Allied tactics By September 1944, the
Western Allies had reached
Germany's western border, and by the end of October had
captured Aachen, the first major German city to fall to them. Over the following six months they overran much of western Germany. In November the
Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) publicly stated that the forces of the Western Allies would strictly adhere to international law in respect of their treatment of civilians. However, SHAEF's manual
Combating the Guerrilla stated that there were circumstances where commanders could take "stern measures" against civilians as a
rapid response to
guerrilla attacks, although this was in breach of the
Hague Conventions. The frequency and nature of retaliatory actions differed between national contingents within the Western Allied forces. Following SHAEF's policy,
United States Army forces destroyed German buildings on several occasions, sometimes entire villages, and took other measures against German civilians. French troops took a similar, if more rigorous, approach to that of the Americans. The British commanders disapproved of retaliations against civilians, and British troops carried out few reprisals. The
First Canadian Army served in the predominately British
21st Army Group, and more frequently retaliated against German civilians than the British. The commander of
4th Canadian (Armoured) Division, Major-General
Christopher Vokes, believed that destroying property was the most appropriate way of responding to resistance by German civilians. The division carried out actions against German property more often than any other Canadian formation.
Soviet forces conducted retaliatory actions more frequently than their Western Allies. The
Soviet Union's leadership was concerned about the threat of a German resistance movement (called
Werwolf), and Soviet forces killed, raped and imprisoned large numbers of local civilians and destroyed property following guerrilla attacks.
Allied attitudes There was frustration throughout the Allied ranks at the Germans' continued resistance in a clearly hopeless cause, anger at the casualties they inflicted when the war was widely, and correctly, perceived to be almost over, and a general feeling that severe, even ruthless, treatment of German soldiers and civilians was justified. On 15 April the British reached
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where the inmates had been reduced to cannibalism. The historian
Rick Atkinson wrote that "the revelations of April ... sparked enduring outrage". An American officer wrote "The attitude of higher command seemed to be that these people ... should be made to feel the full significance of war and what their troops had done to other people." US general
George Patton wrote in his diary "In hundreds of villages ... most of the houses are heaps of stone ... I did most of it." When a
sniper fired at one of Patton's officers, he ordered several German houses to be burnt. When the commander of the US
3rd Armored Division,
Maurice Rose, was killed in action inside Germany on 30 March, several villages were razed by his irate troops, captured wounded Germans were shot on the spot and at least 45 Germans were executed after surrendering. An American artillery officer wrote home in April that "we should fire about a thousand rounds into every [German] town. Do them good". At least one British battalion refused to take
Waffen-SS prisoners, shooting those who surrendered; an officer of the battalion blamed this on SS "truculence" and a British battalion commander summed up the risk-averse attitude within his unit: "At this stage of the war, no one was very keen to earn medals." A British pilot wrote: "It seemed a stupid time to die." One British
corporal spoke for many when he wrote "Why don't the silly bastards give up?" Some divisions had suffered their last fatality by mid-April. The historian
Max Hastings wrote "The final Anglo-American drive across Germany offered ... many foolish little battles which wasted men's lives".
Battle for Sögel In mid-March 1945 the Western Allies prepared to cross the River
Rhine in
Operation Plunder. The Canadian official history describes the circumstances as buoyant as it was recognized that the end of World War II in Europe was close. In early April the 4th Canadian (Armoured) Division, as part of
II Canadian Corps, moved out of the eastern Netherlands in the wake of Operation Plunder's success. On 4 April,
The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of Canada, part of the
10th Canadian Infantry Brigade, one of two
brigades in the division, made an assault crossing of the
Ems River and captured the town of
Meppen, suffering only one casualty. German prisoners included several 17-year-old youths with less than eight weeks of military experience. The Canadians were supported by B and C squadrons SAS with
Operation Howard led by
Paddy Mayne, who were acting as reconnaissance. The division advanced a further to Sögel, which the 1st Battalion of
The Lake Superior Regiment (Motor) captured on 9 April. The following day it repulsed several German counter-attacks before the town was declared cleared. Some German civilians joined the fighting and were believed to have killed several Canadian soldiers. Vokes, believing the civilians needed to be taught a lesson, ordered the destruction of the centre of the town. This was accomplished with several truckloads of dynamite. Vokes was aware that these actions violated the
Hague Conventions and took care not to issue written instructions. Soldiers of the division started referring to Vokes as "The Sod of Sögel". The Canadian Army official history states: ==Battle for Friesoythe==