A German Frogman, captured while swimming with others along the Rhine River near Remagen, in an attempt to destroy US First Army bridges.
Captured by the men of the US 164th Engineer Battalion at Kripp in Germany, March 18 1945
His equipment consists of a rubber helmet and gloves, oxygen mask, canvas jacket lined with chemicals that give off heat when immersed in water, rubber pants, canvas shoes on which are fastened hard rubber web feet.
On March 8, the Americans had seized intact the Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen, and troops and tanks were pouring across the Rhine.
In desperation, Hitler ordered frogmen to blow up the span. By now, the Americans had built a bridgehead on the east bank of the Rhine nine miles deep and fifteen miles long. So to even reach the Ludendorff, the frogmen would have to swim for perhaps eight miles behind American lines. Moreover, the Rhine temperature would be near freezing, causing the frogmen to get cramps and perhaps drown. It would take a near miracle for the mission to succeed.
An hour after darkness descended on March 17, nine days after the first squad of American infantrymen had dashed across the Ludendorff, eleven furtive figures, burdened with heavy loads of explosives, stole along the banks of the Rhine and into the rapid current ten miles north of the bridge. Untersturmführer Schreiber, leader of the frogmen, had been a champion swimmer while in a Berlin University; he and each of his men wore skin-tight rubber suits, rubber foot fins, and carried an apparatus to breathe underwater.
After superhuman effort in battling the strong current and the frigid river temperature for three hours, the frogmen had negotiated nearly five miles behind enemy lines. Suddenly, when two miles from the bridge, the nearly exhausted swimmers were virtually blinded by powerful searchlights that played over the water from both banks of the Rhine. A torrent of machine-gun and rifle fire peppered the helpless Germans. Several of them were hit by bullets and disappeared below the surface. Those who survived struggled to reach the bank and were captured—including the crestfallen Schreiber, who had been fully aware that Adolf Hitler had sent him and his men on a suicide mission.
The surviving combat swimmers were interrogated immediately, with the commander of the 99th Infantry Division, Major General Walter E. Lauer, describing an injured frogman as "... a fanatical Austrian Nazi ... who only started to talk after 6 hours"