Germany's Dishonoured Army: Additional Records of German Atrocities in France

Germany's Dishonoured Army: Additional Records of German Atrocities in France
In the chaos of 1914-1918, soldiers and civilians bore witness to horrors that demanded documentation. J.H. Morgan gathered their testimonies. This book presents sworn statements from French villagers, British officers, and captured German soldiers themselves, recounting incidents that shocked the conscience of the civilized world: the abuse of white flags to lure surrendering troops into death traps, wounded men finished off in no-man's land, prisoners executed without trial, and villages reduced to ash. Morgan doesn't merely compile horror, he traces a thread from individual brutality to orders from above, suggesting these were not isolated war crimes but patterns of conduct sanctioned at the highest levels. The text reads as both historical record and moral indictment, a work written in wartime fury that still carries its urgency a century later. For readers seeking to understand the human cost of occupation and the mechanisms by which ordinary men commit extraordinary violence, these pages offer damning, detailed evidence.
