Again, we have the accounts of the prisoners. Goering, Hess, Speer, and even the Commandant of Auschwitz never spoke about being tortured. Journalists met with them publicly. Goering was able to kill himself because he got so friendly with a guard.
Even the Soviets didn't tend to torture any of the primary actors. They just either killed them outright, or used them as a prop and intentionally kept them alive and well fed, and then publicly prosecuted under the soviet judiciary. They infamously tortured a Polish intelligence officer who had gone to Autchwitz voluntarily and revealed the mass murder to the allies, because he was a Polish Nationalist before the war, and they didn't want him gaining any more friends and allies because he was an absolute Chad even before the war.
As for the German POW's, Speer writes how cushy it got:
From Albert Speer's memoirs, pg. 505:
Apparently the surrounding populace believed we were being beaten and starved; rumor had it that Leni Riefenstahl was pining away in the dungeon of the tower. Actually we had been brought to this castle to answer questions on the technical conduct of the war. ... For the rest, we banished boredom by early-morning sports, a series of scientific lectures, and once Schacht recited poetry, giving astonishingly emotional renderings. A weekly cabaret was also conjured up. We watched the performances - the scenes repeatedly dealt with our own situation - and sometimes tears of laughter ran down our faces at the tumble we had taken.
I will also remind you that many of the Socialist officers and agents were acquitted of their charges because they hadn't participated in crimes against humanity (much to the soviet's annoyance).
Wasn’t it later found that pretty much every German who testified in those trials was tortured?
I believe testicular crushing was common form of torture
LOL. Fucking no. Where did you get any of that?
Again, we have the accounts of the prisoners. Goering, Hess, Speer, and even the Commandant of Auschwitz never spoke about being tortured. Journalists met with them publicly. Goering was able to kill himself because he got so friendly with a guard.
Even the Soviets didn't tend to torture any of the primary actors. They just either killed them outright, or used them as a prop and intentionally kept them alive and well fed, and then publicly prosecuted under the soviet judiciary. They infamously tortured a Polish intelligence officer who had gone to Autchwitz voluntarily and revealed the mass murder to the allies, because he was a Polish Nationalist before the war, and they didn't want him gaining any more friends and allies because he was an absolute Chad even before the war.
As for the German POW's, Speer writes how cushy it got:
From Albert Speer's memoirs, pg. 505:
I will also remind you that many of the Socialist officers and agents were acquitted of their charges because they hadn't participated in crimes against humanity (much to the soviet's annoyance).