50,000 German Prisoners In Allied Internment Camp 1945

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Күн бұрын

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Images of the Rheinwiesenlager. Various scenes of German prisoners in a Prisoner of War Temporary Enclosure (PWTE) camp in Allied occupied Germany in 1945. Shows German prisoner with one leg missing or leg injured on crutches. CU image of German Officer wearing Luftwaffe Flak Lieutenant's four pocket tunic. Images of women and young boy in Allied internment camp. Shows injured German soldier being carried into camp. Shows group of young boys with Priest being directed into internment camp. Shows shirtless man with cap ordering and pushing prisoners away from enclosure fence; probably a member of the German Military Police (Wehrmachtordnungstruppe) the U.S. Army used to maintain order in the camp. Shows more German prisoners arriving at internment camp.
Group of German officers leaving a building and walking around the grounds of an estate followed by an armed U.S. MP. One civilian in group of German officers.
Various scenes of wounded or sick German prisoners being carried or assisted by German soldiers arriving at internment camp.
German children, men and women watching German prisoners in train boxcars. Women hands food to German prisoners in train boxcar. Shows women waving to German prisoners in boxcars as train gets underway. Shows transfer of German prisoners by train probably to France.
Women looking at German prisoners in an open field from a distance. Sign reads “Army PWE”.
Note: Images of the Rheinwiesenlager. The Rheinwiesenlager (Rhine meadow camps) were a group of 19 camps built in the Allied-occupied part of Germany by the U.S. Army. This camp may be part of the Rheinwiesenlager camp built at Koblenz (Coblenz), Germany. The official name of these camps were Prisoner of War Temporary Enclosures (PWTE). The prisoners held in these camps were designated “Disarmed Enemy Forces (DEF) not POWs because of the logistical problems adhering to the Geneva Convention.
Due to the numbers of prisoners, the Americans transferred internal control of the camps to the Germans. Former German troops from the Wehrmacht's Feldgendarmerie (Military Police) and Feldjagerkorps (Military Police) known as Wehrmachtordnungstruppe (Armed Forces Order Troops) maintained order in the camps.
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Пікірлер: 1 600
@matthiasmoeser2652
@matthiasmoeser2652 3 жыл бұрын
The German officers or generals had a better life even in these camps than the normal soldiers or the children soldiers. Even women were arrested separately in tents. The normal soldiers lived there like the rats. Without wood houses or tents, directly on the ground with all weather conditions, food, clean water and medical help. They were persons without any rights and again the Convention by red cross international. My father was in the Rheinwiesenlager Sinzig near Koblenz which is shown in the film. He was 18th and still a schoolboy. Arrested in 18.06.1945 he got his certificate of discharge from this camp in 24.06.1945. He never forgot the experience and terrible situations in this prisoner camp. My father was not a Nazi or SS-soldier, only a German soldier in an bataillion of the Wehrmacht. After war he studied and became an architect near Heidelberg/Germany. He died in October 2018.
@sizzler2462
@sizzler2462 3 жыл бұрын
God bless your father sir
@slawomirzgrabczynski1937
@slawomirzgrabczynski1937 3 жыл бұрын
"My Father was a only Wehrmacht soldier ."??? Do you imagine how many Polish civilians people was executed by Wehrmacht? No, not Nazi , just Wehrmacht formation killing Polish kids women old people with cold blood. Warsaw Posnan Cracov Torun and many other Polish towns and villages. you don't even imagine what Wehrmacht did before they killed the Polish women including under age girls. Shame on you and respect. It's not Nazi invasion my country 1/09/1939 but 6 millions regular German soldiers mostly Wehrmacht. You comment make me sick. Shame on you end start lerning true History.
@okramra
@okramra 3 жыл бұрын
@@slawomirzgrabczynski1937 Too bad comments like this get posted very often. Poor nazis and wehrmacht soldiers. What about millions of civilian casualties without even considering those perished in the cocncentration camps. I am from a former yugoslavia country and I know very well what you are speaking of. Shame on them.
@user-RedStar
@user-RedStar 3 жыл бұрын
Only wehrmacht For you to know, wehrmacht soldiers also killed and humiliated soviet citizens
@goutvols103
@goutvols103 2 жыл бұрын
@@okramra Such a great comment. The Nazis not only murdered the Jews of every country that they invaded but they also rounded up and executed anyone who was opposed to the Third Reich; like teachers, lawyers, politicians, etc.
@michaelbiedassek7136
@michaelbiedassek7136 3 жыл бұрын
And this was just a tiny fraction of the masses of POW that went into captivity. Over a million missing, many of which died in Soviet prison camps that more than 20 times the size of the crowd we see on the video. The sacrifice of human life is beyond anything we have experience in human history and it was made possible by a small group of people.
@simpaticaism
@simpaticaism 3 жыл бұрын
The Russians lost 26 million souls fighting the Nazi ……..we forget that .
@kevinverduci7600
@kevinverduci7600 3 жыл бұрын
35million missing or 45 million unaccounted all troops and civilians all countries
@soulplexis
@soulplexis 3 жыл бұрын
well. Good. They were fascists
@user-yn7jj7ux1b
@user-yn7jj7ux1b 3 жыл бұрын
Причина не в группе людей, а в сознании всех людей, ведь группа действовала с согласия людей.
@unitedwestand5100
@unitedwestand5100 2 жыл бұрын
It was made possible by an entire population willing to look away from the atrocities.
@larrysune2659
@larrysune2659 3 жыл бұрын
During the war they kept German prisoners' in a camp near me in Iowa. They built some beautiful nativity scenes are that are still used to this day.
@James_Cy
@James_Cy 6 жыл бұрын
Too many kids and young faces. War is terrible. No matter what side. I hope the world doesn't have to go through something as disastrous as world war 2 again.
@briandunstan3503
@briandunstan3503 6 жыл бұрын
Young kids ? Bloody Hitler youth more like, fanatics, more dangerous than the ss,
@someturkishguy8638
@someturkishguy8638 5 жыл бұрын
Anyone who says they deserved it is wrong.did Americans think trump would be great?Yes,he just didnt make the people commit crimes against humanity. I dont think alot of germans thought he would have brought destruction. And I dont think you have a choice against conscription.
@always1623
@always1623 5 жыл бұрын
The allies will release them soon. Unlike in Russia
@Shadow-sw2hx
@Shadow-sw2hx 5 жыл бұрын
It will
@cipher88101
@cipher88101 5 жыл бұрын
Truth
@jenniferlarson6426
@jenniferlarson6426 3 жыл бұрын
Great film footage. All those children soldiers....that's heartbreaking.
@user-bo8iy1zj7i
@user-bo8iy1zj7i 2 жыл бұрын
Представь тех кого они убили?
@LukeLovesRose
@LukeLovesRose 2 жыл бұрын
Anything to defend women and girls from the horror of the Bolsheviks
@torsten811
@torsten811 2 жыл бұрын
My grandfather was captured by the Americans in Africa and shipped to America. He was in the Luftwaffe and I think he and his comrades fared better there. Greetings from Germany
@johncater7861
@johncater7861 2 жыл бұрын
I find it interesting that some soldiers, especially some officers, were quite clean with seemingly freshly pressed uniforms whilst most others looked like they had been through hell.
@johanderuiter9842
@johanderuiter9842 4 жыл бұрын
Irrespective of "blame" I see in these men two entire generations utterly mangled and broken.. In these young boys I can see my own 11 year old son and my heart hurts to see their shock and bewilderment, the loss of their youth in that time. They became a collective part of the suffering of adult men all around them, hurdled together like human cattle without any dignity left. The silent witnesses that forever had lost any notion of a strong father figure.
@zeboabidova9708
@zeboabidova9708 4 жыл бұрын
Johan de Ruiter
@successlane3569
@successlane3569 4 жыл бұрын
I wonder if you feel so bad for the men , women and children who were gassed to death?
@mamavswild
@mamavswild 3 жыл бұрын
@@successlane3569 Wow; it must suck to be so black and white...as for me, I can feel sorry for more than one group of people at the same time!
@douglascasey3486
@douglascasey3486 3 жыл бұрын
My thoughts exactly. A handful of idiots caused all the pain and suffering for millions. The beginning of Nazi rule is very similar to what I see in America today. The very same playbook, but it's much broader than a handful.
@user-bo8iy1zj7i
@user-bo8iy1zj7i 2 жыл бұрын
Представьте тех кто с боями отступал до Москвы и потом дошёл до Берлина закапывая по пути настоящих волков!..?
@petermitchell6348
@petermitchell6348 2 жыл бұрын
These camps are temporary camps which were built AFTER conflict had ended. At the time were all around Germany. The German soldiers and airmen would be disarmed and medically treated where necessary. "Due to the numbers of prisoners, the Americans transferred internal control of the camps to the Germans. Former German troops from the Wehrmacht's Feldgendarmerie (Military Police) and Feldjagerkorps (Military Police) known as Wehrmachtordnungstruppe (Armed Forces Order Troops) maintained order in the camps."
@joseguerra2795
@joseguerra2795 2 жыл бұрын
Miles de soldados alemanes prisioneros murieron de hambre
@carlosgallardo1203
@carlosgallardo1203 2 жыл бұрын
@@joseguerra2795 No, mi querido amigo, no "murieron de hambre", LOS MATARON DE HAMBRE. Vea usted que no es lo mismo...
@shirleybalinski4535
@shirleybalinski4535 Жыл бұрын
@@joseguerra2795 ...bull shit. Read my reply posted on this site.
@hscollier
@hscollier 3 жыл бұрын
The end of the myth of the Master Race. I met a couple of Germans who had served in the Wehrmacht in WWII when I was in the USAF in 1979. One had been pro-nazi and the other had not. The pro-nazis family had been wiped out in Allied air raids. The non-political soldier’s family had become communists in East Germany after the war. Both stayed in the US after being released and never went back to Germany. I knew their daughters, who had never known anything about their fathers service in the German army. Both men had been carpenters before the war, met in prison camp where they helped build the barracks at Ft Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania. They both worked for ex-GI’s who started a construction company after coming home. Their American ex-enemies had taught them English and helped them study for their citizenship test because both were good workers and had led quiet, hardworking lives. The one who had been pro-nazi had been badly beaten by other German prisoners when he said he had been wrong to support Hitler. When I see this video I can see men that were just like the men I became friends with 35 years later.
@user-yn7jj7ux1b
@user-yn7jj7ux1b 3 жыл бұрын
Когда человек один он человек, но в сообществе он превращается в барана, это происходит во всём мире к сожалению.
@wandernundnatur
@wandernundnatur 2 жыл бұрын
I knew a man who was in those camps, in the Rhine Meadows camps. He was drafted shortly before the end of the war, sent to France and captured near Düren. This man was deprived of all his personal belongings by the US guards. Cooking utensils, tent train, clothes, watch and everything that could/would be taken home as a souvenir . He never spoke of the US soldiers with hatred, there was more resignation in his words, he told only once of the captivity, of the hunger, the dead that no one could carry away and a US soldier who was yelled at because he gave food to the prisoners. When he came out of captivity he was a broken man, sick in body and soul. This man was my grandfather, whom I loved more than anything, from whom I learned my profession as a district forester.
@PhilJLF
@PhilJLF 2 жыл бұрын
@@user-yn7jj7ux1b war is disgusting.
@PhilJLF
@PhilJLF 2 жыл бұрын
It’s interesting what a home country and their propaganda can do to the mind of a seemingly good person. Sad, but I’m glad your friends got out and were able to lead peaceful lives.
@user-bo8iy1zj7i
@user-bo8iy1zj7i 2 жыл бұрын
Настоящие враги у него были в России!
@derekcoe9633
@derekcoe9633 3 жыл бұрын
People do not naturally hate each other, they are taught to hate.
@ranulf8477
@ranulf8477 2 жыл бұрын
To see children in such a camp is the pure horror.
@goodoldfashionedkillingmachin
@goodoldfashionedkillingmachin 4 жыл бұрын
A million dead in the allied Rhine meadow camps - this number is often doubted by some media and by our opponents. James Bacque (University of Toronto studied history and philosophy, editor of several Canadian magazines) has presented evidence for the number of one million in the following book: James Bacque Planned death: German prisoners of war in American and French camps 1945-1946 480 pages, publisher: Ullstein Taschenbuch, ISBN: 978-3548331638 From the book descriptions: In 1945/46, the US armed forces camouflaged the mass deaths of German prisoners of war in American camps on German soil under the belittling name of “Other Losses”. The Canadian historian James Bacque was deeply shaken when he first learned of this war crime. The pathological German hater General Dwight David Eisenhower had purposefully carried out this mass murder and systematically covered it up. It was only Bacque's research that brought to light the full extent - almost 1 million German soldiers killed in American and French captivity. Around 2,000 survivors of the Allied hunger camps turned to the author and publisher after the first edition of this book appeared. Their new, sensational hints flowed into the present new edition of this bestseller. This book was a sensation. After thorough research, James Bacque was able to prove that almost 1 million Germans perished in the American and French prisoner-of-war camps. But not just the number of victims, but the fact that u. a. a deliberate policy for which General Eisenhower was responsible for the deaths was staggering. The files that testify to this scandal have been destroyed, falsified or kept under lock and key as "secret". The beginning of the Cold War and the new alliance between the Federal Republic of Germany and the USA and France made it seem inopportune to touch this matter. Bacque has put together the pieces of the mosaic of this harrowing portrait in painstaking detail. Far from digging in old wounds or wanting to open new rifts, he is only concerned with helping historical truth to be justified. This revised 9th edition again contains new material that emerged, among other things, after the opening of the Soviet archives. In an interview with the weekly newspaper Junge Freiheit on June 4, 2004, the author Bacque comments on the Rhine meadow camps and the related extermination policy of the Allies against Germans. Here is an excerpt: Bacque: The questionability of the thesis of the “liberation” of Germany becomes even clearer when one considers that the Americans, the French, the Soviets and, to a lesser extent, the British have triggered a famine that killed millions of Germans. Millions? Bacque: Millions. Official historians are unclear about the number of dead, but consider your information to be far too exaggerated. Bacque: No historian has ever doubted that over 1.5 million Germans perished in Allied captivity after 1945. The discussion simply revolved around who had caused her death. The “court historians” on both sides blamed each other during the decades of the Cold War. After studying the files in East and West, I come to the conclusion that there were about a million dead German prisoners of war in the West and - it may surprise you - there were half a million in the East. The same sources, including Western Allies and Germans, show that far more Germans perished between 1945 and 1950 than the European average of twelve per thousand at the time. In fact, that increased death rate runs into the millions. This fact has never been officially established. That's why I have court historians on my neck today. In doing so, they should rather concentrate on the files. The mass extinction in Germany is usually explained by the inability of the Allies, for example to adequately care for the many German soldiers in the so-called Rhine meadow camps. What evidence do you have for the thesis that these are targeted measures? Bacque: Back then there weren't just the notorious Rhine meadow camps - all of Germany was like a prison camp. My research has shown that food depots were not opened to the prisoners at the time - on instructions. Survivors also reported that the thirst was raging - for example, the Rhine was only 200 meters away from the Rhine meadow camps! In addition, existing tent depots of the Wehrmacht and the US Army were not released. Even the wounded and sick lay in the open air in the mud - exposed to rain, cold and wind without protection. In some cases, the prisoners were even forbidden to dig themselves “shelters” such as holes in the ground. Furthermore, there was no medical care and the rules of the Geneva Convention were trampled. These were more extermination than prisoner of war camps. As far as you know, all of this happened on the initiative of the US Forces Commander in Chief, General Dwight D. Eisenhower. Why? Bacque: Out of a primitive hatred of the Germans, as we know President Roosevelt harbored. It is not only the systematic approach of the Allies and the extent of the death that is frightening, but also that there were regular bestialities against prisoners. Reports speak of torture that dwarfs everything we know from the US prison in Abu Gharib in Baghdad. For example, beating with iron bars, breaking bones, squeezing the testicles, mock executions, strangulation to the point of fainting, hypothermia in isolation cells, locking in heat chambers at 80 degrees Celsius. Bacque: I can only confirm incidents such as arbitrary shooting into the camp by the guards, arbitrary beating of prisoners with clubs with severe injuries as a result, or bulldozers rolling over sleeping prisoners at night, either crushing them or burying them alive in their holes in the ground. And all of this without prosecuting the guilty. When your book appeared in Germany in 1989, it suddenly became a bestseller. The professional world remained reserved. Bacque: The flood of letters to the editor was amazing. Thousands of Germans wrote: “Yes, it was like that!” Before that there was a book by Paul Carell and Günter Bödecker about it, “The Prisoners”, but it never became relevant to my book. Indeed, as great as the audience's success was, as great were the reservations and even the rejection that the book met with from many journalists, the federal government and almost the entire German professional community. Why? Bacque: I suspect two reasons. The first is a psychological one: people don't like hearing bad news about themselves. The defeat and the immediate post-war period was a time of humiliation for Germany - not a moment in the history of the fatherland with which one would like to identify. You keep a distance. The second reason is that from the 1950s the Western Allies began to be seen as the protective power against communism, and consequently everything “ugly” was faded out - in fact, they even began to be idealized as “liberators” and “bringer of democracy”. In the minds of many Germans, the British were soon only noble and Americans good-natured, all with a keen sense of justice. What do you see as the cause of this change? Bacque: A Successful Re-education of the Younger Generation. Are you talking about the so-called “re-education”? Bacque: Yes, a system of propaganda lies: the vanquished takes over the history of the victor. During my visits to Germany I have found time and again that there was a rift through almost every family here. A rift between the generation of experience and those born after. In what way? Bacque: The older Germans still remembered what they had actually experienced. But when they told the younger ones, they asked them to remain silent. At a reading in Canada in 1989, I saw a German woman of about thirty come up to me after the event and hug me crying because I - as she said - "had changed her life". Why? Because my book showed her that her father had told the truth after all. The only sad thing about the story is that the father had died in the meantime. So he never found out during his lifetime that his daughter was still inwardly reconciled with him. Such things have happened to me again and again and I think hundreds of thousands of times in Germany. Ultimately, this silencing of the historical truth of the generation of experiences in Germany also prevailed in public. Newspapers and book publishers that still had a historical rather than a moral view of things were increasingly defamed as “right-wing extremists”. The full interview can be read in the archive of Junge Freiheit: www.jf-archiv.de/online-archiv/file.asp?Folder=04&File=244yy09.htm
@TreeSawyer
@TreeSawyer 3 жыл бұрын
7:42 No matter what, there’s always one person staring at their phone.
@johnscreekmark
@johnscreekmark 3 жыл бұрын
You know one thing....They were happy to be held in one run by the Western Allies vs. the Soviet Union!
@danielstarr8957
@danielstarr8957 3 жыл бұрын
I was just thinking that. There's a reason all the Germans fled west and not east at the end of the war.
@marioalbertodiaz2810
@marioalbertodiaz2810 3 жыл бұрын
John,millons of Germán Priosioners died by occidental aliados.
@hectorguerrero752
@hectorguerrero752 3 жыл бұрын
Same did the Japaneses in the far east escenario
@petetube99
@petetube99 3 жыл бұрын
Weve all seen footage of how the US treats prisoners in Guantanamo and Abugraib. Get off your high horse.
@9lettere668
@9lettere668 3 жыл бұрын
@@marioalbertodiaz2810 true that. at kzbin.info/www/bejne/sKS4pIeuoq-Fqdk a concentration camp inmates is in charge.. I have a feeling this guy wants some revenge. It's human and revenge drove the allied through germany but sometimes they acted just like the nazis
@inthgghvg680
@inthgghvg680 3 жыл бұрын
Allied liberators ? did they stand trial as well in Nuernberg for crime against humanity, ? letting children, wounded, women and elderly starve and die of thirst in those Rhine meadow cages was and will always remain what it is: crime against humanity. Even today it is still forbidden to look for historical remainder in the soil of those so called cages. Here in Sinzig (between Bonn and Koblenz), the Police will turn up when you look with a metal detector or just dig where the locals indicated the cages had been...and will fine you.
@shirleybalinski4535
@shirleybalinski4535 Жыл бұрын
Were conditions great? No. I am American. It is easy to blame us & the other Allied powers. Conditions were absolutely horrible all over Europe at the time. Whole armies surrendered( hundreds of thousands soldiers not individual small groups). Millions of refugees from Eastern Europe poured west. Millions of refugees from Europe were homeless & on the move. Displaced people & forced slave laborers were set free from interment camps with no where to go( by the thousands). Everywhere transportation had broken done, supply chains broken, food distribution very poor, housing virtually non existent, heat sources gone, manufacturing, non existence, farming annihilated. I am sorry but POWs were at the bottom of the food chain. German officiers were put in charge of the camps, overall administration by the Allies..German field kitchens cooked & distributed the food. Most of the POWS were repatriated by the end of summer. American & Britain shouldered the biggest share of recovering Europe from the war. Britain never went off rationing for her own people until the mid 1950's!! These two countries shouldered the task of feeding, clothing, housing the civilians of Eastern & Western Europe for years!! So, excuse me but, dammit, when all it said & done, these guys May not have had it any worse than a whole lot of civilians, especially the millions of women & kids left to fend for themselves berif of food, clothing & housing. Cry me a river.
@coryyoung8289
@coryyoung8289 3 жыл бұрын
My Grandfather Harry Schneider was a POW (Google him) snuck out of camp twice to find or steal 1 potato and an egg.... He took it back to add to the boiled snow to add flavouring and share it with everyone. He eventually escaped for good and became famous for good reasons in aviation
@Brian-qx3ld
@Brian-qx3ld 3 жыл бұрын
unfortunately, many Axis forces were inhumane, and your grandfather was very brave.
@alizakurzweil7008
@alizakurzweil7008 3 жыл бұрын
Pow??? He was a Nazi!!!
@markaegyssus5192
@markaegyssus5192 3 жыл бұрын
Your grandfather was a lucky guy my was killed by the Bolsheviks
@2KCustomerService
@2KCustomerService 3 жыл бұрын
@@alizakurzweil7008 they lied to use
@horaciolabadie
@horaciolabadie 2 жыл бұрын
A hero.
@markdermeister1662
@markdermeister1662 7 жыл бұрын
Amerikas should have listened to your general patten...he knew who real enemy was.
@sparx180
@sparx180 7 жыл бұрын
Mark Dermeister Yes, we fought on the wrong side! You are correct about General G.C. Patton, he knew and was going to expose the lies when he got back to the US. Funny, (not really) but he was murdered.Accident my a..e.
@sparx180
@sparx180 6 жыл бұрын
Mark Dermeister They sure should have. I wonder who was responsible for his murder? I have my thoughts how about yourself?
@balancedactguy
@balancedactguy 6 жыл бұрын
A General has no power to declare a war. Only Congress can do that. Weary of over 4 years of war the American people would NOT have supported another.
@halheywood3910
@halheywood3910 6 жыл бұрын
General George Patton bring him back from the dead and unleash him on today's world
@halheywood3910
@halheywood3910 6 жыл бұрын
Mark Dermeister one of California's finest
@user-vx9jh9cp6n
@user-vx9jh9cp6n 6 жыл бұрын
Heart aching.....................
@lrc9304
@lrc9304 3 жыл бұрын
"We defeated the wrong enemy". - Gen. George Patton
@Alfredo-vh6un
@Alfredo-vh6un 3 жыл бұрын
@Luis RC. George Patton the nazi.
@pietroercolano7130
@pietroercolano7130 3 жыл бұрын
Did they? If you look for the number of military casualties you will discover that the it was not the Allied who won the war (not to say about the deaths of civilians).
@SugarRayValentine
@SugarRayValentine 3 жыл бұрын
He said that because communism became a threat not because he supported the racist nazi ideology that Neo nazis identify with
@julieleabod9490
@julieleabod9490 3 жыл бұрын
Who was the real enemy?
@panathatube
@panathatube 3 жыл бұрын
He had the luxury to say such things since they already had defeated the Nazis!
@rosarioorlando3457
@rosarioorlando3457 4 жыл бұрын
These soldiers were NOT kept indoors or in compliance with Geneva convention* many died from their wounds or illness caused by lack of sanitation !
@anthonygrantham7226
@anthonygrantham7226 4 жыл бұрын
@The Truth and they're both weltering in hell with their communist comrades, Rosenfeld, Stalin and Churchill.
@anthonygrantham7226
@anthonygrantham7226 4 жыл бұрын
@CA Babyboomer 1.7 million German POWs were systematically starved to death in open fields in Eisenhower's Rhine meadows death camps.
@musteila6789
@musteila6789 4 жыл бұрын
@CA Babyboomer Your 'victorious' army has applied the same pattern in the conflicts that followed WWII. But 'Wo kein Kläger, da kein Richter!...' 🤔🤔
@KR-jt4ut
@KR-jt4ut 4 жыл бұрын
@@anthonygrantham7226 Idiot. Germany lost 5 million soldiers, ... according to you, 1.7 would have died in American camps .... your source?
@KR-jt4ut
@KR-jt4ut 4 жыл бұрын
@@musteila6789 Without this victorious army, you would still be living under a dictator. So, just say "thank you" to the allied forces who liberated you. And you can't expect the victourious allied forces to provide hotel beds to seven million Nazi Soldiers who surrendered . Their fate was much better than the fate of their victims.
@rsconrado
@rsconrado 3 жыл бұрын
No social distance. Unacceptable !
@renataostertag6051
@renataostertag6051 6 жыл бұрын
OMG - all these little boys in uniform, not more than 12 years old or so. OMG !
@paddybrennan3644
@paddybrennan3644 5 жыл бұрын
Renata Ostertag They are Nazis
@susanboylefanable
@susanboylefanable 5 жыл бұрын
@@paddybrennan3644 indoctrinated Hitler Youth. It's unspeakably awful when a nation is so deep in defeat that it feels it has to call on its last resources rather than surrender before it comes to this. The planners of Operation Valkyrie, in their way, sought to avoid it coming to this.
@cochinaable
@cochinaable 4 жыл бұрын
The priest seemed excited to be with them.
@maitztamas76
@maitztamas76 4 жыл бұрын
@@paddybrennan3644 they are enlisted kids in uniforms. If you are judging them for that, you are the nazi hater.
@sblack48
@sblack48 4 жыл бұрын
They are the lucky ones
@Verdelufe
@Verdelufe 5 жыл бұрын
Not 50K but 1.5 million died of starvation thanks Eisenhower.
@morningwood6389
@morningwood6389 3 жыл бұрын
Proof
@morningwood6389
@morningwood6389 3 жыл бұрын
The fact that your pfp is a nazi, that explains it
@paulwilkinson8099
@paulwilkinson8099 4 жыл бұрын
My mother ( RIP) often recalled German POW working the fields in Wakefield , West Yorkshire UK after the war .
@Eyyoh755
@Eyyoh755 3 жыл бұрын
Old men and boys. The rest dead or missed in action. Today we Germans are a peaceful nation. We learned our lessons well and don't want to spend too much of our taxes for the military again
@Automedon2
@Automedon2 3 жыл бұрын
Now Germany seeks to rule Europe through the EU
@user-bo8iy1zj7i
@user-bo8iy1zj7i 2 жыл бұрын
Настоящие волки не вышли из России!
@leomoreno2356
@leomoreno2356 2 жыл бұрын
Shut up Marina yordanova!
@unitedwestand5100
@unitedwestand5100 2 жыл бұрын
We had about 400k German POWs interned in camps in the US. Including the African Corps, and two entire U-Boat crews. They lived a good life too. Better than German Citizens in Germany, that's a fact. Most of them didnt want to go home.
@charlesmartella
@charlesmartella 2 жыл бұрын
Don't be too hard on yourself Marina. They can say what they like but the world respects Germany . Germany had balls. My grandfather on my mother's side fought against Rommel at Tobruk and actually saw him when he was captured . When he was in Prison camp in Germany he was well treated and respected much better than he was in Italy. Much love from Western Australia xx
@elliejobe2512
@elliejobe2512 3 жыл бұрын
We say it can never happen again, but it is, it is happening right now in Korea & China and no one is going over there to help them. Breaks my heart.
@faizasanam1539
@faizasanam1539 3 жыл бұрын
And in Kashmir
@hibabe5038
@hibabe5038 3 жыл бұрын
As long as it's not American youth to help them we've had enough .
@renatebaumgartner2921
@renatebaumgartner2921 2 жыл бұрын
Abortion up to the moment of birth in America.
@meljenkins1016
@meljenkins1016 3 жыл бұрын
This is Eisenhowers Rheine Meadows infamous prison camp for German POW's.
@PUAlum
@PUAlum 3 жыл бұрын
why was it infamous?
@Four-of-Six
@Four-of-Six 3 жыл бұрын
@@PUAlum These German soldiers were not called POWs by the Americans so they didn't have to be treated as such according to the Geneva Convention..... So they were kept into barb wired meadows without any shelter, food or water. Of the 110000 captives a couple of thousand died of hunger, cold, dehydration. Some were shot for trying to crawl underneath the barb wire to drink water from the river next to the meadow....... If you Google for "Rheinwiessenlager" you'll find more info.
@Jeffthecreepyastafan
@Jeffthecreepyastafan 3 жыл бұрын
@@PUAlum hundreds of thousands died....a German Holocaust of sorts
@Brian-qx3ld
@Brian-qx3ld 3 жыл бұрын
@@Jeffthecreepyastafan um what? 3000 to 6000 died. not hundreds of thousands.....
@c.j.1089
@c.j.1089 3 жыл бұрын
@@Jeffthecreepyastafan just making shit up for the sake of drawing attention to yourself.
@L1V2P9
@L1V2P9 3 жыл бұрын
0:48 If I didn't know Albert Speer was captured at Flensburg, I would swear this soldier was him. The hairline with pronounced recession on his right side is identical.
@keithkuhn6404
@keithkuhn6404 3 жыл бұрын
Albert Speer the "good Nazi", who lucked out after the war.
@mad5479
@mad5479 3 жыл бұрын
Looks a though the cameraman thinks so too.
@JERauff
@JERauff 3 жыл бұрын
Thats not Albert. He is not from the luftwaffe
@Romanoff.Kalashnikov
@Romanoff.Kalashnikov 3 жыл бұрын
I think that is Gen. Friedrich Paulus
@valerykarnauhov1261
@valerykarnauhov1261 3 жыл бұрын
действительно похож
@maryshaffer8474
@maryshaffer8474 5 жыл бұрын
They were lucky to be on the right side of Berlin when captured. They didn't spend years in gulag.
@conveyor2
@conveyor2 5 жыл бұрын
Gulags were Soviet political prisons.
@tomortale2333
@tomortale2333 5 жыл бұрын
read ur history...the Americans eventually handed over thousands n thousands to Russia...for the rebuilding of the cities bombed by germans.
@tickysiasiluka68
@tickysiasiluka68 5 жыл бұрын
mary shaffer .They belong in a gulag.
@birddog9708
@birddog9708 5 жыл бұрын
Why Eisenhower starved most of them to death
@D20000
@D20000 5 жыл бұрын
A german speaking friend of mine said that it was worse there than at some gulags :/
@jasonjacob1533
@jasonjacob1533 6 жыл бұрын
In Russia they will spend 10 years in labor Camp...
@randolfocarlos1
@randolfocarlos1 5 жыл бұрын
E FOI O QUE ACONTECEU GRAÇAS AOS EUA.
@user-gk2sg7qc3t
@user-gk2sg7qc3t 5 жыл бұрын
They deserved 10 years in labor Camp. Absolutely.
@tomortale2333
@tomortale2333 5 жыл бұрын
More like 15...
@tickysiasiluka68
@tickysiasiluka68 5 жыл бұрын
Jason Jacob .And shot of which they deserved.
@van_basten777
@van_basten777 5 жыл бұрын
they restored what they destroyed
@damiendemayo4405
@damiendemayo4405 3 жыл бұрын
"We defeated the wrong enemy " he lived 2 months after making that speech
@ronaldoduarte1522
@ronaldoduarte1522 3 жыл бұрын
I know who said this...
@victorlloyd5271
@victorlloyd5271 2 жыл бұрын
@@ronaldoduarte1522 Yes -- it was Patton. Excellent choice of the framers of the US Constitution to create a clear division between politics and the military. With very, very few exceptions, a civilian government should be lead by civilian leaders.
@cranegantry868
@cranegantry868 2 жыл бұрын
He was murdered.
@user-bo8iy1zj7i
@user-bo8iy1zj7i 2 жыл бұрын
У кого шишка короткая..
@alexisleon3769
@alexisleon3769 2 жыл бұрын
F...k the fascists Patton included... - without the Soviets millions of u.s Soldiers would die on order to defeat germany
@brianfoley4328
@brianfoley4328 5 жыл бұрын
Once you capture the enemy, you have an obligation to provide for them as best you can.
@josephdockemeyer4807
@josephdockemeyer4807 5 жыл бұрын
But the didn't provide for them. Eisenhower changed their status from POW to DEF. As a result, the Geneva Convention no longer applied and Eisenhower starved more than 1.5 million men to death. He was a right bastard and is burning in hell.
@davehoward22
@davehoward22 5 жыл бұрын
like they did in belson and auschwitz
@dinoleo3804
@dinoleo3804 5 жыл бұрын
Bhahahahahahahahahahahahahah
@syedbilal6648
@syedbilal6648 5 жыл бұрын
@@josephdockemeyer4807 Well said
@QueenBee-gx4rp
@QueenBee-gx4rp 5 жыл бұрын
Trish Foley I’m sure the Nazis would have felt the same way-they so often showed their kind compassion.
@truthfilterforyoutube8218
@truthfilterforyoutube8218 4 жыл бұрын
I think this is backwards. The Officers staying in the fancy hotels should have been in the "dirt cages", and the soldiers in the fancy digs !
@lacertabilineata9337
@lacertabilineata9337 3 жыл бұрын
A question: what crime exactly did these high officers commit? To be a high Wehrmacht officer is not a crime in itself. Perhaps one or the other has committed crimes, but we don't know! What did the soldiers do? They fought for Germany at the front. That is not a crime either, it should be appreciated. Among all these soldiers, there must have been a few who also committed crimes, just as Allied soldiers committed crimes. But we do not know which of them did. Can we collectively punish everyone? Due to concentration camp conditions? We Germans were accused of violating the Geneva Conventions. Among other things, the Geneva Convention states that all prisoners of war must be released after the end of the war. The opposite was exercised on German soldiers. And it got worse: these soldiers were deported to forced labor for years. Many did not survive that either. Deportation and forced labor is a "crime against humanity"! This crime was also committed millions of times against Germans.
@jenniferlarson6426
@jenniferlarson6426 3 жыл бұрын
@@lacertabilineata9337 The only German prisoners that did not survive were the ones that Russia had. America took care of their prisoners back here in the U.S.....even paid them for their work and taught many of them work skills so they could get jobs after their release. They were living better than most Americans were living at that time....and had more food. The prisoners in England were treated well too. They were not dropping dead like they were in the Russian prison camps....AND, they were released and sent back home after they served out their time. They were not held prisoner until they were dead...like they were in Russia.
@mongo2022
@mongo2022 3 жыл бұрын
@@lacertabilineata9337 Oh, poor Germans...
@Synapsisify
@Synapsisify 3 жыл бұрын
@@lacertabilineata9337 Nazi soldiers destroyed the USSR it was fair they to repair it.
@bazbarrett8103
@bazbarrett8103 3 жыл бұрын
They decorated all the generals who fought the war behind the lines...
@robertroberts2666
@robertroberts2666 5 жыл бұрын
When will we ever learn?
@harley092355
@harley092355 5 жыл бұрын
Robert Roberts read the papers as the world is as wicked as ever
@dowrhew5581
@dowrhew5581 3 жыл бұрын
Japan,italy and germany for sure learned about this war the question is do victors also learned?
@9lettere668
@9lettere668 3 жыл бұрын
@@dowrhew5581 my lai
@petergehlen4190
@petergehlen4190 3 жыл бұрын
Ask the Wallstreet.
@weatherboi
@weatherboi 6 жыл бұрын
Anyone else had trouble with the audio?
@calvada1
@calvada1 5 жыл бұрын
Weatherboi it was on the screen at the beginning ‘this video has no sound’.
@harrycurrie9664
@harrycurrie9664 4 жыл бұрын
@@calvada1 Just as well eh, I hate the sound of constant whinging in German.
@omegaman1409
@omegaman1409 3 жыл бұрын
50,000 prisoners just think of the hygiene, the diseases, and also the feeding. Its a tragedy itself.
@timlamb9428
@timlamb9428 3 жыл бұрын
While I agree the allies especially Britain and the U.S. did all they could to make things as comfortable as they could under the circumstances while the nazi were purposely killing people including women and children in the concentration camps. So not much empathy from me for thos german prisoners.
@aminemilandvb7958
@aminemilandvb7958 5 жыл бұрын
So sad, these soldiers regardless of what side they were on, we need to respect them. Men sent to fight a war that others picked
@ireki6213
@ireki6213 4 жыл бұрын
Do you regret them?They survived the war.I feel sorry for those they killed.They now sit on pensions and visit the World.And their victims have been dead for a long time.
@carlosgallardo1203
@carlosgallardo1203 2 жыл бұрын
@@ireki6213 And yours, what about them. Only that yours are producing even and still now... And they didn't "killed" anyone; they made the war, certainly agains savages a you and others like you are.
@haltomont1012
@haltomont1012 3 жыл бұрын
My Dad said he'd seen all of Germany at 20k feet. But that was a war crime those camps even he said so
@HenkDynacord
@HenkDynacord 5 жыл бұрын
I do not understand why they were kept prisoner in the rheinwiesenlager for such a long time. War was over. Revenge?
@cieletlavie7950
@cieletlavie7950 5 жыл бұрын
HenkDynacord they were secretly torturing the German people and soldiers, the documentary hellstorm explains it further.
@anbilo23
@anbilo23 3 жыл бұрын
In russia most where in gulags for 11 years. They lied if not having any german prisoners left
@panchopuskas1
@panchopuskas1 3 жыл бұрын
They were lucky that there was very little revenge after what these Bastards had done in the countries the countries they’d invaded.... Germany got off lightly......
@hanhdhsj
@hanhdhsj 3 жыл бұрын
@@panchopuskas1 Whats up boy did they kill your granpa?
@dennispfeifer7788
@dennispfeifer7788 3 жыл бұрын
Population reduction...
@harryd5650
@harryd5650 Жыл бұрын
My Opa was in one of those allied prisoner camps, Bad Kreuznach. Death was all around and he almost died of starvation.
@casanova1914
@casanova1914 6 жыл бұрын
More than one million german POW's died in the Rheinwiesenlager. No food, no water, no medicine. This was Eisenhauers order! I spoke with soldiert that were in a POW-camp. Noone was alowed to bring them food. Or they were shoot. A very sad time.
@TheRealLaughingGravy
@TheRealLaughingGravy 6 жыл бұрын
Nonsense. The number who died was between 3,000 and 10,000. Sad, yes, but probably unavoidable, and certainly not deliberate. Don't fall for modern-day Nazi propaganda.
@renataostertag6051
@renataostertag6051 6 жыл бұрын
1 + Casa Nova!
@yuppy1967
@yuppy1967 5 жыл бұрын
Laughing Gravy and your probably one of those who thinks all Germans were Nazis, so they deserved this kind of treatment. Mind you that if allied POW’s were treated in the same way the camp guards and warden would be charged with running an extermination camp.
@szczamszczam8130
@szczamszczam8130 5 жыл бұрын
Not million german POW but millions Russian soldiers was murdered or killed from hunger but germans, I do not lie idiot
@Baskerville22
@Baskerville22 5 жыл бұрын
Rubbish. How many died in POW camps in the USA ? Almost none. Why ? Because the USA was not destroyed by bombing in the War. Food was plentiful & roads, rail, bridges were intact. In Germany, cities were destroyed; power supplies were destroyed; the railway system was destroyed. Food grown in the countryside could not be transported. The US & the UK had to ship all their petrol & oil from the USA as well as much food. At most, 10,000 POWS died in US prison camps, out of 2 million POWs. How many Germans not in POW camps died in the US zone ? Many more than 10,000....from desease, malnutrition and cold. Results of WAR, not a "plan" to kill them.
@ellebelle8515
@ellebelle8515 5 жыл бұрын
I am not American and am against present American administration and its support of Saudi Arabia. But, WWII is a war America tried to avoid at all costs. In the end, countless young American soldiers lives were lost along with all the countless others. This might look like a sad and miserable sight from the last days of the war, but fortunately, most of these men went on with their lives, unlike the ones that stayed on the battlefield.
@m0rallyb4nkrupt
@m0rallyb4nkrupt 5 жыл бұрын
Ever heard of land lease act? The US built bombers since 1936.
@silverbullet2008bb
@silverbullet2008bb 5 жыл бұрын
teach hca Actually, One million Germans died in these camps from starvation, dehydration, exposure, disease, beaten to death or just plain shot. Here on KZbin please watch: "Eisenhower's Rhine Meadows Death Camps Documentary" and "Other Losses - a film by James Bacque". The book "Other losses" is available on Amazon.
@ghostwilliams4419
@ghostwilliams4419 5 жыл бұрын
Are you sure about that? Ford and Wall Street financed Hitler
@CardinalX
@CardinalX 5 жыл бұрын
Countless? Actually history has a fairly accurate count on american casualties and even other countries too
@ellebelle8515
@ellebelle8515 5 жыл бұрын
@@silverbullet2008bb I know the documentation that exists in abundance of all the German POW camps in North America, one of 10,000 men in my community -with a population even larger than the city. My father made a life-long friendship with one. They worked side by side on a local farm. Many came back to live in North America.
@brandyf1932
@brandyf1932 4 жыл бұрын
5:00 Guy turns back towards the cameraman as the gate shuts him in. He's loaded down with stuff in the back and both front pockets of his britches. Was he flaunting it like a runway model or what? Thanks for posting.
@dgcbadania
@dgcbadania 3 жыл бұрын
Average people in camps, generals in palaces ... Nothing has changed ...
@makalu877
@makalu877 3 жыл бұрын
Never will, sad to say.
@crosbonit
@crosbonit 3 жыл бұрын
@4:47 someone is trying bust people's head with a chair.
@dexterdog62
@dexterdog62 3 жыл бұрын
No he was trying to clear a path through all the prisoners with that chair (think he had one in each hand)
@kootje4700
@kootje4700 3 жыл бұрын
@@dexterdog62 strange way to clear a path
@NobodyQuiteLikeMe
@NobodyQuiteLikeMe 3 жыл бұрын
@@kootje4700 obviously effective though.
@manjitsoni9676
@manjitsoni9676 3 жыл бұрын
ਪੁਰੀ ਘੈਂਟ ਵੀਡੀਓ ਆ ਬਾਈ ਨਾਜ਼ੀ ਸੈਨਾ ਕੋਲ ਸਭ ਤੋਂ ਤਕੜੇ ਹਥਿਆਰ ਸਨ ਦੂਜੀ ਗੱਲ ਕੈਦੀਆਂ ਸੈਨਿਕਾਂ ਦੀ ਸੇਵਾ ਕਰਨੀਂ ਪੁਰਾਣੇ ਇਤਿਹਾਸ ਦੇ ਦਰਸ਼ਨ ਕੀਤੇ ਨੇ ਇਸ ਵੀਡੀਓ ਚ ਧੰਨਵਾਦ ਜੀ
@timpani1950
@timpani1950 3 жыл бұрын
All the suffering.....have mercy on us all
@bobapbob5812
@bobapbob5812 5 жыл бұрын
Part of the problem was sheer logistics. German POWs, freed Allied POWs. freed slave labor, displaced persons. sorting out those anti-communist Russians for repatriation (ie murder), refugees, etc.
@counterinsurgencyadvisor4289
@counterinsurgencyadvisor4289 3 жыл бұрын
New slave labor too from the Germans in captivity.
@teotselek1536
@teotselek1536 3 жыл бұрын
To let people t the fields ou facing the cold the rain the wind and even the sun without any protection is a war crime!!! No matter what side you are! I am Greek we fought against Italians and Germans and we had suffered many war crimes from Bulgarians as well - they were allies at that time but I feel sorry for people who found themselves on the loosing side!..
@johncater7861
@johncater7861 2 жыл бұрын
Of course, but these were temporary camps and not concentration camps. People had to be placed somewhere and quickly. The Americans did the best they could.
@wingedlyon
@wingedlyon Жыл бұрын
Agreed Teo! Read, "Other Losses" by James Bacque or watch his video here on KZbin
@keithhoward5120
@keithhoward5120 2 жыл бұрын
The loss of generations . Young kids as soldiers ........just boys!
@afrikaleta
@afrikaleta 5 жыл бұрын
They were probably glad it was over.
@lacertabilineata9337
@lacertabilineata9337 3 жыл бұрын
Oh yes, they all were fed up with war! But it was not over for them. Many died in these camps. And most of them were deported to forced labour for years into all different countries. Many didn´t survive . The bombings stopped, but the war against us continued.
@Iazzaboyce
@Iazzaboyce 3 жыл бұрын
@@lacertabilineata9337 Those POWs are under USA Army control. Are you saying POWs were put in forced labour and were killed by USA Army or the USA Army handed POWs to other control where this happened?
@bandazyk
@bandazyk 3 жыл бұрын
@@lacertabilineata9337 maybe it was the price they paid to start war and crimes?
@bellaadamowicz8380
@bellaadamowicz8380 3 жыл бұрын
@@lacertabilineata9337 If sow the wind , you reap a whirlwind. The Americans were too nice. It is only right, that they sent you to other countries to work as slaves , you brought terrible distraction to other countries, time to pay of .
@director1111
@director1111 3 жыл бұрын
@@lacertabilineata9337 Until the day we have the occupier scum in our country.
@TheGePeU
@TheGePeU Жыл бұрын
Все заключённые живут и спят под открытым небом. Ни домов, ни бараков, ни палаток не видно.
@TheBauma
@TheBauma 5 жыл бұрын
what a proud us army, they won against children, women and wounded german soldiers.
@sharyncarr4279
@sharyncarr4279 5 жыл бұрын
You must live on some other planet and wear a tin foil hat to make that statement!
@larryteague871
@larryteague871 5 жыл бұрын
We won. Those prisoners looked like 99 percent men
@Belfreyite
@Belfreyite 3 жыл бұрын
Really!!! Boo Hoo! Idiot.
@petergehlen4190
@petergehlen4190 3 жыл бұрын
That´s tradition in the US-army.
@billbright1755
@billbright1755 5 жыл бұрын
One thing mankind has proven time and time again. He cannot avoid war. There’s always something brewing somewhere from greed jealousy and hate. Nowadays his weapons have more power in one bomb than all the bombs dropped in all of WII. They can be autonomously fired intercontinentally at supersonic speeds. Thousands of such missiles are in place as we speak. Not only great blast damage but the environment damage of radioactive debris lingering for decades. Say someone with the thought process of a suicide bomber had access to such a weapon.
@samiam619
@samiam619 4 жыл бұрын
What’s your point?
@anthonylewis9572
@anthonylewis9572 3 жыл бұрын
CHINA. IS THE ENEMY. U.S. AND ALL ITS ALLIES. NEED TO DESTROY CHINA IMMEDIATELY
@benjamindejonge3624
@benjamindejonge3624 3 жыл бұрын
I heard about that camp, no shelter food or water and medical care given
@FightingSportsMedia
@FightingSportsMedia 3 жыл бұрын
shouldn't of tried to take over Europe, cant get mad when they invited all this on themselves
@autism-is-unstoppable8017
@autism-is-unstoppable8017 3 жыл бұрын
@@FightingSportsMedia you spelled "tried to save Europe" wrong
@rickcastellione2267
@rickcastellione2267 3 жыл бұрын
@@FightingSportsMedia so what do you think should happen to the country that took over a quarter of the world's landmass? Btw it was UK and France that declared war on Germany, not the other way round.
@FightingSportsMedia
@FightingSportsMedia 3 жыл бұрын
@@rickcastellione2267 in response to Hitler's invasion of Poland....and Germany attacked first by sinking the British ocean liner Athenia.....gonna keep picking and choosing what facts you use?
@raulangulo2508
@raulangulo2508 3 жыл бұрын
@@rickcastellione2267 yes and Hitler rotchild mi6 Spy and mkultra handler of Cathy o,Brian, in Thanks for the memories,book
@simpaticaism
@simpaticaism 3 жыл бұрын
No sanitation , no shelter from the weather weeks / months without proper food , no medical care , hundreds of them died a slow horrible death , in the ditches they dug to get some cover from the weather.
@martinwepener9933
@martinwepener9933 4 жыл бұрын
Happy for those that returned.
@BRunoAWAY
@BRunoAWAY 3 жыл бұрын
Fuck you nazi
@SnowingAsh111
@SnowingAsh111 3 жыл бұрын
@@BRunoAWAY He’s a National Socialist for having empathy? Strange logic.
@condedooku9750
@condedooku9750 2 жыл бұрын
@@SnowingAsh111 This is how indoctrinated people are today, the truth is very sad.
@stagehand9002
@stagehand9002 2 жыл бұрын
thats just 1 camp - there were 19. countless germans murdered by the allies
@Fritz_Maisenbacher
@Fritz_Maisenbacher 3 жыл бұрын
"We fought the wrong enemy" (Patton, U.S. General)
@cliffa2901
@cliffa2901 3 жыл бұрын
Thank god he wasn't president before the war. You would be under the Nazi flag. I hope you haven't got Jewish friends.
@cranegantry868
@cranegantry868 2 жыл бұрын
@@cliffa2901 What does all that drivel mean?
@cmasseylynch
@cmasseylynch 3 жыл бұрын
They were lucky the russians didn't get hold of them.They wouldn't have stood a chance with Stalin's boys.
@simonroth19
@simonroth19 3 жыл бұрын
This was one of the biggest War crimes ever !!!
@BRunoAWAY
@BRunoAWAY 3 жыл бұрын
Lol, CRY baby
@9lettere668
@9lettere668 3 жыл бұрын
allied made a terror bombing campaign to destroy german history language culture and mass murder against population.. while nazis were hired to work for NASA or fled to south america
@rickcastellione2267
@rickcastellione2267 3 жыл бұрын
Certainly up there among the worst
@johnhenni2808
@johnhenni2808 2 жыл бұрын
oh my God, they were packed in there like sardines. What an.ugly muddy mess it must have been after some heavy rains. What a nightmare.
@Arasmus45
@Arasmus45 5 жыл бұрын
Really sad.
@fidenemini4413
@fidenemini4413 4 жыл бұрын
I can understand the detainment of officers for questioning, but why werent the soildiers just disbanded? War was over, they were civilians
@nonamegame9857
@nonamegame9857 3 жыл бұрын
I know one thing. You could have added some narration 🤯🤯
@goutvols103
@goutvols103 4 жыл бұрын
What sweet revenge for that shirtless prison guard who was once in a German concentration camp himself.
@harrycurrie9664
@harrycurrie9664 4 жыл бұрын
He seemed to be enjoying himself, and why not after what he would have witnessed and endured in the concentration camps.
@donalain69
@donalain69 3 жыл бұрын
Revenge? how many of those prisoners there do you think have ever even seen a concentration camp before?
@susanurban5920
@susanurban5920 3 жыл бұрын
He definitely looked happy to be moving around freely.
@karinlorenz4847
@karinlorenz4847 4 жыл бұрын
My father was in the Luftwaffe and ended up in the Rheinberg prison camp in 1945 when he was 20 years old. The Americans gave them no food and he was down to 98 lbs. when he was lucky enough to be transferred to the British and they fed him. There's an excellent book about the Eisenhower death camps called "Other Losses" by James Bacque.
@user-gm4ol8ro4n
@user-gm4ol8ro4n 4 жыл бұрын
Сколько страданий принесла война советской России... Без повторения . Всем- мирного неба над головой.
@dg1006
@dg1006 Жыл бұрын
And now the suffering the Russians are bringing to the Ukrainians…just as the Germans bought to the Russians in 1941.
@revanemilzadeh865
@revanemilzadeh865 5 жыл бұрын
Es tut mir leid für die deutschen Soldaten
@alesfrancis7280
@alesfrancis7280 4 жыл бұрын
Besser als bei den russen..
@KatyaLishch
@KatyaLishch 4 жыл бұрын
@@alesfrancis7280 Смешно наблюдать за резкими высказываниями безмозглых детей, которые очень смелые только в интернете, а в реальности их робкий голосок будет дрожать как коленки немецких солдат под Сталинградом.
@ardealuero.7283
@ardealuero.7283 4 жыл бұрын
@@KatyaLishch- besser als bei bolsewisten
@blueshirtman8875
@blueshirtman8875 4 жыл бұрын
Save your sorrow for the people they murdered.
@mtgne5351
@mtgne5351 4 жыл бұрын
@@KatyaLishch Da!
@AccordionJoe1
@AccordionJoe1 3 жыл бұрын
Considering the atrocities committed by German soldiers, it's hard to feel sorry for these POWs.
@davidgt3055
@davidgt3055 4 жыл бұрын
I love GERMANY , always in my heart
@noretreat151
@noretreat151 4 жыл бұрын
Gott Mit Uns
@EG-ub3in
@EG-ub3in 3 жыл бұрын
@@noretreat151 MIT Who?
@jb9090
@jb9090 5 жыл бұрын
World War II was the deadliest military conflict in history. An estimated total 70-85 million people perished, which was about 3% of the 1940 world population (est. 2.3 billion).
@tomortale2333
@tomortale2333 5 жыл бұрын
an u can tip ur hat an say ''thank u''' to Adolf
@mezekut12
@mezekut12 5 жыл бұрын
@@tomortale2333 why u clueless hater bullshitting on every comment? U have to learn ur lessons before u come here and spread the hate when u don't clearly know anything about second worldwar
@jorgejefferson8251
@jorgejefferson8251 5 жыл бұрын
anyone who was not alive during that time period needs to be quiet
@laneyspangle4474
@laneyspangle4474 5 жыл бұрын
kirk mullings was you, I wasn’t but my parents family were in them camps so they had a lot to say about it let ppl have there opinions just like you did
@blueshirtman8875
@blueshirtman8875 4 жыл бұрын
I guess that means you,but you could'nt resist?
@violetsprings470
@violetsprings470 4 жыл бұрын
Free speech
@brianflowers586
@brianflowers586 4 жыл бұрын
Lisa Hooper or unless your a liberal than you must have the same as them
@ge2623
@ge2623 3 жыл бұрын
That guy at 4:01 was VERY careful trying not to show his face.
@rtauzin64
@rtauzin64 6 жыл бұрын
They lost. Ask a Russian how they were treated by germans.
@av5958
@av5958 6 жыл бұрын
+Robert Tauzin And you ask the Poles , Finnish , Estonians, Latvians, Lithuanians , Bessarabians how they were treated by Russians.
@Dushnila.
@Dushnila. 6 жыл бұрын
@@av5958 ну ну
@nelliebrown8497
@nelliebrown8497 5 жыл бұрын
The Russians did not recognize the Red Cross, so the Germans treated them the same way.
@emilianbizga1492
@emilianbizga1492 5 жыл бұрын
@@MakhachSultanov you right....was not the russians, was siviets
@Christian-ee7no
@Christian-ee7no 5 жыл бұрын
Ask ukrainians how they were treated by russians(soviets). My grandmas, and grandfathers told me a lot of stories how germans were quite nice towards them in occupied Ukraine by Germany. While russians super abuse ukrainians, and their land. In first years of war when USSR was retreating from west front, and soviets blew up everything in Ukraine factories, bridges, cities, railroad, etc, they also left weapon, and tnt for "partisans" with hope they will terrorize cities under german controle, but it mostly not happen.
@mariaschedvins1386
@mariaschedvins1386 2 жыл бұрын
There are no winners in a war.
@germanbarros7115
@germanbarros7115 3 жыл бұрын
Que increíble es mirar los rostros de estos hombres en la derrota y que convivieron cara a cara con la muerte durante varios años.
@johnindo6771
@johnindo6771 2 жыл бұрын
Those men who murdered , tortured, and raped all across Europe. I do not feel sorry for these men. I feel sorry for their victims-millions and millions!
@Leon-tb2ic
@Leon-tb2ic 5 жыл бұрын
did they have the entire German male populace as prisoners of war?
@joea1433
@joea1433 5 жыл бұрын
All of those men needed latrines, water, food, a place to lay down and to get their heavy coats off as it appears to be warm weather.
@mezekut12
@mezekut12 5 жыл бұрын
@@paddybrennan3644 but u have to know that those men had nothing to do with the camps u speaking about? Those men surely deserved latrines and good food and place to lay down.
@rhinaffrika5825
@rhinaffrika5825 5 жыл бұрын
What camps
@D95RO
@D95RO 5 жыл бұрын
Rhin Affrika the kiss my ass camps
@mancebo7
@mancebo7 4 жыл бұрын
Joe A They would have that all along if the criminal regime they worked for hadn't started the most devastating war ever. How were the allies supposed to have produced latrines for thousands of people overnight? A LOT more important than that, at the time, was providing care to the hundreds of thousands of concentration camp survivors.
@benadam7753
@benadam7753 3 жыл бұрын
@@mancebo7 Western Allies in German POW camps were provided food, water and shelter!
@marcussv661
@marcussv661 5 жыл бұрын
ТАК ПРАВИЛЬНО !!! АМЕРИКАНЦАМ - ДИВИЗИЯМИ ЗДАВАЛИСЬ !!! А КАК ЖЕ ИНАЧЕ ????? СТОЛЬКО В РОССИИ - ЗВЕРСТВА НАТВОРИТЬ !
@zimmer1939
@zimmer1939 5 жыл бұрын
Any body see a ⚡︎⚡︎ uniform around ???
@compoturn1029
@compoturn1029 5 жыл бұрын
Yeah in your closet???
@SFVnative
@SFVnative 4 жыл бұрын
You won't see one here. Anyone having an SS tatoo was immediately shot in the head. These are just soldiers forced into the war, some only 13 years old. Most of the 13 and 14-year-olds weren't even taken prisoner, they just had their weapons taken away and were told to go home.
@blueshirtman8875
@blueshirtman8875 4 жыл бұрын
Were you looking???
@mamavswild
@mamavswild 3 жыл бұрын
@flikedout looks like you’re pretty brainwashed yourself.
@billymule961
@billymule961 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, there is a soldier being taken captive with SS on his collar.
@michaelmallal9101
@michaelmallal9101 4 жыл бұрын
Extraordinary scenes.
@josepalomogomez9865
@josepalomogomez9865 3 жыл бұрын
Las imágenes hablan por sí solas.
@SupesMe
@SupesMe 6 жыл бұрын
Well it may not look like it but they're lucky they weren't taken by the Soviets :/
@dirkweigl5859
@dirkweigl5859 5 жыл бұрын
Amercans wasn't bether
@petergehlen4190
@petergehlen4190 3 жыл бұрын
It´s not important wether they were killed by the bolsheviks or starved to death in good ol Ike´s death camps.
@deputy_commander7595
@deputy_commander7595 6 жыл бұрын
Those soldiers even can wear nice clothing.
@petergehlen4190
@petergehlen4190 3 жыл бұрын
Once you will wear nice clothing too. A white one, big commander.
@xoxa-79
@xoxa-79 5 жыл бұрын
Интересно дизлайки ставили родичи немецких солдат,в чем негатив в видео?
@sujitwarkari5871
@sujitwarkari5871 5 жыл бұрын
I love Germany and my Heart Germany
@annerees5308
@annerees5308 4 жыл бұрын
Sujit Warkari Zx
@bodoh.g.k5302
@bodoh.g.k5302 4 жыл бұрын
Dankeschön Sujit
@loveisintheair8003
@loveisintheair8003 4 жыл бұрын
@flikedout I think Sujit Warkari is talking about Germany today and not about nazi Germany !
@michakrause6532
@michakrause6532 5 жыл бұрын
Wenn es dort so gut und komfortabel war , warum sind den in den POW Lagern soviel verhungert. Auf den Elbewiesen war kein Grasshalm mehr und sogar Leichen wurden verzehrt .
@heinzgebhardt1641
@heinzgebhardt1641 4 жыл бұрын
Micha Krause Sie meinten Rheinwiesen. Die Versorgung POW hat sicherlich nicht geklappt und es kamen viele vor Hunger um. Trotzdem kein Vergleich wie die Nazis mit ihren Kriegsgefangenen umgegangen ist
@prince-solomon
@prince-solomon 4 жыл бұрын
Und was sind deine Quellen für diese Aussagen? Und bitte keine rechtsradikale Website welche die "Wahrheit" vermitteln will...
@mrhamburger6936
@mrhamburger6936 4 жыл бұрын
Eisenhower's death camp
@aydenlui
@aydenlui 3 жыл бұрын
Awesome 🤩
@jameswallis6093
@jameswallis6093 5 жыл бұрын
These men mostly died of exposure
@sharyncarr4279
@sharyncarr4279 5 жыл бұрын
These men who rushed to the Americans or the British were only to glad to be in their custody and not the Russians. Most were processed and sent home. The war was over!
@daskaninchen5416
@daskaninchen5416 4 жыл бұрын
Sharyn Carr you mean that lots of POW that fell in US or GB hands were handed over later to the Russians so that they could die in Siberia?
@kawythowy867
@kawythowy867 4 жыл бұрын
Everyone who fought in that war was brave soldiers. Sad. War is hell
@henrykaye888
@henrykaye888 3 жыл бұрын
The Germans would have been terrified at being captured by the Americans. Guantanamo Bay and Abu Gharaib are good examples of what happens in American imprisonment.
@mitchrichards1532
@mitchrichards1532 3 жыл бұрын
What, humiliation on a home video? lol
@christian.derr_official
@christian.derr_official 6 жыл бұрын
It seems you only show the better pictures. Show how it really was there!
@nikokar9083
@nikokar9083 5 жыл бұрын
I guess it was much better than in Kz lager... right....Fritz?
@QueenBee-gx4rp
@QueenBee-gx4rp 5 жыл бұрын
Edelplastic Was it as bad as Dachau, etc.? Were they tortured, starved, tattooed?
@CardinalX
@CardinalX 5 жыл бұрын
You were there right? Surely your version is more true than film
@compoturn1029
@compoturn1029 5 жыл бұрын
You mean how it was for the Jews in the extermination camps?
@savedbygodsgrace.9058
@savedbygodsgrace.9058 4 жыл бұрын
You have to remember that the nazi flattened Europe and had every intention of not stopping. Hitler said that he did not want war with Britain but the outcome would of been far worse if Britain and eventually the usa had not stepped in. The camp in the film appears to be a transportation holding area and not a concentration camp. War is not a romantic story or a game played on a xbox.
@eneto7785
@eneto7785 4 ай бұрын
War is the human activity where everybody loses
@gruntabro1
@gruntabro1 4 жыл бұрын
3:10 two guys having a fight in the distance
@bratekjet3749
@bratekjet3749 5 жыл бұрын
100 years of independent Poland 🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱
@johnr.b.murray3417
@johnr.b.murray3417 Жыл бұрын
Over a million brutalised and starved. Par for the course with these ‘victors’ don’t you think?
@TheBamaChad-W4CHD
@TheBamaChad-W4CHD 5 жыл бұрын
Awesome stuff that I've never seen. Rare good history. I love it
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