New from Harvard University Press: 
The Malmedy Massacre: The War Crimes Trial Controversy, by 
Steven P. Remy (Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York). A description from the Press:
During the Battle of the Bulge, 
Waffen SS soldiers shot 84 American prisoners near the Belgian town of 
Malmedy—the deadliest mass execution of U.S. soldiers during World War 
II. The bloody deeds of December 17, 1944, produced the most 
controversial war crimes trial in American history. Drawing on newly 
declassified documents, Steven Remy revisits the massacre—and the decade-long controversy that followed—to set the record straight. 
 
After the war, the U.S. Army tracked down 74 of the SS men involved 
in the massacre and other atrocities and put them on trial at Dachau. 
All the defendants were convicted and sentenced to death or life 
imprisonment. Over the following decade, however, a network of Germans 
and sympathetic Americans succeeded in discrediting the trial. They 
claimed that interrogators—some of them Jewish émigrés—had coerced false
 confessions and that heat of battle conditions, rather than superiors’ 
orders, had led to the shooting. They insisted that vengeance, not 
justice, was the prosecution’s true objective. The controversy generated
 by these accusations, leveled just as the United States was anxious to 
placate its West German ally, resulted in the release of all the 
convicted men by 1957. 
The Malmedy Massacre shows that the torture accusations were 
untrue, and the massacre was no accident but was typical of the Waffen 
SS’s brutal fighting style. Remy reveals in unprecedented depth how 
German and American amnesty advocates warped our understanding of one of
 the war’s most infamous crimes through a systematic campaign of 
fabrications and distortions.
More information is available 
here.