After Years of Dark Propaganda, German Female POWs Were Stunned by the First Thing American GIs Offered Them
The end of the Third Reich did not come with a heroic final stand for Anelise Schmidt. It came with the taste of gasoline and wet pine in a forest west of the Harz Mountains. It was April 11, 1945, and a cold, persistent German rain had been falling for three days, turning the earth into a slick, greedy mud that pulled at her boots.
At twenty-one, Anelise was a Nachrichtenhelferin—a signals auxiliary. For two years, she had traced telephone wires across the map of a dying empire. Now, her switchboard was gone. Her final orders were simple: destroy the Enigma machine, burn the codebooks, and wait for the “monsters” the radio had warned her about.

I. The Capture and the Abyss
The American 9th Army did not arrive with the brutish violence Dr. Goebbels had promised. Instead, they appeared as giants in olive drab, moving with an unnerving, casual lethality. When the first Sherman tanks rumbled into their clearing, Anelise’s commander cleared his pistol and laid it on a log. “It is over,” he said.
The women were herded onto the back of a GMC “Deuce and a Half” truck. For two days, they lived in a jolting darkness smelling of diesel and wet wool. Anelise’s mind churned with venomous echoes of propaganda: They will humiliate you. You are the spoils of war. Processing at a transit camp in Rheims, France, felt like systematic dehumanization. They were stripped, interrogated, and subjected to a harsh chemical baptism of DDT powder to kill lice. “We are no longer humans,” Anelise whispered to her friend Helga. “We are livestock being dipped before transport.”
II. The Steel Womb
The rumor they had dismissed as impossible soon became reality: they were being shipped to America. At the port of Cherbourg, Anelise stood before the USS General John Pope, a colossal gray transport ship that seemed large enough to swallow the world.
The eleven-day crossing of the North Atlantic was a trial of misery. The ship pitched and rolled in the spring storms, and the hold became a steel womb filled with the acrid scent of seasickness and salt.
On the tenth day, the Statue of Liberty emerged from the mist. To the world, she was a symbol of hope; to Anelise, she was a cold, imposing sentinel guarding the entrance to her exile. As the ship docked in New Jersey, the industrial roar of America—unscarred by bombs and humming with power—was profoundly demoralizing.
III. The Long Rail to the Midwest
The women were pushed into dull red boxcars. For four days, the rhythmic clatter of wheels became the soundtrack of their lives as they crossed the Great Plains. Through small, barred windows, Anelise saw a landscape of impossible plenty: vast fields of green corn, immaculate red barns, and factories with chimneys puffing contentedly into a sky that had never seen a B-17.
The guards on the train were older men, reservists with tired eyes. On the third day, as the heat in the boxcar became unbearable, a portly sergeant appeared at the grate with a ladle of ice water. He didn’t scowl. He didn’t shout. The small act of kindness was a disruption—a humane gesture that didn’t fit the narrative of a cruel enemy.
IV. The Great Unraveling at Fort Des Moines
On the fourth afternoon, the train shuttered to a halt in Iowa. The door slid open, flooding the dark interior with the bright, unfamiliar light of a midwestern summer.
Anelise stepped onto the gravel, bracing for the snarling dogs and rifle butts she had been taught to expect. Instead, she saw a scene of surreal order. Before her lay Fort Des Moines—not a prison, but a well-maintained base with manicured lawns. In the distance, American soldiers were playing baseball, their laughter carrying on the breeze.
Waiting on the platform were not hardened combat officers, but women—officers of the Women’s Army Corps (WACs) in crisp, khaki uniforms.
A young American GI moved down the line. He stopped in front of a terrified girl from Dresden and, instead of a blow, offered a thick gray wool blanket. Another soldier followed, handing out bottles of Coca-Cola, glistening with condensation.
This was the breaking point. The kindness was more unsettling than any cruelty could have been. Cruelty they were prepared for; they had built psychological fortresses against it. But politeness bypassed their defenses and struck at the core of their indoctrination.
The young private with the blankets caught Anelise’s eye. He gave her a small, polite, almost shy smile. A simple human acknowledgment.
“Helga,” Anelise whispered, her voice cracking with a confusion so deep it felt like grief. “Why? Why are they smiling at us?”
Helga could only shake her head, clutching her soda bottle limply. For these women, stood under the vast, open sky of Iowa, the war they had been fighting in their own minds had ended. The “monsters” did not exist here. In their place stood a boy with a blanket and a bottle of soda—a reality far more complicated and terrifying than any lie Joseph Goebbels had ever conceived.
The great unraveling had begun.