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More than one
million seven hundred thousand German
Prisoners of War died from a deliberate policy of extermination
by starvation, exposure, and disease, under direct orders
of the war criminal General Dwight David Eisenhower.
Ike's Open Field German Camps 'Stretched For 10 Kilometers'
In 1945 America and Britain Froze and Starved to Death Over
a Million German POW's And Civilians.
After roughly
5 million German civilians were rounded up and made prisoners
of war in 1944/45 Europe became dotted with huge open-field
barbed wire fenced camps, where these captives were held
like cattle and subjected to the brutal elements of sun,
heat, rain, snow and frost, given ever diminishing rations
as ordered by Eisenhower until more
than one million Germans had perished from hunger
and disease in these open fields.
One month before
the end of World War 2, General Eisenhower issued special
orders concerning the treatment of German Prisoners and
specific in the language of those orders was
this statement:
"Prison
enclosures are to provide no shelter or other comforts."
In Eisenhower's
West Point Military Academy graduating class
yearbook, published in 1915, Eisenhower is identified as
a "terrible Swedish Jew."
Eisenhower biographer
Stephen Ambrose was given access to the Eisenhower personal
letters, states that he proposed to exterminate the entire
German General Staff, thousands of
people, after the war.
Eisenhower, in
his personal letters, did not merely hate the Nazi
Regime, and the few who imposed its will down from the top,
but that HE HATED THE GERMAN PEOPLE AS A RACE. It was his
personal intent to destroy as many of them as he could,
and one way was to wipe out as many prisoners of war as
possible.
Of course, that
was illegal under International law, so he issued an order
on March 10, 1945 and verified by his initials on a cable
of that date, that German Prisoners of War be predesignated
as
"Disarmed Enemy Forces" called in these reports
as DEF. He ordered that these Germans did not fall under
the Geneva Rules, and were not to be fed or given any water
or medical attention. The Swiss Red Cross was not to inspect
the camps, for under the DEF classification, they had no
such authority or jurisdiction.
Months after
the war was officially over, Eisenhower's special German
DEF camps were still in operation forcing the men into confinement,
but denying that they were prisoners. As soon as the war
was over, General George Patton simply turned his prisoners
loose to fend for themselves and find their way home as
best they could. Eisenhower was furious, and issued a specific
order to Patton, to turn these men over to the DEF camps.
The book, OTHER
LOSSES, found its way into the hands of a Canadian news
reporter, Peter Worthington, of the OTTAWA SUN. He did his
own research through contacts he had in Canada, and reported
in his column on September 12,1989
the following,in part:
"...it is
hard to escape the conclusion that Dwight Eisenhower was
a war criminal of epic proportions. His (DEF) policy killed
more Germans in peace than were killed in the European Theater."
"For years
we have blamed the 1.7 million missing German POW's on the
Russians. Until now, no one dug too deeply ... Witnesses
and survivors have been interviewed by the author; one Allied
officer compared the American camps to Buchenwald."
It is known,
that the Allies had sufficient stockpiles of food and
medicine to care for these German soldiers. This was deliberately
and intentionally denied them. Many men died of gangrene
from frostbite due to deliberate exposure. Local German
people who offered these men food, were denied.
General Patton's
Third Army was the only command
in the European Theater to release significant numbers of
Germans.
Others, such
as Omar Bradley and General J.C.H. Lee, Commander of Com
Z, tried, and ordered the release of prisoners within a
week of the war's end. However, a SHAEF Order, signed by
Eisenhower, countermanded them on May 15th.
Veteran Martin
Brech of Mahopac, New York, a semi-retired
professor of philosophy. In 1945, Brech was an 18 year old
Private First Class in Company C of the 14th Infantry, assigned
as a guard and interpreter at the Eisenhower Death Camp
at Andernach, along the Rhine River. He stated: "My
protests (regarding treatment of the German DEF'S) were
met with hostility or indifference, and when I threw our
ample rations to them over the barbed wire. I was threatened,
making it clear that it was our deliberate policy not to
adequately feed them. When they caught me throwing C- Rations
over the fence, they threatened me with imprisonment. One
Captain told me that he would shoot me if he saw me again
tossing food to the Germans ... Some of the men were really
children 13 years of age...Some of the prisoners were old
men drafted by Hitler in his last ditch stand ... I understand
that average weight of the prisoners at Andernach was 90
pounds...I have received threats ... Nevertheless, this...has
liberated me, for I may now be heard when I relate the horrible
atrocity I witnessed as a prison guard for one of 'Ike's
death camps' along the Rhine."
In 1943, Washington not only transferred Col. Eisenhower
to Europe but promoted him over more than 30 more experienced
senior officers to five star general and placed him in charge
of all the US forces in Europe.
Thus it comes
as no surprise that General George Patton, a real Aryan
warrior, hated Eisenhower.
Peter Worthington,
of the OTTAWA SUN. He did his own research through contacts
he had in Canada, and reported in his column on September
12,1989 the following, in part: "...it is hard to escape
the conclusion that Dwight Eisenhower was a war criminal
of epic proportions. His policy killed more Germans in peace
than were killed in the European Theater."
Eisenhower's
Holocaust Slaughtered 1.7 Million Germans.
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