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The Von Manstein Case......(Or how he got out so early)


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http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journals/details/issue/sample/a011063.pdf

Punishing German Soldiers during

the Cold War: The Case of Erich von Manstein

Bloxham examines the events and rhetoric surrounding

the trial and premature release from custody of Field Marshal

Erich von Manstein. Von Manstein was convicted of involvement in

atrocities on the Eastern Front, yet his story aroused the sympathy

of many in Britain, including influential politicians, who believed

the Wehrmacht to be innocent of the crimes of Nazism. His trial also

fell squarely into a period, the onset of the Cold War, when Britain

was attempting to restore relations with West Germany. Pressure

both from the nascent West German elite and from within the

Conservative government (re-elected in 1951) and its foreign

diplomatic corps ensured that a series of dubious legal devices

would be used to accelerate the liberation of von Manstein at a

time of negotiations about a German contribution to a Western

European army. Similar contrivances abetted the early release of

another field marshal, Kesselring, and a senior general,

Falkenhorst. The releases, and the obfuscations of the soldiers’

war-time records that were an essential part of justifying the

releases, constitute a substantial British contribution both to

the undermining of the process of war crimes trials and to the

rewriting of the Second World War.

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A rather good read.......

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