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Old July 13th, 2003, 10:36 AM
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/719289.stm


Hitler ordered 'Great Escape' massacre

The massacre of 50 fleeing Allied prisoners of war in 1944, immortalised by the film The Great Escape, was ordered by Hitler, it has been revealed.
General Major Adolf Westhoff, who was interrogated by British intelligence officers after the war, said Hitler and SS head Himmler decided the matter between them and the German secret police, the Gestapo, carried it out.

"The Fuhrer himself always took a hand in these affairs when officers escaped," he said.

The testimony was among files released by the Public Record Office in Kew, south-west London.

Westhoff recounted how an "excited and nervous" Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel summoned him to a meeting shortly after the mass break-out in March 1944. He was one of Hitler's most loyal military followers and was also ultimately in charge of PoW camps.

"Gentleman, this is a bad business," Keitel said, giving the news that around 80 Allied airmen had escaped from the camp, Stalag Luft III at Sagan, east Germany.

Saying he had been personally admonished by Hermann Goering in the presence of SS head Heinrich Himmler, Keitel warned he must "set an example" to other prisoners, Westhoff recounted.



He said: "We shall have to take very severe measures. I can only tell you that the men who have escaped will be shot."

When told it was out of the question to execute recaptured men, Westhoff remembered the Field Marshal answering: "I don't care a damn. We discussed it in the Fuhrer's presence and it cannot be altered."

Westhoff said the meeting was told how Hitler and Himmler had decided the matter.

One by one the escapers were recaptured and on Himmler's orders, handed over to the Gestapo.

This was not the normal practice. Usually, recaptured PoWs were handed over to, and dealt with, by the civilian police

Gestapo groups later submitted almost identical reports that the prisoners whilst relieving themselves, bolted for freedom and were shot whilst trying to escape.

Westhoff recalled how the bodies of the 50 were burnt and their ashes returned to the camp in urns.

The massacre was intended to be an example to other would-be fugitives and created shock in Britain.

Some 21 of the Gestapo executors were themselves tried and put to death by the Allies after the war.

Westhoff spoke of the "honour" of the English officers, and claimed he had once told a meeting of the German high command: "Gentlemen, we only act according to the (Geneva) Convention."

"Gentlemen," came the chilling response from a Nazi Party eminence at the meeting, "the convention is a scrap of paper which doesn't interest us."
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