with US Army General
Bruce C. Clarke in 1965. At first Manteuffel was interned at the British-administered
Island Farm Special Camp 11 for high-ranking
Wehrmacht officers. In 1946 he was handed over to the Americans and took part in the
U.S. Army Historical Division project, for which he produced a monograph on the mobile warfare aspect of the Ardennes Offensive. Manteuffel was released in December 1946 and later became involved with politics. He joined the
Free Democratic Party of Germany (FDP) in 1949 and was elected to the
Bundestag in 1953. In 1956, he defected from the FDP to co-found the
Free People's Party and followed the party as it merged with the
German Party the following year. Manteuffel left office in 1957. In the early 1950s, he advised on the redevelopment of the
Bundeswehr. Manteuffel was charged in 1959 for having a deserter shot in 1944 (he reversed the court martial's original verdict of imprisonment and decided for a death sentence, using the Führer Order No. 7 as a basis). He was convicted and sentenced to 18 months in prison. Alaric Searle commented that Manteuffel exceeded his powers as a divisional commander, but at the same time, he agreed with
Hermann Balck, who was also prosecuted for ordering the unlawful execution of a German soldier, that such a trial would be "unthinkable" for a French or British officer. Manteuffel's purely military arguments—that signs of disintegration had appeared on other sectors of the front, that the night before the incident a case of desertion had occurred, and that his division's task, in a precarious situation, was to help protect a critical evacuation point—would probably have been accepted in most other Western countries as justifying his action. He spoke fluent English; in 1968 he lectured at the
United States Military Academy at
West Point, speaking about combat in deep snow conditions and worked as a technical adviser on war films. He was interviewed in
The World at War episode 3 - "France Falls (May - June 1940)" and episode 19 - "Pincers" (August 1944 – March 1945) in 1973. Manteuffel died in 1978. ==Awards==