04752nam 2200601 450 991077750300332120230617010628.00-271-02275-210.1515/9780271022758(CKB)1000000000466540(MH)009307141-8(SSID)ssj0000152041(PQKBManifestationID)12003719(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000152041(PQKBWorkID)10339551(PQKB)10176200(MiAaPQ)EBC6223996(DE-B1597)583731(DE-B1597)9780271022758(OCoLC)76416255(MdBmJHUP)musev2_86811(OCoLC)1253314030(EXLCZ)99100000000046654020200929d2004 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtccrExperiment in occupation witness to the turnabout : anti-Nazi war to Cold War, 1944 -1946 /Arthur D. KahnUniversity Park, Pennsylvania :The Pennsylvania State University Press,[2004]©20041 online resource (xvii, 227 p. )Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph0-271-02314-7 Includes bibliographical references and index.Why we fight! -- Soviet partisans and Soviet suspicions, Summer 1944 -- "We do not call upon the Germans to revolt", Fall 1944 -- The capture-liberation of Metz -- The Battle of the Bulge, Winter 1944-1945 -- Mainz: investigating a pre-VE Day military government, Spring 1945 -- Interrogating victims of Nazism and Nazis -- Wuerzburg: another military government experience -- "What we Russians like to consider as a typical American!" -- Policy clash in military government -- "Crack Patton's military government wide open!", Summer 1945 -- "If only you Americans weren't here...!" -- Patton's last stand -- Elections, the American cure-all, Fall 1945 -- Rehearsal for McCarthyism -- Triumph of the Cold Warriors -- A military government in crisis, Winter 1945-1946 -- Elections: the American panacea II -- Democracy, American zone style! -- Summing up and the collective guilt issue, Spring 1946 -- Demoralized GIs -- Epilogue: 1946-1947.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.Military governmentGermanyWorld War, 1939-1945Personal narratives, AmericanGermanyHistory1945-1955Military governmentWorld War, 1939-1945943.087/4Kahn Arthur David294594MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910777503003321Experiment in occupation3765581UNINAThis Record contains information from the Harvard Library Bibliographic Dataset, which is provided by the Harvard Library under its Bibliographic Dataset Use Terms and includes data made available by, among others the Library of Congress