by Mickey Z. / March 11th, 2023
Henry Kissinger as he launched his long and murderous career
To believe and perpetrate the âGood Warâ and âGreatest Generationâ myths, we must ignore many sordid realities. Iâve written about some of them here, here, and here (and several other posts).
This time, Iâll focus on the memory-holed topic of AWOL American soldiers running wild in Europe.
âParis was full of them,â remarks historian Michael C.C. Adams.
Journalist Chet Antonine has written of U.S. troops âlooting the German city of Jena where the famous Zeiss company made the best cameras in the world.â
The U.S. compiled a list of âContinental AWOLsâ that included as many as 50,000 men. Many of them turned to the black market.
âAllied soldiers [in Italy] stole from the populace and the government, and once, GIs stole a trainload of sugar, complete with the engine,â writes Adams.
V.S. Pritchett, in the New Statesman and Nation (April 7, 1945), wrote about GIs stealing cameras, motorbikes, wine glasses, and books.
In the New York Herald Tribune, the legendary John Steinbeck reported on three soldiers arrested for selling stolen watches.
In October 1945 alone, American GIs sent home $5,470,777 more than they were paid.
One illegal form of currency for GIs â AWOL or otherwise â was whiskey. As alcohol dependency rose, desperate soldiers resorted to such homegrown brews as Aqua Velva and grapefruit juice or medical alcohol blended with torpedo fluid.
The buying and trading werenât limited to moonshine. Throughout the European theater of operations, the Allied soldiers did their best to exploit desperate and vulnerable females.
âIn a ruined world where a pack of cigarettes sold for $100 American, GIs were millionaires,â says Antonine. âA candy bar bought sex from nearly any starving German girl.â
âSoldiers had sex, wherever and whenever possible,â Adams reports. âSeventy-five percent of GIs overseas, whether married or not, admitted to having intercourse. Unchanneled sexual need produced rape, occasionally even murder. Away from home, where nobody knew them, some GIs forced themselves on women.â
In northern Europe, venereal diseases caused more U.S. casualties than the German V-2 rocket. In France, the VD rate rose 600 percent after the liberation of Paris.
Where did those 50,000 AWOL GIs go after doing their part to soil the image of a âgoodâ war? Nearly three thousand were court-martialed and one was executed, Private Eddie Slovik of G Company, 109th Infantry Regiment, 28th Infantry Division. The Detroit native deserted in August 1944, surrendered in October of that same year and was put on trial a month later.
General Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the execution order of December 23, 1944, and Slovik faced a twelve-man firing squad at St. Marie aux Mines in eastern France shortly thereafter. None of the eleven bullets (one is always a blank) struck the intended target â Slovikâs heart âand it was a full three minutes before he died. Outrage spread quickly and there were no further executions.
Eddie Slovik, minutes before his grisly death
As for the rest of the AWOL GIs, Antonineâs guess seems as good as any: âA goodly number of them undoubtedly stayed on in Europe as they had after World War One. Perhaps some of them got bogged down in ordinary life, marrying and having children. Others may have continued their lives of crime and ended up in prison. Only nine thousand of them had been found by 1948.â
That generation being âgreatâ in Bensheim
Then there was a certain staff sergeant who used his authority to anoint himself the absolute lord of the German town of Bensheim during those black market days: future Nobel Peace [sic] Prize winner, Henry Kissinger.
âAfter evicting the owners from their villa,â Antonine writes, âKissinger moved in with his German girlfriend, maid, housekeeper, and secretary and began to throw fancy parties.â
These fancy parties were not the norm in Bensheim, an area where the average German made do with fewer than 850 calories per day. FYI: Thatâs less food than was given to prisoners at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.
Seventy-eight years later, Kissinger the parasite continues to see himself as an absolute lord. Hereâs something I recently wrote about him:
Take-home message: Challenge all myths.
Source: Dissidentvoice.org