He reported from the Nuremberg trials and acted as a public relations adviser to General Lucius D. Clay.
Subsequently he was Public Relations Officer for Generals Joseph T. McNarney, Clay and Frank L. Howley (then American commandant in Berlin).
[6] It centers on sexual crimes committed by Soviet Soldiers in Berlin during the capture of the German capital in April and May 1945.
[7] Klaus Martens criticized a stereotypical characterization of nations and races by Burke and insinuates a connection between the author and the CIA's Psychological Warfare Department.
[8][9][10][11] The German edition followed in 1952 (The Big Rape - Die große Vergewaltigung), by Amsel Publishing House.