THE EXECUTION OF
PVT. SLOVIK,
A POLISH AMERICAN
The following is adapted from an essay
by Laurence M. Vance.
Background and contact information is
available below.
Every child learns in school that
Dwight D. Eisenhower was the 34th president of the United States.
Some Americans also know that Eisenhower was the Supreme Commander
of the Allied forces in Europe during World War II. "I Like Ike" was
not just a campaign slogan. Many Americans genuinely liked
Eisenhower – many Americans except Private Eddie Slovik. And no
doubt many Europeans liberated by the Allies also liked Ike – many
Europeans except those Russian prisoners of war sent back to the
Soviet Union.
Jeffrey Tucker has written about all
modern armies being essentially totalitarian enterprises. "Once you
sign up for them, or are drafted, you are a slave. The penalty for
becoming a fugitive is death. Even now, the enforcements against
mutiny, desertion, going AWOL, or what have you, are never
questioned." [http://www.lewrockwell.com/tucker/tucker32.html]
One notable example of a man who paid
the ultimate price for wanting to change his job, a job that he
never asked for in the first place, was Edward Donald "Eddie" Slovik
(1920–1945). Slovik was a private in the U.S. Army during World War
II. Today, January 31, 2005, marked the 60th anniversary of his
execution by firing squad for desertion. There were 21,049 soldiers
sentenced for desertion during WWII, with 49 of them receiving death
sentences. However, only Slovik’s death sentence was carried out. He
was the first U.S. soldier to be executed for desertion since the
Civil War. He was also the last.
Born in Detroit, Michigan, Slovik was a
small-time thief and ex-convict who was originally classified as
unfit for military service. But shortly after his first wedding
anniversary, in November of 1943, he was drafted anyway.
Then, after training for a few months
at Camp Wolters in Texas, he was sent to France in August of 1944.
Slovik faced impending death in The Battle of Hurtgen Forest, where
the American army suffered 24,000 casualties during the battle and
an additional 9,000 casualties due to fatigue, illness, or friendly
fire. After Slovik’s request to be reassigned from the front lines
to the rear was refused, he deserted, voluntarily surrendered, and
wrote that he would run away again if sent into combat. Confined in
the division stockade and facing a court-martial, Slovik refused to
return to his unit. On November 11, 1944, (then called Armistice
Day) he was tried and pleaded not guilty, but was convicted of
desertion. He wrote a letter to General Eisenhower on December 9
pleading for clemency, but on December 23, during the Battle of the
Bulge Eisenhower confirmed the death sentence.
Slovik’s life and death were recounted
in the 1954 book "The Execution of Private Slovik" by William
Bradford Huie. The award-winning 1974 NBC-TV movie of the same name,
staring Martin Sheen, Ned Beatty, and Gary Busey, is available on
video. [The trailer can be viewed at
http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0071477/trailers.]
Captain Benedict Kimmelman, a member of
the court martial board, wrote in 1987 that "Slovik, guilty as many
others were, was made an example, the sole example, it turned out."
He considered the execution a "historic injustice." Colonel Guy
Williams, another officer on the panel, said that he didn’t think "a
single member of that court actually believed that Slovik would ever
be shot. I know I didn’t believe it."
According to Bernard Calka, the man
responsible for bringing Slovik’s remains home in 1987 from an army
cemetery in France reserved for criminals to Woodmere cemetery in
Michigan, "The man didn’t refuse to serve, he refused to kill."
Calka, a Polish-American WWII veteran who served as an MP during the
war and a commander of a VFW post afterward, and later became a
commissioner of Macomb County (one of the three counties in
Detroit’s "tri-county" metro area), spent more than ten years and
$8,000 of his own money to have Slovik’s remains re-interred next to
his wife. Stephen Osinski, a retired judge who filed a formal
petition for a Slovik pardon, said that he found "a virtual plethora
of significant deprivations of Pvt. Slovik’s constitutional rights."
Like Private Slovik, there are others
who owe their deaths to Eisenhower. The repatriation of Russian
prisoners of war under Operation Keelhaul was another shameful event
of World War II. Russian prisoners liberated from German prison
camps were to be returned to the Soviet Union – even though they did
not want to go back to life under Stalin (our ally in World War II.)
One historian with the courage to
report this atrocity is Thomas Woods. In his important new book "The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History," Professor Woods
describes how Operation Keelhaul was also carried out on American
soil: "At Fort Dix, New Jersey, hundreds of Soviet POWs, who fought
with all their strength when they learned that the American
government was reneging on its promise not to send them back to the
USSR, were drugged in order to calm them down enough for them to be
shipped back."
Laurence M. Vance is a freelance writer
and an adjunct instructor in accounting and economics at Pensacola
Junior College in Pensacola, Florida. His new book is "Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State." His website is
at
http://www.vancepublications.com. He may be contacted at
vancepub@juno.com.