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“What Patton Said to the SS Officer Who Executed 20 American Prisoners”

April 1945, Southern Germany. A farm field outside a liberated village. A young lieutenant noticed the ground looked disturbed. He called over two soldiers and they started to dig. Six inches down, they hit fabric. American fabric. 20 bodies, all American soldiers, all shot in the back of the head, execution style.

Their hands had been bound with wire, forced to kneel and murdered. Within an hour, Patton arrived. He stood at the edge of that mass grave, looking down at 20 dead Americans. His aide tried to pull him away. “Sir, you don’t need to see this.” Patton didn’t move. “Yes, I do.” An investigation began.

Most villagers claimed they knew nothing, but one elderly woman came forward. Through a translator, she told them what she’d seen. Two days earlier, she’d heard 20 gunshots. She’d seen SS troops and their commander. His name was Hauptsturmführer Klaus Ritter. Ritter had been holding American prisoners in the village church.

When American forces approached, he ordered them moved. The next morning, she heard the shots. By afternoon, Ritter was gone. Patton gave a simple order, “Find him.” It took 48 hours. American MPs tracked Ritter to a barn 15 miles away. He was still wearing his SS uniform. They brought him back to the village, back to the farm where he’d murdered 20 men.

Patton walked up to him and asked one question, “Do you speak English?” Ritter nodded. “Yes, I was educated at Oxford.” Patton smiled, not a friendly smile, because George S. Patton had seen those bodies, and now he was going to make sure the man responsible understood exactly what was about to happen to him. This is the story of what Patton said to the SS officer who executed 20 American prisoners.

Before we get into this confrontation, if you want more untold stories from World War II, hit that subscribe button. Ritter was brought to the farmhouse yard. His hands were cuffed behind his back. Two MPs held his arms. Patton was standing with his back to them, looking out at the field. He turned slowly. Ritter looked at him with defiance.

The SS officer was in his mid-30s, tall with the bearing of someone used to giving orders. Patton walked up to him and stopped 3 ft away. He didn’t say anything at first. He just looked at him. The silence stretched out. Ritter shifted uncomfortably. Finally, Patton spoke. His voice was calm, dangerously calm.

Oxford-educated, that means you’re not some thug. You’re intelligent. You understand civilization. You understand the rules of war. Ritter lifted his chin. I understand that war has no rules when you’re losing. Is that what you tell yourself? Patton stepped closer. 20 American soldiers, 20 men who surrendered to you, 20 prisoners under your care, and you lined them up and shot them in the back of the head.

Ritter’s jaw tightened. Patton continued, “I’ve seen the bodies. I’ve seen the wire on their wrists, the wire cut into their skin. They struggled. They knew what was coming. I’ve seen the bullet wounds, all in the back of the head, clean shots, professional. You murdered them efficiently.” “They were soldiers,” Ritter said. “This is war.

” Patton’s eyes went cold. “Soldiers die in combat. Soldiers die fighting. These men died on their knees, defenseless, after they surrendered. That’s not war, that’s murder, and you know it.” Ritter lifted his chin. “I was following orders. We were retreating. We couldn’t take prisoners.

We had to eliminate the problem.” “Eliminate the problem,” Patton repeated the words slowly. “You described 20 human beings as a problem, 20 men with families, with mothers and fathers, some with wives and children. “They were enemy combatants. “They were prisoners.” Patton’s voice rose. “Under the Geneva Convention, they were entitled to protection.

You shot them like dogs.” Ritter’s composure cracked. “You Americans, always so superior. But you’ve bombed our cities, Dresden, Hamburg, Berlin. You’ve killed women and children. Don’t lecture me about morality.” Patton stepped closer. His face was inches from Ritter’s. “We bombed military targets. Yes, civilians died. War is hell.

But we have never lined up prisoners and executed them. And if any American soldier did what you did, I would have him court-martialed and shot.” He gestured toward the field. “Those 20 men, do you want to know what you took from them?” Ritter looked away, but Patton grabbed his chin and forced eye contact.

BMPs tensed but didn’t intervene. “No, you’re going to hear this. Private Morrison was 19 years old. He had a mother in Ohio. She’d already lost her husband in the First World War. Her son was all she had left, and you shot him.” Patton’s voice grew harder. “Corporal Hayes from Texas had a wife and a 2-year-old daughter he’d never met. She was born while he was overseas.

He carried her photo everywhere. It was in his pocket when you killed him. Sergeant Chen from California. His parents immigrated to America for a better life. He was going to be the first in his family to go to college. He had the acceptance letter in his gear, and you executed him.” Ritter was looking at the ground.

“17 more names,” Patton said. “17 more families destroyed, all because you didn’t want to be inconvenienced.” “It wasn’t convenience,” Ritter said quietly. “It was military necessity.” “Military necessity.” Patton shook his head. “I’ve been in this army for over 30 years. I fought in two world wars. I’ve seen men die in every way imaginable, but I have never ordered the execution of prisoners, because that’s not what soldiers do. That’s what murderers do.

I am not a murderer, Ritter said, his voice rising. I am an officer of the Waffen SS. I served my country. I followed orders. And if your superiors ordered you to shoot children, would you do that, too? Ritter didn’t answer. That’s what I thought. Patton’s voice dropped. You hide behind orders, behind duty, behind that uniform, but I know what you are. You’re a coward.

You shot unarmed men who couldn’t fight back, men who trusted the rules of war. You proved them wrong. One of the MPs spoke up. Sir, should we take him to holding? Patton was silent for a moment. Then he spoke quietly. No. Take him to the field. The MPs looked at each other. Sir? The field where he murdered those men.

I want him to see it. They marched Ritter to the excavation site. The bodies had been removed, but the grave was still open. 20 empty spaces in the earth. The earth was dark where blood had soaked in. Patton made Ritter stand at the edge, made him look down. Do you see that? Patton asked. That’s where you put them.

20 men, 20 graves, 20 families that will never be whole. Ritter stared down. His face was pale. The defiance was gone. He was looking at evidence of his crime. I want you to memorize this, Patton said, because you’re going to answer for it. You’re going to stand trial. You’re going to hear the name of every man you murdered, their ranks, their hometowns, their ages, and then you’re going to hear your sentence.

Ritter’s voice was barely a whisper. What will happen to me? Patton leaned in close. You’re going to hang, and I’m going to make sure every SS officer we capture knows what happened to you, so they understand that following orders doesn’t protect you from justice. He stepped back. And I’m going to personally testify at your trial. I saw those bodies.

I spoke to the witness. I stood in this field, and I’m going to make sure everyone understands what this was, murder. Ritter was shaking. Take him away, Patton told the MPs. As they led Ritter away, Patton’s aide approached. Sir, do you really think he’ll hang? Yes, the evidence is overwhelming. We have the bodies, we have witnesses, we have him admitting it.

Patton paused, and I meant what I said, I’m going to testify. The trial took place 6 weeks later in May 1945. The war in Europe was over. Germany had surrendered, but justice continued. Patton testified. He described finding the mass grave. He described the bodies, the wire on their wrists, the bullet wounds. He described Ritter’s interrogation, his cold justification, his phrase eliminated the problem.

Patton’s testimony lasted over an hour. When he finished, everyone in that courtroom understood what had happened. The defense argued Ritter was following orders, that the retreat chaos made it impossible to secure prisoners, that this was war, not murder. But the prosecution had photographs, dozens of them, showing the mass grave, showing the wire, showing the systematic executions.

They had the elderly woman’s testimony, and they had Ritter’s own recorded words. The verdict came on May 15th, 1945, guilty on all counts, war crimes, murder of prisoners of war, violation of the Geneva Convention. The sentence, death by hanging. Ritter appealed. His lawyers argued he was just following orders, that he was a soldier, not a criminal.

The appeal was denied. The evidence was too strong. Patton’s testimony was too detailed. On July 1st, 1945, less than 2 months after Germany’s surrender, Hauptsturmführer Klaus Ritter was executed by hanging at 6:00 a.m. He was 34 years old. Before he died, he was told that General Patton had testified against him, that the four-star general had kept his promise.

Patton didn’t attend the execution. He had moved on to other responsibilities, the occupation, the challenges of peace. But Patton made sure photographs of the execution were distributed to every SS officer in American custody. He wanted them to understand following orders was not a defense. Murdering prisoners had consequences.

The 20 Americans were eventually identified. Some through identification, others through dental records or personal effects. Eventually, every one of them was given back his name. Private First Class James Morrison, age 19, from Columbus, Ohio. His mother buried him next to his father, who died at Belleau Wood in 1918.

She placed flowers on both graves every week until she died. Corporal Daniel Hayes, age 23, from Austin, Texas. His wife and daughter attended his funeral. Years later, that daughter named her own son Daniel, after the grandfather he never knew. Sergeant Robert Chen, age 25, from San Francisco, California. His parents held a service that combined American military honors with Chinese funeral rights.

His college acceptance letter was buried with him and 17 others. Each one a son. Each with a family. Each with people who mourned. All were buried with full military honors. All were remembered. Years later, when historians asked Patton about the hardest part of the war, he didn’t talk about battles or strategies or victories.

He talked about standing at the edge of that mass grave in southern Germany, looking down at 20 dead Americans who trusted the rules of war would protect them. And he talked about making sure the man who broke those rules paid the price. What do you think? Should officers who execute prisoners face the death penalty, even when following orders? Or should there be consideration for the chaos of war? Let us know in the comments below.

And if you want more untold stories from World War II, make sure you subscribe because sometimes the real heroes weren’t the ones who won battles. They were the ones who made sure that even in war, there were lines that couldn’t be crossed without consequence.

 

 

 

“What Patton Said to the SS Officer Who Executed 20 American Prisoners”

 

April 1945, Southern Germany. A farm field outside a liberated village. A young lieutenant noticed the ground looked disturbed. He called over two soldiers and they started to dig. Six inches down, they hit fabric. American fabric. 20 bodies, all American soldiers, all shot in the back of the head, execution style.

Their hands had been bound with wire, forced to kneel and murdered. Within an hour, Patton arrived. He stood at the edge of that mass grave, looking down at 20 dead Americans. His aide tried to pull him away. “Sir, you don’t need to see this.” Patton didn’t move. “Yes, I do.” An investigation began.

Most villagers claimed they knew nothing, but one elderly woman came forward. Through a translator, she told them what she’d seen. Two days earlier, she’d heard 20 gunshots. She’d seen SS troops and their commander. His name was Hauptsturmführer Klaus Ritter. Ritter had been holding American prisoners in the village church.

When American forces approached, he ordered them moved. The next morning, she heard the shots. By afternoon, Ritter was gone. Patton gave a simple order, “Find him.” It took 48 hours. American MPs tracked Ritter to a barn 15 miles away. He was still wearing his SS uniform. They brought him back to the village, back to the farm where he’d murdered 20 men.

Patton walked up to him and asked one question, “Do you speak English?” Ritter nodded. “Yes, I was educated at Oxford.” Patton smiled, not a friendly smile, because George S. Patton had seen those bodies, and now he was going to make sure the man responsible understood exactly what was about to happen to him. This is the story of what Patton said to the SS officer who executed 20 American prisoners.

Before we get into this confrontation, if you want more untold stories from World War II, hit that subscribe button. Ritter was brought to the farmhouse yard. His hands were cuffed behind his back. Two MPs held his arms. Patton was standing with his back to them, looking out at the field. He turned slowly. Ritter looked at him with defiance.

The SS officer was in his mid-30s, tall with the bearing of someone used to giving orders. Patton walked up to him and stopped 3 ft away. He didn’t say anything at first. He just looked at him. The silence stretched out. Ritter shifted uncomfortably. Finally, Patton spoke. His voice was calm, dangerously calm.

Oxford-educated, that means you’re not some thug. You’re intelligent. You understand civilization. You understand the rules of war. Ritter lifted his chin. I understand that war has no rules when you’re losing. Is that what you tell yourself? Patton stepped closer. 20 American soldiers, 20 men who surrendered to you, 20 prisoners under your care, and you lined them up and shot them in the back of the head.

Ritter’s jaw tightened. Patton continued, “I’ve seen the bodies. I’ve seen the wire on their wrists, the wire cut into their skin. They struggled. They knew what was coming. I’ve seen the bullet wounds, all in the back of the head, clean shots, professional. You murdered them efficiently.” “They were soldiers,” Ritter said. “This is war.

” Patton’s eyes went cold. “Soldiers die in combat. Soldiers die fighting. These men died on their knees, defenseless, after they surrendered. That’s not war, that’s murder, and you know it.” Ritter lifted his chin. “I was following orders. We were retreating. We couldn’t take prisoners.

We had to eliminate the problem.” “Eliminate the problem,” Patton repeated the words slowly. “You described 20 human beings as a problem, 20 men with families, with mothers and fathers, some with wives and children. “They were enemy combatants. “They were prisoners.” Patton’s voice rose. “Under the Geneva Convention, they were entitled to protection.

You shot them like dogs.” Ritter’s composure cracked. “You Americans, always so superior. But you’ve bombed our cities, Dresden, Hamburg, Berlin. You’ve killed women and children. Don’t lecture me about morality.” Patton stepped closer. His face was inches from Ritter’s. “We bombed military targets. Yes, civilians died. War is hell.

But we have never lined up prisoners and executed them. And if any American soldier did what you did, I would have him court-martialed and shot.” He gestured toward the field. “Those 20 men, do you want to know what you took from them?” Ritter looked away, but Patton grabbed his chin and forced eye contact.

BMPs tensed but didn’t intervene. “No, you’re going to hear this. Private Morrison was 19 years old. He had a mother in Ohio. She’d already lost her husband in the First World War. Her son was all she had left, and you shot him.” Patton’s voice grew harder. “Corporal Hayes from Texas had a wife and a 2-year-old daughter he’d never met. She was born while he was overseas.

He carried her photo everywhere. It was in his pocket when you killed him. Sergeant Chen from California. His parents immigrated to America for a better life. He was going to be the first in his family to go to college. He had the acceptance letter in his gear, and you executed him.” Ritter was looking at the ground.

“17 more names,” Patton said. “17 more families destroyed, all because you didn’t want to be inconvenienced.” “It wasn’t convenience,” Ritter said quietly. “It was military necessity.” “Military necessity.” Patton shook his head. “I’ve been in this army for over 30 years. I fought in two world wars. I’ve seen men die in every way imaginable, but I have never ordered the execution of prisoners, because that’s not what soldiers do. That’s what murderers do.

I am not a murderer, Ritter said, his voice rising. I am an officer of the Waffen SS. I served my country. I followed orders. And if your superiors ordered you to shoot children, would you do that, too? Ritter didn’t answer. That’s what I thought. Patton’s voice dropped. You hide behind orders, behind duty, behind that uniform, but I know what you are. You’re a coward.

You shot unarmed men who couldn’t fight back, men who trusted the rules of war. You proved them wrong. One of the MPs spoke up. Sir, should we take him to holding? Patton was silent for a moment. Then he spoke quietly. No. Take him to the field. The MPs looked at each other. Sir? The field where he murdered those men.

I want him to see it. They marched Ritter to the excavation site. The bodies had been removed, but the grave was still open. 20 empty spaces in the earth. The earth was dark where blood had soaked in. Patton made Ritter stand at the edge, made him look down. Do you see that? Patton asked. That’s where you put them.

20 men, 20 graves, 20 families that will never be whole. Ritter stared down. His face was pale. The defiance was gone. He was looking at evidence of his crime. I want you to memorize this, Patton said, because you’re going to answer for it. You’re going to stand trial. You’re going to hear the name of every man you murdered, their ranks, their hometowns, their ages, and then you’re going to hear your sentence.

Ritter’s voice was barely a whisper. What will happen to me? Patton leaned in close. You’re going to hang, and I’m going to make sure every SS officer we capture knows what happened to you, so they understand that following orders doesn’t protect you from justice. He stepped back. And I’m going to personally testify at your trial. I saw those bodies.

I spoke to the witness. I stood in this field, and I’m going to make sure everyone understands what this was, murder. Ritter was shaking. Take him away, Patton told the MPs. As they led Ritter away, Patton’s aide approached. Sir, do you really think he’ll hang? Yes, the evidence is overwhelming. We have the bodies, we have witnesses, we have him admitting it.

Patton paused, and I meant what I said, I’m going to testify. The trial took place 6 weeks later in May 1945. The war in Europe was over. Germany had surrendered, but justice continued. Patton testified. He described finding the mass grave. He described the bodies, the wire on their wrists, the bullet wounds. He described Ritter’s interrogation, his cold justification, his phrase eliminated the problem.

Patton’s testimony lasted over an hour. When he finished, everyone in that courtroom understood what had happened. The defense argued Ritter was following orders, that the retreat chaos made it impossible to secure prisoners, that this was war, not murder. But the prosecution had photographs, dozens of them, showing the mass grave, showing the wire, showing the systematic executions.

They had the elderly woman’s testimony, and they had Ritter’s own recorded words. The verdict came on May 15th, 1945, guilty on all counts, war crimes, murder of prisoners of war, violation of the Geneva Convention. The sentence, death by hanging. Ritter appealed. His lawyers argued he was just following orders, that he was a soldier, not a criminal.

The appeal was denied. The evidence was too strong. Patton’s testimony was too detailed. On July 1st, 1945, less than 2 months after Germany’s surrender, Hauptsturmführer Klaus Ritter was executed by hanging at 6:00 a.m. He was 34 years old. Before he died, he was told that General Patton had testified against him, that the four-star general had kept his promise.

Patton didn’t attend the execution. He had moved on to other responsibilities, the occupation, the challenges of peace. But Patton made sure photographs of the execution were distributed to every SS officer in American custody. He wanted them to understand following orders was not a defense. Murdering prisoners had consequences.

The 20 Americans were eventually identified. Some through identification, others through dental records or personal effects. Eventually, every one of them was given back his name. Private First Class James Morrison, age 19, from Columbus, Ohio. His mother buried him next to his father, who died at Belleau Wood in 1918.

She placed flowers on both graves every week until she died. Corporal Daniel Hayes, age 23, from Austin, Texas. His wife and daughter attended his funeral. Years later, that daughter named her own son Daniel, after the grandfather he never knew. Sergeant Robert Chen, age 25, from San Francisco, California. His parents held a service that combined American military honors with Chinese funeral rights.

His college acceptance letter was buried with him and 17 others. Each one a son. Each with a family. Each with people who mourned. All were buried with full military honors. All were remembered. Years later, when historians asked Patton about the hardest part of the war, he didn’t talk about battles or strategies or victories.

He talked about standing at the edge of that mass grave in southern Germany, looking down at 20 dead Americans who trusted the rules of war would protect them. And he talked about making sure the man who broke those rules paid the price. What do you think? Should officers who execute prisoners face the death penalty, even when following orders? Or should there be consideration for the chaos of war? Let us know in the comments below.

And if you want more untold stories from World War II, make sure you subscribe because sometimes the real heroes weren’t the ones who won battles. They were the ones who made sure that even in war, there were lines that couldn’t be crossed without consequence.