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Scapegoating Germany
In the interview below James Bacque discusses his research into the fate of the many millions of German citizens who died or went missing due to intentional starvation after the end of World War Two. This is described in detail in his second book on post-war Germany, Crimes and Mercies; The Fate of German Civilians Under Allied Occupation 1944 to 1950. The book covers the Potsdam Protocol, the formal declaration of intent to destroy Germans and Germany; the forced expulsion of 15 million Germans, becoming starving, penniless refugees from their ancestral lands in Germany’s eastern provinces; Germany’s loss of one third of her pre-war territory; the Marshall Plan fraud; the efforts of Herbert Hoover and others to stave off famine; Britain plotting the destruction of Germany since 1895; human rights denied to all Germans.
Audio Recording
Transcript
Hoover said six million died, and I believe him. I think he’s right. And that was at the point of around 1947 or 1948, I think, and millions more went on dying after that. You know, when you start to feed a person who’s been starving, he doesn’t get better right away; he’s maybe got a disease and then he goes down. So that’s a minimum figure, six million Germans dead after the war, plus two million prisoners of war and beyond that, well, who knows? I think millions. I think the total of Germans killed by Allied action after the war was around 10 to 14 million, somewhere in there.
I’m Bonnie Faulkner. Today on Guns and Butter: James Bacque. Today’s show: “Scapegoating Germany.”
James Bacque is a Canadian writer and researcher, a former journalist, book editor and publisher, and is well known for his books on the history of post-war Germany. His best sellers, Other Losses and Crimes and Mercies, have revealed atrocities committed by the Allies against German POWs and civilians after World War Two. Today we have an in-depth discussion of one of his most famous books, Crimes and Mercies: The Fate of German Civilians Under Allied Occupation, 1944 to 1950. We discuss the intentional starvation of millions of German civilians by the Allied Occupation, the destruction of German industrial production, the forced expulsion of 15 million Germans from Germany’s eastern provinces, and the heroic work of Herbert Hoover and others to stave off massive famine worldwide.
* * * * *Bonnie Faulkner: Jim Bacque, welcome back.
James Bacque: Thank you very much, Bonnie.
Bonnie Faulkner: I’ve just read your Crimes and Mercies: The Fate of German Civilians Under Allied Occupation, 1944 to 1950, published in 2007. Crimes and Mercies is a follow up to Other Losses that documented the crimes committed against German prisoners of war by American occupation forces. How would you characterize American treatment of German civilians after World War Two ended in 1945?
James Bacque: Unbelievable, and I hardly could believe it myself when I first started finding out. When I was living in France in 1988 and ’89, I was doing research in a book about the French Résistance, or resistance, and in the research for that book, I encountered a couple of guys who had been German prisoners in a French camp. They told me of the horrors of the French camp, where they were almost starved to death and that the Americans were doing the same thing. And I didn’t believe it, because I grew up during the war, in Canada, and you Americans were my Allies. I just could not believe that these Germans had been starved to death, because I knew that everybody treats a prisoner of war fairly because of the Geneva Convention, and how could the Americans have done this? But they did.
So when I confirmed that, I was on the edge of writing my first book, Other Losses, and then when I was doing the research for that I found that the Allied policy towards Germany was double: We wanted to kill them off after the war. We killed more people by Allied action after the war than died during the war. That’s really hard to believe, but it’s quite true. But the Americans and the Canadians together changed that policy while it was in force with one part of the government and the army, another part of our societies, the churches and normal people and so on, charities, the Red Cross stepped in to feed the people that we were deliberately starving.
Bonnie Faulkner: You write that the whole nation of Germany was converted into a starvation prison.
James Bacque: Yes.
Bonnie Faulkner: Seven million civilians died after the war in addition to one-and-a-half million German prisoners of war. Could you describe some of the circumstances that German civilians found themselves in, in the immediate aftermath of World War II?
James Bacque: Oh. Well, of course, their cities had been bombed and set on fire, and all of their young men and middle-aged men were flung into camps to die in starvation conditions. They didn’t have a roof over their head, and so disease spread all over the place and they died in their millions. Eisenhower sent out an order on May the 7th, 1945, from his headquarters in Frankfurt, telling all German civilians through their remaining little bits of government like municipal and metropolitan governments, telling those Germans that it was a crime now, under the American occupation to gather food together for the purpose of taking it to the prisoners in the camps. So not only were the prisoners in the camps starving and the civilians starving, but they were forbidden to help each other, and of course they died in their millions – as I say, more after the war than during the war. Who could believe that? But there it is.
Bonnie Faulkner: There are heartbreaking descriptions in your book about how German women and children were living in dark, flooded basements under heaps of rubble without any food. For how long did these conditions continue?
James Bacque: They were worse in the cities than elsewhere. They were, of course, not so bad in farming country because the bombs were concentrated on cities and factories and so it’s really hard to say, but the worst conditions in Germany lasted from late 1945 through 1946 to about 1949. So there were three years when people were starving to death and being exposed to death. When I say exposed to death I mean rain on their heads.
Bonnie Faulkner: Wasn’t there a prevention by the US forces to not even allow charity packages to go into Germany?
James Bacque: Yes, that’s right. Eisenhower turned back trainloads of food that the Red Cross got in to Germany, and he said, “No, they can’t have it.” And so the food which had been collected in parts of Europe and Canada was sent back. So much food was sent back that they apologized to the government of France under General Charles de Gaulle, apologized to them for using up so much rolling stock and time on the tracks. In the meantime, of course, people for whom that food had been destined starved to death. It was a deliberate policy of the US Army implemented by Eisenhower with the approval of Roosevelt, and he was pretty much under the thumb of Henry C. Morgenthau, who was the Secretary of the Treasury.
Bonnie Faulkner: Could you talk about what the Morgenthau Plan consisted of? Now, this plan, which was publicly so-called canceled, was actually integrated into the JCS-1067 policy for post-war Germany.
James Bacque: That’s right.
Bonnie Faulkner: What was in the Morgenthau plan? What was the plan?
James Bacque: To kill as many Germans as they could get away with, without notice; in other words, to do in the German people, to commit genocide against Germany, if they could get away with it. And if the press noticed or the Congress, which it did, then they would stop and slow down a bit. They succeeded very largely in destroying Germany. There was hardly any Germany left in 1960 to ‘65 and the only Germany that was left, was hardworking slaves, who were being run by the capitalist organizations of the UK and the USA and the communists in Russia.
Bonnie Faulkner: You mention General Charles de Gaulle in your book. Did Charles de Gaulle play any role with regard to the starvation of Germans?
James Bacque: Oh, yes, of course. When the prisoners were taken into the French camps – many of them delivered by the Americans, against the Geneva Convention; you weren’t allowed to transfer prisoners against their will – when that was happening, Charles de Gaulle was premier of France, begging for German slaves, which he put to work in France, and they died in large numbers, about a quarter of a million of them.
Bonnie Faulkner: According to your book Britain, Canada and the US outfitted the USSR with all of their military equipment and food. The USSR was still being helped by the West in 1948. Why was Germany seen as a greater threat than the Soviet Union?
James Bacque: Well, in the first place, you’re not quite correct about the supply of armaments and so forth to the Soviets.&nb