Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
February/March 1991 | Volume 42, Issue 1
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
February/March 1991 | Volume 42, Issue 1
From the time of Pearl Harbor we were told that Soviet Russia was our friendly ally against Nazi Germany. By the time the war ended it was becoming apparent that the Soviet Union was not behaving as an ally at all. Winston Churchill gave a famous speech in Fulton, Missouri, on March 5, 1946, in which he introduced the term iron curtain to describe the line behind which Stalin was holding Eastern Europe hostage. The term iron curtain is considered by most to be an original product of Churchill’s oratorical genius. It took me forty-five years to discover that I was in personal possession of evidence to the contrary. When the German army was defeated in May 1945, the U.S. Army found itself in control of territory that was to be turned over to the Soviets as part of the controversial agreement with Stalin at Yalta. That included the city of Leipzig, which was to become part of East Germany, and for fortyfive years thereafter Leipzig was forced to lie behind what was to become known as the Iron Curtain. When we took Leipzig, weeks before Germany’s unconditional surrender, I found myself assigned with about a dozen other young artillery officers to the temporary military-government detachment that was to govern the city until the Soviets officially took over in July 1945. It was not long before news of Belsen, Buchenwald, Dachau, and the other horror camps was blanketing the world. Now every German was told that there was explaining to do. The law faculty of Leipzig University felt compelled to submit a paper to the military government defending the university faculty for having remained at their posts during the Nazi regime. We were amused that the distinguished professors considered us appropriate to receive their plaintive effort. We were only a minor appendage of the great machine that was the U.S. Army. When the time came to turn Leipzig over to the Soviet army, there was no ceremony; we just left. We of the military-government detachment all had accumulated a large stock of combat points since Normandy and were eligible for quick return to the States. Records were scattered about, and somehow I was left with the Leipzig University law faculty’s paper. I put the paper with my gear and promptly forgot about it in the bustle of the times. In 1990 Leipzig figured prominently in the news about German reunification. I was recently impelled to search the attic for my old footlocker with its war memorabilia. There I found the law faculty’s paper and read it thoroughly for the first time. The paper, now yellowed and fragile with age, runs thirty pages, a laboriously typed compendium of defensive