Why did Field-Marshal Montgomery believe that a Germany that ‘looked East’ was ‘a menace to the British Empire’?

5th April 2009

For the last few weeks I’ve been writing about different aspects of Field-Marshal Montgomery’s year as Military Governor of the British Zone of Germany, based mostly on his unpublished ‘Notes on the Occupation of Germany’ held as part of his papers at the archives of the Imperial War Museum.

It seems to have been an extraordinarily active time for him. As I wrote last week, he repeatedly made the point that “our hardest task remains to be tackled”. After the destruction caused by war, the task of “rebuilding European civilisation” required the same, or even greater, levels of dedication, hard work and personal sacrifice, as winning the war had done.

It’s almost as if, in some ways, he didn’t want the war to end. The Battles of Normandy and of the Rhine, which culminated in the unconditional surrender of all German forces in North-West Europe on Luneburg Heath on May 4th 1945, were soon followed by the “Battle of the Winter” whose objectives, this time, were not to defeat the enemy, or capture territory, but “food, work and homes” for people in Germany.

He made a conscious decision that, in the absence of any functioning civil administration, he would use the army to tackle the chaos and confusion he found in Germany after the war, and operations ‘Overlord’, ‘Market Garden’ and ‘Plunder’ were followed by Operations ‘Barleycorn’ (the release of captured German POWs to work on the land and help bring in the harvest), ‘Coalscuttle’ (a further release of POWs to work in the coalmines of the Ruhr) and ‘Stork’ (the evacuation of young children from the British Zone in Berlin).

He issued four ‘personal messages’ to the population of the British Zone, addressing a civilian population of 20 million people in much the same way as he addressed his own troops before going into battle. As the number of soldiers under his command in Normandy, when he was supreme Allied Commander in July 1944, was around 2 million, perhaps the difference was not that great? In message no.3, for example, issued on 8th August 1945, exactly 3 months after the end of the war in Europe, he told the German people he was:

“… now going to proceed with the second stage of the Allied policy. In this stage it is my intention that you shall have freedom to get down to your own way of life, subject only to the provisions of military security and necessity. I will help you eradicate idleness, boredom, and fear of the future. Instead I want to give you an objective, and hope for the future.”

In his three ‘Notes on the Present Situation’ issued a little earlier, on 25th June, 6th and 14th July, and sent to his Corps Commanders and the Heads of Division of the British Control Commission, he had already outlined what he meant by the “second stage of Allied policy,” in some detail. For example in the second of these notes, he explained to his colleagues that:

“Two months have now passed since Germany surrendered and the country passed to the control of the Allied Nations.

During these two months the full extent of the debacle has become apparent; we now know the magnitude of the problem that confronts us in the rebuilding of Germany.

The coming winter will be a critical time. In the British Zone there will be a shortage of food, a very definite shortage of coal, inadequate services of transportation and distribution, and insufficient accommodation. Northwest Europe is very cold in the winter; the average temperature is freezing and heavy falls of snow are frequent; under such conditions people want food and warmth, and they are likely to lack both.

The great mass of 20 million people in the British Zone are in for a hard time this winter; they are apprehensive about food, about housing, and about the general unsettled conditions.

The best way to counteract this feat is to give them ‘hope’

It is clear that we must tackle the ‘battle of the winter’ energetically, and we must win it; for if we lost it, we would compromise the future.

We require a good short term plan to take us through the winter; this must be closely linked to the long term plan for the complete restoration of the economic life of Germany.”

Although this was not explicitly stated in these notes, it appears that, in his mind, the task of rebuilding civilisation in Europe was now closely associated with the urgent need for reconstruction in Germany. Existing policy, agreed by the Allies before the end of the war and implemented by SHAEF, the joint British and US Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force, was, in his view no longer relevant. As he explained in the Notes:

“I think some of our troubles are due to a tendency to adhere rigidly to SHAEF instructions issued previously; many of these instructions are now out of date.”

A week, later, in the third Note, he was able to say that he had been given authority, by the Government, to act on his own initiative in the British Zone, without waiting for joint agreement by all the Allies:

“In my ‘Notes of the Present Situation’ dated 6 July, I outlined the problem that is likely to confront us during the coming months and I gave my views on the methods we should adopt to deal with the situation.

It has now been agreed that the Directive issued to me as C-in-C [Commander-in-Chief] of the British Forces of occupation in Germany, and U.K. member of the Control Council, gives me full powers to begin work on the policy we want to adopt: without waiting for the Control Council to become fully operative…

Our present attitude towards the German people is negative, it must be replaced by one that is positive and holds out hope for the future.”

By the end of the year, the ‘Battle of the Winter’ seemed to have been won, but perhaps surprisingly, Montgomery’s outlook for the future had deteriorated rather than improved.

On 8th October 1945, he returned to England for a conference of the Chiefs of the Imperial General Staff, the most senior military body in the country, and didn’t return to Germany until the 27th.

In the ‘Notes on the Occupation of Germany’ he says he was first told he would be appointed CIGS or Chief of the Imperial General Staff on 26th January the following year, 1946, but he may have been given an indication of this during the conference, as for the remainder of the year, he appeared increasingly preoccupied with the problems faced by the British Army, (rather than those of the British Zone of Germany), arguing strongly that the army should not be reduced in size too much, too quickly. (The war against Japan had ended two months earlier with the surrender of Japan on VJ Day, August 15th 1945, following the atom bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki on 6th and 9th August).

In a paper Montgomery gave at the conference in October, he said he expected the occupation of Germany to last a long time, 20 years or more, and this represented an ideal opportunity to get training facilities for the British army, at no cost:

“An Army of occupation would be required in Germany for at least ten, and possibly twenty years … The Field Army should normally be kept and trained in Germany, where the cost would be borne by the Germans and where training facilities were magnificent.”

On 31st October he started a tour of the Army Corps in Germany in a special train ‘Lion’ meeting his troops and canvassing their views. His diary shows he made three separate tours, over the next two months, each lasting just under a week.

He continued to press the case that the number of troops should not  fall below what he considered minimum requirements, arguing in December that although: “‘The Battle of the Winter’ is proceeding and it is my opinion that we shall win that battle… this is no time for complacency.”

“…the British Zone has remained quiet. So far scarcely a spark has occurred. I do not think we shall have any trouble with the Germans this winter;  they are fully occupied with their own immediate troubles; our main problems this winter are more likely to be with the hard facts of economics; how to sustain the Zone with the minimum of starvation and disease.

Our conflicts with the Germans lie ahead; but they will come. Next year, 1946, is going to be a difficult time; the Germans will have got through the winter and will be feeling better; they will see their factories and coal being removed; they will realise that they themselves are not to be allowed to benefit from the recovery of their country.

We have removed from positions of responsibility a large number of Nazi Germans, all immensely capable people and first-class organisers; these people are now idle.
 
Our industrial and economic policy is such that there is bound to be widespread unemployment in Germany as time goes on.

We have demobilised in the Zone about two million fighting men and are now in process of adding about another half million to the figure.

It will be clear from this brief outline that there is much fertile ground in which to sow the seeds of discontent and trouble.

Therefore I am convinced that our conflicts with the Germans lie ahead, and may well begin next year.

It is essential that we should not let the strength of our armed forces in Germany run down too quickly…”

After returning home for the Christmas holidays, he saw the Prime Minister, Clement Atlee, on Christmas Eve and on January 3rd he addressed a full meeting of the Cabinet, at which, according to his ‘Notes’, he made the same points, but this time also stressing the need to import food, to prevent starvation the following year:

“… the 23 million Germans in the British Zone were peaceable now but might not be so in the future; and he emphasised that the outcome of the Battle of the Winter depended on the Imports of Wheat, without which the Germans would starve.”

In summary, it appears that, although this is not stated in the Notes, Montgomery was losing the argument with the government in London in at least three areas he considered crucial:

– the size of the army in Germany was being reduced too far
– imports of wheat might not be sufficient to prevent starvation, with resulting discontent and unrest, which could be difficult to control
– the level of industry proposed for the future German economy was not sufficient to prevent unemployment, promote economic reconstruction and give German people ‘hope for the future’

(For the context and background for the second two points, see earlier posts in this blog on Bread Rationing in Britain, and the Level of Industry Talks). 

With hindsight, we know that after Montgomery left Germany in May 1946, British policy changed yet again in all three areas. Decisions were taken to maintain the British Army of the Rhine in Germany indefinitely (it is still there today), significant imports of wheat from the US were sent to Germany from 1946 onwards, and the very restrictive terms agreed by all the Allies at the Level of Industry Talks in Berlin in January 1946 were soon relaxed allowing German industry to expand from 1947 and 1948 onwards.

However, in early 1946 things looked very different. The conclusion Montgomery drew was that the consequences of the current restrictive British policy (as determined in London) was that the German people would look to Russia for support, rather than to the US or Britain, and that a hostile Germany combined with a communist Russia could be a serious threat to the security of Britain and the British Empire.

Before he left Germany, Montgomery expressed these concerns in two memos. The first, on the Problem in Germany, was dated 1 Feb 1946. In this he said that: ‘The Battle of the Winter’ had been won:

“No epidemics had broken out and the general health of the German people had been maintained. But the outlook for the future was now worse than ever before…. The future level of German economy would cause distress and unemployment; the influx of refugees was just beginning; all stocks of consumer goods had now been used up. The next battle would be more serious than the ‘Battle of the Winter.’”

His final ‘Notes on the German Situation’ are dated 1st May 1946, the day before he left Germany. Montgomery claims in his Memoirs he took it back to England and "handed a copy personally to the Prime Minister" (though not to his successor as Military Governor in Germany, Sholto Douglas, who complained later that he had never been given these and only learnt of their existence many years later). In these final Notes Montgomery wrote that:

“The general picture was sombre if not black. The food crisis overshadowed all else, but there were other serious factors. The whole German economy was sick. Coal was short, industries lay idle, and there were few goods in the shops. The level of industry agreement was bound to cause distress and might produce unemployment. The result of this situation was the beginning of inflation.”

He went on to say there was a need for “a concrete plan designed to bring about a change of heart in the German people”. The foundation for the plan was “the economic line of attack” and Germans must have “a reasonable standard of living; they must be given some hope for the future…”

“I gave it as my opinion that if we did not do this, we would fail in Germany.

We have not done it and I would say that at the moment there is a definite danger that we may fail. By that I mean there is a danger that if things do not improve the Germans in the British Zone will begin to look EAST. When that happens we shall have failed, and there will exist a definite menace to the British Empire. In this connection, much communist propaganda is coming westwards over the ‘green frontier.’

The people living inside that Germany must be given a reasonable standard of living, and hope for a worth-while future.”
 …

“We must decide whether we are going to feed the Germans, or let them starve. Basically we must not let them starve; if we do, then everything else we do is of no avail.

It does not look at present as if we can increase the ration beyond the present rate of 1042 calories; this means we are going to let them starve: gradually.

In spite of the difficulties of the world food situation, we must get back to a reasonable ration standard in the British Zone as quickly as possible. The discrepancies which exist between the standard of feeding in our Zone and that in other Zones must be removed by agreement on a common standard.

… above all, we must tell the German people what is going to happen to them and to their country. If we do not do these things, we shall drift towards possible failure. That ‘drift’ will take the form of an increasingly hostile population, which will eventually begin to look EAST.

Such a Germany would be a menace to the security of the British Empire.

On the other hand, a contented Germany with a sound political framework could be a great asset to the security of the empire and the peace of the world.”

What did Field-Marshal Montgomery mean by ‘Winning the Peace’ in 1945?

30th March 2009

When I first read Field-Marshal Montgomery’s four part 'Notes on the Occupation of Germany' I ignored the speeches, reprinted in the appendices, which he gave on receiving numerous honours in Britain and in Europe, such the Freedom of the Cities of Manchester, Newport, Brussels, Antwerp, Londonderry and Canterbury, of the London Boroughs of Chiswick and Lambeth and an honorary degree from Queen’s University, Belfast.

At first I thought this showed his vanity and that success had gone to his head, as he wrote, for example, of being greeted by cheering crowds in the streets of Brussels and elsewhere. The speeches all seemed to say much the same thing, fine words and platitudes about soldiers and civilians depending on each other and the importance of the British Empire.

But on a second reading, it seemed to me that these speeches may be as close as we can get to what Montgomery’s own views really were and what he aimed to achieve after the war was over. Why else would he include all these speeches in the Notes, word for word, if he didn’t mean what he said?

On other occasions, for example when he spoke to the press and journalists, he was eminently practical, detailing the problems faced by British Military Government and the steps they had taken in response to these. He talked about issues such as the shortage of food, the problems of refugees, displaced persons, lack of accommodation, the threat of disease, shortage of coal and absenteeism in the mines, the problems of denazification, the formation of political parties, trades unions, and the need for cooperation between the allies. Some of these addresses read as if they were written for him.

The speeches he gave on receiving honours were quite different in tone. Perhaps they were an opportunity for him to say what he really thought and believed?

In these speeches the same themes re-occur again and again, expressed in different ways: the need to rebuild civilisation after the chaos and destruction of war, which can only be done through hard work, sweat and blood (if not tears); the need for personal sacrifice to achieve this, and a firm “spiritual basis” on which to build; how older men, such as himself, were tired after the stress and strain of years of war, and younger men were needed to take over the task from them; the importance of a strong and united British Empire as one of the main pillars of the post-war world.

Here are some extracts:

From his speech in reply to receiving the freedom of the city of Antwerp, on 7th June 1945

“Our first task in now ended. Together we have won the war, and have destroyed the Nazi tyranny of Europe. Our hardest task remains to be tackled. Out of the chaos and confusion which the war has inflicted on Europe we have to rebuild our European civilisation. In destroying the Nazi power, we have destroyed one great evil; much that was good and beautiful has also been destroyed, and the economic organisation of Europe lies in ruins. We can rebuild what has been destroyed only by toil and sweat, and there is no short cut back to prosperity.”

On receiving the freedom of Chiswick, 28th July 1945

“The war in Europe is now over, and the war in the Pacific will be relentlessly pressed to its certain conclusion. But even then much will remain to be done. We must now start to face the problems of rebuilding our civilisation in Europe, and in the world. As a result of this war much of Europe has been destroyed. We have lost much that was good and much that was beautiful, and the whole economic framework of Europe lies in ruins. We have got to rebuild that framework in England, in Europe, in the World, and this can only be done by toil, and sweat, and much hard work; there is no short cut to prosperity.”

On receiving the Freedom of Lambeth on 15th August 1945

“We are all tired as a result of the strain and stress through which we have passed; we all want a rest and some relaxation. I do myself. But we cannot any of us rest for long. We have a job to do which will call for all our energy and purpose. We have got to rebuild a new England and a new Europe out of the ruins of the old. Much of Europe will look to us to give them a lead and we cannot afford to neglect this great responsibility. If we do neglect it, we may well allow the seeds of yet another war to be sown.”

….

“I firmly believe that every enterprise which man undertakes, if it is to achieve any lasting success, must have a strong spiritual basis; if we attempt any great thing for soles material reasons, the results cannot be good. Today our task is greater and more complex that ever before. We have won the war; we now have to rebuild a new civilisation: a new world in which all nations may live in peace and prosperity.

We cannot achieve success in this great task unless we have a firm spiritual basis on which to build.”

….

“But we do not only want peace. We want prosperity; and there are many who think that this will be provided for us by the State: but this is a great mistake. The State can merely provide the opportunity and ensure that it is fair for all; we have got to win prosperity for ourselves, or else go without it; and we will win it for ourselves only by much hard work and by personal sacrifices on the part of us all.”

On receiving the Freedom of the City of Brussels on 12th September 1945:

“In spite of this war, and in spite of all that has been lost or destroyed by it, Europe still has the heritage of all the culture handed down to us through the ages, and this is immeasurably more valuable that our material possessions which have been destroyed. We must build our future on all that was good in the past, and must this time make sure that what we build cannot again be destroyed.”

Of especial interest were three speeches he gave in Northern Ireland, where his family originated from, and still owned land:

On receiving an honorary degree from Queen’s University, Belfast, on 14th September 1945, he started by saying: “It is a great pleasure for me who am an Irishman to come here today to receive an Honorary Degree of your famous University.”

“The future is in your hands. Many of us older men are tired with the stress and strain through which we have passed during the war. In due course we shall want a rest. But the task ahead calls for great energy and drive and the white-hot enthusiasm of youth. We older men may give the lead for a while, but it is for the younger men to take up the running and shoulder this task. I believe there are now immense opportunities for reshaping our world for the better.”

And on receiving the Honorary Burgess of the City of Belfast, later the same day he spoke of the British Empire:

“This Empire of ours does not stand still. It is a great living and developing organism, and is today, I believe, one of the great forces for good in the advancement of the world towards peace and prosperity. During this war, every part of our Empire has learnt to carry greater responsibilities, and our brotherhood in arms has brought us closer together and more conscious of each other’s problems than ever before. Let us see to it that we do not forget the lessons we have learnt. Now, as never before, we must be prepared jointly to shoulder our Imperial responsibilities, and together to help to build a new world based on our love of freedom and justice for all.”

On receiving the Freedom of the City of Londonderry the following day, 15th September 1945, he continued the same theme, invoking the history of the city “which I almost feel is my home town”:

“Before the war, the Empire was everywhere weak … A weak Empire is a danger to ourselves and to the whole world. But a strong and united Empire, united in a common belief in freedom and justice, is one of the greatest forces for good in the world today.”

“This ancient city of ours can well understand these things, since it has itself been through difficult times and suffered great tribulations: the ancient city of Derry being finally reduced to ashes early in the seventeenth century. But the people of London assisted in the work of reconstruction, and a new city arose on the ruins of the old: and was called Londonderry, on account of its connection with the capital of the Empire.

“We of Londonderry thus have a link with the Empire that can never be broken: a link that binds us strongly to the very heart of the Empire.”

On receiving the Freedom of the City of Newport, on 25th September 1945, he spoke of what he believed needed to be done in Germany:

“For how long we shall occupy Germany we cannot say now. But we will do so until we can satisfy ourselves that she can conduct her affairs decently and will not again become a canker in the heart of Europe. Therefore we must start to reorganise her country for peace, a country which has been completely destroyed. We must re-educate her, and teach her people to want to live a free and decent life, and to accept the ideals of freedom and justice. We must eradicate the poison which has been injected into her for so many years and replace it by decent ideas. This is what we are now trying to do in Germany today. It is part of our task of restoring the shattered fabric of civilisation. It will take a long time, but I think it can be done. We shall not ensure peace unless we succeed in this task.” 
 
On receiving the freedom of the City of Canterbury on 20th October 1945

“Today we stand at the beginning of a new era. Peace has been won; we must now win prosperity. We have got to rebuild our civilisation, much of which lies in ruins. This will call for much hard work, as prosperity is not automatically one of the fruits of victory.”

On receiving the Freedom of the Borough of Maidenhead on 22nd October 1945

“Furthermore, the destruction in this war has been on a far greater scale than anything known before. Our complex modern civilisation lies heavily battered, and in some parts of Europe it has almost ceased to exist.”

And finally, the conclusion to a lecture he gave at St Andrews on 15th November 1945 on 'The Spiritual basis of leadership'

“Finally I do not believe that today a commander can inspire great armies, or single units, or even individual men, and lead them to achieve great victories, unless he has a proper sense of religious truth; and he must be prepared to acknowledge it, and to lead his troops in the light of that truth. He must always keep his finger on the spiritual pulse of his armies, and he must be very sure that the spiritual purpose which inspires them is right and true, and is clearly expounded to one and all. Unless he does this he can expect no lasting success.

For all leadership, I believe, is based on the spiritual quality, the power to inspire others to follow; and this spiritual quality may be for good or may be for evil. In many cases this quality has been devoted towards personal ends and was partly or wholly evil; and, whenever this was so, in the end it failed. For leadership which is evil, while it may temporarily succeed, always carries within it the seeds of its own destruction.”

 

Field-Marshal Montgomery and the fraternisation ban

14th March 2009

I’m still trying to make sense of Field-Marshal Montgomery’s year as Military Governor of the British Zone of Germany.

His four messages to British troops on non-fraternisation, issued between March and September 1945, show how his policy gradually eased from a strict ban on any contact with the enemy.

It seems to me they also show British attitudes and assumptions changing; from an over-riding concern with the past, to concern for the future; from viewing the German people collectively, to seeing them as individuals, different from their rulers, and perhaps most bizarrely, from seeing the non-fraternisation ban as a form of collective punishment for the German people, to seeing its relaxation as the first step in a process of positive engagement between occupiers and occupied.
 
Montgomery’s first message, issued in March 1945, two months before the end of the war, forbade any contact with German men, women or children. It warned soldiers not to repeat the mistakes, believed to have been made at the end of the First World War, when British and French armies occupied the Rhineland:

“Twenty-seven years ago the Allies occupied Germany: but Germany has been at war ever since. Our Army took no revenge in 1918; it was more than considerate, and before a few weeks had passed many soldiers were adopted into German households. The enemy worked hard at being amiable…”

Meanwhile, according to the message, the German general staff prepared for war, and “‘organising sympathy’ became a German industry.… So accommodating were the occupying forces that the Germans came to believe we would never fight them again in any cause.”

This time the instruction to British troops was quite clear:

“In streets, houses, cafes, cinemas etc, you must keep clear of Germans, man woman, and child, unless you meet them in the course of your duty. You must not walk out with them, or shake hands, or visit their homes, or make them gifts, or take gifts from them. You must not play games with them or share any social event with them. In short you must not fraternise with Germans at all.”

“You will have to remember that these are the same Germans who, a short while ago, were drunk with victory, who were boasting what they as the Master Race would do to you as their slaves …”

“Our consciences are clear; ‘non-fraternisation’ to us implies no revenge; we have no theory of master races. But a guilty nation must not only be convicted: it must realise its guilt. Only then can the first steps be taken to re-educate it, and bring it back into the society of decent humanity….”

“Be just; be firm; be correct; give orders, and don’t argue. Last time we won the war and let the peace slip out of our hands. This time we must not ease off – we must win both the war and the peace.”

Three months later, on 12th June 1945, just over a month after the end of the war, Montgomery issued a brief second message that “We cannot let up on this policy … But these orders need no longer apply to small children.” A month later the ban was relaxed further and soldiers were told, in a third message to British forces, dated 14th July, that “conversation with adult Germans in the streets and in public places” was now permitted, but they were still forbidden to enter homes. Following consultations with the other occupying powers, and agreement at a meeting of the Control Council, a fourth message to all members of British Forces in Germany, dated 25th September, announced the full relaxation of the ban, except that no Allied soldiers were to be billeted with Germans or allowed to inter-marry.

Montgomery claimed in his memoirs that: “It was a great relief to get this matter settled. I had never liked the orders which we had to issue; but it was Allied policy.” This implies that in his first message he was reflecting official policy, and the easing of the ban was his response to the conditions he found on the ground.

The papers in the archives at the Imperial War Museum appear to back up this claim, at least from June 1945 onwards. They show Montgomery writing to the Secretary of State for War in London, James Grigg, recommending the relaxation of the ban, and approval to do so reluctantly granted by the government in London.

Other sources show that the ban was clearly unenforceable, and it was impossible to stop soldiers at the end of the war talking to German civilians, but I find it interesting to track the reasons given in the various messages, and in the correspondence between Montgomery and the government in London, for gradually relaxing the ban.

On 5th June Montgomery wrote to Grigg as follows:

“In March, just before the battle of the Rhine, I issued a card to every soldier on the subject, that order has been obeyed.

But we have now won the war and the problem is changed.

I consider we should ‘let-up’ by bounds, or phases; if we do not the soldiers will force our hands. We cannot expect the soldier to go on snubbing little children; he must be allowed to give full play to his natural kindly instincts. We do not want the German children to regard the British soldier as a kind of queer ogre.”

On 9th June he sent a telegram to Grigg confirming that the US army had now issued a statement that US soldiers could talk to small children and claiming it was “absurd and also very awkward” if British troops could not do the same. He went on to say he would issue an order permitting British troops to talk to small children on the following Monday, 11 June, if he had not heard otherwise.

He received a reply from a senior official at the War Office saying that his message had been referred to the Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, and may have to go to Cabinet. “Question had highly political aspects though importance of military aspects is fully appreciated. Please do NOT repeat NOT issue any orders on Monday unless and until we have communicated authority to you. We will do our best to get early decision.”

On 11th June he received a personal message from the Prime Minister saying that “I think all you say is very good. I have great confidence in your handling of the situation. If you act in the (spirit) of your [previous messages] you will have my unflinching support. Surely you should pardon quietly those [British soldiers] who have previously offended. I see one man got 56 days.” Montgomery also received a telegram from Grigg, also dated 11 June, referring to the PM’s telegram and saying he personally was also in favour of “trusting to your discretion” but suggesting the action “should NOT have too much formal publicity in this country.”

All of this suggests that that Churchill and Grigg were prepared to give Montgomery their qualified support, but were not willing, at this stage, to ask for formal approval from Cabinet. Montgomery went ahead anyway and issued his brief message on 12th June telling troops the ban “need no longer apply to small children.”

On the same day, 12th June, he issued his second personal message to the German population of the British Zone, attempting to explain the ban to them. With hindsight, at this point, the story seems to me to become surreal. In this message, the German people were addressed as if they were naughty schoolboys, punished for “allowing themselves to be deceived by their rulers” by being sent to Coventry, and Montgomery sounds like a headmaster, trying to explain to them why it was all really for their own good. I wonder what any German men, woman and children thought of it, if they read it. Here is an extract:

“Again after years of waste and slaughter and misery, your Armies have been defeated. This time the Allies were determined that you should learn your lesson – not only that you have been defeated, which you must know by now, but that you, your nation, were again guilty of beginning the war. For if that is not made clear to you, and your children, you may again allow yourselves to be deceived by your rulers, and led into another war.….

This we have ordered, this we have done, to save yourselves, to save your children, to save the world from another war. It will not always be so. For we are Christian forgiving people, and we like to smile and be friendly. Our object is to destroy the evil of the Nazi system; it is too soon to be sure that this has been done….

You are to read this to your children, if they are old enough, and see that they understand. Tell them why it is that the British soldier does not smile.”

A few weeks later, Montgomery received a note from the Prime Minister dated 6th July, saying the question of fraternisation would be discussed at a Cabinet meeting that evening and asking for his views. Montgomery replied as follows. This time the emphasis is on re-education, rather than punishment:

“I have some 20 million German civilians in the British Zone. You cannot re-educate such a number of people if you never speak to them.

The Germans have had their lesson; we have not spoken to them for two months.

I consider we should now withdraw the ban on fraternisation; intimate relations should be discouraged; the exact methods must be left to Commanders-in-Chief.”

A few days later, on 10th July, he received another telegram from Grigg giving him qualified authority to relax the ban further:

This telegram started by attempting to explain why the ban had been put in place in the first place, in similar terms to Montgomery’s message to the German population a few weeks earlier. According to the telegram, this had been done partly as a security measure but “mainly to (impress) on German and Austrian populations (a) their responsibility for the war which has brought them to their present straits (b) what other countries think of their past (conduct) and (c) as a deterrent for the future than war does NOT pay.”

The telegram went on to say that the matter had been discussed in Cabinet and Montgomery now had discretion to relax the ban further, provided this was done gradually, and timed so that “the attitude of the British occupying forces is less severe in Austria than in Germany” and he should consult General Eisenhower [the US Military Governor] so similar policies were followed in both Zones. He should also “have regard to the likelihood that the Germans might attempt to play off the Russians against the other Allies” and therefore have the matter dealt with by the Allied Control Council, rather than act on his own.

Montgomery sent a message to Eisenhower the same day, suggesting that troops should be permitted to speak to adults as well as little children. He received a reply from Eisenhower agreeing in principle and suggesting both released statements on 14th July, which they duly did.  A third letter to British forces on non-fraternisation, dated 14th July, permitted “conversation with adult Germans in the streets and in public places” but still forbade them to enter homes.

Interestingly, it seems Montgomery may have jumped the gun a bit, as he had already explained his policy on non-fraternisation in a long document (the second of his 'Notes on the Present Situation') dated 6th July, sent to his army Corps Commanders and Control Council Heads of Divisions. This outlined the policy they should follow in a wide number of areas, and even included a tear-off slip they should fill in and return to confirm they had received and read the document.

The section on fraternisation ran as follows, in Montgomery’s typical style for these types of documents, of brief numbered points:

"14) We cannot resuscitate Germany without the help of the people themselves; we cannot re-educate 20 million people if we are never to speak to them.

15) We crossed the Rhine on 23 March and for nearly four months we have not spoken to the German population, except when duty has so demanded. The Germans have been told why we have acted thus; it has been a shock to them and they have learnt their lesson.

16) To continue this policy is merely to make our own task very difficult, if not impossible,

17 I consider the ban on fraternisation should be lifted at once.

Fraternisation should be discouraged, but not forbidden

Commanders-in-Chief should be given a free hand to decide the best methods of applying this general directive.

18) At present the policy of the various Allies is not even the same

In the Russian Zone an officer or man is allowed to speak to and mix with civilians; in the British Zone he is tried by court-martial for so doing.

The Allies must all adopt the same policy."

Two months later, following discussions and agreement between all Allies at a meeting of the Control Council, in a fourth message to all members of British Forces in Germany, dated 25th September, Montgomery announced the full relaxation of the ban, except that no allied soldiers were to be billeted with Germans or allowed to inter-marry.

The ban on inter-marriage remained for a further 18 months or so, and the first marriages between British soldiers and German women were permitted in early 1947.

Field-Marshal Montgomery’s ‘Notes on the Occupation of Germany’ – part 1

21st February 2009

Two weeks ago I wrote about Field-Marshal Montgomery, as Military Governor of the British Zone of Germany after the war, and his unpublished 'Notes on the Occupation of Germany' which are held with his papers at the Imperial War Museum.

In this post I’ll say something about what he wrote in the first volume of the 'Notes', which covers the period from the end of the war in Europe on May 8th, to July 14th 1945.

According to the ‘Notes’, the situation at the end of the war had not developed as anticipated. German central government had collapsed and the unconditional surrender had been signed by the German military command, not the government. There was also uncertainty as to the intentions of the Russians in their Zone:

“The Allies were therefore faced with a situation very different to that which had been envisaged at the meetings between Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin, in which the Allied organisation for the occupation of Germany was discussed…. the machinery whereby a central government could function no longer existed. Furthermore a firm ‘frontier’ had already sprung up between the zone held by the Western Allies and that held by Russia and the Russians had imposed a strict control on all traffic through their lines.”

Conditions in Germany were chaotic:

“When the war ended, the chaos and confusion throughout Germany was immense. No central government machine existed; large numbers of displaced persons of all European nationalities were roaming the country, often looting as they went; the transportation and communication services had ceased to function; agriculture and industry were largely at a standstill; and there was a serious risk of an outbreak of famine and disease during the coming months.”

And there was no framework in existence to manage this:

Military government organisation, as already implemented during the campaign following the D-Day invasions and the Battle of Normandy was intended to be a temporary measure only, to “control the civilian population only sufficiently to prevent it from interfering with the operational requirements of the armed forces. For this reason planning by the Military Government organisation was based solely on meeting short-term needs.” The situation in Germany was different from that in France, Belgium and the Netherlands and “An organisation to plan and direct the activities of the community over a long-term period was now urgently required.”

Montgomery wrote in the ‘Notes’ that he had been informed privately that he would be appointed Military Governor of the British Zone and the British member of the Allied Control Council, but as the days went by, he became increasingly concerned that no appointment had been made. As a result he flew to London on May 14th to argue the case directly with the Prime Minister.

He “arrived in England at a politically unfavourable moment” as the wartime coalition government was coming to an end and politicians’ minds were on other things. He had dinner with Winston Churchill, but had “the greatest difficulty in getting the Prime Minister to consider the problems of Government in Germany as of such importance as to require an immediate decision.”

(This was a time of political uncertainty in Britain. The wartime coalition was dissolved soon after the end of the war and a general election held on July 5th.  The result, victory for the Labour Party, was not declared until July 26th and in the meantime, Winston Churchill remained Prime Minister.)

Montgomery “was very disturbed by the Prime Minister’s procrastination” and although gaining approval for his own appointment, there was still a difference of opinion as to who should be his deputy. As a result he “returned to the attack in a telegram to the Prime Minister …” Once the issue of appointing a deputy was resolved, there was still a difference of opinion as to when the appointments would be announced. “After a somewhat acrimonious exchange of telegrams the Prime Minister finally gave way and agreed to announce the appointments …”

As soon as his appointment was announced, on May 22nd, he summoned the heads of divisions of the British Control Commission, (who had been waiting in London as a kind of embryonic government), to a meeting, and told them that they would be deployed to Germany as soon as possible, and located somewhere, still to be decided, in the British Zone, rather than in Berlin.

He returned to Germany on May 26th and four days later, on May 30th, issued his first 'Personal message to the population of the British Zone', (which was printed and displayed in prominent places throughout the Zone). In this he said his object was: “to establish a simple and orderly life for the whole community, and to see that the population had food, housing and freedom from disease; that those who had committed war crimes would be punished in the proper fashion; and that the armed forces would be disarmed and disbanded, and would then be discharged to their home areas, first and foremost to bring in the harvest and then to restart the life of the community.”

Montgomery’s description of events in the 'Notes' raises a few questions:

Firstly, what was the reason for the delay in his appointment as Military Governor? A German historian, Jochen Thies, has written that the diplomat Yvone Kirkpatrick was previously considered for the post, but I haven’t checked the references to this in the archives. Kirkpatrick himself says nothing about this in his autobiography.

Secondly, why did Montgomery use such strong language about his interviews with Churchill and the delays in confirming his appointment? What did he hope to achieve in Germany after the war and why did he seem to treat this as if it were a personal mission? Why didn’t he rest on his laurels, return to Britain, and enjoy the adulation of the crowds?

One possible clue is provided in a speech he gave in June 1945, on receiving the freedom of the City of Antwerp, which is included as one of the appendices in the 'Notes'. In subsequent months he gave similar speeches on receiving honours from other cities across Europe. What is noticeable in this and other speeches, it seems to me, is not just the sentiments, but the force and passion with which they are expressed. The death and destruction of war must have made a profound impression on him. In this speech, he said that victory on its own was not enough. Even the destruction of the evil of Nazism, on its own, was not enough, as in so doing “much that was good and beautiful had also been destroyed.” Here is the relevant passage:

“Our first task in now ended. Together we have won the war, and have destroyed the Nazi tyranny of Europe. Our hardest task remains to be tackled. Out of the chaos and confusion which the war has inflicted on Europe we have to rebuild our European civilisation. In destroying the Nazi power, we have destroyed one great evil; much that was good and beautiful has also been destroyed, and the economic organisation of Europe lies in ruins. We can rebuild what has been destroyed only by toil and sweat, and there is no short cut back to prosperity. In this gigantic task the Allied Nations must continue to co-operate in that same spirit of service to the common cause of freedom which has so strengthened us during the stress and strain of war.

Together we have achieved much in war; may we achieve even more in peace.”

 
References:

Montgomery papers
'Notes on the Occupation of Germany' part 1
Imperial War Museum reference: BLM 85

Field-Marshal Montgomery: as Military Governor of the British Zone of Germany

1st February 2009

Field-Marshal Montgomery was the first Military Governor of the British Zone in Germany after the war, for just under a year from May 1945 to April 1946.

Surprisingly his Wikipedia entry makes no mention of this, skipping straight from his accepting the surrender of all German forces in Northern Germany, Holland and Denmark, on Lüneburg Heath on 4th May 1945, to his appointment as Chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS) in 1946.

Montgomery is best known, of course, for his wartime victories, notably at El Alamein and as Commander-in-Chief of Allied Forces at the Battle of Normandy. After the war he was wildly popular at home in England, both among soldiers who fought under him, and among civilians, thousands of whom cheered him in the streets. In later life though, and especially after his memoirs were published in 1958, he attracted a great deal of controversy and criticism.

As my research is on the British in occupied Germany after the war, I am not so interested in the debates on how the war was fought – on whether Montgomery was right or wrong at, for example, El Alamein, Normandy, Arnhem (‘A Bridge Too Far’), or the Battle of the Bulge. I am more interested in how influential he was as Military Governor of the British Zone of Germany and how he reacted to the transition from war to peace.

In my post a couple of months ago on Turning Points; when and why did British policy change at the end of the war, I wrote about a clear change in British policy towards Germany, as shown in the weekly PR Directives issued by the British 21st Army Group, which coincided with Montgomery’s return to Germany from England on 26th May, after confirmation of his appointment as Military Governor.  

Why did he react to the end of the war in the way he did? And what did he really mean when he spoke of “fighting a battle to save the soul of Germany” (see my previous post on the book ‘Darkness over Germany’ by Amy Buller)? Montgomery’s father had been Bishop of Tasmania and was later secretary of the Christian missionary Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts. To what extent was the ‘missionary idealism’, so evident in the words and actions of some British people in Germany after the war, inspired directly by the first Military Governor?

One insight into his character can be obtained from Goronwy’s Rees’ description of him at the time of the Dieppe Raid in 1942 (which I wrote about some months ago on this blog). Another fascinating account of Montgomery, this time as an old man, is on the BBC WW2 People’s War website.

As far as I know, no-one has attempted an assessment of Montgomery’s time as Military Governor of Germany. His biographer, Nigel Hamilton, appears to take two quite different views. On the one hand, he interpreted this period as the start of the decline of a great military commander, who “failed to grow in stature commensurate with his high office … That Monty could have achieved such undoubted greatness as military commander in war, yet failed to rise to an equivalent greatness of spirit or stature in peace, was a strange paradox.”

On the other hand, Nigel Hamilton wrote elsewhere in the book in more favourable terms of his time in Germany:

“Critics of Montgomery would later claim that he was a general who, by virtue of his prickly personality, could only perform in war. While it cannot be denied that Monty’s generalship was uniquely suited to war, his military governorship of Germany was without doubt the least ‘sung’ and yet, in many ways, the most successful of all Monty’s campaigns. Under his personal leadership, administering the most populous and industrialized zone of Germany, seeds were sown that later resulted in the world’s most astonishing industrial revival within a free and liberal society.”

In another passage, on Montgomery’s personal character rather than on his military or political achievements, Hamilton appears to try (in my view not very successfully) to have it both ways:

“What emerged [after the war] was, increasingly, an overwrought, lonely tyrant without family or real friends, unable to share as once he had shared the fellowship of desert warriors. Whether any other commander could have done as well, let alone better, in ruling Germany is doubtful …. To complain that he was not, at the same time, a great statesman or diplomat, that he did not rise to the stature, say, of MacArthur in Japan or even Eisenhower in Europe, is wilfully to overlook his achievement and belittle his profoundly Christian charity.”

Montgomery himself clearly considered his time in Germany to be significant and devoted four chapters to this in his memoirs, but to try to gain a better and more detailed understanding of what he aimed to achieve, I’ve been reading his unpublished ‘Notes on the Occupation of Germany’ held, together with his other papers, at the Imperial War Museum. It’s not entirely clear who wrote them, or exactly when they were written, but (unlike his memoirs published in 1958) they do appear to be contemporary, and were probably produced soon after the events they describe by one of his staff, in consultation with him, (in much the same way as a narrative of events was compiled by his military assistant, Kit Dawnay, between D-Day and the end of the war in Europe). They are in four parts, each comprising a typewritten chronicle of events with introduction and commentary, 14-25 pages long, and a number of appendices comprising relevant documents – such as memos, directives and speeches – and finally a brief diary listing his movements and meetings with visitors. The introduction and loose-leaf documents for each of the four parts were originally hand bound with a board cover with the title, a hand coloured map of the British Zone, and marked ‘TOP SECRET, Personal for C-in-C, copy no. 3’.

In my next post I’ll describe some of the things I discovered in his ‘Notes on the Occupation of Germany'.

References

The Memoirs of Field-Marshal The Viscount Montgomery of Alamein (Collins, London: 1958)

Nigel Hamilton, Monty: The Field-Marshal 1944-1976 (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1986)

The ‘Notes on the Occupation of Germany’ are part of the Montgomery papers at the Imperial War Museum, reference BLM 85, BLM 86, BLM 87 and BLM 88.

Turning Points: when and why did British policy in Germany change after the end of the Second World War?

23rd November 2008

Historians have debated when and why British Policy after the war changed from ‘holding Germany down’ to ‘putting Germany on its feet again.’ Was it due to the emergence of the Cold War, and if so, was the key ‘Turning Point’ the Moscow Foreign Ministers’ conference in April 1947, as Konrad Adenauer claimed in his memoirs, or as the historian Anne Deighton has argued, was it a year earlier at the Paris conference in April 1946, or half way between the two with the speech by James Byrnes (the US Secretary of State) in Stuttgart in September 1946? Alternatively was the Turning Point due, not to the emerging Cold War, but as another historian has claimed, to economic, rather than political or diplomatic grounds, in the Winter of 1946, as the British government became concerned above all else with the costs of the occupation, or yet again, as Petra Goedde has argued (see last week’s post) was it due to personal relationships between GIs and Germans, in the first two years after the end of the war?

In the paper I gave at the History Lab postgraduate conference earlier this year, I argued that, for senior British army officers on the ground in Germany, the key Turning Point was none of the above, but immediately after the unconditional surrender of German armed forces on VE Day in May 1945 and the end of the war in Europe, when almost overnight, the British army of occupation started working energetically to rebuild and restore a country they had previously been doing their best to destroy.

On a recent visit to The National Archives I was delighted to find evidence to support my view, in a file of weekly policy directives, which specified very clearly the public relations line to be adopted by the British Military Government.

Directive no 1, issued on 13th May 1945, only a few days after VE Day on May 8th, adopted a harsh tone, stating in the first paragraph that:

“The following five points will be the dominant themes of all output:
a) The completeness of Germany’s defeat in the field
b) The common responsibility of all Germans for Nazi crimes
c) The power and determination of the Allies to enforce their will
d) The unanimity of the Allies
e) The spiritual importance of the individual”

In the main body of the directive, four points were emphasised:

"Completeness of Germany’s defeat
The common responsibility of all Germans for Nazi crimes: Concentration Camps
Unanimity of the Allies

Food production" and the need for maximum effort by all Germans to avoid famine.

There was no change in policy in the second directive, issued on May 20th, which stated clearly: “There are no changes in the main themes given in Policy Directive No 1.”

But in the third directive, for the week beginning 27th May, there was a distinct change in tone:

“1. The basic themes laid down in Policy Directive No 1 (para 1) remain valid but points (a) and (b) should no longer be dominant. While not allowing them to be glossed over, the emphasis should now be shifted to more positive aims. We should now gradually begin to lessen the harshness of our tone.

2. The immediate need, from both Allied and German points of view, is for a supreme effort by the Germans at all forms of reconstruction work. The devastation and dislocation in Western Germany is on a scale far greater than in any other occupied zone with the exception of BERLIN, and is such that without positive encouragement from ourselves, in place of the negative impression created by continual insistence on the fact of German defeat, the Germans are likely to prove incapable of finding within themselves the moral energy needed for reconstruction.

3. What is now required is to show the Germans that considerable reconstruction activity is already in progress under Allied impetus …..

4. To sum up: make it very clear to the Germans that we do not want to see them go under as a people and that (points (a) to (d) of policy directive No. 1 notwithstanding) we do want to see Western Germany build itself up again, as far as possible by its own efforts, into a prosperous though controlled community.”

Directive no 4, dated 8 June, continued this new theme, stating explicitly that policy had now changed:

“1. Directive No.1 prescribed a predominantly negative attitude designed to produce passive acquiescence. It is now superseded and emphasis will henceforth be laid on the following:

a) The encouragement of genuinely democratic persons to assist in the urgent tasks required by Mil Gov…

b) The encouragement of cultural activities

c) The exposure and discrediting of the National Socialist/Militarist regime coupled with the responsibility of the German people for supporting it…

d) The power and fundamental agreement of the Allies

e) The spiritual importance of the individual, and his duties towards the community”

Unfortunately nothing in this file explains the reasons for this change in policy. I am not aware of any formal change in policy by the British government in London and it seems to me it must be linked with Field Marshal Montgomery’s appointment as Military Governor of the British Zone. In his memoirs he describes how, following the unconditional surrender, he had “suddenly become responsible for the government and well-being of about twenty million Germans. Tremendous problems would be required to be handled and if they were not solved before the winter began, many Germans would die of starvation, exposure and disease.… As the days passed after the end of the German war I became increasingly worried at the lack of any proper organisation to govern Germany.”

Montgomery flew to London on 14th May to “impress on the Prime Minister the urgent need for a decision in the matter” (ie the appointment of a Military Governor) and succeeded in being appointed Commander in Chief of the British forces in Germany on 22nd May. Now that he had been given the necessary authority, he could make the changes in policy he thought necessary himself. On May 23rd he addressed Control Commission staff in London and said: “Between us we have to re-establish civil control, and to govern, a country which we have conquered and which has become sadly battered in the process.” His biographer, Nigel Hamilton, commented on this speech: “Monty’s sympathy with the plight of Germany came as a shock to those in the auditorium who pictured him as a ruthless, Cromwellian commander, until two weeks ago waging implacable war upon the Nazis.”

He returned to Germany on 26th May, the day before Directive no 3 was issued, with the new emphasis on “more positive aims.”

References

PRISC Directives: May 1945 – March 1946
The National Archives, FO 1005/739
The first directives, numbers 1-9, were issued by the Headquarters of the British 21st Army Group. From number 10 onwards they were issued on behalf of “Major-General Information Services Control and Public Relations” following General Alec Bishop’s appointment to this position in July 1945.

Konrad Adenauer, Memoirs 1945-53, translated by Beate Ruhm von Oppen (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1966), Chapter 6 ‘The Turning Point’ pp 89-106

Anne Deighton in Ian D. Turner (ed), Reconstruction in Post-War Germany: British Occupation Policy and the Western Zones 1945-1955, (Oxford: Berg Publishers Ltd, 1989), p25

John E. Farquharson, ‘From Unity to Division: what prompted Britain to change its policy in Germany in 1946.’ European History Quarterly, Vol.26 1996, pp 81-123

Petra Goedde, GIs and Germans: Culture, Gender, and Foreign Relations, 1945-1949 (Yale University Press, 2003)

The Memoirs of Field-Marshal The Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, (Collins, London: 1958)

Goronwy Rees on Field-Marshal Montgomery

27th April 2008

As I described in my posting on 20th January, the approach I have adopted for my research on "’Winning the Peace’: The British in occupied Germany, 1945-1951" is to ‘Follow the People.’ One of the people I’m following is Field-Marshal Bernard Montgomery, Military Governor of the British Zone of Germany during the first twelve months after the end of the war, and better known, of course, as the victor of the battle of El Alamein.

In the two previous posts on this blog, I’ve written about Goronwy Rees, another person I’m following, who was, among many other things, a british army intelligence officer in Germany for six months after the end of war. One of the chapters in his book of autobiographical sketches A Bundle of Sensations, describing his part in the Dieppe Raid in 1942, includes a portrait of Montgomery which apparently attracted a great deal of attention at the time it was first published, nearly fifty years ago.

Although this episode took place during rather than after the war, and is therefore outside my own period of research, I still think it’s worth covering here, as an introduction to writing more about Montgomery and his time in Germany in future postings.

Rees starts by describing how, when he was serving as an intelligence officer in the Home Forces in London, the brigadier told him he would be transferred to HQ South Eastern Command and this meant he would be on General Montgomery’s staff:

"’He’s a bit of a terror, you know’, the brigadier said. "’Very keen on physical fitness, and all that. Makes all his staff officers do a five-mile run once a week’. He spoke as if it were an affront to the human race and gave a little shiver of distaste."

At first Rees saw nothing of Montgomery until one day an ADC told him he was to report personally to the Army Commander at 8.15pm, after dinner.

When he arrived at the "comfortable villa" near Reigate where Montgomery had his quarters, he was shown into a room. "Through the open French windows I could see a small, rather unimpressive figure walking on the lawn, head slightly bent and hands clasped behind his back."

When Montgomery entered the room, Rees described him as follows: "One saw a narrow foxy face, long-nosed, sharp and intelligent and tenacious, with very bright and clear blue eyes, and a small, light, spare body … but what was impressive was an air he had of extraordinary quietness and calm, as if nothing in the world could disturb his peace of mind … And to my surprise, after experience of many senior officers, though none so exalted as him, he was extremely polite, so that one almost forgot his rank …"

"And as one talked to him, one was aware all the time of the stillness and quietness that reigned all around him, in the study itself, in the entire household, in the garden outside, as if even the birds were under a spell of silence; it was a kind of stillness one would associate more easily with an interview with a priest than a general."

The notes to my copy of A Bundle of Sensations (edited by John Harris) add at this point that: "Reviewers of A Bundle of Sensations were much taken by Rees’ pages on Monty and Nigel Hamilton [Montgomery’s biographer] agrees: ‘Anyone who ever served or worked with Montgomery will testify to the accuracy of this portrait.’"

The next morning Rees was called to see Montgomery again and was told he was to act as his representative on the ‘Combined Operations’ group planning the Dieppe Raid. Since Montgomery "was formally responsible for the operation, it would be necessary for him to be kept informed of the progress of planning and training, of any needs or difficulties that might arise, or any decision taken that might require his approval."

During the following weeks, after the frantic activity at the Combined Operations headquarters, Rees wrote how different things seemed when he went to Reigate to report to Montgomery:

"It was never difficult to see him; when an appointment was made, he was always punctually available, and he always gave the impression that he had nothing in the world to do except the business which was in hand … Most remarkable of all, to myself, was that he actually listened to what I said, gravely and politely, though very often I felt it was not worth listening to; and when he made comments, or issued any instructions, one felt that they had already been considered, calmly and dispassionately, in the cool of the evening in the garden, when he had given himself just the right amount of time required for reflection."

The day before it was due to take place, there was a gale and the expedition was cancelled due to unfavourable weather conditions. However, a decision was taken that the operation, now codenamed Jubilee, was to take place in a month’s time, but as a large number of Canadian forces were involved, overall responsibility was transferred from Montgomery to General McNaughton, the Canadian Commander in Chief. Rees was immediately recalled and took no further part in the planning. However a few days later he was told he could take part as an observer, which he did on board one of the escort ships, the destroyer Garth.

The aim of the raid was to capture the town, hold it for 12 hours, and then stage an orderly withdrawal. According to Rees, the operation was a disaster, there was no orderly retreat, and he described the condition of some of the survivors, picked up by his ship as they tried to escape from the beaches:

"…many were badly wounded, all were suffering from shock and exhaustion. They had the grey, lifeless faces of men whose vitality had been drained out of them; each of them could have modelled a death mask. They were bitter and resentful at having been flung into a battle far more horrible than anything for which they had been prepared… I thought that this is what a beaten army look like, for no army is beaten until it has lost faith and confidence in those who command it."

"Plans for Jubilee had not provided for withdrawal under such conditions as these; elaborate as they were, they had not taken complete failure into account. The wounded lay stretched out side by side on bunks and stretchers and hastily improvised beds, none of them wholly conscious, mumbling words of shock and pain, their faces drained of blood and each with a look in his eyes of dumb surprise, as if each had a question to ask which no one could answer."

The notes to A Bundle of Sensations say that this interpretation has been much debated and adds that Allied losses amounted to 4,350 (with 1,179 dead and 2,190 taken prisoner) German losses were 591, including 311 dead and missing. The Allies lost 106 aircraft and the Germans 48.

The subject of this posting is Rees’ portrait of Montgomery, not whether his description of the Dieppe Raid is correct or not, so I’ll finish this posting with three personal comments Rees describes Montgomery making on his fellow officers:

Firstly, a comment generally taken to refer to Admiral Mountbatten. Rees had told Montgomery it was sometimes difficult to discover what decisions had really been reached at Combined Operations HQ, and Montgomery added reflectively: "Yes, Admiral – , Admiral – , A very gallant sailor. A very gallant sailor. Had three ships sunk under him. Three ships sunk under him. (Pause) Doesn’t know how to fight a battle." 

Secondly, of another general who was, according to Rees, "exceedingly brave, exceedingly competent, with the charm and panache of a Renaissance condottiere" he [Montgomery] said: "General – ? Yes. General -. A very brave man. Killed three men with his bare hands. The man’s a brigand. Doesn’t know how to wage war."

These two comments illustrate Montgomery’s criticism of generals who, in his view, did not consider sufficiently the welfare of those who served under them, and who ignored the pain and suffering of war. According to Rees, who on his own admission idolised Montgomery at the time: "The Army Commander had a mind of classical directness and lucidity; when he talked of problems of war they seemed to assume an almost elementary simplicity, but this was only because of the strictness of the analysis which had been applied to them."

Third and lastly, Rees wrote how Montgomery could also be generous in praise of those of whom he approved, saying: "In later years, after he had won the victory of Alamein and had become famous, I often remembered his comment on General Alexander: ‘The only man, yes the only man, under whom any admiral, general, or air marshal would gladly serve in a subordinate position.’"

References

Goronwy Rees: Sketches in Autobiography: ‘A Bundle of Sensations’ and ‘A Chapter of Accidents’ with ‘A Winter in Berlin’, a further autobiographical essay. (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2001). Edited with Introduction and Notes by John Harris

A Bundle of Sensations was first published by Chatto & Windus, London, 1960

Two extracts from the chapter on the Dieppe Raid, ‘A Day at the Seaside’, were serialised in The Sunday Times on 22nd and 29th May 1960 as ‘Monty’ and the ‘Drama of Dieppe’.