Hermann Göring Interrogated by US Forces, May 1945

Hermann Göring Interrogated by US Forces, May 1945

This historic photograph captures the immediate aftermath of the collapse of Nazi Germany, depicting Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring during an interrogation by United States military personnel in May 1945. Göring, once the second-most powerful man in the Third Reich and commander-in-chief of the Luftwaffe, had surrendered to the U.S.

36th Infantry Division near Radstadt, Austria, on May 9, 1945. The image provides a candid look at the transition from absolute power to prisoner of war.

As the founder of the Gestapo and a primary architect of the Holocaust, Göring’s capture was a major priority for Allied forces. Unlike other high-ranking Nazis who committed suicide or fled, Göring surrendered expecting to be treated as a high-level political prisoner.

His interrogation sessions, such as the one pictured here, were instrumental in gathering intelligence on the internal collapse of the Nazi regime. These early encounters served as a prelude to the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg, where Göring was later tried, convicted of war crimes and crimes against humanity, and sentenced to death.

He famously avoided the gallows by committing suicide in his cell on October 15, 1946, just hours before his scheduled execution. This photograph serves as a stark reminder of the accountability faced by the architects of the Third Reich.

It remains a significant piece of archival evidence documenting the final days of the war and the subsequent judicial process that sought to hold Nazi leadership responsible for their atrocities during World War II.

If you want to reach the owner of this project...