Prisoners of War: A Reference Handbook

Prisoners of War: A Reference Handbook

by Arnold Krammer
Prisoners of War: A Reference Handbook

Prisoners of War: A Reference Handbook

by Arnold Krammer

Hardcover

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Overview

America's current War on Terror is causing a readjustment of centuries of POW policies. Prisoners of war are once again in the news as America and Western Europe grapple with a new, faceless enemy and the rules of war and the torture of POWs are open to reconsideration. Until very recently, there has been astonishingly little written on the subject of prisoners of war. Yet, to understand the present, it is critical to look back over history. To that end, Arnold Krammer examines the fate of war prisoners from Biblical and Medieval times through the halting evolution of international law to the current reshuffling of the rules. The issue of prisoners of war is of more immediate concern now than ever before and an examination of the history of their treatment and current status may well influence foreign policy.

The fate of war prisoners through history has been cruel and haphazard. The lives of captives hung by a thread. Execution, enslavement, torture, or being held for ransom were equally likely. International agreements developed haltingly through the 19th and 20th centuries to culminate in the Geneva Accords of 1929. America's current War on Terror is causing a readjustment of centuries of POW policies. Prisoners of war are once again in the news as America and Western Europe grapple with a new, faceless enemy and the rules of war and the torture of POWs are open to reconsideration.
Until very recently, there has been astonishingly little written on the subject of prisoners of war. Yet, to understand the present, it is critical to look back over history. To that end, Arnold Krammer examines the fate of war prisoners from Biblical and Medieval times through the halting evolution of international law to the current reshuffling of the rules.

Since biblical times, war captives have been considered property and counted as booty to be enslaved or killed. Americans were interested in generals and weapons and battles, but not the fate of prisoners of war. The Second World War, when 90,000 Americans fell into enemy hands, began to change that. Concern for our POWs in Germany and Japan, and close contact with enemy camps in America began to change our attitudes. However, it was the Vietnam War, media-driven and polarizing, that caused the American public to truly reevaluate the plight of its sons and brothers, heroic and clearly loyal, as they fell into the hands of an inscrutable and apparently unyielding distant enemy.
More recently, during the first Gulf War of 1991 and the current War on Terrorism, the issue of prisoners of war has moved to center stage, involving the clash of ideologies, politics, and expediency. Since 9/11, the rights and safety of prisoners of war caught up in the War on Terror have been debated in Congress and adjudicated on by former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales whose conclusions were protested by numerous organizations. The issue of prisoners of war is of more immediate concern now than ever before, and an examination of the history of their treatment and current status may well influence foreign policy.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275993009
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 11/30/2007
Series: Contemporary Military, Strategic, and Security Issues
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Arnold Krammer is Professor of History at Texas A&M University. A highly praised teacher for more than three decades, Krammer has written a number of books in both English and German about POWs, among them Nazi Prisoners of War in America and Hitler's Last Soldier in America (with Georg Gaertner), Undue Process: The Untold Story of America's German Enemy Aliens, and more than forty articles ranging from World War I, through the Spanish Civil War, World War II, and the Holocaust.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Chapter 1 War Prisoners through the Ages
Chapter 2 A Search for Legal Protection
Chapter 3 The Best and the Worst
Chapter 4 The Rules Have Changed
Appendix Primary Documents
De Jure Belli Ac Pacis (On the Law of War and Peace) by Hugo Grotius, 1625
Lieber's Code (General Orders No. 100), 1863
Brussels Declaration of 1874
The Laws of War on Land, Oxford Manual, 1880
Final Act of the International Peace Conference, The Hague, 29 July 1899
Final Act of the Second Peace Conference, The Hague, 18 October 1907
Convention Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War, Geneva, 27 July 1929
Convention Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War, Geneva, 12 August 1949
ESTIMATED POWs (Prisoners of War), MIA (Missing in Action) and KIA (Killed in Action) since 1775
Bibliography
Index
A photo essay follows page 80.

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