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Ratlines were systems of escape routes for Nazis and other fascists fleeing Europe at the end of World War II. These escape routes mainly led toward safe havens in South America, particularly Argentina, Paraguay, Brazil and Chile. Other destinations may have included the United States, Canada and the Middle East. The Nazi party used a right-facing swastika as their symbol and the red and black colors were said to represent Blut und Boden (blood and soil). ...
Benito Mussolini and Adolf Hitler Fascism (in Italian, fascismo), capitalized, refers to the right-wing authoritarian political movement which ruled Italy from 1922 to 1943 under the leadership of Benito Mussolini. ...
Combatants Allied powers: China France Great Britain Soviet Union United States and others Axis powers: Germany Italy Japan and others Commanders Chiang Kai-shek Charles de Gaulle Winston Churchill Joseph Stalin Franklin Roosevelt Adolf Hitler Benito Mussolini Hideki TÅjÅ Casualties Military dead: 17,000,000 Civilian dead: 33,000...
South America South America is a continent crossed by the equator, with most of its area in the Southern Hemisphere. ...
A map showing countries commonly considered to be part of the Middle East The Middle East is a region comprising the lands around the southern and eastern parts of the Mediterranean Sea, a territory that extends from the eastern Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf. ...
One ratline, made famous by the Frederick Forsyth thriller The Odessa File, was run by the ODESSA (Organisation der ehemaligen SS-Angehörigen; "The Organization of Former SS-Members") network organized by Otto Skorzeny. However, more recent research shows that this organisation played at most a minor part in the organised smuggling of some tens of thousands of Nazi war-criminals. The reality was both more prosaic and possibly more shocking: national governments and international institutions played a larger role than secret societies. Frederick Forsyth. ...
It has been suggested that The ODESSA File (film) be merged into this article or section. ...
ODESSA (German: Organisation der ehemaligen SS-Angehörigen, Organization of Former SS Members) is the name commonly given to an international Nazi network alleged to have been set up towards the end of World War II by a group of SS officers. ...
The (German for Protective Squadron), abbreviated (Runic) or SS (Latin), was a large security and military organization of the National Socialist German Workers Party (Nazi Party) in Germany. ...
After Operation Greif, Otto Skorzeny was labelled the most dangerous man in Europe Otto Skorzeny (June 12, 1908 - July 6[1] 1975) was an Obersturmbannführer in the German Waffen-SS during World War II. After fighting on the Eastern Front, he is known as the commando leader who rescued...
The Roman ratlines
Early efforts—Bishop Hudal Catholic Bishop Alois Hudal was rector of the Pontificio Istituto Teutonico Santa Maria dell’Anima in Rome, a seminary for Austrian and German priests, and "Spiritual Director of the German People resident in Italy" [1]. After the end of the war in Italy, Hudal became active in ministering to German-speaking prisoners of war and internees then held in camps throughout Italy. In December 1944 the Vatican Secretariat of State received permission to appoint a representative to "visit the German-speaking civil internees in Italy", a job which was assigned to Hudal. Dr. Alois Hudal, Roman Catholic bishop â and, for a short time during the 1930s, a honorary Nazi Party member. ...
Nickname: Motto: SPQR: Senatus Populusque Romanus Location of the city of Rome (yellow) within the Province of Rome (red) and region of Lazio (grey) Coordinates: Region Lazio Province Province of Rome Founded 21 April 753 BC Government - Mayor Walter Veltroni Area - City 1,285 km² (580 sq mi) - Urban 5...
Geneva Convention definition A prisoner of war (POW) is a soldier, sailor, airman, or marine who is imprisoned by an enemy power during or immediately after an armed conflict. ...
The Secretariat of State is the oldest dicastery in the Roman Curia, the government of the Roman Catholic Church. ...
Hudal used this position to aid the escape of wanted Nazi war criminals, including Franz Stangl, commanding officer of Treblinka, Gustav Wagner, commanding officer of Sobibor, Alois Brunner, responsible for the Drancy internment camp near Paris and in charge of deportations in Slovakia to German concentration camps, and Adolf Eichmann [2] — a fact about which he was later unashamedly open. Some of these wanted men were being held in internment camps: generally without identity papers, they would be enrolled in camp registers under false names. Other Nazis were in hiding in Italy, and sought Hudal out as his role in assisting escapes became known on the Nazi grapevine [3] In the context of war, a war crime is a punishable offense under International Law, for violations of the laws of war by any person or persons, military or civilian. ...
Franz Stangl (March 26, 1908 â June 28, 1971) was an SS officer, commandant of the Sobibór and of the Treblinka Nazi extermination camps. ...
Gustav Wagner (born July 18, 1911 in Vienna ) was an SS officer and deputy commandant of Sobibór death camp in Poland, where tens of thousands were gassed during Operation Reinhard. ...
Alois Brunner (born April 8, 1912 in Rohrbrunn, Burgenland, reports of death contested) is an Austrian Nazi war criminal who was Adolf Eichmanns assistant. ...
Drancy deportation camp was an infamous temporary prison camp in the city of Drancy, north of Paris, France used to hold Jews who were later deported to the extermination camps. ...
Otto Adolf Eichmann (known as Adolf Eichmann; March 19, 1906 â June 1, 1962) was a high-ranking Nazi and SS Obersturmbannführer (equivalent to Lieutenant Colonel). ...
In his memoirs Hudal said of his actions: I thank God that He [allowed me] to visit and comfort many victims in their prisons and concentration camps and to help them escape with false identity papers. [4] He explained that in his eyes: "The Allies' War against Germany was not a crusade, but the rivalry of economic complexes for whose victory they had been fighting. This so-called business ... used catchwords like democracy, race, religious liberty and Christianity as a bait for the masses. All these experiences were the reason why I felt duty bound after 1945 to devote my whole charitable work mainly to former National Socialists and Fascists, especially to so-called 'war criminals'." According to Mark Aarons and John Loftus in their book Unholy Trinity [5], Hudal was the first Catholic priest to dedicate himself to establishing escape routes. Aarons and Loftus claim that Hudal provided the objects of his charity with money to help them escape, and more importantly with false papers including identity documents issued by the Vatican Refugee Organisation (Commissione Pontificia d'Assistenza). Mark Aarons is a journalist and author from Australia. ...
John Joseph Loftus (born February 12, 1950, in Boston, Massachusetts) is an American author, former US government prosecutor and former Army intelligence officer. ...
These Vatican papers were not full passports, and not in themselves enough to gain passage overseas. They were, rather, the first stop in a paper trail—they could be used to obtain a displaced person passport from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which in turn could be used to apply for visas. In theory the ICRC would perform background checks on passport applicants, but in practice the word of a priest or particularly a bishop would be good enough. According to statements collected by Gitta Sereny from a senior official of the Rome branch of the ICRC [6], Hudal could also use his position as a bishop to request papers from the IRC "made out according to his specifications". Sereny's sources also revealed an active illicit trade in stolen and forged IRC papers in Rome at this time. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is a private humanitarian institution based in Geneva, Switzerland. ...
Gitta Sereny (born March 13, 1921) is a Hungarian-born British biographer, historian and journalist whose writing focuses mainly on the Holocaust and abused children. ...
According to declassified US intelligence reports, Hudal was not the only priest helping Nazi escapees at this time. In the "La Vista report" declassified in 1984, Counter Intelligence Corps (CIC) operative Vincent La Vista told how he had easily arranged for two bogus Hungarian refugees to get false IRC documents with the help of a letter from a Father Joseph Gallov. Gallov, who ran a Vatican sponsored charity for Hungarian refugees, asked no questions and wrote a letter to his "personal contact in the International Red Cross, who then issued the passports" [7]. The History of the Counter Intelligence Corps was a classified 30 volume book prepared in the late 1950s by Maj. ...
The San Girolamo ratline According to Aarons and Loftus, Hudal's private operation was small scale compared to what came later. The major Roman ratline was operated by a small, but influential network of Croatian priests, members of the Franciscan order, led by Father Krunoslav Draganovic. Draganovic organised a highly sophisticated chain, head-quartered at the San Girolamo degli Illirici Seminary College in Rome, but with links from Austria to the final embarcation point in the port of Genoa. The ratline initially focused on aiding members of the Croatian Ustashi fascist movement, most notably the Croat wartime dictator Ante Pavelic [8]. The Order of Friars Minor and other Franciscan movements are disciples of Saint Francis of Assisi. ...
Krunoslav Draganovic (?â1983) was a Croatian Catholic priest. ...
The Pontifical Croatian College of St. ...
Genoa (Genova [] in Italian - Zena [] in Genoese) is a city and a seaport in northern Italy, the capital of the Province of Genoa and of the region of Liguria. ...
The Ustaše (often spelled Ustashe in English; singular Ustaša or Ustasha) was a Croatian right-wing organisation put in charge of the Independent State of Croatia by the Axis Powers in 1941. ...
The title given to this article lacks diacritics because of certain technical limitations. ...
According to Aarons and Loftus, priests active in the chain included: Fr. Vilim Cecelja, former Deputy Military Vicar to the Ustashi, based in Austria where many Ustashi and Nazi refugees remained in hiding; Fr. Dragutin Kamber, based at San Girolamo; Fr. Dominic Mandic, allegedly an official Vatican representative at San Girolamo and also "General Economist" or treasurer of the Franciscan order — Aarons and Loftus allege he used this position to put the Franciscan press at the ratline's disposal; Monsignor Karlo Petranovic, based in Genoa. Monsignor is an ecclesiastical honorific title for clergy of the Roman Catholic Church. ...
Genoa (Genova [] in Italian - Zena [] in Genoese) is a city and a seaport in northern Italy, the capital of the Province of Genoa and of the region of Liguria. ...
Cecelja would make contact with those in hiding in Austria, and help them across the border to Italy; Kamber, Mandic and Draganovic would find them lodgings, often in the monastery itself, while they arranged documentation; finally Draganovic would phone Petranovic in Genoa with the number of required berths on ships leaving for South America. (See below for the operation of the South American end.) The operation of the Draganovic ratline was an open secret amongst the intelligence and diplomatic community in Rome. As early as August 1945, Allied commanders in Rome were asking questions about the use of San Girolamo as a "haven" for Ustashi [9]. A year later, a US State Department report of 12 July 1946 lists nine war criminals, including Albanians and Montenegrins as well as Croats, plus others "not actually sheltered in the COLLEGIUM ILLIRICUM [i.e., San Girolamo degli Illirici] but who otherwise enjoy Church support and protection." [10] In February 1947 CIC Special Agent Robert Clayton Mudd reported ten members of Pavelic's Ustashi cabinet living either in San Girolamo or in the Vatican itself. Mudd had infiltrated an agent into the monastery and confirmed that it was "honeycombed with cells of Ustashi operatives" guarded by "armed youths". Mudd also reported: The United States Department of State, often referred to as the State Department, is the Cabinet-level foreign affairs agency of the United States government, equivalent to foreign ministries in other countries. ...
is the 193rd day of the year (194th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1946 (MCMXLVI) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display full 1946 calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Montenegrins (Serbian/Montenegrin: ЦÑногоÑÑи/Crnogorci) are a South Slavic people who are primarily associated with the Republic of Montenegro. ...
"It was further established that these Croats travel back and forth from the Vatican several times a week in a car with a chauffeur whose license plate bears the two initials CD, "Corpo Diplomatico". It issues forth from the Vatican and discharges its passengers inside the Monastery of San Geronimo [sic]. Subject to diplomatic immunity it is impossible to stop the car and discover who are its passengers."[11] Look up sic in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Mudd's conclusion was the following: "DRAGANOVIC's sponsorship of these Croat Quislings definetly [sic] links him up with the plan of the Vatican to shield these ex-Ustashi nationalists until such time as they are able to procure for them the proper documents to enable them to go to South America. The Vatican, undoubtedly banking on the strong anti-Communist feelings of these men, is endeavoring to infiltrate them into South America in any way possible to counteract the spread of Red doctrine. It has been reliably reported, for example that Dr. VRANCIC has already gone to South America and that Ante PAVELIC and General KREN are scheduled for an early departure to South America through Spain. All these operations are said to have been negotiated by DRAGANOVIC because of his influence in the Vatican." Quisling, after Norwegian fascist politician Vidkun Quisling, is a term used to describe traitors and collaborationists. ...
The existence of Draganovic's ratline is admitted by the Vatican historian Fr. Robert Graham, who told Aarons and Loftus: "I've no doubt that Draganovic was extremely active in syphoning off his Croatian Ustashi friends." However Graham insisted that Draganovic was not officially sanctioned in this by his superiors: "Just because he's a priest doesn't mean he represents the Vatican. It was his own operation." [12]
US intelligence gets involved If at first US intelligence officers had been mere observers of the Draganovic ratline, this was to change in the summer of 1947. A now declassified US Army intelligence report from 1950, authored by "IB Operating Officer" Paul Lyon of the 430th Counter Intelligence Corps, sets out in detail the history of the people smuggling operation in the three years to follow[citation needed] According to the report, from this point on US forces themselves had began to use Draganovic's established network to evacuate its own "visitors". As the report put it, these were "visitors who had been in the custody of the 430th CIC and completely processed in accordance with current directives and requirements, and whose continued residence in Austria constituted a security threat as well as a source of possible embarrassment to the Commanding General of USFA, since the Soviet Command had become aware that their presence in US Zone of Austria and in some instances had requested the return of these persons to Soviet custody." That is, these were suspected war criminals and quislings from areas occupied by the Red Army—legally US Forces were obliged to hand them over for trial to the Soviets. They were reluctant to do this partly because Stalin was in the habit of shooting anyone handed over for trial, guilty or not (see Operation Keelhaul) The deal with Draganovic involved getting the visitors to Rome—"Dragonovich handled all phases of the operation after the defectees arrived in Rome, such as the procurement of IRO Italian and South American documents, visas, stamps, arrangements for disposition, land or sea, and notification of resettlement committees in foreign lands." US intelligence used these methods in order to get important Nazi scientists and military strategists, to the extent they had not already been claimed by the Soviet Union, to their own centres of military science in the US. Many Nazi scientists were employed by the US, retrieved in Operation Paperclip. For other organizations known as the Red Army, see Red Army (disambiguation). ...
Operation Keelhaul was a programme carried out in Austria by British forces in May and June 1945 that decided the fate of thousands of post-war refugees fleeing eastern Europe. ...
Operation Paperclip scientists pose together. ...
The Argentine Connection "In Nuremberg at that time something was taking place that I personally considered a disgrace and an unfortunate lesson for the future of humanity. I became certain that the Argentine people also considered the Nuremberg process a disgrace, unworthy of the victors, who behaved as if they hadn't been victorious. Now we realize that they [the Allies] deserved to lose the war." Argentine president Juan Perón on the Nuremberg Trials of Nazi war criminals. [13] Juan Domingo Perón (October 8, 1895 â July 1, 1974) was an Argentine soldier and politician, elected three times as President of Argentina and serving from 1946 to 1955 and from 1973 to 1974. ...
The Süddeutsche Zeitung announces The Verdict in Nuremberg. ...
On the other side of the Atlantic, the ratline escapees found their warmest welcome in Peron's Argentina. In his 2002 book The Real Odessa [13] Argentine researcher Uki Goñi used new access to the country's archives to show that Argentine diplomats and intelligence officers had, on Peron's instructions, vigorously encouraged Nazi and Fascist war criminals to make their home in Argentina. According to Goñi the Argentines not only collaborated with Draganovic's ratline, they set up further ratlines of their own running through Scandinavia, Switzerland and Belgium. Uki Goñi is an Argentinian journalist, author and historian known for his work exposing the role of the Argentinian government under Juan Perón in organising ratline escape routes for ex-Nazi war criminals after Germanys defeat in World War II. His research, drawing on investigation in Argentinian...
Scandinavia is a historical and geographical region centered on the Scandinavian Peninsula in Northern Europe which includes the three kingdoms of Denmark, Norway and Sweden. ...
According to Goñi, Argentina's first move into Nazi smuggling was in January 1946, when Argentine bishop Antonio Caggiano, bishop of Rosario and leader of the Argentine chapter of Catholic Action flew with Bishop Agustín Barrére to Rome where Caggiano was due to be anointed Cardinal. While in Rome the Argentine bishops met with French Cardinal Eugène Tisserant, where they passed on a message (recorded in Argentina's diplomatic archives) that "the Government of the Argentine Republic was willing to receive French persons, whose political attitude during the recent war would expose them, should they return to France, to harsh measures and private revenge." Antonio Caggiano (30 January 1889 â 23 October 1979) was an archbishop and cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church of Argentina. ...
This page meets Wikipedias criteria for speedy deletion. ...
Collaborationism, as a pejorative term, can describe the treason of cooperating with enemy forces occupying ones country. ...
Over the spring of 1946 a number of French war criminals, fascists and Vichy officials made it from Italy to Argentina in the same way: they were issued passports by the Rome IRC office; these were then stamped with Argentine tourist visas (the need for health certificates and return tickets was waived on Caggiano's recommendation). The first documented case of a French war criminal arriving in Buenos Aires was Emile Dewoitine—later sentenced in absentia to 20 years hard labour. He sailed first class on the same ship back with Cardinal Caggiano [14] The far-right tradition in France founds its origins, as the distinction of left and right in politics itself, to the 1789 French Revolution. ...
Motto Travail, famille, patrie French: Unoccupied zone of Vichy France (until November 1942) Capital Vichy Capital-in-exile Sigmaringen (1944-1945) Language(s) French Religion Roman Catholic Government Dictatorship Chief of state - 1940 â 1944 Philippe Pétain President of the Council - 1940 â 1942 Philippe Pétain - 1942 â 1944 Pierre Laval...
Internet Relay Chat (IRC) is a form of instant communication over the Internet. ...
Ãmile Dewoitine (1892-July 5, 1979) was a French industrial, Collaborationist war criminal who escaped after the war to Argentina, a major refuge of former Nazi members or Collaborationists. ...
Shortly after this Argentinian Nazi smuggling became institutionalised, according to Goñi, when Perón's new government of February 1946 appointed anti-semitic anthropologist Santiago Peralta as Immigration Commissioner and alleged former Ribbentrop agent Ludwig Freude as his intelligence chief. Goñi argues that these two then set up a "rescue team" of secret service agents and immigration "advisors", many of whom were themselves European war-criminals, with Argentine citizenship and employment [15]. The Eternal Jew: 1937 German poster. ...
Anthropology (from Greek: á¼Î½Î¸ÏÏÏοÏ, anthropos, human being; and λÏγοÏ, logos, knowledge) is the study of humanity. ...
Ulrich Friedrich Wilhelm Joachim von Ribbentrop (born Ulrich Friedrich Wilhelm Joachim Ribbentrop) (April 30, 1893 â October 16, 1946) was Foreign Minister of Germany from 1938 until 1945. ...
Citizenship is membership in a political community (originally a city or town but now usually a country) and carries with it rights to political participation; a person having such membership is a citizen. ...
ODESSA and the Gehlen Org -
The Italian and Argentinian ratlines have only been confirmed relatively recently, mainly due to research in recently declassified archives. Until the work of Aarons and Loftus, and of Uki Goñi (2002), a common view was that ex-Nazis themselves, organised in secret networks, ran the escape routes alone. The most famous such network is ODESSA (Organisation of former SS members), founded in 1946 according to Simon Wiesenthal, which included SS-Obersturmbannführer Otto Skorzeny and Sturmbannführer Alfred Naujocks and allegedly, in Argentina, Rodolfo Freude. Alois Brunner, former commandant of Drancy internment camp near Paris, allegedly escaped to Rome then Syria by ODESSA (Brunner is thought to be the highest-ranking Nazi war criminal still alive as of 2007). Persons claiming to represent ODESSA claimed responsibility in a note for the 9 July 1979 car bombing in France aimed at Nazi hunters Serge and Beate Klarsfeld. According to Paul Manning (1980), "eventually, over 10,000 former German military made it to South America along escape routes ODESSA and Deutsche Hilfsverein..." [16] ODESSA (German: Organisation der ehemaligen SS-Angehörigen, Organization of Former SS Members) is the name commonly given to an international Nazi network alleged to have been set up towards the end of World War II by a group of SS officers. ...
Uki Goñi is an Argentinian journalist, author and historian known for his work exposing the role of the Argentinian government under Juan Perón in organising ratline escape routes for ex-Nazi war criminals after Germanys defeat in World War II. His research, drawing on investigation in Argentinian...
Simon Wiesenthal, KBE, (Buczacz, December 31, 1908 â Vienna, September 20, 2005) was an Austrian-Jewish architectural engineer who became a Nazi hunter after surviving the Holocaust. ...
SS-Obersturmbannführer Rank Patch SA-Obersturmbannführer Rank Patch Obersturmbannführer was a paramilitary Nazi Party rank which was used by both the SA and the SS. The title was first created as an SA rank in 1932 after an expansion of the SA created the need for an...
After Operation Greif, Otto Skorzeny was labelled the most dangerous man in Europe Otto Skorzeny (June 12, 1908 - July 6[1] 1975) was an Obersturmbannführer in the German Waffen-SS during World War II. After fighting on the Eastern Front, he is known as the commando leader who rescued...
Sturmbannführer Collar Patch Sturmbannführer was a paramilitary rank of the Nazi Party which was used by both the Sturmabteilung (SA) and the Schutzstaffel (SS). ...
Alfred Naujocks Born in 1911, SS-Sturmbannführer Alfred Helmut Naujocks was, according to some historians, ultimately responsible for the Second World War. ...
German-Argentine spy director Roldofo Freude (far left), with Juan Perón and Eva Perón. ...
Alois Brunner (born April 8, 1912 in Rohrbrunn, Burgenland, reports of death contested) is an Austrian Nazi war criminal who was Adolf Eichmanns assistant. ...
Drancy deportation camp was an infamous temporary prison camp in the city of Drancy, north of Paris, France used to hold Jews who were later deported to the extermination camps. ...
A Nazi hunter is a private individual or group who tracks down and gathers information on former Nazis so that they can be punished for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in the Holocaust. ...
Serge (September 17, 1935, Bucharest, Romania) and Beate (February 13, 1939, Berlin, Germany) Klarsfeld, French researchers engaging in Holocaust documentation and anti-Nazi activism. ...
Paul Manning (b. ...
Simon Wiesenthal, who advised Frederick Forsyth on the novel/filmscript The Odessa File which brought the name to public attention, also names other Nazi escape organisations such as Spinne ("Spider") and Sechsgestirn ("Constellation of Six"). Wiesenthal describes these immediately after the war as Nazi cells based in areas of Austria where many Nazis had retreated and gone to ground. Wiesenthal claimed that the Odessa network shepherded escapees to the Catholic ratlines in Rome (although he mentions only Hudal, not Draganovic); or through a second route through France and into Francoist Spain [17] Frederick Forsyth. ...
It has been suggested that The ODESSA File (film) be merged into this article or section. ...
Clandestine is an adjective meaning that its reference is something secret or guerrilla in nature, such as certain activities executed by spies. ...
History of Spain Series Prehistoric Spain Roman Spain Medieval Spain Age of Reconquest Age of Expansion Age of Enlightenment Reaction and Revolution First Spanish Republic The Restoration Second Spanish Republic Spanish Civil War The Dictatorship Modern Spain Topics Economic History Military History Social History The Spanish Civil War officially ended...
ODESSA was supported by the Gehlen Org, which employed many former Nazi party members, and was headed by Reinhard Gehlen, a former Nazi intelligence officer employed post-war by the CIA. The Gehlen Org became the nucleus of the BND German intelligence agency, directed by Reinhard Gehlen from its 1956 creation until 1968.[citation needed] This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Reinhard Gehlen (April 3, 1902 â June 8, 1979) was a Major General in the Nazi Wehrmacht during World War II, with the position of chief of intelligence-gathering on the Eastern Front. ...
The CIA Seal The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) is an American intelligence agency, responsible for obtaining and analyzing information about foreign governments, corporations, and individuals, and reporting such information to the various branches of the U.S. Government. ...
The Bundesnachrichtendienst (Federal Intelligence Service, BND) is the foreign intelligence agency of the German government, under the control of the Bundeskanzleramt (Federal Chancellery). ...
Allegations of world powers' involvement in ratlines There have been allegations of collusion or active support by various governments for the ratlines. Accusations have been levelled against the United States government of acting through the Central Intelligence Agency to help smuggle Nazi scientists and officers to safety. Similar accusations have been made against the KGB. The Central Intelligence Agency(CIA) is an intelligence agency of the United States government. ...
The KGB emblem and motto: The sword and the shield KGB (transliteration of ÐÐÐ) is the Russian-language abbreviation for Committee for State Security, (Russian: ; Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti). ...
The case against the Vatican -
It is accepted that Catholic priests, notably Hudal and Draganovic, were actively involved in smuggling wanted war criminals. What is disputed is the extent to which their actions were sanctioned by higher authorities within the Church. The class action suit against the Vatican Bank and others was raised by attorneys Tom Easton and Jonathan H. Levy in San Francisco, California on November 15, 1999. ...
In his role as apostolic visitor to the imprisoned Croats, Draganovic reported to Bishop Giovanni Battista Montini, then secretary in charge of 'extraordinary affairs' at the Vatican's Secretariat of State - he would later become Pope Paul VI. Some evidence that Montini was aware and approved of Draganovic's actions has come out recently in a San Francisco courtroom where a class action suit of holocaust survivors against the Vatican Bank is currently underway. One witness in the trial is William Gowen, a former US Army intelligence agent stationed in Rome in the years after the war, charged with investigating the Draganovic ratline. Gowen's testimony has not been officially published, but a copy was obtained by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz which printed an article in January 2006 accusing Montini based on Gowen's evidence [18]. According to the Haaretz article: This article cites very few or no references or sources. ...
Haaretz (Hebrew: (help· info), The Land) is an Israeli newspaper, founded in 1919. ...
"I personally investigated Draganovic - who told me he was reporting to Montini," emphasized Gowen. Gowen related that at a certain stage Montini learned, apparently from the head of the OSS unit in Rome, James Angleton, who nurtured relations with Montini and the Vatican, of the investigation Gowen's unit was conducting. Montini complained about Gowen to his superiors and accused him of having violated the Vatican's immunity by having entered church buildings, such as the Croatian college, and conducting searches there. The aim of the complaint was to interfere with the investigation. In his testimony, Gowen also stated that Draganovic helped the Ustashe launder the stolen treasure with the help of the Vatican Bank: This money was used to fund its religious activities, but also to fund the escape of Ustashe leaders on the Rat Line.[18] Oss is a municipality and a city in the southern Netherlands, in the province of North Brabant. ...
James Jesus Angleton (December 9, 1917âMay 12, 1987), known to friends and colleagues as Jim and nicknamed the Kingfisher, was the long-serving director of the CIAs counter-intelligence division, an occasional poetry aficionado, and an avid fly-fisherman and orchid-grower. ...
List of Nazis who escaped using ratlines Famous Nazis war criminals such as Adolf Eichmann, Franz Stangl, Josef Mengele, Erich Priebke, Aribert Heim, Andrija Artuković and Ante Pavelic, the latter "using papers allegedly provided by the Vatican, and disguised as a priest"[19], found refuge in Latin America and the Middle East. Otto Adolf Eichmann (known as Adolf Eichmann; March 19, 1906 â June 1, 1962) was a high-ranking Nazi and SS Obersturmbannführer (equivalent to Lieutenant Colonel). ...
Franz Stangl (March 26, 1908 â June 28, 1971) was an SS officer, commandant of the Sobibór and of the Treblinka Nazi extermination camps. ...
Josef Mengele Dr. Josef Mengele (March 16, 1911 â February 7, 1979), was a German SS officer and a physician in the Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Aribert Heim Aribert Heim (born June 28, 1914) is an Austrian doctor and one of the worlds most wanted Nazi war criminals. ...
Andrija ArtukoviÄ (November 29, 1899 - January 16, 1988), was an ethnically Croatian right-wing politician convicted of war crimes and genocide committed against minorities in the WWII Independent State of Croatia (NDH). ...
The title given to this article lacks diacritics because of certain technical limitations. ...
Endnotes - ^ Aarons and Loftus, Unholy Trinity: The Vatican, The Nazis, and the Swiss Bankers (St Martins Press 1991, revised 1998), p. 36
- ^ Michael Phayer, The Catholic Church and the Holocaust
- ^ Gitta Sereny Into That Darkness Picador 1977, p. 289. Her account comes from testimony of Nazi war criminals helped by Hudal, such as Franz Stangl, Commandant of Treblinka extermination camp.
- ^ Hudal Römische Tagebücher (English translation quoted in Aarons and Loftus, p. 37)
- ^ Aarons and Loftus, chap 2 'Bishop Hudal and the First Wave'
- ^ Gitta Sereny, op. cit., pp. 316-7
- ^ See Aarons and Loftus, pp. 43-5
- ^ # Aarons and Loftus, chapter 5 'Ratline'
- ^ Declassified US Army File: 'Rome Area Allied Command to the CIC', 8 August 1945
- ^ Declassified State Department File: 'Alleged Vatican Protection of Jugoslav War Criminals', 12 July 1946
- ^ Declassified CIA File: 'Background Report on Father Krunoslav Draganovic', 12 February 1947
- ^ Aarons and Loftus, p. 89
- ^ a b From the 'Perón tapes' he recorded the year before his death, published in Yo, Domingo Perón, Luca de Tena et al.; this translation as quoted in Uki Goñi The Real Odessa: Smuggling the Nazis to Perón's Argentina, Granta (revised edition) 2003 p. 100
- ^ Uki Goñi, The Real Odessa: Smuggling the Nazis to Perón's Argentina, Granta (revised edition) 2003, pp. 96–8
- ^ Goñi ch. 8
- ^ Paul Manning, Martin Bormann: Nazi in Exile (Lyle Stuart, Inc., 1980, ISBN 0-8184-0309-8 (page 181)
- ^ Simon Wiesenthal Justice not Vengeance, George Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1989 - particularly chap. 6 'Odessa'.
- ^ a b 'Tied up in the Ratlines' by Yossi Melman, Haaretz, 17 January 2006
- ^ "Nazi-Era Victims Demand Army, CIA Release Documents on Vatican", CNS News, September 4, 2000.
Franz Stangl (March 26, 1908 â June 28, 1971) was an SS officer, commandant of the Sobibór and of the Treblinka Nazi extermination camps. ...
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Bibliography - Mark Aarons and John Loftus, Unholy Trinity: The Vatican, The Nazis, and the Swiss Bankers, St Martins Press 1991 (revised 1998)
- Gitta Sereny Into That Darkness, Picador 1977
- Uki Goñi The Real Odessa: Smuggling the Nazis to Perón's Argentina, Granta (revised edition) 2003
- Robert Graham and David Alvarez, Nothing Sacred: Nazi Espionage against the Vatican, 1939-1945, London: Frank Cass, 1998.
- Simon Wiesenthal Justice not Vengeance, George Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1989
- Gerald Steinacher The Cape of Last Hope: The Flight of Nazi War Criminals through Italy to South America, in: Klaus Eisterer, Günter Bischof (Ed.), Transatlantic Relations. Austria and Latin America in the 19th and 20th Century (Transatlantica 1) New Brunswick 2006, p. 203 – 224.
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