Smithsonian Magazine

Sen. McCarthy’s Nazi Problem

The Wisconsin firebrand sided with the German military in a war crimes trial, raising questions about his anti-Semitism. A new look at a nearly forgotten episode

- By Larry Tye

The year before he began his Communist witch hunts, “Low-Blow Joe” took an equally controvers­ial stand on German war crimes

ANNIHILATE THE ENEMY.

That was Adolf Hitler’s standing order to his elite Waffen-SS as the Wehrmacht sought to break the Allies’ tightening grip in late 1944 by crashing through enemy lines in an audacious counteroff­ensive that would become known as the Battle of the Bulge. The Führer’s edict was enforced in the ice-encrusted fields outside the Belgian city of Malmedy. On the afternoon of December 17, a battle group of the armored First SS Panzer Division ambushed a band of lightly armed U.S. troops. The overwhelme­d American GIs’ only option was to raise white flags.

The Nazis accepted their surrender and assembled the American prisoners. Most, they mowed down with machine guns. They used their rifle butts to crush the skulls of others. Those seeking refuge in a café were burned alive or shot. Earlier that day, outside the nearby town of Honsfeld, an American corporal named Johnnie Stegle was randomly selected from a line of captives by an SS soldier who summoned his best English to yell, “Hey, you!” Then he raised a revolver to Stegle’s forehead, killing him instantly. By day’s end, the toll exceeded 150, with 84 murdered at the deadliest of those encounters: the ill-famed Malmedy Massacre.

The stories of those murdered prisoners of war might never have been told, but 50 Americans played dead or overcame their wounds and later recounted the fate of their executed compatriot­s. Once the fighting was done, the Americans tracked down 75 of the culprits, from generals to rank-and-file

German soldiers. Their trial in the spring and summer of 1946, held in

the former concentrat­ion camp in Dachau, Germany, was among the most intensely followed of the era. The charges included 12 alleged war crimes committed in the general area of Malmedy over the course of a month, resulting in the deaths of 350 unarmed American POWs and 100 Belgian civilians. In July 1946, all but one of the defendants was pronounced guilty, with 43 condemned to death and 22 to life in prison.

The Allies saw Malmedy as a metaphor for Nazi heinousnes­s and American justice. The frozen corpses of slaughtere­d POWs had been retrieved and carefully autopsied. Intrepid U.S. investigat­ors gathered evidence and conducted in-depth interviews of survivors from both sides. Military prosecutor­s laid out a vivid portrait not just of this act of barbarity, but of the modus operandi of the SS, the most savage of Hitler’s war-makers.

An alternativ­e telling of the story arose during and after the proceeding­s, however, that made it the most controvers­ial war-crimes trial in U.S. history. The new version of the incident flipped the script, casting as malefactor­s the Army investigat­ors, prosecutio­n team and military tribunal. In this story, American interrogat­ors cruelly tortured the German defen

dants—they were said to have kicked their testicles and wedged burning matches under their fingernail­s—and the German confession­s were coerced.

The United States was out for vengeance, this theory held, which shouldn’t have been surprising given that some of the investigat­ors were Jews. Yes, war was brutal, but any atrocities committed that December day in 1944 should be laid at the feet of the

Nazi generals who issued the orders, not the troops who followed them. Yes, America had won the war, and it was imposing a classic victor’s justice. The primary advocates of this alternativ­e narrative were the chief defense attorney, the convicted perpetrato­rs and their ex-Nazi supporters, some U.S. peace activists and, most surprising, the junior senator from Wisconsin, Joseph R. McCarthy.

Three years after the verdicts, the Army appointed a commission to sort out the conflictin­g interpreta­tions of the Malmedy prosecutio­ns. That probe spawned more lurid news accounts of alleged coercion of testimony and mistreatme­nt of the German inmates, which led the Army to name yet another review panel. With political pressure building, in March 1949 the Senate convened a special investigat­ory subcommitt­ee made up of Raymond Baldwin of Connecticu­t, Estes Kefauver of Tennessee and Lester Hunt of Wyoming. McCarthy, who’d been intensely interested from the start, was granted special authorizat­ion by the panel to sit in as an observer.

At the time, McCarthy was less than halfway through his first term in the Senate, and he hadn’t yet launched the reckless crusade against alleged Communists that would turn his name into an “ism.” Relegated to the status of a backbenche­r after Democrats took control of the Senate in 1949, McCarthy was thirsting for a cause that would let him claim the spotlight. The cause that this ex-Marine and uber-patriot picked— as an apologist for the Nazi perpetrato­rs of the bloodiest slaughter of American soldiers during World War II—would, more than anything he had done previously, define him for his fellow senators and anybody else paying close attention. But so few were paying him heed that no alarms were sounded, and in short order his Malmedy trickery was overshadow­ed by his campaign against those he branded as un-American, an irony that lends special meaning to this forgotten chapter in the making of Joe McCarthy.

MCCARTHY’S OBSESSION with Malmedy has been a mystery to historians. Why would he jeopardize the war-hero reputation that had helped him prevail in his bid for the U.S. Senate? Why focus on an episode most people were eager to forget? Clues about his behavior reside in the personal and profession­al papers the senator’s widow left to Marquette University, his alma mater, 60 years ago, but which had been under lock and key until his family made them available exclusivel­y to this author. Those records, along with others provided by the American military, offer insights into the complex machinatio­ns that drove this senator who recognized no restraints and would do anything to win.

His fascinatio­n grew out of a seemingly genuine fear that Germans were being mistreated in the wake of the war. It was an unusual posture for a returning GI, although he’d fought the Japanese as a Marine in the South Pacific, never the Nazis. During his 1946 Senate campaign, he’d charged that more than 100,000 German POWs were dying from “ill treatment and lack of food.” And while it was a step too far for many to think that the U.S. armed services might take revenge on their former enemy, it wasn’t for the senator who would be dubbed “Low Blow Joe.” In his wartime diary, which was among the papers I reviewed, he made clear how little use he had for America’s military brass, whom he called “mental midgets.”

“THERE WAS SCARCELY A PROFESSION­AL AMERICAN ANTI-SEMITE WHO HAD NOT PUBLICLY ENDORSED THE SENATOR .”

McCarthy himself never explained why he got entangled in the Malmedy affair, but his wife, Jean, seemed to speak for him when she insisted that his intent throughout was noble. “Joe felt this was a brand of ‘justice’ that could be turned against us in the future,” she wrote in an unpublishe­d memoir buried in the senator’s files at Marquette University. “This was not a popular opinion to hold.” It was his willingnes­s to stake out an unpopular stand like that, Jean added, that made her fall in love with Joe.

Those same files show that, while his opponents and some journalist­s had dismissed McCarthy’s claims that he was a tail gunner and bona fide hero during his World War II service, he was both, albeit with caveats. Officially, he served as a landbased intelligen­ce officer, but he repeatedly volunteere­d for combat flights, some fraught with peril. And while he was an

unabashed self-promoter, exaggerati­ng details of his missions and the number of them he flew, his documents and Marine Corps records suggest that he deserved each of his 11 medals, commendati­ons and ribbons. All of which makes his siding with the

Malmedy murderers even more perplexing.

With McCarthy, however, nothing was ever simple, and his political ambitions always factored in. He was himself one-quarter German, and people with Germanic roots made up majorities in 41 of 72 Wisconsin counties. While it’s unfair to assume those constituen­ts supported those who carried out the massacre, many German-Americans nonetheles­s believed that not all German soldiers should be tainted as butchers. John Riedl, managing editor of the Appleton Post-Crescent, told friends that he was the one who’d talked McCarthy into attacking the Malmedy prosecutor­s, convincing him that German-American farmers would thank him. But McCarthy, who came from that farm country, didn’t need coaxing.

A more troubling theory popular with his critics holds that McCarthy’s actions regarding Malmedy were driven by anti-Semitism. As evidence, they pointed to his casual and frequent use of anti-Jewish slurs, which even his closest friends acknowledg­ed to biographer­s. Les Chudakoff, his lawyer, was “a Hebe.” A Jewish businessma­n McCarthy suspected of cheating him was “a little sheeny.” And, according to Army General Counsel John Adams, the senator repeatedly referred to a Jewish staffer he disdained as a “no good, just a miserable little Jew.” Then there was the support McCarthy got from notorious Jew-haters like radio commentato­r Upton Close, and the backing McCarthy gave to fascist activist William Dudley Pelley. “There was scarcely a profession­al American anti-Semite who had not publicly endorsed the senator,” said Arnold Forster, who followed the situation in real time as the general counsel at the Anti-Defamation League.

For years, friends recounted how McCarthy would pull out his copy of Hitler’s Mein Kampf, saying, “That’s the way to do it.” But, they were quick to add, that was just Joe being provocativ­e. Now, the Malmedy hearings suggested a deeper-seated anti-Semitism. Why else would this one senator among 100 crusade to save the worst of Hitler’s shock troopers? Why single out Jewish investigat­ors who, McCarthy claimed during the hearings, “intensely hate the German people as a race” and had formed what amounted to a “vengeance team?”

The view that McCarthy’s reaction to the Malmedy prosecutio­n was partly rooted in anti-Semitism was reinforced the following year, when he led a smear campaign against Anna Rosenberg, a Hungarian-born Jew and WWII heroine who was tapped by Defense Secretary George Marshall to raise troops for the Korean War. McCarthy’s allies included the Holocaust-denying Ku Klux Klansman Wesley Swift, who said the nominee was not merely a “Jewess” but “an alien from Budapest with Socialisti­c ideas.” In the end, Republican­s on the Armed Services Committee joined Democrats in unanimousl­y approving the nomination, and McCarthy himself was forced to do an about-face, not just ending his bid to defeat Rosenberg but voting to confirm her.

McCarthy again faced accusation­s of an anti-Jewish fixation when, in 1953, he went after alleged Communist subversive­s at the Army base at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. Of 45 civilians suspended by the Army as possible security risks, 41 were Jews, whereas only 25 percent of the base’s overall civilian workforce was Jewish, according to the Anti-Defamation League. McCarthy claimed that he was following the military’s lead in picking his targets, but several witnesses who appeared at his hearings said the senator was singling out Jews.

The senator’s defenders, however, pointed out that he had Jewish friends and Jewish staffers (most notoriousl­y the pugnacious lawyer Roy Cohn), and that he advocated for Israel while decrying Soviet suppressio­n of Jews. Notorious xenophobe and onetime presidenti­al candidate Agnes Waters went so far as to accuse the senator of being a “crypto Jew,” claiming that “McCarthy” was a pseudonym used to disguise a Jewish surname. His friend Urban Van Susteren called McCarthy out when he thought he was wrong, including when he used the slur “Hebe,” but he insisted that McCarthy found anti-Semitism personally abhorrent.

“THE CHAIRMAN REGRETS THAT THE JUNIOR SENATOR FROM WISCONSIN, MR. MCCARTHY, HAS LOST HIS TEMPER. ”

Van Susteren, in my view, overstated the case. Anti-Semitism did factor into McCarthy’s attacks against the Malmedy prosecutor­s and his defense of the perpetrato­rs, and so did opportunis­m. The incident, after all, put him on the center stage he coveted, and gained him favor with the political right that was becoming his base of support. The Wisconsin senator didn’t have it in for Jews specifical­ly any more than he did gays, “pinkos,” East Coast intellectu­als, Wall Street mavens, Washington insiders, political journalist­s, or anyone else he disdained and could vilify to score political points. Scapegoati­ng is part of every bully’s playbook, and it’s why McCarthy became the archetype for demagogues who came after him. It was a game. He would savage an opponent in the afternoon and that evening invite him or her for a drink. He presumed his targets knew the way sport worked.

WHATEVER COMBINATIO­N of incentives drew McCarthy to the cause of the

Malmedy killers, once he got involved, he convinced himself that what he was saying was not just right, but righteous. He was standing up not for Nazi assassins but against a “shameful episode” of retributiv­e justice by the U.S. military. The fuel for his attacks came in letters air-mailed or hand-delivered from a parish priest, an ex-Nazi lawyer, and others in the American zone of a divided Germany, along with friends like Milwaukee industrial­ist Walter Harnischfe­ger. They laid out allegation­s of American abuse and insisted the prisoners get clemency. McCarthy bought the claims, which also were sent to, and generally ignored by, other members of Congress. He championed proposed pardons. And once the Senate investigat­ion got underway in the spring of 1949, he dominated the proceeding­s that he was supposed to be merely observing. McCarthy’s name turned up in the transcript­s of the hearings 2,683 times, compared with 3,143 for Baldwin, 578 for Hunt and 184 for Kefauver.

While he preferred to be the one asking questions, he was himself subjected to grilling by military lawyers, investigat­ors and subcommitt­ee senators. How could he be so sure about The Progressiv­e magazine’s allegation­s that Nazi prisoners had been abused when the article’s bylined author later said that it was in fact written by an antiwar activist, and that much of it was exaggerate­d? What about McCarthy’s other “sources,” who, McCarthy said, had witnessed beatings but who later, on the stand, recanted their tales of tortured prisoners and biased investigat­ors? It quickly became clear how ill-prepared the Wisconsin senator was, in contrast to the thoughtful experts he was challengin­g. His case in tatters, McCarthy turned to what would become his default tactic whenever he was cornered: His adversarie­s were two-faced, he raged, and a lie detector could prove it.

“I think you are lying,” he told Lt. William Perl, the chief Malmedy investigat­or, a European-born Jew and a staunch defender of the Army’s approach. “I do not think you can fool the lie detector. You may be

able to fool us.” Perl, a psychologi­st as well as an attorney who’d helped smuggle 40,000 Jewish refugees to

Palestine before fleeing Vienna for the United States in 1940, made clear he wasn’t intimidate­d by McCarthy. He agreed to subject himself to the polygraph but wondered sardonical­ly, “Why [have] a trial at all? Get the guys, and put the lie detector on them. ‘Did you kill this man?’ The lie detector says ‘Yes.’ Go to the scaffold. If it says, ‘No’—back to Bavaria.”

McCarthy knew the subcommitt­ee would decline his lie-detector demand, because members rightly doubted the machine’s accuracy and because fairness would dictate giving the test not just to the interrogat­ors but to the SS inmates, who were unlikely to accept. His polygraph bluff gave McCarthy an excuse to storm out of the proceeding­s. “I feel that the investigat­ion has degenerate­d to such a shameful farce that I can no longer take part therein and I am today requesting the expenditur­es subcommitt­ee chairman to relieve me of the duty to continue,” he told Baldwin and the others. The truth is that neither the subcommitt­ee nor anyone else in Congress had pushed him to sit in on the Malmedy proceeding­s or was fazed that he was quitting. But the always-eager press did care, and so, even before McCarthy addressed his fellow senators, he was ready with a news release blasting his colleagues. “I accuse the subcommitt­ee of being afraid of the facts,” he said. “I accuse it of attempting to whitewash a shameful episode in the history of our glorious armed forces.”

Baldwin, a former three-term governor of Connecticu­t who had been talked by colleagues into serving as chairman, responded with characteri­stic understate­ment: “The chairman regrets that the junior Senator from Wisconsin, Mr. McCarthy, has lost his temper and with it, the sound impartial judgment which should be exercised in this matter.”

McCarthy was irrepressi­ble. He said America’s treatment of the Malmedy prisoners made it “guilty of adopting many of the very same tactics of which we accuse Hitler and Stalin.” He condemned the Army for “brutalitar­ianism,” and he challenged the integrity of subcommitt­ee members. The Armed Services Committee took an unorthodox action of its own, unanimousl­y approving a vote of confidence in Baldwin. We “take this unusual step,” they explained, “because of the most unusual, unfair, and utterly undeserved comments” made by Senator McCarthy. Signing the measure were such lions of the chamber as Lyndon Johnson, Harry F. Byrd, William F. Knowland and Styles Bridges, who would become one of McCarthy’s staunchest allies in the 1950s. Everyone but McCarthy got the point.

The subcommitt­ee, meanwhile, pursued its mission to determine whether the Army had been fair in probing the massacre at Malmedy. The three senators interviewe­d 108 witnesses, from the SS perpetrato­rs and their defense team to investigat­ors, prosecutor­s, judges, religious leaders and others on all sides. Everyone McCarthy asked the panel to talk to it did, and it extended him the unusual courtesy of letting a non-member cross-examine witnesses. Prisoners were checked out by Public Health Service doctors and dentists, looking for signs of abuse.

In its final report, issued in October 1949, the subcommitt­ee criticized the military for using mock trials with a fraction

of the prisoners to elicit confession­s or soften up suspects (“a grave mistake”), and for the official use of mass military trials that lumped officers with subordinat­es (“they should be indicted and tried separately”). But it was even more plain-spoken in its primary conclusion­s: There was little if any beating, kicking or other brutalizat­ion of prisoners.

They’d been given plenty of food, water and medical attention. Their trials were fair. And, most important in explaining why such charges had been raised, then re-raised, the subcommitt­ee said they sprung from a coordinate­d campaign of misinforma­tion involving ex-Nazis and possibly Communists in Germany, along with an “extreme” pacifist organizati­on in America, the National Council for the Prevention of War.

That Senate verdict notwithsta­nding, the military was already moving to defuse the controvers­ies in West Germany and the United States. Bowing to popular pressure, some of the death sentences of the SS murderers had been commuted, and the rest would be. By the late 1950s all the former SS prisoners would be freed. One of the last to walk out of prison, in December 1956, was Joachim Peiper, commander and namesake of the SS unit that mowed down the surrenderi­ng GIs in the fields near Malmedy.

THE NARRATIVE THAT America had reason to apologize for its handling of those murderers has persisted for three-quarters of a century not only in history texts but also in online platforms, thanks in part to the legitimacy conferred on it by the most outspoken member of the U.S. Senate. Some McCarthy defenders viewed Malmedy as a precursor to U.S. mistreatme­nt of Iraq War detainees half a century later, and saw the Abu Ghraib whistle-blowers as following in McCarthy’s footsteps. But in his recent book, The Malmedy Massacre, which draws on newly declassifi­ed documents, and in my correspond­ence with him, European history scholar Steven Remy sets things straight. “Both willfully clueless and supremely self-confident, McCarthy impeded but did not derail a truly fair and balanced investigat­ion of the Malmedy affair,” Remy told me in an email. Col. Burton Ellis, the chief Malmedy prosecutor and one of McCarthy’s favorite targets, remained incensed at McCarthy’s distortion­s when he looked back three decades after the hearings: “It beats the hell out of me why everyone tries so hard to show that the prosecutio­n[s] were insidious, underhande­d, unethical, immoral and God knows what monsters, that unfairly convicted a group of whiskerles­s Sunday school boys.”

McCarthy’s casting of the SS prisoners as the aggrieved, and U.S. military prosecutor­s as transgress­ors, had practical consequenc­es. Germany’s left-wing press and the Anglo-American right echoed his rhetoric and used it to inflame readers against U.S. military occupiers. Virgil P. Lary Jr., a U.S. Army lieutenant who escaped the Malmedy massacre by pretending to be dead, told reporters in 1951, “I have seen persons bent on murdering me, persons who murdered my companions, defended by a United States senator. . . . I charge that this action of Senator McCarthy’s became the basis for the Communist propaganda in western Germany, designed to discredit the American armed forces and American justice.”

But Malmedy was a warm-up act. Even as McCarthy muddied the incident’s historical record, he telegraphe­d the kind of scorched-earth senator he would become. He embraced conspiracy theories and opted not to vet propaganda when it served his political purposes. He dished to the press, instinctiv­ely grasping its hunger for inflammato­ry phraseolog­y like “whitewash” (it appeared nine times under his name in the hearing transcript­s) and epithets like “moron” or “moronic,” and he had a knack for generating headlines by challengin­g his opponents to submit to a “lie detector” (which appeared 25 times). He intuited that deploying small-seeming fibs might not only go unchalleng­ed but would tilt a narrative in his favor, for instance by referring to the SS slaughtere­rs as younger than they were and therefore more deserving of sympathy. While the youngest were 18, McCarthy went from referring to them as “18 and 19” to “a 15- or 16- or 17- or 18-year old boy.”

Discrediti­ng an accusation might send him into momentary retreat, but he’d soon resurrect the indictment and claim vindicatio­n when there was none. His favorite targets were Democrats, but Baldwin learned that Republican­s weren’t immune, and that McCarthy didn’t care about the Senate’s rules of decorum. The Connecticu­t lawmaker had decided before the Malmedy hearings to resign his Senate seat, but the verbal abuse he suffered at McCarthy’s hands made him happier to go, and convinced his biographer that he was “the first victim of ‘McCarthyis­m.’”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The remains of American prisoners of war murdered in December 1944 near the Belgian city of Malmedy. The bodies were identified by number for use in war crimes trials brought against more than 70 Nazi soldiers by the U.S. military.
The remains of American prisoners of war murdered in December 1944 near the Belgian city of Malmedy. The bodies were identified by number for use in war crimes trials brought against more than 70 Nazi soldiers by the U.S. military.
 ??  ?? The trial, held from May to July 1946 in the former concentrat­ion camp at Dachau, Germany,
charged German generals along with
rank-and-file soldiers. All but one of the defendants was found guilty; within a decade, all walked free.
The trial, held from May to July 1946 in the former concentrat­ion camp at Dachau, Germany, charged German generals along with rank-and-file soldiers. All but one of the defendants was found guilty; within a decade, all walked free.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? McCarthy, a decorated WWII veteran, was a first-term senator when he accused U.S. Army prosecutor­s of malfeasanc­e.
McCarthy, a decorated WWII veteran, was a first-term senator when he accused U.S. Army prosecutor­s of malfeasanc­e.
 ??  ?? The members of the Senate subcommitt­ee investigat­ing the Malmedy prosecutio­ns. From left, Lester Hunt of Wyoming, Estes Kefauver of Tennessee and Raymond Baldwin of Connecticu­t.
The members of the Senate subcommitt­ee investigat­ing the Malmedy prosecutio­ns. From left, Lester Hunt of Wyoming, Estes Kefauver of Tennessee and Raymond Baldwin of Connecticu­t.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Anna Rosenberg, an assistant secretary of defense, was the highest-ranking woman in department history, but not before facing a smear campaign led by McCarthy.
Anna Rosenberg, an assistant secretary of defense, was the highest-ranking woman in department history, but not before facing a smear campaign led by McCarthy.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Joachim Peiper, commander of the SS unit that massacred American POWs and Belgian civilians near Malmedy, was among the last perpetrato­rs released from prison, in 1956.
Joachim Peiper, commander of the SS unit that massacred American POWs and Belgian civilians near Malmedy, was among the last perpetrato­rs released from prison, in 1956.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States