Spring of 1945 when the Allied armies entered Dhaka, Bookenvald, and Bergen Bellson.

The concentration camp system was already disintegrating.

The SS were carrying out forced evacuations, abandoning posts or fleeing without clear orders.

In Dhau, the commander, Richard Bear, had disappeared days earlier.

In Bhanvald, the withdrawal left behind lists, barracks, and identifiable men.

In Bergen Bellson, Ysef Kramer was still on site when the British arrived.

The collapse of power altered all hierarchies.

Liberated prisoners pointed out guards recognizable by faces, ranks, and blood group tattoos.

In Bookenvald, an internal clandestine organization had already disarmed SS members before the Allied entry.

In Dhaka, some captured guards were shot after being identified.

In other camps, former capos and guards were hunted down inside and outside the perimeter.

There were no courts or written orders.

There was immediate recognition and direct punishment.

This documentary examines how liberated prisoners located, pursued, and executed SS guards in the hours when the Nazi system ceased to exist.

The end of SS control, liberation, flight, and power vacuum.

Between April 11th and May 8th, 1945, Allied forces liberated more than 60 camps of the Nazi concentration camp system.

It was not a planned humanitarian operation.

It was the direct consequence of the military advance.

American, British, and Soviet armored divisions reached facilities that appeared on intelligence maps as detention centers or unknown sites.

What they found was not a functioning system, but its decomposition in real time.

The collapse did not consist of a formal surrender.

It consisted of the simultaneous rupture of three pillars.

The hierarchical chain of command, the bureaucratic routine of terror, and the illusion of impunity.

When those three elements broke down, SS Power simply ceased to exist as an operational structure.

The camps were not improvised prisons.

Since 1934, they had operated under the direct control of the SS Toten Cop for Bender, specialized units created by Theodore Aiker to administer, guard, and extract forced labor from prisoners.

Each camp functioned with a commander, role chiefs, barrack supervisors, and administrative personnel who managed lists, transfers, punishments, and deaths.

Control did not depend solely on physical violence.

It depended on predictability.

Daily roll calls lasting 2 hours, classification systems using colored triangles, work quotas, falsified records, and an internal hierarchy of prisoner functionaries who carried out orders in exchange for minimal privileges.

That architecture allowed between 200 and 800 SS members to control camps with 20,000, 40,000, or even 60,000 prisoners.

The system operated through bureaucratic inertia and distributed terror.

In January 1945, with the Red Army advancing from the east and western forces crossing the Rine, that architecture began to fracture.

On January 27th, Soviet troops liberated Awitz and found barely 7,000 prisoners alive.

The SS had evacuated more than 58,000 between November and January and forced marches westward.

Those evacuations did not follow a clear logic.

They responded to contradictory orders from Hinrich Himmler, who oscillated between three incompatible directives, preventing prisoners from falling into enemy hands, preserving a labor force for the German war industry, and avoiding the Allies obtaining witnesses to the mass extermination.

The result was a deadly logistical chaos.

The columns marched between 30 and 50 km a day without food, water, or shelter.

Those who could not keep pace were shot at the roadside.

Transport trains departed without a confirmed destination.

Freight cars sealed for days without ventilation, arriving with dozens of corpses at stations that refused to receive more prisoners.

Binwald illustrates how the collapse of command generated a power vacuum that organized prisoners were able to exploit.

On April 3rd, with the US 6th Armored Division less than 80 km away, Commander Herman Pista received orders to evacuate the camp.

Between April 6th and 10th, the SS forced the departure of approximately 28,000 prisoners in marches toward other camps.

But the internal clandestine committee, dominated by German communist prisoners, and militarily organized since 1943, executed a strategy of passive resistance, falsification of evacuation lists, concealment of prisoners in barracks declared empty, and sabotage of transports through deliberate administrative delays.

On April 11th, when the first American patrols approached, Pista ordered the final evacuation of personnel.

At a quart 3:00 in the afternoon, the clandestine committee took control of the watchtowers, the weapons depots, and the main gate.

When the American division officially entered shortly after 4, it found the camp under the control of the prisoners themselves with improvised white flags and 21,000 survivors organized by nationality.

Bookenvald was not liberated in the strict sense.

It was abandoned by the SS and self-liberated by a clandestine structure that had survived years of internal purges.

Bergen Bellson represents the opposite extreme, a collapse with no internal organization capable of containing it.

Originally conceived as an exchange camp for prisoners with diplomatic value, it became between December 1944 and April 1945, the terminal point of evacuations from eastern camps.

Without gas chambers or industrial extermination facilities, the camp absorbed more than 85,000 people in 4 months, completely overwhelming its designed capacity of 10,000.

The commander, Yseph Kramer, received no evacuation orders because the camp no longer had strategic value.

It was a human depot in decomposition.

When British forces of the 11th Armored Division arrived on April 15th, they found approximately 60,000 living prisoners and more than 13,000 unburied corpses.

Typhus affected 70% of the survivors.

There had been no functioning portable water since April 4th.

The barracks, designed for 100 people, held between 600 and 1,000.

The SS had abandoned sanitary functions and food distribution since March.

The British negotiated a 48-hour truce with the local German command to organize the transfer of authority without combat.

Kramer and 48 SS members remained in the camp until April 17th.

That permanence was not altruism.

It was calculation.

Kramer knew that fleeing would immediately identify him as guilty.

Remaining gave him the possibility of presenting himself as an administrator who had followed orders under impossible conditions.

Dachauo, liberated on April 29th by American troops, revealed the coexistence of three temporalities in the same space.

Evacuation in progress, partial abandonment of command, and the continued presence of armed guards.

Between April 26th and 28th, the SS had evacuated approximately 7,000 prisoners toward the Alps.

The train discovered by American soldiers near the station contained 39 cars with approximately 2,300 corpses.

Prisoners evacuated from Bukinvald who had died during a 21-day transport without water or food.

Within the main complex, the command structure had disappeared between the night of the 28th and the morning of the 29th, but between 200 and 300 lower ranking guards remained on duty.

When American troops entered, they found approximately 32,000 prisoners alive, bodies piled in the crerematorium and guards alternating between attempts to surrender and sporadic gunfire.

Operational confusion was total.

Some soldiers accepted formal surreners.

Others, upon seeing the rail cars filled with corpses and the crerematoria, executed unarmed guards.

The exact number of dead that day remains debated, but the central fact is indisputable.

The visual impact of the camp shattered American military discipline for several hours.

That breakdown of discipline was not exceptional.

Allied soldiers arrived without conceptual preparation for what they would encounter.

Combat manuals included protocols for prisoners of war, civilian populations, and the surrender of enemy forces.

They did not include protocols for installations of industrial human degradation.

On April 12th, General Dwight Eisenhower visited Ordroof, a subcamp of Bukinvald liberated 3 days earlier.

His remark was recorded, “We have been told that the American soldier does not know why he fights. Now at least he will know what he fights against.”

That statement reflects the immediate operational problem.

The liberators were simultaneously confronting a medical emergency, a crime scene, and a moral imperative.

Those three urgencies were incompatible in terms of standard military procedure.

The collapse of the system turned personal identification into the only mechanism of immediate justice.

Liberated prisoners did not need files.

They had lived under that system for months or years.

They recognized faces, uniforms, ranks, and specific functions.

They knew who had selected prisoners for the gas chambers, who had beaten them during roll calls, who had stolen rations, who had ordered executions.

That direct identification operated without judicial mediation because no intermediate authority existed.

In the Gusen subc camp, liberated on May 5th, prisoners lynched between 40 and 50 capos and auxiliary guards in the first 48 hours.

In Mount evacuated by the SS on May 3rd, Spanish prisoners from the clandestine committee executed 22 capos accused of active collaboration in murders before the arrival of American troops.

The blood group tattoo became an involuntary mark of identification.

Introduced in 1936 for members of the SS Vafugong trooper and gradually extended to camp guard units.

It consisted of a letter indicating the blood group marked on the inner part of the left arm.

Its function was medical to facilitate transfusions in combat if the soldier was unconscious.

But in 1945 it became evidence of belonging to the SS.

Allied forces used it as a rapid filter in prisoner of war camps where millions of German soldiers were mixed together.

It was not absolute proof.

Its application was not universal and some members recruited after 1943 did not have it, but it was sufficient for immediate detention and interrogation.

Some attempted to remove the tattoo through cuts, burns, or acid, leaving scars that appeared even more suspicious.

The distinction between SS personnel, auxiliaries, and capos was operationally impossible in the first days.

The camps did not operate solely with Germans.

From 1942 onward, the system incorporated auxiliary guards recruited in occupied Soviet territories, personnel from foreign units, and fundamentally prisoners turned into internal functionaries.

Capos supervised work details, distributed rations, controlled barracks, and applied punishments under orders.

Some exercised that power with extreme brutality.

Others used it to protect specific prisoners or sabotage production quotas.

But at the moment of liberation, that distinction was invisible to ordinary prisoners who had only experienced violence.

Immediate justice operated without nuance.

The power vacuum in the liberated camps lasted between 24 and 72 hours.

In that interval, three forces coexisted without a clear hierarchy.

Liberated prisoners driven by an impulse for revenge, remaining guards without superior orders, and Allied troops without a specific protocol.

That coexistence generated spontaneous violence, summary executions, and lynchings that Allied forces did not always attempt to stop.

In some cases, such as Dhau, American soldiers directly participated in executions.

In others, such as Guzen, they remained passive observers while prisoners settled scores.

In Bkenvald, prior internal organization allowed a degree of control.

The clandestine committee detained 125 SS members and formally handed them over to American authorities, although they had previously executed 22 Kappos accused of specific murders.

The Nazi concentration camp system did not end with a surrender.

It disintegrated through operational fragmentation, contradictory evacuations, abandonment of command, flight of those responsible, and the persistence of guards without a functional chain of command.

That disintegration made immediate justice inevitable because it eliminated all intermediate authority between victims and executioners.

When the gates opened, they did not reveal a metaphorical hell.

They revealed an administrative system of terror whose collapse transformed its operators into identifiable, vulnerable targets within reach of those who had survived under its domination.

Justice without courts, retribution against the SS and Capos in 1945.

In Dhao, liberated on April 29th, 1945, American soldiers from the 45th Infantry Division and the 42nd Infantry Division encountered a sequence of events that blurred the distinction between combat and settling scores.

The violence did not begin inside the main camp, but at the adjacent train station, where 39 rail cars contained approximately 2,300 decomposing corpses.

These bodies belong to prisoners evacuated from Bkhenvald in a transport that had lasted 21 days without food or water.

The reaction of the soldiers who discovered the rail cars was immediate and documented.

According to testimonies collected in the subsequent military investigation, several captured SS guards near the station were executed on the spot.

There was no formal surrender or transfer to custody.

There were gunshots.

The second episode occurred in the so-called coal yard, a space where captured SS guards were concentrated after the entry into the main camp.

Numbers vary according to sources, but testimonies agree that between 30 and 50 guards were executed there after surrendering.

The military investigation led by Lieutenant Colonel Joseph M. Whitaker, Deputy Inspector General of the Seventh US Army, interrogated direct witnesses and concluded that the executions took place under circumstances that could not be justified as combat.

Whitaker identified at least one officer directly responsible, Lieutenant William P. Walsh, but his disciplinary recommendations never led to court marshals.

Brigadier General Henning Lindon, commander of the liberation operation, pushed for the events to be reinterpreted as a response to escape attempts or as part of a confusing combat situation.

There were no US judicial proceedings for those deaths.

The US institutional explanation oscillated between three incompatible narratives.

First, to deny that anything irregular had occurred.

Second, to admit irregularities but attribute them to the confusion of combat.

Third, to acknowledge summary executions, but classify them as understandable reactions given the emotional context.

None of these narratives addressed the central problem.

Soldiers of a regular army had executed unarmed prisoners in an area under military control.

Whitaker’s report was archived without consequences because opening a disciplinary process against US personnel in Dhaka would have meant publicly acknowledging that the liberation of a concentration camp included war crimes committed by the liberators.

But the violence in Dhaka was not solely between American soldiers and SS guards.

Inside the camp, liberated prisoners identified and attacked CAPOS and prisoner functionaries accused of active collaboration in the internal control system.

The CAPOS were not SS guards or German personnel.

They were prisoners selected to supervise work details, distribute rations, apply punishments, and maintain internal discipline under SS authority.

Some exercised that power with extreme brutality.

Others tried to protect fellow prisoners or sabotage production quotas.

That distinction was irrelevant at the time of liberation.

For most ordinary prisoners, a capo who had beaten prisoners during roll calls, stolen rations, or reported sabotage attempts was indistinguishable from an SS guard in terms of direct responsibility for everyday suffering.

In Dhao, the number of kapos and internal collaborators lynched or executed by other prisoners in the first 48 hours is not precisely documented, but later testimonies confirm that multiple episodes occurred.

Violence against Kapos was not a peculiarity of Dao.

It was a recurring pattern in almost all liberated camps where this internal control structure existed.

In the Gusen sub camp, part of the Mauousen complex, prisoners executed between 40 and 50 capos and auxiliary guards in the first 48 hours after the SS evacuation on May 3rd, 1945.

Local memorials described those days as a period of chaos and lynch law where immediate justice operated without any mediation.

The difference between Gusen and Darau was not the existence of violence against collaborators, but the degree of control that the liberating forces were able or willing to impose.

In Gusen, US troops arrived on May 5th, 2 days after the SS evacuation, and found a camp where the settling of scores had already occurred.

In Dhaka, the troops were present from April 29th, but they did not systematically intervene to stop the internal violence among prisoners.

This inaction was not necessarily negligence.

It was operational calculation.

An American officer was simultaneously facing the need to secure the perimeter, disarm remaining SS guards, organize medical care for 32,000 prisoners in critical condition, and maintain order in a space where any attempt to stop liberated prisoners could trigger a riot.

The first concentration camp liberated by US forces was not Dhao, but Uruff, a subcamp of Bukhanvald.

On April 4th, 1945, troops from the fourth armored division found approximately 4,000 corpses and evidence that the SS had executed the remaining prisoners before evacuating.

They also found the bodies of two German guards who had been executed by prisoners during the liberation.

This visual evidence preserved in the archives of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum confirms that immediate violence against camp personnel occurred from the first contact between liberators and the camps of the concentration camp system.

General Dwight Eisenhower visited Ordruff on April 12th and ordered that the entire site be photographed and filmed.

His public statement was explicit.

“We have been told that the American soldier does not know why he fights. Now at least he will know what he fights against.”

This statement reflects the immediate operational dilemma.

The American soldiers had not been conceptually prepared for what they were encountering and their reactions ranged from shock and confusion to immediate punitive decisions.

Bhanvald liberated on April 11th presented a different dynamic because the internal clandestine organization had taken control of the camp before the American arrival.

The clandestine committee dominated by German communist prisoners detained 125 SS members and formally handed them over to US authorities.

But before that formal handover, the committee executed 22 capos accused of specific murders.

These executions were not spontaneous lynchings.

They were decisions made by an organized structure that had operated clandestinely for years and assumed judicial functions in the authority vacuum between the SS evacuation and the US arrival.

A subsequent report from the National WWI Museum describes columns of liberated prisoners marching in formation and notes that many were eager to find Germans and kill them.

This description reflects that the impulse for revenge was neither individual nor irrational.

It was collective and organized.

The difference between the violence in Bkenvald and the violence in Dhau or Guzen was the degree of institutionalization.

In Bkenvald, the prior clandestine organization allowed revenge to operate with some selectivity.

Specific accused were identified.

Concrete accusations were made and decisions were executed within an alternative framework of authority.

In Dhau and Gusen, the violence was more diffuse.

Multiple simultaneous episodes, spontaneous assaults, and lynchings without formal accusations.

This difference does not imply that one form of violence was more legitimate than the other.

It implies that the collapse of the SS system generated different dynamics of immediate justice depending on the internal structures of each camp.

The operational problem for the Allied forces was that no protocols existed for managing this transition.

Military manuals included procedures for the surrender of enemy forces, the custody of prisoners of war, and the administration of civilian populations in occupied territory.

They did not include procedures for facilities where three groups with completely reversed power relations coexisted, unarmed SS guards who had been executioners, liberated prisoners who had been victims, and allied troops who had to simultaneously rescue, punish, and document.

The real capacity to impose order in this context depended on contingent factors.

The number of troops available, the physical condition of the prisoners, the presence or absence of internal leaders with recognized authority, and individual decisions of officers without clear guidance from higher commands.

The documentation of this violence is structurally uneven.

Dao generated an investigative report because the executions occurred in the presence of US personnel and because the episode threatened to become a public scandal if leaked without institutional control.

Ordruff generated photographic evidence because Eisenhower ordered the entire site to be documented.

Bookenval generated later testimonies because the internal clandestine organization survived as a structure and was able to articulate its own narrative.

Gusen and other subcamps generated fragmentaryary evidence because the executions occurred on the margins without institutional witnesses and because survivors who participated had incentives not to leave a record.

This documentary inequality does not mean that the violence was lesser in less documented places.

It means that what is preserved in archives reflects both the occurrence of events and the institutional conditions that allowed their recording.

The British forces faced similar dynamics with different institutional responses.

Bergen Bellson, liberated on April 15th, became the emblematic case of British management of a humanitarian disaster.

The British negotiated a 48-hour truce with the local German command to transfer authority without combat, specifically to contain the outbreak of typhus, affecting 70% of the 60,000 living prisoners.

Commander Ysef Kramer and 48 SS members remained in the camp until April 17th, assisting in the transition.

This controlled presence prevented episodes of immediate violence comparable to Dhaka, not because the prisoners in Bergen Bellson lacked a desire for revenge, but because 70% were physically unable to move and because the British forces prioritized sanitary control over any other consideration.

The result was different in terms of subsequent justice.

Bergen Bellson generated the first major trial of camp crimes before a British military tribunal in September 1945 known as the Bellson trial.

45 accused, including Kramer and SS personnel, were formally tried.

11 were sentenced to death and executed in December 1945.

This judicial framework was possible because the British forces had secured custody of the SS personnel from day one and because the institutional priority was to document, preserve evidence and build a judicial case that could stand internationally.

The difference between the British response in Bergen Bellson and the American response in Dhau was not moral.

It was institutional and operational.

How did the Allied armies react to the Nazi executioners in the West?

The liberation of the camps left the Allied armies facing an immediate dilemma.

They had come to defeat an armed enemy and suddenly they were managing the collapse of a criminal system with thousands of living victims and perpetrators mixed in the same space.

The initial US reaction in places like Dhau showed this transition in a raw way.

There were episodes of SS guard deaths on the very day of the liberation in an atmosphere of rage and chaos and the very fact that the seventh army ordered an internal investigation weeks later indicates that for the institution it could not be dismissed as just fog of war.

Lieutenant Colonel Joseph Whitaker’s report, Assistant to the Inspector General, existed precisely to reconstruct complaints of mistreatment and deaths of German guards, and it established that shootings and summary executions had occurred in the area related to the train and the coalard.

But that same case shows the second part of the pattern.

After the initial outburst, the US Army returned to its logic of control, perimeter, custody, interrogation, and evidence preservation.

In other words, the brief impulse for punishment tended to be followed by a pragmatic decision.

The camp could no longer be a scene of vengeance.

It had to become a managed place with protected prisoners and detained suspects.

This shift was not only driven by ethics or abstract discipline.

It was driven by operational necessity.

Epidemics had to be prevented.

Internal lynchings had to be stopped.

Weapons had to be secured.

SS had to be separated from the vermach.

Names had to be taken.

And what had just been discovered had to be documented.

The very existence of US military reports about Dhau and what was found in the camp reflects that urgency to register and frame the horror as evidence, not just as an impression.

And in parallel, the narrative of many liberating units reveals something important.

Improvised justice was a risk not only morally but politically.

As soon as the world knew what was in the camps, it would also look at how the liberators behaved.

Dao therefore remained as a double wound, a symbol of the Nazi crime, and at the same time a reminder that even a disciplined army could break down for moments in the face of evidence.

The British, while sharing the shock and the impulse for punishment, had a different situation in Bergen Bellson from the very first minute.

It was not just a camp.

It was a sanitary catastrophe with typhus, dissentry, thousands of unburied corpses, and tens of thousands of people on the brink of death.

The British authorities arrived in Bellson on April 15th, 1945 and found themselves in a scenario where order meant above all hygiene, burial, disinfection, and isolation.

Within this framework, a form of punishment emerged that had both a practical and symbolic objective, forcing the available perpetrators, namely SS officers and also German prisoners of war employed as labor, to collect bodies, dig graves, and bury the dead.

Whether or not it was forced labor in the strict legal sense, it was a coercive imposition of tasks associated with the crime applied in a context where the main immediate enemy was disease and decomposition.

The museum and journalistic documentation of the liberation of Bellson records both the magnitude of the disaster and the fact that British forces forced German personnel in custody to participate in the burial and cleanup of the camp in Bellson.

Moreover, this behavior had a messageddriven logic.

The liberation was widely reported and became a turning point in British public consciousness.

Mass burial not only prevented an outofcrol epidemic, but also served as a way to deny any excuse of we didn’t know.

The Imperial War Museum itself highlights the discovery of thousands of bodies and around 60,000 survivors in extreme conditions.

And this framework explains why the British prioritized visible and urgent actions.

Mass graves, bulldozers, doctors, quarantines, and immediate disaster management.

The punishment here, blended with logistics, forcing the perpetrators to bury the dead, was a public health measure and a brutal way of confronting them with the material result of their system.

If, in the west, improvised justice was a brief outburst followed by institutional control.

In the east, the immediate postwar period moved across even rougher terrain.

First, because the Eastern Front had been a war of annihilation since 1941, with levels of mass violence, reprisals, and destruction that surpassed any comparison with the West.

Second, because the Soviet advance not only liberated but occupied, reorganized, and consolidated a new apparatus of power.

And third, because the Soviet relationship with justice was intertwined with security structures like the NKVD and purging mechanisms that mixed the capture of Nazi criminals with political persecution in the liberated territories in Poland and other areas of Eastern Europe.

The presence of the Red Army and the NKVD was experienced by large sectors as the shift from one form of domination to another rather than a return to sovereignty.

Polish sources explicitly described that between 1944 and 1945 practices of cleansing and coercion were deployed which included detentions, terror and political control within a framework where Soviet force acted more as a conquering power than as an ally.

This is important for the topic of the camps for a simple reason.

In that context, the fate of many suspects, including members of German structures, did not depend on transparent procedures in the western style, but rather on security decisions, interrogations, and internment mechanisms.

It was not always spontaneous revenge.

Many times it was a system.

A clear window into this approach appears in what happened later, already in the German territory under Soviet occupation.

There the Soviet administration created special camps to intern tens of thousands of people as part of the denazification and security of the new order.

The Saxonhausen memorial, for example, documents that the Soviets established 10 special camps in their occupied zone and that Zaxonhausen hosted one of the largest around 60,000 detainees with thousands dying from hunger and disease between 1945 and 1950.

This is not an emotional response from soldiers to a liberated camp.

It is a state policy that used mass detention under harsh conditions as an instrument of control in the postwar period.

Therefore, when talking about Soviet justice versus American justice, the central difference is not in the existence of punishment, but in the type of machine that administers it.

In the American case, even with episodes of reprisal, the movement tends toward formal procedures, military investigation, reports, prisoner classification, evidence preservation, and later tribunals.

In the British case at Bellson, punishment was immediately expressed as forced labor, and as public confrontation with the bodies while simultaneously organizing a massive sanitary response.

In the Soviet case, the dominant logic was embedded in security and occupation structures, arrest, internment, purging, and control that did not only target the obvious culprits, but also extended to broad categories of dangerous individuals for the new order.

In Dhao, for example, research and historical work on the last days of the camp show that once the SS control was broken, there were attempts at retribution by liberated prisoners against former captives, something that the Allied troops later tried to contain, operating under a logic of order and custody.

The idea of handing over can exist as a punctual gesture or as an omission, not intervening in time, looking away for a few seconds, or not having enough men to prevent a crowd from rushing in.

And in a place where the evidence of the crime was mere meters away, where the wagons with dead bodies, the barracks of the sick, and the unburied corpses were visible at a glance, those seconds could be decisive.

In the east, however, the issue is not understood solely by what happened inside a particular camp, but by the wartime culture with which the Red Army arrived.

The Eastern Front was not a tougher campaign than others.

It was a war of annihilation with brutal occupation, mass killings, and systematic destruction that affected millions of civilians.

Works of historical dissemination based on academic research highlight this combination of combat and occupation violence as the core of the German Soviet conflict.

It was not only about defeating the enemy, but about a confrontation shaped by criminal policies and constant brutalization.

This left a psychological and cultural mark on the soldiers and the liberated populations.

Liberation was not only about rescue but also about reclaiming territories where the trauma was both total and recent.

That is why when the Red Army entered Awitz on January 27th, 1945 and found thousands of abandoned prisoners and traces of extermination, they did so as a force that had just crossed a continent of human ruins.

In this context, the Soviet logic tended to prioritize two things at once, advancing and securing.

Documenting the Nazi crime was important, but the focus on security and political control also weighed heavily, often overriding any western idea of a preserved scene or custody for tribunal in the classical sense.

When discussing the direct handover of guards to survivors in Soviet occupied areas, the problem is that often the boundary between permission, tolerance, or the inability to prevent it is poorly documented.

Much of the postwar violence in Eastern Europe occurred outside formal records, local revenge, settling scores with collaborators, attacks on fallen authorities, and episodes on the margins of the new power.

Recent studies on violence in the 1944 to 1945 period in Eastern and central eastern European regions often describe this period as a transformation of wartime brutality into postwar political and social violence rather than a clean slate.

This helps explain why certain episodes of reprisal may have occurred without being documented in as much detail as a US military report like the one on Dhaka.

Not because they were necessarily more or less significant, but because the ecosystem of documentation, censorship, state priorities, and local chaos was different.

The previous experience of total war also affects how the perpetrator is perceived.

For an American soldier coming from the Western Front, an SS guard might be a prisoner of war who should be separated, guarded, and interrogated, even if the emotional impulse was overwhelming.

In Dhao, the very existence of investigated accounts and the later effort to frame what happened shows the tension between visceral reaction and a return to institutional discipline.

For a Soviet soldier or for liberated populations in the east, the figure of the SS could embody years of occupation, hunger, deportations, and murders on a scale that had redefined the word enemy.

One does not need to romanticize or justify anything to notice the effect.

The more absolute the war, the thinner the line between justice and vengeance becomes.

This is compounded by a key factor.

Command and discipline do not operate the same when the objective changes in minutes.

The liberation of a camp was not a city taken or a hill conquered.

It was a humanitarian emergency with an epidemic threat with thousands of people outside any normal social structure and with perpetrators trying to blend into the general collapse.

The chain of command could be intact, but the type of situation exceeded standard instruction, and here emotional reaction filtered even into professional armies.

In the west, this is seen in the before and after outbursts or isolated abuses followed by the swift attempt to impose control, record, separate, and maintain an institutional narrative.

In the east, control could arrive with another priority.

Politically securing the territory, classifying populations, purging, detaining, and framing the future under the logic of occupation, where justice was also a tool of consolidation.

From immediate punishment to Nuremberg, the problem of law.

In the days following the liberation, the Allied front advanced so quickly that at times the war seemed to be disassembling piece by piece.

A road taken, a village surrendered, a German column broken, and suddenly behind a barbed wire fence, a world that didn’t fit into any previous idea of camp or prison.

In this brutal clash between what should have happened, according to formal justice, namely the capture, custody, and interrogation of the suspects, and what actually happened, popular justice, and lynchings, an uncomfortable question arose for the victors themselves.

What happened when the law tried to enter a place where for years the law had been a mockery?

The official response, at least on paper, was clear even before stepping foot in a camp.

The 1929 Geneva Convention on Prisoners of War established a basic principle.

The prisoner was in the power of the enemy state, not the individuals who captured him.

He was to be treated humanely and protected from acts of violence, and explicitly reprisals against him were prohibited.

This logic was not meant for peace of mind, but precisely for the worst days, to prevent combat from turning into organized revenge.

But the problem in April and May of 1945 was that the theater of operations was no longer just a battlefield.

It was a succession of discoveries that pulled soldiers out of the mental framework of conventional warfare and pushed them into a moral terrain where the lines became blurred.

In theory, an unarmed and surrendered SS guard would enter the same legal circuit as any prisoner of war.

Identification, custody, transfer, interrogation, and eventually trial if charges existed.

In practice, the very condition of SS carried a different weight.

Not because international law ignored it, as the convention applied to the prisoner as a person under custody, but because the symbol was inseparable from the visible crime around.

The uniform was not just any uniform.

It was the immediate face of a system that had just left behind piled up corpses, sick people without care, crerematoriums, and open pits.

This disconnect between norm and reality exploded in the first moments of control.

In Dhau, for example, the sequence that later generated more controversy showed the exact point where the law broke.

Guards separated from the rest, prisoners lined up, close-range shootings, and episodes where violence became procedure for a while, even if it was improvised.

The legal question was simple and harsh.

When someone surrendered, did they remain enemy or did they become a prisoner under protection?

The 1929 text left no room for doubt about treatment.

Custody was the responsibility of the detaining power and reprisals were prohibited.

The real question, the one felt on the ground, was different.

How could immediate self-control be demanded from men who had just seen what they had seen and were still under combat tension with isolated shooters, rumors of counterattacks, and guards who in some cases were still trying to escape or resist.

The liberators had to construct a new ethical and moral narrative that did not appeal to vengeance, but rather the institutional reflection of restraining it, channeling it, or at least recording it.

Because the same army that had witnessed the horror needed more than indignation.

It needed discipline to occupy Germany, authority to administer cities, and above all, credibility for what was to come next, the trials for war crimes.

That goal clashed headon with an uncomfortable truth.

If justice was allowed to become summary execution, the moral message would be contaminated.

And if soldiers were harshly punished for losing control, there was a risk of breaking internal cohesion and legitimacy, as if the command were defending those who wore the wrong uniform.

For this reason, formal investigations began almost immediately.

As mentioned earlier, Colonel Joseph Whitaker took charge of the formal investigation at Dhaka, focused on alleged mistreatment and deaths of German guards in custody.

But now, it is important to go into a little more detail about what Whitaker recorded.

This investigation known by the title investigation of alleged mistreatment of German guards at Dau dated June 1945 gathered testimonies, reconstructed sequences and documented specific facts.

Shootings of surrendered prisoners in a rail car, executions after the segregation between Vermar and SS and emissions of medical assistance to the wounded.

The mere existence of this report indicated something key.

The US military structure understood that once the surrendered enemy became a prisoner, the issue was no longer combat but custody and therefore fell under a different logic, responsibility, regulations, and eventually a court marshal.

This distinction was at the heart of the law of war.

It wasn’t a matter of sympathy for the prisoner, but of limits for the captor.

The convention, in fact, was based on the idea of state responsibility above individual impulses.

There was political pressure and strategic pressure.

The Allies were beginning to document Nazi crimes at a near frenetic pace with intelligence teams and testimony gathering operations producing field reports to ensure that what was discovered would not remain rumor or oral account.

In Dhau, for example, military reports circulated that sought to establish facts and the structures of the camp system shortly after liberation as part of the urgency to record everything.

And in parallel, branches and procedures for investigating war crimes in the European theater were being consolidated at least nominally based on frameworks like the Geneva Convention and accepted rules of war.

This is the point where the intervention of senior commanders appears because military justice did not occur in a vacuum.

According to widely cited reconstructions, the investigation into Dacow came to contemplate potential court marshals for those involved.

However, the chain of command also had the power to shut it down.

In this context, it is recorded that General George S. Patton, already appointed as military governor of Bavaria, chose to dismiss the charges, which meant that the witnesses were not confronted in a formal trial and that the case was closed without a military criminal process.

That decision, regardless of how it is judged, revealed a dilemma that the allies faced.

Maintaining discipline without denying the psychological impact, upholding legality without turning it into a scene of exemplary punishment against their own, and protecting the moral authority of the future trial of the Nazis without opening an internal front that could be read as an equivalence between crimes.

In documents cited regarding the case, the idea of mitigating circumstances was also raised.

The letter of the law might have been violated, but it was argued that the conditions seen by the first troops made it impossible or unfair to assign individual responsibility with precision long after the fact.

Thus, within a matter of weeks, the scenario changed silently.

The first day had been driven by impulse.

The law disappeared because reality pushed it aside.

The second moment was bureaucratic and strategic.

The law returned not as comfort but as a tool of governance, occupation and legitimacy.

And still there remained an unresolved issue because not all the allies and not all fronts had the same relationship with vengeance, discipline and the concept of prisoner.

In the east the word custody carried a different weight and the immediate past of total war pushed for different responses.

The problem for the allies was that the impulse to punish and the obligation to restrain appeared at the same time in the same place and in front of the same people.

In theory, the framework was clear.

Prisoners of war were under the power of the detaining state, not individuals, and they had to be treated humanely and protected from acts of violence.

Furthermore, reprisals were prohibited.

This was not a moral detail.

It was a written rule.

And in 1945, that rule still applied when versions of summary executions began circulating, such as guards being shot after surrendering, shootings at close range, and bodies piled in corners where there was no longer any combat.

The natural reaction of a regular army was to try to name and legally frame what was happening.

Not because the war was ending in the abstract, but because military control depended on one idea.

Violence had to be an instrument, not an overflow.

This brings into play a tool that may seem minor, but is not administrative language.

In situations where it was no longer possible to undo what had happened, the report, the dispatch, and the exact phrasing served to frame the event, mitigate its public impact, and above all, protect the cohesion of the command.

Modern warfare operated with documents.

If something could not be justified as combat, then it had to be presented as an incident, as resistance, as an escape attempt.

This formula, which stated that a suspect had been shot while attempting to escape, had history.

In fact, it had been a recurring fiction within the Nazi system.

The SS and police forces frequently used it to describe the murders of prisoners, giving them an appearance of legality and discipline.

The bitter irony is that on the other side there was also the temptation to use similar phrases when the goal was to close a dangerous gap in the official narrative.

Not because they were morally equivalent, but because military bureaucracy in any army tends to seek terms that reduce political friction.

In a study of the US Army’s own professional and ethical system, a striking example appears.

Upon learning of a massacre of prisoners in 1943, George S. Patton remarked that the officer should certify that the dead were snipers or that they had tried to escape or something like that to avoid scandal in the press and civil anger.

That phrase does not describe Dhao.

It describes a logic.

The logic of a command that when the event has already occurred first asks about the political and disciplinary effect and in 1945 that effect was explosive.

The liberation of the camps was being photographed, filmed, and narrated by correspondents.

The Allied public, which had heard general reports of atrocities for years, was now seeing concrete images, bodies, furnaces, barracks, death trains.

In that context, admitting that Allied soldiers had executed prisoners could be seen as an intolerable stain or as a comprehensible reaction, and that ambiguity was dangerous.

If the overflow was legitimized, the door would open for the war to end, not with surrender and occupation, but with a chain of uncontrolled vengeance.

Therefore, in many cases, the movement was both double and almost contradictory.

First, immediate violence was tolerated or passed over because no one wanted to be the officer who stopped men who had just witnessed horror.

And then the attempt was made to restore order through investigation, discipline, and the transfer of responsibilities.

Not always to punish harshly, but to close the episode, fit it into a file, isolate it as an exception.

The document had that function, to turn the unbearable into a case, the visceral into an incident, the morally dangerous into a resolved matter.

Meanwhile, at a higher level, another kind of response was being prepared.

Formal justice, deliberate, slow, and slow not due to a lack of will, but due to scale to judge, the Allies needed more than fury.

They needed an international structure, a definition of crimes, a court rules, evidence, translation, logistics, custody of the accused, and above all, a political objective that the punishment would also be a historical record impossible to deny.

This design was consolidated with the London Agreement of August 8th, 1945, which established the basis for the International Military Tribunal and its charter.

But even after that step, the process was gradual.

There was an inaugural session in Berlin on October 18th, 1945 before the machinery was moved to Nuremberg, where the main trial formally began on November 20th, 1945.

Here lies the heart of the contrast.

Immediate punishment was a matter of minutes or hours.

Formal justice a matter of months.

And this interval was not a vacuum.

It was a period of occupation, interrogations, the hunting of fugitives, the reorganization of prisons and displaced persons camps, epidemics, famines, repatriations.

In this world in ruins, the idea of waiting for the tribunal could feel like an affront to some survivors and a relief to some officials.

Waiting meant that the state was reclaiming the sovereignty of punishment which was no longer the mass or the impulse but the procedure.

However, deferred justice was not simply softer.

It had another ambition.

The goal of Nuremberg was not just to punish individuals but to demonstrate a pattern.

How a criminal state was designed, how orders were obeyed, how murders were masked with bureaucracy, how an entire system was executed with signatures, stamps, chains of command.

In that sense, Nuremberg sought something that revenge could not give, a global record.

Yet, the tension did not disappear.

Formal justice was also selective.

It could not judge everyone nor every guard nor every collaborator.

It chose primary culprits, constructed categories such as war crimes and crimes against humanity, and let thousands of lesser cases fall into other courts into denazification or simply into oblivion.

This selection inevitably fueled resentment.

For some, the fact that a well-dressed official ended up in a well-lit room and not in a muddy courtyard felt like injustice.

For others, it was the only way to prevent the end of the war from resembling too closely what was being condemned.

The moral questions raised by the liberation.

The public history of liberation was constructed almost from the very first day as a necessary narrative.

The gates opened, the crime was exposed, and the Allied armies appeared as the force that set the world back on its axis.

This narrative had real value as it clearly stated that the allies had saved lives, stopped murders, and documented evidence.

But it also served another function, to order the moral chaos.

Because in the same place where the horror was discovered, there were also episodes that didn’t fit with the image of the liberator as an impeccable figure.

This clash is clearly seen in what historians call without euphemisms a sensitive issue.

The famous German historian Jurgen Zeruski has made this clear when studying the shootings of captured SS members during the liberation of Dhaka outside of Germany due to the shadow it casts on the reputation of the liberators and inside Germany because of the potential and real use that apologetic sectors can make to retrospectively justify Nazi atrocities or pseudo exonerate perpetrators.

That’s the underlying reason why this issue was often sidelined.

Not because it was non-existent, but because it was dangerous in the realm of memory.

Opening that door could feed the deceptive argument of everyone did the same.

Right when the world was trying to prove with evidence that the Nazi system was not just another violence in the war, but a state machinery of persecution and extermination.

The consequence was a kind of narrative selection.

In survivors memoirs, for example, these events appear, but as a marginal aspect compared to the overwhelming weight of the liberation itself.

The priority of memory was survival, not creating a moral account of the moment when power changed hands.

In institutional accounts, the focus shifted toward what was strategically essential, securing the perimeter, addressing epidemics, recording evidence, establishing command.

Everything else, like shootings in a courtyard, hitting a guard, and the gaze that did not intervene, tended to remain in a gray area without heroism and with no clear place in the communicates.

And when something threatened to become a scandal, the most effective tool to close the issue appeared, the file.

Zerooki also points out that just days later, a meticulous investigation into the events at Dhaka was initiated with sworn statements and command reports.

But he also emphasizes something decisive for understanding the disappearance of the issue in the public narrative.

The originals of these sources were in the US National Archives and were only released in the summer of 1992.

Between 1945 and that document release, the public memory had decades to solidify without that uncomfortable layer in view.

It’s not that no one knew.

There were rumors, scattered testimonies, contradictory versions.

What was lacking was accessibility, contrast, and the kind of discussion that only becomes widespread when sources appear and historians can work with them with some stability.

In parallel, a useful myth was consolidated, the shadowless liberator.

Useful because the postwar period needed clean symbols to rebuild legitimacy and sustain the great trial that was coming.

With Nuremberg, justice had to be deferred, but public, rigorous, international.

The world had to see the perpetrators seated, identified, confronted with documents, not just punished by impulses.

The inaugural session of the International Military Tribunal was on October 18th, 1945 in Berlin, and the main trial formally began on November 20th, 1945 in Nuremberg.

For this justice to work as a foundational act, a sharp contrast was needed.

Organized crime versus restored legality.

In this framework, immediate revenge was a noise that was attempted to be reduced.

But history does not remain silent forever.

It changes form.

What didn’t fit into the official narrative resurfaced over time in late testimonies.

Many veterans described decades later the psychological shock of entering the camps.

The mix of nausea, anger, and bewilderment, and how this shock altered their understanding of the war and their own conduct.

There were also voices of soldiers, doctors, and correspondents who recalled that moment when discipline seemed insufficient to process what was seen.

These are not uniform or convenient accounts.

Precisely for that reason, they matter because they break the idea that human morality is automatic, that it activates by itself in the face of absolute evil like a perfect machine.

This is the door through which the concept of the gray zone enters.

And it is here that precision is necessary.

Primo Levi formulated this idea to describe the moral complexity within the concentration camp universe where the Nazi system pushed victims into ambiguous positions to exploit minimal privileges by performing control tasks, thus establishing a sinister survival system in exchange for concessions without erasing the fundamental difference between executioners and the persecuted.

His point was that the reality of the lagger cannot be reduced to two pure blocks.

Victims on one side and persecutors on the other because the system itself was designed to degrade relationships, induce complicity, and generate degrees of coercion and responsibility that are difficult to judge from the outside.

What is disturbing is that this idea, originally meant to describe the internal camp experience, helps illuminate what happened in the minutes following liberation.

Not because Allied soldiers and liberated prisoners became equivalent to the SS, but because the line between justice and vengeance became, in some places as thin as a gesture.

There were capos identified and punished by other prisoners.

There were guards handed over to mobs.

There were soldiers who intervened and soldiers who did not.

All of this coexisted with the attempt to restore legal order.

And this coexistence is in itself a form of the gray zone.

Not the one of systemic crime, but the one of momentary moral collapse.

The comfortable narrative prefers heroes without fractures.

The reality of 1945 did not offer that.

It offered human beings.

Some reacted with extraordinary self-control, others with an impulse for immediate punishment, others with a paralysis that they later confused with guilt.

And upon this diversity, a tension was mounted that never completely disappears.

When an evil is so absolute, can the human response remain pure without cost?

The Geneva Convention prohibited reprisals against prisoners of war.

The principle was written.

What is difficult to accept is that even with the written principle, real behavior can deviate when the mind is confronted with something it was not prepared to see.

So why is this issue still uncomfortable today?

For two reasons that pull in opposite directions.

The first is moral.

Recognizing shadows in the liberator seems to some a way of diminishing the liberation or tarnishing the memory of those who did the right thing under impossible conditions.

The second is political.

Deniialist or relativist sectors seek exactly that crack to turn it into propaganda as some extremist authors tried to do by distorting the episode to relativize the condemnation of national socialism or invert the moral sense of liberation.

But silence is not a solution because silence is also a weapon.

When the complex is omitted, the ground is left open for the complex to be hijacked by those who manipulate it the worst.

To speak about this seriously requires two statements at once without allowing one to negate the other.

Liberation was a historical act of rescue and revelation of the crime.

And at the edge of that act, there were episodes of vengeance and summary executions that show human fragility under extreme shock.

It is not an equivalence.

It is a warning.

The final warning does not aim to judge 1945 from a comfortable chair, but to understand what happens to morality when it is pushed to the limit.

Public memory needs symbols, yes, but mature memory also needs full truth.

Because if the camps taught anything, it is that degradation doesn’t start suddenly.

It starts when it is accepted that there are lives to which rules do not apply.

And if anything, the moment of liberation taught us.

It is that even those who come to restore rules can for a moment feel the temptation to suspend them.

That is the edge.

That is the place where history becomes uncomfortable, but also where it becomes truly useful.

Because if the shadowless liberator is a myth, then the lesson is not that morality is guaranteed, but that morality is a task.

It is sustained with discipline, with institutions, with boundaries, with honest memory.

And that honesty, which distinguishes the ability to look at the good without turning it into sanctity, and the horror without turning it into an excuse, is even today a form of defense