David Hughes
David Hughes
David,
pure coincidence, but a couple of weeks ago, just after we had a discussion here I saw a documentary on German TV that shed some light on the background of the supply situation in Germany during the war. After attacking the Soviet Union in 1941, the Germans were more or less plundering all the crops and food they could get hold of in the areas they had conquered in the east and sent it back to Germany to the effect that the supply situation was still pretty good at the end of the war. The motivation behind that strategy (known as the "Hunger Plan" and also as "Backe Plan", named after the strategy's mastermind, Herbert Backe) was not only to supply the German civilians with more food and keep up the morale, but also at the same time to get rid of the local population in the occupied areas in the East by simply letting them starve. In the end, one of the sick ideas behind the war had been to conquer new areas of settlement for the "Aryan race" in the east and so they had to get rid of part of the local population anyway.
This organized plundering of food in the East explains why the Germans appeared to be surprisingly well fed in the eyes of the British who came here during 1945 (which is reflected in the article you were referring to). It was only after these war time food supplies had been used up in Germany by 1946 that the supply situation in Germany got really dramatic.
John
Hi John,
Thanks; very interesting.
Funny thing but I was thinking about this a couple of days ago. We'd run out of sugar and I opened a packet and then cut off the far end after emptying it to get the last few grains out. A war-time habit that's still got a lot of mileage in it...
Regards, David