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Allied-occupied Germany

The entirety of Germany was military occupied by the Allies from the Berlin Declaration on 5 June 1945 to the establishment of the West Germany on 23 May 1949. After Nazi Germany (1933–1945) of the German Reich (1871–1945) surrendered to the Allies and collapsed on 8 May 1945, the four countries representing the Allies (United States, United Kingdom, Soviet Union, and France) asserted joint authority and sovereignty with the Allied Control Council (ACC) at the 1945 Berlin Declaration. At first, defining Allied-occupied Germany as all territories (1922–1938) of the former German Reich before the Nazi annexing of Austria and later at the 1945 Potsdam Conference of the Allies themselves, the Potsdam Agreement on 1 August decided the new eastern German border by giving Poland and the Soviet Union all regions of Germany east of the Oder–Neisse line (eastern parts of Pomerania, Neumark, Posen-West Prussia, East-Prussia & almost Silesia) and divided the remaining "Germany as a whole" into the four occupation zones for administrative purposes under the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and the Soviet Union.[2] Although the three of Allies (United States, United Kingdom, and Soviet Union) agreed about the occupation, division, and border of Germany in the 1943 Tehran Conference in Iran before, the four occupied zones located in Germany were only agreed by the three Allies at the February 1945 Yalta Conference.

Germany
Deutschland (German)
1945–1949
Anthem: Trizonesien-Song (unofficial, popular replacement anthem in sporting events)[1]
Germany from 1 August 1945 to 23 May 1949
  French occupation zone
  British occupation zone[a]

  American occupation zone
  Soviet occupation zone[b]
StatusMilitary occupation
Capital
Common languages
Governors (1945) 
• British zone
Bernard Montgomery
• American zone
Dwight D. Eisenhower
• French zone
Jean d.L. de Tassigny
• Soviet zone
Georgy Zhukov
Historical eraCold War
8 May 1945
5 June 1945
16 February 1946
23 May 1949
7 October 1949
15 March 1991
Population
• 1945
64,260,000
• 1949
68,080,000
Currency
  1. Became a state of the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) by joining it on 1 January 1957, not recognized by all four Allied powers.
  2. Reunited Germany by joining the Federal Republic of Germany on 3 October 1990.
  3. German reunification took place on 3 October 1990.
  4. The western Allied zones of Germany and the western sectors of Berlin (de facto).
  5. The Soviet zone of Germany and sector of Berlin.

The four sectors and exclaves of Berlin

All territories annexed by Germany before the war from Austria and Czechoslovakia were returned to these countries. The Memel Territory, annexed by Germany from Lithuania before the war, was annexed by the Soviet Union in 1945 and transferred to the Lithuanian SSR. All territories annexed by Germany during the war from Belgium, France, Italy, Luxembourg, Poland and Yugoslavia were returned to their respective countries.

Deviating from the occupation zones planned according to the London Protocol in 1944, at Potsdam, the United States, United Kingdom and the Soviet Union approved the detachment from Germany of the territories east of the Oder–Neisse line, with the exact line of the boundary to be determined in a final German peace treaty. This treaty was expected to confirm the shifting westward of Poland's borders, as the United Kingdom and United States committed themselves to support the permanent incorporation of eastern Germany into Poland and the Soviet Union. From March 1945 to July 1945, these former eastern territories of Germany had been administered under Soviet military occupation authorities, but following the Potsdam Conference they were handed over to Soviet and Polish civilian administrations and ceased to constitute part of Allied-occupied Germany.

In the closing weeks of fighting in Europe, United States forces had pushed beyond the agreed boundaries for the future zones of occupation, in some places by as much as 320 km (200 miles). The so-called line of contact between Soviet and U.S. forces at the end of hostilities, mostly lying eastward of the July 1945-established inner German border, was temporary. After two months in which they had held areas that had been assigned to the Soviet zone, U.S. forces withdrew in the first days of July 1945.[3] Some have concluded that this was a crucial move that persuaded the Soviet Union to allow American, British and French forces into their designated sectors in Berlin, which occurred at roughly the same time, although the need for intelligence gathering (Operation Paperclip) may also have been a factor.[4] On 20 March 1948, the Soviets withdrew from the Allied Control Council; later leading to the establishment of the two German states in East and West both in 1949.

Occupation zones

 
Allied zones of occupation in post-war Germany, highlighting the Soviet zone (red), the inner German border (black line), and the zone from which American troops withdrew in July 1945 (purple). The provincial boundaries correspond largely to those of the pre-war states, before the creation of the present Länder (federal states).

American Zone

The American zone in Southern Germany consisted of Bavaria (without the Rhine Palatinate Region and the Lindau District, both part of the French zone) and Hesse (without Rhenish Hesse and Montabaur Region, both part of the French zone) with a new capital in Wiesbaden, and of northern parts of Württemberg and Baden. Those formed Württemberg-Baden and became northern portions of the present-day German state of Baden-Württemberg founded in 1952.

The ports of Bremen (on the lower Weser River) and Bremerhaven (at the Weser estuary of the North Sea) were also placed under U.S. control because of the U.S. request to have certain toeholds in Northern Germany. At the end of October 1946, the American Zone had a population of:

  • Bavaria 8.7 million
  • Hesse 3.97 million
  • Württemberg-Baden 3.6 million
  • Bremen 0.48 million[5]

The headquarters of the American military government was the former IG Farben Building in Frankfurt am Main.

Following the complete closure of all Nazi German media, the launch and operation of completely new newspaper titles began by licensing carefully selected Germans as publishers. Licenses were granted to Germans not involved in Nazi propaganda to establish those newspapers, including Frankfurter Rundschau (August 1945), Der Tagesspiegel (Berlin; September 1945), and Süddeutsche Zeitung (Munich; October 1945). Radio stations were run by the military government. Later, Radio Frankfurt, Radio München (Munich) and Radio Stuttgart gave way for the Hessischer Rundfunk, Bayerischer Rundfunk, and Süddeutscher Rundfunk, respectively. The RIAS in West-Berlin remained a radio station under U.S. control.

British Zone

By May 1945 the British and Canadian Armies had liberated the Netherlands and had conquered Northern Germany. The Canadian forces went home following the German surrender, leaving Northern Germany to be occupied by the British.

The British Army of the Rhine was formed on 25 August 1945 from the British Liberation Army.[6]

In July the British withdrew from Mecklenburg's capital Schwerin which they had taken over from the Americans a few weeks before, as it had previously been agreed to be occupied by the Soviet Army. The Control Commission for Germany (British Element) (CCG/BE) ceded more slices of its area of occupation to the Soviet Union – specifically the Amt Neuhaus of Hanover and some exclaves and fringes of Brunswick, for example the County of Blankenburg, and exchanged some villages between British Holstein and Soviet Mecklenburg under the Barber-Lyashchenko Agreement.

Within the British Zone of Occupation, the CCG/BE re-established the city of Hamburg as a German state, but with borders that had been drawn by the Nazi government in 1937. The British also created the new German states of:

Also in 1947, the American Zone of Occupation being inland had no port facilities – thus the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen and Bremerhaven became exclaves within the British Zone.

At the end of October 1946, the British Zone had a population of:

  • North Rhine-Westphalia 11.7 million
  • Lower Saxony 6.2 million
  • Schleswig-Holstein 2.6 million
  • Hamburg 1.4 million[5]

The British headquarters were originally based in Bad Oeynhausen from 1946, but in 1954 it was moved to Mönchengladbach where it was known as JHQ Rheindahlen.

Another special feature of the British zone was the Enclave of Bonn. It was created in July 1949 and was not under British or any other allied control. Instead it was under the control of the Allied High Commission. In June 1950, Ivone Kirkpatrick became the British High Commissioner for Germany. Kirkpatrick carried immense responsibility particularly with respect to the negotiation of the Bonn–Paris conventions during 1951–1952, which terminated the occupation and prepared the way for the rearmament of West Germany.

Belgian, Polish and Norwegian Zones

Army units from other countries were stationed within the British occupation zone. The Belgians were allocated a territory which was garrisoned by their troops.[7] The zone formed a 200 kilometres (120 mi) strip from the Belgian-German border at the south of the British zone, and included the important cities of Cologne and Aachen. The Belgian army of occupation in Germany (known as the Belgian Forces in Germany from 1951) became autonomous in 1946 under the command, initially, of Jean-Baptiste Piron.[8] Belgian soldiers remained in Germany until 31 December 2005.[9]

Polish units mainly from 1st Armoured Division were stationed in the northern area of the district of Emsland as well as in the areas of Oldenburg and Leer.[citation needed] This region bordered the Netherlands and covered an area of 6,500 km2, and was originally intended to serve as a collection and dispersal territory for the millions of Polish displaced persons in Germany and western Europe after the war.[citation needed] Early British proposals for this to form the basis of a formal Polish Zone of Occupation, were however, soon abandoned due to Soviet opposition. The zone had a large camp constructed largely for displaced persons and was administered by the Polish government in exile. The administrative centre of the Polish occupation zone was the city of Haren the German population of which was temporarily removed. The city was renamed Maczków (after Stanisław Maczek) from 1945 to 1947. Once the British recognised the pro-Soviet government in Poland, and withdrew recognition from the London-based Polish government in exile, the Emsland zone became more of an embarrassment. Polish units within the British Army were demobilised in June 1947. The expelled German populations were allowed to return and the last Polish residents left in 1948.[citation needed]

In 1946, the Norwegian Brigade Group in Germany had 4,000 soldiers in Hanover; amongst whom was future Chancellor Willy Brandt (then a Norwegian citizen) as press attaché.

French Zone

 
French forces in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, 1946

The French Republic was at first not granted an occupation zone in Germany, but the British and American governments later agreed to cede some western parts of their zones of occupation to the French Army.[10] In April and May 1945, the French 1st Army had captured Karlsruhe and Stuttgart, and conquered a territory extending to Hitler's Eagle's Nest and the westernmost part of Austria. In July, the French relinquished Stuttgart to the Americans, and in exchange were given control over cities west of the Rhine such as Mainz and Koblenz.[11] All this resulted in two barely contiguous areas of Germany along the French border which met at just a single point along the River Rhine. Three German states (Land) were established: Rheinland Pfalz in the North and West and on the other hand Württemberg-Hohenzollern and South Baden, who later formed Baden-Württemberg together with Württemberg-Baden of the American Zone.[12]

The French Zone of Occupation included the Saargebiet, which was disentangled from it on 16 February 1946. By 18 December 1946 customs controls were established between the Saar area and Allied-occupied Germany. The French zone ceded further areas adjacent to the Saar (in mid-1946, early 1947, and early 1949). Included in the French zone was the town of Büsingen am Hochrhein, a German exclave separated from the rest of the country by a narrow strip of neutral Swiss territory. The Swiss government agreed to allow limited numbers of French troops to pass through its territory in order to maintain law and order in Büsingen.

At the end of October 1946, the French Zone had a population of:

  • Rheinland Pfalz 2.7 million
  • Baden (South Baden) 1.2 million
  • Württemberg-Hohenzollern 1.05 million

(The Saar Protectorate had a further 0.8 million)[5]

Luxembourg zone

From November 1945, Luxembourg was allocated a zone within the French sector.[13] The Luxembourg 2nd Infantry Battalion was garrisoned in Bitburg and the 1st Battalion was sent to Saarburg.[13] The final Luxembourg forces in Germany, in Bitburg, left in 1955.[13]

Soviet Zone

 
Pink: portions of Germany east of the Oder–Neisse line attached to Poland (except for northerly East Prussia and the adjoining Memel Territory, not shown here, which were joined directly to the Soviet Union). Red: the Soviet Occupation zone of Germany.

The Soviet occupation zone incorporated Thuringia, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, Brandenburg and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. The Soviet Military Administration in Germany was headquartered in Berlin-Karlshorst.

At the end of October 1946, the Soviet Zone had a population of:

  • Saxony: 5.5 million
  • Saxony-Anhalt 4.1 million
  • Thuringia 2.9 million
  • Brandenburg 2.5 million
  • Mecklenburg 2.1 million[5]

Berlin

While located wholly within the Soviet zone, because of its symbolic importance as the nation's capital and seat of the former Nazi government, the city of Berlin was jointly occupied by the Allied powers and subdivided into four sectors. All four occupying powers were entitled to privileges throughout Berlin that were not extended to the rest of Germany – this included the Soviet sector of Berlin, which was legally separate from the rest of the Soviet zone.

At the end of October 1946, Berlin had a population of:

  • Western sectors 2.0 million
  • Soviet sector 1.1 million[5]

Lost territory

In 1945 Germany east of the Oder–Neisse line was assigned to Poland by the Potsdam Conference to be "temporarily administered" pending the Final Peace Treaty on Germany; eventually (under the September 1990 Peace Treaty) the northern portion of East Prussia became the Kaliningrad Oblast within the Soviet Union (today Russian Federation). A small area west of the Oder, near Szczecin, also fell to Poland. Most German citizens residing in these areas were subsequently expropriated and expelled. Returning refugees, who had fled from war hostilities, were denied return.

Population

In October 1946, the population of the various zones and sectors was as follows:[5]

State, sector, or other territory Zone Population
Bavaria American 8.7 million
Hesse American 3.97 million
Württemberg-Baden American 3.6 million
Bremen American 0.48 million
North Rhine-Westphalia British 11.7 million
Lower Saxony British 6.2 million
Schleswig-Holstein British 2.6 million
Hamburg British 1.4 million
Rhineland-Palatinate French 2.7 million
South Baden French 1.2 million
Württemberg-Hohenzollern French 1.05 million
Saxony Soviet 5.5 million
Saxony-Anhalt Soviet 4.1 million
Thuringia Soviet 2.9 million
Brandenburg Soviet 2.5 million
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Soviet 2.1 million
Berlin (western sectors) American, British, French 2.0 million
Berlin (Soviet sector) Soviet 1.1 million

Governance and the emergence of two German states

The original Allied plan to govern Germany as a single unit through the Allied Control Council de facto broke down on 20 March 1948 (restored on 3 September 1971) in the context of growing tensions between the Allies, with Britain and the US wishing cooperation, France obstructing any collaboration in order to partition Germany into many independent states, and especially: the Soviet Union unilaterally implementing from early on elements of a Marxist political-economic system (enforced redistribution of land, nationalisation of businesses). Another dispute was the absorption of post-war expellees. While the UK, the US and the Soviet Union had agreed to accept, house and feed about six million expelled German citizens from former eastern Germany and four million expelled and denaturalised Czechoslovaks, Poles, Hungarians and Yugoslavs of German ethnicity in their zones, France generally had not agreed to the expulsions approved by the Potsdam agreement (a decision made without input from France). Therefore, France strictly refused to absorb war refugees who were denied return to their homes in seized eastern German territories or destitute post-war expellees who had been expropriated there, into the French zone, let alone into the separated Saar protectorate.[14] However, the native population, returning after Nazi-imposed removals (e.g., political and Jewish refugees) and war-related relocations (e.g., evacuation from air raids), were allowed to return home in the areas under French control. The other Allies complained that they had to shoulder the burden to feed, house and clothe the expellees who had to leave their belongings behind.

In practice, each of the four occupying powers wielded government authority in their respective zones and carried out different policies toward the population and local and state governments there. A uniform administration of the western zones evolved, known first as the Bizone (the American and British zones merged as of 1 January 1947) and later the Trizone (after inclusion of the French zone). The complete breakdown of east–west allied cooperation and joint administration in Germany became clear with the Soviet imposition of the Berlin Blockade that was enforced from June 1948 to May 1949. The three western zones were merged to form the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) i.e. West Germany in May 1949, and after that the Soviets followed suit in October 1949 with the establishment of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) i.e. East Germany.

In the west, the occupation continued until 5 May 1955, when the General Treaty (German: Deutschlandvertrag) entered into force. However, upon the creation of the Federal Republic in May 1949, the military governors were replaced by civilian high commissioners, whose powers lay somewhere between those of a governor and those of an ambassador. When the Deutschlandvertrag became law, the occupation ended, the western occupation zones ceased to exist, and the high commissioners were replaced by normal ambassadors. West Germany was also allowed to build a military, and the Bundeswehr, or Federal Defense Force, was established on 12 November 1955.

A similar situation occurred in East Germany. The GDR was founded on 7 October 1949. On 10 October the Soviet Military Administration in Germany was replaced by the Soviet Control Commission, although limited sovereignty was not granted to the GDR government until 11 November 1949. After the death of Joseph Stalin in March 1953, the Soviet Control Commission was replaced with the office of the Soviet High Commissioner on 28 May 1953. This office was abolished (and replaced by an ambassador) and (general) sovereignty was granted to the GDR, when the Soviet Union concluded a state treaty (Staatsvertrag) with the GDR on 20 September 1955. On 1 March 1956, the GDR established a military, the National People's Army (NVA).

Despite the grants of general sovereignty to both German states in 1955, full and unrestricted sovereignty under international law was not enjoyed by any German government until after the reunification of Germany in October 1990. Though West Germany was effectively independent, the western Allies maintained limited legal jurisdiction over 'Germany as a whole' in respect of West Germany and Berlin. At the same time, East Germany progressed from being a satellite state of the Soviet Union to increasing independence of action; while still deferring in matters of security to Soviet authority. The provisions of the Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany, also known as the "Two-plus-Four Treaty", granting full sovereign powers to Germany did not become law until 15 March 1991, after all of the participating governments had ratified the treaty. As envisaged by the Treaty, the last occupation troops departed from Germany when the Russian presence was terminated in 1994, although the Belgian Forces in Germany stayed in German territory until the end of 2005.

A 1956 plebiscite ended the French administration of the Saar protectorate, and it joined the Federal Republic as Saarland on 1 January 1957, becoming its tenth state.

The city of Berlin was not part of either state and de jure continued to be under Allied occupation of the four countries until the reunification of Germany in October 1990. For administrative purposes, the three western sectors of Berlin were merged into the entity of West Berlin being de facto part of the FRG. The Soviet sector became known as East Berlin and while not recognised by the Western powers as a part of East Germany, the GDR declared it its capital (Hauptstadt der DDR).

Occupation policy

 
American propaganda poster using images of concentration camp victims to warn against "fraternization"

At the end of the war, General Eisenhower issued a non-fraternization policy to troops under his command in occupied Germany. This policy was relaxed in stages. By June 1945 the prohibition on speaking with German children was made less strict. In July it became possible to speak to German adults in certain circumstances. In September the policy was completely dropped in Austria and Germany.

Nevertheless, due to the large numbers of Disarmed Enemy Forces being held in Rheinwiesenlagers throughout western Germany, the Americans and the British – not the Soviets – used armed units of Feldgendarmerie to maintain control and discipline in the camps. In June 1946, these German military police units became the last Wehrmacht troops to surrender their arms to the western powers.

By December 1945, over 100,000 German civilians were interned as security threats and for possible trial and sentencing as members of criminal organisations.

The food situation in occupied Germany was initially very dire. By the spring of 1946 the official ration in the American zone was no more than 1,275 calories (5,330 kJ) per day, with some areas probably receiving as little as 700 calories (2,900 kJ) per day. In the British zone the food situation was dire, as found during a visit by the British (and Jewish) publisher Victor Gollancz in October and November 1946. In Düsseldorf the normal 28-day allocation should have been 1,548 calories (6,480 kJ) including 10 kilograms (22 lb) of bread, but as there was limited grain the bread ration was only 8.5 kilograms (19 lb). However, as there was only sufficient bread for about 50% of this "called up" ration, the total deficiency was about 50%, not 15% as stated in a ministerial reply in the British Parliament on 11 December. So only about 770 calories (3,200 kJ) would have been supplied, and he said the German winter ration would be 1,000 calories (4,200 kJ) as the recent increase was "largely mythical". His book includes photos taken on the visit and critical letters and newspaper articles by him published in several British newspapers; The Times, the Daily Herald, the Manchester Guardian, etc.[15]

Some occupation soldiers took advantage of the desperate food situation by exploiting their ample supply of food and cigarettes (the currency of the black market) to get to the local German girls as what became known as frau bait (The New York Times, 25 June 1945). Some soldiers still felt the girls were the enemy, but used them for sex nevertheless.[16]

The often destitute mothers of the resulting children usually received no child support. In the earliest stages of the occupation, U.S. soldiers were not allowed to pay maintenance for a child they admitted having fathered, since to do so was considered "aiding the enemy". Marriages between white U.S. soldiers and Austrian women were not permitted until January 1946, and with German women until December 1946.[16]

The children of African-American soldiers, commonly called Negermischlinge[17] ("Negro half-breeds"), comprising about three percent of the total number of children fathered by GIs, were particularly disadvantaged because of their inability to conceal the foreign identity of their father. For many white U.S. soldiers of this era, miscegenation even with an "enemy" white population was regarded as an intolerable outrage. African-American soldiers were therefore reluctant to admit to fathering such children since this would invite reprisals and even accusations of rape, a crime which was much more aggressively prosecuted by military authorities against African-Americans compared with Caucasian soldiers, much more likely to result in a conviction by court-martial (in part because a German woman was both less likely to acknowledge consensual sexual relations with an African-American and more likely to be believed if she alleged rape against an African-American) and which carried a potential death sentence. Even in the rare cases where an African-American soldier was willing to take responsibility for fathering a child, until 1948 the U.S. Army prohibited interracial marriages.[17] The mothers of the children would often face particularly harsh ostracism.[18]

Between 1950 and 1955, the Allied High Commission for Germany prohibited "proceedings to establish paternity or liability for maintenance of children."[17] Even after the lifting of the ban West German courts had little power over American soldiers.

In general, the British authorities were less strict than the Americans about fraternisation, whereas the French and Soviet authorities were more strict.

While Allied servicemen were ordered to obey local laws while in Germany, soldiers could not be prosecuted by German courts for crimes committed against German citizens except as authorised by the occupation authorities. Invariably, when a soldier was accused of criminal behaviour the occupation authorities preferred to handle the matter within the military justice system. This sometimes led to harsher punishments than would have been available under German law – in particular, U.S. servicemen could be executed if court-martialed and convicted of rape.[18] See United States v. Private First Class John A. Bennett, 7 C.M.A. 97, 21 C.M.R. 223 (1956).

Insurgency

The last Allied war advances into Germany and Allied occupation plans were affected by rumors of the Nazi Werwolf plan for insurgency, and successful Nazi deception about plans to withdraw forces to the Alpenfestung redoubt. This base was to be used to conduct guerrilla warfare, but the rumours turned out to be false. No Allied deaths can be reliably attributed to any Nazi insurgency.[19]

Expulsion policy

The Potsdam conference, where the victorious Allies drew up plans for the future of Germany, noted in article XIII of the Potsdam Agreement on 1 August 1945 that "the transfer to Germany of German populations...in Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary will have to be undertaken"; "wild expulsion" was already going on.

Hungary, which had been allied with Germany and whose population was opposed to an expulsion of the German minority, tried to resist the transfer. Hungary had to yield to the pressure exerted mainly by the Soviet Union and by the Allied Control Council.[20] Millions of people were expelled from former eastern territories of Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and elsewhere to the occupation zones of the UK, US, and USSR, which agreed in the Potsdam Agreement to absorb the post-war expellees into their zones. Many remained in refugee camps for a long time. Some Germans remained in the Soviet Union and were used for forced labour for a period of years.

France was not invited to the Potsdam Conference. As a result, it chose to adopt some decisions of the Potsdam Agreements and to dismiss others. France maintained the position that it did not approve post-war expulsions and that therefore it was not responsible to accommodate and nourish the destitute expellees in its zone. While the few war-related refugees who had reached the area to become the French zone before July 1945 were taken care of, the French military government for Germany refused to absorb post-war expellees deported from the East into its zone. In December 1946, the French military government for Germany absorbed into its zone German refugees from Denmark, where 250,000 Germans had found a refuge from the Soviets by sea vessels between February and May 1945.[14] These clearly were war-related refugees from the eastern parts of Germany however, and not post-war expellees.

Military governors and commissioners

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The two American exclaves in the British sector are Bremen.
  2. ^ The quadripartite area shown within the Soviet zone is Berlin.

References

  1. ^ Schiller, Melanie. Soundtracking Germany. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  2. ^ States, United (1968). Treaties and Other International Agreements of the United States of America, 1776-1949: Multilateral, 1931-1945. Department of State.
  3. ^ "What Is to Be Done?". Time. 9 July 1945.
  4. ^ Knowles, Chris (29 January 2014). "Germany 1945–1949: a case study in post-conflict reconstruction". History & Policy. Retrieved 19 July 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "I. Gebiet und Bevölkerung". Statistisches Bundesamt. Wiesbaden.
  6. ^ "British Army of the Rhine". BAOR Locations. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  7. ^ Brüll, Christoph (2011). "Entre ressentiment et ré-éducation, L'Armée belge d'Occupation et les Allemands, 1945–1952" (PDF). Cahiers d'Histoire du Temps Présent. 23: 55–56.
  8. ^ Brüll, pp. 55–94.
  9. ^ Brüll, p. 55.
  10. ^ Reinisch, Jessica (2013). The Perils of Peace. OUP. p. 261.
  11. ^ de Gaulle, Charles (1959). Mémoires de guerre : Le Salut 1944-1946. Plon. pp. 170, 207.
  12. ^ Campion, Corey (2019). "Remembering the" Forgotten Zone: Recasting the Image of the Post-1945 French Occupation of Germany". French Politics, Culture & Society. 37 (3): 79–94. doi:10.3167/fpcs.2019.370304. S2CID 210491528.
  13. ^ a b c . Armée.lu. Archived from the original on 30 July 2013. Retrieved 6 July 2013.
  14. ^ a b Cf. the report of the Central State Archive of Rhineland-Palatinate on the first expellees arriving in that state in 1950 from other German states in the former British or American zone: "Beyond that [the fact, that until France took control of her zone west only few eastern war refugees had made it into her zone] already since summer 1945 France refused to absorb expellee transports in her zone. France, who had not participated in the Potsdam Conference, where the expulsions of eastern Germans had been decided, and who therefore did not feel responsible for the ramifications, feared an unbearable burden for its zone anyway strongly smarting from the consequences of the war." N.N., "Vor 50 Jahren: Der 15. April 1950. Vertriebene finden eine neue Heimat in Rheinland-Pfalz" 31 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine, on: Rheinland-Pfalz Landesarchivverwaltung, retrieved on 4 March 2013.
  15. ^ Gollancz, Victor (1947). In Darkest Germany. Victor Gollancz, London. pp. 116, 125–6.
  16. ^ a b Biddiscombe, P. (2001). "Dangerous Liaisons: The Anti-Fraternization Movement in the U.S. Occupation Zones of Germany and Austria, 1945–1948". Journal of Social History. 34 (3): 611–647. doi:10.1353/jsh.2001.0002. S2CID 145470893.
  17. ^ a b c Children of the Enemy by Mary Wiltenburg and Marc Widmann, Der Spiegel, 2 January 2007
  18. ^ a b Hitchcock, William I. (2008). The Bitter Road to Freedom. New York: Free Press.
  19. ^ Benjamin, Daniel (29 August 2003). "Condi's Phony History". Slate magazine. from the original on 20 July 2008. Retrieved 8 July 2008.
  20. ^ The Expulsion of the ‘German’ Communities from Eastern Europe at the End of the Second World War 1 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine Steffen Prauser and Arfon Rees, European University Institute, Florence, Department of history and civilization

Further reading

  • Bark, Dennis L., and David R. Gress. A History of West Germany Vol 1: From Shadow to Substance, 1945–1963 (1992)
  • Bessel, Richard. Germany 1945: from war to peace (Simon and Schuster, 2012)
  • Campion, Corey. "Remembering the" Forgotten Zone": Recasting the Image of the Post-1945 French Occupation of Germany." French Politics, Culture & Society 37.3 (2019): 79-94.
  • Erlichman, Camilo, and Knowles, Christopher (eds.). Transforming Occupation in the Western Zones of Germany: Politics, Everyday Life and Social Interactions, 1945-55 (Bloomsbury, 2018). ISBN 978-1-350-04923-9
  • Golay, John Ford. The Founding of the Federal Republic of Germany (University of Chicago Press, 1958)
  • Jarausch, Konrad H.After Hitler: Recivilizing Germans, 1945–1995 (2008)
  • Junker, Detlef, ed. The United States and Germany in the Era of the Cold War (2 vol 2004), 150 short essays by scholars covering 1945–1990 excerpt and text search vol 1; excerpt and text search vol 2
  • Knowles, Christopher. "The British Occupation of Germany, 1945–49: A Case Study in Post-Conflict Reconstruction." The RUSI Journal (2013) 158#6 pp: 84–91.
  • Knowles, Christopher. Winning the Peace: the British in Occupied Germany, 1945–1948. (PhD Dissertation King's College London, 2014).

online, later published as Winning the Peace: The British in Occupied Germany, 1945-1948, 2017, Bloomsbury Academic

  • Main, Steven J. "The Soviet Occupation of Germany. Hunger, Mass Violence and the Struggle for Peace, 1945–1947." Europe-Asia Studies (2014) 66#8 pp: 1380–1382. doi:10.1080/09668136.2014.941704
  • Phillips, David. Educating the Germans: People and Policy in the British Zone of Germany, 1945-1949 (2018) 392 pp. online review
  • Schwarz, Hans-Peter. Konrad Adenauer: A German Politician and Statesman in a Period of War, Revolution and Reconstruction (2 vol 1995) full text vol 1
  • Taylor, Frederick. Exorcising Hitler: the occupation and denazification of Germany (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2011)
  • Weber, Jurgen. Germany, 1945–1990 (Central European University Press, 2004)

Primary sources and historiography

  • Andrews, Ernest A.; Hurt, David B. (2022). A Machine Gunner's War: From Normandy to Victory with the 1st Infantry Division in World War II. Philadelphia & Oxford: Casemate. ISBN 978-1636241043.
  • Beate Ruhm Von Oppen, ed. Documents on Germany under Occupation, 1945–1954 (Oxford University Press, 1955) online
  • Clay, Lucius D. The papers of General Lucius D. Clay: Germany, 1945–1949 (2 vol. 1974)
  • Miller, Paul D. "A bibliographic essay on the Allied occupation and reconstruction of West Germany, 1945–1955." Small Wars & Insurgencies (2013) 24#4 pp: 751–759. doi:10.1080/09592318.2013.857935

External links

  • The short film A DEFEATED PEOPLE (1946) is available for free download at the Internet Archive.
  • Civil Affairs In Germany (1945) is available for free download at the Internet Archive
  • by Melvyn P. Leffler

allied, occupied, germany, occupation, western, germany, after, world, occupation, rhineland, occupation, ruhr, entirety, germany, military, occupied, allies, from, berlin, declaration, june, 1945, establishment, west, germany, 1949, after, nazi, germany, 1933. For the occupation of Western Germany after World War I see Occupation of the Rhineland and Occupation of the Ruhr The entirety of Germany was military occupied by the Allies from the Berlin Declaration on 5 June 1945 to the establishment of the West Germany on 23 May 1949 After Nazi Germany 1933 1945 of the German Reich 1871 1945 surrendered to the Allies and collapsed on 8 May 1945 the four countries representing the Allies United States United Kingdom Soviet Union and France asserted joint authority and sovereignty with the Allied Control Council ACC at the 1945 Berlin Declaration At first defining Allied occupied Germany as all territories 1922 1938 of the former German Reich before the Nazi annexing of Austria and later at the 1945 Potsdam Conference of the Allies themselves the Potsdam Agreement on 1 August decided the new eastern German border by giving Poland and the Soviet Union all regions of Germany east of the Oder Neisse line eastern parts of Pomerania Neumark Posen West Prussia East Prussia amp almost Silesia and divided the remaining Germany as a whole into the four occupation zones for administrative purposes under the United States the United Kingdom France and the Soviet Union 2 Although the three of Allies United States United Kingdom and Soviet Union agreed about the occupation division and border of Germany in the 1943 Tehran Conference in Iran before the four occupied zones located in Germany were only agreed by the three Allies at the February 1945 Yalta Conference GermanyDeutschland German 1945 1949The C PennantAnthem Trizonesien Song unofficial popular replacement anthem in sporting events 1 Germany from 1 August 1945 to 23 May 1949 French occupation zone British occupation zone a American occupation zone Soviet occupation zone b StatusMilitary occupationCapitalBerlin de jure Frankfurt American zone Bad Oeynhausen British zone Baden Baden French zone East Berlin Soviet zone Common languagesGerman English Russian FrenchGovernors 1945 British zoneBernard Montgomery American zoneDwight D Eisenhower French zoneJean d L de Tassigny Soviet zoneGeorgy ZhukovHistorical eraCold War Surrender of German armed forces8 May 1945 Allied Control Council5 June 1945 Saar Protectoratea16 February 1946 West Germany23 May 1949 East Germanyb7 October 1949 Final Settlementc15 March 1991Population 194564 260 000 194968 080 000CurrencyReichsmark and Rentenmark 1945 1948 West zones except Saarland Deutsche Mark from 1948 dSoviet zone Mark from 1948 ePreceded by Succeeded byNazi Germany West GermanyEast GermanySaar ProtectorateBecame a state of the Federal Republic of Germany West Germany by joining it on 1 January 1957 not recognized by all four Allied powers Reunited Germany by joining the Federal Republic of Germany on 3 October 1990 German reunification took place on 3 October 1990 The western Allied zones of Germany and the western sectors of Berlin de facto The Soviet zone of Germany and sector of Berlin The four sectors and exclaves of BerlinAll territories annexed by Germany before the war from Austria and Czechoslovakia were returned to these countries The Memel Territory annexed by Germany from Lithuania before the war was annexed by the Soviet Union in 1945 and transferred to the Lithuanian SSR All territories annexed by Germany during the war from Belgium France Italy Luxembourg Poland and Yugoslavia were returned to their respective countries Deviating from the occupation zones planned according to the London Protocol in 1944 at Potsdam the United States United Kingdom and the Soviet Union approved the detachment from Germany of the territories east of the Oder Neisse line with the exact line of the boundary to be determined in a final German peace treaty This treaty was expected to confirm the shifting westward of Poland s borders as the United Kingdom and United States committed themselves to support the permanent incorporation of eastern Germany into Poland and the Soviet Union From March 1945 to July 1945 these former eastern territories of Germany had been administered under Soviet military occupation authorities but following the Potsdam Conference they were handed over to Soviet and Polish civilian administrations and ceased to constitute part of Allied occupied Germany In the closing weeks of fighting in Europe United States forces had pushed beyond the agreed boundaries for the future zones of occupation in some places by as much as 320 km 200 miles The so called line of contact between Soviet and U S forces at the end of hostilities mostly lying eastward of the July 1945 established inner German border was temporary After two months in which they had held areas that had been assigned to the Soviet zone U S forces withdrew in the first days of July 1945 3 Some have concluded that this was a crucial move that persuaded the Soviet Union to allow American British and French forces into their designated sectors in Berlin which occurred at roughly the same time although the need for intelligence gathering Operation Paperclip may also have been a factor 4 On 20 March 1948 the Soviets withdrew from the Allied Control Council later leading to the establishment of the two German states in East and West both in 1949 Contents 1 Occupation zones 1 1 American Zone 1 2 British Zone 1 2 1 Belgian Polish and Norwegian Zones 1 3 French Zone 1 3 1 Luxembourg zone 1 4 Soviet Zone 2 Berlin 3 Lost territory 4 Population 5 Governance and the emergence of two German states 6 Occupation policy 7 Insurgency 8 Expulsion policy 9 Military governors and commissioners 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 13 1 Primary sources and historiography 14 External linksOccupation zones Edit Allied zones of occupation in post war Germany highlighting the Soviet zone red the inner German border black line and the zone from which American troops withdrew in July 1945 purple The provincial boundaries correspond largely to those of the pre war states before the creation of the present Lander federal states American Zone Edit Further information American occupation zone in Germany and Allied occupied Austria The American zone in Southern Germany consisted of Bavaria without the Rhine Palatinate Region and the Lindau District both part of the French zone and Hesse without Rhenish Hesse and Montabaur Region both part of the French zone with a new capital in Wiesbaden and of northern parts of Wurttemberg and Baden Those formed Wurttemberg Baden and became northern portions of the present day German state of Baden Wurttemberg founded in 1952 The ports of Bremen on the lower Weser River and Bremerhaven at the Weser estuary of the North Sea were also placed under U S control because of the U S request to have certain toeholds in Northern Germany At the end of October 1946 the American Zone had a population of Bavaria 8 7 million Hesse 3 97 million Wurttemberg Baden 3 6 million Bremen 0 48 million 5 The headquarters of the American military government was the former IG Farben Building in Frankfurt am Main Following the complete closure of all Nazi German media the launch and operation of completely new newspaper titles began by licensing carefully selected Germans as publishers Licenses were granted to Germans not involved in Nazi propaganda to establish those newspapers including Frankfurter Rundschau August 1945 Der Tagesspiegel Berlin September 1945 and Suddeutsche Zeitung Munich October 1945 Radio stations were run by the military government Later Radio Frankfurt Radio Munchen Munich and Radio Stuttgart gave way for the Hessischer Rundfunk Bayerischer Rundfunk and Suddeutscher Rundfunk respectively The RIAS in West Berlin remained a radio station under U S control British Zone Edit Further information British Occupation zone in Germany and Allied occupied Austria By May 1945 the British and Canadian Armies had liberated the Netherlands and had conquered Northern Germany The Canadian forces went home following the German surrender leaving Northern Germany to be occupied by the British The British Army of the Rhine was formed on 25 August 1945 from the British Liberation Army 6 In July the British withdrew from Mecklenburg s capital Schwerin which they had taken over from the Americans a few weeks before as it had previously been agreed to be occupied by the Soviet Army The Control Commission for Germany British Element CCG BE ceded more slices of its area of occupation to the Soviet Union specifically the Amt Neuhaus of Hanover and some exclaves and fringes of Brunswick for example the County of Blankenburg and exchanged some villages between British Holstein and Soviet Mecklenburg under the Barber Lyashchenko Agreement Within the British Zone of Occupation the CCG BE re established the city of Hamburg as a German state but with borders that had been drawn by the Nazi government in 1937 The British also created the new German states of Schleswig Holstein emerging in 1946 from the Prussian Province of Schleswig Holstein Lower Saxony the merger of Brunswick Oldenburg and Schaumburg Lippe with the state of Hanover in 1946 and North Rhine Westphalia the merger of Lippe with the Prussian provinces of the Rhineland northern part and Westphalia during 1946 47 Also in 1947 the American Zone of Occupation being inland had no port facilities thus the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen and Bremerhaven became exclaves within the British Zone At the end of October 1946 the British Zone had a population of North Rhine Westphalia 11 7 million Lower Saxony 6 2 million Schleswig Holstein 2 6 million Hamburg 1 4 million 5 The British headquarters were originally based in Bad Oeynhausen from 1946 but in 1954 it was moved to Monchengladbach where it was known as JHQ Rheindahlen Another special feature of the British zone was the Enclave of Bonn It was created in July 1949 and was not under British or any other allied control Instead it was under the control of the Allied High Commission In June 1950 Ivone Kirkpatrick became the British High Commissioner for Germany Kirkpatrick carried immense responsibility particularly with respect to the negotiation of the Bonn Paris conventions during 1951 1952 which terminated the occupation and prepared the way for the rearmament of West Germany Royal Air Force s Malcolm Club in Schleswig formerly the Stadt Hamburg Hotel in late 1945 British armoured car at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin 1950Belgian Polish and Norwegian Zones Edit Further information Polish occupation zone in Germany Army units from other countries were stationed within the British occupation zone The Belgians were allocated a territory which was garrisoned by their troops 7 The zone formed a 200 kilometres 120 mi strip from the Belgian German border at the south of the British zone and included the important cities of Cologne and Aachen The Belgian army of occupation in Germany known as the Belgian Forces in Germany from 1951 became autonomous in 1946 under the command initially of Jean Baptiste Piron 8 Belgian soldiers remained in Germany until 31 December 2005 9 Polish units mainly from 1st Armoured Division were stationed in the northern area of the district of Emsland as well as in the areas of Oldenburg and Leer citation needed This region bordered the Netherlands and covered an area of 6 500 km2 and was originally intended to serve as a collection and dispersal territory for the millions of Polish displaced persons in Germany and western Europe after the war citation needed Early British proposals for this to form the basis of a formal Polish Zone of Occupation were however soon abandoned due to Soviet opposition The zone had a large camp constructed largely for displaced persons and was administered by the Polish government in exile The administrative centre of the Polish occupation zone was the city of Haren the German population of which was temporarily removed The city was renamed Maczkow after Stanislaw Maczek from 1945 to 1947 Once the British recognised the pro Soviet government in Poland and withdrew recognition from the London based Polish government in exile the Emsland zone became more of an embarrassment Polish units within the British Army were demobilised in June 1947 The expelled German populations were allowed to return and the last Polish residents left in 1948 citation needed In 1946 the Norwegian Brigade Group in Germany had 4 000 soldiers in Hanover amongst whom was future Chancellor Willy Brandt then a Norwegian citizen as press attache French Zone Edit Main article French occupation zone in Germany French forces in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin 1946 The French Republic was at first not granted an occupation zone in Germany but the British and American governments later agreed to cede some western parts of their zones of occupation to the French Army 10 In April and May 1945 the French 1st Army had captured Karlsruhe and Stuttgart and conquered a territory extending to Hitler s Eagle s Nest and the westernmost part of Austria In July the French relinquished Stuttgart to the Americans and in exchange were given control over cities west of the Rhine such as Mainz and Koblenz 11 All this resulted in two barely contiguous areas of Germany along the French border which met at just a single point along the River Rhine Three German states Land were established Rheinland Pfalz in the North and West and on the other hand Wurttemberg Hohenzollern and South Baden who later formed Baden Wurttemberg together with Wurttemberg Baden of the American Zone 12 The French Zone of Occupation included the Saargebiet which was disentangled from it on 16 February 1946 By 18 December 1946 customs controls were established between the Saar area and Allied occupied Germany The French zone ceded further areas adjacent to the Saar in mid 1946 early 1947 and early 1949 Included in the French zone was the town of Busingen am Hochrhein a German exclave separated from the rest of the country by a narrow strip of neutral Swiss territory The Swiss government agreed to allow limited numbers of French troops to pass through its territory in order to maintain law and order in Busingen At the end of October 1946 the French Zone had a population of Rheinland Pfalz 2 7 million Baden South Baden 1 2 million Wurttemberg Hohenzollern 1 05 million The Saar Protectorate had a further 0 8 million 5 Luxembourg zone Edit From November 1945 Luxembourg was allocated a zone within the French sector 13 The Luxembourg 2nd Infantry Battalion was garrisoned in Bitburg and the 1st Battalion was sent to Saarburg 13 The final Luxembourg forces in Germany in Bitburg left in 1955 13 Soviet Zone Edit Main article Soviet occupation zone of Germany Pink portions of Germany east of the Oder Neisse line attached to Poland except for northerly East Prussia and the adjoining Memel Territory not shown here which were joined directly to the Soviet Union Red the Soviet Occupation zone of Germany The Soviet occupation zone incorporated Thuringia Saxony Saxony Anhalt Brandenburg and Mecklenburg Vorpommern The Soviet Military Administration in Germany was headquartered in Berlin Karlshorst At the end of October 1946 the Soviet Zone had a population of Saxony 5 5 million Saxony Anhalt 4 1 million Thuringia 2 9 million Brandenburg 2 5 million Mecklenburg 2 1 million 5 Berlin EditMain article History of Berlin West and East Germany 1945 1990 While located wholly within the Soviet zone because of its symbolic importance as the nation s capital and seat of the former Nazi government the city of Berlin was jointly occupied by the Allied powers and subdivided into four sectors All four occupying powers were entitled to privileges throughout Berlin that were not extended to the rest of Germany this included the Soviet sector of Berlin which was legally separate from the rest of the Soviet zone At the end of October 1946 Berlin had a population of Western sectors 2 0 million Soviet sector 1 1 million 5 Lost territory EditMain article Former eastern territories of Germany In 1945 Germany east of the Oder Neisse line was assigned to Poland by the Potsdam Conference to be temporarily administered pending the Final Peace Treaty on Germany eventually under the September 1990 Peace Treaty the northern portion of East Prussia became the Kaliningrad Oblast within the Soviet Union today Russian Federation A small area west of the Oder near Szczecin also fell to Poland Most German citizens residing in these areas were subsequently expropriated and expelled Returning refugees who had fled from war hostilities were denied return Population EditIn October 1946 the population of the various zones and sectors was as follows 5 State sector or other territory Zone PopulationBavaria American 8 7 millionHesse American 3 97 millionWurttemberg Baden American 3 6 millionBremen American 0 48 millionNorth Rhine Westphalia British 11 7 millionLower Saxony British 6 2 millionSchleswig Holstein British 2 6 millionHamburg British 1 4 millionRhineland Palatinate French 2 7 millionSouth Baden French 1 2 millionWurttemberg Hohenzollern French 1 05 millionSaxony Soviet 5 5 millionSaxony Anhalt Soviet 4 1 millionThuringia Soviet 2 9 millionBrandenburg Soviet 2 5 millionMecklenburg Vorpommern Soviet 2 1 millionBerlin western sectors American British French 2 0 millionBerlin Soviet sector Soviet 1 1 millionGovernance and the emergence of two German states EditThe original Allied plan to govern Germany as a single unit through the Allied Control Council de facto broke down on 20 March 1948 restored on 3 September 1971 in the context of growing tensions between the Allies with Britain and the US wishing cooperation France obstructing any collaboration in order to partition Germany into many independent states and especially the Soviet Union unilaterally implementing from early on elements of a Marxist political economic system enforced redistribution of land nationalisation of businesses Another dispute was the absorption of post war expellees While the UK the US and the Soviet Union had agreed to accept house and feed about six million expelled German citizens from former eastern Germany and four million expelled and denaturalised Czechoslovaks Poles Hungarians and Yugoslavs of German ethnicity in their zones France generally had not agreed to the expulsions approved by the Potsdam agreement a decision made without input from France Therefore France strictly refused to absorb war refugees who were denied return to their homes in seized eastern German territories or destitute post war expellees who had been expropriated there into the French zone let alone into the separated Saar protectorate 14 However the native population returning after Nazi imposed removals e g political and Jewish refugees and war related relocations e g evacuation from air raids were allowed to return home in the areas under French control The other Allies complained that they had to shoulder the burden to feed house and clothe the expellees who had to leave their belongings behind In practice each of the four occupying powers wielded government authority in their respective zones and carried out different policies toward the population and local and state governments there A uniform administration of the western zones evolved known first as the Bizone the American and British zones merged as of 1 January 1947 and later the Trizone after inclusion of the French zone The complete breakdown of east west allied cooperation and joint administration in Germany became clear with the Soviet imposition of the Berlin Blockade that was enforced from June 1948 to May 1949 The three western zones were merged to form the Federal Republic of Germany FRG i e West Germany in May 1949 and after that the Soviets followed suit in October 1949 with the establishment of the German Democratic Republic GDR i e East Germany In the west the occupation continued until 5 May 1955 when the General Treaty German Deutschlandvertrag entered into force However upon the creation of the Federal Republic in May 1949 the military governors were replaced by civilian high commissioners whose powers lay somewhere between those of a governor and those of an ambassador When the Deutschlandvertrag became law the occupation ended the western occupation zones ceased to exist and the high commissioners were replaced by normal ambassadors West Germany was also allowed to build a military and the Bundeswehr or Federal Defense Force was established on 12 November 1955 A similar situation occurred in East Germany The GDR was founded on 7 October 1949 On 10 October the Soviet Military Administration in Germany was replaced by the Soviet Control Commission although limited sovereignty was not granted to the GDR government until 11 November 1949 After the death of Joseph Stalin in March 1953 the Soviet Control Commission was replaced with the office of the Soviet High Commissioner on 28 May 1953 This office was abolished and replaced by an ambassador and general sovereignty was granted to the GDR when the Soviet Union concluded a state treaty Staatsvertrag with the GDR on 20 September 1955 On 1 March 1956 the GDR established a military the National People s Army NVA Despite the grants of general sovereignty to both German states in 1955 full and unrestricted sovereignty under international law was not enjoyed by any German government until after the reunification of Germany in October 1990 Though West Germany was effectively independent the western Allies maintained limited legal jurisdiction over Germany as a whole in respect of West Germany and Berlin At the same time East Germany progressed from being a satellite state of the Soviet Union to increasing independence of action while still deferring in matters of security to Soviet authority The provisions of the Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany also known as the Two plus Four Treaty granting full sovereign powers to Germany did not become law until 15 March 1991 after all of the participating governments had ratified the treaty As envisaged by the Treaty the last occupation troops departed from Germany when the Russian presence was terminated in 1994 although the Belgian Forces in Germany stayed in German territory until the end of 2005 A 1956 plebiscite ended the French administration of the Saar protectorate and it joined the Federal Republic as Saarland on 1 January 1957 becoming its tenth state The city of Berlin was not part of either state and de jure continued to be under Allied occupation of the four countries until the reunification of Germany in October 1990 For administrative purposes the three western sectors of Berlin were merged into the entity of West Berlin being de facto part of the FRG The Soviet sector became known as East Berlin and while not recognised by the Western powers as a part of East Germany the GDR declared it its capital Hauptstadt der DDR Occupation policy EditMain articles Denazification Industrial plans for Germany Food in occupied Germany and Forced labor of Germans after World War II American propaganda poster using images of concentration camp victims to warn against fraternization At the end of the war General Eisenhower issued a non fraternization policy to troops under his command in occupied Germany This policy was relaxed in stages By June 1945 the prohibition on speaking with German children was made less strict In July it became possible to speak to German adults in certain circumstances In September the policy was completely dropped in Austria and Germany Nevertheless due to the large numbers of Disarmed Enemy Forces being held in Rheinwiesenlagers throughout western Germany the Americans and the British not the Soviets used armed units of Feldgendarmerie to maintain control and discipline in the camps In June 1946 these German military police units became the last Wehrmacht troops to surrender their arms to the western powers By December 1945 over 100 000 German civilians were interned as security threats and for possible trial and sentencing as members of criminal organisations The food situation in occupied Germany was initially very dire By the spring of 1946 the official ration in the American zone was no more than 1 275 calories 5 330 kJ per day with some areas probably receiving as little as 700 calories 2 900 kJ per day In the British zone the food situation was dire as found during a visit by the British and Jewish publisher Victor Gollancz in October and November 1946 In Dusseldorf the normal 28 day allocation should have been 1 548 calories 6 480 kJ including 10 kilograms 22 lb of bread but as there was limited grain the bread ration was only 8 5 kilograms 19 lb However as there was only sufficient bread for about 50 of this called up ration the total deficiency was about 50 not 15 as stated in a ministerial reply in the British Parliament on 11 December So only about 770 calories 3 200 kJ would have been supplied and he said the German winter ration would be 1 000 calories 4 200 kJ as the recent increase was largely mythical His book includes photos taken on the visit and critical letters and newspaper articles by him published in several British newspapers The Times the Daily Herald the Manchester Guardian etc 15 Some occupation soldiers took advantage of the desperate food situation by exploiting their ample supply of food and cigarettes the currency of the black market to get to the local German girls as what became known as frau bait The New York Times 25 June 1945 Some soldiers still felt the girls were the enemy but used them for sex nevertheless 16 The often destitute mothers of the resulting children usually received no child support In the earliest stages of the occupation U S soldiers were not allowed to pay maintenance for a child they admitted having fathered since to do so was considered aiding the enemy Marriages between white U S soldiers and Austrian women were not permitted until January 1946 and with German women until December 1946 16 The children of African American soldiers commonly called Negermischlinge 17 Negro half breeds comprising about three percent of the total number of children fathered by GIs were particularly disadvantaged because of their inability to conceal the foreign identity of their father For many white U S soldiers of this era miscegenation even with an enemy white population was regarded as an intolerable outrage African American soldiers were therefore reluctant to admit to fathering such children since this would invite reprisals and even accusations of rape a crime which was much more aggressively prosecuted by military authorities against African Americans compared with Caucasian soldiers much more likely to result in a conviction by court martial in part because a German woman was both less likely to acknowledge consensual sexual relations with an African American and more likely to be believed if she alleged rape against an African American and which carried a potential death sentence Even in the rare cases where an African American soldier was willing to take responsibility for fathering a child until 1948 the U S Army prohibited interracial marriages 17 The mothers of the children would often face particularly harsh ostracism 18 Between 1950 and 1955 the Allied High Commission for Germany prohibited proceedings to establish paternity or liability for maintenance of children 17 Even after the lifting of the ban West German courts had little power over American soldiers In general the British authorities were less strict than the Americans about fraternisation whereas the French and Soviet authorities were more strict While Allied servicemen were ordered to obey local laws while in Germany soldiers could not be prosecuted by German courts for crimes committed against German citizens except as authorised by the occupation authorities Invariably when a soldier was accused of criminal behaviour the occupation authorities preferred to handle the matter within the military justice system This sometimes led to harsher punishments than would have been available under German law in particular U S servicemen could be executed if court martialed and convicted of rape 18 See United States v Private First Class John A Bennett 7 C M A 97 21 C M R 223 1956 Insurgency EditThe last Allied war advances into Germany and Allied occupation plans were affected by rumors of the Nazi Werwolf plan for insurgency and successful Nazi deception about plans to withdraw forces to the Alpenfestung redoubt This base was to be used to conduct guerrilla warfare but the rumours turned out to be false No Allied deaths can be reliably attributed to any Nazi insurgency 19 Expulsion policy EditMain article Flight and expulsion of Germans 1944 1950 The Potsdam conference where the victorious Allies drew up plans for the future of Germany noted in article XIII of the Potsdam Agreement on 1 August 1945 that the transfer to Germany of German populations in Poland Czechoslovakia and Hungary will have to be undertaken wild expulsion was already going on Hungary which had been allied with Germany and whose population was opposed to an expulsion of the German minority tried to resist the transfer Hungary had to yield to the pressure exerted mainly by the Soviet Union and by the Allied Control Council 20 Millions of people were expelled from former eastern territories of Germany Poland Czechoslovakia Hungary and elsewhere to the occupation zones of the UK US and USSR which agreed in the Potsdam Agreement to absorb the post war expellees into their zones Many remained in refugee camps for a long time Some Germans remained in the Soviet Union and were used for forced labour for a period of years France was not invited to the Potsdam Conference As a result it chose to adopt some decisions of the Potsdam Agreements and to dismiss others France maintained the position that it did not approve post war expulsions and that therefore it was not responsible to accommodate and nourish the destitute expellees in its zone While the few war related refugees who had reached the area to become the French zone before July 1945 were taken care of the French military government for Germany refused to absorb post war expellees deported from the East into its zone In December 1946 the French military government for Germany absorbed into its zone German refugees from Denmark where 250 000 Germans had found a refuge from the Soviets by sea vessels between February and May 1945 14 These clearly were war related refugees from the eastern parts of Germany however and not post war expellees Military governors and commissioners EditMain article List of administrators of Allied occupied GermanySee also EditAllied occupied Austria German occupied Europe History of Germany since 1945 Interzonal traffic Allied occupied JapanNotes Edit The two American exclaves in the British sector are Bremen The quadripartite area shown within the Soviet zone is Berlin References Edit Schiller Melanie Soundtracking Germany Retrieved 25 August 2020 States United 1968 Treaties and Other International Agreements of the United States of America 1776 1949 Multilateral 1931 1945 Department of State What Is to Be Done Time 9 July 1945 Knowles Chris 29 January 2014 Germany 1945 1949 a case study in post conflict reconstruction History amp Policy Retrieved 19 July 2016 a b c d e f I Gebiet und Bevolkerung Statistisches Bundesamt Wiesbaden British Army of the Rhine BAOR Locations Retrieved 1 November 2015 Brull Christoph 2011 Entre ressentiment et re education L Armee belge d Occupation et les Allemands 1945 1952 PDF Cahiers d Histoire du Temps Present 23 55 56 Brull pp 55 94 Brull p 55 Reinisch Jessica 2013 The Perils of Peace OUP p 261 de Gaulle Charles 1959 Memoires de guerre Le Salut 1944 1946 Plon pp 170 207 Campion Corey 2019 Remembering the Forgotten Zone Recasting the Image of the Post 1945 French Occupation of Germany French Politics Culture amp Society 37 3 79 94 doi 10 3167 fpcs 2019 370304 S2CID 210491528 a b c L Armee luxembourgeoise apres la liberation 1944 1967 Armee lu Archived from the original on 30 July 2013 Retrieved 6 July 2013 a b Cf the report of the Central State Archive of Rhineland Palatinate on the first expellees arriving in that state in 1950 from other German states in the former British or American zone Beyond that the fact that until France took control of her zone west only few eastern war refugees had made it into her zone already since summer 1945 France refused to absorb expellee transports in her zone France who had not participated in the Potsdam Conference where the expulsions of eastern Germans had been decided and who therefore did not feel responsible for the ramifications feared an unbearable burden for its zone anyway strongly smarting from the consequences of the war N N Vor 50 Jahren Der 15 April 1950 Vertriebene finden eine neue Heimat in Rheinland Pfalz Archived 31 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine on Rheinland Pfalz Landesarchivverwaltung retrieved on 4 March 2013 Gollancz Victor 1947 In Darkest Germany Victor Gollancz London pp 116 125 6 a b Biddiscombe P 2001 Dangerous Liaisons The Anti Fraternization Movement in the U S Occupation Zones of Germany and Austria 1945 1948 Journal of Social History 34 3 611 647 doi 10 1353 jsh 2001 0002 S2CID 145470893 a b c Children of the Enemy by Mary Wiltenburg and Marc Widmann Der Spiegel 2 January 2007 a b Hitchcock William I 2008 The Bitter Road to Freedom New York Free Press Benjamin Daniel 29 August 2003 Condi s Phony History Slate magazine Archived from the original on 20 July 2008 Retrieved 8 July 2008 The Expulsion of the German Communities from Eastern Europe at the End of the Second World War Archived 1 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine Steffen Prauser and Arfon Rees European University Institute Florence Department of history and civilizationFurther reading EditBark Dennis L and David R Gress A History of West Germany Vol 1 From Shadow to Substance 1945 1963 1992 Bessel Richard Germany 1945 from war to peace Simon and Schuster 2012 Campion Corey Remembering the Forgotten Zone Recasting the Image of the Post 1945 French Occupation of Germany French Politics Culture amp Society 37 3 2019 79 94 Erlichman Camilo and Knowles Christopher eds Transforming Occupation in the Western Zones of Germany Politics Everyday Life and Social Interactions 1945 55 Bloomsbury 2018 ISBN 978 1 350 04923 9 Golay John Ford The Founding of the Federal Republic of Germany University of Chicago Press 1958 Jarausch Konrad H After Hitler Recivilizing Germans 1945 1995 2008 Junker Detlef ed The United States and Germany in the Era of the Cold War 2 vol 2004 150 short essays by scholars covering 1945 1990 excerpt and text search vol 1 excerpt and text search vol 2 Knowles Christopher The British Occupation of Germany 1945 49 A Case Study in Post Conflict Reconstruction The RUSI Journal 2013 158 6 pp 84 91 Knowles Christopher Winning the Peace the British in Occupied Germany 1945 1948 PhD Dissertation King s College London 2014 online later published as Winning the Peace The British in Occupied Germany 1945 1948 2017 Bloomsbury Academic Main Steven J The Soviet Occupation of Germany Hunger Mass Violence and the Struggle for Peace 1945 1947 Europe Asia Studies 2014 66 8 pp 1380 1382 doi 10 1080 09668136 2014 941704 Phillips David Educating the Germans People and Policy in the British Zone of Germany 1945 1949 2018 392 pp online review Schwarz Hans Peter Konrad Adenauer A German Politician and Statesman in a Period of War Revolution and Reconstruction 2 vol 1995 full text vol 1 Taylor Frederick Exorcising Hitler the occupation and denazification of Germany Bloomsbury Publishing 2011 Weber Jurgen Germany 1945 1990 Central European University Press 2004 online editionPrimary sources and historiography Edit Andrews Ernest A Hurt David B 2022 A Machine Gunner s War From Normandy to Victory with the 1st Infantry Division in World War II Philadelphia amp Oxford Casemate ISBN 978 1636241043 Beate Ruhm Von Oppen ed Documents on Germany under Occupation 1945 1954 Oxford University Press 1955 online Clay Lucius D The papers of General Lucius D Clay Germany 1945 1949 2 vol 1974 Miller Paul D A bibliographic essay on the Allied occupation and reconstruction of West Germany 1945 1955 Small Wars amp Insurgencies 2013 24 4 pp 751 759 doi 10 1080 09592318 2013 857935External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Allied occupation of Germany The short film A DEFEATED PEOPLE 1946 is available for free download at the Internet Archive Civil Affairs In Germany 1945 is available for free download at the Internet Archive The Struggle for Germany and the Origins of the Cold War by Melvyn P Leffler Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Allied occupied Germany amp oldid 1134538481, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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