Google
 

View Full Version : Americans in service of Nazi Germany: The George Washington Brigade


Criminal
12-08-2004, 10:33 AM
http://www.axishistory.com/index.php?id=310

US volunteers in the Waffen-SS



There were some US citizens who were members of the Waffen-SS, but no unit made up of American volunteers were ever raised (despite some claims about an "American Free Corps" or "George Washington Brigade"). According to figures from the SS five US citizens served in the Waffen-SS in May 1940, but after that date no numbers are available.



Second Lieutenant Martin James Monti (born 1910 in St Louis of an Italian-Swiss father and German mother) went awol Oct 1944, travelled from Karachi to Naples (through Cairo and Tripoli) where to stole a F-4 or F-5 photographic reconnaissance aircraft (photo recon version of the P-38) and flew to Milan. There he surrendered, or rather defected, to the Germans and worked as a propaganda broadcaster (as Martin Wiethaupt) before entering the Waffen-SS as a SS-Untersturmführer in SS-Standarte Kurt Eggers. At the end of the war he went south to Italy where surrendered to US forces (still wearing his SS uniform) claiming that he had been given the uniform by partisans. He was charged with desertion and sentenced to 15 years hard labour. This sentence was soon commuted and Monti rejoined the US Air Corps, but in 1948 he was discharged and picked up by the FBI. He was now charged with treason and sentenced to 25 years the following year. He was paroled in 1960.



Peter Delaney (aka Pierre de la Ney du Vair), a Louisiana born SS-Haupsturmführer in SS-Standarte Kurt Eggers who is believed to have served in Légion des Volontaires Français (LVF). He met Monti and probably arranged for him to enter the Waffen-SS. Delaney was killed in 1945.



At least eight American volunteers are known to have been killed during their service.



No real attempt by the US authorities to investigate the matter and trace the volunteers was made after the war, as opposed to for example the efforts by the British.

dorag
12-08-2004, 04:53 PM
i like the SS. they have cool camuflage. :eek:

Criminal
12-10-2004, 08:57 PM
The article does not mention the real question I have about this: Why would United States citizens volunteer to serve the most evil regeim that ever existed. Maybe they were prisoners of war? Maybe it was ideology?

I can understand why, Russians for example, switched sides since few saw a difference between serving Stalin and Hitler but for the US or for Britian this was different.

I did read Kurt Vonnegut's novel "Mother Night" about a US Collaborator who worked as a radio broadcaster in Nazi Germany, who was actually a spy for the US Government. Maybe Vonnegut got his inspiration from James Monti, though I think it had more to do with Erza Pound, the famous poet who collaborated with the Italian Fascists.

mike75
12-10-2004, 10:23 PM
Actaully my family did have a history with fighting with the nazi's. My grandmother's sister married a german immigrant in the mid 30's and when the nazi's invaded poland he went back to fight for his country. I believe he was killed over in Russia but I am not too sure. My grandmother has still never fogiven her sister for marrying a nazi.

Google