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VETERANS OF ANOTHER WAR RECALL NAZI
INTERROGATIONS -- The group of World War II
veterans
kept a military code and the decorum of their
generation,
telling virtually no one of their top-secret
work
interrogating Nazi prisoners of war.

Members of the P.O. Box 1142 program
maintained decades of silence.
For more about World War II veterans, use the
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Story here...
http://seattletimes.nwsource
.com/html/nationworld/2003929
105_torturevets06.html
Story below:
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Veterans of another war recall Nazi
interrogations
By Petula Dvorak
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON -- For six decades, they held their silence.
The group of World War II veterans kept a military code and the decorum
of their generation, telling virtually no one of their top-secret work
interrogating Nazi prisoners of war at Fort Hunt, Va.
When about two dozen veterans got together Friday for the first time
since the 1940s, many lamented the chasm between the way they conducted
interrogations during the war and the harsh measures used today in
questioning terrorism suspects.
Back then, they and their commanders wrestled with the morality of
bugging prisoners' cells with listening devices. They felt bad about
censoring letters. They took prisoners out for steak dinners to soften
them up. They played games with them.
"We got more information out of a German general with a game of chess or
pingpong than they do today, with their torture," said Henry Kolm, 90,
an MIT physicist who had been assigned to play chess in Germany with one
of Hitler's commanders, Rudolph Hess.
Blunt criticism of modern enemy interrogations was a common refrain at
the ceremonies held beside the Potomac River near Alexandria, Va. Across
the river, President Bush defended his administration's methods of
detaining and questioning terrorism suspects during an Oval Office
appearance.
Several of the veterans, all men in their 80s and 90s, denounced the
controversial techniques. And when the time came for them to accept
honors from the Army's Freedom Team Salute, one veteran refused, citing
his opposition to procedures that have been used at Guantanamo Bay in
Cuba and the war in Iraq.
"I feel like the military is using us to say, 'We did spooky stuff then,
so it's OK to do it now,' " said Arno Mayer, 81, a professor of European
history at Princeton University.
When Peter Weiss, 82, went up to receive his award, he commandeered the
microphone and stressed his point.
"I am deeply honored to be here, but I want to make it clear that my
presence here is not in support of the current war," said Weiss,
chairman of the Lawyers' Committee on Nuclear Policy and a human-rights
and trademark lawyer in New York City.
The veterans of P.O. Box 1142, a top-secret installation that went only
by its postal-code name, were brought back to Fort Hunt by park rangers
who are piecing together a portrait of what happened there during the
war.
Nearly 4,000 prisoners of war, most of them German scientists and
submariners, were brought in for questioning for days, even weeks,
before their presence was reported to the Red Cross, which didn't comply
with the Geneva Conventions. Many of the interrogators were refugees
from the Third Reich.
"We did it with a certain amount of respect and
justice," said John Gunther Dean, 81, who became a career Foreign
Service officer and ambassador to Denmark.
The interrogators had standards that remain a source of pride and honor.
"During the many interrogations, I never laid hands on anyone," said
George Frenkel, 87, of Kensington. "We extracted information in a battle
of the wits. I'm proud to say I never compromised my humanity."
Exactly what went on behind the barbed-wire fences of Fort Hunt has been
a mystery that has lured amateur historians and curious neighbors for
decades.
During the war, nearby residents watched buses with darkened windows
roar toward the fort day and night. They couldn't have imagined that
groundbreaking secrets in rocketry, microwave technology and submarine
tactics were being peeled apart right on the grounds that are now a
popular picnic area.
When Vincent Santucci arrived at the National Park Service's George
Washington Memorial Parkway office as chief ranger four years ago, he
asked his cultural-resource specialist, Brandon Bies, to do some
research so they could post signs throughout the park, explaining its
history.
Bies, Santucci and others have spent hours tracking down and trying to
coax complex details from men who swore on their generation's honor to
never speak of the work they did at P.O. Box 1142.
"The National Park Service is committed to telling your story, and now
it belongs to the nation," said David Vela, superintendent of the George
Washington Memorial Parkway.
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Larry Scott --