Boards.ie uses cookies. By continuing to browse this site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Click here to find out more x
Post Reply  
 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
06-11-2011, 21:34   #16
Fuinseog
Registered User
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 5,317
Quote:
Originally Posted by R.Dub.Fusilier View Post
i'm not an expert on the subject but from what i remember he was sentenced to 12 years , i think, but a judge who was from ulster and a unionist. there is a good account of his military life in "Hitlers Englishmen" if you ever come across it. "Irish Secrets" by Hull gives a good account of the whole subject ,spies and such, in WW2.
I have tried to research Brady and the others, but the trail runs dry after 1950. Did they settle here? he seems to have kept a very low profile, unlike others such as Eric Pleasants in Hitler's Bastard.
G2 investigated Brady's Roscommon origins and the locals there had never heard of him.
Fuinseog is offline  
Advertisement
06-11-2011, 21:42   #17
OS119
Registered User
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 2,437
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fuinseog View Post
he was not a big fish like John Amery. Most of the Brits who served got off with short prison sentences.
yeah, there - surprisingly perhaps - seems to been a diferentiation between the 'nasties' and the useful (or not) idiots.

one of the idiots - forget which one - became a successful businessman in the UK. perhaps people just wanted to forget and get on their lives?
OS119 is offline  
06-11-2011, 21:42   #18
ejmaztec
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: Fecktov
Posts: 22,565
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fuinseog View Post
he was a serving member of the British army when he joined the German army. most armies do not look kindly upon turncoats.
He could have ditched his German uniform and wriggled out of the situation, he being primarily a POW. Perhaps he didn't have time to think?
ejmaztec is offline  
06-11-2011, 21:56   #19
OS119
Registered User
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 2,437
Quote:
Originally Posted by ejmaztec View Post
He could have ditched his German uniform and wriggled out of the situation, he being primarily a POW. Perhaps he didn't have time to think?
if we're talking about Brady he wasn't arrested in uniform, he surrendered in 1946 to British troops in Germany - presumably he'd spent the best part of a year in hiding and making his way from Berlin, in the Soviet sector, to Ireland (or indeed to anywhere but the Soviet sector), and just gave up.

Germany in 1946 would not have been a fun place to be - vast numbers of refugees, not a lot of food, and crawling with Allied troops who may or may not have been looking for him - he may well have decided that surrender was better than starvation, or indeed that he could persuade the BA that he'd screwed up the German attempts to use POW's as agents, as others undoubtedly did.
OS119 is offline  
06-11-2011, 22:00   #20
Delancey
Moderator
 
Delancey's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 5,458
I suppose that its possible that one reason the Brits who served in the German military got off relatively lightly was a perception that they were motivated by real conviction.
Many people throughout Europe were of the view that communism was the greatest evil facing the world and it had to be stopped at all costs , by 1946 the great alliance was rapidly unravelling and this may have had a bearing on their sentences.
Crucially the British ' Freikorps ' never bore arms against the British Army and that may well have saved them.

It would seem from the replies that the ' Irish Unit ' never existed which is no real surprise , just a few strange characters.
Delancey is offline  
Advertisement
06-11-2011, 22:05   #21
ejmaztec
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: Fecktov
Posts: 22,565
Quote:
Originally Posted by OS119 View Post
if we're talking about Brady he wasn't arrested in uniform, he surrendered in 1946 to British troops in Germany - presumably he'd spent the best part of a year in hiding and making his way from Berlin, in the Soviet sector, to Ireland (or indeed to anywhere but the Soviet sector), and just gave up.

Germany in 1946 would not have been a fun place to be - vast numbers of refugees, not a lot of food, and crawling with Allied troops who may or may not have been looking for him - he may well have decided that surrender was better than starvation, or indeed that he could persuade the BA that he'd screwed up the German attempts to use POW's as agents, as others undoubtedly did.
My grandfather was chasing women around Hamburg and Berlin then, so he was happy enough, but then again he stayed fighting on the winning side.
ejmaztec is offline  
06-11-2011, 22:35   #22
OS119
Registered User
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 2,437
Quote:
Originally Posted by Delancey View Post
I suppose that its possible that one reason the Brits who served in the German military got off relatively lightly was a perception that they were motivated by real conviction....
i think its the other way around - the true believers: Amery, Joyce, et all - got the rope or long sentances, the opportunists, the unlucky and the easily lead got relatively light sentances.

few of them could not have found themselves in a noose, but the Judges seem to have been quite sympathetic to those who found themselves at the tender mercies of the Germans as a result of active service, rather than a deliberate trip to Germany.

i don't doubt however that, as you alude to, had the BFC ever been used to fight the western Allies, any British, Commonwealth or Irish citizen subsequently found in Germany would have been strung up from the nearest lampost.
OS119 is offline  
06-11-2011, 22:41   #23
R.Dub.Fusilier
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Dublin
Posts: 584
Quote:
Originally Posted by Delancey View Post
It would seem from the replies that the ' Irish Unit ' never existed which is no real surprise , just a few strange characters.
i read in a book about the british free corps that there was a unit of Irish soldiers that used to go to different cities and towns , dressed in SS uniforms, for propaganda purposes. i will try root out the source. the same book said that the Irish in the Waffen SS maid their way through Spain and Portugal after WW2.
R.Dub.Fusilier is offline  
07-11-2011, 21:30   #24
snafuk35
Banned
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 833
In Stephen Ambrose's book Citizen Soldiers an American commander was amused when he took the surrender of a German unit and the Kraut commander gave him a long lecture on why the Americans should join Germany and fight the invading Ivans. Years later the American said the German had made some valid points, Nazi or not.
There was a sizable following among the Blueshirts and in the IRA who were fiercely Catholic and anti-communist. Spanish, Italian, French, Scandinavians and many other right wing groups joined the Waffen SS. There was a significant Nazi party in the US before the outbreak of war.
No surprise that fanatical anti-communists in Ireland did so too.

Last edited by snafuk35; 07-11-2011 at 21:34.
snafuk35 is offline  
Advertisement
08-11-2011, 02:49   #25
Delancey
Moderator
 
Delancey's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 5,458
Quote:
Originally Posted by snafuk35 View Post
In Stephen Ambrose's book Citizen Soldiers an American commander was amused when he took the surrender of a German unit and the Kraut commander gave him a long lecture on why the Americans should join Germany and fight the invading Ivans. Years later the American said the German had made some valid points, Nazi or not.
There was a sizable following among the Blueshirts and in the IRA who were fiercely Catholic and anti-communist. Spanish, Italian, French, Scandinavians and many other right wing groups joined the Waffen SS. There was a significant Nazi party in the US before the outbreak of war.
No surprise that fanatical anti-communists in Ireland did so too.
We hear so much about ' collabaration ' during the War and the inference is that these people were unpatriotic scoundrels , some doubtless were just that but others were motivated by a fierce anti-commmunism.
Just look at somme of the British ' establishment ' figures who wanted an Armistice with Germany to enable the Germans to turn their full attention to the USSR.
At wars end General Patton lobbied hard against the de-nazification programme claimimg it weakened the western allies and strenghtened Stalin.
Revisionism can be cruel.....
Delancey is offline  
08-11-2011, 22:23   #26
InTheTrees
Registered User
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 4,474
MY uncle spent most of ww2 in various prison camps around germany after being captured at Dunkirk.

AT one point he was approached about joining the german side, and out of curiosity, he took it as far being warned of the seriousness of messing with them and so he dropped it.

I wonder if many irish prisoners changed sides? Maybe as spies? maybe as double agents?
InTheTrees is offline  
08-11-2011, 23:31   #27
280special
Registered User
 
Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 378
Havent heard anything about a specific Irish group. Some of the surviving British guys who switched sides,were interviewed as part of a Tv documentary that was shown on one of the Sky channels a while back, I think there may have been one Irish guy or someone of Irish descent.

I do recall reading about an attempt to recruit Americans, unfortunatley I cant remember which book it was in and as my book collection is in a mess at the moment I cant look it up. I seem to recall it was a female recruiter, maybe an American national who got a less than friendly welcome ! I know there were a good number of Indians captured in North Africa who were recruited by the Germans and some by the Italians.
280special is offline  
09-11-2011, 00:01   #28
Delancey
Moderator
 
Delancey's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 5,458
A large number of Indians fought for the Japanese against the British , they are now feted as heroes although their number was much smaller than that of the regular Indian Army.
Delancey is offline  
09-11-2011, 19:55   #29
snafuk35
Banned
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 833
Quote:
Originally Posted by Delancey View Post
A large number of Indians fought for the Japanese against the British , they are now feted as heroes although their number was much smaller than that of the regular Indian Army.
I was reading a book about the Burmese campaign during the Second World War. A large portion of the British forces fighting there were Indians. In once incident described in the book, a British soldier describes how an Indian fighting in his same unit who he made good friends with told him that after the war the Indians would fight him. In hindsight it is easy to judge. Not everything is black and white.

Similarly many of the Algerians who fought for the Free French were a decade later fighting a guerrilla war for Algerian Independence.

Among the men who fought in the ranks of the French Foreign Legion in Indo-China and Algeria following World War 2 or were guns for hire in Africa in 1950s, 60s and 70s were veterans from Allied and also from Axis armies.

Last edited by snafuk35; 09-11-2011 at 20:03.
snafuk35 is offline  
Thanks from:
10-11-2011, 19:34   #30
Fuinseog
Registered User
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 5,317
On the subject of Irish men in the German army I heard this story from the son of the man concerned in the story.

The English captured a group of German soldiers in Italy in 1944. One of the prisoners was a man called O Donel, whose people had come to Austria from Ireland in 1720, was chosen to interpret.
As the names were called out the soldiers stepped forward, but O Donel did not as he was not in the ranks but standing beside the SM, a man from Ireland.
When the officer heard the name O Donel he roared ' what the bloody hell is a Irish man doing in the German army?' to which the SM roared back, 'what the bloody hell is an Irishman doing in the British army?'. The officer was not amused.
Fuinseog is offline  
Post Reply

Quick Reply
Message:
Remove Text Formatting
Bold
Italic
Underline

Insert Image
Wrap [QUOTE] tags around selected text
 
Decrease Size
Increase Size
Please sign up or log in to join the discussion

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search