V-E Day (5-8-45)

Auch Prag und Böhmen befreit

London, 8. Mai – Der tschechoslowakische Sender Prag gab heute früh 6 Uhr bekannt, dass die Deutschen in Prag und ganz Böhmen die bedingungslose Kapitulation angenommen haben.

Der deutsche Wehrmachtsbefehlshaber in Pilsen, General Majelski, beging gestern nach seiner Kapitulation vor General Pattons Streitkräften Selbstmord.

In Mahren kämpfen deutsche Truppen immer noch im Raum von Olmütz.

Breslau ist nun völlig von russischen Truppen besetzt. Der deutsche Befehlshaber von Breslau ergab sich gestern mit 40.000 Mann der Besatzung.

In Jugoslawien wurde Laibach von Kräften des Marschalls Tito genommen.


Zusammentreffen Montgomery-Rokosowski

London, 8. Mai – Gestern trafen General Montgomery und Marschall Rokosowski in Wismar zusammen.

Mussert gefangen

London, 8. Mai – Der Führer der holländischen Nationalsozialisten Mussert ist in Holland gefangengenommen worden. Über das Schicksal Leon Degrelles ist noch nichts bekannt.

Jubel in der ganzen Welt

London, 8. Mai – Das britische Informationsministerium veröffentlichte anlässlich der bedingungslosen Kapitulation Deutschlands ein Kommuniqué, in welchem der Dienstag, der 8., und Mittwoch, der 9. Mai zum Andenken des Sieges über Europa als Feiertage erklärt werden, Noch vor Bekanntwerden der amtlichen Erklärung spielten sich überall in England Jubelszenen ab. London und alle englischen Städte prangen in Fahnenschmuck. In den Straßen wurde gesungen und getanzt. Große Menschenmengen versammelten sich vor dem Buckingham Palast, dem Sitz der englischen Regierung und dem Außenministerium.

In Paris strömte die Bevölkerung in Massen über die Boulevards, Flugzeuge kreisten über der Stadt und warfen Leuchtraketen ab.

In Neuyork kam es zu lebhaften Freudenszenen. Die Straßen waren bedeckt mit Koriandoli und Papierschnitzeln, die von den Häusern Herabflatterten. Auch Washington bot ein ähnliches Bild.

In den Straßen von Oslo verkündeten Lautsprecher den Frieden. Aus den Gefängnissen entlassene Freiheitskampfer wurden von der jubelnden Bevölkerung auf den Schultern getragen.

In Holland lauteten Glocken im ganzen Land den Sieg ein. Die alliierten Truppen wurden mit Flieder und Tulpen überschüttet.

In Dänemark wurde den einrückenden britischen Truppen ein triumphaler Empfang bereitet.

Auch in den neutralen Ländern werden Feiern abgehalten. Der schwedische Ministerpräsident sagte in einer Ansprache: Wir können wieder frei atmen. Noch sind Leid und Sorge von Europa nicht gewichen, aber nach sechs Jahren ist die Vernichtung von Menschenleben und Kulturwerken endgültig vorüber. In Genf und anderen Schweizer Städten drangen sich die Menschen auf den Strafen und brechen in Hochrufe auf die Alliierten aus.

Dankgottesdienste in Österreich

Über Anregung der Staatsregierung hat Seine Eminenz Kardinal Fürsterzbischof Dr. Theodor Innitzer die Anordnung getroffen, dass anlässlich der Beendigung des Krieges durch die verbündeten Mächte heute Mittwoch, den 9. Mai, in allen Kirchen Dankgottesdienste abgehalten werden. Seine Eminenz selbst wird diesen Dankgottesdienst heute um 11,30 Uhr in der Peterskirche in Wien zelebrieren. As diesem Anlasse werden ebenfalls heute in der Zeit von 12 bis 12,15 Uhr sämtliche Kirchenglocken der Erzdiözese den Frieden einläuten.

Soviet Information Bureau (May 9, 1945)

Оперативная сводка за 9 мая

Между ТУКУМСОМ и ЛИБАВОЙ Курляндская группа немецких войск в составе 16 и 18 немецких армий под командованием генерала от инфантерии Гильперта с 23 часов 8 мая сего года прекратила сопротивление и начала передавать личный состав и боевую технику войскам ЛЕНИНГРАДСКОГО фронта. Войска фронта заняли города ЛИБАВА (ЛЕПАЯ), ПАВИЛОСТА, АЙЗПУТЕ, СКРУНДА, САЛДУС, САБИЛЕ, КАНДАВА, ТУКУМС. К вечеру 9 мая войскам фронта сдалось в плен более 45.000 немецких солдат и офицеров. Приём пленных продолжается.

В районе устья реки ВИСЛЫ восточнее ДАНЦИГА и на носе ПУТЦИГЕР-НЕРУНГ северо-восточнее ГДЫНИ группы немецких войск, прижатые к побережью моря, прекратили сопротивление и с утра 9 мая начали сдачу личного состава и боевой техники войскам 3-го и 2-го БЕЛОРУССКИХ фронтов: К вечеру 9 мая войскам 3-го БЕЛОРУССКОГО фронта сдалось в плен 11.000, а войскам 2-го БЕЛОРУССКОГО фронта 10.000 немецких солдат и офицеров. Приём пленных продолжается.

Группа немецких войск в Чехословакии, уклоняясь от капитуляции советским войскам, поспешно отходит на запад и юго-запад.

Войска 1-го УКРАИНСКОГО фронта, в результате стремительного ночного манёвра танковых соединений и пехоты, сломили сопротивление противника и 9 мая в 4 часа утра освободили от немецких захватчиков столицу союзной нам ЧЕХОСЛОВАКИИ город ПРАГУ, а также заняли на территории ЧЕХОСЛОВАКИИ города ХОМУТОВ, КАДАНЬ, БИЛИНА, ЛОУНЫ. Юго-восточнее ДРЕЗДЕНА войска фронта, продвигаясь вперёд, заняли города ПИРНА, ЗЕБНИТЦ, НОЙГЕРСДОРФ, ЦИТТАУ, ФРИДЛАНТ, ЛАУБАН, ГРАЙФФЕНБЕРГ, ГИРШБЕРГ, ВАРМБРУНН. Одновременно юго-западнее и южнее БРЕСЛАВЛЯ войска фронта заняли города ЛАНДЕСХУТ, ГОТТЕСБЕРГ, ВАЛЬДЕНБУРГ, ШВЕЙДНИЦ, РЕЙХЕНБАХ, ЛАНГЕНБИЛАУ, ФРАНКЕНШТАЙН, ПАТШКАУ, ВАРТА, ГЛАТЦ, ЛАНДЕК.

Войска 4-го УКРАИНСКОГО фронта заняли на территории Чехословакии города ШИЛПЕРК, МЮГЛИЦ, МОРАВСКА ТРЮБАУ, ЛИТОВЕЛЬ, ПРОСТЕЕВ.

Войска 2-го УКРАИНСКОГО фронта, стремительно продвигаясь вперёд, заняли на территории Чехословакии города ВЕЛИКИЕ МЕЖИРИЧИ, ЙИГЛАВА, БРОД, БЕНЕШОВ, ТРЖЕБИЧ.

Войска 3-го УКРАИНСКОГО фронта заняли на территории Австрии города ЛООСДОРФ, ВИЗЕЛЬБУРГ, АМШТЕТТЕН, МЮРЦЦУСШЛАГ, БРУК, ГРАЦ и соединились с американскими войсками в районе АМШТЕТТЕН.

Address of His Holiness Pius XII
May 9, 1945, 12:00 p.m. CET

piusxii.rome

Ecco alfine terminata questa guerra che, durante quasi sei anni, ha tenuto l’Europa nella stretta delle più atroci sofferenze e delle più amare tristezze. Un grido di riconoscenza umile e ardente sgorga dal più profondo del Nostro cuore verso «il Padre delle misericordie e il Dio di ogni consolazione» (2Cor 1,3). Ma il Nostro cantico di azioni di grazia si accompagna con una preghiera supplichevole per implorare dalla onnipotenza e dalla bontà divina il termine, secondo giustizia, delle lotte sanguinose anche nell’Estremo Oriente.

Inginocchiati in spirito dinanzi alle tombe, ai burroni sconvolti e rossi di sangue, ove riposano le innumerevoli spoglie di coloro che son caduti vittime dei combattimenti o dei massacri disumani, della fame o della miseria, Noi li raccomandiamo tutti nelle Nostre preghiere e specialmente nella celebrazione del Santo Sacrificio, al misericordioso amore di Gesù Cristo, loro Salvatore e loro Giudice. E Ci sembra che essi, i caduti, ammoniscano i superstiti dell’immane flagello e dicano loro: Sorgano dalle nostre ossa e dai nostri sepolcri e dalla terra, ove siamo stati gettati come grani di frumento, i plasmatori e gli artefici di una nuova e migliore Europa, di un nuovo e migliore universo, fondato sul timore filiale di Dio, sulla fedeltà ai suoi santi comandamenti, sul rispetto della dignità umana, sul principio sacro della uguaglianza dei diritti per tutti i popoli e tutti gli Stati, grandi e piccoli, deboli e forti.

La guerra ha accumulato tutto un caos di rovine, rovine materiali e rovine morali, come mai il genere umano non ne ha conosciute nel corso di tutta la sua storia. Si tratta ora di riedificare il mondo. Come primo elemento di questa restaurazione, Noi bramiamo di vedere, dopo una così lunga attesa, il ritorno pronto e rapido, per quanto le circostanze lo permettono, dei prigionieri, degl’internati, combattenti e civili, ai loro domestici focolari, verso le loro spose, verso i loro figli, verso i loro nobili lavori di pace.

A tutti poi Noi diciamo: Non lasciate piegare la vostra energia né abbattersi il vostro coraggio; dedicatevi ardentemente all’opera di ricostruzione, sostenuti da una robusta fede nella Provvidenza divina. Mettetevi al lavoro, ognuno al suo posto, risoluto e tenace, col cuore animato da un generoso, indistruttibile amore del prossimo. È ardua, certamente, ma è pur santa la impresa che vi attende per riparare gl’immediati e disastrosi effetti della guerra: vogliamo dire il disfacimento dei pubblici ordinamenti, la miseria e la fame, il rilasciamento e l’imbarbarimento dei costumi, l’indisciplinatezza della gioventù. In tal guisa, a poco a poco, voi preparerete alle vostre città e ai vostri villaggi, alle vostre province e alle patrie vostre, una sorte più accettevole e il vigore di un sangue rinnovato.

Fugata dalla terra, dal mare, dal cielo la morte insidiatrice, assicurata ormai dall’offesa delle armi la vita degli uomini, creature di Dio, e quanto ad essi rimane dei privati e dei comuni averi, gli uomini possono ormai aprire la mente e l’animo alla edificazione della pace.

Se noi ci restringiamo a considerare l’Europa, ci troviamo già dinanzi a problemi e a difficoltà gigantesche, di cui bisogna trionfare, se si vuole spianare il cammino a una pace vera, la sola che possa essere duratura. Essa non può infatti fiorire e prosperare se non in una atmosfera di sicura giustizia e di lealtà perfetta, congiunte con reciproca fiducia, comprensione e benevolenza. La guerra ha suscitato dappertutto discordia, diffidenza ed odio. Se dunque il mondo vuol ricuperare la pace, occorre che spariscano la menzogna e il rancore e in luogo loro dominino sovrane la verità e la carità.

Innanzi tutto pertanto supplichiamo instantemente nelle nostre preghiere quotidiane il Dio d’amore di adempire la sua promessa fatta per bocca del profeta Ezechiele: «Io darò loro un cuore unanime, un nuovo spirito infonderò nel loro interno, e strapperò dalle loro viscere il cuore di sasso e vi sostituirò un cuore di carne, affinché camminino sulla via dei miei precetti e osservino i miei giudizi e li mettano in pratica, ed essi siano il mio popolo e io sia il loro Dio» (Ez 11,19-20). Che il Signore si degni di destare questo spirito nuovo, il suo spirito, nei popoli e particolarmente nel cuore di coloro, cui è affidata la cura di ristabilire la futura pace! Allora, e allora soltanto, il mondo risuscitato eviterà il ritorno del tremendo flagello e regnerà la vera, stabile e universale fratellanza e quella pace garantita da Cristo anche in terra a chi nella sua legge d’amore vorrà credere e sperare.

The Pittsburgh Press (May 9, 1945)

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I DARE SAY —
V-E Day in New York

By Florence Fisher Parry

NEW YORK (Monday) – I was writing by my window. It was about 9:40 this morning. I looked out toward Grand Central and at first, I thought it was snowing. It could have been – we’ve had every sample of weather here. Then I heard the noise… must have been going on for minutes. A shrill, far roar, unidentifiable, peculiar, but charged with a funny high excitement.

“This is it!” I cried to Mama, and we dove into our coats. We were hailing a taxi in a few minutes after.

I told the driver:

Just cruise around. Up Park to 42nd, over to Fifth, on up to one of the Fifties and then over to Broadway. Go down Broadway till you’re stopped.

In a minute we were in the midst of an ocean of people. The newspapers had not yet made the street, but ribboned streamers were floating from the windows, and any kind of scrap of paper was being thrown from the buildings.

We were stopped on our way down Broadway at about 48th Street. Times Square was already a sea of celebrators. We detoured and raced down to Macy’s. Then we began to walk up toward Times Square.

Broadway

By this time the newspapers were on the street – great full-page streamers – and nothing official. The President hadn’t made the announcement. It wasn’t official.

But now it was too late. V-E Day was here, damn it, and let him who dared deny it! That was the mood of the crowds. If THIS was a false alarm then Heaven help someone! The bars along Broadway filled to bursting.

We jammed into a restaurant and tried to eat something. Everyone was talking to everyone else. They simply IGNORED the delay of the President’s statement. The wholesale places had already declared a holiday and the workers were on the street. The other stores were still open, but the little shopkeepers stood in their doorways, uncertain what to do.

Now the people were grabbing the papers in a kind of desperation. What? No President’s statement YET? Okay, it was V-E Day ANYWAY! You can’t be fooled twice!

We got into a taxi that had a loud radio. “Cruise and turn up the radio,” we asked the driver. George Hicks was talking from inside Germany somewhere. Surrender had come there, all right.

Overhead some planes tore madly. The headlines on the papers grew blacker, bigger. The cops looked very sober and important, standing like rocks, human eddies whirling around them.

Presently, the white confetti began to thin… the crowds grew a little less boisterous. The shopkeepers who had locked their doors returned. Broadway showed a widening channel.

The painter

We came back to our hotel. I sat down here to write. A sudden white apparition filled the window, made me jump out of my skin. Just a white-overalled painter dropping down outside to paint the frame of my window, smoking nonchalantly, heedless of the noisy hum beneath him, the excited planes, the slow-drifting “snow” from other windows…

“The thing is to take it easy!” he remarks with a grin, lowering himself and swinging gently 12 stories above the street. “We’re suckers for excitement, wear ourselves out. Nobody can tell us nothin’ if we’re set to hear what we want to hear. We’re told not to throw confetti or wastepaper, and look what we done arready and the President not even told us it’s time to let out yet! Solves us right if we’re fooled again. Me, I fastens my belt and makes sure I’m all set, before I starts paintin’ the town!”

“But suppose it IS true. Won’t you celebrate?”

“Yep. In doo time. In doo time. But this is a swell afternoon for to paint, lady after all this rain we’ve been having.”

…Now he’s swung over to the other window. I feel quieter watching him. The noise below has quieted down, too. And the snow isn’t falling at all, anymore, from the high windows around Grand Central, yonder…

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Reds capture Prague from Nazi outlaws

All but few Germans obey surrender

LONDON, England (UP) – The Red Army, fighting on against outlawed German diehards after the official end of the European war, today captured the Czechoslovak capital of Prague in a pre-dawn attack.

The Prague radio reported that the Germans in defiance of the unconditional surrender agreement, bombed the capital and two other Czechoslovak cities.

Nazis garrisoning the Czechoslovak bastion were the only force of any consequence carrying on after the officially proclaimed cessation of hostilities at 12:01 a.m. today.

Reports from the continent said the garrisons of historic Dunkerque and the last enemy-held pockets at St. Nazaire, La Rochelle and Lorient had given up.

Stalin reveals capture

Marshal Stalin announced the capture of Prague.

Despite the end of the war 19 hours earlier, the order of the day concluded with the usual formula – “death to the German invaders.”

Telephone reports from Bornholm by way of Copenhagen said the German resistance on the Danish island off the tip of Sweden cracked during the night, and Russian warships put in after daylight.

The crumbling of the last nests of Nazi resistance followed word of the final formalizing of Germany’s surrender in Berlin.

Hold out in Latvia

German planes began bombing Prague at 12:10 p.m. (6:10 a.m. ET), the Czech broadcast said, and had also bombed Neuenburg, 25 miles east of Prague. and Melnik, 18 miles north. The broadcast urged inhabitants to take shelter.

One hundred thousand Nazi troops in Northwest Latvia announced that they would ignore Germany’s unconditional surrender.

All Germans who refused to lay down the arms after 12:01 a.m. today (6:01 p.m. Tuesday ET), the hour fixed by the German High Command for capitulation, faced possible trial as murderers, arsonists and saboteurs outside the laws of war.

A Soviet officer speaking over the patriot radio said the Red Army had entered Prague only to liberate it and had no intention of forcing any type of administration on the Czechoslovak people.

Link up below Linz

A dispatch from the U.S. Third Army front revealed that other Soviet units some 140 miles south of Prague had linked up with the U.S. 65th Infantry Division southeast of the Austrian city of Linz yesterday.

The junction split the remaining German forces in Southern Europe into two pockets – Bohemia and Southeast Austria.

Throughout Europe, hundreds of thousands of German troops were filing into Allied prison camps in compliance with their High Command’s order to lay down their arms.

All hostilities on the Dodecanese Islands in the Aegean Sea ended at 3 p.m. (9 a.m. ET) yesterday. The commander of the German garrison signed a surrender pact in the presence of a British officer.

Fighting was also believed virtually to have ceased in Yugoslavia following the capture of Zagreb, capital of Croatia, by Marshal Tito’s Partisans yesterday.

Form ‘government’

Stockholm heard Radio Libau in German-controlled Northwest Latvia announce the formation of a “National Latvian Government.”

The broadcast said the estimated 100,000 German troops in Latvia would ignore the German High Command’s unconditional surrender offer and continue to fight in the service of the new government and under the Latvian supreme command.

The new government asked the Russians to cease hostilities and appealed to the Western Allies for mediation. Latvian circles in Stockholm estimated the government would last one or two weeks, after which the Russians would liquidate the pocket.

Riotous fete in Moscow

By Henry Shapiro, United Press staff writer

MOSCOW, USSR (UP) – A jubilant Russia announced the signing of the final articles of Germany’s unconditional surrender and proclaimed today its own Victory Day.

The final act in Germany’s capitulation took place in the main hall of the German Military Academy of Engineering at the corner of Friedrichstrasse and Rheinsteinstrasse in ruined Berlin at 12:45 a.m. local time.

There Marshal Wilhelm Keitel, supreme commander of the German Armed Forces; Adm. Hans-Georg von Friedeburg, commander of the German Navy, and Col. Gen. Hans Jurgen Stumpff, chief of the Luftwaffe, ratified the articles of surrender.

Marshal Georgy K. Zhukov signed fir Russia and Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur William Tedder, deputy supreme commander, for the Western Allies.

Gen. Carl A. Spaatz, commander of the U.S. Strategic Air Forces in Europe and Gen. Jean de Lattre de Tassigny, commander-in-chief of the French Army, were present as witnesses.

”Victory is here!” a Moscow radio broadcast cried. “Today humanity can breathe freely again.”

Pro-Allied celebration

The announcement – the first to the Soviet people of Germany’s surrender – caused what probably was the first spontaneous public pro-Allied demonstration in Moscow since the start of the war.

Tens of thousands of night-shift workers from Moscow’s factories ceased work and poured out into the streets. They surged toward Red Square.

Crowds paused briefly before the American Embassy. They saluted the American flag, still at half-staff in mourning for President Roosevelt. Cheers rang out for “our American allies.”

‘Mob’ Allied autos

Similar demonstrations occurred outside the British and other Allied embassies.

Crowds moved Anglo-American autos and dragged out the occupants to toss them joyfully into the air.

Red flags decorated every building.

Soviet youth danced and sang in the streets. British junior naval officers and army sergeants were seized and hoisted to shoulders.

The Britons joined rings around the rosy with Russian youngsters and sang Russian songs. The youngsters in turn joined in with “Tipperary.”

In the course of 10 years’ residence in the Soviet Union, I had never witnessed such an outburst of genuine popular emotion for foreigners.

All work ceases

The government proclaimed today a public holiday and ordered that all work cease.

The newspaper Pravda almost unprecedently devoted half its front page to news of Germany’s capitulation. The signing of the preliminary pacts at Reims and statements by President Truman and Prime Minister Churchill were not mentioned.

However, the Moscow radio followed its announcement of Germany’s capitulation with the playing of “God Save the King,” “The Star-Spangled Banner” and “Marseillaise” in addition to the Soviet national anthem.

It’s real victory, Stalin tells Reds

Sacrifice not in vain, Marshal broadcasts

LONDON, England (UP) – Marshal Stalin, in a radio speech tonight, proclaimed to the Russian people that “the great day of victory over Germany has come.”

Stalin told the Russians that the preliminary capitulation was signed at Reims May 7 – the first recorded public mention by the Russians of the capitulation preceding the formal surrender at Berlin.

He said the final capitulation was signed at Berlin, and then, apparently referring to Germany’s contempt for treaties, added, “This is no mere ship of paper, it is the real thing. Our sacrifices have not been in vain.”

Stalin concluded his brief address with the exclamations:

Comrades! The great patriotic war has ended in victory! Glory to our great people! Eternal glory to the heroes who fell in the battle for liberty!

Stalin ordered a salute of 30 salvos by 1,000 guns in Moscow tonight.

Pope prays for war’s end in Far East

Cites material, moral ruin in Europe

VATICAN CITY (UP) – Pope Pius XII expressed gratitude today for the conclusion of the war in Europe. He offered a prayer for “a just end” of the “bloody struggle” still underway in the Far East.

In a broadcast to the world, the Pontiff said the European War had left in its wake the greatest “material and moral ruin in the history of mankind.”

Quotes war dead

He said the war dead were now telling the survivors:

May a new and better Europe, a new and better world arise from our bones and our graves, and from the earth where we have been thrown as grains of wheat.

The text of the Pope’s address follows.

Here at last we behold the end of this war, which, during almost six years, has held Europe in the grip of the most atrocious suffering and most bitter sorrow.

A cry of humble and ardent gratitude arises from the very depths of our heart to “the Father of Mercies and the God of All Consolation.” [2 Corinthians 13]

Suppliant prayer

But our canticle of thanksgiving is accompanied with the suppliant prayer to implore also of divine omnipotence and goodness the termination, in accord with justice, of the sanguinary warfare in the Far East. On our knees in spirit before the tombs, before the ravines disturbed and reddened by blood, where repose the innumerable corpses of those who have fallen, victims of the fighting or of inhuman massacres, of hunger or of misery.

We recommend them all in our prayers, and especially in the celebration of the Holy Sacrifice, to the merciful love of Jesus Christ, their Savior and their judge. And it seems to us that they, the fallen, are giving warning to the survivors of this cruel scourge and are saying to them: Let there arise from the earth, wherein we have been placed as grains of wheat, the molders and builders of a new and better Europe, of a new and better universe, founded on the filial fear of God, on fidelity to His Holy Commandments, on respect for human dignity, on the sacred principle of equality of the rights of all peoples and all states, large and small, weak and strong.

Task to rebuild

The war has created on all sides chaotic ruin, both material and moral, such as mankind has never known in the entire course of human history. The task of this hour is to rebuild the world.

As the first element of this restoration, we long to see, after so long a period of waiting, the prompt and speedy return, insofar as circumstances permit, of the prisoners, of the interned, combatants and civilians, to their homes and to their wives, children and the noble works of peace.

To all them we say: Let not your energy flag nor your courage fail; dedicate yourselves ardently to the work of reconstruction, sustained by a strong faith in divine providence. Apply yourselves to labor, each one at his post, resolute and determined, with a heart animated by a generous, indestructible love of one’s fellow man.

Holy undertaking

It is difficult, certainly, but it is also a holy undertaking that awaits you in repairing the immediate and disastrous consequences of the war. We refer to the decay of public order, misery and hunger, the relaxing and brutalizing of customs and usages, the lack of discipline among the youth. By so doing, little by little, you will prepare for your cities and your villages, for your provinces and your fatherlands, a lot more acceptable and renewed vigor to your blood.

With the threat of death lying in wait driven from the earth, from the sea and from the sky, the lives of men, creatures of God, and that which remains to them of their private and common possession henceforth assured by the laying down of arms, men can now set free their minds and spirits to the building of the peace.

Gigantic difficulties

If we limit ourselves to consideration of Europe, we find ourselves face to face now with gigantic problems and difficulties which we must overcome if we wish to plan the way to a true peace, the only one that can be lasting.

Peace, indeed, cannot flower and prosper except in an atmosphere of secure justice and of perfect fidelity, joined with reciprocal trust, mutual understanding and benevolence.

The war has aroused everywhere discord, suspicion and hatred. If, therefore, the world wishes to regain peace, it is necessary that falsehood and rancor should vanish and in their stead that sovereign truth and charity should reign.

Should beseech God

Above all, however, in our daily prayers, we should beseech God constantly to fulfill his promise made by the mouth of the Prophet Ezekiel: “And I will give them one heart, and will put a new spirit in their bowels; and I will take away the stony heart out of their flesh: that they may walk in my commandments, and keep my judgments, and do them: and that they may be my people, and I may be their God.”

May the Lord God deign to create this new spirit, His spirit, in peoples, and particularly in the hearts of those to whom he has entrusted the responsibility of establishing the future peace.

Then and only then will the reborn world avoid the return of the thunderous scourge of war and there will reign a true, stable and universal brotherhood, and that peace guaranteed by Christ even on earth to those who are willing to believe and trust in His law of love.

Mob German agency

LONDON, England (UP) – An Exchange Telegraph dispatch said today that a jubilant crowd wrecked the German travel agency in Zurich, Switzerland, last night, pitching all the furniture and picture of Adolf Hitler into the street or the Sihl River.

U-boat to surrender

LONDON, England – The first U-boat to surrender under Germany’s capitulation agreement will put into Weymouth Harbor on the English coast late today.

10 million Yanks to fight Japan

Shifting of forces already started

WASHINGTON (UP) – U.S. armed might, which helped doom Germany, now is turning to hurl its entire weight against the last Axis nation.

A total force of 10 million men is expected to be used in the final assault on the Jap empire.

Japan, already fighting a losing war, must now get set for blows far heavier than anything she has suffered thus far. Her military destruction, assured for some time, will now be accelerated.

Shift underway

She has the choice – stated yesterday by President Truman – of unconditional surrender or “utter destruction” of her war-making power.

The shifting of U.S. forces for the final assault upon the enemy in the Pacific is underway. It will take time and tremendous effort, this change from a two-front to one-front war. And the enemy is strong. Adm. William D. Leahy, the President’s chief of staff, has warned that Japan still has “perhaps seven million troops.”

But the process of arraying superior might against the eastern enemy has started, and its tempo will be increased until all of this country’s power is concentrated for the all-out blow.

Navy’s size cited

There are an estimated one million Army troops already in the Pacific. To them will be added most of the nation’s post-V-E Day Army, expected by the War Department to total 6,968,000 men.

Already dedicated primarily to victory in the east are the Navy’s 3,270,000 men and women, the Marine Corps’ 475,000, and the Coast Guard’s 172,000. This gigantic force will now give its undivided attention to Japan.

Thus, the nation will have a total of about 10,800,000 men and women in uniform between V-E and V-J Day. Most of them, except for European occupation forces, will be available for use in the war against Japan.

At the Navy’s disposal, exclusive of the power contributed by Japan’s other enemies, are 1,200 warships including 23 battleships, 91 aircraft carriers and swarms of cruisers, destroyers, submarines and lesser vessels.

U.S. won’t falter

The industrial production which first dismayed and then overwhelmed Nazidom will now flow in irresistible flood to the east.

If the Japs had hoped this country’s will would falter after defeat of their German partner, they must have derived nothing but despair from the statements of American leaders on V-E Day.

From the President down all responsible leaders emphasized that the war will not be over until Japan capitulates. War, Navy and production officials echoed Mr. Truman’s statement that “our victory is only half-won.” They adopted the theme of “work, work, work.”

No one knows what effect ultimately the example of Germany will have upon Japan. The assumption here, however, is that Japan’s warlords, like Nazidom’s, will fight to the last.

Japs ‘more ruthless’

Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell, commander of the Army ground forces, said on the strength of long experience fighting Japs that they are “even more savage and ruthless” than the Germans.

Acting Secretary of State Joseph C. Grew, who for years was U.S. Ambassador in Tokyo, said Japan “is strong, and she is still fighting with cunning and tenacity.”

But even the Jap militarists, Mr. Grew said, must know “that they will be crushed.”

The War Department disclosed that the piecemeal collapse of Germany made it possible to curtail troop and supply movements to Europe well before V-E Day and start redeployment of troops.

The mass movement from Europe “is just about to get underway,” the War Department said, and all transportation facilities, ships and planes, will be utilized to the utmost to complete it.

Allies feared Axis junction in Far East

That gave European war top priority

WASHINGTON (UP) – The reason America gave the European war top priority after Pearl Harbor was because it was imperative to prevent a German-Japanese junction in India.

Speaking in the Army’s V-E Day film, Two Down and One to Go, Army Chief of Staff Gen. George C. Marshall said the Axis had planned to meet in India and then destroy Britain, Russia and the United States one by one.

Any cost strategy

“Our strategy,” he said, “was to prevent at all costs the junction of Germany and Japan, and then push them back.”

It was imperative to send forces to Europe immediately because Germany had Britain and Russia “on the ropes,” he said. Had the U.S. concentrated first on Japan, he declared, Germany would have become almost impregnable.

Gen. Marshall said another reason for temporarily subordinating the Jap war was that it was a two-year job to build the shipping strength to transport troops and supplies across the Pacific.

Ended at El Alamein

The threat of a German-Japanese junction ended when the Germans were forced back from El Alamein in 1943 and the British smashed the Japs at Ceylon.

The film, shown privately to the press last night, will be distributed theaters for exhibition to the public. It was made last summer for distribution with the end of the European war.

Be kind to Reich, Japs urge Allies

Hope expressed for Germany of future
By the United Press

Tokyo’s newspapers gave prominent display today to news of Germany’s surrender and expressed hope that Allied treatment of the fallen Nazis would be “as kind as that which Germany would have given if the Axis had been the victor.”

Most of the newspapers said the surrender had not been entirely “unanticipated” and reiterated that Japan’s determination to continue the war would be unaffected.

Press comments, reported in a Jap Domei broadcast, emphasized that Japan’s leaders should take advantage of lessons learned in Germany’s collapse to prepare Japan for “the very hard times that lie ahead.”

The newspaper Asahi was quoted as expressing hope that Germany eventually would rise to regain its position as a leader nation in Europe.

Jap cabinet decides to keep fighting

By the United Press

Japan announced today that it will keep fighting as hard as ever in spite of Germany’s surrender.

The announcement, broadcast by Tokyo radio, was made after a special meeting of the Jap Cabinet under Premier Kantaro Suzuki.

While it expressed “deep regret” over Germany’s surrender, the official statement said the “sudden change of the war situation in Europe will not bring the slightest change in the war objective of the imperial government of Japan.”

Editorial: Ernie Pyle and V-E Day

Ernie Pyle had some ideas about V-E Day.

His ideas, we think, are pretty much the ideas of most G.I.’s.

He wrote them long before V-E Day, which he never lived to see. He wrote them from his heart and out of the long months in which he trudged the bitter, tragic paths of war – war, which he once described as “a flat, black depression without highlights, a revulsion of the mind and an exhaustion of the spirit.”

As we mark the end of fighting in Europe and turn to the tedious, painful months of death and anguish still to come in the Pacific war, listen to Ernie’s words on V-E Day:

The end of the war will be a gigantic relief, but it cannot be a matter of hilarity for most of us. Somehow it would seem sacrilegious to sing and dance when the great day comes – there are so many who can never sing and dance again.

We have won this war because our men are brave, and because of many other things – because of Russia, and England, and the passage of time, and the gift of nature’s materials.

We did not win it because destiny created us greater than all other peoples. I hope that in victory we are more grateful than we are proud. I hope we can rejoice in victory – but humbly. The dead men would not want us to gloat.

And all of us together will have to learn how to reassemble our broken world into a pattern so firm and so fair that another great war cannot soon be possible.

These are the words of a gifted writer, a writer who knew not only the filth and dirt and numbing horror of war, but knew the innermost confidences and thoughts and hopes and fears and ideas of the men who fight wars, and die in them.

For the great numbers of us at home, who have been so jubilant over the news from Europe, those of us who have fought the war in petty inconveniences and shortages, in small and paltry sacrifices, these are good words for us to know.

Let’s keep them in our minds until V-J Day, and in our hearts forever.

Capitol lights on

WASHINGTON – Floodlights played on the U.S. Capitol dome and the Washington Monument from dusk last night until dawn today in celebration of Victory in Europe.

Othman: Ol’ Tanglefoot

By Fred Othman

WASHINGTON – V-E Day was a surprise to me. I was looking for dancing in the streets.

President Truman made the announcement. There was a whoop and a crash in the White House.

Then throughout the capital the biggest news of the generation had no more outward, superficial effect on the population than the rain that slithered down outside. Thankfulness, yes – and on with the job.

So it was at the Senate too.

For a solid hour I listened to the Senate War Investigating Committee investigate the carbon black situation. Carbon black is a kind of soot. Our current capacity is 1,104,000 tons of the stuff per year, or enough to make about all the auto tires we’ll need, the War Production Board hopes. The experts talked about carbon black and nobody jumped up or down or even mentioned the fact that there was no war in Europe.

I went over to the House (after stopping off for a porkchop lunch) and there was some oratory there under the floodlights. But it was no joyous celebration. Mostly they were talking about the hard job ahead in the Pacific. They were right, of course.

Widow Smith disappointed

Downtown the federal clerks were clerking as usual. There were a couple of streamers of sodden ticker tape hanging from a press building window. Three ladies stood in a second-floor beauty parlor around the corner and threw out torn-up bits of paper, but nobody paid them any attention.

By all outward signs it was just another May 8; a wet one at that. And it brought disappointment to the Widow Smith. Poor gal.

She’s the wife of Merriman Smith, White House correspondent of the United Press. Her husband spent so much time traveling with the late President Roosevelt that people began to call her a widow.

When President Truman went into the White House, she thought perhaps she’d get to see her husband occasionally. It was not to be. Smith soon began spending a lot of his might hours in the executive offices, waiting for peace to be announced.

The widow then began pinning her wifely hopes on V-E Day. Surely, she said, the coming of peace would let her become acquainted again with her husband. That’s what she thought.

Breaks fast at barrier

Glance back at the second paragraph of this dispatch. You’ll note a reference to a whoop and a crash. That was Smith.

His job is to get the news and deliver it in a hurry. This involves a foot race from the executive office to the White House press room when there is hot news in a presidential press conference.

Smith got away from Mr. Truman’s desk in near-record time, but at the door hit a protruding ladder left there by a photographer and tripped to the floor. Picking himself up on the bounce he kept going and threw himself into his phone booth and began dictating the story you probably read about the presidential speech on peace. It was a good story.

When he’d finished dictating, doctors took over and discovered that he’d seriously dislocated his shoulder when he hit the floor. To the hospital went Smith.

He’s resting easily at this writing. Eventually he’ll get to go home – the widow hopes.

Eyewitness of surrender signing –
German war chief arrogant to the end

After signature, Keitel requests 24 hours’ grace, meets rebuff
By Joseph W. Grigg Jr., United Press staff writer

MARSHAL ZHUKOV’S HQ, Berlin (UP) – The final seal was set on the German Army’s defeat and humiliation before the world when Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel, titular head of the once-proud German High Command, was brought to Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov’s headquarters in the devastated German capital early this morning and signed the formal ratification of Germany’s unconditional surrender.

As one of the first two American newspapermen officially permitted to go to Berlin since the Russian occupation, I witnessed the signature in the large whitewashed hall of an army technical school in the eastern residential suburb Karlshorst, now used by Marshal Zhukov as his headquarters.

The document was more or less identical terms as that signed at Reims on Monday morning, with certain additions requested by the Russians defining more closely the surrender of German troops and equipment.

On the Allied side, it was signed by Marshal Zhukov for the Russians, and by Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur W. Tedder on behalf of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. It was witnessed by Gen. Carl A. Spaatz and Gen. de Lattre de Tassigny. On the German side, Keitel, as chief of the German Army, signed together with Adm. Friedeburg, commander-in-chief of the German Navy, and Col. Gen. Paul Stumpff, commander-in-chief of the Nazi Air Force.

Bars German claim

With signatures of the heads of all the German Armed Forces appended, this historic document forestalls forever any future German claim that the German Army ended the war unbeaten.

Keitel, tall haughty gray-haired figure wearing the full-dress uniform and red striped pants of a German field marshal, maintained his Prussian arrogance to the bitter end.

After his signature already had been appended to the document and while the Allied chiefs were signing, Keitel made a last-minute attempt to play for time. He beckoned the Russian interpreter to him and began haranguing him bitterly protesting there was an insufficient time to notify the forces under his command of minor modifications in the capitulation text and asking for another 24 hours’ grace before it became effective.

He could be heard clearly saying to the interpreter: “I insist you go to the colonel general – I mean Marshal Zhukov – and tell him I must demand another 24 hours’ respite.”

The interpreter hesitated and appeared uncertain what to do and finally went and consulted members of Marshal Zhukov’s staff. As no reply was conveyed back to Keitel, it appeared that the Russians ignored the request.

Drove 1,000 miles

For Marshal Zhukov the ceremony was the triumphant climax to a bitter 1,000-mile battle from the ruins of Stalingrad into the heart of devastated Berlin.

Marshal Zhukov’s headquarters were established at Karlshorst as there is not a single building in the whole fantastic nightmare of devastation of Central Berlin that could house even a company headquarters, let alone that of a great army. Keitel, too, had the final supreme humiliation of being driven in a Russian staff car to meet Marshal Zhukov through the blasted shambles of Central Berlin, which witnessed the greatest triumph of his and Hitler’s armed forces a bare 3½ years ago.

Marshal Tedder, Gen. Spaatz and other members of the SHAEF delegation left Reims yesterday morning and touched down on the airstrip at Stendal near the Elbe at 11 a.m., where a rendezvous had been made with a Russian fighter escort and a plane bringing Keitel and Friedeburg from Flensburg.

Stumpff, who once commanded the Nazi Air Force group in Norway and Finland and later had an important Western Front command, rode with Marshal Tedder from Reims. A party of eight American, British and French newsmen and broadcasters flew with Marshal Tedder.

Keitel’s plane was late for the rendezvous and it was not until 12:20 that all five planes took off again. Almost immediately they were joined by an escort of six Russian Yaks, which flew circles around the slow transports all the way into Tempelhof Airport in Berlin.

City like skeleton

As the planes circled slowly over Berlin preparing to land, the city underneath looked like an incredible Wellsian setting. Mile after mile of gaunt, roofless shells of houses stood silent and skeleton-like. There was no traffic in the streets except Russian military vehicles. Over the whole dead capital there was a thick smoke haze. Columns of smoke from buildings still burning could be seen curling lazily into the still air over the city.

The SHAEF delegation was met at the airfield by a guard of honor of a Soviet guards’ regiment with flags of the Soviet Union, United States and Britain. The party was welcomed officially by Army Gen. Ivan Sokolobsky, representing Marshal Zhukov, and a Gen. Bersarin, the Red Army’s commandant for Berlin. During the official presentation, some 60 or more Red Army cameramen and newsreelmen swarmed around the delegation.

The day was warm and sunny. The band played the three national anthems and a guard of honor carrying long bayonets fixed on their rifles gave three hurrahs and staged a formal parade.

The planes landed at 2 p.m. Immediately after the ceremony the Allied delegation and the newsmen were whisked off in a cavalcade of cars through Berlin’s devastated East End to Marshal Zhukov’s headquarters. At 4:30 p.m., Marshal Tedder, Gen. Spaatz and their staff paid a formal call on Marshal Zhukov in his office, a small, simply-furnished room with a red flag and maps as the only decorations on the wall.

In a brief informal ceremony, Marshal Tedder presented Marshal Zhukov with a silken SHAEF banner sent as a personal gift by Gen. Eisenhower. Marshal Zhukov replied with a brief speech of thanks.

Marshal Zhukov, medium-sized and stocky, with his hair close cropped and thinning on top, wore a full-dress uniform and was a dignified soldierly figure throughout. He spoke only Russian.

Confers with Tedder

Keitel and the other Germans, meanwhile, had been escorted to a nearby villa to await the capitulation document. Marshal Zhukov asked Marshal Tedder to stay behind and confer alone with him for a few minutes. The two remained closeted about a half hour while Marshal Tedder gave Marshal Zhukov the draft of the capitulation terms embodying certain changes which the Russians desired. At 5:30 p.m., they came out and Marshal Zhukov asked Marshal Tedder to give him until 8 p.m. (1 p.m. ET) to consider the exact wording.

A long wait then began. At 8 p.m. Marshal Zhukov and the SHAEF experts had not yet agreed on the terms.

Tedder was called away to confer again personally with Marshal Zhukov. It was not until shortly before midnight that the document was finally completed, typed and presented to the Germans.

At midnight, Marshal Zhukov gave word to the delegates to enter the hall for the signing.

The large whitewashed hall of the former Army Technical School was brilliantly lit with Klieg lights, spotlighting the Soviet, American, British and French flags immediately behind the chief Allied delegates. The long tables were arranged like a letter “E.” Marshal Zhukov, stern-faced, took the middle seat, with Marshal Tedder and Soviet Assistant Foreign Commissar Vyshinsky and Adm. Sir Harold Burrough, the Allied supreme naval commander, on his right, and Gen. Spaatz followed by Gen. de Tassigny, who had arrived independently, from the French First Army. Other members of the Allied delegation included American Maj. Gen. H. R. Bull, head of SHAEF G-3, and British Maj. Gen. K. W. D. Strong, head of SHAEF G-2. The newsmen were escorted by Capt. Harry Butcher, USNR; Brig. W. A. S. Turner and Col. Ernest Dupuy, of SHAEF public relations.

Calls Germans

The delegates spent several minutes posing for the Russian photographers who swarmed all over the hall. At 12:07, Marshal Zhukov rose and read the text of the capitulation document and then ordered the German delegation to be brought in.

At 12:25, Keitel walked in and was followed by Friedeburg and Stumpff. Keitel, haughty and self-possessed, his face slightly flushed, slammed his marshal’s baton down on the table and took a seat, looking straight ahead, ignoring the photographers. Once or twice, he fingered his collar and nervously wetted his lips. He was determined, however, to carry his old school Potsdam arrogance through to the bitter end.

The Germans sat at a separate table near the door with four uniformed aides and two Allied interpreters standing behind.

When he was seated Marshal Tedder arose and asked in a cold voice in English: “I ask you: Have you read this document of unconditional surrender? Are you prepared to sign it?” After the translation, Keitel picked up a copy of the document off the table and replied in harsh Prussian accent in German, “Yes, I am ready.”

Marshal Zhukov then motioned him to come over to the table. Keitel picked up his cap, his marshal’s baton and gloves and slowly and carefully inserted his monocle in his right eye, walked over and sat down to sign in a long scrawling hand the single word “Keitel.” The first signature was appended at exactly 12:15 a.m. There was a total of nine copies to sign – three each in Russian, English and German, of which the Russian and English texts were official for the record.

Marches haughtily

After signing, Keitel returned to his seat and Friedeburg and Stumpff followed immediately afterward. Marshal Zhukov, Marshal Tedder and Gens. Spaatz and Tassigny then signed. It was while this was proceeding that the incident of Keitel demanding an extra 24 hours’ grace occurred.

As the signing was completed, Marshal Zhukov rose and said coldly in Russian, “I now request the German delegation to leave the room.”

Keitel rose, snapped together the folder in which he was carrying his copy and marched out haughtily, followed by the other Germans.

The Allied leaders then shook hands all around. Later, Marshal Zhukov gave a banquet to the Allied delegation which lasted till 6 a.m., during which no less than 25 toasts were drunk. In one toast to Gen. Eisenhower, Marshal Zhukov described him as “one of the greatest generals of present times,” adding, “I want him to know how much the Soviet Army and people appreciate his tremendous achievements.”

Keitel returned to Flensburg this morning and Marshal Tedder and Gen. Spaatz to SHAEF.