lmritger wrote:
Enemy Ace wrote:
Lynn,
All I did was go to Wikipedia (english) and look up "Malmedy".
I am sure the references linked to that article will go into great detail.
V/r,
Robert
North American SNJ-4 N11SH S/N 84851
Wikipedia is not exactly a reputable source, given that anyone can edit it... I could go there right now and type all manner of things, referencing nonexistent books and send well-meaning individuals on a wild goose chase trying to verify completely baseless information, or worse, someone might read it, see a "citiation" and assume that the statement is authoritative. Please understand I'm not personally calling you out here, as lots of people have referenced Wikipedia here and elsewhere, and it's certainly not all bad- but for such controversial subjects as war crimes, I would suggest something more concrete. From what you describe, it sounds as though perhaps that entry has been edited to undeservingly cast the German forces involved in a more positive light. I would be interested to see what German sources have to say about this event- witnesses and post-war historians alike.
Dan, that II. SS Panzer Corps history you mention... is the author German or no? And what's the date on that publication?
Lynn
Michael Reynolds is the author. He's done many books on the Waffen SS, and a biography of Peiper as well
The Devil's Adjutant: Jochen Peiper, Panzer Leader by Michael Frank Reynolds (Jul 21, 1995)
Sons of the Reich: The History of II SS Panzer Corps by Michael Frank Reynolds (Jun 2002)
Men of Steel: I SS Panzer Corps: The Ardennes and Eastern Front, 1944-45 by Michael Frank Reynolds (Jul 22, 1999)
Steel Inferno: I SS Panzer Corps In Normandy by Michael Reynolds (Jul 21, 1997)
I have the German written history of the 12th SS. Two volumes by Hubert Meyer. Not a mention of the seperate massacres of 35 and then 27 Canadian prisoners, but lots of talk about the treatment of SS POWs by the Allies. Interestingly enough this is possible because the SS men, who thought they were going to be shot, were not, and lived to tell about their POW experiences.
"Soldiers of Destruction -The SS Death's Head Division 1933-45" by Charles Snyder well documents the killing of the British POWs in 1940.