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| Adolf Hitler's 'Commando Order' was very blunt in what it stated. The 'Commando Order' state that any special forces soldier captured alive by the Germans was to be shot. The terms of the Geneva Convention were not going to be extended to commandos. Why did Hitler order such a draconian measure? Two ideas have been forwarded and a combination of the two is likely to be accurate. Commandos were a very effective fighting force and units such as the British Commandos and the Special Air Service were capable of doing a great deal of damage to the Germans in small and frequently undetected raiding parties. Also on the Channel Island of Sark, some German soldiers were found with their hands tied behind their back. They had been shot. Their deaths were blamed on commandos who had raided the island. Hitler in his fury ordered that any commandos caught after this, should be summarily shot without a trial - the 'Commando Order'.
Hitler emphasised that only a few copies of the order were to be printed and that each one had to be carefully looked after. Chief of Staff, Jodl, sent a message out with the order:
Six men from the Royal Marine Commandos were shot on the Cockleshell Raid of 1942 and towards the end of the war, the bodies of 24 Special Air Service men were found in France. They had been captured, tortured and shot by the Gestapo.
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