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March 6,
2008
Did the Allies Starve
Millions of Germans?
By James
Bacque
As soon as the Second World War
ended in 1945, Canada and the United States began shipping
food to the hundreds of millions of people who were facing
starvation as a result of the war. Unprecedented in world
history, this massive program fulfilled the highest ideals
for which the Western Allies had fought. Their generosity
seemed to have no limit. They fed former enemies - Italy and
Japan - as well as a new enemy, the Soviet Union.
Only Germany was left
out.
It is well known in the West that
the Allies hanged Nazis for crimes - the murder of Jews, the
brutal mass expulsions, the deadly forced-labour camps, the
starvation of entire nations. What is not generally known is
that these occupying armies carved off 25 percent of
Germany's most fertile land and placed it under Russian and
Polish control, forcibly expelling about 16 million people
into what remained. It has also been forgotten - or hidden -
that the Allies forbade emigration and kept millions of
prisoners in forced-labour camps. International charitable
aid to Germany was banned for another year, then restricted
for more than a year. When it was permitted, it came too
late for millions of people.
In a plan devised by U.S. secretary
of the treasury Henry C. Morgenthau Jr., the Allies
"pastoralized" Germany. They slashed production of oil,
tractors, steel and other products that had been essential
to the war effort. They cut fertilizer production by
82
percent. They under-valued German exports (which they
controlled), depriving Germans of cash needed to buy food.
And a large percentage of young male workers were kept in
forced-labour camps for years. During the six months
following the end of the war, Germany's industrial
production fell by 75 percent.
The loss of so much fertile land and
the drop in fertilizer supplies caused agricultural
production to fall by 65 percent. Sixty million people began
to starve in their huge prison.
The mass expulsions from one part of
Germany to another, approved at the Allied victory
conference in Potsdam in July and August, 1945, were
enforced "with the very maximum of brutality," wrote British
writer and philanthropist Victor Gollancz in his book Our
Threatened Values (1946). Canadian writer and TV
producer Robert Allen, in an article titled Letter from
Berlin, in Reading magazine (February, 1946), described the
scene in a Berlin railway station as the refugees arrived in
late 1945: "They were all exhausted and starved and
miserable ... A child only half alive ... A woman in the
most terrible picture of despair I've seen ... Even when you
see it, it's impossible to believe ... God it was
terrible."
In the West, the plan to dismantle
German industrial capacity began at the British headquarters
of General Dwight Eisenhower in August, 1944. Meeting with
Mr. Morgenthau, Gen. Eisenhower prescribed a treatment for
Germany that would be "good and hard," giving as his reason
that "the whole German population is a synthetic
paranoid."
Mr. Morgenthau took a written
version of their discussion to U.S. president Franklin
Roosevelt and British prime minister Winston Churchill when
the two met in Quebec City in September, 1944. British
foreign secretary Anthony Eden, U.S. secretary of state
Cordell Hull and U.S. secretary for war Henry L. Stimson all
protested vigorously against the Morgenthau plan because a
pastoralized Germany could not feed itself. Mr. Hull and Mr
Stimson told Roosevelt that about 20 million Germans would
die if the plan were implemented.
Most historians say the Morgenthau
Plan was abandoned after the protests, but Mr. Morgenthau
himself said it was implemented.
In the New York Post for Nov. 24,
1947, he wrote: "The Morgenthau Plan for Germany ... became
part of the Potsdam Agreement, a solemn declaration of
policy and undertaking for action ... signed by the United
States of America, Great Britain and the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics."
I first happened on the outlines of
this story while researching my 1989 book Other
Losses, about the mass deaths of German prisoners of war
in Allied camps. For 45 years, historians have never
disputed a massive survey conducted over four years by the
government of chancellor Konrad Adenauer, which stated that
some 1.4 million German prisoners had died in captivity.
What is still disputed by the two sides is how many died in
each side's camps. Each has blamed the other for nearly all
the deaths.
The fall of the Soviet empire in
1989 provided a spectacular test of the truth: If the KGB
archives recorded how many Germans died in Soviet camps, the
world would know how many died in the West.
In 1992, I went to the KGB archives
in Moscow, where I was permitted to troll the long, gloomy
aisles, free to read and photocopy anything I wanted. And
there I found the reports from KGB colonel I. Bulanov and
others showing that 450,600 Germans had died in Soviet
camps. Given the figure of 1.4 million deaths, this meant
that close to one million had died in Western
camps.
In addition, the KGB records show
that the Soviets had also imprisoned hundreds of thousands
of civilians, of whom many thousands died.
This was the shadow of a greater
tragedy, the fate of German civilians.
The recent declassification of the
Robert Murphy Papers at the Hoover Institute in Stanford,
California, and the Robert Patterson manuscript papers in
Washington focused the picture. Mr. Murphy had been chief
U.S. diplomatic adviser in Germany, and Mr. Patterson the
secretary of war after 1945.
Some of Mr. Murphy's papers show a
catastrophic death rate in Germany, highlighted by a
surprising comment by Mr. Murphy in discussing German
demographics. He said in a State Department position paper
in 1947 that the U.S. statistical projection of births,
immigration and officially reported deaths showed that over
the next three years the German population should be 71
million, but that "to be conservative and in view of the
present high death rate in Germany, a figure of 69 million
will be used." In other words, Mr. Murphy was basing
high-level U.S. policy on the knowledge that the actual
German death rate was approximately double the rate
officially reported to Washington by the U.S. military
governor.
In the National Archives in Ottawa,
I found a document seized by Canadians in 1946, showing a
death rate in the city of Brilon in north-central Germany
almost triple the total reported for the Allies for their
zones of Germany in 1945-46. The U.S. Army medical officer
in Germany secretly reported that the actual death rate in
the U.S. zone in May, 1946, was 21.4 per 1,000 per year, or
83 percent higher than the military governor was reporting
to Washington.
These documents in Ottawa, Moscow,
Washington and Stanford, recently revealed or long
neglected, show that the Allies not only destroyed most
German industry, they also reduced German food production to
the point that Germans received less food for long periods
during several years than the starving Dutch had received
under German occupation.
From 1945 to the middle of 1948, one
saw the probable collapse, disintegration and destruction of
a whole nation." These are not the words of a revisionist
historian of the 1990s, but the sober judgment of a U.S.
Navy medical officer on the scene. Captain Albert Behnke
compared German and Dutch starvation: For months in parts of
Germany, the ration set by the occupying Allies was 400
calories per day; in much of Germany it was often around
1,000, and officially for more than two years it was never
more than 1,550. The Dutch always got more than
1,394.
And for his part in starving people
in the Netherlands, Nazi commander Arthur Seyss-Inquart was
hanged by the Allies.
A comparison of the German censuses
of 1946 and 1950 shows the effect of the food shortages. The
1950 census showed 5.7 million people fewer than there
should have been according to the number of people recorded
in the 1946 census, minus officially reported deaths, plus
births and "immigrants" (people expelled from the east and
returning prisoners) in the period from 1946 to
1950.
Mr. Murphy had, indeed, been
conservative, partly because he underestimated the number of
prisoners due to return to Germany from Russia. The total
tally of unacknowledged deaths among prisoners, refugees and
non-expelled civilians comes to around nine million people
between 1945 and 1950, far more than the number who died
during the war itself. All of these deaths were
surplus
to those actually reported.
While Germans starved, the
Canadian-U.S. relief program swung into action in other
parts of the world. Former U.S. president Herbert Hoover,
then chief food adviser to president Harry Truman, flew
around the world assessing need and supply. He found big
regions of food poverty, as there has always been and still
are, but not insurmountable world food shortage. In fact,
world food production in 1945, according to the U.S.
government statistics, was 90 per cent of the average of the
years from 1936 to 1938. By the end of 1946, it was
virtually normal.
Mr. Hoover begged, borrowed and
bought enough food from the few other surplus countries -
Australia and Argentina - to feed nearly all the world's
starving. He congratulated Canadians warmly for their
co-operation in a CBC speech in Ottawa in 1946: "To Canada
flows the gratitude of hundreds of millions of human beings
who have been saved from starvation through the efforts of
this great Commonwealth."
As Mr. Hoover pronounced victory
over the greatest famine threat in world history, Germans
were entering their worst year ever. In early 1946, reports
of conditions in Germany led U.S. senators, among them
Kenneth Wherry and William Langer, to protest against "this
addlepated... brutal and vicious Morgenthau
Plan."
Belatedly, Mr. Truman asked Mr.
Hoover to intervene. Mr. Hoover spoke to all North
Americans: "Millions of mothers are today watching their
children wilt before their eyes." Infant mortality rates in
some German cities were 20 per cent per year,
catastrophically higher than the average in Germany before
the war or in contemporary Europe.
Cases of tuberculosis among children
in Kiel, in the British zone, increased by 70 per cent over
the prewar period.
Mr. Hoover called for mercy to
Germany.
"I can only appeal to your pity and
your mercy...Will you not take to your table an invisible
guest?"
Canadians and Americans set the
table for the invisible guest.
According to prime minister
Mackenzie King's chief foreign-affairs adviser, Norman
Robertson, Canada was the only country that had kept its
food commitments to help the starving. Only in Canada did
rationing and price controls continue long after the war so
that others could be fed.
This unique campaign saved 800
million lives, according to Mr. Hoover.
Some older Germans treasure the
memory of the "Hoover Speise" (meal) that warmed their
bodies at school in 1947. Many millions - including hundreds
of thousands of Canadians born in Germany - also remember
their homes in parts of Germany now under Polish or Russian
rule. None dreams of reparations; all yearn for us to know
their story.
Source: James Bacque/Crimes
and Mercies
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