Bleeding Germany Dry von Claus Nordbruch | The Aftermath of World War II from the German Perspective | ISBN 9780958431347

Bleeding Germany Dry

The Aftermath of World War II from the German Perspective

von Claus Nordbruch
Buchcover Bleeding Germany Dry | Claus Nordbruch | EAN 9780958431347 | ISBN 0-9584313-4-5 | ISBN 978-0-9584313-4-7

Bleeding Germany Dry

The Aftermath of World War II from the German Perspective

von Claus Nordbruch

Auszug

Bleeding Germany Dry is an accurate and hard-hitting revision of Nordbruch historical events that for over half a century have had a decisive infl uence on the policies of Berlin and Vienna. Nordbruch directs his attention to the millions of German war victims who to this very day remain uncompensated for their sufferings during imprisonment, torture and slave labour. According to the author, all the Allies continue to wage war against Germany, albeit a war no longer waged with bombs and machine guns. Instead, it is a war of an intellectual corrosive subversion, and also conducted against German science. The heart of Europe is still suffering from the consequences of this radical policy of total destruction, which is unprecedented in human history. This wide-ranging and richly illustrated book is more than a dispassionate study cataloguing death, material losses and suffering in chronological order. With his inimitable style of writing, Nordbruch ruthlessly breaks taboos here. Ignoring the political and intellectual taboos created by the disciples of political correctness, he puts forward unconventional demands that must be addressed by a future sovereign German policy.
7 – A word of thanks 9 – Introduction 23 – 1. “It Should be the Entire Germany!” On the Significance of Surrender – 36 Enemy-State Clauses and the Peace Treaty – 47 51 – 2. What to do with Germany? The Atlantic Charter and the Conferences at Teheran and Yalta – 60 Ehrenburg, Morgenthau and Accomplices – 68 The Potsdam Resolutions – 81 87 – 3. The Germans are Getting ‘Liberated’ Allied Violations of International Law and Allied Crimes during the War – 90 Allied Conduct from the Moment the Armistice Comes into Effect – 114 Mass Rape of German Women and Girls – 128 137 – 4. The Outbreak of the Clean World All Germans Are the Enemies – NOT JUST the National Socialists – 139 ‘The Culture Bringers’ – 147 Austria’s New Freedom – 153 The Germans are Starving to Death – 158 171 – 5. Germans in Captivity of the Victors In Prisons – 178 In Concentration Camps – 187 In Prisoner of War Camps – 209 221 – 6. Germans Out! Enforced Flight and Expulsion from the Homeland – 224 Forcible Removal to Foreign Lands – 238 Eradication of the Homeland-Stayers – 245 251 – 7. German Slaves and Forced Labourers In the Soviet Union – 259 Inside the Soviet Satellite States – 268 Claus Nordbruch • Bleeding 6 Germany Dry Within the Dominion of the ‘Democratic’ Allies – 284 To Take Stock: The Balance Sheet – 294 299 – 8. A Digression: Foreign Workers in Germany 315 – 9. The Biggest Pillaging Operation in History:
‘Reparations’ for the Allies Dismantlements in the German Reich – 323 Occupation Costs and Other Blank Cheques – 341 Theft of German Patents, Trade Marks and Cultural Treasures – 345 The Kidnapping of German Scientists, Technicians and Skilled Workers – 358 The Perpetuum Mobile is Alive and Well – 370 395 – 10. The End of the Post-War Period?! German Losses, Damages and Expenditures – 398 Acknowledgement of German Suffering and Restitution – 415 Reparations to Germany and Compensation for German People – 432 439 – 11. Germany’s Rebirth Peace Treaty with Germany! – 452 The Future of the German East – 459 Finding the Way Back to Ourselves – 473 479 – Abbreviations 481 – Bibliography 1a Published documents 1b Non-published Documents from the Archives of Equalization of [War] Burdens (Lastenausgleichsarchiv) in Bayreuth 2 Scholastic Sources 3 Primary Literature (Personal-Experience-Accounts and Memoirs) 4a Secondary Literature (Books) 4b Secondary Literature (non-scientific Newspapers, Magazines, Manuscripts) 5 Others 503 – Index of Names 523 – Footnotes