⚠️ Historical Documentation Notice
Historical Documentation Notice

This document is part of a historical archive and is presented for scholarly research and educational purposes.

The content reflects historical perspectives and should be understood within its historical context.

Alphabetical
site index
(text)

[Photo and caption provided by this website]

Press Release

The Boston Globe’s
Series, ‘Secret History of World War II’ Reports On
Holocaust Plans and a Dark Note to The US Liberation of
Dachau

Two special reports to be published
Sunday and Monday, July 1 and 2

BOSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–June 29, 2001–
The Boston Globe’s continuing year-long series, “The Secret History of World War II,” resumes Sunday and Monday, July 1 and 2, with two significant reports, one about the Nazi’s Holocaust plans and a second about a dark side to the American liberation of the Dachau death camp.

On Sunday, July 1, the Globe reports on a declassified document showing that the U.S. knew about Nazi plans for the
Holocaust six months earlier than previously believed. A leading historian who discovered the November 1941 document independent of the Globe said the dispatch raises new questions about what the Allies could have done to prevent what became the central horror of the war.

The dispatch is among the three million pages of documents released by U.S. intelligence agencies under the
1998 Nazi War Crimes Disclosure Act. The declassified records, unprecedented in their breadth and depth of detail, are the dossiers that the CIA had previously refused to open to public scrutiny because they contained the names of sources and described the precise way that missions were carried out.

Among the other revelations in The Boston Globe story, by staff reporter Mark Fritz, are details of a U.S. intelligence effort to block the creation of Israel.


Felix
Sparks’s soldiers liberating Dachau. Surrendered
German soldiers were stood against a wall and
massacred.

On Monday, July 2, Globe staff reporter
Thomas Farragher investigates a dark footnote to the
American liberation of the Nazi death camp at Dachau. He details a virtually unexplored murder probe in which investigators concluded that some of the GI’s who rounded up elite SS prisoners were murderers, not heroes.

Illustrated by Army Signal Corps photographs from the
National Archives, the Globe will tell the story of the men from the war-worn 45th Infantry Division, some of whom —
when confronted with horrific evidence of the Holocaust —
reacted brutally. Army investigators concluded that at least
28 surrendered Germans were gunned down by Americans on the day the Nazi concentration camp was liberated in April
1945.

Douglas Brinkley, director of the Eisenhower
Center for American Studies at the University of New
Orleans, told the Globe that the episode represented “a low point in an otherwise gallant effort to beat fascism.”

For its report, the Globe reviewed declassified top-secret documents, photographs, and the transcript of the
Army Inspector General’s investigation into the incident.
The newspaper also interviewed men who participated or witnessed the shootings, as well as the lieutenant colonel, now a retired Colorado Supreme Court justice, who ordered the firing to stop.

The Globe report about the shootings at Dachau will be supplemented on the newspaper’s website (www.boston.com/globe) where the transcript of the Army investigation and video clips from the men who took part in the shooting will be posted.

The Sunday story about the holocaust will be posted on the Globe’s website at 2 p.m. Saturday, and the Monday story will appear on the web at 2 p.m. Sunday.


Contact: Boston Globe, Richard P. Gulla, 617-929-3288
[email protected]


©
Copyright 2000 Globe Newspaper Company

Related items on this website:
  • Index to Dachau Concentration
    Camp items
  • Alan Jacobs
    has no sympathy with ” SS shot by US Army at
    Dachau”
  • They had it coming to
    them
  • Judge van Roden’s inquiry
    into American torture of prisoners at Dachau,
    1948
  • Albert
    Doyle’s own investigations into the Dachau
    massacre
  • visit the

    site
    put up about Sgt.
    William Heller,
    US war photographer: this includes
    one close-up photo of German soldiers shot at the
    wall

©
Focal Point
2001 write to David Irving