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Allied war crimes during World War II

During World War II, the Allies committed legally proven war crimes and violations of the laws of war against either civilians or military personnel of the Axis powers. At the end of World War II, many trials of Axis war criminals took place, most famously the Nuremberg Trials and Tokyo Trials. In Europe, these tribunals were set up under the authority of the London Charter, which only considered allegations of war crimes committed by people who acted in the interests of the Axis powers. Some war crimes involving Allied personnel were investigated by the Allied powers and led in some instances to courts-martial. Some incidents alleged by historians to have been crimes under the law of war in operation at the time were, for a variety of reasons, not investigated by the Allied powers during the war, or were investigated but not prosecuted.

According to an article in Der Spiegel by Klaus Wiegrefe, many personal memoirs of Allied soldiers have been willfully ignored by historians because they were at odds with the "greatest generation" mythology surrounding World War II. This has started to change, with books such as The Day of Battle by Rick Atkinson, in which he describes Allied war crimes in Italy, and D-Day: The Battle for Normandy, by Antony Beevor.[1] Beevor's latest work suggests that Allied war crimes in Normandy were much more extensive "than was previously realized".[2]

Policy edit

The Allies claim that their militaries were directed to observe the Hague Conventions and Geneva Conventions and believed to be conducting a just war fought for defensive reasons. Violations of the conventions did occur, however, including the forcible return of Soviet citizens who had been collaborating with Axis forces to the USSR at the end of the war. The military of the Soviet Union also frequently committed war crimes, which are today known to have been at the direction of its government. These crimes included waging wars of aggression and mass killings of prisoners of war, and repressing the population of conquered countries.[3]

Antony Beevor describes the Soviet rape of German women during the occupation of Germany as the "greatest phenomenon of mass rape in history", and has estimated that at least 1.4 million women were raped in East Prussia, Pomerania, and Silesia alone. He asserts that Soviet women and girls liberated from slave labor in Germany were also violated.[4]

Individual commentators such as the German historian and left-wing antiwar activist Jörg Friedrich have argued that Allied aerial bombardment of civilian areas and cultural targets in enemy territory, including the German cities of Cologne, Hamburg, and Dresden, the Abbey in Monte Cassino in Italy during the Battle of Monte Cassino,[5] the Japanese cities of Tokyo, Nagoya, Osaka, and especially the use of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which resulted in the total destruction of cities and the deaths of hundreds of thousands of civilians, should be considered war crimes;[6][7][8][9] however, other observers point out that no positive or specific international law with respect to aerial warfare existed prior to and during World War II[10] and that no Japanese and German officers were prosecuted at the post-World War II Allied war crime trials for the aerial raids on Shanghai, Chongqing, Warsaw, Rotterdam, and British cities during the Blitz.[11]

Western Allies edit

Canada edit

Murder of POW's edit

According to Mitch-am and Avon Hohenstaufen, the Canadian army unit "The Loyal Edmonton Regiment" murdered German prisoners of war during the invasion of Sicily.[12]

Razing of Friesoythe edit

Charles P. Stacey, the Canadian official campaign historian, reports that on 14 April 1945 rumours spread that the popular commanding officer of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of Canada, Lieutenant Colonel Frederick E. Wigle, had been killed by a civilian sniper. This rumour resulted in the Highlanders setting fire to civilian property in the town of Friesoythe in an act of reprisal.[13] Stacey later wrote that the Canadian troops first removed German civilians from their property before setting the houses on fire; he commented that he was "glad to say that [he] never heard of another such case".[14] It was later found that German soldiers had killed the Argylls' commander.[15]

France edit

French Army edit

 
Some civilian victims of the Abbeville massacre, May 1940.

During the German invasion of Belgium, Belgian authorities arrested a number of suspects ("enemy Belgians and enemy foreigners") between 10 and 15 May on the orders of the auditor general Walter Ganshof van der Meersch. "It is clear that the arrests were very irresponsible and arbitrary. They just picked up some people: out of revenge, out of jealousy, because of their political beliefs, their Jewish origin or because of their foreign nationality," wrote survivor Gaby Warris.[16]

Three days later, on 19 May, 79 of these detainees were taken to Abbeville and locked up under the music kiosk on the market square. When the city of Abbeville was heavily bombed from the air by German squadrons on the night of 19 to 20 May, the French guards feared the prisoners would be released by the Germans and decided to summarily execute them.[17] Twenty-one prisoners were taken from the kiosk, placed against the wall, and shot without trial on the orders of the French Capitaine Marcel Dingeon, who was Abbeville's deputy commander. Of the dead, only four were found to have actually worked for the Germans. Dingeon killed himself several months after France surrendered. In January 1942, two French soldiers who participated in the massacre, Lieutenant René Caron and Sergeant Émile Molet, were tried by a German court-martial in wartime Paris. They were sentenced to death and executed by firing squad on 7 April 1942 at Mont-Valérien.[18]

Maquis edit

Following the Operation Dragoon landings in southern France and the collapse of the German military occupation in August 1944, large numbers of German troops could not escape from France and surrendered to the French Forces of the Interior. The Resistance executed a few of the Wehrmacht and most of the Gestapo and SS prisoners.[19]

The Maquis also executed 17 German prisoners of war at Saint-Julien-de-Crempse (in the Dordogne region), on 10 September 1944, 14 of whom have since been positively identified. The murders were revenge killings for German murders of 17 local inhabitants of the village of St. Julien on 3 August 1944, which were themselves reprisal killings in response to Resistance activity in the St. Julien region, which was home to an active Maquis cell.[20]

Moroccan Goumiers edit

 
Moroccan Goumiers at Monte Cassino, 1944.

French Moroccan troops of the French Expeditionary Corps, known as Goumiers, committed mass crimes in Italy during and after the Battle of Monte Cassino[21] and in Germany.[22] According to Italian sources, more than 12,000 civilians, above all young and old women, children, were kidnapped, raped, or killed by Goumiers.[23] This is featured in the Italian film La Ciociara (Two Women) with Sophia Loren.

French troops took part in the invasion of Germany, and France was assigned an occupation zone in Germany. Perry Biddiscombe quotes the original survey estimates that the French Goumiers for instance committed "385 rapes in the Constance area; 600 in Bruchsal; and 500 in Freudenstadt."[24] The soldiers are also alleged to have committed widespread rape in the Höfingen District near Leonberg.[25] Katz and Kaiser,[26] though they mention rape, found no specific occurrences in either Höfingen or Leonberg compared to other towns. Anthony Clayton, in his book France, Soldiers, and Africa,[27] devotes several pages to the criminal activities of the Goumiers, which he partially ascribes to typical practices in their homeland.

According to Norman Naimark, French Moroccan troops matched the behaviour of Soviet troops when it came to rape, in particular in the early occupation of Baden and Württemberg, provided the numbers are correct.[28]

United Kingdom edit

 
The city centre of Dresden after the bombing

Looting, rape, and prisoner executions were committed by British soldiers at a similar scale compared to other armies throughout the war.[29] [page needed]

Indiscriminate bombing of cities edit

The British, with other allied nations (mainly the U.S.) carried out air raids against enemy cities during World War II, including the bombing of the German city of Dresden, which killed around 25,000 people. While "no agreement, treaty, convention or any other instrument governing the protection of the civilian population or civilian property" from aerial attack was adopted before the war,[30] the Hague Conventions did prohibit the bombardment of undefended towns. The city, largely untouched by the war had functioning rail communications to the Eastern front and was an industrial centre. Allied forces inquiry concluded that an air attack on Dresden was militarily justified on the grounds the city was defended.[31]

Abuses against civilians and POWs edit

On 21 April 1945, British soldiers randomly selected and burned two cottages in Seedorf, Germany, in reprisal against local civilians who had hidden German soldiers in their cellars.[32] Historian Sean Longden claims that violence against German prisoners and civilians who refused to cooperate with the British army "could be ignored or made light of".[33]

After the end of the war in Europe, German prisoners in Norway were reportedly forced to clear minefields under British supervision. The Germans complained to British Commander, General Andrew Thorne, but he dismissed the accusations arguing that the Germans prisoners were not POWs but "disarmed forces who had surrendered unconditionally." By 1946, when the cleanup ended, 392 were injured and 275 had died; this was contrary to the terms of the Geneva Conventions.[34][page needed]

The "London Cage", a MI19 prisoner of war facility in the UK during and immediately after the war, was subject to allegations of torture.[35] The Bad Nenndorf interrogation centre in occupied Germany, managed by the Combined Services Detailed Interrogation Centre, was the subject of an official inquiry in 1947, which found that there was "mental and physical torture during the interrogations" and that "personal property of the prisoners were stolen".[36]

Rape and sexual harassment edit

The Italian statistics record eight rapes and nineteen attempted rapes by British soldiers in Italy between September 1943 and December 1945. Various sources, including the Special Investigation Branch as well as evidences from Belgian reporters, said that rape and sexual harassment by British troops occurred frequently following the invasion of Sicily in 1943.[37]

Rape also took place during the advance towards the Rhine,[38] especially once British forces had entered Germany.[38] During late 1944, with the army based across Belgium and the Netherlands, soldiers were billeted with local families or befriended them. In December 1944, it came to the attention of the authorities that there was a "rise of indecency with children" where abusers had exploited the "atmosphere of trust" that had been created with local families. While the army "attempted to investigate allegations, and some men were convicted, it was an issue that received little publicity."[33]

In Germany, rapes of local women were committed by British and Canadian troops.[39] Even elderly women were targeted.[39] Though the Royal Military Police tended to turn a blind eye towards abuse of German prisoners and civilians who obstructed the army, rape was considered differently. Some officers, however, treated the behaviour of their men with leniency. Some rapes were impulsively committed under the effects of alcohol or post-traumatic stress, but there were cases of premeditated attacks.[33] One such case was the rape of three German women in the town of Neustadt am Rübenberge on a single day in April 1945,[38] or the attempted rape of two local girls at gunpoint in the village of Oyle, near Nienburg, where two soldiers attempted to coerce two girls into going into a nearby wood, and, upon their refusal, one was grabbed and dragged into the woods, where, according to Longden, after she began screaming, "one of the soldiers pulled a gun to silence her. Whether intentionally or in error, the gun went off, hitting her in the throat and killing her."[39]

Unrestricted submarine warfare and shooting of shipwreck survivors edit

On 4 May 1940, in response to Germany's intensive unrestricted submarine warfare, during the Battle of the Atlantic and its invasion of Denmark and Norway, the Royal Navy conducted its own unrestricted submarine campaign. The Admiralty announced that all vessels in the Skagerrak were to be sunk on sight without warning. This was contrary to the terms of the Second London Naval Treaty.[40][41]

According to Alfred de Zayas, there are numerous documented cases of the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force deliberately firing upon shipwreck survivors.[42] In July 1941, the submarine HMS Torbay (under the command of Anthony Miers) was based in the Mediterranean where it sank several German ships. On two occasions, once off the coast of Alexandria, Egypt, and the other off the coast of Crete, the crew attacked and killed dozens of shipwrecked German sailors and troops. None of the shipwrecked survivors posed a major threat to Torbay's crew. Miers made no attempt to hide his actions, and reported them in his official logs. He received a strongly worded reprimand from his superiors following the first incident. Miers' actions violated the Hague Convention of 1907, which banned the killing of shipwreck survivors under any circumstances.[43][44]

On 10 September 1942, the Italian hospital ship Arno was torpedoed and sunk by RAF torpedo bombers north-east of Ras el Tin, near Tobruk. The British claimed that a decoded German radio message intimated that the vessel was carrying supplies to the Axis troops.[45] Arno was the third Italian hospital ship sunk by British aircraft after the loss of the Po in the Adriatic Sea to aerial torpedoes on 14 March 1941[46][47] and the bombing of the California off Syracuse on 11 August 1942.[48]

On 18 November 1944, the German hospital ship Tübingen was sunk by two Beaufighter bombers off Pola, in the Adriatic Sea. The vessel had paid a brief visit to the allied-controlled port of Bari to pick up German wounded under the auspices of the Red Cross; despite the calm sea and the good weather that allowed a clear identification of the ship's Red Cross markings, it was attacked with rockets nine times. Six crewmembers were killed.[49] American author Alfred M. de Zayas, who evaluated the 266 extant volumes of the Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau, identifies the sinking of Tübingen and other German hospital ships as war crimes.[50]

Looting edit

During Operation Overlord, British line of communication troops conducted small-scale looting in Bayeux and Caen in France, following their liberation, in violation of the Hague Conventions.[51] On 23 May 1945, British troops in Schleswig-Holstein were alleged to have plundered Glücksburg castle, stealing jewellery, and desecrating 38 coffins from the castle's mausoleum.[52]

United States edit

 
Dachau liberation reprisals. Soldiers of the U.S. Seventh Army and SS prisoners in a coal yard at Dachau concentration camp during its liberation. April 29, 1945 (US Army photograph)[note 1]
  • Laconia incident: US aircraft attacking Germans rescuing the sinking British troopship in the Atlantic Ocean. For example, the pilots of a United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) B-24 Liberator bomber, despite knowing the U-boat's location, intentions, and the presence of British seamen, killed dozens of Laconia 's survivors with bombs and strafing attacks, forcing U-156 to cast their remaining survivors into the sea and crash dive to avoid being destroyed.
  • Unrestricted submarine warfare. Fleet Admiral Nimitz, the wartime commander-in-chief of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, provided unapologetic written testimony on Karl Dönitz's behalf at his trial that the U.S. Navy had waged unrestricted submarine warfare in the Pacific from the very first day the U.S. entered the war.
  • Canicattì massacre: killing of Italian civilians by Lieutenant Colonel McCaffrey. A confidential inquiry was made, but McCaffrey was never charged with an offense relating to the incident. He died in 1954. This incident remained virtually unknown until Joseph S. Salemi of New York University, whose father witnessed it, publicized it.[54][55]
  • In the Biscari massacre, which consists of two instances of mass murders, US troops of the 45th Infantry Division killed roughly 75 prisoners of war, mostly Italian.[56][57]
  • Near the French village of Audouville-la-Hubert, 30 German Wehrmacht prisoners were killed by U.S. paratroopers.[2]
  • Gorla massacre: On 20 October 1944, a U.S. B-24 heavy bomber belonging to the Fifteenth Air Force unloaded a set of approximately 80 tons of bombs on the heavily populated Milanese suburbs of Gorla and Precotto. The main stairwell of Gorla's Francesco Crispi Elementary School was hit as the children and school personnel were rushing down to the air raid shelters. The explosion killed 184 of the 200 children as well as the entire staff of 19 teachers at the school.[58][59][60][61] There were some 614 victims in the neighborhood as a whole. In 2019 Milan's mayor Giuseppe Sala appealed to U.S. authorities to apologize for the bombing.[62]
  • In the aftermath of the Malmedy massacre, a written order from the HQ of the 328th US Army Infantry Regiment, dated 21 December 1944, stated: No SS troops or paratroopers will be taken prisoner but will be shot on sight.[63] Major-General Raymond Hufft (US Army) gave instructions to his troops not to take prisoners when they crossed the Rhine in 1945. "After the war, when he reflected on the war crimes he authorized, he admitted, 'if the Germans had won, I would have been on trial at Nuremberg instead of them.'"[64] Stephen Ambrose related: "I've interviewed well over 1000 combat veterans. Only one of them said he shot a prisoner ... Perhaps as many as one-third of the veterans ... however, related incidents in which they saw other GIs shooting unarmed German prisoners who had their hands up."[65]
  • Chenogne massacre: On 1 January 1945, members of the 11th Armored Division executed 80 Wehrmacht soldiers, which were assembled in a field and shot with machine guns.[66] The events were covered up at the time, and none of the perpetrators were ever punished. Postwar historians believe the killings were carried out on verbal orders by senior commanders that "no prisoners were to be taken".[67] General George S. Patton confirmed in his diary that the Americans "...also murdered 50 odd German med [sic]. I hope we can conceal this".[68]
  • Jungholzhausen massacre: On 15 April 1945, the 254th Infantry Regiment of the 63rd Infantry Division executed between 13 and 30 Waffen SS and Wehrmacht prisoners of war.[69]
  • Treseburg massacre: On 19 April 1945, the 18th Infantry Regiment of the 1st Infantry Division captured and murdered five German soldiers and nine unarmed Hitler Youths near the village of Treseburg, in reprisal for losing a soldier.[70]
  • Lippach massacre: On 22 April 1945 American soldiers from the 23rd Tank Battalion of the 12th Armored Division killed 24 Waffen SS soldiers who had been taken prisoners of war in the German town of Lippach. Members of the same unit are also alleged to have raped 20 women in the town.[71]
  • The Dachau liberation reprisals: Upon the liberation of Dachau concentration camp on 29 April 1945, about a dozen guards in the camp were shot by a machine gunner who was guarding them. Other soldiers of the 3rd Battalion, 157th Infantry Regiment, of the US 45th (Thunderbird) Division killed other guards who resisted. In all, about 30 were killed, according to the commanding officer Felix L. Sparks.[72][73] Later, Colonel Howard Buechner wrote that more than 500 were killed.[74][75]
  • Operation Teardrop: Eight of the surviving, captured crewmen from the sunken German submarine U-546 were tortured by US military personnel. Historian Philip K. Lundeberg has written that the beating and torture of U-546's survivors was a singular atrocity motivated by the interrogators' desire to quickly get information on what the U.S. believed were potential V-1 flying bombs or V-2 rocket attacks on the continental US by German submarines.[76][77]
  • Historian Peter Lieb has found that many U.S. and Canadian units were ordered not to take enemy prisoners during the D-Day landings in Normandy. If this view is correct, it may explain the fate of 64 German prisoners (out of the 130 captured) who did not make it to the POW collecting point on Omaha Beach on the day of the landings.[1]
  • During the Allied invasion in Sicily, some massacres of civilians by US troops were reported, including the Vittoria one, where 12 Italians died (including a 17-year-old boy),[78] and in Piano Stella, where a group of civilians were murdered.[79]

According to an article in Der Spiegel by Klaus Wiegrefe, many personal memoirs of Allied soldiers have been wilfully ignored by historians until now because they were at odds with the "greatest generation" mythology surrounding World War II. However, this has recently started to change, with books such as The Day of Battle, by Rick Atkinson, in which he describes Allied war crimes in Italy, and D-Day: The Battle for Normandy, by Antony Beevor.[1] Beevor's latest work suggests that Allied war crimes in Normandy were much more extensive "than was previously realized".[2]

Among American WWII veterans who admitted to having committed war crimes was former Mafia hitman Frank Sheeran. In interviews with his biographer Charles Brandt, Sheeran recalled his war service with the Thunderbird Division as the time when he first developed a callousness to the taking of human life. By his own admission, Sheeran participated in numerous massacres and summary executions of German POWs, acts which violated the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 and the 1929 Geneva Convention on POWs. In his interviews with Brandt, Sheeran divided such massacres into four different categories.

  1. Revenge killings in the heat of battle. Sheeran told Brandt that, when a German soldier had just killed his close friends and then tried to surrender, he would often "send him to hell, too." He described often witnessing similar behavior by fellow GIs.[80]
  2. Orders from unit commanders during a mission. When describing his first murder for organized crime, Sheeran recalled: "It was just like when an officer would tell you to take a couple of German prisoners back behind the line and for you to 'hurry back'. You did what you had to do."[81]
  3. The Dachau massacre and other reprisal killings of concentration camp guards and trustee inmates.[82]
  4. Calculated attempts to dehumanize and degrade German POWs. While Sheeran's unit was climbing the Harz Mountains, they came upon a Wehrmacht mule train carrying food and drink up the mountainside. The female cooks were first allowed to leave unmolested, then Sheeran and his fellow GIs "ate what we wanted and soiled the rest with our waste." Then the Wehrmacht mule drivers were given shovels and ordered to "dig their own shallow graves." Sheeran later joked that they did so without complaint, likely hoping that he and his buddies would change their minds. But the mule drivers were shot and buried in the holes they had dug. Sheeran explained that by then, "I had no hesitation in doing what I had to do."[83]

War rape edit

Secret wartime files made public only in 2006 reveal that American GIs committed more than 400 sexual offenses in Europe, including 126 rapes in England, between 1942 and 1945.[84] A study by Robert J. Lilly estimates that a total of 14,000 civilian women in England, France and Germany were raped by American GIs during World War II.[85][86] It is estimated that there were around 3,500 rapes by American servicemen in France between June 1944 and the end of the war and one historian has claimed that sexual violence against women in liberated France was common.[87]

In Taken by Force, J. Robert Lilly estimates the number of rapes committed by U.S. servicemen in Germany to be 11,040.[88] As in the case of the American occupation of France after the D-Day invasion, many of the American rapes in Germany in 1945 were gang rapes committed by armed soldiers at gunpoint.[89]

Although non-fraternization policies were instituted for the Americans in Germany, the phrase "copulation without conversation is not fraternization" was used as a motto by United States Army troops.[90] The journalist Osmar White, a war correspondent from Australia who served with the American troops during the war, wrote that

After the fighting moved on to German soil, there was a good deal of rape by combat troops and those immediately following them. The incidence varied between unit and unit according to the attitude of the commanding officer. In some cases offenders were identified, tried by court martial, and punished. The army legal branch was reticent, but admitted that for brutal or perverted sexual offences against German women, some soldiers had been shot – particularly if they happened to be Negroes. Yet I know for a fact that many women were raped by white Americans. No action was taken against the culprits. In one sector a report went round that a certain very distinguished army commander made the wisecrack, 'Copulation without conversation does not constitute fraternisation.'[91]

A typical victimization with sexual assault by drunken American personnel marching through occupied territory involved threatening a German family with weapons, forcing one or more women to engage in sex, and putting the entire family out on the street afterward.[90]

As in the eastern sector of the occupation, the number of rapes peaked in 1945, but a high rate of violence against the German and Austrian populations by the Americans lasted at least into the first half of 1946, with five cases of dead German women found in American barracks in May and June 1946 alone.[89]

Carol Huntington writes that the American soldiers who raped German women and then left gifts of food for them may have permitted themselves to view the act as a prostitution rather than rape. Citing the work of a Japanese historian alongside this suggestion, Huntington writes that Japanese women who begged for food "were raped and soldiers sometimes left food for those they raped."[89]

The black soldiers of America's segregated occupation force were both more likely to be charged with rape and severely punished.[89] Heide Fehrenbach writes that, while the American black soldiers were in fact by no means free from indiscipline,

The point, rather, is that American officials exhibited an explicit interest in a soldier's race, and then only if he were black, when reporting behavior they feared would undermine either the status or the political aims of the U.S. Military Government in Germany.[92]

In 2015, German news magazine Der Spiegel reported that German historian Miriam Gebhardt "believes that members of the US military raped as many as 190,000 German women by the time West Germany regained sovereignty in 1955, with most of the assaults taking place in the months immediately following the US invasion of Nazi Germany. The author bases her claims in large part on reports kept by Bavarian priests in the summer of 1945."[93]

Eastern Allies edit

Soviet Union edit

The Soviet Union had not signed the Geneva Convention of 1929 that protected, and stated how prisoners of war should be treated. This cast doubt on whether the Soviet treatment of Axis prisoners was therefore a war crime, although prisoners "were [not] treated even remotely in accordance with the Geneva Convention",[94] resulting in the deaths of hundreds of thousands.[95][unreliable source?] However, the Nuremberg Tribunal rejected this as a general argument. The tribunal held that the Hague Conventions (which the 1929 Geneva Convention did not replace but only augmented, and unlike the 1929 convention, were ones that the Russian Empire had ratified) and other customary laws of war, regarding the treatment of prisoners of war, were binding on all nations in a conflict whether they were signatories to the specific treaty or not.[96][97][98]

 
Mass grave of the victims of the Katyn massacre after discovery in 1943

One of the Soviet Union's earliest war crimes was the Katyn massacre (Polish: zbrodnia katyńska, "Katyń crime"; Russian: Катынская резня Katynskaya reznya, "Katyn massacre", or Russian: Катынский расстрел, "Katyn execution by shooting"), a series of mass executions of Polish military officers and intelligentsia carried out by the Soviet Union, specifically the NKVD ("People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs", aka the Soviet secret police) in April and May 1940. Though the killings took place at several places, the massacre is named after the Katyn Forest, where some of the mass graves were first discovered.

Acts of mass rape and other war crimes were committed by Soviet troops during the occupation of East Prussia (Danzig),[99][100][101][102] parts of Pomerania and Silesia, during the Battle of Berlin,[4] and during the Battle of Budapest.[citation needed]

The most widely-known war crimes committed by Soviet troops against citizens and soldiers are:

Late in the war, Yugoslavia's communist partisans complained about the rapes and looting committed by the Soviet Army while traversing their country. Milovan Djilas later recalled Joseph Stalin's response,

Does Djilas, who is himself a writer, not know what human suffering and the human heart are? Can't he understand it if a soldier who has crossed thousands of kilometers through blood and fire and death has fun with a woman or takes some trifle?[103]

Soviet war correspondent Natalya Gesse observed the Red Army in 1945: "The Russian soldiers were raping every German female from eight to eighty. It was an army of rapists". Polish women as well as Russian, Belarusian and Ukrainian slave laborers were also mass raped by the Red Army. The Soviet war correspondent Vasily Grossman described: "Liberated Soviet girls quite often complain that our soldiers rape them".[4] Soviet premier Joseph Stalin refused to punish the offenders.[104]

The Gegenmiao massacre of 1945; rapes and massacres conducted by the Soviet Army over half a group of 1,800 Japanese women and children who had taken refuge in the lamasery Gegenmiao/Koken-miao (葛根廟) during the Soviet invasion of Manchuria.[105]

Yugoslavia edit

Armed conflict Perpetrator
World War II in Yugoslavia Yugoslav Partisans
Incident Type of crime Persons
responsible
Notes
Bleiburg repatriations Alleged war crimes, crimes against humanity: murder of prisoners of war and civilians. No prosecutions. The victims were mostly Yugoslav collaborationist troops (ethnic Croats, Serbs, and Slovenes), but also included a number of civilians. They were executed without trial in an act of vengeance for the genocide committed by the pro-Axis collaborationist states (in particular the Ustaše) installed by the Nazis during the German occupation of Yugoslavia.[106]
Foibe massacres War crimes, crimes against humanity: murder of prisoners of war and civilians. Ethnic cleansing. No prosecutions.[107] Following Italy's 1943 armistice with the Allied powers up to 1947, OZNA and Yugoslav Partisans executed in Julian March (Karst Region and Istria), Kvarner and Dalmatia a number between 11,000[108][109] and 20,000[110] of the local ethnic Italian population (Istrian Italians and Dalmatian Italians), as well against anti-communists in general (even Croats and Slovenes), usually associated with Fascism, Nazism and collaboration with Axis,[110][108] as well as against real, potential or presumed opponents of Tito communism.[111] The type of attack was state terrorism,[110][112] reprisal killings,[110][113] and ethnic cleansing against Italians.[110][114][115][116][117] The foibe massacres were followed by the Istrian–Dalmatian exodus.[118]
Communist purges in Serbia in 1944–45 War crimes, crimes against humanity: murder of prisoners of war and civilians. No prosecutions. 1944–1945 killings of ethnic Germans (Danube Swabians), Rusyns (Ruthenians) and Hungarians in Bačka, as well as Serb prisoners of war and civilians.[119]
Kočevski Rog massacre War crimes, crimes against humanity: murder of prisoners of war and civilians. No prosecutions. Massacres of prisoners of war, and their families.[120]
Macelj massacre Crimes against humanity: murder of prisoners of war and civilians. No prosecutions. Massacres of prisoners of war, and their families.[121]
Tezno trench Crimes against humanity: murder of prisoners of war and civilians. No prosecutions. Massacres of prisoners of war, and their families.[122]
Barbara Pit Crimes against humanity: murder of prisoners of war and civilians. No prosecutions. Massacres of prisoners of war, and their families.[123]
Prevalje mass grave Crimes against humanity: murder of prisoners of war and civilians. No prosecutions. Massacres of prisoners of war, and their families.[124]

Asia and the Pacific War edit

Allied soldiers in the Pacific and Asian theatres sometimes killed Japanese soldiers who were attempting to surrender or after they had surrendered. A social historian of the Pacific War, John W. Dower, states that "by the final years of the war against Japan, a truly vicious cycle had developed in which the Japanese reluctance to surrender had meshed horrifically with Allied disinterest in taking prisoners".[125] Dower suggests that most Japanese personnel were told that they would be "killed or tortured" if they fell into Allied hands and, as a consequence, most of those faced with defeat on the battlefield fought to the death or committed suicide.[126] In addition, it was held to be shamefully disgraceful for a Japanese soldier to surrender, leading many to commit suicide or to fight to the death regardless of any beliefs concerning their possible treatment as POWs. In fact, the Japanese Field Service Code said that surrender was not permissible.[127]

And while it was "not official policy" for Allied personnel to take no prisoners, "over wide reaches of the Asian battleground it was everyday practice".[128]

Australia edit

According to historian Mark Johnston, "the killing of unarmed Japanese was common" and Australian command tried to put pressure on troops to actually take prisoners, but the troops proved reluctant.[129] When prisoners were indeed taken "it often proved difficult to prevent them from killing captured Japanese before they could be interrogated".[130] According to Johnston, as a consequence of this type of behavior, "Some Japanese soldiers were almost certainly deterred from surrendering to Australians".[130]

Major General Paul Cullen indicated that the killing of Japanese prisoners in the Kokoda Track Campaign was not uncommon. In one instance he recalled during the battle at Gorari that "the leading platoon captured five or seven Japanese and moved on to the next battle. The next platoon came along and bayoneted these Japanese."[131] He also stated that he found the killings understandable but that it had left him feeling guilty.

China edit

 
Some victims of the Tongzhou massacre.

There has been relatively little research into the general treatment of Japanese prisoners of war taken by Chinese Nationalist forces, such as the National Revolutionary Army (NRA), during the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–45), according to R. J. Rummel.[132] However, civilians and conscripts, as well as Japanese civilians in China, were frequently maltreated by the Chinese military. Rummel says that Chinese peasants "often had no less to fear from their own soldiers than ... from the Japanese".[133] The Nationalist military was reinforced by recruits gained through violent campaigns of conscription directed at Chinese civilians. According to Rummel:

This was a deadly affair in which men were kidnapped for the army, rounded up indiscriminately by press-gangs or army units among those on the roads or in the towns and villages, or otherwise gathered together. Many men, some the very young and old, were killed resisting or trying to escape. Once collected, they would be roped or chained together and marched, with little food or water, long distances to camp. They often died or were killed along the way, sometimes less than 50 percent reaching camp alive. Then recruit camp was no better, with hospitals resembling Nazi concentration camps... Probably 3,081,000 died during the Sino-Japanese War; likely another 1,131,000 during the Civil War—4,212,000 dead in total. Just during conscription [emphasis added].[134]

Within some intakes of Nationalist conscripts, there was a death rate of 90% from disease, starvation or violence before they commenced training.[135]

Examples of war crimes committed by Chinese associated forces include:

United Kingdom edit

During the Burma campaign, there are recorded instances of British troops removing gold teeth from dead Japanese troops and displaying Japanese skulls as trophies.[138]

During the Allied occupation of Japan, Australian, British, Indian and New Zealand troops in Japan as part of the British Commonwealth Occupation Force (BCOF) committed 62 recorded rapes. The commander of the BCOF's official reports state that members of the BCOF were convicted of committing 57 rapes in the period May 1946 to December 1947 and a further 23 between January 1948 and September 1951. No official statistics on the incidence of serious crimes during the BCOF's first three months in Japan (February to April 1946) are available.[139] Australian historian Robin Gerster contends that while the official statistics underestimate the level of serious crime among BCOF members, Japanese police often did not pass reports they received on to the BCOF and that the serious crimes which were reported were properly investigated by BCOF military police. The penalties given to members of the BCOF convicted of serious crimes were "not severe", however, and those imposed on Australians were often mitigated or quashed by Australian courts.[140]

United States edit

On January 26, 1943, the submarine USS Wahoo fired on survivors in lifeboats from the Japanese transport Buyo Maru. Vice Admiral Charles A. Lockwood asserted that the survivors were Japanese soldiers who had turned machine-gun and rifle fire on the Wahoo after she surfaced, and that such resistance was common in submarine warfare.[141] According to the submarine's executive officer, the fire was intended to force the Japanese soldiers to abandon their boats and none of them were deliberately targeted.[142] Historian Clay Blair stated that the submarine's crew fired first and the shipwrecked survivors returned fire with handguns.[143] The survivors were later determined to have included Allied POWs of the Indian 2nd Battalion, 16th Punjab Regiment, who were guarded by Japanese Army Forces from the 26th Field Ordnance Depot.[144] Of 1,126 men originally aboard Buyo Maru, 195 Indians and 87 Japanese died, some killed during the torpedoing of the ship and some killed by the shootings afterwards.[145]

On 4 March 1943, during and after the Battle of the Bismarck Sea (March 3–5, 1943), General George Kenney ordered U.S. patrol boats and Allied aircraft to attack Japanese rescue vessels, as well as the approximately 1,000 survivors from eight sunken Japanese troop transport ships on life rafts and swimming or floating in the sea.[146][147] This was later State justified on the grounds that the rescued servicemen were next to their destination, and would have been rapidly landed at their military destination and promptly returned to active service in the battle.[146][148] Many of the Allied aircrew accepted the attacks as necessary, while others were sickened.[149]

American soldiers in the Pacific often deliberately killed Japanese soldiers who had surrendered. According to Richard J. Aldrich, a professor of history at the University of Warwick, who has published a study of the diaries kept by United States and Australian soldiers, they sometimes massacred prisoners of war.[150] Dower states that in "many instances ... Japanese who did become prisoners were killed on the spot or en route to prison compounds".[128] According to Aldrich it was common practice for U.S. troops not to take prisoners.[151] This analysis is supported by British historian Niall Ferguson,[152] who also says that, in 1943, "a secret [U.S.] intelligence report noted that only the promise of ice cream and three days leave would ... induce American troops not to kill surrendering Japanese".[152]

Ferguson states such practices played a role in the ratio of Japanese prisoners to dead being 1:100 in late 1944. That same year, efforts were taken by Allied high commanders to suppress "take no prisoners" attitudes,[152] among their own personnel (as these were affecting intelligence gathering) and to encourage Japanese soldiers to surrender. Ferguson adds that measures by Allied commanders to improve the ratio of Japanese prisoners to Japanese dead, resulted in it reaching 1:7, by mid-1945. Nevertheless, taking no prisoners was still standard practice among US troops at the Battle of Okinawa, in April–June 1945.[152] Ferguson also suggests that "it was not only the fear of disciplinary action or of dishonor that deterred German and Japanese soldiers from surrendering. More important for most soldiers was the perception that prisoners would be killed by the enemy anyway, and so one might as well fight on."[153]

Ulrich Straus, a US Japanologist, suggests that frontline troops intensely hated Japanese military personnel and were "not easily persuaded" to take or protect prisoners, as they believed that Allied personnel who surrendered, got "no mercy" from the Japanese.[154] Allied soldiers believed that Japanese soldiers were inclined to feign surrender in order to make surprise attacks, a practice which was outlawed by the Hague Convention of 1907.[155][154] Therefore, according to Straus, "Senior officers opposed the taking of prisoners on the grounds that it needlessly exposed American troops to risks".[154] When prisoners nevertheless were taken at Guadalcanal, interrogator Army Captain Burden noted that many times these were shot during transport because "it was too much bother to take him in".[156]

US historian James J. Weingartner attributes the very low number of Japanese in US POW compounds to two important factors, a Japanese reluctance to surrender and a widespread American "conviction that the Japanese were "animals" or "subhuman" and unworthy of the normal treatment accorded to POWs.[157] The latter reason is supported by Ferguson, who says that "Allied troops often saw the Japanese in the same way that Germans regarded Russians—as Untermenschen".[152]

Mutilation of Japanese war dead edit

 
U.S. Navy Lieutenant (j.g.) E.V. McPherson with a Japanese skull on board USS PT-341

In the Pacific theater, Allied servicemen engaged in human trophy collecting from Japanese soldiers. The phenomenon of "trophy-taking", especially by American personnel, occurred on "a scale large enough to concern the Allied military authorities throughout the conflict, and was widely reported and commented on in the American and Japanese wartime press", with magazines and journals reporting widespread cases. Franklin Roosevelt himself was reportedly given a gift of a letter-opener made of a Japanese soldier's arm by U.S. Representative Francis E. Walter in 1944, which Roosevelt later ordered to be returned, calling for its proper burial.[158]: 65 [159]: 825  The news was also widely reported to the Japanese public, where the Americans were portrayed as "deranged, primitive, racist and inhuman". This, compounded by a previous Life magazine picture of a young woman with a skull trophy, was reprinted in the Japanese media and presented as a symbol of "American barbarism", causing national shock and outrage.[160][159]: 833 [159]

The collection of Japanese body parts began quite early in the war, prompting a September 1942 order for disciplinary action against such souvenir taking.[159] Harrison concludes that, since this was the first real opportunity to take such items (the Battle of Guadalcanal), "clearly, the collection of body parts on a scale large enough to concern the military authorities had started as soon as the first living or dead Japanese bodies were encountered".[159]

When Japanese remains were repatriated from the Mariana Islands after the war, roughly 60 percent were missing their skulls.[159]

In a 13 June 1944 memorandum, the US Army Judge Advocate General, (JAG) Major General Myron C. Cramer, asserted that "such atrocious and brutal policies", were both "repugnant to the sensibilities of all civilized people"[157] and also violations of the Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded and Sick in Armies in the Field, which stated that: "After each engagement, the occupant of the field of battle shall take measures to search for the wounded and dead, and to protect them against pillage and maltreatment."[161] Cramer recommended the distribution to all commanders of a directive ordering them to prohibit the misuse of enemy body parts.[157]

These practices were also in violation of the unwritten customary rules of land warfare and could lead to the death penalty.[157] The US Navy JAG mirrored that opinion one week later, and also added that "the atrocious conduct of which some US personnel were guilty could lead to retaliation by the Japanese which would be justified under international law".[157]

Okinawa edit

U.S. military personnel raped Okinawan women during the Battle of Okinawa in 1945.[162]

Okinawan historian Oshiro Masayasu (former director of the Okinawa Prefectural Historical Archives) writes based on several years of research:

Soon after the U.S. Marines landed, all the women of a village on Motobu Peninsula fell into the hands of American soldiers. At the time, there were only women, children, and old people in the village, as all the young men had been mobilized for the war. Soon after landing, the Marines "mopped up" the entire village, but found no signs of Japanese forces. Taking advantage of the situation, they started 'hunting for women' in broad daylight, and those women who were hiding in the village or nearby air raid shelters were dragged out one after another.[163]

According to interviews carried out by The New York Times and published by them in 2000, several elderly people from an Okinawan village confessed that after the United States had won the Battle of Okinawa, three armed Marines kept coming to the village every week to force the villagers to gather all the local women, who were then carried off into the hills and raped. The article goes deeper into the matter and claims that the villagers' tale—true or not—is part of a "dark, long-kept secret" the unraveling of which "refocused attention on what historians say is one of the most widely ignored crimes of the war": 'the widespread rape of Okinawan women by American servicemen."[164] Although Japanese reports of rape were largely ignored at the time, academic estimates have been that as many as 10,000 Okinawan women may have been raped. It has been claimed that the rape was so prevalent that most Okinawans over age 65 around the year 2000 either knew or had heard of a woman who was raped in the aftermath of the war. Military officials denied the mass rapings, and all surviving veterans refused The New York Times' request for an interview.[165]

Professor of East Asian Studies and expert on Okinawa, Steve Rabson, said: "I have read many accounts of such rapes in Okinawan newspapers and books, but few people know about them or are willing to talk about them."[165] He notes that plenty of old local books, diaries, articles and other documents refer to rapes by American soldiers of various races and backgrounds.

An explanation given for why the US military has no record of any rapes is that few—if any—Okinawan women reported abuse, mostly out of fear and embarrassment. According to Nago, Okinawan police spokesman: "Victimized women feel too ashamed to make it public."[165] Those who did report them are believed by historians to have been ignored by the U.S. military police. A large scale effort to determine the extent of such crimes has also never been called for. Over five decades after the war has ended the women who were believed to have been raped still refused to give a public statement, with friends, local historians and university professors who had spoken with the women instead saying they preferred not to discuss it publicly. Many people wondered why it never came to light after the inevitable American-Japanese babies the many women must have given birth to. In interviews, historians and Okinawan elders said that some of those Okinawan women who were raped and did not commit suicide did give birth to biracial children, but that many of them were immediately killed or left behind out of shame, disgust or fearful trauma. More often, however, rape victims underwent crude abortions with the help of village midwives. A large scale effort to determine the possible extent of these crimes has never been conducted. Over five decades after the war had ended, in the late 1990s, the women who were believed to have been raped still overwhelmingly refused to give public statements, instead speaking through relatives and a number of historians and scholars.[165]

There is substantial evidence that the U.S. had at least some knowledge of what was going on. Samuel Saxton, a retired captain, explained that the American veterans and witnesses may have intentionally kept the rape a secret, largely out of shame: "It would be unfair for the public to get the impression that we were all a bunch of rapists after we worked so hard to serve our country."[165] Military officials formally denied the mass rapes, and all surviving related veterans refused request for interviews from The New York Times. Masaie Ishihara, a sociology professor, supports this: "There is a lot of historical amnesia out there, many people don't want to acknowledge what really happened."[165] Author George Feifer in his book Tennozan: The Battle of Okinawa and the Atomic Bomb, noted that by 1946 there had been fewer than 10 reported cases of rape in Okinawa. He explained that it was "partly because of shame and disgrace, partly because Americans were victors and occupiers". Feifer claimed: "In all there were probably thousands of incidents, but the victims' silence kept rape another dirty secret of the campaign."[166]

However, American professor of Japanese studies Michael S. Molasky and some other authors have argued that they noted that Okinawan civilians "were often surprised at the comparatively humane treatment they received from the American enemy."[167][168] According to Islands of Discontent: Okinawan Responses to Japanese and American Power by the American Mark Selden, the Americans "did not pursue a policy of torture, rape, and murder of civilians as Japanese military officials had warned."[169]

Post-war edit

According to some authors, there were 1,336 reported rapes during the first 10 days of the occupation of Kanagawa Prefecture after the Japanese surrender,[162] however author Brian Walsh states that this claim originates from a misreading of Japanese Government crime figures that had actually reported 1,326 criminal incidents of all types involving American forces, including an unspecified number of rapes.[170]

Comparative death rates of POWs edit

According to James D. Morrow, "Death rates of POWs held is one measure of adherence to the standards of the treaties because substandard treatment leads to death of prisoners". The "democratic states generally provide good treatment of POWs".[171]

Killed by the Allied powers edit

  • German POWs in East European (not including the Soviet Union) hands 32.9%[152]
  • German soldiers held by Soviet Union: 15–33% (14.7% in The Dictators by Richard Overy, 35.8% in Ferguson)[152]
  • Italian soldiers held by the Soviet Union: 79%[172]
  • Japanese POWs held by Soviet Union: 10% [citation needed]
  • German POWs in British hands 0.03%[152]
  • German POWs in American hands 0.15%[152]
  • German POWs in French hands 2.58%[152]
  • Japanese POWs held by U.S.: relatively low[clarification needed], mainly suicides according to James D. Morrow.[173]
  • Japanese POWs in Chinese hands: 24% [citation needed]

Killed by Axis powers edit

  • US and British Commonwealth POWs held by Germany: ≈4%[171]
  • Soviet POWs held by Germany: 57.5%[152]
  • Italian POWs and military internees held by Germany: between 6% and 8.4%[note 2]
  • Western Allied POWs held by Japan: 27%[174] (Figures for Japan may be misleading, as sources indicate that either 10,800[175] or 19,000[176] of 35,756 fatalities among Allied POW's were from "friendly fire" at sea when their transport ships were sunk. The Geneva convention required the labelling of hospital ships as such, but had no provision for the labelling of such craft as POW ships. All sides killed many of their own POWs when sinking enemy ships.)

Summary table edit

Percent killed
Origin
Soviet Union United States
and United Kingdom
China Western Allies Germany Japan
Held by Soviet Union 14.70
–35.80
10.00
United Kingdom 0.03
United States 0.15 varying
France 2.58
East European 32.90
Germany 57.50 4.00
Japan included in Western Allies (27) not documented 27.00

Portrayal edit

Holocaust denial literature edit

The focus on Allied atrocities during the war has been a theme of Holocaust denial literature, particularly in countries where outright denial of the Holocaust is illegal.[177] According to historian Deborah Lipstadt, the concept of "comparable Allied wrongs", such as the post-war expulsions of ethnic Germans from Eastern Europe and Allied war crimes, is at the center of, and a continuously repeated theme of, contemporary Holocaust denial; phenomenon she calls "immoral equivalencies".[178]

Japanese neo-nationalists edit

Japanese neo-nationalists argue that Allied war crimes and the shortcomings of the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal were equivalent to the war crimes committed by Japanese forces during the war.[citation needed] American historian John W. Dower has written that this position is "a kind of historiographic cancellation of immorality—as if the transgressions of others exonerate one's own crimes".[179] While right-wing forces in Japan have tried to push for their perspective on war-time history, they have been unsuccessful due to opposition both within and outside Japan.[180]

See also edit

War crimes committed by the Axis powers and their collaborators
Allied war crimes
Other

Notes edit

  1. ^ The caption for the photograph in the US National Archives reads, "SC208765, Soldiers of the 42nd Infantry Division, US Seventh Army, order SS men to come forward when one of their number tried to escape from the Dachau, Germany, concentration camp after it was captured by US forces. Men on the ground in background feign death by falling as the guards fired a volley at the fleeing SS men. (157th Regt. 4/29/45)."[53]
    Lt. Colonel Felix L. Sparks disputed this and thought that it "represented the initial step in the cover-up of the execution of German guards".[53]
  2. ^ About 43,600 deaths on a total of approx 730,000 POWs and military internees. Another 13,269 were killed between September 1943 and February 1944 in the sinking of seven ships carrying them from Greece to German-controlled ports. A further 5,000 to 6,000 Italian POW were murdered by the Germans after they had surrendered in the Massacre of the Acqui Division.

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Harris, Justin Michael. "American Soldiers and POW Killing in the European Theater of World War II" [1] 18 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine

allied, crimes, during, world, further, information, crimes, world, during, world, allies, committed, legally, proven, crimes, violations, laws, against, either, civilians, military, personnel, axis, powers, world, many, trials, axis, criminals, took, place, m. Further information War crimes in World War II During World War II the Allies committed legally proven war crimes and violations of the laws of war against either civilians or military personnel of the Axis powers At the end of World War II many trials of Axis war criminals took place most famously the Nuremberg Trials and Tokyo Trials In Europe these tribunals were set up under the authority of the London Charter which only considered allegations of war crimes committed by people who acted in the interests of the Axis powers Some war crimes involving Allied personnel were investigated by the Allied powers and led in some instances to courts martial Some incidents alleged by historians to have been crimes under the law of war in operation at the time were for a variety of reasons not investigated by the Allied powers during the war or were investigated but not prosecuted According to an article in Der Spiegel by Klaus Wiegrefe many personal memoirs of Allied soldiers have been willfully ignored by historians because they were at odds with the greatest generation mythology surrounding World War II This has started to change with books such as The Day of Battle by Rick Atkinson in which he describes Allied war crimes in Italy and D Day The Battle for Normandy by Antony Beevor 1 Beevor s latest work suggests that Allied war crimes in Normandy were much more extensive than was previously realized 2 Contents 1 Policy 2 Western Allies 2 1 Canada 2 1 1 Murder of POW s 2 1 2 Razing of Friesoythe 2 2 France 2 2 1 French Army 2 2 2 Maquis 2 2 3 Moroccan Goumiers 2 3 United Kingdom 2 3 1 Indiscriminate bombing of cities 2 3 2 Abuses against civilians and POWs 2 3 3 Rape and sexual harassment 2 3 4 Unrestricted submarine warfare and shooting of shipwreck survivors 2 3 5 Looting 2 4 United States 2 4 1 War rape 3 Eastern Allies 3 1 Soviet Union 3 2 Yugoslavia 4 Asia and the Pacific War 4 1 Australia 4 2 China 4 3 United Kingdom 4 4 United States 4 4 1 Mutilation of Japanese war dead 4 4 2 Okinawa 4 4 2 1 Post war 5 Comparative death rates of POWs 5 1 Killed by the Allied powers 5 2 Killed by Axis powers 5 3 Summary table 6 Portrayal 6 1 Holocaust denial literature 6 2 Japanese neo nationalists 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 Further readingPolicy editThe Allies claim that their militaries were directed to observe the Hague Conventions and Geneva Conventions and believed to be conducting a just war fought for defensive reasons Violations of the conventions did occur however including the forcible return of Soviet citizens who had been collaborating with Axis forces to the USSR at the end of the war The military of the Soviet Union also frequently committed war crimes which are today known to have been at the direction of its government These crimes included waging wars of aggression and mass killings of prisoners of war and repressing the population of conquered countries 3 Antony Beevor describes the Soviet rape of German women during the occupation of Germany as the greatest phenomenon of mass rape in history and has estimated that at least 1 4 million women were raped in East Prussia Pomerania and Silesia alone He asserts that Soviet women and girls liberated from slave labor in Germany were also violated 4 Individual commentators such as the German historian and left wing antiwar activist Jorg Friedrich have argued that Allied aerial bombardment of civilian areas and cultural targets in enemy territory including the German cities of Cologne Hamburg and Dresden the Abbey in Monte Cassino in Italy during the Battle of Monte Cassino 5 the Japanese cities of Tokyo Nagoya Osaka and especially the use of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki which resulted in the total destruction of cities and the deaths of hundreds of thousands of civilians should be considered war crimes 6 7 8 9 however other observers point out that no positive or specific international law with respect to aerial warfare existed prior to and during World War II 10 and that no Japanese and German officers were prosecuted at the post World War II Allied war crime trials for the aerial raids on Shanghai Chongqing Warsaw Rotterdam and British cities during the Blitz 11 Western Allies editCanada edit Murder of POW s edit According to Mitch am and Avon Hohenstaufen the Canadian army unit The Loyal Edmonton Regiment murdered German prisoners of war during the invasion of Sicily 12 Razing of Friesoythe edit Main article Razing of Friesoythe Charles P Stacey the Canadian official campaign historian reports that on 14 April 1945 rumours spread that the popular commanding officer of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of Canada Lieutenant Colonel Frederick E Wigle had been killed by a civilian sniper This rumour resulted in the Highlanders setting fire to civilian property in the town of Friesoythe in an act of reprisal 13 Stacey later wrote that the Canadian troops first removed German civilians from their property before setting the houses on fire he commented that he was glad to say that he never heard of another such case 14 It was later found that German soldiers had killed the Argylls commander 15 France edit French Army edit See also Abbeville massacre nbsp Some civilian victims of the Abbeville massacre May 1940 During the German invasion of Belgium Belgian authorities arrested a number of suspects enemy Belgians and enemy foreigners between 10 and 15 May on the orders of the auditor general Walter Ganshof van der Meersch It is clear that the arrests were very irresponsible and arbitrary They just picked up some people out of revenge out of jealousy because of their political beliefs their Jewish origin or because of their foreign nationality wrote survivor Gaby Warris 16 Three days later on 19 May 79 of these detainees were taken to Abbeville and locked up under the music kiosk on the market square When the city of Abbeville was heavily bombed from the air by German squadrons on the night of 19 to 20 May the French guards feared the prisoners would be released by the Germans and decided to summarily execute them 17 Twenty one prisoners were taken from the kiosk placed against the wall and shot without trial on the orders of the French Capitaine Marcel Dingeon who was Abbeville s deputy commander Of the dead only four were found to have actually worked for the Germans Dingeon killed himself several months after France surrendered In January 1942 two French soldiers who participated in the massacre Lieutenant Rene Caron and Sergeant Emile Molet were tried by a German court martial in wartime Paris They were sentenced to death and executed by firing squad on 7 April 1942 at Mont Valerien 18 Maquis edit Following the Operation Dragoon landings in southern France and the collapse of the German military occupation in August 1944 large numbers of German troops could not escape from France and surrendered to the French Forces of the Interior The Resistance executed a few of the Wehrmacht and most of the Gestapo and SS prisoners 19 The Maquis also executed 17 German prisoners of war at Saint Julien de Crempse in the Dordogne region on 10 September 1944 14 of whom have since been positively identified The murders were revenge killings for German murders of 17 local inhabitants of the village of St Julien on 3 August 1944 which were themselves reprisal killings in response to Resistance activity in the St Julien region which was home to an active Maquis cell 20 Moroccan Goumiers edit See also Marocchinate nbsp Moroccan Goumiers at Monte Cassino 1944 French Moroccan troops of the French Expeditionary Corps known as Goumiers committed mass crimes in Italy during and after the Battle of Monte Cassino 21 and in Germany 22 According to Italian sources more than 12 000 civilians above all young and old women children were kidnapped raped or killed by Goumiers 23 This is featured in the Italian film La Ciociara Two Women with Sophia Loren French troops took part in the invasion of Germany and France was assigned an occupation zone in Germany Perry Biddiscombe quotes the original survey estimates that the French Goumiers for instance committed 385 rapes in the Constance area 600 in Bruchsal and 500 in Freudenstadt 24 The soldiers are also alleged to have committed widespread rape in the Hofingen District near Leonberg 25 Katz and Kaiser 26 though they mention rape found no specific occurrences in either Hofingen or Leonberg compared to other towns Anthony Clayton in his book France Soldiers and Africa 27 devotes several pages to the criminal activities of the Goumiers which he partially ascribes to typical practices in their homeland According to Norman Naimark French Moroccan troops matched the behaviour of Soviet troops when it came to rape in particular in the early occupation of Baden and Wurttemberg provided the numbers are correct 28 United Kingdom edit See also British war crimes World War II nbsp The city centre of Dresden after the bombing Looting rape and prisoner executions were committed by British soldiers at a similar scale compared to other armies throughout the war 29 page needed Indiscriminate bombing of cities edit The British with other allied nations mainly the U S carried out air raids against enemy cities during World War II including the bombing of the German city of Dresden which killed around 25 000 people While no agreement treaty convention or any other instrument governing the protection of the civilian population or civilian property from aerial attack was adopted before the war 30 the Hague Conventions did prohibit the bombardment of undefended towns The city largely untouched by the war had functioning rail communications to the Eastern front and was an industrial centre Allied forces inquiry concluded that an air attack on Dresden was militarily justified on the grounds the city was defended 31 Abuses against civilians and POWs edit On 21 April 1945 British soldiers randomly selected and burned two cottages in Seedorf Germany in reprisal against local civilians who had hidden German soldiers in their cellars 32 Historian Sean Longden claims that violence against German prisoners and civilians who refused to cooperate with the British army could be ignored or made light of 33 After the end of the war in Europe German prisoners in Norway were reportedly forced to clear minefields under British supervision The Germans complained to British Commander General Andrew Thorne but he dismissed the accusations arguing that the Germans prisoners were not POWs but disarmed forces who had surrendered unconditionally By 1946 when the cleanup ended 392 were injured and 275 had died this was contrary to the terms of the Geneva Conventions 34 page needed The London Cage a MI19 prisoner of war facility in the UK during and immediately after the war was subject to allegations of torture 35 The Bad Nenndorf interrogation centre in occupied Germany managed by the Combined Services Detailed Interrogation Centre was the subject of an official inquiry in 1947 which found that there was mental and physical torture during the interrogations and that personal property of the prisoners were stolen 36 Rape and sexual harassment edit The Italian statistics record eight rapes and nineteen attempted rapes by British soldiers in Italy between September 1943 and December 1945 Various sources including the Special Investigation Branch as well as evidences from Belgian reporters said that rape and sexual harassment by British troops occurred frequently following the invasion of Sicily in 1943 37 Rape also took place during the advance towards the Rhine 38 especially once British forces had entered Germany 38 During late 1944 with the army based across Belgium and the Netherlands soldiers were billeted with local families or befriended them In December 1944 it came to the attention of the authorities that there was a rise of indecency with children where abusers had exploited the atmosphere of trust that had been created with local families While the army attempted to investigate allegations and some men were convicted it was an issue that received little publicity 33 In Germany rapes of local women were committed by British and Canadian troops 39 Even elderly women were targeted 39 Though the Royal Military Police tended to turn a blind eye towards abuse of German prisoners and civilians who obstructed the army rape was considered differently Some officers however treated the behaviour of their men with leniency Some rapes were impulsively committed under the effects of alcohol or post traumatic stress but there were cases of premeditated attacks 33 One such case was the rape of three German women in the town of Neustadt am Rubenberge on a single day in April 1945 38 or the attempted rape of two local girls at gunpoint in the village of Oyle near Nienburg where two soldiers attempted to coerce two girls into going into a nearby wood and upon their refusal one was grabbed and dragged into the woods where according to Longden after she began screaming one of the soldiers pulled a gun to silence her Whether intentionally or in error the gun went off hitting her in the throat and killing her 39 Unrestricted submarine warfare and shooting of shipwreck survivors edit On 4 May 1940 in response to Germany s intensive unrestricted submarine warfare during the Battle of the Atlantic and its invasion of Denmark and Norway the Royal Navy conducted its own unrestricted submarine campaign The Admiralty announced that all vessels in the Skagerrak were to be sunk on sight without warning This was contrary to the terms of the Second London Naval Treaty 40 41 According to Alfred de Zayas there are numerous documented cases of the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force deliberately firing upon shipwreck survivors 42 In July 1941 the submarine HMS Torbay under the command of Anthony Miers was based in the Mediterranean where it sank several German ships On two occasions once off the coast of Alexandria Egypt and the other off the coast of Crete the crew attacked and killed dozens of shipwrecked German sailors and troops None of the shipwrecked survivors posed a major threat to Torbay s crew Miers made no attempt to hide his actions and reported them in his official logs He received a strongly worded reprimand from his superiors following the first incident Miers actions violated the Hague Convention of 1907 which banned the killing of shipwreck survivors under any circumstances 43 44 On 10 September 1942 the Italian hospital ship Arnowas torpedoed and sunk by RAF torpedo bombers north east of Ras el Tin near Tobruk The British claimed that a decoded German radio message intimated that the vessel was carrying supplies to the Axis troops 45 Arno was the third Italian hospital ship sunk by British aircraft after the loss of the Po in the Adriatic Sea to aerial torpedoes on 14 March 1941 46 47 and the bombing of the California off Syracuse on 11 August 1942 48 On 18 November 1944 the German hospital ship Tubingenwas sunk by two Beaufighter bombers off Pola in the Adriatic Sea The vessel had paid a brief visit to the allied controlled port of Bari to pick up German wounded under the auspices of the Red Cross despite the calm sea and the good weather that allowed a clear identification of the ship s Red Cross markings it was attacked with rockets nine times Six crewmembers were killed 49 American author Alfred M de Zayas who evaluated the 266 extant volumes of the Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau identifies the sinking of Tubingen and other German hospital ships as war crimes 50 Looting edit During Operation Overlord British line of communication troops conducted small scale looting in Bayeux and Caen in France following their liberation in violation of the Hague Conventions 51 On 23 May 1945 British troops in Schleswig Holstein were alleged to have plundered Glucksburg castle stealing jewellery and desecrating 38 coffins from the castle s mausoleum 52 United States edit See also List of war crimes committed during World War II Crimes perpetrated by the United States and United States war crimes World War II nbsp Dachau liberation reprisals Soldiers of the U S Seventh Army and SS prisoners in a coal yard at Dachau concentration camp during its liberation April 29 1945 US Army photograph note 1 Laconia incident US aircraft attacking Germans rescuing the sinking British troopship in the Atlantic Ocean For example the pilots of a United States Army Air Forces USAAF B 24 Liberator bomber despite knowing the U boat s location intentions and the presence of British seamen killed dozens of Laconia s survivors with bombs and strafing attacks forcing U 156 to cast their remaining survivors into the sea and crash dive to avoid being destroyed Unrestricted submarine warfare Fleet Admiral Nimitz the wartime commander in chief of the U S Pacific Fleet provided unapologetic written testimony on Karl Donitz s behalf at his trial that the U S Navy had waged unrestricted submarine warfare in the Pacific from the very first day the U S entered the war Canicatti massacre killing of Italian civilians by Lieutenant Colonel McCaffrey A confidential inquiry was made but McCaffrey was never charged with an offense relating to the incident He died in 1954 This incident remained virtually unknown until Joseph S Salemi of New York University whose father witnessed it publicized it 54 55 In the Biscari massacre which consists of two instances of mass murders US troops of the 45th Infantry Division killed roughly 75 prisoners of war mostly Italian 56 57 Near the French village of Audouville la Hubert 30 German Wehrmacht prisoners were killed by U S paratroopers 2 Gorla massacre On 20 October 1944 a U S B 24 heavy bomber belonging to the Fifteenth Air Force unloaded a set of approximately 80 tons of bombs on the heavily populated Milanese suburbs of Gorla and Precotto The main stairwell of Gorla s Francesco Crispi Elementary School was hit as the children and school personnel were rushing down to the air raid shelters The explosion killed 184 of the 200 children as well as the entire staff of 19 teachers at the school 58 59 60 61 There were some 614 victims in the neighborhood as a whole In 2019 Milan s mayor Giuseppe Sala appealed to U S authorities to apologize for the bombing 62 In the aftermath of the Malmedy massacre a written order from the HQ of the 328th US Army Infantry Regiment dated 21 December 1944 stated No SS troops or paratroopers will be taken prisoner but will be shot on sight 63 Major General Raymond Hufft US Army gave instructions to his troops not to take prisoners when they crossed the Rhine in 1945 After the war when he reflected on the war crimes he authorized he admitted if the Germans had won I would have been on trial at Nuremberg instead of them 64 Stephen Ambrose related I ve interviewed well over 1000 combat veterans Only one of them said he shot a prisoner Perhaps as many as one third of the veterans however related incidents in which they saw other GIs shooting unarmed German prisoners who had their hands up 65 Chenogne massacre On 1 January 1945 members of the 11th Armored Division executed 80 Wehrmacht soldiers which were assembled in a field and shot with machine guns 66 The events were covered up at the time and none of the perpetrators were ever punished Postwar historians believe the killings were carried out on verbal orders by senior commanders that no prisoners were to be taken 67 General George S Patton confirmed in his diary that the Americans also murdered 50 odd German med sic I hope we can conceal this 68 Jungholzhausen massacre On 15 April 1945 the 254th Infantry Regiment of the 63rd Infantry Division executed between 13 and 30 Waffen SS and Wehrmacht prisoners of war 69 Treseburg massacre On 19 April 1945 the 18th Infantry Regiment of the 1st Infantry Division captured and murdered five German soldiers and nine unarmed Hitler Youths near the village of Treseburg in reprisal for losing a soldier 70 Lippach massacre On 22 April 1945 American soldiers from the 23rd Tank Battalion of the 12th Armored Division killed 24 Waffen SS soldiers who had been taken prisoners of war in the German town of Lippach Members of the same unit are also alleged to have raped 20 women in the town 71 The Dachau liberation reprisals Upon the liberation of Dachau concentration camp on 29 April 1945 about a dozen guards in the camp were shot by a machine gunner who was guarding them Other soldiers of the 3rd Battalion 157th Infantry Regiment of the US 45th Thunderbird Division killed other guards who resisted In all about 30 were killed according to the commanding officer Felix L Sparks 72 73 Later Colonel Howard Buechner wrote that more than 500 were killed 74 75 Operation Teardrop Eight of the surviving captured crewmen from the sunken German submarine U 546 were tortured by US military personnel Historian Philip K Lundeberg has written that the beating and torture of U 546 s survivors was a singular atrocity motivated by the interrogators desire to quickly get information on what the U S believed were potential V 1 flying bombs or V 2 rocket attacks on the continental US by German submarines 76 77 Historian Peter Lieb has found that many U S and Canadian units were ordered not to take enemy prisoners during the D Day landings in Normandy If this view is correct it may explain the fate of 64 German prisoners out of the 130 captured who did not make it to the POW collecting point on Omaha Beach on the day of the landings 1 During the Allied invasion in Sicily some massacres of civilians by US troops were reported including the Vittoria one where 12 Italians died including a 17 year old boy 78 and in Piano Stella where a group of civilians were murdered 79 According to an article in Der Spiegel by Klaus Wiegrefe many personal memoirs of Allied soldiers have been wilfully ignored by historians until now because they were at odds with the greatest generation mythology surrounding World War II However this has recently started to change with books such as The Day of Battle by Rick Atkinson in which he describes Allied war crimes in Italy and D Day The Battle for Normandy by Antony Beevor 1 Beevor s latest work suggests that Allied war crimes in Normandy were much more extensive than was previously realized 2 Among American WWII veterans who admitted to having committed war crimes was former Mafia hitman Frank Sheeran In interviews with his biographer Charles Brandt Sheeran recalled his war service with the Thunderbird Division as the time when he first developed a callousness to the taking of human life By his own admission Sheeran participated in numerous massacres and summary executions of German POWs acts which violated the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 and the 1929 Geneva Convention on POWs In his interviews with Brandt Sheeran divided such massacres into four different categories Revenge killings in the heat of battle Sheeran told Brandt that when a German soldier had just killed his close friends and then tried to surrender he would often send him to hell too He described often witnessing similar behavior by fellow GIs 80 Orders from unit commanders during a mission When describing his first murder for organized crime Sheeran recalled It was just like when an officer would tell you to take a couple of German prisoners back behind the line and for you to hurry back You did what you had to do 81 The Dachau massacre and other reprisal killings of concentration camp guards and trustee inmates 82 Calculated attempts to dehumanize and degrade German POWs While Sheeran s unit was climbing the Harz Mountains they came upon a Wehrmacht mule train carrying food and drink up the mountainside The female cooks were first allowed to leave unmolested then Sheeran and his fellow GIs ate what we wanted and soiled the rest with our waste Then the Wehrmacht mule drivers were given shovels and ordered to dig their own shallow graves Sheeran later joked that they did so without complaint likely hoping that he and his buddies would change their minds But the mule drivers were shot and buried in the holes they had dug Sheeran explained that by then I had no hesitation in doing what I had to do 83 War rape edit Secret wartime files made public only in 2006 reveal that American GIs committed more than 400 sexual offenses in Europe including 126 rapes in England between 1942 and 1945 84 A study by Robert J Lilly estimates that a total of 14 000 civilian women in England France and Germany were raped by American GIs during World War II 85 86 It is estimated that there were around 3 500 rapes by American servicemen in France between June 1944 and the end of the war and one historian has claimed that sexual violence against women in liberated France was common 87 In Taken by Force J Robert Lilly estimates the number of rapes committed by U S servicemen in Germany to be 11 040 88 As in the case of the American occupation of France after the D Day invasion many of the American rapes in Germany in 1945 were gang rapes committed by armed soldiers at gunpoint 89 Although non fraternization policies were instituted for the Americans in Germany the phrase copulation without conversation is not fraternization was used as a motto by United States Army troops 90 The journalist Osmar White a war correspondent from Australia who served with the American troops during the war wrote thatAfter the fighting moved on to German soil there was a good deal of rape by combat troops and those immediately following them The incidence varied between unit and unit according to the attitude of the commanding officer In some cases offenders were identified tried by court martial and punished The army legal branch was reticent but admitted that for brutal or perverted sexual offences against German women some soldiers had been shot particularly if they happened to be Negroes Yet I know for a fact that many women were raped by white Americans No action was taken against the culprits In one sector a report went round that a certain very distinguished army commander made the wisecrack Copulation without conversation does not constitute fraternisation 91 A typical victimization with sexual assault by drunken American personnel marching through occupied territory involved threatening a German family with weapons forcing one or more women to engage in sex and putting the entire family out on the street afterward 90 As in the eastern sector of the occupation the number of rapes peaked in 1945 but a high rate of violence against the German and Austrian populations by the Americans lasted at least into the first half of 1946 with five cases of dead German women found in American barracks in May and June 1946 alone 89 Carol Huntington writes that the American soldiers who raped German women and then left gifts of food for them may have permitted themselves to view the act as a prostitution rather than rape Citing the work of a Japanese historian alongside this suggestion Huntington writes that Japanese women who begged for food were raped and soldiers sometimes left food for those they raped 89 The black soldiers of America s segregated occupation force were both more likely to be charged with rape and severely punished 89 Heide Fehrenbach writes that while the American black soldiers were in fact by no means free from indiscipline The point rather is that American officials exhibited an explicit interest in a soldier s race and then only if he were black when reporting behavior they feared would undermine either the status or the political aims of the U S Military Government in Germany 92 In 2015 German news magazine Der Spiegel reported that German historian Miriam Gebhardt believes that members of the US military raped as many as 190 000 German women by the time West Germany regained sovereignty in 1955 with most of the assaults taking place in the months immediately following the US invasion of Nazi Germany The author bases her claims in large part on reports kept by Bavarian priests in the summer of 1945 93 Eastern Allies editSoviet Union edit Main article Soviet war crimes World War II The Soviet Union had not signed the Geneva Convention of 1929 that protected and stated how prisoners of war should be treated This cast doubt on whether the Soviet treatment of Axis prisoners was therefore a war crime although prisoners were not treated even remotely in accordance with the Geneva Convention 94 resulting in the deaths of hundreds of thousands 95 unreliable source However the Nuremberg Tribunal rejected this as a general argument The tribunal held that the Hague Conventions which the 1929 Geneva Convention did not replace but only augmented and unlike the 1929 convention were ones that the Russian Empire had ratified and other customary laws of war regarding the treatment of prisoners of war were binding on all nations in a conflict whether they were signatories to the specific treaty or not 96 97 98 nbsp Mass grave of the victims of the Katyn massacre after discovery in 1943 One of the Soviet Union s earliest war crimes was the Katyn massacre Polish zbrodnia katynska Katyn crime Russian Katynskaya reznya Katynskaya reznya Katyn massacre or Russian Katynskij rasstrel Katyn execution by shooting a series of mass executions of Polish military officers and intelligentsia carried out by the Soviet Union specifically the NKVD People s Commissariat for Internal Affairs aka the Soviet secret police in April and May 1940 Though the killings took place at several places the massacre is named after the Katyn Forest where some of the mass graves were first discovered Acts of mass rape and other war crimes were committed by Soviet troops during the occupation of East Prussia Danzig 99 100 101 102 parts of Pomerania and Silesia during the Battle of Berlin 4 and during the Battle of Budapest citation needed The most widely known war crimes committed by Soviet troops against citizens and soldiers are the Metgethen massacre mass murder and rape of 32 3 000 German claim German citizens by Red Army soldiers the Nemmersdorf massacre mass murder and rape of 74 German citizens as well as 50 French and Belgian POWs by the Red Army s 2nd Guards Tank Corps the Treuenbritzen massacre mass murder and rape of German citizens by Soviet soldiers the Massacre of Broniki mass murder of 153 German POWs by Soviet soldiers the Massacre of Grischino mass torture rape and murder of Axis 596 POWs mostly nurses construction workers and communications personnel and civilians by Soviet soldiers the Massacre of Feodosia torture mutilation and murder of 160 wounded German soldiers by the Red Army and Soviet Navy the Naliboki massacre looting razing and mass murder in the town of Naliboki Belarus by Soviet Partisans resulting in the deaths of 127 129 Polish civilians Late in the war Yugoslavia s communist partisans complained about the rapes and looting committed by the Soviet Army while traversing their country Milovan Djilas later recalled Joseph Stalin s response Does Djilas who is himself a writer not know what human suffering and the human heart are Can t he understand it if a soldier who has crossed thousands of kilometers through blood and fire and death has fun with a woman or takes some trifle 103 Soviet war correspondent Natalya Gesse observed the Red Army in 1945 The Russian soldiers were raping every German female from eight to eighty It was an army of rapists Polish women as well as Russian Belarusian and Ukrainian slave laborers were also mass raped by the Red Army The Soviet war correspondent Vasily Grossman described Liberated Soviet girls quite often complain that our soldiers rape them 4 Soviet premier Joseph Stalin refused to punish the offenders 104 The Gegenmiao massacre of 1945 rapes and massacres conducted by the Soviet Army over half a group of 1 800 Japanese women and children who had taken refuge in the lamasery Gegenmiao Koken miao 葛根廟 during the Soviet invasion of Manchuria 105 Yugoslavia edit Armed conflict Perpetrator World War II in Yugoslavia Yugoslav Partisans Incident Type of crime Personsresponsible Notes Bleiburg repatriations Alleged war crimes crimes against humanity murder of prisoners of war and civilians No prosecutions The victims were mostly Yugoslav collaborationist troops ethnic Croats Serbs and Slovenes but also included a number of civilians They were executed without trial in an act of vengeance for the genocide committed by the pro Axis collaborationist states in particular the Ustase installed by the Nazis during the German occupation of Yugoslavia 106 Foibe massacres War crimes crimes against humanity murder of prisoners of war and civilians Ethnic cleansing No prosecutions 107 Following Italy s 1943 armistice with the Allied powers up to 1947 OZNA and Yugoslav Partisans executed in Julian March Karst Region and Istria Kvarner and Dalmatia a number between 11 000 108 109 and 20 000 110 of the local ethnic Italian population Istrian Italians and Dalmatian Italians as well against anti communists in general even Croats and Slovenes usually associated with Fascism Nazism and collaboration with Axis 110 108 as well as against real potential or presumed opponents of Tito communism 111 The type of attack was state terrorism 110 112 reprisal killings 110 113 and ethnic cleansing against Italians 110 114 115 116 117 The foibe massacres were followed by the Istrian Dalmatian exodus 118 Communist purges in Serbia in 1944 45 War crimes crimes against humanity murder of prisoners of war and civilians No prosecutions 1944 1945 killings of ethnic Germans Danube Swabians Rusyns Ruthenians and Hungarians in Backa as well as Serb prisoners of war and civilians 119 Kocevski Rog massacre War crimes crimes against humanity murder of prisoners of war and civilians No prosecutions Massacres of prisoners of war and their families 120 Macelj massacre Crimes against humanity murder of prisoners of war and civilians No prosecutions Massacres of prisoners of war and their families 121 Tezno trench Crimes against humanity murder of prisoners of war and civilians No prosecutions Massacres of prisoners of war and their families 122 Barbara Pit Crimes against humanity murder of prisoners of war and civilians No prosecutions Massacres of prisoners of war and their families 123 Prevalje mass grave Crimes against humanity murder of prisoners of war and civilians No prosecutions Massacres of prisoners of war and their families 124 Asia and the Pacific War editSee also Japanese prisoners of war in World War II and Japanese prisoners of war in the Soviet Union Allied soldiers in the Pacific and Asian theatres sometimes killed Japanese soldiers who were attempting to surrender or after they had surrendered A social historian of the Pacific War John W Dower states that by the final years of the war against Japan a truly vicious cycle had developed in which the Japanese reluctance to surrender had meshed horrifically with Allied disinterest in taking prisoners 125 Dower suggests that most Japanese personnel were told that they would be killed or tortured if they fell into Allied hands and as a consequence most of those faced with defeat on the battlefield fought to the death or committed suicide 126 In addition it was held to be shamefully disgraceful for a Japanese soldier to surrender leading many to commit suicide or to fight to the death regardless of any beliefs concerning their possible treatment as POWs In fact the Japanese Field Service Code said that surrender was not permissible 127 And while it was not official policy for Allied personnel to take no prisoners over wide reaches of the Asian battleground it was everyday practice 128 Australia edit According to historian Mark Johnston the killing of unarmed Japanese was common and Australian command tried to put pressure on troops to actually take prisoners but the troops proved reluctant 129 When prisoners were indeed taken it often proved difficult to prevent them from killing captured Japanese before they could be interrogated 130 According to Johnston as a consequence of this type of behavior Some Japanese soldiers were almost certainly deterred from surrendering to Australians 130 Major General Paul Cullen indicated that the killing of Japanese prisoners in the Kokoda Track Campaign was not uncommon In one instance he recalled during the battle at Gorari that the leading platoon captured five or seven Japanese and moved on to the next battle The next platoon came along and bayoneted these Japanese 131 He also stated that he found the killings understandable but that it had left him feeling guilty China edit nbsp Some victims of the Tongzhou massacre There has been relatively little research into the general treatment of Japanese prisoners of war taken by Chinese Nationalist forces such as the National Revolutionary Army NRA during the Second Sino Japanese War 1937 45 according to R J Rummel 132 However civilians and conscripts as well as Japanese civilians in China were frequently maltreated by the Chinese military Rummel says that Chinese peasants often had no less to fear from their own soldiers than from the Japanese 133 The Nationalist military was reinforced by recruits gained through violent campaigns of conscription directed at Chinese civilians According to Rummel This was a deadly affair in which men were kidnapped for the army rounded up indiscriminately by press gangs or army units among those on the roads or in the towns and villages or otherwise gathered together Many men some the very young and old were killed resisting or trying to escape Once collected they would be roped or chained together and marched with little food or water long distances to camp They often died or were killed along the way sometimes less than 50 percent reaching camp alive Then recruit camp was no better with hospitals resembling Nazi concentration camps Probably 3 081 000 died during the Sino Japanese War likely another 1 131 000 during the Civil War 4 212 000 dead in total Just during conscription emphasis added 134 Within some intakes of Nationalist conscripts there was a death rate of 90 from disease starvation or violence before they commenced training 135 Examples of war crimes committed by Chinese associated forces include in 1937 near Shanghai the killing torture and assault of Japanese POWs and Chinese civilians accused of collaboration were recorded in photographs taken by Swiss businessman Tom Simmen 136 In 1996 Simmen s son released the pictures showing Nationalist Chinese soldiers committing summary executions by decapitation and shooting as well as public torture the Yan an Rectification Movement from 1942 to 1945 in the Communist controlled zones ordered by Mao Zedong and the Chinese Communist Party Over 10 000 people were tortured or killed and it is often regarded by many as the beginning of Mao Zedong s cult of personality the Tongzhou mutiny of August 1937 Chinese soldiers recruited by Japan mutinied and switched sides in Tongzhou Beijing before attacking Japanese civilians killing 280 and raping many women 132 137 Nationalist troops in Hubei Province during May 1943 ordered whole towns to evacuate and then plundered them any civilians who refused or were unable to leave were killed 133 United Kingdom edit During the Burma campaign there are recorded instances of British troops removing gold teeth from dead Japanese troops and displaying Japanese skulls as trophies 138 During the Allied occupation of Japan Australian British Indian and New Zealand troops in Japan as part of the British Commonwealth Occupation Force BCOF committed 62 recorded rapes The commander of the BCOF s official reports state that members of the BCOF were convicted of committing 57 rapes in the period May 1946 to December 1947 and a further 23 between January 1948 and September 1951 No official statistics on the incidence of serious crimes during the BCOF s first three months in Japan February to April 1946 are available 139 Australian historian Robin Gerster contends that while the official statistics underestimate the level of serious crime among BCOF members Japanese police often did not pass reports they received on to the BCOF and that the serious crimes which were reported were properly investigated by BCOF military police The penalties given to members of the BCOF convicted of serious crimes were not severe however and those imposed on Australians were often mitigated or quashed by Australian courts 140 United States edit See also United States war crimes World War II On January 26 1943 the submarine USS Wahoo fired on survivors in lifeboats from the Japanese transport Buyo Maru Vice Admiral Charles A Lockwood asserted that the survivors were Japanese soldiers who had turned machine gun and rifle fire on the Wahoo after she surfaced and that such resistance was common in submarine warfare 141 According to the submarine s executive officer the fire was intended to force the Japanese soldiers to abandon their boats and none of them were deliberately targeted 142 Historian Clay Blair stated that the submarine s crew fired first and the shipwrecked survivors returned fire with handguns 143 The survivors were later determined to have included Allied POWs of the Indian 2nd Battalion 16th Punjab Regiment who were guarded by Japanese Army Forces from the 26th Field Ordnance Depot 144 Of 1 126 men originally aboard Buyo Maru 195 Indians and 87 Japanese died some killed during the torpedoing of the ship and some killed by the shootings afterwards 145 On 4 March 1943 during and after the Battle of the Bismarck Sea March 3 5 1943 General George Kenney ordered U S patrol boats and Allied aircraft to attack Japanese rescue vessels as well as the approximately 1 000 survivors from eight sunken Japanese troop transport ships on life rafts and swimming or floating in the sea 146 147 This was later State justified on the grounds that the rescued servicemen were next to their destination and would have been rapidly landed at their military destination and promptly returned to active service in the battle 146 148 Many of the Allied aircrew accepted the attacks as necessary while others were sickened 149 American soldiers in the Pacific often deliberately killed Japanese soldiers who had surrendered According to Richard J Aldrich a professor of history at the University of Warwick who has published a study of the diaries kept by United States and Australian soldiers they sometimes massacred prisoners of war 150 Dower states that in many instances Japanese who did become prisoners were killed on the spot or en route to prison compounds 128 According to Aldrich it was common practice for U S troops not to take prisoners 151 This analysis is supported by British historian Niall Ferguson 152 who also says that in 1943 a secret U S intelligence report noted that only the promise of ice cream and three days leave would induce American troops not to kill surrendering Japanese 152 Ferguson states such practices played a role in the ratio of Japanese prisoners to dead being 1 100 in late 1944 That same year efforts were taken by Allied high commanders to suppress take no prisoners attitudes 152 among their own personnel as these were affecting intelligence gathering and to encourage Japanese soldiers to surrender Ferguson adds that measures by Allied commanders to improve the ratio of Japanese prisoners to Japanese dead resulted in it reaching 1 7 by mid 1945 Nevertheless taking no prisoners was still standard practice among US troops at the Battle of Okinawa in April June 1945 152 Ferguson also suggests that it was not only the fear of disciplinary action or of dishonor that deterred German and Japanese soldiers from surrendering More important for most soldiers was the perception that prisoners would be killed by the enemy anyway and so one might as well fight on 153 Ulrich Straus a US Japanologist suggests that frontline troops intensely hated Japanese military personnel and were not easily persuaded to take or protect prisoners as they believed that Allied personnel who surrendered got no mercy from the Japanese 154 Allied soldiers believed that Japanese soldiers were inclined to feign surrender in order to make surprise attacks a practice which was outlawed by the Hague Convention of 1907 155 154 Therefore according to Straus Senior officers opposed the taking of prisoners on the grounds that it needlessly exposed American troops to risks 154 When prisoners nevertheless were taken at Guadalcanal interrogator Army Captain Burden noted that many times these were shot during transport because it was too much bother to take him in 156 US historian James J Weingartner attributes the very low number of Japanese in US POW compounds to two important factors a Japanese reluctance to surrender and a widespread American conviction that the Japanese were animals or subhuman and unworthy of the normal treatment accorded to POWs 157 The latter reason is supported by Ferguson who says that Allied troops often saw the Japanese in the same way that Germans regarded Russians as Untermenschen 152 Mutilation of Japanese war dead edit Main article American mutilation of Japanese war dead nbsp U S Navy Lieutenant j g E V McPherson with a Japanese skull on board USS PT 341 In the Pacific theater Allied servicemen engaged in human trophy collecting from Japanese soldiers The phenomenon of trophy taking especially by American personnel occurred on a scale large enough to concern the Allied military authorities throughout the conflict and was widely reported and commented on in the American and Japanese wartime press with magazines and journals reporting widespread cases Franklin Roosevelt himself was reportedly given a gift of a letter opener made of a Japanese soldier s arm by U S Representative Francis E Walter in 1944 which Roosevelt later ordered to be returned calling for its proper burial 158 65 159 825 The news was also widely reported to the Japanese public where the Americans were portrayed as deranged primitive racist and inhuman This compounded by a previous Life magazine picture of a young woman with a skull trophy was reprinted in the Japanese media and presented as a symbol of American barbarism causing national shock and outrage 160 159 833 159 The collection of Japanese body parts began quite early in the war prompting a September 1942 order for disciplinary action against such souvenir taking 159 Harrison concludes that since this was the first real opportunity to take such items the Battle of Guadalcanal clearly the collection of body parts on a scale large enough to concern the military authorities had started as soon as the first living or dead Japanese bodies were encountered 159 When Japanese remains were repatriated from the Mariana Islands after the war roughly 60 percent were missing their skulls 159 In a 13 June 1944 memorandum the US Army Judge Advocate General JAG Major General Myron C Cramer asserted that such atrocious and brutal policies were both repugnant to the sensibilities of all civilized people 157 and also violations of the Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded and Sick in Armies in the Field which stated that After each engagement the occupant of the field of battle shall take measures to search for the wounded and dead and to protect them against pillage and maltreatment 161 Cramer recommended the distribution to all commanders of a directive ordering them to prohibit the misuse of enemy body parts 157 These practices were also in violation of the unwritten customary rules of land warfare and could lead to the death penalty 157 The US Navy JAG mirrored that opinion one week later and also added that the atrocious conduct of which some US personnel were guilty could lead to retaliation by the Japanese which would be justified under international law 157 Okinawa edit U S military personnel raped Okinawan women during the Battle of Okinawa in 1945 162 Okinawan historian Oshiro Masayasu former director of the Okinawa Prefectural Historical Archives writes based on several years of research Soon after the U S Marines landed all the women of a village on Motobu Peninsula fell into the hands of American soldiers At the time there were only women children and old people in the village as all the young men had been mobilized for the war Soon after landing the Marines mopped up the entire village but found no signs of Japanese forces Taking advantage of the situation they started hunting for women in broad daylight and those women who were hiding in the village or nearby air raid shelters were dragged out one after another 163 According to interviews carried out by The New York Times and published by them in 2000 several elderly people from an Okinawan village confessed that after the United States had won the Battle of Okinawa three armed Marines kept coming to the village every week to force the villagers to gather all the local women who were then carried off into the hills and raped The article goes deeper into the matter and claims that the villagers tale true or not is part of a dark long kept secret the unraveling of which refocused attention on what historians say is one of the most widely ignored crimes of the war the widespread rape of Okinawan women by American servicemen 164 Although Japanese reports of rape were largely ignored at the time academic estimates have been that as many as 10 000 Okinawan women may have been raped It has been claimed that the rape was so prevalent that most Okinawans over age 65 around the year 2000 either knew or had heard of a woman who was raped in the aftermath of the war Military officials denied the mass rapings and all surviving veterans refused The New York Times request for an interview 165 Professor of East Asian Studies and expert on Okinawa Steve Rabson said I have read many accounts of such rapes in Okinawan newspapers and books but few people know about them or are willing to talk about them 165 He notes that plenty of old local books diaries articles and other documents refer to rapes by American soldiers of various races and backgrounds An explanation given for why the US military has no record of any rapes is that few if any Okinawan women reported abuse mostly out of fear and embarrassment According to Nago Okinawan police spokesman Victimized women feel too ashamed to make it public 165 Those who did report them are believed by historians to have been ignored by the U S military police A large scale effort to determine the extent of such crimes has also never been called for Over five decades after the war has ended the women who were believed to have been raped still refused to give a public statement with friends local historians and university professors who had spoken with the women instead saying they preferred not to discuss it publicly Many people wondered why it never came to light after the inevitable American Japanese babies the many women must have given birth to In interviews historians and Okinawan elders said that some of those Okinawan women who were raped and did not commit suicide did give birth to biracial children but that many of them were immediately killed or left behind out of shame disgust or fearful trauma More often however rape victims underwent crude abortions with the help of village midwives A large scale effort to determine the possible extent of these crimes has never been conducted Over five decades after the war had ended in the late 1990s the women who were believed to have been raped still overwhelmingly refused to give public statements instead speaking through relatives and a number of historians and scholars 165 There is substantial evidence that the U S had at least some knowledge of what was going on Samuel Saxton a retired captain explained that the American veterans and witnesses may have intentionally kept the rape a secret largely out of shame It would be unfair for the public to get the impression that we were all a bunch of rapists after we worked so hard to serve our country 165 Military officials formally denied the mass rapes and all surviving related veterans refused request for interviews from The New York Times Masaie Ishihara a sociology professor supports this There is a lot of historical amnesia out there many people don t want to acknowledge what really happened 165 Author George Feifer in his book Tennozan The Battle of Okinawa and the Atomic Bomb noted that by 1946 there had been fewer than 10 reported cases of rape in Okinawa He explained that it was partly because of shame and disgrace partly because Americans were victors and occupiers Feifer claimed In all there were probably thousands of incidents but the victims silence kept rape another dirty secret of the campaign 166 However American professor of Japanese studies Michael S Molasky and some other authors have argued that they noted that Okinawan civilians were often surprised at the comparatively humane treatment they received from the American enemy 167 168 According to Islands of Discontent Okinawan Responses to Japanese and American Power by the American Mark Selden the Americans did not pursue a policy of torture rape and murder of civilians as Japanese military officials had warned 169 Post war edit Main article Rape during the occupation of Japan According to some authors there were 1 336 reported rapes during the first 10 days of the occupation of Kanagawa Prefecture after the Japanese surrender 162 however author Brian Walsh states that this claim originates from a misreading of Japanese Government crime figures that had actually reported 1 326 criminal incidents of all types involving American forces including an unspecified number of rapes 170 Comparative death rates of POWs editAccording to James D Morrow Death rates of POWs held is one measure of adherence to the standards of the treaties because substandard treatment leads to death of prisoners The democratic states generally provide good treatment of POWs 171 Killed by the Allied powers edit German POWs in East European not including the Soviet Union hands 32 9 152 German soldiers held by Soviet Union 15 33 14 7 in The Dictators by Richard Overy 35 8 in Ferguson 152 Italian soldiers held by the Soviet Union 79 172 Japanese POWs held by Soviet Union 10 citation needed German POWs in British hands 0 03 152 German POWs in American hands 0 15 152 German POWs in French hands 2 58 152 Japanese POWs held by U S relatively low clarification needed mainly suicides according to James D Morrow 173 Japanese POWs in Chinese hands 24 citation needed Killed by Axis powers edit US and British Commonwealth POWs held by Germany 4 171 Soviet POWs held by Germany 57 5 152 Italian POWs and military internees held by Germany between 6 and 8 4 note 2 Western Allied POWs held by Japan 27 174 Figures for Japan may be misleading as sources indicate that either 10 800 175 or 19 000 176 of 35 756 fatalities among Allied POW s were from friendly fire at sea when their transport ships were sunk The Geneva convention required the labelling of hospital ships as such but had no provision for the labelling of such craft as POW ships All sides killed many of their own POWs when sinking enemy ships Summary table edit Percent killed Origin Soviet Union United Statesand United Kingdom China Western Allies Germany Japan Held by Soviet Union 14 70 35 80 10 00 United Kingdom 0 03 United States 0 15 varying France 2 58 East European 32 90 Germany 57 50 4 00 Japan included in Western Allies 27 not documented 27 00 Portrayal editHolocaust denial literature edit The focus on Allied atrocities during the war has been a theme of Holocaust denial literature particularly in countries where outright denial of the Holocaust is illegal 177 According to historian Deborah Lipstadt the concept of comparable Allied wrongs such as the post war expulsions of ethnic Germans from Eastern Europe and Allied war crimes is at the center of and a continuously repeated theme of contemporary Holocaust denial phenomenon she calls immoral equivalencies 178 Japanese neo nationalists edit Japanese neo nationalists argue that Allied war crimes and the shortcomings of the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal were equivalent to the war crimes committed by Japanese forces during the war citation needed American historian John W Dower has written that this position is a kind of historiographic cancellation of immorality as if the transgressions of others exonerate one s own crimes 179 While right wing forces in Japan have tried to push for their perspective on war time history they have been unsuccessful due to opposition both within and outside Japan 180 See also editWar crimes committed by the Axis powers and their collaborators German war crimes Italian war crimes Japanese war crimes Genocide of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia The Holocaust in the Independent State of Croatia Massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia Allied war crimes American war crimes American mutilation of Japanese war dead British war crimes Churchill s advocacy of chemical strike against German cities Poison laboratory of the Soviet secret services which was involved in experiments on German and Japanese prisoners of war Communist purges in Serbia in 1944 1945 Foibe massacres Thiaroye massacre Soviet partisans atrocities against civilians in Finland Bleiburg repatriations Flight and expulsion of Germans 1944 1950 Forced labour of Germans after World War II Forced labour of Germans in the Soviet Union Soviet war crimes Other Crimes against humanity Ethnic cleansing Genocide Genocides in history List of ethnic cleansing campaigns List of genocides List of war crimes Looted art Philosophy of history Taken by Force book Victor s justice World War II casualtiesNotes edit The caption for the photograph in the US National Archives reads SC208765 Soldiers of the 42nd Infantry Division US Seventh Army order SS men to come forward when one of their number tried to escape from the Dachau Germany concentration camp after it was captured by US forces Men on the ground in background feign death by falling as the guards fired a volley at the fleeing SS men 157th Regt 4 29 45 53 Lt Colonel Felix L Sparks disputed this and thought that it represented the initial step in the cover up of the execution of German guards 53 About 43 600 deaths on a total of approx 730 000 POWs and military internees Another 13 269 were killed between September 1943 and February 1944 in the sinking of seven ships carrying them from Greece to German controlled ports A further 5 000 to 6 000 Italian POW were murdered by the Germans after they had surrendered in the Massacre of the Acqui Division References editCitations edit a b c The Horror of D 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After the Battle Magazine Issue 143 http listserv acsu buffalo edu cgi bin wa A2 ind9705 amp L twatch l amp D 1 amp O D amp F P amp P 1025 LISTSERV 16 5 Archives Error Archived from the original on 15 July 2013 Retrieved 11 December 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Italian women win cash for wartime rapes Volker Koop Besetzt franzosische Besatzungspolitik in Deutschland Berlin 2005 1952 Il caso delle marocchinate al Parlamento Archived from the original on 6 January 2009 Retrieved 22 November 2008 Biddiscombe Perry 2001 Dangerous Liaisons The Anti Fraternization Movement in the U S Occupation Zones of Germany and Austria 1945 1948 Journal of Social History 34 3 635 doi 10 1353 jsh 2001 0002 JSTOR 3789820 S2CID 145470893 Stephenson Jill 2006 Hitler s Home Front Wurttemberg under the Nazis London Continuum p 289 ISBN 1 85285 442 1 Katz Kaiser Chaos Angst und leise Hoffnung Kriegsende und franzosische 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and American GIs in Europe During World War II Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 50647 3 Morrow John H October 2008 Taken by Force Rape and American GIs in Europe during World War II By J Robert Lilly The Journal of Military History 72 4 1324 doi 10 1353 jmh 0 0151 S2CID 162399427 Schofield Hugh 5 June 2009 Revisionists challenge D Day story BBC News Archived from the original on 18 November 2022 Retrieved 6 January 2010 Taken by Force Rape and American GIs in Europe during World War II J Robert Lilly ISBN 978 0 230 50647 3 p 12 a b c d Harrington Carol 2010 Politicization of Sexual Violence From Abolitionism to Peacekeeping London Ashgate pp 80 81 ISBN 0 7546 7458 4 a b Schrijvers Peter 1998 The Crash of Ruin American Combat Soldiers in Europe During World War II New York New York University Press p 183 ISBN 0 8147 8089 X White Osmar 1996 Conquerors Road An Eyewitness Report of Germany 1945 Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press pp 97 98 ISBN 0 521 83051 6 Fehrenbach Heide 2005 Race After Hitler Black Occupation Children in Postwar Germany and America Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press p 64 ISBN 978 0 691 11906 9 Were Americans As Bad as the Soviets Der Spiegel 2 March 2015 Archived from the original on 14 March 2023 Study Soviet Prisoners of War POWs 1941 42 unreliable source website of Gendercide Watch Matthew White Source List and Detailed Death Tolls for the Twentieth Century Hemoclysm Stalin POWs and the laws of war World War II legacy 2003 Educational Broadcasting Corporation Jennifer K Elsea Legislative Attorney American Law Division Federation of American Scientists CRS Report for Congress Lawfulness of Interrogation Techniques under the Geneva Conventions PDF 8 September 2004 Page 24 first paragraph see also footnotes 93 and 87 German High Command Trial 30 December 1947 28 October 1948 PartVIII Archived 2 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine James Mark 2005 Remembering Rape Divided Social Memory and the Red Army in Hungary 1944 1945 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February 2013 Perche quasi nessuno ricorda le foibe huffingtonpost it in Italian a b c d e Ota Konrad Boris Barth Jaromir Mrnka eds 2021 Collective Identities and Post War Violence in Europe 1944 48 Springer International Publishing p 20 ISBN 9783030783860 Relazione della Commissione storico culturale italo slovena V Periodo 1941 1945 Archived from the original on 16 January 2009 Retrieved 11 January 2009 Il tempo e la storia Le Foibe Rai TV Raoul Pupo Lowe Keith 2012 Savage continent London ISBN 9780241962220 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bloxham Donald Dirk Moses Anthony 2011 Genocide and ethnic cleansing In Bloxham Donald Gerwarth Robert eds Political Violence in Twentieth Century Europe Cambridge University Press p 125 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511793271 004 ISBN 9781107005037 Silvia Ferreto Clementi La pulizia etnica e il manuale Cubrilovic in Italian Retrieved 15 February 2015 Gia nello scatenarsi della prima ondata di cieca violenza in quelle terre nell autunno del 1943 si intrecciarono giustizialismo sommario e tumultuoso parossismo nazionalista rivalse sociali e un disegno di sradicamento della presenza italiana da quella che era e cesso di essere la Venezia Giulia Vi fu dunque un moto di odio e di furia sanguinaria e un disegno annessionistico slavo che prevalse innanzitutto nel Trattato di pace del 1947 e che assunse i sinistri contorni di una pulizia etnica Quel che si puo dire di certo e che si consumo nel modo piu evidente con la disumana ferocia delle foibe una delle barbarie del secolo scorso from the official website of The Presidency of the Italian Republic Giorgio Napolitano official speech for the celebration of Giorno del Ricordo Quirinal Rome 10 February 2007 Il giorno del Ricordo Croce Rossa Italiana in Italian Archived from the original on 28 January 2022 Retrieved 17 December 2022 Georg G Iggers 2007 Franz L Fillafer Georg G Iggers Q Edward Wang eds The Many Faces 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John W Dower 1986 War Without Mercy p 68 Ulrich Strauss 2003 The Anguish of Surrender Japanese POWs of World War II page needed a b John W Dower 1986 War Without Mercy p 69 Mark Johnston Fighting the enemy Australian soldiers and their adversaries in World War II pp 80 81 a b Mark Johnston Fighting the enemy Australian soldiers and their adversaries in World War II p 81 Kevin Baker Paul Cullen citizen and soldier the life and times of Major General Paul Cullen AC CBE DSC and Bar ED FCA p 146 a b Rummel 1991 p 112 a b Rummel 1991 p 113 Rummel R J CHINA S BLOODY CENTURY Rudolph J Rummel 1991 China s Bloody Century Genocide and Mass Murder Since 1900 ISBN 0 88738 417 X Transaction Publishers p 115 Tom Mintier Photos document brutality in Shanghai CNN 23 September 1996 Retrieved 25 August 2007 中村粲 大東亜戦争への道 展々社 1990年 T R Moreman The jungle the Japanese and the British Commonwealth armies at war 1941 45 p 205 Gerster 2008 pp 112 3 Gerster 2008 p page needed Lockwood Charles 1951 Sink em All Bataam Books ISBN 978 0 553 23919 5 O Kane Richard 1987 Wahoo The Patrols of America s Most Famous WWII Submarine Presidio Press ISBN 978 0 89141 301 1 Blair Clay 2001 Silent Victory Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 55750 217 9 Holwitt 2005 p 288 DeRose 2000 pp 287 288 Holwitt 2005 p 289 DeRose 2000 pp 77 94 a b Gillison Douglas 1962 Royal Australian Air Force 1939 1942 Canberra Australian War Memorial Ken Dooley 2015 The Untold Story of the U S 5th Air Force s 39th Fighter Squadron Relentless Pursuit p 63 Anniversary talks Battle of the Bismarck Sea 2 4 March 1943 Australian War Memorial 3 March 2003 Archived from the original on 24 August 2003 Retrieved 1 August 2015 johnston mark 2011 Whispering Death Australian Airmen in the Pacific War Crows Nest New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 74175 901 3 Ben Fenton American troops murdered Japanese PoWs Daily Telegraph UK 8 June 2005 accessed 26 May 2007 Adrich is a professor of history at the University of Nottingham Ben Fenton American troops murdered Japanese PoWs Daily Telegraph UK 8 June 2005 accessed 26 May 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k Ferguson Niall 2004 Prisoner Taking and Prisoner Killing in the Age of Total War Towards a Political Economy of Military Defeat War in History 11 2 148 92 doi 10 1191 0968344504wh291oa S2CID 159610355 Niall Ferguson Prisoner Taking and Prisoner Killing in the Age of Total War Towards a Political Economy of Military Defeat War in History 2004 11 2 p 176 a b c Ulrich Straus The Anguish Of Surrender Japanese POWs of World War II excerpts Seattle University of Washington Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 295 98336 3 p 116 Laws of War Laws and Customs of War on Land Hague IV October 18 1907 Ulrich Straus The Anguish Of Surrender Japanese POWs of World War II excerpts Seattle University of Washington Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 295 98336 3 p 117 a b c d e Weingartner J J 1992 Trophies of War US Troops and the Mutilation of Japanese War Dead 1941 1945 Pacific Historical Review 61 1 53 67 doi 10 2307 3640788 JSTOR 3640788 Weingartner James J February 1992 Trophies of War U S Troops and the Mutilation of Japanese War Dead 1941 1945 Pacific Historical Review 61 1 53 67 doi 10 2307 3640788 JSTOR 3640788 Archived from the original on 11 August 2011 Retrieved 11 August 2011 U S Marines on their way to Guadalcanal relished the prospect of making necklaces of Japanese gold teeth and pickling Japanese ears as keepsakes a b c d e f Harrison Simon 2006 Skull Trophies of the Pacific War transgressive objects of remembrance Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 12 4 817 836 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9655 2006 00365 x Archived from the original on 8 March 2021 Retrieved 24 November 2021 Dickey Colin 2012 Afterlives of the Saints Stories from the Ends of Faith Unbridled Books ISBN 9781609530723 Cited in Weingartner 1992 a b Schrijvers Peter 2002 The GI War Against Japan New York New York University Press p 212 ISBN 978 0 8147 9816 4 Tanaka Toshiyuki Japan s Comfort Women Sexual Slavery and Prostitution During World War II Routledge 2003 p 111 ISBN 0 203 30275 3 Sims Calvin 1 June 2000 3 Dead Marines and a Secret of Wartime Okinawa The New York Times Nago Japan Retrieved 6 April 2015 Still the villagers tale of a dark long kept secret has refocused attention on what historians say is one of the most widely ignored crimes of the war the widespread rape of Okinawan women by American servicemen a b c d e f Sims Calvin 1 June 2000 3 Dead Marines and a Secret of Wartime Okinawa The New York Times Nago Japan Retrieved 6 April 2015 Feifer George 1992 Tennozan The Battle of Okinawa and the Atomic Bomb Michigan Ticknor amp Fields ISBN 9780395599242 Molasky Michael S 1999 The American Occupation of Japan and Okinawa Literature and Memory Routledge p 16 ISBN 978 0 415 19194 4 Molasky Michael S Rabson Steve 2000 Southern Exposure Modern Japanese Literature from Okinawa University of Hawaii Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 8248 2300 9 Sheehan Susan D Elizabeth Laura Selden Hein Mark Islands of Discontent Okinawan Responses to Japanese and American Power 18 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Walsh Brian October 2018 Sexual Violence During the Occupation of Japan The Journal of Military History 82 4 1217 1219 a b James D Morrow The Institutional Features of the Prisoners of War Treaties Center for Political Studies at The University of Michigan Only 10032 repatriated POW on approx 48000 arrived in the POW camps Another 22000 died during the marches to the camps Thomas Schlemmer Invasori non vittime La campagna italiana di Russia 1941 1943 Bari Laterza 2009 ISBN 978 88 420 7981 1 page 153 James D Morrow The Institutional Features of the Prisoners of War Treaties Center for Political Studies at The University of Michigan p 22 Yuki Tanaka 1996 Hidden Horrors Westview Press ISBN 0 8133 2718 0 pp 2 3 Gavan Daws Prisoners of the Japanese POWs of World War II in the Pacific p 297 Donald L Miller D Days in the Pacific p 317 Stephen E Atkins Holocaust denial as an international movement ABC CLIO 2009 pg 105 Debrah Lipstadt Denying the Holocaust The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory Bt Bound 1999 pg 41 Dower John W 2002 An Aptitude for Being Unloved War and Memory in Japan In Bartov Omer et al eds Crimes of War Guilt and Denial in the Twentieth Century New York The New Press p 226 ISBN 1 56584 654 0 Sharalyn Orbaugh Japanese fiction of the Allied occupation p 179 Sources edit Addison Paul Crang Jeremy A eds 2006 Firestorm The Bombing of Dresden Pimlico ISBN 1 84413 928 X Bischoff Gunter Ambrose Stephen 1992 Introduction in Bischoff Gunter Ambrose Stephen eds Eisenhower and the German POWs New York Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0 8071 1758 7 DeRose James F 2000 Unrestricted Warfare John Wiley amp Sons Flint Edwards R 2009 The development of British civil affairs and its employment in the British Sector of Allied military operations during the Battle of Normandy June to August 1944 Cranfield Bedford Cranfield University Cranfield Defence and Security School Department of Applied Science Security and Resilience Security and Resilience Group Gomez Javier Guisandez 1998 30 June 1998 International Review of the Red Cross no 323 p 347 363 The Law of Air Warfare PDF International Review of the Red Cross Gerster Robin 2008 Travels in Atomic Sunshine Australia and the Occupation of Japan Melbourne Scribe ISBN 978 1 921215 34 6 Holwitt Joel I 2005 Execute Against Japan Ohio State University PhD dissertation Moody W 2003 Hell s Folly Trafford Publishing p 128 footnote ISBN 9781412210928 retrieved 6 September 2010 Naimark Norman M 1995 The Russians in Germany A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation 1945 1949 Cambridge Belknap Press ISBN 0 674 78405 7 Overy Richard 2006 The Post War Debate Firestorm The Bombing of Dresden PDF Service Robert 2004 Stalin A Biography London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 72627 3 Stacey Colonel Charles Perry Bond Major C C J 1960 Official History of the Canadian Army in the Second World War Volume III The Victory Campaign The operations in North West Europe 1944 1945 The Queen s Printer and Controller of Stationery Ottawa Stacey Colonel Charles Perry 1982 A date with history Memoirs of a Canadian historian Deneau ISBN 978 0 88879 086 6 USAF Historical Division Research Studies Institute Air University Historical Analysis of the 14 15 Bombing of Dresden Air Force Historical Studies Office Archived from the original PDF on 17 August 2010 Further reading editHarris Justin Michael American Soldiers and POW Killing in the European Theater of World War II 1 Archived 18 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Allied war crimes during World War II amp oldid 1218212474, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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