As a participant in many of the events he writes about in
Experiment in Occupation, Arthur Kahn offers a richly detailed
account of the process by which the fight against Nazism came to be
transformed into the Cold War. His story reveals how those in the
Military Government of Germany who were dedicated to carrying out
the war aims promulgated by Roosevelt and Eisenhower for a thorough
democratization of Germany were ultimately defeated in their
confrontation with powerful elements in the Military Government and
in Washington who were more intent upon launching a preemptive war
against the Soviet Union than upon the eradication of Nazism and
German militarism.
A twenty-three-year-old OSS operative, Arthur Kahn was assigned
after D-Day to a psychological warfare unit, where at first he
supervised prisoner-of-war interrogations and then served as an
editor of intelligence. Instructed to respond to requests from
Supreme Headquarters, he drafted proposals for psychological
warfare approaches to critical situations at the front only to
discover that a SHAEF directive banned calls to the Germans to
revolt.
Subsequently Kahn served in liaison with the Soviets and during
the Battle of the Bulge at Montgomery's British headquarters. For
several months before and after VE Day he traveled through the
American Zone as an intelligence investigator and wrote a report
that led to the dismissal of General George S. Patton as Military
Governor of Bavaria. Appointed Chief Editor of Intelligence of the
Information Control Division, he produced the most influential
intelligence weekly in the American Zone. Kahn's portrayal of
events in postwar Germany provides warnings for current and future
American experiments in foreign occupation.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!