P.O. Box 1142 was a secret American military intelligence facility that operated during World War II. The AmericanMilitary Intelligence Service had two special wings, known as MIS-X and MIS-Y. The MIS-X program focused upon the escape and evasion activities of American POWs in Europe. MIS-Y's core duty was to interview the Prisoners of War. They were known by their codename, the mailing address "P.O. Box 1142." Notable prisoners housed at the facility included rocket scientist Wernher von Braun, spymaster Reinhard Gehlen, and Heinz Schlicke, inventor of infrared detection. GermanU-Boat commander Werner Henke was also a prisoner but was fatally shot when he tried to escape by climbing the fence. P.O. Box 1142 was based in Fort Hunt, Virginia, formerly part of George Washington's farmlands. German scientists, submariners and soldiers were questioned. P.O. Box 1142 obtained valuable intelligence from German POWs and also communicated with Allied POWs overseas. The camp was in violation of the Geneva Convention because the Red Cross was not notified of the transfer or location of the prisoners, but according to the surviving wardens, torture was not used. The work done at Fort Hunt contributed to the Allied victory of World War II. It also led to advances in scientific technology and military intelligence that directly influenced the Cold War. In October 2007, a group of the former intelligence workers gathered for the first time since the war's conclusion, and a flagpole and plaque recognizing their contributions were dedicated on the original grounds. The camp was started in 1942; the majority of the camp facilities were bulldozed in 1946. The post commanders were: Col. Daniel W. Kent ; Col. Russell H. Sweet ; Col. John L. Walker ; and Col. Zennas R. Bliss.
PO Box 1142 was one of a number of secret internment facilities commissioned by the United States with the goal to exploit the German scientists recruited as part of Operation Paperclip in Europe. In order to prevent scientists specializing in rocket and other sensitive technologies from falling into Communist hands, the United States became determined to prevent the Soviet Union from seizing scientists with this information prior to the end of the war. The U.S. Joint Intelligence Objectives Agency was responsible for sponsoring the operation and took a specific focus on the scientists who had worked on Hitler's V2 Rocket program.
Interrogation process
As many of the former prison guards and interrogators at PO Box 1142 have started to grow old and information become declassified, the substantial amount of information learned at PO Box 1142 has started to come to light. Between 1942 and 1946, the military interrogators at the camp questioned more than 3,400 prisoners with more than 500 of these being scientists that came to the United States as part of Operation Paperclip. During these interviews, significant information regarding German advances in rocketry, jet technology, weapons systems, and acoustic torpedoes was discovered. The United States was able to take this information and develop an effective acoustic torpedo countermeasure. The former interrogators say they did not use physical torture, however they did use psychological tricks, like threatening to turn the prisoner over to the Soviet NKVD. National Park Service Ranger Brandon Bies interviewed over 70 former interrogators from PO Box 1142 on this topic and said: "To our knowledge, no. There was no torture here. This is a question that was asked in every interview the National Park Service conducted, and we have found no evidence that there was anything remotely resembling torture that happened here."
Later reception
In 2001, the German historian Sönke Neitzel found about 150,000 pages of interrogation reports and bugged room conversations made in Trent Park and Fort Hunt. He analysed them together with Harald Welzer, a social psychologist. They published several books about their results:
Abgehört: Deutsche Generäle in britischer Kriegsgefangenschaft 1942-1945. Ullstein, Berlin 2005 .
»Der Führer war wieder viel zu human, viel zu gefühlvoll«: Der Zweite Weltkrieg aus der Sicht deutscher und italienischer Soldaten .
Soldaten. Protokolle vom Kämpfen, Töten und Sterben. S. Fischer, Frankfurt am Main 2011 .
Another member of the research group, Felix Römer, wrote Kameraden. Die Wehrmacht von innen. Piper, Munich 2012.