• See below where food was available for Soviet POW’s and it was refused and the prisoners allowed to die.

    Reich Ministry for the occupied Eastern territories report on Prisoners of War dated 28 Feb 1942,

    _**with a certain amount of understanding for goals aimed at by German politics, dying and deterioration could have been avoided in the extent described. For instance, according to information on hand, the native population within the Soviet Union are absolutely willing to put food at the disposal of the prisoners of war. Several understanding camp commanders have successfully chosen this course. However in the majority of the cases, the camp commanders have forbidden the civilian population to put food at the disposal of the prisoners, and they have rather let them starve to death……

    Finally, the shooting of prisoners of war must be mentioned ; these were partly carried out according to viewpoints which ignore all political understanding. For instance, in various camps, all the “Asiatics” were shot, although the inhabitants of the areas, considered belonging to Asia, of Transcaucasia and Turkestan especially, are among those people in the Soviet Union who are most strongly opposed to Russian subjugation and to Bolshevism. The Reich ministry of the occupied Eastern territories has repeatedly emphasized these abuses. However, in November for instance, a detail [Kommando] appeared in a prisoner of war camp in Nikolajew, which wanted to liquidate all Asiatics……

     **_


  • From:
    Christian Gerlach, Kalkulierte Morde, Die deutsche Wirtschafts- und Vernichtungspolitik in Weißrußland 1941-1944
    (Calculated murders The German economic and political destruction in Belarus 1941-1944)

    http://www.perlentaucher.de/buch/christian-gerlach/kalkulierte-morde.html

    According to the reports and eyewitness testimonials the murders on marches and transports increased in a well nigh incredible manner in the autumn and winter of 1941. This was especially obvious in the city of Minsk. After a transport in January 1942 alone 1,000 to 2,000 corpses of prisoners are said to have lain in the Minsk main street Sovietskaja. That 80 out of 8,000 men were shot between Masjukovshtchina and the Minsk freight train station was nothing unusual. For instance, German soldiers of Home Infantry Battalion 332 indicted by the Soviets stated that once on 3 October 1941 31 men and once in November 200 men, at other times between 100 and 500 men, had been murdered especially on the way to the secondary camp at the Pushkin barracks in the northeast of Minsk. And this happened on a relatively short trip – on overland marches in Belorussia things were no different, only harder to document. During a march of 3,000 Soviet prisoners of war from Bobruisk in the direction of Sluzk on 7 November 1941, according to a witness who went after the column in a horse cart and counted the bodies, 729 men were shot – then the march was cancelled, and the column had to turn back. Whether in Minsk alone a total of 5,000 or 20,000 prisoners were shot in such actions, as becomes apparent from various eyewitness testimonials, can no longer be clarified.


  • @Lazarus:

    Yes in the Kingdom of the one eyed all the actions of Hitler are excusable.
    You should read up  more on the experience  Allied troops crossing from Holland into Germany when pursuing fleeing Germans. They  were amazed at the contrast between the food available once the border was crossed.
    The Germans were found to have meat and preserved food in abundance whilst the rest of Europe was strictly rationed.
    Simply put they had looted the whole of the continent to make sure their own population was well fed and they cared nothing that  everyone else starved.
    One can picture poor Adolf weeping at the news Soviet POW’s were dying. He was probably as shocked at this news as he was to learn someone had been murdering the Jews without his authority!
    An unreconstructed Nazi apologist is always going to try and find ways to shift the blame. Unfortunately outside of Stormfront he is peeing into the wind.

    I have already presented a serious, historical account of Germany’s food situation. You are attempting to confuse that issue, without adding anything of substance to what the historian has written. Your main “contribution” with your post seems to be the implication that Germany should be blamed for preventing starvation and malnutrition among its own people, and for maintaining the food reserves necessary to survive a Northern European winter. Once again, you are wasting everyone’s time.


  • @Lazarus:

    From:
    Christian Gerlach, Kalkulierte Morde, Die deutsche Wirtschafts- und Vernichtungspolitik in Weißrußland 1941-1944
    (Calculated murders The German economic and political destruction in Belarus 1941-1944)

    http://www.perlentaucher.de/buch/christian-gerlach/kalkulierte-morde.html

    According to the reports and eyewitness testimonials the murders on marches and transports increased in a well nigh incredible manner in the autumn and winter of 1941. This was especially obvious in the city of Minsk. After a transport in January 1942 alone 1,000 to 2,000 corpses of prisoners are said to have lain in the Minsk main street Sovietskaja. That 80 out of 8,000 men were shot between Masjukovshtchina and the Minsk freight train station was nothing unusual. For instance, German soldiers of Home Infantry Battalion 332 indicted by the Soviets stated that once on 3 October 1941 31 men and once in November 200 men, at other times between 100 and 500 men, had been murdered especially on the way to the secondary camp at the Pushkin barracks in the northeast of Minsk. And this happened on a relatively short trip – on overland marches in Belorussia things were no different, only harder to document. During a march of 3,000 Soviet prisoners of war from Bobruisk in the direction of Sluzk on 7 November 1941, according to a witness who went after the column in a horse cart and counted the bodies, 729 men were shot – then the march was cancelled, and the column had to turn back. Whether in Minsk alone a total of 5,000 or 20,000 prisoners were shot in such actions, as becomes apparent from various eyewitness testimonials, can no longer be clarified.

    From the Wikipedia article about Christian Gerlach:


    According to Gerlach, the resistance offered by officers such as Claus von Stauffenberg and Henning von Tresckow, who were responsible for the famous assassination attempt on Hitler on 20 July 1944, was insincere, and in fact- Tresckow and many other resistance fighters were heavily implicated in national socialist war crimes [7] However, Gerlach’s thesis was severely criticized by a number of scholars . . . Recently, Danny Orbach, a Harvard based historian and PhD candidate, had argued that Gerlach’s reading of the sources is highly skewed, and at times- diametrically opposed to what they really say. In one case, according to Orbach, Gerlach had falsely paraphrased the memoir of the resistance fighter Colonel Rudolf Christoph Freiherr von Gersdorff, and in another case, quoted misleadingly from an SS document. Hence, Orbach concludes that Gerlach’s thesis on the German resistance is highly unreliable. [9].


    Based on the above, my first impression is that Gerlach has swallowed Allied propaganda hook, line, and sinker. And has distorted evidence to make Germany look as bad as possible. (By attempting to discredit the German resistance.) And has devoted his whole career to wallowing in a sense of collective German guilt.

    The German occupation of the Soviet Union was harsh. But that harshness should be discussed objectively. You very clearly have an ax to grind, and the same also appears to be true of Gerlach.


  • So your defence is to attack the author?
    I have to smile when I see your  usual tactic of  repasting whole pages of Wiki and believing it is a credible source!

    I note you  ignore the official German document that clearly says:

    the native population within the Soviet Union are absolutely willing to put food at the disposal of the prisoners of war. Several understanding camp commanders have successfully chosen this course. However in the majority of the cases, the camp commanders have forbidden the civilian population to put food at the disposal of the prisoners, and they have rather let them starve to death……

    Perhaps you should continue to scour Wiki in the hope it might provide you with an answer ?


  • @KurtGodel7:

    Your main “contribution” with your post seems to be the implication that Germany should be blamed for preventing starvation and malnutrition among its own people, and for maintaining the food reserves necessary to survive a Northern European winter. Once again, you are wasting everyone’s time.

    Nothing could better illustrate your complete lack of credibility than the above.
    For your information any country who invades another has a legal duty to make sure the  captured citizens have adequate food supplies.
    It also shows how you continue to distort the reality I posted .
    In 1941  when millions of Soviet POW’s were starving and the local population offered to provoide food (because there was no shortage) the camp commanders refused the help and deliberately and criminaly allowed the prisoners to starve.
    Your excuses are pathetic and don’t even make sense.


  • And yet again Kurt turned another thread into book reports dealing with German policies of killing opposition/ Holocaust/ Extermination program.

    Another thread closed because it now has nothing to do with the French holding out in 1940.

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