For the POWs captured by the Germans, the standards varied. For Soviets and other Eastern European countries, the survival rate was abysmally low. The Nazis considered the Slavic peoples to be "sub-human," and gave them lower rations and worked them very hard. For the western Allies, conditions were fairly good and survival was high. Not until the end of the war, when the German people themselves were starving, did the British/US POWs encounter severe conditions. The Luftwaffe, in particular, adhered to the Geneva Conventions for downed airmen - an old-fashioned knightly chivalry - hoping the Allies would also treat their downed airmen well too.