It is absurd to believe that 300,000 fugitive Nazis escaped to South America on the few U-Boats remaining at the end of the war, or that they all made their own travel arrangements...

The truth is much more ordinary, almost mundane. It is all the more shocking as a result. For whatever success ODESSA achieved, they were mere amateurs at Nazi-smuggling when compared with the Vatican.

Source: Mark Aarons and John Loftus "Unholy Trinity"

Pope Pius XI was ardently pro-German, pro-Nazi, and anti-communist. He issued the Concordiat of 1933 which basically recognised the Nazi ideology with open arms and set out a philosophical accomodation with violent anti-semitism.

In the spring of 1943 Martin Bormann sent SS Major Walter Rauff, who had developed mobile units to gas the Jews, to the Vatican to discretely lay in place agreements with Pope Pius XII at the Vatican to form plans for postwar Ratlines and aid the escape of SS war criminals.

After the fall of Stallingrad many in Hitler's closest circle accepted defeat was inevitable and began negotiations. The OSS sent Moe Berg, who was a personal emissary from Roosevelt, by submarine (Ammeraglio Cagni & Project Shark/Vittorio), to discuss with the Vatican and Rauff how to facilitate this escape network.

Argentina's diplomat in Madrid, Juan Peron deliberately issued 1000 blank Argentine passports to facilitate escape networks. James Jesus Angleton of the OSS, later to become a key figure in the Cold war CIA was deeply involved in helping the Ratlines smuggle out SS volunteers from occupied Russia and Ukraine to South America to assist in spy networks against the Soviets.

In June 1997 documents came to light reported by CNN and Reuters documenting how the Vatican Bank was holding US$250m in gold deposits from the Nazis and alluding to a total of $600m which has vanished.

Late in the war, the Vatican created an organisation called Intermere to assist SS men to cross international borders which accomodated them in monasteries. It also used the CARITAS Catholic aid agency and their network throughout South America. Austria's Bishop Hudal and Cardinal Montini who later became Pope Paul VI organised Intermere which knew the true identities of these people and yet issued Red Cross papers to them. Cardinal Montini organised the San Girolamo brotherhood of monks and the Jesuit order of Castelgandolfo to hide Nazis.

The book "Aftermath: Martin Bormann and the Fourth Reich" by Ladislas Farago (1974) describes how Martin Bormann arrived in Argentina on the steamer Giovani carrying a Vatican passport in the name of Reverend Juan Gomez. He was apparently welcomed at the pier by by Ludwig Freude and General Juan Batista Sosa Molina, the Minister of War, representing President Peron.


Pope John Paul II worked at Auschwitz in a rubber plant run by Nazi financier Hermann Abs for Solvay Drugs of I.G. Farben.

Surce: "Pope Once Slaved for Vatican Aide's Firm," SF Chronicle, 1/12/83

Farben, which also employed Fritz Krämer, has 750 subsidiaries worldwide, including U.S. firms. In the wake of the recent Vatican Bank scandals, Pope John Paul II appointed a four-man committee to study and run Vatican finances, which included Hitler's personal banker and the pontiff's old boss, Hermann Abs. Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal protested this recently.

Source: "Ex-Reich Aide in Vatican Irks Jews," Philadelphia Inquirer, 12/30/82



Bormann and Eichmann in Argentina

Angel Alcázar De Velasco, a Spanish Jew and a renowned spy was taken into Hitler's confidence at the last moment of the Third Reich, therefore, he was attending Hitler at his Bunker in April 1945.

According to Velasco, Hitler did not commit suicide and was not in Berlin when Soviet troops occupied Berlin on April 30, 1945. Martin Bormann and Velasco himself took U-boat, U-313 on May 7, 1946 from Villa Garcia, a fishing village of Northwestern Spain and reached Argentina after 18 days voyage. (In official records, U-313 was allegedly surrendered at Narvik, Norway on 8 May 1945, transferred to Loch Eriboll, Scotland, for Operation Deadlight where U-313 was scuttled on December 27 1945. But, the British government kept it alive together with Hitler's crew. Is it possible that the British helped ex-Nazis to escape from Europe.

During the voyage, Bormann told Velasco that: Hitler was first transferred to a fortress in Bavaria. Eva Brown had died there because of the use of drugs in the bunker. (Other stories claims she did not die and followed Hitler to Argentina.) Then, Hitler was sent to Norway by ship. He was kept in a remote Norwegian village till his evacuation plan was carried out. He can not disclose where Hitler is. Bormann was proud that he managed to make the world believe Hitler's suicide.

Velasco also stated that he dispatched Adolf Eichmann from Madrid Airport to Buenos Aires, Argentina on June 6, 1946. Velasco managed to obtain a passport at the Argentina embassy in Madrid on June 3, 1946 and passed it to the person who disclosed his real name, Eichmann, on the way to the airport.




The 137-sq-km (53-sq-mile) Colonia Dignidad colony near the city of Parral, some 350 km (220 miles) south of Santiago - in a lush valley in the Andean foothills

Berghof








Hacienda San Ramon





“Hitler Died in 1960"

On July 28, 1945, two former crewmen of the Admiral Graf Spee battleship welcomed--under the greatest secrecy--two submarines from Europe. One of those submarines conveyed Adolf Hitler. 

This is the main thesis of the book "Bariloche Nazi. Sitios históricos relacionados al nacionalsocialismo" (Nazi Bariloche: Historic Sites Related to National Socialism) from Argentinean journalist Abel Basti. The text, published in February, is a tour guide to visit the sites inhabited by German leaders in the Trans-Andean south, and challenges the official story about the Führer committing suicide in his bunker on April 30, 1945. 

Basti, who left Buenos Aires in 1978 to work as a forest ranger in Bariloche, looked into the subject when he covered the extradition to Italy of Nazi captain Erich Priebke in 1995.

"He was detained in Bariloche. I wasn't into the Nazi subject, but due to work reasons it was necessary to satisfy the need for information. From that moment onward I delved into certain avenues of research," says the author. 

When do traces of Hitler's presence in southern Argentina emerge? 

Based on certain eyewitness accounts, that are complemented with historic revisionism, since the absence of evidence regarding the suicide is notorious. And if Hitler didn't kill himself and escaped, what he obtained in Argentina is valuable.

What other proof have you found? 

Eyewitness accounts from qualified people who were with Hitler in Argentina and who agree with FBI, British Intelligence, and Argentinean Navy documents discussing the presence of Nazi subs in the South Atlantic in July and August 1945. Furthermore, there is more information coming to light that contradicts the alleged suicide. 

Well, there's always been a sort of "cloud" around the subject

 Yes, mainly because the proof needed to substantiate a death isn't there. Furthermore, the first official reports talk of an escape. In other words, when the Red Army entered the bunker, Stalin asked for a confirmation of Hitler's death and the general in charge says he can't, because there is no body. Even Germany declared [Hitler] dead in 1955 after presuming him dead. 

Your book is focused on the alleged arrival of submarines in Patagonia. When did they arrive? 

What I've investigated, along with contributions from Europe, is that it was a convoy evacuating the Nazi high command, consisting of at least 10 submersibles with 60 persons aboard each. 

Another clue that in Basti's opinion sheds light on the arrival of the Nazis in Argentina are the accounts of two sailors who participated in their reception:

In 1950, two sailors from the Graf Spee, a German vessel sunk by its own crew on the River Plate, said that they received at least two submarines in Patagonia on July 28, 1945
 

How did that happen?

They say that they slept in a Patagonian ranch and in the early morning hours were on hand to receive the submarines. They brought trucks and loaded baggage and people onto them. One researcher spoke with the sailors (who are now dead) and they confirmed the story. On the other hand, we have the proof of the evacuation and on the other, the discovery of the sunken subs. 

Finding them would be even better confirmation..

They've been detected through magnetometers. The problem is that there is a lot of sand covering them.
 

Basti is now at work on a second book, where he says he will present proof of the Führer's presence in Argentina after World War II and his supposed death in exile in 1960. . 


Las Ultimas Noticias Santiago de Chile

July 11, 2004




«All the Leaders of the Third Reich Fled to Latin America...»

Nil Nikandrov, http://en.fondsk.ru/
April 2, 2009

In May, 1945 officers of the SMERSH – the counter-intelligence department of the Red Army – found the burned bodies of Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun in a garden just outside the Reich Chancellery. An identification procedure was carried out to exclude any doubts whether the corpses were those of the Nazi leader and his wife, but for a long time its results remained classified. The secrecy bred various alternative versions. Former Chief of US Intelligence in Berlin Col. W.J. Heimlich stated that according to his own report "there was no evidence beyond that of HEARSAY to support the THEORY of Hitler's suicide". Later former CIA Director B. Smith expressed an opinion coinciding with that of his colleague by saying that nobody was able to prove Hitler's death in Berlin.

The claims awakened the fantasy of numerous individuals whose interests revolved around the history of Nazi Germany. Hundreds of books and dozens of movies about operation ODESSA – the transfer of Nazi leaders to hideouts in various remote parts of the world - have seen the light of day as a result. Like many aspects of the short existence of the Third Reich the theme is indeed captivating. Currently there seems to be a Nazi history boom in Russia. Bookstores are loaded with literature on the subject. Biographies of Nazi leaders, memoirs written by Wehrmacht generals and Luftwaffe pilots, treatises on the Abwehr and the Gestapo may be a specific sort of pabulum, but in Russia they clearly have a permanent readership.

The swastika can be seen on most of the book covers. Once I inadvertently heard a piece of a conversation among people I did not know in a bookstore - someone said: "All the leaders of the Third Reich fled to Latin America". I was not too surprised. You can run across much stronger statements in Internet like "Hitler remained alive for a whole decade after Stalin's death and the truth finally became impossible to conceal".

***

The attempts made by writers, journalists, and cohorts of sensation-seekers to float more positive and optimistic versions of what happened to Nazi leaders should not come as a surprise in the context of the current Western campaign aimed at radically reassessing the results of World War II and understating – if not altogether denying – the role played by the Soviet Union in routing the Nazi Germany and its allies. Oftentimes Nazi leaders are portrayed as fearless warriors who rose against the expansion of "the Russian Bolshevism" but were swept away by "the Eastern hordes".

The final point in the biographies of many of the Nazi leaders was put by the Nuremberg Trials, but masters of falsifications either pretend not to notice the episodes or distort them in the style of the now-popular fantasy genre which ideologists of the dominant neoliberal doctrine brought to the forefront of the modern art. The reality which does not correspond to ideology can be cosmetically processed. A whole generation grew up on various fantasies like The Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter, and likewise global projects, and quite a few people are prepared to believe in incredible transformations of reality, miraculous transfigurations, magic illusions, and mystical triumphs of the elevated virtual reality over the boring ordinary life.

The popularization of the hypothesis that Hitler survived in an underground "New Berlin" in Antarctica was one of the first attempts to plant the fantasy genre into historical literature. Allegedly engineers and construction workers delivered to the continent by 35 (!) submarines of Führer's Convoy had been building the installation in enormous underground oases in 1939-1943.


In his well-documented The Hitler Survival Myth (1981), Donald McKale identifies the earliest source of the myth of Hitler's escape to the southern hemisphere as the unexpected surrender of a German submarine in early July 1945 at Mar del Plata, Argentina. Several Buenos Aires newspapers, in defiance of Argentine Navy statements, said that rubber boats had been seen landing from it, and other submarines spotted in the area. On July 16, 1945, the Chicago Times carried a sensational article on the Hitlers having slipped off to Argentina.

The Hitler-in-Argentina tale first surfaced in a book  back in 1947.

Ladislao Zsabó, a Hungarian advertiser, witnessed the arrival of the U-530 and saw its crew disembarking. He had heard that the destination was the German Antarctica and, mistakenly, made a supposition that Hitler had escaped to Antarctica, and published the book Hitler está vivo (Hitler is alive), where he speaks about the possible location of Hitler, in Queen's Maud properties, opposite the Weddel Sea, that was then renamed Neuschwabenland, when the area was explored in 1938/39 by the German expedition leaded by Captain Ritschter.

Zsabó made the wrong assumption, had he read the book by professor Hugo Fernandez Artucio published in 1940, Nazis en el Uruguay, (Nazis in Uruguay) he would had discovered that there actually was a plan referring to German Antarctica, but this was nothing but the term they used for the Patagonia and that this information had been made public in New York in 1939.

A second book by Michael X. Barton was published in 1969 entitled We Want You: Is Hitler Alive?

Even wider circulation was enjoyed by the version according to which Nazi leaders had fled in numbers to Latin America and established a secret "Fourth Reich". It was put forward by Ladislas Farago, an ethnic Hungarian who worked for the U.S. Naval Intelligence during World War II and cleverly utilized his unique knowledge and experience after it. He wrote books about the struggle between intelligence services and Nazi criminals that managed to avoid punishment by fleeing across the ocean. Farago's Martin Bormann and the Fourth Reich became a bestseller in 1970s.

By professionally arranging the materials at his disposal the author attempted to prove that A. Hitler's personal secretary, chief of Parteikanzlei, and "gray cardinal" Bormann escaped from the intelligence services of the anti-fascist coalition countries and made it to Latin America, where he lived without serious problems and died at a senior age. Farago presented in a lively fashion the history of searches for Bormann, cited a whole bulk of documents, and supplied details of conversations with eyewitnesses of Bormann's secret life and even with Bormann himself. The books left many readers convinced that the Third Reich's number two official had miraculously survived and discredited the report that Bormann's skeleton had been found at a construction site in Berlin a few years after the end of the war and identified.

In Farago's interpretation, Bormann created in Latin America a secret network of his aides and native sympathizers which replicated the "authority vertical", the administrative system, and the security machine of the Third Reich. Bormann's empire allegedly spread over Argentine, Paraguay, Chile, and Bolivia, and also had bases in other Latin American countries.

Indirectly Farago's version was confirmed by the accomplishments of the so-called Nazi hunters, of whom Simon Wiesenthal, a survivor of a Nazi concentration camp, was the best-known. Flows of information – at times quite unreliable - concerning Nazi criminals at large converged in Wiesenthal’s headquarters. Thus Wiesenthal floated numerous legends about the powerful Nazi underground in Latin America. Nevertheless he must be credited with having done a lot to make Nazi criminals face justice. The information supplied by Wiesenthal led to the seizure of Adolf Eichmann in Argentine and helped to establish the whereabouts of Butcher of Lyon Klaus Barbie who - after protracted strife – was eventually deported to France. At one time there was hope that the notorious Nazi sadist - physician Josef Mengele would also be caught in no time in Brazil or Paraguay.

A lot has been written about Wiesenthal's efforts to put on trial Walter Rauff, the SS officer who designed gas vans, the mobile gas chambers used by the SS to exterminate prisoners. After trying to land in various countries he finally settled down in Chile where he got the job of an "adviser" with Pinochet's secret police DINA. Rauff patronized Colonia Dignidad regarded as a Nazi enclave in Chile. The colony was founded by former Nazi corporal and a fanatical follower of Hitler Paul Schäfer. If the Fourth Reich ever existed, Colonia Dignidad would have been its only part to become known. In reality it was an extremely secretive cult whose leaders were involved in child abuse. On these grounds Schäfer amassed a bulk of materials compromising a number of Chilean politicians, military officers, and influential businessmen and thus managed to avoid being punished for years. Only in May, 2006 Schäfer and his aides were finally sentenced to long terms in jail.

***

Interest in the Fourth Reich myth began to evaporate in the 1980s -1990s as at that time the Nazi criminals who found shelter in Latin America had to reach their seventies or even eighties. The page of history was about to be turned, but in 2000 the theme of the Nazi underground was revitalized by Argentinian journalist Abel Basti with his sensational books Hitler En Argentina and Bariloche Nazi: Sitios Historicos Relacionados Al Nacionalsocialismo. They were carefully documented and included photographs like post-war pictures of A. Hitler and his wife E. Braun whom he married in his bunker while the fighting of Berlin was raging. Basti's imagination and ability to invent and combine evidence were superior even to those of late Farago. The latter at least never claimed that Hitler personally headed the Fourth Reich in the name of the struggle against plutocracy, communism, Jewry, and Free Masonry. Basti wrote that A. Hitler, E. Braun, and Führer's closest aides flew from the burning Berlin to Spain (or, alternatively – to Norway), and then crossed the Atlantic Ocean by three submarines and reached Argentina. In July-August, 1945 Hitler and his clique landed in the Rio Negro province near the Caleta de los Loros village and moved on further into Argentine. Allegedly, the same secret route prepared by SS chief H. Himmler's people was later passed by Bormann, Mengele, and Eichmann... Basti detailed the journey of A. Hitler and E. Braun across Argentina assisted by local Nazi sympathizers, and described the couple’s family life during which – despite the hardships of hiding – they even had children.

Bariloche Nazi: Sitios Historicos Relacionados Al Nacionalsocialismo became the favorite reading of Hitler's admirers. The two-storied mansion in Bariloche which – according to Basti – had served as Hitler's residence in 1945-1950 permanently attracts tourists. Other routes allegedly leading to the hideouts of Bormann, Mengele, and Eichmann had also become fairly popular. Paraguayan historian Mariano Llano expressed support for Basti's view as he also published a book on the rewarding theme entitled "Hitler. Nazi in Paraguay".

***

The flow of literature spreading the myth about Hitler's life in Latin America is unlikely to dwindle upon the publication of Basti's books. I am not trying to say that the fantasy genre has no right to exist. Demand for this sort of writings surges in crisis epochs when readers are hungry for whatever helps them to escape from reality. Besides, the fantasy interpretation of the past showing Nazi criminals remaining unpunished instills optimism into the present-day potential Führers.

Basti's books were promoted globally, and among other countries the waves of the campaign reached Russia. Companies are trying to obtain a license to make a movie based on the material. We should expect that in the future new authors will create sensations by broadening the list of survivors to eventually include all of Hitler's associates. To eliminate discrepancies, those who were executed following the Nuremberg Trials could be look-alikes of the actual Nazi leaders and fanatics eager to sacrifice their lives...



San Carlos de Bariloche some 750 miles southwest of the capital, Buenos Aires

Imagine the picture: a lovely estate in Argentina, a bunch of friends – Hitler, Bormann, Himmler, Göbbels, Ribbentrop, Keitel, Müller - at the dining table. Eva Braun wearing an apron is pouring coffee with cream and serving an apple pie. What an idyll...


"Adolf Hitler lived in Patagonia, in southern Argentina, after fleeing Germany in 1945," claims Argentinean journalist Abel Basti in a tour-guide-style book which discusses the locations in the Andean foothills which served as a refuge for several former Nazi leaders."

"Hitler and his lover, Eva Braun, did not commit suicide - rather, they fled to Argentina's shores aboard a submarine and lived for years in the vicinity of San Carlos de Bariloche, a tourist site and ski haven about 1,350 kilometers (810 miles) southwest of Buenos Aires, according to the journalist."

In his book, Bariloche: Nazi Guia-Turistica, published January 2004, Basti reproduces documents, affidavits, photographs and blueprints aimed at steering the reader (or visitor) to the sites that sheltered Hitler, Martin Bormann, Josef Mengele and Adolf Eichmann.

He (Basti) is displeased when asked if his book challenges the official story of the Hitler/Braun suicide, saying that the corpses of Hitler and his lover were never found, as is the case with other Nazis who allegedly committed suicide. "The only 'official' story is the report made by General Zhukov (commander of the Soviet armies that occupied Berlin) to the Kremlin, stating that Hitler and several Nazi leaders had escaped, presumably to Spain or the Americas, and this is what Stalin advised the U.S. government,' he retorted."

Basti's book includes a photo of the Incalco Ranch (In the language of the indigenous Nahuel people of Argentina, Incalco means near the water), located in Villa la Angostura on the shores of Lago Nahuel Huapi (lake), 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of Bariloche. This was the refuge chosen by Argentinian Nazis to hide Hitler and Eva Braun.

"This residence, set amidst a pine forest and which can only be reached by boat or hydroplane, belonged to Argentinean businessman Jorge Antonio, one of the most trusted aides of two-time president Juan Domingo Peron." (Juan Domingo Peron was president of Argentina twice, first from 1946 to 1955 and the second time in 1973 and 1974.)

Basti makes mention of Rudolf Fraude, son of Ludwig Fraude, the German millionaire, as a key player, in his capacity as Peron's secretary, in placing former Nazis in Argentina, among them (Adolf) Eichmann, who was captured in 1960 outside Buenos Aires by Israeli commandos and was executed two years later in Israel. The book's author, having been involved in several Nazi-related investigations with European television networks, claims that Hitler also lived at Hacienda San Ramon, 10 kilometers (6 miles) east of Bariloche, which belonged at the time to the (German) principality of Schaumberg-Lippe.

The epic distance that exists between Berlin and Patagonia was shortened, according to Basti, by the wave of German submarines that reached the shores of southern Argentina after the Second World War."

[Two German submarines, the U-530 and the U-977, were captured by the Allies in the South Atlantic in July and August 1945 after making mysterious voyages to Argentina.]

"There is numerous and reliable evidence that Nazis fled to Argentina, with the arrival of Nazi U-boats in Patagonia," he noted, recalling the 'vital assistance' offered by Peron's government at the time 'to admit the Führer's henchmen into that country.

Basti, who lives in Bariloche and initiated his research into the relocation of Nazis to the picturesque city, claims to have the accounts of passengers aboard the U-boats, Nazis who reached Patagonia--accounts which will constitute the basis of his second book."


~Las Ultimas Noticias of Santiago de Chile January 2, 2004, "Bariloche was Hitler and Eva Braun's final refuge."






New Eagle's Nest

Suddenly, the long blue prow of a lone submarine shoots above the water. It has been almost four months since World War ll in Europe has ceased. This is German U-Boat 977 badly in need of some fresh air. For it has been traveling under water for sixty days. The U-Boat would come up only at night to charge the electric batteries. The Nazi Swastika is clearly visible on both sides of the conning tower. The skipper, Lieutenant Heinz Schäffer is afraid his sub might be mistaken for a Japanese sub and be sunk. For Lt. Schäffer is on the most top secret mission of his entire career. When Germany surrendered unconditionally, some warships and submarines were still at sea. A few of these would seek refuge in a neutral country. The time is 0400 O'clock (4:00 am) in the early morning of August 17, 1945. (Germany had surrendered May 7, 1945.) The place is the South Atlantic Ocean, just off the shore of the city of Buenos Aires. Buenos Aires is the capital of Argentina, the second largest country in South America. U-977 is watching for a signal to come ashore, three green lights. As the signal is given, the sub moves up the Rio de la Plata (the mouth of a large river) to dock in Buenos Aires. As U-977 approaches the pier, Lt. Heinz Schäffer ponders over the identity of his three passengers. This mission has been so top secret that no one knows who they are. A middle aged man and woman with a small girl emerge topside. But they are bundled up in trench coats and wrapped in several scarves. A full squad of Argentine Army air Force Police and a full squad of Secret State Police (Gestapo) await the trio's arrival. They are quickly loaded into an armored car and whisked away. With sirens whaling, their escorts of four motorcycles and six squad cars soon reach the Army Air Force Base. On the main runway a tri-motor Junkers Transport JU52/3 airplane is warming up. This plane has the logo of the Argentine Air Force, but it is one of Germany's finest.

After a short two-hour journey that covers around four hundred miles, they land on a secluded airstrip. This is located on the edge of the jungle near Laguna Mar Chiquita, a large lagoon. This is in the middle of the Cordoba region of Argentina. Here is the location of a plantation fortress that covers a thousand square miles. It is enclosed by a ten foot high chain link fence with four strands of barbed wire at the top. Guard towers are located every four to five miles apart. Armed guards with guard dogs also patrol the entire area. A thousand flood lights shine brightly during the night. Large "Keep Out - No Trespassing" signs are posted in three languages; German, English and Spanish. Finally, two small airplanes circle overhead day and night. There is a large sign over the main front gate that reads, "NEU KEHLSTEIN." When translated into English it reads "NEW EAGLE'S NEST!"

To this day, many people are confused by the names Berghof and Eagle's Nest, which are two separate places. The Berghof was located on a plateau called the Obersalzberg which is on the route to the top of the Kehlstein, the mountain where Hitler's tea house, called the Eagle's Nest, was built in 1938. To add to the confusion, Hitler had another tea house, called Mooslahnerkopf, which was a short walk from the Berghof. The German name for the Eagle's Nest is Kehlsteinhaus, which means house on Kehlstein mountain.

Not too far from Munich, Germany rise the Bavarian Alps, a very beautiful group of mountains. Far up on the slope is a village called Obersalzberg. This is where Hitler had his home as well as bunkers and air raid shelters. And perched above this near the summit, was his lair or retreat, called "Kehlstein" (Eagle's Nest - This is where Eva Braun lived with Hitler for many years.

The identity of the three passengers: Adolf Hitler, Eva Braun Hitler (his wife) and their young daughter Uschi Hitler.

Germany has surrendered unconditionally but Adolf Hitler had not. He was now here to keep his promise for the Third Reich would last at least a thousand years!

Now many top scientists, historians, and forensic experts have never believed that Hitler and his wife, Eva Braun, committed suicide on April 30, 1945. Supposedly Hitler shot himself in the head and Eva used a cyanide poison capsule. Then their bodies were supposedly doused with gasoline and set on fire. The bodies were burned so severely it was impossible to identify them. There was no blood left to be tested and no finger-prints to compare. By May 1st, Russian troops had captured most of Berlin. Josef Stalin, the secretary general, top leader of Russia, wanted positive proof that Hitler was dead. He sent a search team led by Lieutenant Colonel Ivan Klimenko to find the truth. A water soaked body who resembled Hitler was found in an old oak water tank. Although this man had not been touched by fire, he was positively identified as Adolf Hitler. He was put on display in the Reich Chancellery main hall. Soon another body was found in a wooden box just outside the bunker door. He looked enough like Hitler to be his twin brother. So he was positively identified as Adolf Hitler. (This body had not been touched by fire either.) Two days later, two bodies were dug up out of a small bomb crater, a man and a woman. They were sent to the 496th field hospital in Berlin-Buch. On May 8, V-E Day, both bodies were given a preliminary forensic autopsy. Now we know once and for all this is positively Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun Hitler! Their dental records have been compared and that proves who they really are, case closed.

However, this did not prove anything! The woman identified as Eva Braun Hitler had not died of cyanide poison but from a shrapnel wound in her chest. And we see Adolf Hitler had several doubles. At least one double had his dental records and teeth altered to look exactly like Hitler. All of the men and women that surrounded Hitler were completely fanatical in their loyalty and devotion to him. They all swore an oath, not to the German military or to the German fatherland, but to Hitler himself. Most of them were captured by the Russians, a few by England, and a few by the United States. They were interrogated, tortured, and sent to prison. That is why so many different stories exist concerning the life or death of Hitler and his wife.

As early as September of 1943, "Operation Land of Fire" was put into motion. It was spearheaded by Hitler's private secretary, Martin Bormann, who handled Hitler's finances. He began to smuggle money, gold and art treasures into Argentina by submarine. This is where the finances came from to construct "Neu Kehlstein" the new Eagle's Nest. By the end of World War ll, the government of Argentina had issued 2,003 passports for high Nazi war criminals! Soon reports came pouring in that Hitler was indeed alive and well. He was seen as a headwaiter in a cafe in Grenoble, France. Next he was a fisherman in the Aran Islands, off the coast of Ireland. Then a croupier in a casino in Evian. Would you believe, as a monk in the monastery in St. Gallen, Switzerland? Next holed up in a moated castle Westphalia, Germany. And all the while Josef Stalin was insisting that Hitler and Eva were living either in Spain or Argentina.

Adolf Hitler was a very complex individual with a photographic memory. Many people believe he was insane, while others believe he was a genius. He certainly was a gifted speaker, able to hold mass audiences spellbound. Hitler believed that he was the twentieth century representative of the medieval Teutonic Knights driving back the Slavs from German territory. He promised to completely crush the Jewish and communist backed world conspiracy. Eva Braun met Hitler in 1933, and became his mistress for life finally marrying him on April 29, 1945.

Time Magazine selected Hitler as "The Man of The Year" in 1938. Samuel Church, U.S. Industrialist, offered a one million dollar reward for his capture in 1940.

In 1986 the daily newspaper in Buenos Aires, Argentina, printed a story. A reporter had just interviewed Adolf Hitler, he is alive and in perfect health, and only 96 years old!