The BRUTAL Post War Execution Of Joachim Peiper - Burned Alive 30 Years After WW2

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • During the Second World War, there were many army commanders that ordered many atrocities and war crimes. Some of these resulted in them being brought to trial after the conflict, and one of these was Joachim Peiper. Peiper was rather senior in the SS as Heinrich Himmler and he were very close, and he was one of Himmler's favourite adjutants. Peiper was a skilled military commander, and he commanded Kampfgruppe Peiper inside of the Waffen-SS, and they were a group known for their fierce fighting, and for committing terrible war crimes.
    Joachim Peiper was known for his short temper, and he also ordered his soldier to execute many Prisoners Of War. One of these atrocities committed by his men was the Malmedy Massacre when over 80 American POWs were gunned down in a field, as Peiper was frustrated with the delay a skirmish with them caused his advance. After the Second World War, he was placed on trial for his crimes, and was sentenced to death however he never faced execution as his sentence was commuted and then reduced significantly. But he managed to live the last decades of his life inside of France in a small village rather peacefully, however things changed in the 1970s.
    Many people found out that Peiper was living in the village of Traves, and a hate campaign emerged to try and drive him out. Peiper was sent threatening letters, in which his house was threatened to be burned down. He believed this would never happen, but on Bastille Day 1976 his house was firebombed. Peiper tried to shoot at the attackers who set his property ablaze, however he quickly became overwhelmed by the flames and smoke and died inside of the house fire. It was a shocking event, with the former SS commander being burned alive inside his house, and being killed 30 years after the war had came to an end.
    So join us today as we look at, 'The BRUTAL Post War Execution Of Joachim Peiper - Burned Alive 30 Years After WW2' Remember to support our channel, please make sure to subscribe.
    Thanks for watching! Support the channel by subscribing, liking, and sharing.
    Follow me on Twitter: / theuntoldpast
    Follow me on Instagram: theuntoldpast
    Disclaimer: All opinions and comment stated below in the Comments section do not represent the opinion of TheUntoldPast. All opinions and comments and dialogue should discuss the video above in a historical manner.
    TheUntoldPast does not accept any racism, profanity, insults, sexism or any negative discussion aimed at an individual. TheUntoldPast has the right to delete any comment with this content inside it and also ban the user from the channel.

Komentáře • 3,1K

  • @pollyllwynfedwen8763
    @pollyllwynfedwen8763 Před 2 lety +1111

    Living in post war France was possibly not the smartest of moves.

    • @louisbarraud7853
      @louisbarraud7853 Před 2 lety +98

      And also saying he doesn't care for Frenchmen aka the people he will live with

    • @joseywales3789
      @joseywales3789 Před 2 lety +97

      Arrogance? Superiority? Conceit? Hubris? Or Foolishness and Stupidity?

    • @jefesalsero
      @jefesalsero Před 2 lety +96

      Perhaps Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, or Uruguay would have been better post-war destinations.

    • @schizoidboy
      @schizoidboy Před 2 lety +72

      I'm thinking that myself, he might have been better off living in Switzerland or somewhere else neutral, but he moved to France. Granted according to Fredrick Forsythe, the writer of The Day of the Jackal and The Odessa Files, there were some parts of France that were friendlier to the Germans than others and this carried on in the post war years. However, you still have to wonder what this guy was thinking.

    • @ravarga4631
      @ravarga4631 Před 2 lety +29

      Shouldhave bern executed 1945/46 this was murder,

  • @noelmaher4633
    @noelmaher4633 Před 2 lety +253

    "Settled permanently in France" got his wish..

    • @neilmurray6943
      @neilmurray6943 Před 2 lety +8

      Maybe he liked the food!

    • @enyawrebbuj9458
      @enyawrebbuj9458 Před 2 lety +5

      He rests permanently now in Bavaria.

    • @kerryclark4967
      @kerryclark4967 Před 2 lety +10

      Yep, Rest In Pieces!

    • @jonathancatz6432
      @jonathancatz6432 Před rokem

      The french authoritirs aught to have been more careful before giving legal residence to just everyone. Don't forget that the devil himself-khomeini-perish his name-lived there peacefully before he returned to iran and wreaked havoc on the whole middle east.

    • @anaroberts5938
      @anaroberts5938 Před rokem

      BOOM - did, the allies kill surendering German soldiers . No sir . Only the Canadians. How many?Only one.. That is one too Many.

  • @brada2354
    @brada2354 Před 2 lety +194

    They found that his hand had been cut off too. The shotgun was given to him by a neighbour who was an ex SS artilleryman.

    • @docbrosk
      @docbrosk Před 2 lety +64

      The ex-artilleryman was also French, in the SS Charlemagne division....

    • @brada2354
      @brada2354 Před 2 lety +10

      @@docbrosk thank you

    • @mbryson2899
      @mbryson2899 Před 2 lety +20

      Thank you Brad and Alan, I wondered who gave him the shotgun and why they helped him.

    • @docbrosk
      @docbrosk Před 2 lety +44

      @@mbryson2899 I thought I knew a good deal about military history, but it was only a few years ago I learned how many (about 2/3) of the personnel in the Waffen SS were NOT Germans....Guess "our friends" have worked ard to conceal that aspect from view.

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 Před 2 lety +10

      @@docbrosk no they didn’t just ignorant fools not doing their due diligence

  • @firmaith
    @firmaith Před 2 lety +228

    That doesn’t sound particularly brutal compared to his antics. I don’t know how he received such a light prison sentence.

    • @cosmiccowboy776
      @cosmiccowboy776 Před 2 lety +25

      These trials were not very popular in West Germany at the time, and the Americans and British were less interested in antagonizing the Germans than one might think, owing to the looming threat of the Soviets. A lot of these guys served short sentences because of that.

    • @firmaith
      @firmaith Před 2 lety +20

      @@cosmiccowboy776 that makes sense. I remember reading about him at the bulge and I assumed he didn’t live long afterwards. Short lives to Nazis I say

    • @bellaadamowicz8380
      @bellaadamowicz8380 Před 2 lety +3

      @@firmaith
      Agree , short lives to Nazi murderers !

    • @paulleigh7792
      @paulleigh7792 Před 2 lety +10

      @@cosmiccowboy776 Also, many war criminals were sentenced by judges who had formerly held those same positions in the Nazi 3rd reich. Criminals judging criminals!

    • @ohauss
      @ohauss Před 2 lety +5

      @@paulleigh7792 Given that the trial at issue here wasn't a German trial to begin with but a US military court, that's a rather misleading argument. It also was the Commander in Chief of the US European Command, Thomas Hardy, who commuted his sentence to life in prison.

  • @kenm8376
    @kenm8376 Před 2 lety +206

    We have a saying, "Build a man a fire and you warm him for an evening. Set a man on fire and you warm him for the rest of his life." It's so nice to see that he learned that.

    • @jrvgwagner
      @jrvgwagner Před 2 lety +6

      😅😅🤣🤣🤣

    • @joebidensdentures4541
      @joebidensdentures4541 Před 2 lety +11

      I would bet everything I have on Peiper against you in a fight.

    • @kenm8376
      @kenm8376 Před 2 lety +17

      @@joebidensdentures4541 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @joebidensdentures4541
      @joebidensdentures4541 Před 2 lety +12

      @@kenm8376 Emojis are feminine, which only validates my original point. That point being Peiper was far more of a man than you.

    • @TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods
      @TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods Před 2 lety +24

      @@joebidensdentures4541 Someone's insecure about their masculinity and has a violence kink. Obvious closet case is obvious.

  • @terryandrews7271
    @terryandrews7271 Před 2 lety +426

    When you commit atrocities like that you cannot blame it on being a soldier

    • @leonardolupini3484
      @leonardolupini3484 Před 2 lety +28

      What nonesense. He was not even there on the day of the massacre

    • @StewBurtTheRed
      @StewBurtTheRed Před 2 lety +38

      No unexcusable offense to mankind should be swayed with "I was just following orders" ever again. True tyrants have no sense of humility, empathy or dignity.

    • @ithinkurf
      @ithinkurf Před 2 lety +52

      @@leonardolupini3484 In the modern context. He was not there on the day of the massacre but he was responsible for fostering the culture within his units that allowed his subordinates to believe that carrying out the massacre was the right course of action. He may not have been directly responsible but he certainly accountable for the actions of his subordinates.

    • @DrippyTheRaindrop
      @DrippyTheRaindrop Před 2 lety +23

      What justification can be made for the "Allies" hanging an elderly German school teacher, who's only "crime" was to publish an offensive newspaper? (Julius Streicher)

    • @DrippyTheRaindrop
      @DrippyTheRaindrop Před 2 lety +32

      Is burning alive whole cities of women and children (Tokyo, Dresden, Nagasaki, Hiroshima) an "atrocity"?

  • @marcwilliams2504
    @marcwilliams2504 Před rokem +7

    "It was a shocking event, with the former SS commander being burned alive inside his house, and being killed 30 years after the war had came to an end. " Kudos to the French people who brought justice to this murderous thug.

  • @billsinclair6515
    @billsinclair6515 Před 2 lety +65

    for historical accuracy, its worth mentioning that he was not present at, nor did he order the Malmedy murder of American soldiers. As their C.O. he accepted accountability for their actions at the post war trials and that incurred a penalty of death although it was later commuted to a jail sentence. But hey, lets go and live in France eh?

    • @rodon12001
      @rodon12001 Před 2 lety +11

      I guess, it could happened like that. BUT........ what about his documented actions on Eastern front? Should we also blame his subordinates? Also, it is just my personal opinion: executing over eighty American POW without A - direct order from your superiors, or B - without knowing for sure, that such action will be tolerated by your superiors, is hard to imagine in highly trained and disciplined SS troops. In ether case, he had blood on his hands. Again, if A or C don't stand, the Eastern front is.

    • @billsinclair6515
      @billsinclair6515 Před 2 lety +11

      @@rodon12001 I agree 100%, the man ought to have had the death penalty regardless. Hitler moved some of his best, battle hardened troops from the eastern front to fight in the Ardennes. By that point, the war with Russia was a total war, and the Russians fed literally millions of men into the grinder where they perished at a much higher ratio than the retreating Germans. So the life of captured enemy was almost worthless to them as they represented mouths to feed when they had little or no food themsleves. Bring that philosophy to the Western front and you unfortunatley get Malmedy

    • @josephstabile9154
      @josephstabile9154 Před 2 lety +6

      Just sayin', we do not know, FOR A TRUE, OBJECTIVE FACT, that he did not have a say in regard to Malmedy. And, if he in fact did not, it would almost be uncharacteristic of "Blowtorch" Peiper.
      "By your fruits shall ye be known"

    • @Bahamut3525
      @Bahamut3525 Před rokem

      There is no problem with living in France.
      He lived in France for 30+ years without problems.
      French & Germans don't hate each other. You watch too much history channel and fake history.

    • @Bahamut3525
      @Bahamut3525 Před rokem +9

      @@billsinclair6515 "the man ought to have had the death penalty regardless"
      So should countless Americans who committed worse crimes like directly executing POWs, civilians, etc.

  • @foxman1546
    @foxman1546 Před 2 lety +70

    The fire hoses weren't working hahaha.
    Nice one god.

    • @scoldingwhisper
      @scoldingwhisper Před 2 lety +10

      Idk if they were broken or “broken”

    • @louisbarraud7853
      @louisbarraud7853 Před 2 lety +9

      @@scoldingwhisper fairly certain they were "broken" and not broken. And I full support that

    • @scoldingwhisper
      @scoldingwhisper Před 2 lety +6

      @@louisbarraud7853 I imagine Jeremy Clarkson from top gear "OH NO!!!" "anyways.."

    • @robertchubb1518
      @robertchubb1518 Před 2 lety +2

      The hoses had been slashed

    • @drdr76
      @drdr76 Před 2 lety +3

      ok course, by design. well executed operation.

  • @AngeloPerfili
    @AngeloPerfili Před 2 lety +232

    How come I have never heard this story? Oh, that's right. I am watching the " the untold past" channel. Your subject matter and attention to detail are awesome...

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 Před 2 lety +7

      I’ve heard of it before

    • @andrewkappler5503
      @andrewkappler5503 Před 2 lety +6

      He also said "those damn engineers" When the American engineers solders blew up the last remaining bridge stopping his advance during battle of the bulge

    • @janbadinski7126
      @janbadinski7126 Před 2 lety +5

      You might enjoy 'the history guy' stories. He does obscure history because because he believes (I agree' that deserves to be remembered. He is also a history instructor on a college level. I find myself binge watching his stories more often than not.

    • @charliesmith4072
      @charliesmith4072 Před 2 lety +3

      U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy was a noisy and belligerent supporter of Peiper during and after his trial. We tend to forget that a number of U.S. Republican politicians, like McCarthy and Robert Taft were strong supporters of the Nazis after WW II.

    • @craigaust3306
      @craigaust3306 Před 2 lety +6

      Actually, this story has been known for quite some time.

  • @peterwallace4964
    @peterwallace4964 Před 2 lety +52

    The one good thing about his 30 years of escaping justice was that he would’ve been constantly looking over his shoulder..never quite knowing when they were coming for him

    • @clonmore819
      @clonmore819 Před rokem +2

      He didn't escape justice. He served 12 years in prison. Learn your facts before spouting nonsense, please.

    • @Bahamut3525
      @Bahamut3525 Před rokem +6

      How did he escape justice? He willingly submitted himself to a trial, and was sentenced.
      Use your low brain cells next time.

    • @Vevay1961
      @Vevay1961 Před rokem

      @@clonmore819 If you think serving 12 years in prison for murdering hundreds of unarmed civilians, including children..... and countless unarmed POWs is "justice" then you possess the same IQ as Peiper does today. Zero.

    • @Vevay1961
      @Vevay1961 Před rokem

      @@Bahamut3525 Another idiot fanboy that thinks 12 years in prison is justice for the war criminal.

    • @Jklease342
      @Jklease342 Před rokem

      @@Bahamut3525 yeah because 12 years is fair for murdering pow’s

  • @trj1442
    @trj1442 Před 2 lety +2

    Another excellent episode. Thankyou.

  • @buckshot6481
    @buckshot6481 Před 2 lety +350

    My Uncle George was a Master Sargent with the troops that discovered the horror at Malmady and he never forgot it.

    • @kyles9320
      @kyles9320 Před 2 lety +15

      How could you? The scope of how f**ked that is would be beyond comprehension at first.

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 Před 2 lety

      And ?

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 Před 2 lety +36

      Americans shot prisoners as well it war not a tea party

    • @TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods
      @TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods Před 2 lety +31

      @@zaynevanday142 And the Germans starved, enslaved, and gassed their POWs. Your point?

    • @Jamestrent9
      @Jamestrent9 Před 2 lety +6

      @@TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods their are no winners in war!

  • @isopod666
    @isopod666 Před 2 lety +28

    Justice......... has been served

  • @kerryclark4967
    @kerryclark4967 Před 2 lety +23

    I thoroughly enjoy this channel! I had 3 uncle's in WW2 and only 1 came back home! He was a very kind and gentle man who fought bravely amongst many others to win that war!

    • @ashley-cz1sl
      @ashley-cz1sl Před 2 lety +3

      My grandfather was there for D day. He helped liberate one of the concentration camps. I am not sure what one. He never really talked about what he saw during the war

    • @kerryclark4967
      @kerryclark4967 Před 2 lety +3

      @@ashley-cz1sl there were many veterans like that.. they couldn't talk about their experiences and many had nightmares the rest of their lives

    • @JohnRodriguesPhotographer
      @JohnRodriguesPhotographer Před 2 lety +4

      ​@@ashley-cz1sl my dad never talked about Buchenwald, until I asked. we talked once only. he did talk about the rest of the war freely. from funny, to sickening, to amazed he survived. 6th Armored Division!

    • @nickmerino9440
      @nickmerino9440 Před rokem +1

      @@JohnRodriguesPhotographer do you remember any of his stories?

    • @JohnRodriguesPhotographer
      @JohnRodriguesPhotographer Před rokem +2

      @@nickmerino9440 Yes, more than a few. Some funny some are horrific. For example a soldier being killed when a 20mm round hit him, in the chest and exploded Pissed my dad off. hit the gun with the 75mm.. Funny one now Dad " liberated " a bicycle. He was riding down the road, unshaven dirty, greasy uniform. Guess who was coming the other way? None other than General Patton! Asked dad a few questions, snapped a salute and said "Carry on"

  • @patolt1628
    @patolt1628 Před 2 lety +55

    Peiper was identified by a former resistance member (managing a hardware store in a village in the area) who noticed his German accent and asked him about France occupation. Peiper was not involved in France occupation but he didn't try to hide his name so that he was very soon confirmed who he was and his reputation. For the rest, the case is still controversial since it's not clear if he was really attacked and if the body found in his burnt house was Peiper's body. This has been an assumption as there were no DNA comparison possible.
    Another version of the story is that the attack against the house has been staged by Peiper himself and that he would then have escaped through a hole in the barbed wire, joining a nearby road (because it's the path that a sniffer dog followed) where a car would have waited for him. Then he would have vanished somewhere (in South America ...?)
    Anyway, in May 1977, experts concluded that indeed nothing proved that the body found was Peiper's corpse but that nothing proved the opposite either. So the case was closed. I'm afraid we'll never know.

    • @bad74maverick1
      @bad74maverick1 Před 2 lety +4

      There was no need for him to go to south America either. He served his sentence and was released and went on about his life.

    • @patolt1628
      @patolt1628 Před 2 lety +5

      @@bad74maverick1 You are right: legally speaking he was free to go wherever he wanted but he might have felt unsafe for some reason and prefered to escape and just vanish. Who knows?
      I just wanted to highlight the fact that, contrary to what is being said in the video, it remains unclear: being attacked by former partisans although he was not involved in crimes in France (on the Russian front probably, in Italy and Belgium for sure but he was unknown in France) would have been hardly plausible in the 50s but this happened in 1976 after having moved to this little village in 1972! I don't claim that it's not what happened but it doesn't seem to make sense and that's why it's still so controversial. Now in 2022, we can note that nobody ever spoke about that night: curious. I think we'll never know.

    • @bad74maverick1
      @bad74maverick1 Před 2 lety +3

      @@patolt1628 I agree the scenario is a bit suspicious, but then again so many things after the war that happened to ex SS officers who had similar fates are too.

    • @patolt1628
      @patolt1628 Před 2 lety +2

      @@bad74maverick1 Yes, probably.

    • @bluerock4456
      @bluerock4456 Před 2 lety +7

      Dental records & his SS tattoo did the ID.

  • @vangestelwijnen
    @vangestelwijnen Před 2 lety +94

    With some delay the verdict was picked up by the French. Excellent.

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 Před 2 lety +6

      Fool

    • @buzz2393
      @buzz2393 Před 2 lety +10

      @@zaynevanday142 u lost the war, now shut up

    • @Borkendeneshk
      @Borkendeneshk Před 2 lety +4

      True. At least the French did something for WWII finally!

    • @lscher2461
      @lscher2461 Před 2 lety +9

      @@buzz2393 Yeh the Krauts lost the war but not thanks to the frenchies or brits. Sooo no much reason to be bragging...

    • @yusufaden2432
      @yusufaden2432 Před 2 lety +3

      The French killed a million Algerians. Ten years before his death they passed an amnesty for all their killers. So maybe those French anti fascists should’ve started with their own bothers rather than a old man who beat them fair and square

  • @kenmayfield3739
    @kenmayfield3739 Před 2 lety +249

    I’ve always thought it astonishing that Peiper’s original sentence was commuted. That wasn’t justice, it was a travesty.

    • @novadhd
      @novadhd Před 2 lety +15

      I think the Brits handled it. They did that with a lot of the nazi's and were too lenient. Americans would have handled it differently.

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 Před 2 lety +5

      It was justice you are just a sheep

    • @sirgalahad1376
      @sirgalahad1376 Před 2 lety +14

      @@zaynevanday142 I notice you posting on just about every comment. So are you a Nazi apologist? Care to explain yourself?

    • @h.db.9684
      @h.db.9684 Před 2 lety +10

      @@novadhd No they wouldn’t have. The US lacked the stomach to do anything. The Soviets on the other hand would’ve executed him.

    • @carlosferreira5709
      @carlosferreira5709 Před 2 lety +5

      A feature of the emerging Cold War.

  • @pruephillip1338
    @pruephillip1338 Před 2 lety +82

    Shooting and burning. This was Peiper's own modus operandi, visited upon him.

  • @martinoconnor4314
    @martinoconnor4314 Před 2 lety +18

    I found a book in a Charity shop called The Devils Adjutant which was about Joachim Peiper's life and death if anyone is interested in further reading on this man. I can't remember the name of the author but I'm sure google can help.

  • @Russellsagecline
    @Russellsagecline Před 2 lety +53

    He could've been remembered for being a brilliant tactician, but chose "RUTHLESS, FELCHING MURDERER," instead.

    • @MrProsat
      @MrProsat Před 2 lety +8

      Brilliant tactician? Aside from rescuing a German unit surrounded in Russia, what exactly was brilliant about his military career? Unless you count shooting/killing unarmed civilians in several countries.

    • @Russellsagecline
      @Russellsagecline Před 2 lety +2

      @@MrProsat You're right. I rode the Short Bus. Sorry.... apologies.

    • @TheMetalMachineMusic
      @TheMetalMachineMusic Před 2 lety +2

      He liked felching? Where did you hear this?

    • @leonardolupini3484
      @leonardolupini3484 Před 2 lety +4

      Murderer? I think not.... While in Italy, a large group of Jews were released to Peiper, and to the horror of his superiors, he set them all free.... Most of the Jews spoke afterwards of the Standartenfuhrer's kindness, including a rabbi....

    • @scottjimenez653
      @scottjimenez653 Před 2 lety +3

      @@leonardolupini3484: Even if he freed some prisoners, the fact that he murdered others makes him a murderer. He also failed a breakthrough during the Bulge. In short, he was a failure. Yet, in interviews after the war, he remained arrogant: a typical SS ruthless scum worthy of death. Care to counter that?

  • @ericmartin9232
    @ericmartin9232 Před 2 lety +151

    His unit was known as the kampfgruppe Blowtorch. Seems like what goes around comes around....

    • @MrProsat
      @MrProsat Před 2 lety +29

      fitting end.

    • @Charlesputnam-bn9zy
      @Charlesputnam-bn9zy Před 2 lety

      Unfortunately, I think he faked his own death.
      DNA check wasn't that developed then.

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 Před 2 lety

      @@MrProsat not really

    • @troysweeney8432
      @troysweeney8432 Před 2 lety +2

      What would you call the Americans who burned whole cites down killing millions of civilians by fire? Piper at most killed 100s maybe 1000s but not even close to those flying bombers.

    • @Yiannis2112
      @Yiannis2112 Před 2 lety +3

      @@troysweeney8432 I'd call it "you started this, I say when it stops"

  • @borisshenker3722
    @borisshenker3722 Před 2 lety +7

    Poetic justice.

  • @DeusVoltage
    @DeusVoltage Před 2 lety +3

    Congrats on finally making a video where the title isn't clickbait.

  • @ShamileII
    @ShamileII Před 2 lety +36

    Odd that he would retire in France....maybe not the best of ideas .
    He actually worked for Porsche in their factory parts dept. I remember a story from the early racing days where it was mentioned that "Peiper was a great deal of help" .....wait, that Peiper...the Oberststurmbanfuhrer?? lol

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart Před rokem +1

      And then was kicked out of Porsche

  • @wtfsalommy3250
    @wtfsalommy3250 Před 2 lety +69

    live by the sword...

    • @markpaul8178
      @markpaul8178 Před 2 lety +1

      Right on.

    • @pagodebregaeforro2803
      @pagodebregaeforro2803 Před 2 lety +2

      It took too long, unfortunately.

    • @harryeisermann2784
      @harryeisermann2784 Před 2 lety

      he was freed by criminal court, so and peace was,signed 30 years earlier, hmmmm strange

    • @harryeisermann2784
      @harryeisermann2784 Před 2 lety

      why not Commit Churchill not as,a criminal or that idiot Patton, or Montgomery, HE made many mistakes , thousands died for nothing?
      winners JUSTICE

    • @jorgefajardo2213
      @jorgefajardo2213 Před 2 lety

      @@harryeisermann2784 Patton never got unarmed man and civilians executed in cold blood.

  • @Armyjay
    @Armyjay Před 2 lety +1

    An excellent video, cheers.

  • @stephenwhitworth3151
    @stephenwhitworth3151 Před 2 lety +25

    Pardon me if I fail to shed any tears that a man who fully and proudly participated in the outrageous crimes of the hate-fueled, racist Nazi regime was at last given justice by the Avengers long after his appropriate original death sentence had stupidly been commuted.

    • @dm-gq5uj
      @dm-gq5uj Před 2 lety

      He finally found out what it was like to be trapped in a burning building, overcome by smoke and heat. He cruelly sentenced others to that fate, so it was poetic justice - and far more fitting than hanging.

    • @franciefernandesjoseph6776
      @franciefernandesjoseph6776 Před rokem

      Yes absolutely stupid n against the humanity

    • @Bahamut3525
      @Bahamut3525 Před rokem

      Comment based on pure disinformation and lack of objectivity.

    • @cjryan88
      @cjryan88 Před rokem +1

      and what about the crimes committed by the russians ,they got away with them

  • @jamespanciotti3960
    @jamespanciotti3960 Před 2 lety +83

    I am glad that he finally received justice for his crimes. It is very fitting that the burner of so many villages would die in a house fire. He witnessed and caused so much death and never expressed regret over any of it. This is the first I had heard about his life and death after he was not convicted for war crimes. Thank you for your research and work on this video.

    • @SanitysVoid
      @SanitysVoid Před 2 lety +3

      The Courts decided his justice. A group of un authorized rabble who had no standing to murder anyone murdered him. Probably a group of young communits who let others fight the real mans war while they printed propagnda in their mother's basement.

    • @daviddalton9214
      @daviddalton9214 Před 2 lety +1

      @@SanitysVoid
      We could ask what the US army troops at Malmedy thought about this great big soldier.
      Oh, wait. Can’t do that.

    • @SanitysVoid
      @SanitysVoid Před 2 lety +4

      @@daviddalton9214 Or we cold ask what U.S. Colonels did in the same situation. They were not about to let some POW's slow up their advances either. Ever personally know any WWII vets? The stories they told were no BS. This was related to me. The CO told two GIs to march two German POW's down the road and turn them over to the MP's at the check point and be back in 5 minutes as the unit was moving out. They were back as ordered. The March was 2 miles down the road then 2 miles back. That's 4 miles. Know anyone that can run that in 5 mintes? Guess what became of the two Germans..... figure it out.

    • @derricklarsen2919
      @derricklarsen2919 Před 2 lety

      @@SanitysVoid probably best way to handle war crimes is to try the top leadership but with minor guys like.peiper best to kill them covertly or use the Israelis. You get lawyers involved they start digging up too much shit to make a name for themselves.

    • @alexlanning712
      @alexlanning712 Před 2 lety +5

      not a grain of contrition

  • @thomasweatherford5125
    @thomasweatherford5125 Před 2 lety +38

    He should’ve stood trial at Nuremberg with the other higher ups. I don’t have any I’ll feelings for people of his ilk getting justice which comes in all forms.

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 Před 2 lety +2

      He did do some research

    • @charliesmith4072
      @charliesmith4072 Před 2 lety +2

      There were many layers of trials. What you are thinking of is the trial of the 26 top Nazis who started the war. As that was winding down Ben Ferencz (who is still alive) was organizing the Einsatzgruppen trial, also in Nurnberg. Peiper was tried by the Americans later with the men who did the actual killing at Malmedy. A number of right wing U.S. politicians, led by Senator Joseph McCarthy, created so much pressure that the American governor of West Germany reduced his sentence. There were also layers of trials in Poland, the USSR, and the civil courts of West Germany. I believe that one of these trials ended last year in Germany.

    • @alexbowman7582
      @alexbowman7582 Před 2 lety +2

      American officer Chester Nimitz famously said if we had lost I'd have been on a war crimes trial and sent a letter to the Nuremberg war crimes trial of Doenitz, accused of waging unrestricted naval warfare, that he had done so too. British RAF officers often lied to pilots telling them they were bombing industry when their targets were German housing surely a war crime? If you want crimes worse than the Germans look to British Indian rule where an estimated 60 million were murdered, mostly starved with around 10 million killed in the few years following the 1857 uprising and 2 to 4 million starved in 1943 in Bengal after we took their rice crops. Britain also killed more woman and children in concentration camps than adults killed in battles during the Boer war. Britain also starved 1 or 2 million Irish whilst exporting food from Ireland under PM Pitt. We also managed the successful complete genocide of the Aboriginal Tasmanians. As recently as the 50's and 60's we were putting 100's of 1,000's of Kenyan people in camps whilst fight the Mau Mau (go go in Kenyan) rebellion and hung 8 thousand Kenyan men in less than a decade.

    • @billlansdell7225
      @billlansdell7225 Před 2 lety

      @@alexbowman7582 Practically nothing you wrote there is true. I am not saying this for your benefit, because you are obviously left wing ideologue and historical revisionist. But it should be stated for anybody who mistakenly thinks you know what you are talking about.

  • @tomg5187
    @tomg5187 Před 2 lety +4

    Harrowing story, thank you sir! 🙏

  • @donavinvanwyk9033
    @donavinvanwyk9033 Před 2 lety +77

    There is a book written by Leo Kessler about the life and death of Joachim Peiper , it is an interesting read and looks into what occurred during those last days of the war and what happened when Peiper and those men of the SS that were captured and stood trial after the war. The book is called " SS Peiper " by Leo Kessler

    • @LukeLovesRose
      @LukeLovesRose Před 2 lety +2

      Lies no doubt

    • @JoeFlation
      @JoeFlation Před 2 lety +7

      @@LukeLovesRose

    • @donavinvanwyk9033
      @donavinvanwyk9033 Před 2 lety +8

      @@LukeLovesRose well seeing as history is all about doing your own research & looking at the facts that were available at the time & then making your own conclusions , I wouldn't know if they lies or not in your opinion

    • @LukeLovesRose
      @LukeLovesRose Před 2 lety +2

      @@donavinvanwyk9033 I have far more evidence in my corner

    • @donavinvanwyk9033
      @donavinvanwyk9033 Před 2 lety +10

      @@LukeLovesRose If you have evidence that the author of the book did not have access to then good for you. All I said was that it was intetesting book to read and I did not express a view either way

  • @TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods
    @TyrSkyFatherOfTheGods Před 2 lety +29

    Cremated alive - karma has a dank sense of humour.

  • @Afro3461
    @Afro3461 Před 2 lety +17

    What a wonderful example of ‘Poetic Justice’!

    • @panhead55
      @panhead55 Před rokem +1

      How so? Seems like cold blood murder to me. The man committed crimes long ago and was tried by a jury and sentenced.

  • @psymons9133
    @psymons9133 Před 2 lety +42

    The saddest part of this story was that Peiper was not killed until the 70's...

  • @ducomaritiem7160
    @ducomaritiem7160 Před 2 lety +45

    Most of your footage of Peiper seems correct, except for those at the "Schwimmenwagen" ( 7:46) . That's not Joachim Peiper, but their unit's photographer. My source: After the Battle magazine , number about the battle of the Bulge.

    • @mikebrase5161
      @mikebrase5161 Před 2 lety +3

      The Soldier in Schwim is also wearing Oberscharfuhrer NCO rank further making sure it isnt Peiper

    • @kjragg1099
      @kjragg1099 Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah a lot of people seem to think this is Peiper when it looks nothing like him.

    • @nickgoodwood4812
      @nickgoodwood4812 Před 2 lety

      That's right.

  • @mikekennedy4572
    @mikekennedy4572 Před 2 lety +44

    Too bad that he was allowed to live as long as he did after the war, considering the atrocities that happened under his command. Thank you to the Avengers who took him out.

  • @greatunwashed1856
    @greatunwashed1856 Před 2 lety +10

    Settling in what used to be occupied France? More front than “arrods “ fine example of Hubris.

  • @aylmer666
    @aylmer666 Před 2 lety +6

    Peiper was sort-of the basis of Robert Shaw’s character in BATTLE OF THE BULGE and Peter O’Toole’s in NIGHT OF THE GENERALS, and damn does he really really closely resemble Michael Fassbender. Maybe Fassbender ought to play him in a biopic?

  • @keithehredt753
    @keithehredt753 Před 2 lety +1

    GREAT TOPIC, GREAT COVERAGE. WELL DONE

  • @pauldazar3348
    @pauldazar3348 Před 2 lety +47

    I feel sorry for the dog...

  • @tamer1773
    @tamer1773 Před 2 lety +60

    Despite his skills as a soldier Peiper was really nothing more than a vicious murderer who killed helpless civilians and unarmed POW's and got away with it. I'm glad he was such a lousy shot that he missed hitting any of the attackers. I was always amazed that the French government allowed him to live there. Unless they knew he'd be taken care of 30 years after the war. Revenge is a dish best served cold.

    • @bilbobaggins2784
      @bilbobaggins2784 Před 2 lety +4

      Excellent comment!

    • @debeeriz
      @debeeriz Před 2 lety +1

      after the war britain became frances enemy and germany its best friend, so l am not amazed at all, but considering the allies bombing did more damage and killed more french than the germans did, you cant really blame them

    • @bilbobaggins2784
      @bilbobaggins2784 Před 2 lety +1

      @@debeeriz I don't agree that the response to a genocidal nation waging total war on the world has to be proportionate. The Battle of the Bulge six months after D day and less than that before Nazi Germany collapses, the defence of Berlin, not to mention the Japanese war to the end mean that if the Allies had stopped to make these dainty considerations we'd still be at it. Nazi Germany democratically and enthusiastically pulled fpr this war and sent their men to kill and be killed in it. You can't whine now about the Allies for taking up Nazi Germany and thrashing those genocidal losers.

    • @debeeriz
      @debeeriz Před 2 lety +2

      @@bilbobaggins2784 when you compare what the japanese and russians did, l think the germans were hard done by when it came to war crimes prosecutions, and even amongst the germans if a nazi had skills to offer he was not prosecuted as a war criminal

    • @bilbobaggins2784
      @bilbobaggins2784 Před 2 lety +1

      @@debeeriz Nazism and Japanese imperialism had to be discredited through humiliation, prosecution and executions. The Allies did a fantastic job as evidenced by the thriving democracies that are modern Germany and Japan. (The Soviet Union was with the Allies against the Axis so that doesn't apply). As to the individual toll of regular Germans and Japanese, both countries were enthusiastic supporters of their regimes; Hitler was elected democratically.
      And both countries fought to the bitter end even after the war was all but lost lost. It was in those final weeks of suicidal last stands that they incurred their big civilian casualties (e.g. Dresden, February 1945; Hiroshima and Nagasaki, August, 1945).
      No criminal conspiracy is ever prosecuted to the last man. The point is to punish the leadership, the most egregious criminals, publicly humiliate and discredit them and set the historical record straight. Ditto with the January 6, 2021 insurrection.
      Sure, some German rocket scientists and others were given a pass in order to help the US in the Cold War but your defence of the Nazi and Japanese losers is not motivated by a desire for perfect justice, is it now?

  • @georgec4917
    @georgec4917 Před 2 lety +172

    He got a bonus of an extra 30 years, unlike his many victims.

    • @jmy7622
      @jmy7622 Před 2 lety +15

      Study the Nuremburg trial carefully.

    • @matthewdavid6134
      @matthewdavid6134 Před 2 lety +17

      @@jmy7622 What do you mean by that? Also how does that change the fact that this guy got to live an extra 30 years while his victims didn't?

    • @doriscastillo4438
      @doriscastillo4438 Před 2 lety +2

      That is sad,I hope that those years he was looking always to his back waiting to be catch for the international army

    • @Genghis-Khan121
      @Genghis-Khan121 Před 2 lety +4

      The church incident killing civilians was France not the eastern front ,

    • @jmy7622
      @jmy7622 Před 2 lety +8

      @@doriscastillo4438 Most people don't understand Gemany between the wars. But to the war most don't understand the SS , lots were mad dog killers, some joined for patriotic reasons ,more pay ,best equitment ,The actual trial was filmed ,there were witnesses.You can't put this in a post,it's a long story.peiper was 10 miles away the trffic jam was even longer,like the Russians they would have guys in the rear searching for people to kill .At this stage of the war he was given Hitler youth,old guys paratroopers , a mixed bag of misfits Many in the front that killed these guys were all hung, Peiper they couldn't prove anything, nothing.Our guys commited war crimes on film . they were told don't do that anymore. The mia lai massacre in 'Nam man in charge was there and walked .War is an evil thing.These things happened thousads of years ago to this day going on right now, you just don't hear about it. The victor makes the history. DR Mengle ,Japan did the same thing , we did it too but for much longer to our own people their patients were in prison or the wrong color many died ,then our "DR's " went overseas to Africa and India they kicked us out.One was BILL GATES Mr vaccine , he would have good times with his buddy Epstein, thats why he's divorced or separated. There's pictures of Peiper when he first joined ,Himmler saw him and made him his secretary,he always looked very unhappy and asked to be sent to the front. Evil is everywhere and lots of times we are behind it .Afghanistan ,geeze the last 20 years we've been killing folks half way around the world in a dozen countriesDid you see any of the pics of babies starving to death because of us? horrific !What's going on in our own country today ? Mexico , our problem became their problem and we're talking many millions of dead .I guess that comes when we declare ourselves the superpower. Do you know more americans were killed in our civil war than WW2?

  • @aidjunkie5335
    @aidjunkie5335 Před 2 lety +6

    Joachim Peiper features in the brilliant novel The Environmental Gardeners. Well worth a read!

  • @TCW838
    @TCW838 Před 2 lety +20

    I do have sympathy that the poor dogs got caught up in this. They didn't do anything.

    • @alfredagain
      @alfredagain Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah, why do these Nazi scum always have dogs? Just like Hitler and his mistress. I love dogs and I shudder to think of them in the bloody hands of those murderers. I've seen photos of dogs being cuddled by the likes of Sepp Dietrich, Isle Koch, and even Julius Streicher.

    • @motorrebell
      @motorrebell Před 2 lety +4

      @@alfredagain Yes very weird , Hitler was a Vegetarian - avoided Alcohol too .

  • @joebrunette5594
    @joebrunette5594 Před 2 lety +23

    The only downside is that he got to live so long after his crimes.

  • @thomaspavelko9412
    @thomaspavelko9412 Před 2 lety +20

    Every time I watch one of these I kind of wonder why after the Soviet Union collapsed why not one KGB or GRU interrogator was ever charged with any crimes against humanity or any of the commanders or guards of the forced labor camps?

    • @stefanodadamo6809
      @stefanodadamo6809 Před 2 lety +3

      Because no foreign power occupied the former Soviet Union and prosecuted them.

    • @thomaspavelko9412
      @thomaspavelko9412 Před 2 lety +2

      @@stefanodadamo6809 very true..still though alot of those communist left the Soviet Union with what they could steal and bought million dollar mansions all over the EU..
      Basically they all got a free pass and funny enough no-one wants to talk about it

    • @simony2801
      @simony2801 Před 2 lety +1

      @@thomaspavelko9412 I think their escape and wealth is all in your head. The Soviet Union was a failed economic project,

    • @GazB85
      @GazB85 Před 2 lety +1

      @@thomaspavelko9412 That never happened at all! The oligarchs stayed in Russia!

    • @bluerock4456
      @bluerock4456 Před 2 lety

      @@GazB85 tell that to Roman Abramovich, then!

  • @garyfinn8772
    @garyfinn8772 Před 2 lety +2

    Wouldn't have minded him behind me in a fight

  • @h.db.9684
    @h.db.9684 Před 2 lety +66

    “I was mistreated during my time as a prisoner, therefore my charges should be dismissed.” - SS soldier who was literally on trial for executing prisoners and innocent civilians.
    The balls on that man, and the pathetic, feeble judges that agreed with him. Pathetic.

    • @thepub245
      @thepub245 Před 2 lety +5

      The Americans screwed up. The Allies, with the grumbling, half hearted agreement of the Soviets, chose to maintain the higher moral ground to punish those that were directly involved in the machinations of mass murder and war crimes, by taking the decision to deal with them in a court of law, which I think was right. The fact that Peiper and his men were subjected to torture and degrading treatment weakened the case against them. As far as I know, Peiper was only bought to trial for the Malmedy incident and the evidence against him was not strong. Also, attitudes toward previous enemies changed as the west turned toward the new enemy in the Soviets and the West German public had to be bought onside. Peiper must have been a bitter man at being on the losing side in the war and possibly had a bit of a death wish. Why else would he expose himself to scrutiny outside of Germany when so many of his peers had long and comfortable lives within?

    • @kylegellner8687
      @kylegellner8687 Před 2 lety

      This man fits the classic definition of chutzah:
      Murdering your parents, and then begging for mercy because you're an orphan.

    • @Bahamut3525
      @Bahamut3525 Před rokem

      @@thepub245 Because he was bitter with Germany, said so himself. He didn't recognise his country, which had become too American and business-minded.
      I believe there is also a comment about the SS, where he says that most of his comrades completely abandoned the ideals and are basically bourgeois now.

  • @jefesalsero
    @jefesalsero Před 2 lety +105

    During the summer of 1976, while visiting my grandparents in California, my WW2 U.S. Army veteran grandfather (who served in the ETO) told me about the news of Pieper's death in France. Grandpa said that he knew someone who had spoken with Peiper in France after the war and that this person said that Pieper denied responsibility for the Malmedy Massacre and blamed it on Sepp Dietrich. Seems logical that Pieper would deny his crimes.

    • @alfredagain
      @alfredagain Před 2 lety +19

      The Nazis were notorious cowards. I once read that Sepp Dietrich told Peiper, regarding this operation, to "not waste too much time with prisoners". Peiper certainly took him at his word, the murdering bastards.

    • @philiplubduck6107
      @philiplubduck6107 Před 2 lety +14

      Coward isn’t the word I’d use, things were far different back then and once you were a soldier you didn’t have much choice but to listen to your commander. Whether you a Nazi or Soviet you would be shot if you fled. Even the USA killed those who fled early on. Now officers and such had some. Voice yet still not choice as they would likely be killed if they decided to oppose the ideals of Nazi Germany. Though they might have been able to “retire”.
      Oddly the Nazis aren’t the only evil people. Seemed many of the towns and countries put up little to no fight and just allowed Germany to remove their Jewish population. Many people of the time hated Jews worldwide including the USA. A large number did not agree with killing Jews but many still would rather never deal with one in their town. That’s one reason why many just let Nazis come in and take control.

    • @alfredagain
      @alfredagain Před 2 lety +4

      @@philiplubduck6107 I agree, but what gets me is the bastards who fled to places like South America. If they were true soldiers they would have surrendered their fate to the victorious powers instead of becoming international fugitives. I realize this exonerates Peiper, but it doesn't ease my hatred of him. As for cowardice, it goes right down to the average citizen too. I once saw footage of an interview, in a lovely outdoor setting, with a woman who'd used the Gestapo to deal with a neighbour she didn't like. The questions started to get her jittery (what did she expect?) and she called the interview off by stating that it was starting to rain!

    • @philiplubduck6107
      @philiplubduck6107 Před 2 lety +1

      @@alfredagain wow to deal with a bad neighbor to have that much torture and for what some land dispute at most!
      I imagine anyone of enough mind to take gold and other valuables would have seen the war would soon be lost and what they could to survive and likely survive in decent luxury. Honestly if the country you serve losses and dies I wouldn’t say turning yourself in would be brave or smart. Just suicide. Even smart/greedy ally soldiers stole items from many Nazi strongholds and some citizens. I think South America idolized Nazis and somehow was always allowed to do so without any pushback. Making life pretty good and open without fear of people knowing what your did. Though some Nazis were assassinated by spec ops of various countries.

    • @drdr76
      @drdr76 Před 2 lety +5

      It's no different today. We have politicians who deny what we have actual recordings of them saying/doing. We have many convicted murderers who do the same; deny, deny, deny.

  • @pointsofsue2487
    @pointsofsue2487 Před rokem +120

    Mum and Dad were visiting a museum in France in the late 70s, and it was about WW2 and the atrocities against the millions of victims. A lady started crying and her German husband said it was all lies, and that it was lies facilitated by the British. First time my dad got into a fight since WW2 when he and his unit liberated a concentrationcamp, and he taught the Nazi a lesson. I guess when you are a Nazi..you are always a Nazi. Very proud of my dad that day. Miss you old man...my hero.

    • @ladycplum
      @ladycplum Před rokem +14

      Thank your father or his service, for me.

    • @timeanagy8495
      @timeanagy8495 Před rokem

      A Nazi? What about anti-white BLM? About the Palestine thing, the Is-raeli Nazism. France killed more than a million people in Africa and till this day terrorize the whole continent. Africans even have to speak in the disgusting French language. France is the only one in EU that has A bombs. Without Hitler France would occupy half of Germany even today. The US killed 10's of millions of people during their wars...

    • @ladycplum
      @ladycplum Před rokem

      @@timeanagy8495 You sound like you would have been right at home in the Hungarian Arrow Cross with Szalasi and his thugs.

    • @dtomdtom92
      @dtomdtom92 Před rokem +22

      “We defeated the wrong enemy”
      -George S. Patton

    • @jpmnky
      @jpmnky Před rokem

      You’re right about the “once a Nazi always one” thing. My dad said the same about Putin. “He’s f*****g KGB. And once you’re KGB, you’re KGB for life”. This was years ago. Now here in 2022, going into 2023 he’s been proven right.

  • @johnf8064
    @johnf8064 Před 2 lety +21

    When they found his corpse, it had shrunk too the size of a toddler. An anomaly of the fire.

    • @Izumi-sp6fp
      @Izumi-sp6fp Před 2 lety +5

      Probably all that was left was the torso. Everything else being consumed. That could be mistaken for having "shrunk" in size.

    • @charlesshields305
      @charlesshields305 Před 2 lety +1

      So his watch was near the shrunken remains of a corpse, and that makes it Peiper ? No, like the supposed corpse of Hitler outside the Berlin bunker, once visible proof of identity is erased in fires, what you have is escape strategies by mass murderers via yet more killing then burning, followed by smooth passage to fascist-admiring South American states and lives lived wealthily and surreptitiously behind the facade of 'known' death and the world moving on. But if Peiper really got burned to a cinder in France, then he got a deservedly painful comeuppance.

    • @bluerock4456
      @bluerock4456 Před 2 lety

      @@Izumi-sp6fp teeth do not burn.

    • @Vevay1961
      @Vevay1961 Před rokem

      @@bluerock4456 So..... you're saying his teeth were larger than the average toddler is tall? If he had 2.5 foot tall teeth in his 5 foot 7 body, he was a freak.

  • @100forks
    @100forks Před 2 lety +36

    None of the thousands that he tortured and killed got to live an extra 30 years like he did. But his day of reckoning is
    still to come; when the Lord returns.

    • @DaveGIS123
      @DaveGIS123 Před 2 lety +2

      I can't wait to see his face on the Day of Judgement when he realizes his judge is Jesus, the King of the Jews!

    • @100forks
      @100forks Před 2 lety +1

      @@DaveGIS123 Great reply

    • @mariafrost1762
      @mariafrost1762 Před 2 lety

      And the prize for the stupidest post here goes to ..............YOU!!
      Clearly way out of your depth on this topic.

    • @typetersen8809
      @typetersen8809 Před 2 lety

      @@mariafrost1762 WHY?

  • @LeopardIL2
    @LeopardIL2 Před 2 lety

    Man this is top notch content, uncensored History.
    Can you make one about Max Wunche?

  • @raymondcottle5554
    @raymondcottle5554 Před 2 lety +34

    Have you heard the sayings “what goes around, comes around”, “you reap what you sow” and “ live by the sword, die by the sword. So Justice is then served.

  • @Pugiron
    @Pugiron Před 2 lety +88

    Sadly, none of his surviving men were with him in the fire.

  • @paulmcwilliams1709
    @paulmcwilliams1709 Před 2 lety +96

    Joachim Peiper was lucky he was allowed to live as long as he did, and some people can't forget what he did, and what he believed in.

    • @paulmcwilliams1709
      @paulmcwilliams1709 Před 2 lety +10

      Those people that were alive during the War couldn't forget what he and the SS did to the American soldiers at Malmady, and the citizens of France, so I don't blame them for wanting him gone.

    • @alfredagain
      @alfredagain Před 2 lety +5

      These days he'd have his face blanked out, be given a new identity, and be given all the rest of the treatment that is a murdering thug's rights just in case some vigilantes did what the courts failed to do - which is what happened.

    • @leonardolupini3484
      @leonardolupini3484 Před 2 lety +8

      @@paulmcwilliams1709 Peiper was miles away on the day of the massacre.

    • @paulmcwilliams1709
      @paulmcwilliams1709 Před 2 lety +3

      @@leonardolupini3484 He was an SS soldier, who believed in Hitler and everything that Hitler believed in. The SS were well known for killing innocent civilians and POW's. So, I think that Peiper wasn't by no means a choir boy! He did as he was ordered just like the other SS men did.

    • @daleburrell6273
      @daleburrell6273 Před 2 lety +6

      @@leonardolupini3484 ...HOW THE HELL DO YOU KNOW THAT?!
      ANYWAY, AN OFFICER IS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE ACTIONS OF THE PEOPLE UNDER HIS COMMAND!!!
      PEIPER WAS NOT BLAMELESS- AND YOU DAM WELL KNOW IT!!!

  • @jaythekid4809
    @jaythekid4809 Před rokem +3

    From what it sounds like, he got off easy.

  • @Namtov
    @Namtov Před 2 lety +24

    He had Command responsibility of the malmedy massacre. He had left the area when the incident happened.

    • @carlhicksjr8401
      @carlhicksjr8401 Před 2 lety +6

      Doesn't matter.
      He was the commander and later testimony stated clearly that he obliquely gave the order... Something to effect of "We don't have the time or supplies to handle these prisoners, Hauptsturmfuhrer. Deal with it."
      Then he lost the war, which tripled his chances for getting tried as a war criminal. In the end, the sons'a bitch deserved to die on fire.

    • @samuelgordino
      @samuelgordino Před 2 lety +3

      @@carlhicksjr8401 More a case my man, my responsibility. He had nothing to do with the massacre but were his man's so he assumed the responsibility. I'm taking abou the Malmedy massacre only, the other war crimes are a different matter.

    • @scrat4379
      @scrat4379 Před 2 lety

      @Sam Gordino, he was SS though wasn't he? One isn't entitled to discretion when you're a member of the SS..he was a committed Nazi.

    • @Vevay1961
      @Vevay1961 Před rokem

      Read the trial testimony. Even Peiper did not dispute the testimony of survivors and his own troops that was on the scene and had simply moved less than 1 km down the road when the shooting started.

    • @Namtov
      @Namtov Před rokem

      @@Vevay1961 And ? Any conflict in my statement and your statement ?

  • @raoulgrimm9974
    @raoulgrimm9974 Před 2 lety +8

    i love happy endings

  • @bradleybriscoe2608
    @bradleybriscoe2608 Před 2 lety +89

    An extremely interesting, well researched and non biased book about Peiper entitled 'Hitler's Warrior: The Life and Wars of SS Colonel Jochen Peiper' was written by author Danny S. Parker in 2014. A highly recommended read for any WWII enthusiast.

    • @zaynevanday142
      @zaynevanday142 Před 2 lety +23

      Peiper was a brave soldier

    • @batrachian149
      @batrachian149 Před 2 lety +25

      @@zaynevanday142 He was a Nazi, and now he's a dead Nazi. The only good kind.

    • @johnstevens3048
      @johnstevens3048 Před 2 lety +11

      @@lei3746 didn't just shoot civilians an pows though did he? Although you may not like to admit it, these nazi fanatics made some of the best soldiers the world has ever seen to this day

    • @MassachusettsTrainVideos1136
      @MassachusettsTrainVideos1136 Před 2 lety +18

      @@zaynevanday142 What a brave soldier shooting civilians so courageous. Give me a break

    • @jaybuck5818
      @jaybuck5818 Před 2 lety +10

      @@zaynevanday142
      Not brave enough to stand by the atrocities he committed.

  • @themerchantofengland
    @themerchantofengland Před 2 lety

    So interesting, thanks.

  • @dougjohnson5243
    @dougjohnson5243 Před 2 lety +2

    So what is the rest of the story about the remainder of Mrs. Peiper's life?

    • @ileanaaacotaacosta7769
      @ileanaaacotaacosta7769 Před rokem +2

      To Doug Johnson Peipers wife Sigurd survived him for almost three years and of an illness hepatitis in April 1979 at 67 she was cremated and Peipers ashes arnd hers are together in a Bavarian cemetery

  • @philmitchellboxing8661
    @philmitchellboxing8661 Před 2 lety +27

    How coincidental that the fire fighters hoses didn't work when the famous Nazis housewas on fire 😅

    • @STScott-qo4pw
      @STScott-qo4pw Před 2 lety +1

      i noticed that tiny little detail. Odd, doncha think...?

    • @mglenn7092
      @mglenn7092 Před 2 lety +4

      I’m willing to give the fire brigade the benefit of the doubt - and more to the point, credit the people who burned out Peiper;’s lair with thinking ahead and sabotaging the fire hydrants before the fire brigade got there. But, nice coincidence…. Aka plausible deniability…

    • @GazB85
      @GazB85 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jmy7622 Don't reply? It's not your channel, Nazi defender.

  • @8472turtle
    @8472turtle Před 2 lety +44

    The Russian movie come and see shows what they did.... Thank you for telling these stories Mark. All your hard work is appreciated.

    • @ducomaritiem7160
      @ducomaritiem7160 Před 2 lety +7

      I've seen that movie, you can't catch sleep for some time after watching it.

    • @8472turtle
      @8472turtle Před 2 lety

      @@dietrich7090 he did order his units to kill civilian non combatants.... He fought on the Russian side and then was involved with malmedy... Everyone knows what Germany did during that time. Your defending a murderer....
      History will remember him as such regardless.

    • @8472turtle
      @8472turtle Před 2 lety +2

      @@dietrich7090 peiper was sent out to perform the Final solution... He was sent out to destroy everything in his path...
      That's what Hitler wanted.
      He negated his right to live through his OWN actions... Once a Nazi always one....

    • @8472turtle
      @8472turtle Před 2 lety +1

      @@dietrich7090 only good Nazi is a dead Nazi... Have a good day

    • @8472turtle
      @8472turtle Před 2 lety

      @@dietrich7090 LoL 😂.... OKAY... FRITZ....
      Da svidaniya.... Uvidimsya... Comrade... Malinkiy mushchina....

  • @richardweston7595
    @richardweston7595 Před 2 lety +22

    Choosing to live in France seems odd to me. That decision eventually caught up with him.

    • @polarvortex3294
      @polarvortex3294 Před 2 lety +5

      It's nice in the countryside there. There's a charm in the very air. Perhaps he thought that by moving to such a place he could forget his troubled past. Also, as a narcissist, and unused to caring much about the feelings and lives of others, he no doubt underestimated the pain he'd caused by committing his many crimes and the abiding hatred he'd engendered.

    • @lasko24
      @lasko24 Před 2 lety +2

      Many ex German soldiers ended up settling in other countries after the war.Which is the thing with wars after it is over it seems like everyone is supposed to pretend it never happened. Like the scene from Band of Brothers where the US soldier and the German soldier was doing traffic stops together and just talking like a few days before they wasn't trying to kill each other.

    • @polarvortex3294
      @polarvortex3294 Před 2 lety

      @@lasko24 Your words remind me of the legend of Valhalla, where the warriors would fight each other during the day and then feast together at night. Or how, in the Great War, many soldiers met between the trenches during the first Christmas to exchange little presents and drinks. And the idea that your opponents are OK lives on in modern sporting events when people shake hands after a hard-fought game. But I guess there's a kind of code that must followed in order for everyone, as you say, to "pretend it never happened."

    • @bluerock4456
      @bluerock4456 Před 2 lety

      @@polarvortex3294 He thought himself a superior being; why would he take notice of the feelings of inferiors?

    • @cactuslietuva
      @cactuslietuva Před 2 lety

      @@bluerock4456 Then why he begged for protection for the local french police if he felt superior.

  • @lulurosenkrantz3720
    @lulurosenkrantz3720 Před 2 lety +7

    Peiper was not even present during the Malmady massacre . An American officer spoke in his defence during his trial . The Malmady massacre was allegedly perpetrated by young recruits acting outside orders .

    • @davidlynch9049
      @davidlynch9049 Před 2 lety

      Doesn't matter. He was the leader. And he killed many innocent people.

  • @DartmanX
    @DartmanX Před 2 lety +44

    Always love a feel good story.

    • @hooper4581
      @hooper4581 Před 2 lety +1

      I got that warm fuzzy feeling myself

  • @christopherjohnson2171
    @christopherjohnson2171 Před 2 lety +7

    Well done people of France.

    • @stefanvogel8255
      @stefanvogel8255 Před 2 lety

      Idiot...He had nothing to do with Malmedy. Watch unter Galgen wächst kein Gras...

  • @SmellyNutz
    @SmellyNutz Před 2 lety +5

    A really well made video
    Didn't think that the war's effects would be felt 30 years later

    • @DaveGIS123
      @DaveGIS123 Před 2 lety +1

      Thirty years really isn't a long time, and the events of WW2 were well within living memory.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart Před rokem +1

      ​@@DaveGIS123 especially for anyone who lost a close relative or loved one

  • @ryandavis9898
    @ryandavis9898 Před 2 lety +38

    My grandfather max brusinski was an American citizen and that side of my family came back to Poland and he became a tank commander then fought on the side of the british and my great uncle was interned at auschwitz but survived the war I guess my great uncle found it hard to find work in america so changed our last name to davis

    • @norms3913
      @norms3913 Před 2 lety +5

      I think my grandad helped liberate dachau camp

    • @nickmerino9440
      @nickmerino9440 Před rokem

      Sad he changed your names. I'm a fellow pole. My mom's side has a very polish last name like your gpops, but they didn't change it.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart Před rokem

      ​@@nickmerino9440 maybe sad, maybe not

  • @conceptalfa
    @conceptalfa Před 2 lety +11

    Great documentary!!! 👍 👍 👍

  • @warrenkimble4578
    @warrenkimble4578 Před 2 lety +2

    Bloody good shows mate 😃👍

  • @abramjones9091
    @abramjones9091 Před 2 lety +2

    Died from smoke inhalation, not burned alive... big difference

  • @patdalager2598
    @patdalager2598 Před 2 lety +29

    Well it's hard to fight a fire with firearms. Couldn't have happened to a better person.

  • @abacab87
    @abacab87 Před 2 lety +29

    So he didn't burn alive, he was overcome with smoke while trying to save possessions. Not that different than the many deaths I hear about locally.

    • @leodesalis5915
      @leodesalis5915 Před 2 lety +12

      99.99% of the time someone "burns alive" the smoke inhalation would've killed them first, it's only people put through incineration chambers or trapped in burning vehicles that are actually burnt alive. He would've died in agony and he got his just desserts he should've met the hang man 30 year's prior so he should count himself lucky.

    • @Bahamut3525
      @Bahamut3525 Před rokem

      @@leodesalis5915 " he should've met the hang man 30 year's prior "
      Are you a judge?

    • @leodesalis5915
      @leodesalis5915 Před rokem +2

      @@Bahamut3525 if you think what he did didn't deserve death then I already know your not worth debating over this

    • @Bahamut3525
      @Bahamut3525 Před rokem

      @@leodesalis5915 It's a good thing you don't have the education to have studied law and actually worked in the justice system.

    • @leodesalis5915
      @leodesalis5915 Před rokem +1

      @@Bahamut3525 😂😂😂😂your funny pal

  • @salus1231
    @salus1231 Před 2 lety +10

    The original sentence of hanging should have been carried out. There was little mitigating reason for
    a prison sentence and none at all for it to be reduced. There really were SS and other Nazis hung for
    less. This Peiper case is puzzling when you look at it.

    • @Vevay1961
      @Vevay1961 Před rokem

      Americans should have turned Peiper and his whole unit over to the Soviets. They were just as subhuman as the Nazis, so Peiper and his scumbag subordinates would have crapped their pants when they learned they were being shipped off to the Soviets. Probably would have started hanging themselves in their cells within minutes.

  • @charlesfaure1189
    @charlesfaure1189 Před 2 lety +26

    The thought of this piece of dung getting what was coming to him warms my heart. "I do not understand why people keep dragging up history" --said the war criminal.

    • @jussim.konttinen4981
      @jussim.konttinen4981 Před 2 lety +1

      As if Molotov was not

    • @frasierkrane3593
      @frasierkrane3593 Před 2 lety

      these people fought for their countries and suffered for their own reasons, just as you project yours.

    • @matthewdavid6134
      @matthewdavid6134 Před 2 lety

      @@frasierkrane3593 There is a difference between defending ones country and killing civilians or capture prisoners in a foreign country

    • @lscher2461
      @lscher2461 Před 2 lety +1

      @@matthewdavid6134 What you describe sounds exacly what the USA and nato have been doing the last 20 years... and these are modern times, supposed to be diferent from the savage 30s and 40s.
      How many times did USA ignore sovereignities and invaded middle eastern countries? Ask the families of the 700.000 civilians killed there if the think the USA is good or bad, you might have a surprise!

    • @matthewdavid6134
      @matthewdavid6134 Před 2 lety +1

      @@lscher2461 can’t defend your side so you have insult another is that it? Cause when did I say I supported nato invasions? That’s a tired and old tactic that shows you know your position is indefensible, just admit you’re a biased Nazi so we can all go on.

  • @rayjames6096
    @rayjames6096 Před 2 lety +20

    Sounds like justice was belatedly served but eventually served with style.

  • @michaelgabriel7919
    @michaelgabriel7919 Před 2 lety +16

    I had no idea that Peiper avoided justice after the war... but looks like justice finally met up with Joachim Peiper.
    I can understand why his death sentence was commuted. US soldiers and prison guards would have known who he was and what happened at Malmedy.
    And while I don't condone their actions... I can understand why they did it.
    What is most curious is the fact that Peiper's 30+ year prison sentence was reduced to drastically. My guess is, as a senior SS officer, the Allies decided to use his knowledge at aid them in anti-Soviet activities during the Cold War... like many other former SS and German intelligence officers.
    Peiper deserved to be held accountable for his despicable actions during the war... and eventually he was... just not by a court a law.

  • @joecaner
    @joecaner Před 2 lety +34

    "I suppose if I had lost the war, I would have been tried as a war criminal."
    - Curtis LeMay

    • @earlfruitbat9032
      @earlfruitbat9032 Před 2 lety +3

      Relevance?

    • @joecaner
      @joecaner Před 2 lety +5

      @@earlfruitbat9032 I would think it obvious. War crimes are the rule, not the exception during hostilities, and there are perps among all the belligerents, but only those on the losing side are punished, never the victors.

    • @tomfrazier1103
      @tomfrazier1103 Před 2 lety

      Curtis LeMay has been somewhat punished by being held in ignominy by many other Americans, as well as Japanese civilians.

    • @joecaner
      @joecaner Před 2 lety +2

      @@tomfrazier1103 I've heard tell that Dick Cheney is held in ignominy by many Americans, as well as Iraqi civilians. Is he also being somewhat punished?

    • @drdr76
      @drdr76 Před 2 lety

      @@joecaner War crimes may be the rule, but in the case of WWII, there were many more committed by the Nazis than others. To the victor go the spoils. It has always been that way--kinda the definition of winning.

  • @borjastick
    @borjastick Před 2 lety +17

    He didn't commit the Malmedy atrocity. He was responsible but wasn't present. If you want a really good read on his story try Leo Kessler's S.S. Pieper. Fascinating story.

    • @doncarlton4858
      @doncarlton4858 Před 2 lety +2

      Peiper was responsible because he was in direct command of the killers.

    • @borjastick
      @borjastick Před 2 lety +3

      @@doncarlton4858 No he wasn't in 'direct' command because he was miles away. He held his hand up to if you like corporate responsibility because he was their commanding officer.. Read the book and you'll see exactly what happened.

    • @Charlesputnam-bn9zy
      @Charlesputnam-bn9zy Před 2 lety +1

      @@doncarlton4858
      Peiper was innocent for Malmedy
      in the same way that
      general Homma was innocent for the Bataan death march.

    • @Asger21
      @Asger21 Před 2 lety +4

      I love all Leo Kessler's books but though many details were right, there were a lot of fiction in them as well.
      Truth mixed with lies are just lies.

    • @salus1231
      @salus1231 Před 2 lety +2

      Fan of him were you ?

  • @josiel152
    @josiel152 Před 2 lety +51

    I"ve wondered why so many killers of civilians and the Nazi who committed war crimes and should have been hanged got there
    sentences commuted. Never seemed right to me when they killed and tortured so many including children.

    • @tonyjames5444
      @tonyjames5444 Před 2 lety +9

      The number of Japanese military personnel who escaped justice for dare I say even more horrific crimes is shameful, unlike the Nazis the the bulk of Japanese war crimes went unpunished.

    • @lscher2461
      @lscher2461 Před 2 lety +2

      Well ask the americans about the thousands of n4z1s that they brought overseas and treated them way Better than American veterans... apparently when the evil ones help you get into space before the s0viets its all good huh? But instead lets worry about the 3 or 4 that escaped to the magical mointains of Argentina, not on the thousands we brought here...

    • @itsreallyjustmehere611
      @itsreallyjustmehere611 Před 2 lety

      @@lscher2461 the soviets did the exact same thing

    • @deadby15
      @deadby15 Před 2 lety +4

      The US hasn't even apologized to the Vietnamese for spraying Dioxin over civilians.

    • @mglenn7092
      @mglenn7092 Před 2 lety

      Tony James, L Scher - unfortunately we tend to live in a very unjust world where the perpetrators of atrocities usually get away with it, and it is rather shameful that we protected a lot of nazis (because they were useful) and let a lot of Japanese war criminals off the hook (because it was politically expedient when we needed Japan's support as a base while we were fighting in Korea - that's really the point when the War Crimes/Crimes Against Humanity tribunals in Japan stopped). We continue to let a lot of people get away with it - including some on our side who deserve to be prosecuted and punished for the ways they've crossed all moral lines. The real world does really suck that way.
      It's still gratifying though to see that not all of the monsters masquerading as human beings, animals like Joachim Peiper, escaped a just karmic end for their atrocities.

  • @wilhelmhesse1348
    @wilhelmhesse1348 Před 2 lety +6

    Those eyes are void of all kindness... Empty... Hollow...

  • @dfaltin
    @dfaltin Před 2 lety +2

    It wasn’t an execution, but murder

    • @Vevay1961
      @Vevay1961 Před rokem

      Another apologist crying because a war criminal that slaughtered children and unarmed civilians got the justice he deserved. Execute him, revive him, and repeat the cycle for each of his thousands of victims.

  • @TheYeti308
    @TheYeti308 Před 2 lety +11

    Undisclosed info was this ; A good amount of blood was found out side the building , a contribution of two types not of Pipers , suggesting that a couple of Pipers assailants were critically hit in the exchange of gun fire .

  • @millertime4993
    @millertime4993 Před 2 lety +15

    Hearing he died in such a brutal way really warms my heart.

  • @sonnyburnett8725
    @sonnyburnett8725 Před 2 lety +22

    Thank you for this story. I’ve always wanted to know how and what happened that night. Sounds like they got it spot on.

    • @JOEBURNES2006
      @JOEBURNES2006 Před rokem

      Murdered by communists==========thats spot on????? not hardly

  • @davidanthony4845
    @davidanthony4845 Před rokem

    As that WWII vet & superb writer Paul Fusseĺl put it in wartime ' think of a struggle between something profoundly defective and something absolutely irredeemable. '

  • @virginiawilkinson5038
    @virginiawilkinson5038 Před rokem +1

    You get by, but you never get away.

  • @lei3746
    @lei3746 Před 2 lety +37

    Good Riddance

    • @NiallMS1
      @NiallMS1 Před 2 lety

      Deffo, and a just end as well!!

  • @Csmallo
    @Csmallo Před 2 lety +19

    If by "executed" you mean "murdered by terrorists", then you are correct.

    • @kayvan671
      @kayvan671 Před 2 lety +10

      No, the original title is better.

    • @vchk5330
      @vchk5330 Před 2 lety +1

      yeah based

    • @racertian
      @racertian Před 2 lety +4

      He should have swung from a short length rope. Escaped justice by sulking like a pitiful child during his trial and claiming he was bullied whilst a prisoner. Take a look at the start of the film when the murderous Nazis are walking round the yard. One of them can clearly be seen strolling as if he has not got a care in the world, hands in pocket, smirking and laughing...and who is it ...the monstrous Pieper. The worthless individual, not a man, who accompanied his close friend Himmler on tours of concentration camps, the coward who participated in atrocities that saw women and children rounded up and executed, who committed numerous war crimes and he escaped the noose by claiming he had been 'bullied'.....'murdered by terrorists' ? ... A suggestion as worthless as the evil maniac himself.

    • @equarg
      @equarg Před 2 lety +2

      🤔…………..
      Meh, I will go with executed.
      Hard to feel sorry for an ex SS officer who ordered the brutal death of innocents and POW’s.
      Heck, today I learned about the Hungover Austrian hanging pole method of execution. Much different then the long (or short) drop method of execution most know about.
      Apparently a man is marched to a 9 foot pole, has legs tied to a rope connected to a pulley(and one executer on the ground waits to yank on hard), and a strap put under his arm pits to string up the pole.
      He is poised up the pole suddenly, where a 2nd execute puts a noose connected to a hook around his neck……and then holds the condemned head points down physically.
      Then the executer below yanks the foot restraints dropping the condemned down, tightening the noose. The 2nd executer then physically breaks the commends neck as the noose pulls.
      Saw a post WW2 video of it. It was brutal……but obviously quick.
      Very hands on. I felt sorry for the executer, really hands on.

  • @norms3913
    @norms3913 Před 2 lety +4

    My grand dad fought at malmedy facing the onslaught of the tiger 1 tanks racing towards the town

    • @markwicks5988
      @markwicks5988 Před rokem

      Don't believe there were any tiger 1 tanks at malmedy

  • @fondelmaddick5085
    @fondelmaddick5085 Před 2 lety +10

    What was said about his involvement and punishment regarding the Malmedy massacre, is incorrect. American troops came forward in his defence at his trial, making it clear he told his men NOT to shoot escaping GI's.

    • @Vevay1961
      @Vevay1961 Před rokem +1

      Lying seems to be one of your strongest skills.

  • @MrSviggels
    @MrSviggels Před 2 lety +6

    But did the dogs live?

  • @Will-ux1dg
    @Will-ux1dg Před 2 lety +14

    How could his execution be brutal when he was a murderer.

    • @oman9492
      @oman9492 Před 2 lety +1

      You suffer from sadism. Being sadistic is the purest and some say the only true form of evil. You need help

    • @peterecos634
      @peterecos634 Před 2 lety

      @@oman9492 What was the murder of 76 American GIs at Malmedy? Or the killing of the Italian civilians? Don't tell me orders are orders. That excuse doesn't work.

    • @oman9492
      @oman9492 Před 2 lety

      @@peterecos634 it was sick in the head by sadistic sheep. No excuse but that doesn't mean they should be tortured to death. Just kill them quickly and move on. Torturing people is sadistic doesn't matter if it was does by the so called good guys

    • @mrblackmamba117
      @mrblackmamba117 Před 2 lety +1

      @@oman9492 well I'm a sadist then. Any convicted murderer, rapist, etc should be made to suffer till their last breath.

    • @Vevay1961
      @Vevay1961 Před rokem

      @@oman9492 So your approach to those who murder innocent men, women and children is hug them and make them feel better about themselves so you won't be considered "sadistic". Check in with your psychiatrist. Tell them your meds need to be increased because you're making excuses for serial killers again.

  • @philc4520
    @philc4520 Před 2 lety +1

    Local fire brigade: “whose house is this? Oh Joachim Peipers….oh shit…doesn’t look like our pumps working”! Knock knock - Peiper: “Who’s there”? Answer: Karma bitch….that’s who.

  • @johnhenni2808
    @johnhenni2808 Před 2 lety +2

    The creator's Attitude of superiority throughout this and all this guy's vids. Nothing new to add ever, he just tut-tuts and oh dear oh dear , oh dearie me throughout.

  • @davidpostma9862
    @davidpostma9862 Před 2 lety +34

    I’ve known of this brute for a long time. Glad the group served justice.

    • @gravitatemortuus1080
      @gravitatemortuus1080 Před 2 lety

      Actually, it may have not been. He said the body was confirmed but actually the head and hands were to burned to do so. But the rest of the body was not. There is evidence he may have been moved to another location and this was to cover it. Several books on it. Who knows.

    • @davidpostma9862
      @davidpostma9862 Před 2 lety +1

      He ran over Gil’s with his tanks who came out to surrender

    • @jmy7622
      @jmy7622 Před 2 lety +3

      @@davidpostma9862 He never drove a tank.

    • @morge...
      @morge... Před 2 lety

      @@davidpostma9862 eikel

  • @googoogjoobgoogoogjoob
    @googoogjoobgoogoogjoob Před 2 lety +17

    How shocking! That he lived so much of his post-war life as a free man.

    • @Bahamut3525
      @Bahamut3525 Před rokem

      So do many American war criminals still alive today.
      Even Arthur "Bomber" Harris (responsible for bombing of Germany and Dresden) himself said: "I enjoyed incinerating German women and children".
      He gloated about it and died a hero.