SUBSIM Radio Room Forums



SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997

Go Back   SUBSIM Radio Room Forums > General > General Topics
Forget password? Reset here

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 03-15-11, 08:03 AM   #1
Bilge_Rat
Silent Hunter
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: standing watch...
Posts: 3,856
Downloads: 344
Uploads: 0
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Feuer Frei! View Post
No charges were ever brought against Detmers, despite some suspicion about possible ‘foul play’ against the Sydney, a controversy that still rages to this day, and the Australian Government finally released him and his crew on January 21 1947, nearly 21 months after the end of the war.
Some people, again, not all of them Germans, think this prolonged internment was a form of revenge.
I looked into this a bit more and have not found one reference to any person who thinks the treatment of Detmers and his crew by the Australians was a "form of revenge".

They were treated in accordance with the Geneva convention, were housed, fed, clothed, kept in a POW camp with other prisoners. One seaman died of lung cancer and Detmers was hospitalised for three months after a stroke. All were repatriated in 1947 more or less at the same time as every other Axis prisoner held by the western alllies.

A real example of a "form of revenge" is the way the Germans treated their prisoners. During Barbarossa in 1941, 3,300,000 Soviet soldiers were captured by the German Army. By march 1942, 2,800,000 had died in German POW camps.
__________________
Bilge_Rat is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-15-11, 09:06 AM   #2
Feuer Frei!
Navy Seal
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Valhalla
Posts: 5,295
Downloads: 141
Uploads: 17
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Bilge_Rat View Post
I looked into this a bit more and have not found one reference to any person who thinks the treatment of Detmers and his crew by the Australians was a "form of revenge".
The source of my post was from here , from Principal Sources listed at bottom of page.

Quote:
They were treated in accordance with the Geneva convention, were housed, fed, clothed, kept in a POW camp with other prisoners.
Source?
Quote:
Detmers was hospitalised for three months after a stroke.
2 actually.


Quote:
A real example of a "form of revenge" is the way the Germans treated their prisoners. During Barbarossa in 1941, 3,300,000 Soviet soldiers were captured by the German Army. By march 1942, 2,800,000 had died in German POW camps.
Well, i'm not sure what you are implying here, if you are referring to me underlining the part about being in internment for 21 mths after the war and the part about revenge, i certainly wasn't inferring that that is my sole belief. I underlined them to stress a a point in the article.
Now, onto acts of so-called revenge by Germans, supposedly inflicted on the Russian prisoners taken from Operation Barbarossa
and i'll quote:
Quote:
During the war the Armies of Allied nations such as the US, UK, Canada and Australia were ordered to treat Axis prisoners strictly in accordance with the Geneva Convention (1929). Some breaches of the Convention took place, however. According to Stephen E. Ambrose, of the roughly 1,000 US combat veterans that he had interviewed, roughly one-third told him they had seen US troops kill German prisoners.
Towards the end of the war in Europe, as large numbers of Axis soldiers surrendered, the US created the designation of Disarmed Enemy Forces (DEF) so as not to treat prisoners as POWs. A lot of these soldiers were kept in open fields in various Rheinwiesenlagers. Controversy has arisen about how Eisenhower managed these prisoners
Quote:
After the surrender of Germany in May 1945, the POW status of the German prisoners was in many cases maintained, and they were for several years used as forced labour in countries such as the UK and France. Many died when forced to clear minefields in Norway, France etc.; "by September 1945 it was estimated by the French authorities that two thousand prisoners were being maimed and killed each month in accidents
Quote:
In 1946 the UK had more than 400,000 German prisoners, many had been transferred from POW camps in the US and Canada. Many of these were for over three years after the German surrender used as forced labour, as a form of "reparations
Source



Quote:
Those held in Soviet-occupied territory fared far worse. Officially, the Soviet Union took 2,388,000 Germans and 1,097,000 combatants from other European nations as prisoners during and just after the war. More than a million of the German captives died. The immense suffering Germany and her Axis partners had caused surely played a key role in the treatment of enemy POWs. "In 1945, in Soviet eyes it was time to pay," wrote British military historian Max Arthur. "For most Russian soldiers, any instinct for pity or mercy had died somewhere on a hundred battlefields between Moscow and Warsaw.
Source

Quote:
According to some sources, the Soviets captured 3.5 million Axis servicemen (excluding Japanese) of which more than a million died. One specific example of the tragic fate of the German POWs was after the Battle of Stalingrad, during which the Soviets captured 91,000 German troops, many already starved and ill, of whom only 5,000 survived the war.
German soldiers were for many years after the war kept as forced labour. The last German POWs (those who were sentenced for war crimes, sometimes without sufficient reasons) were released by the Soviets in 1955, only after Joseph Stalin had died.
Source


Quote:
The conditions German POWs endured on the Eastern Front are beyond description. Shipped to separate camps in Siberia and elsewhere in the western Soviet Union, the German POWs were subjected to aggressive reeducation in communist ideology, as well as frequent beatings, torture, and execution. Food was always scarce.
Quote:
Most German POWs were held for ten years after the war.
Source

And if that is not enough then my parents have some horror stories of their own, experiencing the Allies, in particular the Russians exercising revenge.

Sorry if i have gone overboard here, it is not my intent to aggravate or to be aggressive here, but it irks me everytime i see the eveil German stories.
No harm done i hope Bilge_Rat











__________________
"History is the lies that the victors agree on"- Napoleon

LINK TO MY SH 3 MODS
Feuer Frei! is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-15-11, 09:37 AM   #3
mookiemookie
Navy Seal
 
mookiemookie's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 9,404
Downloads: 105
Uploads: 1
Default

I suppose it took a couple years to get the POW repatriated for practical reasons, not out of revenge. Right after the war, Germany was a shambles. For the U.S. and England to release a million, two million men back into a non-functioning society would have been chaos. Getting food to the remaining German population was a huge problem without adding all those other mouths to feed.

The Russians on the other hand - I believe they kept their German slave labor out of pure spite.
__________________
They don’t think it be like it is, but it do.

Want more U-boat Kaleun portraits for your SH3 Commander Profiles? Download the SH3 Commander Portrait Pack here.
mookiemookie is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-15-11, 10:34 AM   #4
Bilge_Rat
Silent Hunter
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: standing watch...
Posts: 3,856
Downloads: 344
Uploads: 0
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Feuer Frei! View Post
Sorry if i have gone overboard here, it is not my intent to aggravate or to be aggressive here, but it irks me everytime i see the eveil German stories.
well you open the door when you imply that Detmers and his crew were somehow mistreated when even a cursory review of the historical record shows they were treated very correctly as were all German prisoners who were held by the Commonwealth authorities.

what irks me everytime is when I see stories that minimise German atrocities in WW2 or somehow equate that the US/Commonwealth committed excesses on the same scale as the Nazis. Germany in WW2 committed monstrous atrocities. The western allies also made mistakes.
Q: Were the two on the same level? A: not even close.

Quote:
No harm done i hope Bilge_Rat
of course not.

p.s. - the wikipedia article you quoted on the treatment of POWs by the Western Allies above is grossly distorted. I dont know who wrote it, but obviously someone with an axe to grind.
__________________

Last edited by Bilge_Rat; 03-15-11 at 11:02 AM.
Bilge_Rat is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-15-11, 06:10 PM   #5
August
Wayfaring Stranger
 
August's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 23,216
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0


Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Feuer Frei! View Post
Now, onto acts of so-called revenge by Germans, supposedly inflicted on the Russian prisoners taken from Operation Barbarossa
and i'll quote:
I read through your post and didn't see where you actually address this point. So are those "acts of so called revenge by Germans, supposedly inflicted on Russian prisoners" true or false, and how does the apparently better treatment of German POW's by the Allies relate to it either way?
__________________


Flanked by life and the funeral pyre. Putting on a show for you to see.
August is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-15-11, 08:58 PM   #6
Feuer Frei!
Navy Seal
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Valhalla
Posts: 5,295
Downloads: 141
Uploads: 17
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Bilge_Rat View Post
well you open the door when you imply that Detmers and his crew were somehow mistreated when even a cursory review of the historical record shows they were treated very correctly as were all German prisoners who were held by the Commonwealth authorities.
Yea true, i could have done better here, in relation to attempting to stress a point or otherwise there.

Quote:
what irks me everytime is when I see stories that minimise German atrocities in WW2 or somehow equate that the US/Commonwealth committed excesses on the same scale as the Nazis. Germany in WW2 committed monstrous atrocities.
Well, i will have to challenge that because i don't know where you are getting your information from but I constantly see or hear that the Germans committed horrible acts in WW2 and whenever subjects of this nature come up that the German-bashing is rife and alive, has been since the war and still is to this day.
Every person, and i mean every person i have ever entered into a discussion with about the 'role', if you will of Germany in WW2 has been a continual "well, the Germans were all bad, all Germans were Nazis, the Germans and the attrocities they committed were so terrible that... blah blah blah" that it's incredibly difficult to continue a discussion or even attempt to have open-minded or mature points to make to someone.
The point i am making here is that, yes, we know the Germans committed horrible crimes against Humanity, and we know that the Nazis were undeniably and without a doubt wrong in their ideology and their thoughts and actions.
So? And i mean that with the utmost diplomacy here, what i mean by so? is that we know all this, we know this happened, yet we always fall back to this usual rubbish point-making when we speak of anything even remotely that can be considered as questioning what happened in WW2 or questioning the Allies and some of their actions either during the war or post-period.
THAT is what gets me, and to deny that this happens is wrong.
Unfortunately history has been written, we can't change that, what we can change though is our attitudes and learn from history, so that the same mistakes don't happen again.
I think a lot of people still have a problem with letting things go, to continually rub the shame of what the Nazis did in WW2 into the Germans' faces of today.

Quote:
The western allies also made mistakes.
Yes they did, i was attempting to highlight some of these, difference is that i was not generalising or lumping ALL Allies into one basket.
History tells us this was so, not all Allies committed mistakes, ofc not.
So, why this double standard then, history tells us that not all Germans were bad, or committed crimes against humanity. Etc etc.
It always touches a sore spot when questiong the History writers, which in this case is the Allies.
The Victors feel uncomfortable when they are questioned about what they have written down on paper, called History.


Quote:
Q: Were the two on the same level? A: not even close.
Ofc not.



Quote:
p.s. - the wikipedia article you quoted on the treatment of POWs by the Western Allies above is grossly distorted. I dont know who wrote it, but obviously someone with an axe to grind.
Grossly distorted? Why? Because you think so? Or it's 'too' unbelievable that this could have happened or that the Allies could have actually done this?
Once again, why is it so bad to question history? Or, in this case, why is it so unbelievable or grossly distorted that this happened?


Quote:
Originally Posted by August View Post
I read through your post and didn't see where you actually address this point. So are those "acts of so called revenge by Germans, supposedly inflicted on Russian prisoners" true or false, and how does the apparently better treatment of German POW's by the Allies relate to it either way?
Yes, it doesn't make sense my original post:
Quote:
Now, onto acts of so-called revenge by Germans, supposedly inflicted on the Russian prisoners taken from Operation Barbarossa
and i'll quote:
What it should have said is:
Now, onto acts of so-called revenge OR acts of wrong-doings by Allies and in some of the following quotes, by Russians on German POW's taken from Operation Barbarossa, and i'll quote:

Makes more sense. I was quoting those to make a point, in relation to Bilge_Rat's post.

And with that, i think i have just derailed my own thread.
__________________
"History is the lies that the victors agree on"- Napoleon

LINK TO MY SH 3 MODS
Feuer Frei! is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-15-11, 09:15 PM   #7
August
Wayfaring Stranger
 
August's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 23,216
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0


Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Feuer Frei! View Post
And with that, i think i have just derailed my own thread.

Happens to the best of us!
__________________


Flanked by life and the funeral pyre. Putting on a show for you to see.
August is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-16-11, 10:25 AM   #8
Bilge_Rat
Silent Hunter
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: standing watch...
Posts: 3,856
Downloads: 344
Uploads: 0
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Feuer Frei! View Post
Well, i will have to challenge that because i don't know where you are getting your information from but I constantly see or hear that the Germans committed horrible acts in WW2 and whenever subjects of this nature come up that the German-bashing is rife and alive, has been since the war and still is to this day.
Every person, and i mean every person i have ever entered into a discussion with about the 'role', if you will of Germany in WW2 has been a continual "well, the Germans were all bad, all Germans were Nazis, the Germans and the attrocities they committed were so terrible that... blah blah blah" that it's incredibly difficult to continue a discussion or even attempt to have open-minded or mature points to make to someone.
The point i am making here is that, yes, we know the Germans committed horrible crimes against Humanity, and we know that the Nazis were undeniably and without a doubt wrong in their ideology and their thoughts and actions.
So? And i mean that with the utmost diplomacy here, what i mean by so? is that we know all this, we know this happened, yet we always fall back to this usual rubbish point-making when we speak of anything even remotely that can be considered as questioning what happened in WW2 or questioning the Allies and some of their actions either during the war or post-period.
THAT is what gets me, and to deny that this happens is wrong.
Unfortunately history has been written, we can't change that, what we can change though is our attitudes and learn from history, so that the same mistakes don't happen again.
I think a lot of people still have a problem with letting things go, to continually rub the shame of what the Nazis did in WW2 into the Germans' faces of today.
FF, you are not in a good position to be invoking the victim card. It is entirely appropriate to bring up examples of German actions in WW2 in a discussion about WW2, especially in a case like this where one of the topic you raised in your own thread is about the treatment of German POWs by the Allies.

If you don't want to discuss these issues, maybe you should stick to post-1945 topics.


Quote:
The Victors feel uncomfortable when they are questioned about what they have written down on paper, called History.
The Germans kept meticulous records during WW2. Most of what we know about how many men, women and children were shipped to extermination camps, slave labor camps, POW camps and what happened to them comes from their own records.



Quote:
Grossly distorted? Why? Because you think so? Or it's 'too' unbelievable that this could have happened or that the Allies could have actually done this?
Once again, why is it so bad to question history? Or, in this case, why is it so unbelievable or grossly distorted that this happened?
The wikipedia article is supposed to be about the treatment of German POWs by the western allies, but instead of giving you an overall picture, it relies on certain controversial and contested facts to give the impression that the western allies were systematically abusing German POWs.

I will give you some examples.

First, it starts with a quote by Ambrose which gives the impression that German POWs were routinely shot. Ambrose was talking about situations in the heat of combat where enemy soldiers were killed while trying to surrender or immediately after. I have no doubt this happened on both sides. However, real historians who have looked into the issue have not been able to find evidence that it occurred as frequently as Ambrose claimed. Now, if you are looking at evidence about soldiers who were killed in cold blood, long after they surrendered, all the documented cases are about German troops murdering allied prisoners, for example Malmedy or the murder of canadian POWs by the 12th SS in normandy. Terry Copp, the canadian historian looked into this whole issue in the book "Fields of Fire" on the Canadian Army in normandy and was not able to find any evidence that any German POW was ever murdered by canadian forces.

secondly, the wiki article then moves on to the controversy regarding the treatment of german POWs in germany in 1945-46, which is all based on one book, Baque's "Other Losses" which claimed that up to 1,000,000 POWs died. However, Baque is not an historian, but a novelist. Mainstream historians who have reviewed this issue dispute his findings and have established the death toll at the most at 1% of the 5,600,000 prisoners (i.e. 56,000). The other points, DEF designation and open air camp were temporary mesures which were much more due to the chaotic situation which prevailed in Germany in 1945 than any sinister plan by the Allies.

My point was that the wiki article is not an unbiased review of the treatment of German POWs, but a collection of controversial and disputed facts by someone who is trying to prove that German POWs were mistreated by the Allies, but anyone who has even a cursory knowledge of WW2 history will see that.

I could go on and on, since I have many more examples, (and will be happy to provide them if you wish) but I don't want to be acused of "German Bashing".





Quote:
And with that, i think i have just derailed my own thread.
Happens to all of us.
__________________
Bilge_Rat is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-16-11, 11:10 AM   #9
Feuer Frei!
Navy Seal
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Valhalla
Posts: 5,295
Downloads: 141
Uploads: 17
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Bilge_Rat View Post
FF, you are not in a good position to be invoking the victim card.
I'm not waving the victim card at all here, merely just indicating what usually happens in discussions about WW2 and moreso when the Germans are involved in any sort of way.
Quote:
It is entirely appropriate to bring up examples of German actions in WW2 in a discussion about WW2, especially in a case like this where one of the topic you raised in your own thread is about the treatment of German POWs by the Allies.
Well, appropriate it may have been, i guess i wasn't expecting to be 'served' a volley broadside with an alleged attrocity that the Nazis had committed.
I was merely, like i said in my earlier post, highlighting or strengthening a point in the article in the OP.
I at the time thought it was 'mild' enough in it's intent.
Obviously that wasn't the case.

[QUOTE]If you don't want to discuss these issues, maybe you should stick to post-1945 topics.
__________________
"History is the lies that the victors agree on"- Napoleon

LINK TO MY SH 3 MODS

Last edited by Feuer Frei!; 03-16-11 at 11:21 AM.
Feuer Frei! is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-16-11, 11:46 AM   #10
Bilge_Rat
Silent Hunter
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: standing watch...
Posts: 3,856
Downloads: 344
Uploads: 0
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Feuer Frei! View Post
Well, appropriate it may have been, i guess i wasn't expecting to be 'served' a volley broadside with an alleged attrocity that the Nazis had committed.

well maybe it was overkill, but it does settle an argument quickly.


I am more worried now about the spread of wikipedia, many people see it as gospel, but just looking up various WW2 subjects over the past day, it is amazing what drivel gets put down as fact.
__________________
Bilge_Rat is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:41 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1995- 2025 Subsim®
"Subsim" is a registered trademark, all rights reserved.