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The Dark Reason Captured WW2 Traitors Were Shot *Warning HARD TO STOMACH

The World War II traitors contributed to years of  brutality and violence, which claimed millions of   innocent lives, by helping the enemy.

But when the  war finally ended, they faced nations that wanted   revenge.

What came next was one of the harshest  and most brutal paybacks Europe had ever seen.

Long before shooting started in 1939, Europe  was already tearing itself apart.

When Adolf   Hitler took power in Germany in January 1933,  he didn’t just rebuild an army.

He rebuilt a   whole mindset of total loyalty to the state.

Anyone outside that loyalty became a target,   and anyone willing to serve Germany became useful.

Italy had already gone down the same path.

Benito Mussolini had ruled since 1922,   and by the mid-1930s, both countries were  feeding off each other’s ambitions.

Germany   left the League of Nations in 1933, reintroduced  military conscription in 1935, and marched   troops into the demilitarized Rhineland in  1936.

Each move made Europe more nervous.

By March 1938, Germany swallowed Austria  during the Anschluss.

Later that same year,   they seized the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia  after the Munich Agreement.

Both events showed   that Europe was heading toward a huge conflict.

No  one knew the exact date, but they could feel it.

This tension created the perfect environment for  secret deals, hidden loyalties, and early signs   of betrayal.

Some people supported their  governments and prepared for the worst.

Others saw rising Germany as a chance  to gain money, influence, or revenge.

Germany’s Abwehr, led by Admiral  Wilhelm Canaris, moved early.

In 1934,   they began quietly recruiting foreigners who were  angry, desperate, or simply greedy.

By 1936, they   had informants spread out across France, Poland,  Britain, Czechoslovakia, and the Balkans.

Many   were low-level workers, including factory hands,  drivers, and port clerks, people who thought   passing information was harmless.

It didn’t  feel like treason yet, because there was no war.

But the governments they betrayed were preparing.

France expanded its treason laws in 1938 after   years of internal political crisis.

Britain  introduced the Treachery Act in May 1939,   just four months before the shooting  began.

Poland added the death penalty   for wartime betrayal even earlier, in 1936,  anticipating what Germany was planning.

When Germany attacked Poland on September 1,  1939, the world finally shifted from tension   to open war.

Britain and France declared  war on Germany on September 3, and suddenly,   every country understood the danger of  insiders secretly working for the enemy.

The first major example came from Poland.

Germany  crushed the country in only five weeks, ending   in early October.

During that short but brutal  period, the chaos created openings for betrayal.

Some civilians guided German soldiers to hiding  spots where Polish officers were regrouping.

Others revealed supply routes or pointed out where  resistance fighters lived.

These acts didn’t cause   immediate punishment because Poland was still  fighting, but they were remembered.

After the war,   many of these early collaborators were  identified by name and held accountable.

In Britain, the war had barely begun when the  first traitor surfaced.

George Johnson Armstrong,   a British engineer, was caught passing secrets to  Germany in October 1939.

His trial took place in   1941, and he became the first British citizen  executed under the Treachery Act in July 1941.

France faced a more complicated problem.

By early  1940, German agents were already working inside   the country, helping prepare for the invasion  that arrived in May 1940.

One early informant,   Pierre Fournier, leaked details about  weak spots in the French army’s defenses.

Germany used this kind of information  in their fast-moving attacks.

When France collapsed in June 1940,   thousands of people who had quietly helped the  Germans thought the new Vichy government would   protect them forever.

They believed  they had chosen the “winning” side.

But that false sense of safety didn’t last  long.

Because once the war swung the other way,   these names would come back up, one by one.

By mid-1940, much of Europe was  under German control.

Norway fell   in April 1940.

The Netherlands and  Belgium collapsed in May.

France was   split in June.

Everywhere Germany  marched, it offered the same deal:   obey or be crushed.

Some people resisted.

Others chose the easier path of collaboration.

In Norway, Vidkun Quisling stepped forward  almost immediately.

On 9 April 1940,   the same day Germany invaded, he announced his  own government.

His party, Nasjonal Samling,   supported the occupiers fully.

Quisling’s  police helped arrest thousands of Norwegians,   including teachers, officers, and resistance  members.

Families who resisted found their   loved ones taken to camps such as Grini.

By  1945, when Norway was liberated, the country   remembered every decision he made.

His own name  later became a worldwide nickname for “traitor.

” In the Netherlands, Anton  Mussert and his movement,   the NSB, aligned themselves with the Nazis.

When the Germans occupied the country,   his supporters helped enforce the new rules.

They  pointed out Jewish families hiding in basements,   reported resistance meetings, and sometimes  even patrolled streets with German soldiers.

Whole neighborhoods later remembered exactly  who had collaborated and who had stayed loyal.

Belgium faced a similar story.

Léon  Degrelle, leader of the Rexist Party,   openly supported Hitler.

He recruited  Belgians to fight in German units,   especially the Waffen-SS.

Young men joined  believing they were fighting against communism,   but their decision meant leaving their own  country behind.

Many were killed on the   Eastern Front.

Those who returned in 1945 came  back to a Belgium that no longer wanted them.

And then there was France.

After the defeat in  June 1940, the country was split into two zones.

The Vichy government, led by Marshal Philippe  Pétain, controlled the south.

While some French   citizens simply tried to survive, others actively  helped the German occupiers.

They enforced orders,   handed over political opponents, and  even helped round up Jewish families.

These decisions would come under intense  scrutiny when France regained control in 1944.

When Germany launched its huge invasion  of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941,   it opened a front unlike anything  Europe had ever seen.

It stretched   from the Baltic Sea all the way to the  Black Sea.

Entire cities fell in days.

Millions of soldiers and civilians were trapped  between two systems that were both ruthless in   their own ways.

In the middle of this disaster,  thousands of people faced impossible decisions.

Some Soviet citizens had old resentments that  Germany used to its advantage.

In Ukraine,   many families still remembered the Holodomor  famine that killed millions in the early 1930s.

In Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia,  people remembered how the Soviets   had occupied their lands in 1940  and arrested thousands.

In Belarus,   entire villages had been crushed by Soviet  policies.

Even in parts of Russia, there were   people who had lost relatives during Stalin’s  purges.

When German soldiers arrived in 1941,   some locals saw them as a lesser evil,  or at least as a ticket to survival.

German commanders moved fast.

They created local  police units called “auxiliary forces.

” By the   end of 1941, more than 80,000 locals had joined  these groups.

Their job wasn’t frontline fighting.

They patrolled captured towns, guarded supply  routes, and carried out arrests.

Some ended up   participating in brutal actions against civilians,  especially in areas where partisans were active.

Every name on those rosters would later end up  on Soviet lists of “traitors to the motherland.

” But not everyone joined willingly.

Some were  pressured.

Some were starving.

Some believed   Germany would win the war and that siding with  the “future winner” would save their families.

But once they signed up, their actions were  recorded.

And the Soviet Union never forgot.

The atmosphere inside the Soviet Union  became even more unforgiving in 1942.

Stalin issued his fierce Order No.

227 in July,  which meant no retreat, no excuses.

Soviet   troops were punished harshly for falling back.

Retreating soldiers could face execution.

Even   being captured by German forces was considered  suspicious.

The NKVD, the Soviet secret police,   believed that any soldier who survived  German captivity might have helped the enemy.

After the war, hundreds of thousands  of freed Soviet prisoners were sent to   special camps in places like Kazakhstan  and Siberia.

Many were interrogated for   months.

Some were sentenced to years of labor  simply because they had been captured alive.

By now, spying had become one of the  most dangerous jobs in the world.

Every country knew that information  could change the direction of battles.

This meant that the punishment for anyone caught  helping the enemy grew harsher each month.

In Britain, German intelligence tried repeatedly  to land agents by parachute.

Very few succeeded.

Most were captured within hours.

The British  security services had cracked many German codes,   so they were usually waiting for the spies  before they even touched the ground.

Those   tried under the Treachery Act faced execution  if convicted.

Josef Jakobs, a German agent, was   captured in January 1941 and executed in August  that same year.

There were no second chances.

Inside France, the situation was even more  complex.

As German occupation tightened its grip,   the French Resistance grew louder and more  active.

By 1942, groups like the Maquis had   begun collecting the names of anyone  suspected of helping German officers.

Some informants were forced into cooperation  after torture by the Gestapo.

Others volunteered   for money, ration benefits, or power.

But the  Resistance didn’t care why they did it.

Once an   informant’s name appeared on their list, the  punishment was almost always death.

Many of   these executions happened quietly in forests,  barns, and abandoned houses.

Trials were fast,   sometimes only a few minutes, because every  delay risked being discovered by German patrols.

Italy became another battleground for betrayal  after 25 July 1943, when Mussolini was removed   from power.

The country split in two.

The  south joined the Allies.

The north became the   German-backed Italian Social Republic.

Families  were divided.

Old friends turned into informants.

People exposed neighbors out of fear or anger.

As German forces took control of northern Italy,   thousands of Italians gave information to  them.

But when Italy was liberated in 1945,   the very same informants faced brutal  retribution.

Italian partisans arrested   hundreds in cities like Milan, Turin, and Genoa.

Many were executed immediately by firing squads.

The moment Allied troops landed  in Normandy on 6 June 1944,   the countdown for collaborators began.

The Germans  were still strong, but their days were numbered.

In France, German-backed groups like  the Milice, created in January 1943,   had spent over a year hunting resistance  fighters.

They had arrested families,   interrogated young men, and helped the Germans  track down anyone suspected of working against   the occupation.

When the Allies pushed inland  after D-Day, members of the Milice became   top targets.

Many fled toward Germany.

Those who stayed were captured quickly.

By August 1944, Paris rose up.

The streets  exploded with fighting.

As the city freed itself,   people pointed out collaborators hiding  in apartments, basements, and even inside   churches.

Courts formed quickly once the  government returned.

Between 1944 and 1949,   more than 750 collaborators were executed  legally in France.

Their files still sit   in the French national archives today,  showing exactly what each person did.

Belgium went through its own wave of arrests  in September 1944 when Allied forces liberated   Brussels and Antwerp.

The Rexist movement, which  had supported Germany since 1940, collapsed almost   overnight.

Members tried explaining their actions  as political idealism or youthful mistakes.

But   Belgian courts focused on one thing, that they had  worked with the enemy while the country suffered.

The Netherlands experienced a different kind  of anger.

During the harsh “Hunger Winter” of   1944–1945, Dutch families had survived freezing  temperatures, empty shops, and almost no food.

Many blamed collaborators who had helped  German authorities seize supplies or arrest   resistance members.

After liberation in May  1945, more than 150,000 Dutch citizens were   taken into custody for collaboration.

Trials  lasted for years.

Several were executed.

But nothing matched what  happened in Germany itself.

Germany wasn’t only fighting enemies outside  its borders.

By 1944, it was terrified of   enemies inside its own walls.

Hitler believed  that internal betrayal was far more dangerous   than any foreign spy.

And things exploded after  the failed assassination attempt on 20 July 1944,   when officers like Claus von Stauffenberg tried  to kill him with a bomb inside the Wolf’s Lair.

Once the plot collapsed, the reaction  was brutal.

Hitler felt humiliated.

He felt surrounded by traitors.

So he ordered  a massive crackdown that hit every corner of   German society.

More than 7,000 Germans were  arrested within weeks.

By early 1945, around   4,900 people had been executed.

Many had nothing  in common except, they wanted the war to end.

These weren’t foreign agents.

These were respected  Germans.

Army officers like Henning von Tresckow,   government workers like Eduard  Hamm, judges, professors, priests,   and even mid-level clerks.

Anyone linked  to the conspiracy was marked for death.

Trials were a joke.

The People’s Court, led by  Roland Freisler, didn’t bother with evidence.

Hearings sometimes lasted less than 10 minutes.

Sentences were already written before the accused   entered the room.

Most were hanged in Berlin’s  Plötzensee Prison.

Others were shot in secret   locations.

Captured officers were often executed  immediately after short military hearings.

Families suffered too.

Under Sippenhaft,  entire families could be punished for   one person’s “betrayal.

” Some lost  their homes.

Others were arrested.

Children were taken away and placed in  special state homes.

No one was safe.

By early 1945, Germany was collapsing,  and paranoia got worse.

As Allied troops   pushed into German territories, the regime  doubled down.

Soldiers caught leaving their   posts were executed on the roadside by  flying courts-martial.

These were small   teams that drove around the front lines,  handing out death sentences within minutes.

Civilians suffered as well.

Anyone caught  helping Allied soldiers risked being shot   on the spot.

Local Nazi officials acted  on fear, not law.

Some ordered executions   without approval.

Hitler Youth boys as  young as 15 were used to patrol towns,   and some were involved in carrying out  executions of so-called “traitors.

” Germany was no longer fighting just the  Allies.

It was fighting itself.

Every week,   more Germans died at the hands of their own  government.

The country was eating itself alive.

When Germany surrendered on 8 May  1945, the world felt a brief moment   of relief.

But the relief was mixed  with years of anger.

Across Europe,   people wanted justice.

And they turned quickly  to the collaborators who had helped the Nazis.

France moved fast.

The country had lived  under occupation for four long years,   and many felt betrayed by those who  worked with the German forces.

One   of the most famous cases was Pierre Laval,  executed on 15 October 1945.

He had helped   run the Vichy government and supported  German demands.

His trial was quick,   and his execution showed how deeply France  wanted to close that painful chapter.

In Norway, Vidkun Quisling became the symbol  of betrayal.

He was executed on 24 October   1945.

Norwegians saw his execution as a  final act of taking their country back.

The Netherlands also acted with determination.

Anton Mussert was executed on 7 May 1946,   almost exactly a year after the country was freed.

Belgium took a similar route.

Members of  the Rexist Party were executed through 1946.

Poland’s situation was even more intense.

Having suffered some of the worst brutality   under German rule, anger ran deep.

By 1946,  dozens of collaborators were executed,   especially those who had helped the Germans  during mass arrests in 1939 and 1940.

Eastern Europe went through some of the  harshest reactions.

With Soviet-backed   governments taking power, thousands were accused  of aiding the Germans.

In Czechoslovakia,   public anger was strong, especially  after the terror that followed the   assassination of Reinhard Heydrich in  1942.

Collaborators faced firing squads,   long trials, and sometimes violent mobs  before authorities could even intervene.

During this chaos, many collaborators ran.

They knew what was coming.

Some fled to Spain,   which was under Francisco Franco and  wasn’t eager to hand people over.

Others   crossed oceans and hid in South America, with  Argentina becoming one of the main safe havens.

The hunt didn’t stop.

France continued  searching for missing collaborators   throughout the late 1940s.

Some  were captured in 1947 and 1948,   often living under false names.

Trials continued  long after the main wave of justice had passed.

In the Netherlands, smaller trials went  on until 1950.

Executions became rare,   but the country still wanted answers from  those who had vanished during the occupation.

Norway and Denmark finished their last executions  in 1948, but they continued arresting suspects   who had escaped justice.

Some had been hiding in  forests, remote villages, or even across borders.

Poland’s new communist government carried out  trials into the early 1950s, especially against   people who had worked with German police  forces during the darkest years of the war.

The Soviet Union went even further.

Anyone  accused of helping the Germans could be sent to   labor camps in Siberia.

Many disappeared entirely.

Families often didn’t know if their relatives were   alive or dead.

Some cases weren’t closed until  decades later, long after the Cold War had begun.

Germany also had its own unfinished  business.

After the war, West Germany   reviewed the cases of people linked  to the 20 July 1944 plot.

For years,   families fought to clear their names and  remove the label of “traitor.

” Some officers   were officially honored only in the late  1950s, showing how long these wounds lasted.

When we look back at all the trials,  the firing squads, the rushed decisions,   and the long prison sentences, something  becomes clear.

The world had just survived   the most brutal war in history.

More  than 70 million people had died.

In a moment like that, betrayal  felt like a knife in the back.

Countries didn’t see traitors as  simple criminals.

They saw them   as people who helped the enemy  destroy their homes.

For many,   it felt worse than being attacked by the enemy  themselves.

Governments justified executions   by saying they needed to restore order.

Courts said they needed to rebuild trust.

Countries believed they needed harsh punishment  to move forward.

Communities wanted to show that   loyalty mattered.

Families who had lost loved  ones demanded justice.

And in a world still   shaking from the war’s impact, executing traitors  felt like the only way to close the chapter.