Declassified
archives document ties between CIA and Nazis
By
Andre Damon
see also
Reinhardt Gehlen
see also
Project
Paperclip
http://www.wsws.org
On June 6, the US national archives released some 27,000
pages of secret records documenting the CIA’s Cold War
relations with former German Nazi Party members and
officials.
The files reveal numerous cases of German Nazis, some clearly
guilty of war crimes, receiving funds, weapons and employment
from the CIA. They also demonstrate that US intelligence
agencies deliberately refrained from disclosing information
about the whereabouts of Adolf Eichmann in order to protect
Washington’s allies in the post-war West German government
headed by Christian Democratic leader Konrad Adenauer.
Eichmann, who had sent millions to their deaths while
coordinating the Nazis’ “final solution” campaign to
exterminate European Jewry, went into hiding in Buenos Aires
after the fall of the Third Reich. Utilizing friendly
contacts in the Catholic Church and the Peron government in
Argentina, Eichmann was able to reside in the South American
country for 10 years under the alias of Ricardo Klement. He
was abducted in 1960 by Mossad, Israel’s foreign intelligence
agency, put on trial in Israel and executed in 1962.
The documents show that the CIA was in possession of
Eichmann’s pseudonym two years before the Mossad raid. The
CIA received this information in 1958 from the West German
government, which learned of Eichmann’s alias in 1952. Both
the CIA and the Bonn government chose not to disclose this
information to Israel because they were concerned that
Eichmann might reveal the identities of Nazi war criminals
holding high office in the West German government,
particularly Adenauer’s national security adviser Hans
Globke.
When Eichmann was finally brought to trial, the US government
used all available means to protect its West German allies
from what he might reveal. According to the declassified
documents, the CIA pressured Life magazine into deleting
references to Globke in portions of Eichmann’s memoirs that
it chose to publish.
In addition to the revelations regarding Eichmann, the
documents chronicle the CIA’s creation of “stay-behind”
intelligence networks in southwestern Germany and Berlin,
labeled “Kibitz” and “Pastime,” respectively. The Kibitz ring
involved several former SS members. In the early 1950s, the
CIA provided these groups with money, communications
equipment and ammunition so that they could serve as
intelligence assets in the event of a Soviet invasion of West
Germany.
The CIA documents were reviewed by Timothy Naftali, a
historian with the National Archives Interagency Working
Group, the government body that oversaw their
declassification and release. According to an article
published by Naftali, the stay-behind program was dissolved
“in the wake of public concerns in West Germany about the
resurgence of Neo-Nazi Groups.” Specifically, the Kibitz-15
group, led by an “unreconstructed Nazi,” became a potential
source of public embarrassment for the US, as its members
were broadly involved in Neo-Nazi activity. [1]
The CIA terminated the program by 1955 and arranged for many
of its contacts to be resettled in Canada and Australia.
According to the documents, Australia provided funds for
relocation while the CIA provided its ex-assets with a
“resettlement bonus.”
The CIA employed Gustav Hilger, a former adviser to Nazi
Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop. As an employee of
the German foreign office, Hilger was present at the
negotiation of the Stalin-Hitler pact in 1939. The CIA deemed
his experience with the USSR sufficiently valuable to free
him from incarceration at Fort Meade in Maryland and employ
him as an intelligence evaluator in West Germany.
In 1948, Hilger moved to the United States and obtained a
position at the CIA’s K Street building in Washington as a
researcher and expert on the USSR. Hilger eventually left the
CIA to work for the West German foreign office.
According to a paper analyzing the CIA documents published by
Robert Wolfe, a former senior archivist at the US National
Archives, “it is beyond dispute that Hilger criminally
assisted in the genocide of Italy’s Jews.... During the
roundup of Italian Jews in late 1943, a note signed ‘Hilger’
recorded Ribbentrop’s concurrence that the Italians be asked
to intern the Jews in concentration camps in Northern Italy,
in lieu of immediate deportation. The SS intended thereby
that the Italian Jews and their potential Italian protectors
should believe that internment in Italy was the final
destination, rather than eventual deportation to the murder
mills in Poland to be immediately murdered or gradually
worked to death. The stated purpose of this ruse was to
minimize the number of Italian Jews who would go into hiding
to avoid deportation to Poland” [2]
In another instance, the CIA employed Tscherim Soobzokov, a
former Nazi gendarme and Waffen SS lieutenant, who, according
to a paper published by Interagency Working Group Director of
Historical Research Richard Breitman, “participated in an
execution commando [combat group detailed to executing Jews
and Communists en masse] and had searched North Caucasian
villages for Jews.”
Soobzokov was employed by the CIA for seven years. Over this
period, he repeatedly used his intelligence contacts to avoid
investigation by the FBI and the US Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS) in regard to his complicity in
war crimes.
According to Breitman’s paper, CIA examiners noted that
Soobzokov was an “incorrigible fabricator” who repeatedly
lied about his past in order to conceal his participation in
criminal activity. Nevertheless, the CIA shielded him against
investigation, at one point sending the INS a document
asserting that Soobzokov had never worked for the Nazis. [3]
Prior to the outbreak of war, a significant section of the
American ruling elite had favored cooperation with the Nazis
as a European hedge against the spread of Bolshevism. Henry
Ford was notorious for his anti-Semitism and his political
affinity for German Fascism, and a number of major American
companies retained their business ties with the Third Reich.
Notably, IBM sold Germany the punch cards that were used to
catalog the “final solution.” (See: “How IBM helped the Nazis
IBM and the Holocaust”)
However, as one European nation after another fell before
Hitler’s onslaught, the threat of German imperialist
dominance in Europe spurred the American ruling class to
enter the European theater.
US imperialism mobilized popular support in its war against
the Nazi regime by appealing to the democratic and
anti-fascist sentiments of the American people. After the
defeat of Germany, it organized, together with its World War
II allies—Britain, the Soviet Union and France—the Nuremburg
trials to prosecute top Nazi officials for their complicity
in war crimes.
However, with the start of the Cold War, the United States
reversed its policy of identifying, trying and executing
prominent Nazi war criminals. As is starkly demonstrated in
the case of Eichmann, the knowledge possessed by many of
these individuals made trying them inconvenient.
Regardless of its limited prosecution of upper-echelon Nazis,
the United States had no qualms about recruiting Nazi Party
members and war criminals into its military research
apparatus. Prominent German military developers such as
Werner Von Braun and Bernhard Tessmann were assimilated into
the US rocketry program, while Kurt Blome, a Nazi scientist
who experimented on concentration camp prisoners, was
employed by the US to develop chemical weapons.
Likewise, the early stages of the Cold War saw high-level
Nazi cadres drafted into the US intelligence machine and
deployed in Europe, the Middle East and the Americas.
According to the Department of Justice Office of Special
Investigations (OSI), the bureau assigned to investigate
German war criminals living within the US, at least 10,000
Nazis entered the US between 1948 and 1952. Of the thousands
of German Nazis who fled—or were brought—to the United
States, only some 100 have been prosecuted by the OSI.
Notes:
1. Timothy Naftali, “New Information on Cold War CIA
Stay-Behind Operations in Germany and on the Adolf Eichmann
Case” http://www.fas.org/sgp/eprint/naftali.pdf 2. Robert
Wolfe, “Gustav Hilger: From Hitler’s Foreign Office to CIA
Consultant” http://www.fas.org/sgp/eprint/wolfe.pdf 3.
Richard Breitman, “Tscherim Soobzokov”
http://www.fas.org/sgp/eprint/breitman.pdf
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