Niemiecki goniec na froncie wschodnim niesie meldunek.

In World War II, surrender did not always mean safety

During World War II, Allied troops sometimes killed enemy soldiers who were trying to surrender or had already surrendered. This was especially common on the Eastern Front and in the Asia-Pacific.

WWII Surrenders That Didn't Save Lives

Soviet prisoners of war under the Lithuanian rebels (Lithuanian Activist Front) control during the June Uprising in Eastern Lithuania, 1941.

The Soviet record was especially deadly

About a third of Germans captured by the Soviet Union died in captivity. By contrast, the death rate for German and Japanese prisoners held by the Western Allies was about 1 to 2 percent.

WWII Surrenders That Didn't Save Lives