June 18, 2019
Review of Mary Louise Roberts, What Soldiers Do: Sex and the
American GI in World War II France (University of Chicago Press,
2013), xii + 351 pgs., hardcover.
Another D-Day (June 6) celebration on
has come and gone. It has been ten years since I posted this on the LRC blog:
According to an article about Antony Beevor’s new
book, D-Day, 20,000 French civilians were killed within three months of
the D-Day landing. Some villages in Normandy only recently began having D-Day
celebrations. What? How ungrateful these people were for the “hundreds of tons
of bombs destroying entire cities and wiping out families.” Or perhaps it was
because of the “theft and looting of Normandy households and farmsteads by
liberating soldiers” that “began on June 6 and never stopped during the entire
summer.” Or perhaps it was the “3,500 rapes by American servicemen in France
between June 1944 and the end of the war.”
I recently came across another book on
D-Day that greatly expands upon this last point.
I have been putting off for some time
now a review of Mary Louise Roberts’ important book What Soldiers Do:
Sex and the American GI in World War II France (hereafter What
Soldiers Do). I don’t normally review books that are over a year or two old
but I must make an exception in the case of this book. And since we have just
been bombarded with propaganda about how great American soldiers were who
liberated France from the Nazis on D-Day, it is now or never if I am ever going
to get this book reviewed.
What Soldiers Do proves and documents, without
doubt or gainsaying, whether the author intended it or not, that U.S. soldiers
in World War II were the greatest generation of whoremongers in the history of
the American military.
Mary Louise Roberts is professor of
history at the University of Wisconsin. She is also the author of D-Day Through French Eyes: Normandy
1944 (University
of Chicago Press, 2014), and at least two other books that I am aware of.
What Soldiers Do begins with an introduction and
ends with a conclusion. In each case, the port city of Le Havre in Normandy is
mentioned. In the introduction we read that in 1945, a year after D-Day,
thousands of American GIs in Le Havre were waiting for a boat home. The mayor
of the city penned a letter to the American regional commander complaining that
“the good citizens of his city were unable to take a walk in the park or visit
the grave of a loved one without coming across a GI engaged in sex with a
prostitute.” At night, “drunken soldiers roamed the street looking for sex, and
as a result ‘respectable’ women could not walk alone.” “Scenes contrary to
decency” were taking place “day and night.” In the conclusion we read that “GIs
were emboldened to believe the nation was theirs for the taking.” In garrison
towns like Le Havre, the GI’s “disregard for French social norms meant they had
public sex with prostitutes and assaulted women on the streets.”
According to the author, What
Soldiers Do “explores how sex was used to negotiate authority” between
the United States and France. It focuses on the “three kinds of sex between GIs
and French women during the US military presence: romance, prostitution, and
rape.” These subjects make up the three sections of the book. The book
concludes with almost 80 pages of notes, including many French sources,
followed by a very detailed index.
Roberts explains that “with very few
exceptions the GIs had no emotional attachment to the French people or the
cause of their freedom.” The Normandy campaign was billed as “an erotic
adventure.” Sexual fantasies about France motivated “the GI to get off the boat
and fight.” However, “such fantasies also unleashed a veritable tsunami of male
lust.” Once aroused, “the GI libido proved difficult to contain.” Roberts
maintains that “sex was fundamental to how the US military framed, fought, and
won the war in Europe.” She contends that “this book presents GI sexual conduct
as neither innocent of power nor unimportant in effect.” Military historians,
including Stephen Ambrose, “have largely ignored the sexual habits of American
soldiers.”
And what were these sexual habits?
- The GIs propositioned women right in front of
their husbands or boyfriends.
- Women could not walk the streets alone; sexual
relations occurred in broad daylight under the eyes of children.
- The local girls flocked to the large camps north
of town, where the American soldier was “jumping on, even raping, anything
which fell under his dick.”
- During their time in France, the GIs bought an
extraordinary amount of sex.
- The GIs bartered for sex no differently than they
did alcohol and cigarettes.
- Trading Army products for sex was common GI
practice throughout Europe.
- One thousand to fifteen hundred men could pass
through [a brothel] in a day, forcing a woman to take on fifty to sixty
customers.
- Sometimes a prostitute would fulfill her duties
in an alleyway, blacked-out doorway, or under a bridge. These
encounters the GIs called “knee-tremblers.”
- Sex was most often had for GI products such as
soap, cigarettes, chocolate, and K rations.
- Cooperation between GIs and prostitutes ensured a
steady supply of sex.
- An estimated dozen divisions started their own
brothels.
- Soon after D-day, military officers realized that
they could not control GI sexual activity in France.
- GI promiscuity took place in parks, cemeteries,
streets, and abandoned buildings in cities.
- Sexual relations because unrestricted and public;
sexual intercourse was performed in broad daylight before the eyes of
civilians, including children.
- Once in France, GIs received condoms along with
their food rations.
- The soaring rate of infection signaled the army’s
incapacity at every level to regulate sexual relations between GIs and
French women.
- One military study found that 50 percent of
married soldiers and 80 percent of unmarried soldiers had intercourse at
some point during the war.
- Some of these MPs because full-time pimps,
allowing the prostitutes to enter in exchange for a share of their
earnings.
- If the GIs did not find women to satisfy their
desires, they would rape “honest” women.
- The warm weather facilitated outdoor sex.
- An unwanted, homeless population of diseased
women being shuttled from town to town—these prostitutes compromise the
legacy of the American occupation in Normandy.
- The US military was struggling mightily with the
problems of GI promiscuity. As we have seen, clandestine prostitution was
rampant; venereal disease rates were escalating, and accusations of rape
were legion.
- The sexual exploitation of French women allowed
the US military to test out the new gears of its global authority.
- US officers tried to contain the damage to their
reputation by scapegoating black GIs and proclaiming rape to be a “black”
crime.
- Prostitutes were considered the French commodity
par excellence. In the mind of a GI, a prostitute differed little from a
cigarette, save in the price on the black market.
U.S. soldiers in World War II were
heroic, they were brave, they were altruistic, but they were also the greatest
generation of whoremongers.
Laurence M. Vance [send him mail] writes from central Florida. He is the
author of ; ; War, Empire, and the Military:
Essays on the Follies of War and U.S. Foreign Policy; , and many other books. His newest books are and .
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