"In the U.S. Army prison camps of Germany and France at the end of World War II, almost four million German soldiers were held prisoner outdoors, in unsheltered barbed-wire enclosures, with little or no food and water, for months on end. At least 750,000 died of malnutrition and disease.
The French Army, which took some 740,000 prisoners from the Americans to use as reparations labour, starved and mistreated them so appallingly that over 250,000 died.
Most were soldiers of the Wehrmacht who surrendered in May 1945, but scores of thousands were women, children and old men. Most of these deaths were listed simply as Other Losses or Perdu Pour Raison Diverses. ..."