Picture of the day

What still baffles me to this day is why the Soviets would "intern" American planes and aircrew that landed in Soviet Far Eastern territory due to damage from planes and flak over Japan. Both were fighting the Axis at the time - although the Sovs had not yet declared war on Japan. Aircraft were being supplied to the Red Air Force after flying through Canada and Alaska, it would've been VERY easy to send American planes and aircrews back to US soil the same way.

Smuggling crews back through Iran was easier than flying aircraft around. Plus, free B29s. What's not to like? :)
 
Here is glorious Tu-4, which decadent imperialist Americans copied from stolen plans, with awesome Soviet turboprop engines.

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Actually kind of a ###y installation.
 
Nice paint job, huh?

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All the better to see you with.

John Aranyos had flown 82 combat missions in the P-47 and been shot at plenty of times by Germans, but wasn’t sure about being fired on by Americans. “I’ll tell you what,” he says, “I was a little apprehensive. I got to my altitude and made my first pass at the bomber, a B-17. He was at 9,000 feet and I was several thousand feet higher. And I thought to myself that I was deliberately setting myself up as a perfect target for some eagle-eyed kid aspiring to be a top-notch gunner at my expense. I felt I was the world’s greatest idiot.

“As I made the first pass, I was expecting to feel the impact of the frangible bullets—and there was no impact! I couldn’t believe it. I thought they were dry firing at me or something. And the recorder showed I had been hit 14 times. That is when I started being able to feel confident that the airplane was going to give me a good ride.”

More here: http://www.airspacemag.com/military-aviation/just-shoot-me-57581298/
 
Good question! Don't know much about this aspect of WW2. Didn't Northern Ireland do the same thing?

Switzerland sounds like as good a place as any to wait out the war.

The Swiss ran a concentration camp.p system for interned allied person. The Swiss government even billed the allies for the bad food, poor medical care,. There were beatings and shootings as the Swiss Military was pro nazi, Swiss business was making a fortune supplying the Germans and hiding stolen Jewish assets. Things were so bad that the US conducted war crimes investigation and Indicted dozens of Swiss Military.
 
Good question! Don't know much about this aspect of WW2. Didn't Northern Ireland do the same thing?

Switzerland sounds like as good a place as any to wait out the war.

Northern Ireland can be thought of as a British province, contributing to the fight against the Axis. It was the Republic of Ireland that was neutral during the war.
 
The Swiss ran a concentration camp.p system for interned allied person. The Swiss government even billed the allies for the bad food, poor medical care,. There were beatings and shootings as the Swiss Military was pro nazi, Swiss business was making a fortune supplying the Germans and hiding stolen Jewish assets. Things were so bad that the US conducted war crimes investigation and Indicted dozens of Swiss Military.

Jeez, and I always thought of the Swiss as being squeaky clean.

The wife of one of our rancher neighbours is Swiss born. I one asked her what language she spoke and she replied - "Swiss, of course." My response: "Sounds pretty much like German to me." She was offended.
 
The Swiss ran a concentration camp.p system for interned allied person. The Swiss government even billed the allies for the bad food, poor medical care,. There were beatings and shootings as the Swiss Military was pro nazi, Swiss business was making a fortune supplying the Germans and hiding stolen Jewish assets. Things were so bad that the US conducted war crimes investigation and Indicted dozens of Swiss Military.


do you have proof for your accusations? I call bull####.
 
Jeez, and I always thought of the Swiss as being squeaky clean.

The wife of one of our rancher neighbours is Swiss born. I one asked her what language she spoke and she replied - "Swiss, of course." My response: "Sounds pretty much like German to me." She was offended.

Its swiss-german. It's a dialect and most germans except those from the very southern parts of Germany don't understand much of it.

But don't call us germans. We're not. We fought for it, we bled for it and we get really pissed off if we're called germans.

And no, we were not quite that "clean" in WWII, but what could we possibly have done being surrounded by the Nazis and with no ressources of own own? They could have starved us into submission within a couple months.

We did quite good given the situation.
 
Who called you Germans?

It was profitable for the Swedes and Swiss to play patty cake with the Nazis while remaining ostensibly neutral. Nice balancing act during the middle of a global conflict and one of the greatest mass exterminations in human history.

The Swiss have a long history of being mercenary soldiers, taking part in most if not all of the European conflicts, one of the reasons they wound up forming the Papal Guard.
 
do you have proof for your accusations? I call bull####.

Not bull####. Fact.

An U.S. military memo of 1944 mentioned the conditions in Wauwilermoos as "worse than in enemy prison camps" and confirmed the first-hand impressions. The "meals consisted of watered-down soups and scorched stale bread." The sanitary circumstances were subpar: for instance, the latrines were just trenches, very unsanitary, and to clean the trenches were hosed down every few weeks. Reportedly, "lice and rats were everywhere and the men got sick with boils due to the unsanitary conditions" the soldiers had to live in. They "also lost weight, mostly about 40 pounds." Béguin castigated American internees by "subjecting them to cruel punishments and solitary confinements for minor infractions." The soldiers also were "imprisoned a total of 7 months"; the Haque Convention allowed only 30 days confinement. In addition, the internees did not know the time to be served their punishment

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wauwilermoos_internment_camp#Conditions.2C_human_rights_violations_and_inspections

Switzerland’s wartime general, Henri Guisan, demanded that all Red Cross reports about the internment camps be submitted to army censors first if delegates wanted access. When the US military attaché in Bern found at about this, he warned Marcel Pilet-Golaz, Swiss foreign minister in 1944, that "the mistreatment inflicted on US aviators could lead to 'navigation errors' during bombing raids over Germany."

Wauwilermoos was the subject of official protests by the United States, Great Britain, Poland, Italy, and even prevented normalization of diplomatic relations with the USSR. Although the camp was visited by inspectors, its commanding officer, Béguin, was only suspended and banned from entering the camp on 5 September 1945. On 24 September he was taken into custody. On 20 February 1946, a military court sentenced Béguin to three and a half years in prison.

The Pentagon awarded 143 posthumous POW Medals to World War II veterans who were held in the Wauwilermoos punishment camp. On 30 April 2014 eight survivors of the camp were awarded with the Prisoner of War Medal, thus being recognized for the suffering they endured during their imprisonment.

I would suggest that Switzerland ran a concentration camp. Was it an extermination camp? No. But that still does not diminish that it was an evil and despicable chapter in Swiss history.
 
Here's an interesting little read -

What were the conditions like in the Swiss internment camps for downed American airmen during WW2?

"Once in the custody of the Swiss government, American airmen were considered “internees.” Internees are treated almost identically to POWs under the laws of war, excepting that by definition an internee is held in a neutral state. Some other US soldiers entered Switzerland by foot, for which they earned the status of “evadee.” Evadees were not kept in camps, and could come and go as they pleased. Internees, on the other hand, were usually restricted to a specific area and kept under guard. The Swiss were determined to adhere strictly to the rules governing internees, largely because they were under constant threat of invasion by the German Army. Any hint of impartiality toward the Allies could have incurred dire consequences for a state that professed neutrality, particularly one surrounded completely by the Axis. USAAF personnel caught attempting escape were punished severely, sometimes well beyond the limits stipulated in the laws of war. The Swiss government’s policy toward neutrality was clearly illustrated by the fact that some USAAF bombers attempting to land in Switzerland were attacked by Swiss fighters and anti-aircraft weapons.

After landing in Switzerland, interned crewmembers were typically interrogated and then quarantined for a short period before movement to a permanent internment camp. The first permanent internment facility was established at Adelboden, and others soon followed in Wengen and Davos. Several “punishment” or concentration camps were also established to house internees undergoing disciplinary punishment, normally for attempting escape. These camps included Straflager Wauwilermoos, Hünenburg, Les Diablerets and Greppen. Wauwilermoos was the most notorious of the punishment camps, due to deplorable camp conditions and a fanatical Swiss Army commander. Incarceration in such facilities grew dramatically after the Allied invasion of France, mainly because of the increased prospect of escape to Allied lines.

Despite the severe treatment that some internees received at the hands of the Swiss government, the overwhelming majority of Swiss citizens were sympathetic to the Allied cause. Many Swiss citizens risked punishment or exile by helping American airmen to escape the country. The anti-Allied posture of the Swiss government at the time was understandable in a historical context; Switzerland was not self-sufficient, and depended on foreign imports to survive. Neutral states are not required to restrict private citizens from selling munitions or equipment that contribute to the war effort of a belligerent nation, however, they cannot restrict commerce to one belligerent and allow it with another. By the passing of exclusive treaties, the Swiss government did effectively restrict nearly all trade with the Allies, while at the same time providing loans, munitions and key industrial components for the Axis. This clearly violated their neutral status, although this decision probably preserved their political sovereignty and territorial integrity."


https://www.quora.com/What-were-the-conditions-like-in-the-Swiss-internment-camps-for-downed-American-airmen-during-WW2

Brookwood
 
Factual history really bites, don't it? I'll remember this the next time I chow down on Swiss chocolate and read the lauding of Swiss Lugers and Schmidt-Rubin rifles on CGN.

"I can handle my enemies. It's my 'friends' that I need help with".
 
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