Daily Post - 13.12.1941, Blaðsíða 2

Daily Post - 13.12.1941, Blaðsíða 2
DA£LY P06T ... . n— The New Style of German Taken from a B. B. G. Broadcast by a Royal Marine 'i DAILY POST is published by Blaðahringurinn. Editors: S. Benediktsson. Sgt. J. I. McGhie. Ofíice: 12, Austurstræti, Tel. 3715, Reykjavík. Printed by Alþýðuprentsmiðjan Saturday, Dec. 13, 1941 Hitler’s First Defeat Hitler’s offensive against Russia, which began nearly six months ago, has come to a halt. The German army, which over- ran Poland in a fortnight and France in a month, has failed after half a year to take either Moscow or Leningrad. Its blitz timetable has broken down completely and both Hitler and his High Command have an- nounced that offensive operat- ions must be suspended until the spring. Nothing can conceal the fact that the failure of his Russian plans constitutes a major de- feat for Hitler. And nothing should be allowed to divert our attention from the European front, which is and will remain the key to the defeat of the Axis. The Pacific war started on the very day on which the Germans announced their de- cision to call a halt on the Eastern Front. This was no coincidence. Hitler indeed “called in the New World to re- dress the balance in the Old”. He called Japan into the war, partly of course by a sensat- ional stroke to cover his dis- comfiture, but chiefly because, if he is to resume his advknce in Russia in the Spring, it is essential that supplies shall in the meantime not reach the Russian troops in greater quantities than they reach the German. Hitler, and with - him the whole Axis power, will stand or fall by his ability to defeat Rusia next Spring or Summer. But if Anglo-American supplies can reach Russia in maximum quantities during the winter, he will never get the chance to re- sume his advance. Therefore it /Was essential for him to divert Anglo-American resourcés in other directions during the Soldier T WAS with the Royal Marines when we land- ed at Calais ahout midnight on Saturday the 25th of May 1940. It was the day before Calais was finally taken. We had a day of the most extraordinary fighting I)ve ever seen. We were fired at from all directions at once, and we seldom saw the enemy at all. We lost a good many men and we were captured on the Sunday morning at 9 o’clock. There seemed to be only a handful of German soldiers around Calais, but my word, were they well armed! Every man had his tommy-gun, and his pockets were full of am- munition. They don’t carry it in 'bandoliers or pouches. And we soon saw how quick and straight they can shoot. They were shooting all the time for sport, and to show off, at any- thing that happened to be about; cats and dogs, hens, men and women — anything that came handy. And they were hitting them right in the head every time. winter, Therefore Japan made war. Let us fully , understand that Japan is ili a sense a red herring — though a very solid one, and with good teeth in its mouth. Japan may inflict heavy , blows on us and on Ame- rica, but in the last resort, without the German Army, she will flounder like a fish on dry land. Hitler has placed us on the horns of a dilemma. How to divide our still limited re- sources between the European fronts and the Pacific front? Mr. Churchill indicated in his last speecji that we shall not be panicked by bad news from the Far East into depriving Russia of our maximum support and supplies and thus playing into Hitler’s hands. And they all had hand gren- ades on sticks stuffed inside their tunics and in the tops of their Jack-boots, but they didn’t waste any of those! NO PACKS OR WEBBING Another thing — they had no packs or water bottles or webb- ing equipment. So far as we could make out that was all carried in trucks, and I suppose that’s why they w’ere able to get about so quick. They were smart enough on the march but when they were fighting every one of them was like a killer all on his own — more like dogs hunting. And the officers went about in tanks. The men seemed to be very scared of the officers, but they were all free to loot and to kill anyone that came across their track. Well, after I was taken pris- oner I had 21 days with these chaps. Our column was herded along through the Belgian vill- ages which the Germans had just captured. They gave us no food, and so after a bit we all got very hungry. We were sleeping out in the fields or sometimes in an orchard, and some of the men tried to get apples from the trees. But the guards shot them. KILLED FOR SPORT The Belgian people tried to give us focd as we went along in the line of march, and some of the, men would stretch out their hands to take a piece of bread, and they got shot too. The nearest German picked them off with his tommy-gun, and they left the bodies lying in the road. Some of them used the bayonet instead. You may not believe it, but they’d tell a man who had col- lapsed to sit on the wing of a car as if they were going to give him a lift. Then the driver would zig-zag up the road so he fell off. Then he’d usually get run over by the back-wheels. I never saw anything like this march in my life. They seemed to enjoy all this sort of thing, and some days they killed any- thing up to ten men, more or less in the way of sport. They nearly all spoke Eng- lish and they often talked to us at odd times — they used to talk about what they were goin to do to Britain, and hoW they’d die for Hitler. And after they’d shot a man they’d Pat their tommy-gun affectionately and wink at us. That just shows you their mentality. They treat- ed the old women and children worse than they did us, but I thrnk they treated the French Colonial troops the worst of the lot — killing them and whipP' ing them like slaves. just to- hear them shout. WILD ANIMALS The older soldiers who d seen the last 'war were differ- ent, less like crafty wild anJ- mals — much more human ai' together, and they don’t seem to get the gangster idea ot warfare. I got an idea why the young' sters are all so familiar with their weapons from what I saW of the camps we passed on the road. We very seldom saw the Germans drilling, but you’d ai' ways see targets up and men firing either under instruction or in their own time. ahd they certainly were training all the time. Firing and P.T. seemed to be the main things. And they think of nothing else but the war. I don’t believe people here realise all they read about the German Army and hoW tbe Germans are behaving. I c&n tell you, you haven’t heard a quarter of the truth. It’s worse than you think. My German gangster friends will kill yoU 1 they can. And, believe me’ they’re awkward people to meet all of a sudden. Recent issoes of English & American newspapers and magazines Bókaverzlan fsafoldar

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