Hague]] and [[Geneva Convention]]s."<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p185</ref> Both J. P. Pradervand (ICRC French Delegation) and Henry Dunning (American Red Cross) sent letters to the State Department condemning the poor treatment of the German prisoners.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p95</ref> Colonel Philip Lauben stated that "The Vosges was just one big death camp."<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p108</ref> === Prisoner totals === According to ''Other Losses'', the U.S. Army employed a number of methods to reduce the number of prisoners officially on hand. One method was to accuse the Russians of taking far more prisoners than they reported.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p153</ref> Another was the "midnight shift", whereby the opening balance of a given week was less than the closing balance of the previous week.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p56</ref> The book describes that a "Missing Million" prisoners exist in the difference in totals between two U.S. army reports (the last of the daily reports and the first of the weekly reports) issued on June 2, 1945.<ref name="bacque52">{{Harvnb|Bacque|1989|pp=52β3}}</ref> As a consequence of this, according to Quartermaster's reports the number of rations issued to the camps was reduced by 900,000.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p55</ref> ''Other Losses'' states that after visiting many of the camps in August 1945, Major General [[Robert McGowan Littlejohn|Robert M. Littlejohn]] (Quartermaster of the ETO) concluded that the U.S. Army was reporting 3.7 million prisoners while it actually possessed 5.2 million, thereby corroborating the conclusions made in a report three months earlier from Lieutenant General [[John C. H. Lee]] (in charge of logistics for the ETO), which he had sent to SHAEF headquarters.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p61</ref> ''Other Losses'' states that Littlejohn subsequently wrote in a report to Washington that because requisitions for supplies were based on these faulty numbers, 1.5 million prisoners were getting no food.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p166</ref> ''Other Losses'' states that, three years later, in 1948 the ICRC formally requested documents confirming the total number of prisoners in the U.S. Zone and was eventually told that 3.5 million were there, which omitted approximately 1.7 million from the actual number of 5,224,000.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p154</ref><ref>A June 1945 SHAEF document reproduced in Other Losses lists a total of 7.6 million prisoners, with 5.2 million of those in U.S. column.</ref> === Food shortage === {{see also|Food in occupied Germany}} ''Other Losses'' explicates the 1944–1949 German food crisis to support claims for a high mortality rate.<ref>Bacque, ''Other Losses'', pages 63-76</ref> ''Other Losses'' concludes that the 1945 food crisis in Europe was contrived by Allied forces by the use of restrictive food import policy, including restrictions on Red Cross food deliveries, and other means.<ref>{{Harvnb|Bacque|1989|pp=59β60,215}}</ref> It states that Eisenhower purposefully starved German prisoners given that "[t]here was a lot more wheat available in the combined areas of western Germany, France, Britain, Canada and the USA than there had been in the same year in 1939."<ref name="Bacque 1989 24-25,208">{{Harvnb|Bacque|1989|pp=24β25,208}}</ref> ''Other Losses'' states that, in May 1945, the ICRC had 100,000 tons of food in storage warehouses in Switzerland.<ref>Bacque, ''Other Losses'', p75</ref> According to the book, when they tried to send trainloads of this food into the U.S. Zone, the U.S. Army sent the trains back, saying their own warehouses were full. ''Other Losses'' states that this prompted Max Huber, head of the ICRC, to send a strong letter of protest to the State Department, in which he described the difficulties placed by SHAEF in the way of the ICRC efforts to provide aid. He said, "Our responsibility for the proper use of relief supplies placed in our care is incompatible with a restriction to the fulfilment of orders which render us powerless to furnish relief which we ourselves judge necessary."<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p76</ref> U.S. Army warehouses had 13.5 million [[Red_Cross_parcel#German_PoWs_after_World_War_II|Red Cross food parcels]] taken from the [[ICRC]], which were never distributed.<ref>Bacque, ''Other Losses'', p109</ref> The book also states that German civilians were prevented from bringing food to the camps,<ref>Bacque, ''Other Losses'', p60</ref> and that Red Cross food parcels were confiscated by SHAEF, and the War Department banned them from being given to the men in the camps.<ref>Bacque, Other Losses, p63</ref> The book states that Bacque found no evidence of a drastic food shortage in the U.S. Army — * "We had so much food we didnβt know what to do with it." — Colonel Henry Settle, 106th division. * "We are not in any desperate need of extra food." — Lt Colonel Bailey, SHAEF. * "There is in this Theater a substantial excess of subsistence ... over 3,000,000 rations a day less than those requisitioned were issued." — General Robert Littlejohn, Quartermaster of the ETO.<ref>Bacque, ''Other Losses'', p104</ref>
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Niidae Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Encyclopedia:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Search
Search
Editing
Other Losses
(section)
Add topic