   Issue: 2 April
2005 |
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| High Life Untold
suffering Taki
Nemmersdorf is a village in East Prussia that was overrun by the
Soviets in the autumn of 1944. After seizing the village, the
Russkies raped all the women, regardless of age, and then crucified
them. All of them. Men and children were clubbed to death or run
over with tanks. Not a single person survived. It was payback for
three years of Nazi atrocities during their invasion of Russia.
German units counter-attacked and retook Nemmersdorf, and then
invited reporters from three neutral countries — Sweden, Switzerland
and Spain — to see what our Allies had done. German newsreels showed
the horror non-stop.
Which brings me to General George Patton, my favourite warrior
after Robert E. Lee and Hasso von Manteuffel. Patton understood far
more about strategy than Montgomery, Bradley and Eisenhower
combined. He was a great tactician as well as a global thinker. He
showed his superior insight when he disagreed with the so-called
‘endgame’ in Europe as designed by the Big Four — Churchill,
Roosevelt, Stalin and Chiang Kai-shek. This plan had the Allied
demarcation line at the Elbe River rather than Berlin or the Polish
border. As Patton was hurtling through southern Germany during the
spring of 1945, he realised that German troops were eager to
surrender to Allied forces, whereas they were fighting to the death
on the Eastern Front. This made a mockery of Eisenhower’s and
Bradley’s predictions of a bloodbath if the Anglo–Americans tried to
take Berlin. In fact, when the Russians lost 100,000 men in taking
Berlin, short-term thinkers like Brad and Ike felt justified. They
could not have been more wrong. Had Patton been given a free rein,
most of Germany and Czechoslovakia would have remained free and
democratic. Here’s Joachim Fest, whose book about the last days of
Hitler is the basis for the film Der Untergang (Downfall):
The fighting for the Reichstag was especially
intense. On 2 May, when the German defenders ran out of
ammunition, they fought on in the dark, man to man, with knives,
shovels and gun butts. The clubbing and stabbing went on even
after clean-up work had started on the nearby Pariser
Platz... I am not surprised. Had I seen the
newsreels of what the Red Army was doing to unarmed women and
children, I, too, would have fought to the death.
The trouble was that Patton was unpopular among Anglo–American
biggies. He was rich, a womaniser, a seven-goal polo player, and
spoke his mind — traits which lesser men dislike and envy. When my
father named a ship after the general, he wondered why he, a Greek,
was doing something Uncle Sam should have done before him. But Daddy
was wrong. People like George Patton should have lived much earlier,
when wimps and phoneys did not rule the roost.
Patton wanted to keep the Wehrmacht intact and turn it against
the Soviets. People like Polly Toynbee might frown, but untold
suffering would have been avoided and perhaps 25 million lives
saved. It was not to be. Patton did not mince his words. He thought
the Commies were primitive and uncouth, and said so openly.
Toynbee-like, Ike and Truman were appalled. Montgomery and
Churchill, however, were in agreement. Both Monty and Winnie wanted
to take Berlin and extend democratic government to the Russian
border. Actually, all Patton did was to pre-empt Nato and German
rehabilitation.
Sixty years ago last week, my wife’s grandmother, Princess
Shoenburg, born Oettingen-Wallerstein, and her cousin, Princess
Lichtenstein, were dining in her Viennese palace when a British bomb
killed them both. Her daughter, my wife’s aunt, escaped because she
had run upstairs from the shelter to save her dog. Two of my
grandmother-in-law’s sons were fighting on the Eastern Front under
Manteuffel’s Army Group Vistula. One of them returned in the
mid-Fifties. Had Patton been listened to, I’d be sitting in a
beautiful red castle in Bohemia, rather than Chalet Palataki in
Gstaad. (I know, it’s a rough life, but I’m not complaining.)
Austria was liberated by Russian troops, and a ten-year Allied
occupation followed. It is probably the most beautiful country in
the world, and the Salzburg Festival begins this week. One of my
fantasies is to have gone to Salzburg with Old Blood and Guts
himself and to have listened to Mozart. And we would have taken
Hasso von Manteuffel with us, although not in his marshal’s uniform.
After all, the Germans did lose the war.
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