O QUE ACONTECEU COM OS HOMENS DA SS APÓS A SEGUNDA GUERRA?

🟢 PIX key to help the channel: ▶ [email protected] After the collapse of Nazi Germany, the SS ceased to exist. Numerous SS members, many of them still committed Nazis, remained free in Germany and throughout Europe. On May 21, 1945, the British captured Himmler, who was disguised and carrying a fraudulent passport. In an internment camp near Lüneburg, he committed suicide by biting into a cyanide capsule. Several other important SS members escaped, but some were quickly captured. Kaltenbrunner, head of the Reich Main Security Office - RSHA and the highest-ranking surviving SS department head after Himmler's suicide, was captured and imprisoned in the Bavarian Alps. He was one of 22 defendants tried at the International Military Tribunal in 1945-46. Some SS members were subjected to summary execution, torture, and beatings at the hands of liberated prisoners, displaced persons, or Allied soldiers. American soldiers of the 157th Regiment, who entered the Dachau concentration camp in April 1945 and witnessed the acts committed by the SS, shot some of the remaining SS camp guards. On April 15, 1945, British troops entered Bergen-Belsen. They put the SS guards on starvation rations, made them work without breaks, forced them to handle the remaining bodies, and stabbed them with bayonets or struck them with the butts of their rifles if they slowed down. Some members of the United States Army Counterintelligence Corps handed over captured SS concentration camp guards to displaced persons camps, where they knew they would be subjected to summary execution. 00:00 - START 02:18 - Mass Exodus 07:16 - Unwavering Demands 11:40 - Trials